mitigate
mengurangkan
definition
verb
he wanted to mitigate misery in the world
make less severe, serious, or painful.
example
To say that statistics 'mitigate' murder is obviously contemptible.
he wanted to 'mitigate' misery in the world
We should welcome an opportunity to 'mitigate' the misery of a lingering death of a person who longs to die.
Politics is meant to 'mitigate' the misery to which our inborn condition consigns us, not add to it.
It seems to have become accepted that poverty will always exist - the aim of policy is merely to 'mitigate' its worst effects.
Parliament, however, has sought to 'mitigate' the worst effects of strict liability by including defences in some statutes.
drainage schemes have helped to 'mitigate' this problem
If you have serious credit card debts, the best way to 'mitigate' the bill is to switch to zero interest plastic.
Proper planning can significantly 'mitigate' the deemed interest benefit income or debt income inclusion.
So government will have to take some sort of measures to 'mitigate' this.
Clearly, there can be 'mitigating' circumstances as the Panel recognises.
Oh, of course there are 'mitigating' circumstances, such as being too young, or too ill to be in command of your existence.
Even manslaughter could be covered by a fine if there were 'mitigating' circumstances, or if the victim were a slave.
However a coalition of peace and environmental groups is not convinced that potential impacts from the incinerator are 'mitigable' .
This is 'mitigable' via proper sequencing of restoration projects and the Control Program.
In fact, there is alarming evidence that a significant number of people actually believe that where drinking is a factor in rape, it 'mitigates' the offence itself.
One is to develop a serious plan for 'mitigating' extreme poverty.
Every case of slavery, however lenient its inflictions and 'mitigated' its atrocities, indicates an oppressor, the oppressed, and oppression.
But the issue won't be 'mitigated' until conservatives make a serious effort to get into academics and make their arguments heard.
As it stands, this preposterously long-term deal only 'mitigates' the first year of that possibility.
To some degree, the general improvement of the housing stock that has taken place in recent years has 'mitigated' some of the worst features of physical deprivation.
If the key risk 'mitigators' turn skittish, the gig is up.
The groom is a loss 'mitigator' at a mortgage company.
And he may well have had 'mitigating' circumstances in making his decision.
There were 'mitigating' circumstances for the error which I shall not go into here.
‘We're holding bonds as a 'mitigator' of risk,’ he says.
Unless there are 'mitigating' circumstances, that's as much as an athlete is permitted.
We could get bogged down in legal argument, factor in 'mitigating' circumstances and take previous behaviour into consideration.
The project would also have a significant and 'mitigable' impact to the black-crowned night heron rookery because of the removal of ornamental trees on the surrounding properties.
The uniting factor is that withdrawal of specific glutens 'mitigates' symptoms in a significant number of individuals with these gluten-associated diseases.
Credits: Google Translate