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perpetuated
[per-pech-oo-ey-tid]
adjective
constantly circulated or repeated, practiced, carried on, etc..
The media certainly profits from the perpetuated myth that skinny equals healthy.
Illiteracy can cause a perpetuated cycle of poverty and low quality of life.
preserved from extinction or oblivion; kept alive.
Monuments are not only a cultural attraction, but the perpetuated memory of people and events.
verb
the simple past tense and past participle of perpetuate.
Other Word Forms
- unperpetuated adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of perpetuated1
Example Sentences
But overcooked is the narrative, perpetuated daily in the press, that Ms. Sears is “unhinged,” as Don Scott, speaker of the Virginia House of Delegates, told reporters in the spin room after the debate.
Not only do fears of exclusion affect the well-being of adolescents, but so does the comparative culture perpetuated by social media.
“Defendant’s lies to the victim clients perpetuated Girardi’s theft in real time.”
The company had "perpetuated an enormous failure on the Australian people" and would face "significant consequences", she said.
But his main conspiracy is the one he keeps returning to time and again, the one he continues to use with everything Epstein: That it’s a hoax perpetuated by the Democrats.
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