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Word of the Day for Saturday, December 12, 2009palliate \PAL-ee-ayt\, transitive verb: 1. To make (an offense or crime) seem less serious; extenuate. I had held a hope that she would take my class, that I would have the chance not only to cope with but to help palliate her pain. He was widely praised in both East and West as a humanitarian seeking to palliate the excesses of a cruel regime. The response to industrial decline was to cling even more to the British state, which had the resources to palliate its effects, and ease a transformation to a new economy -- or, indeed, as many hoped, to prop up the declining industries. Palliate derives from Late Latin palliatus, past participle of palliare, "to cloak, to conceal," from Latin pallium, "cloak." |
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