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sanitate

[ san-i-teyt ]

verb (used with object)

, san·i·tat·ed, san·i·tat·ing.
  1. to make sanitary; equip with sanitary appliances:

    to sanitate a new town.



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Word History and Origins

Origin of sanitate1

First recorded in 1880–85; back formation from sanitation
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Example Sentences

She added some businesses have been forced to close and then reopen facilities to sanitate them following reports of infections.

From Reuters

It was put in trim by the engineers, then sanitated by the humbler members of the Medical Corps.

But it would not be very satisfactory to pass the day in a ventilated and sanitated Hell with nothing to eat or drink.

Westport should brush itself up, cleanse its streets, tidy up its shops, sanitate its surroundings, and offer decent accommodation to tourists.

Imagine a hospital as big as King's College Hospital all packed into a train, and having to be self-provisioned, watered, sanitated, lit, cleaned, doctored and nursed and staffed and officered, all within its own limits.

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sanitary waresanitation