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  1. Dictionary
    enfeebled
    /ɪnˈfiːbld/

    adjective

    • 1. made weak or feeble: "trade unions are in an enfeebled state"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. Enfeebled means made very weak, especially by illness or old age. Learn how to use this adjective in sentences and see synonyms and translations.

    • English

      to make someone or something very weak. Synonyms. debilitate...

  3. Enfeeble is a formal verb that means to make someone or something very weak. Learn more about its synonyms, usage, and related words from the Cambridge Dictionary.

  4. Enfeeble is a verb that means to make feeble or deprive of strength. Learn its synonyms, antonyms, examples, etymology, and word history from Merriam-Webster dictionary.

  5. enfeeble. Fewer examples. Throughout the summer, tourists clog already enfeebled public transportation with their wheeled cases and giant backpacks. The president’s standing was enfeebled by her party’s losses in the recent election. He was accused of subverting the country's already enfeebled democratic institutions.

  6. verb (used with object) , en·fee·bled, en·fee·bling. to make feeble; weaken: That bout of pneumonia enfeebled him. Synonyms: debilitate, enervate. enfeeble. / ɪnˈfiːbəl / verb. tr to make weak; deprive of strength. Discover More. Derived Forms. enˈfeebler, noun. enˈfeeblement, noun. Discover More. Other Words From. en·fee ble·ment noun.

  7. Enfeebled means very weak, especially physically or politically. Learn how to use this formal adjective in sentences with synonyms and related words.

  8. To enfeeble is to make someone or something very weak or fragile. Your governor's budget cuts might enfeeble the state's public school system. If an illness weakens you — makes you feel frail and shaky — it enfeebles you. Aging enfeebles us, and the lack of Vitamin D in the winter also enfeebles many people.