stultify

UK /ˈstʌltɪfaɪ/ US /ˈstʌltɪfaɪ/
verb 4

Definitions

verb

1

To stunt, inhibit (progress, ideas, etc.) or make dull and uninteresting, especially through routine that is overly restrictive or limiting.

Bureaucracy and over-regulation have stultified the economy.

From the economic point of view, the concentration of future construction into a dozen or so standard classes should be for the good, provided it is not adhered to too rigidly, and allowed to stultify progress in design and further efforts to improve the efficiency of the steam locomotive, which still remains the simplest and most reliable of machines ever invented by man.

2

To make useless or worthless.

His business plan was stultified by new technologies.

Here was a disaster—her ingenious scheme completely stultified.

3

To cause to appear foolish; to deprive of strength; to stupefy.

The politicians continued to stultify themselves.

Was the House to stultify itself by agreeing to the opposite principles of these opposed Bills?

4

To prove to be of unsound mind or demonstrate someone's incompetence.

And although, as hath been observed, according to the strict rules of law no person is allows to stultify himself, yet it seems that even at law the contracts of idiots and lunaticks, after office found, and the party legally commited, are void […]

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