Definition of Incapacitates

1. Verb. (third-person singular of incapacitate) ¹

¹ Source: wiktionary.com

Definition of Incapacitates

1. incapacitate [v] - See also: incapacitate

Lexicographical Neighbors of Incapacitates

incanted
incanting
incantoning
incants
incapabilities
incapability
incapable
incapable(p)
incapableness
incapablenesses
incapably
incapacious
incapacitant
incapacitate
incapacitated
incapacitates (current term)
incapacitating
incapacitation
incapacitations
incapacitative
incapacities
incapacity
incapsulate
incapsulated
incapsulates
incapsulating
incapsulation
incapsulations
incarcerable
incarcerate

Literary usage of Incapacitates

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. The Canadian Monthly and National Review by William White (1881)
"Я —the brain becomes weakened by the blessing ? constant strain to which it is subject- i In concluding, we would rocom-l ed, and incapacitates the player ..."

2. The Law of Contracts by Samuel Williston, Clarence Martin Lewis (1920)
"Drunkenness—when it incapacitates. It is not every degree of intoxication that renders a person incapable in a legal sense. In order to make out incapacity ..."

3. The Law of Baron and Femme, of Parent and Child, of Guardian and Ward, of by Tapping Reeve (1816)
"... an unreasonable custom; and yet not more so, than to admit the act of a femme covert to be valid, if coverture incapacitates her to do it. . r • : ' : . ..."

4. The Origin and Development of Religious Belief by Sabine Baring-Gould (1892)
"... on earth— The blunting of the finer faculties incapacitates man for enjoyment— destroys his aspirations—and therefore limits his Heaven—The idea of Hell ..."

5. Law of Wills, Executors and Administrators by James Schouler (1915)
"Delirium incapacitates; Effect of Lucid Intervals. It stands to reason that the will of a person, made while he is delirious and quite out of his mind, ..."

6. Precis of the Archives of the Cape of Good Hope by H. C. V. Leibbrandt, Jan van Riebeeck (1906)
"... as this incapacitates him from remaining in the Service any longer, he asks for his discharge, with the retention of rank and quality, but offers to ..."

7. A Treatise on the Law Relating to the Execution and Revocation of Wills and by Richard Thomas Walkem, Ontario (1873)
"Intoxication to the extent of producing oblivion incapacitates 2. General rule of the Courts of Law and Equity as to the effect a person from making a will. ..."

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