enervate

શક્તિહીન કરવું
definition
verb
The knowledge of a shared destiny energizes and sustains many of us, enervates and defeats others.
cause (someone) to feel drained of energy or vitality; weaken.
adjective
the enervate slightness of his frail form
lacking in energy or vitality.
translation of 'enervate'
કમજોર કરવું,
શક્તિહીન કરવું,
નિર્બળ કરવું
example
After charging his age with being an 'enervate' breed which is "ever on his knees before the footstool of Authority," he goes on to observe that the process of statute-making ought to make one pause before according so much unquestioned deference to statutes.
Thanks so much and hope you regain your energy soon… don't let school or whatever it is 'enervate' you too much.
A few weeks of the Blair, Bush, and Campbell vision of an 'enervate' media might change their minds.
The day's ride had exhausted her already dwindled energy, and the night had truly 'enervated' her.
Without this, poetry is 'enervated' and becomes merely the record of consciousness no more compelling than yesterday's sports statistics.
Ionizing radiation 'enervates' the human gene pool and it weakens our immune systems.
Shall we say this war consumes the heart and 'enervates' the soul?
When I conjure in my mind the objections that people I know make to Christianity, I am reminded of my friend on the couch, 'enervated' by life's manifold demands.
His enemies were 'enervated' and lacked a strong voice.
Worry is an 'enervator' , a demotivater, when it stands alone with no action, no plan or method of dealing with it.
Hemingway's genius would be squandered, 'enervated' by celebrity, and he would die an alcoholic and a suicide.
It 'enervated' Sven, draining his energy and willpower, then paralyzing him.
In contrast, this study indicates that Jamaican users universally perceive cannabis as an energizer, a motive power, never as an 'enervator' that leads to apathy and immobility.
The lack of food 'enervated' him and he couldn't produce the goods when they were required.
All it achieves is presumably the exhaustion of what appears to be an inexhaustible woman and the 'enervation' of her audience.
Again, the speaker's anxiety and 'enervation' concern the chasm below.
This starting point corresponds to the feelings of 'enervation' and hopelessness that the current the administration generates.
The knowledge of a shared destiny energizes and sustains many of us, 'enervates' and defeats others.
The tension has 'enervated' whole generations of players.
You leave the theatre drained and 'enervated' , wishing you could get that time back, 15 minutes of awesome explosions notwithstanding.
The feeling of aimlessness and 'enervation' was alarming, and the resulting imagery memorable.
The preoccupation with the problem of evil, asserts Nietzsche, 'enervates' the human spirit.
Rather than passivity and 'enervation' , the goal now is loyalty and mobilization.
But whether depressed by the small audience or 'enervated' by the heat, the choir made little impact before the interval.
Businessmen, 'enervated' by the pressures of city life, sought spiritual as well as physical refreshment in the new pastime of bushwalking.
Credits: Google Translate