corrupt - use in sentences

Object

  • influence: Public anxiety about the potentially corrupting influence of the new language was constant from its birth.
  • file: Act ' thereby making calendar events all online join these players a corrupted file.
  • disk: This is only for restoring your data e.g. the cost of re-keying data or recovering a corrupted hard disk.
  • datum: Many times, turning a machine on corrupts the critical data required.

Preposition: on

  • filehost: Also, if the files get corrupted on the filehost or during download, the client is very likely to crash.

Subject

  • sin: How could his best, which was corrupted by sin, be acceptable in any way to a Holy God?

Modifies a noun

  • dictator: Much was siphoned off into the Swiss bank accounts of corrupt African dictators.
  • politician: The boys ' nemesis is Boss Hogg, a corrupt politician with the Sheriff in his pocket.
  • bringeth: Even so every good tree bringeth forth good fruit; but a corrupt tree bringeth forth evil fruit.
  • cop: Denzel Washington plays Alonzo, a corrupt veteran cop and partner of the rookie.
  • policeman: I don't have the answers or alternatives to corrupt policemen, violent criminals, crooked lawyers or the inadequate prison system.
  • bureaucrat: But the POR went on tail-ending the corrupt old bureaucrat.

Modifying Another Word

  • morally: Tho stupid and morally corrupt in the petty sense, I do not think this man would order a murder.
  • notoriously: Private firms contracted to local councils have been notoriously corrupt, but the arms sector is equally notorious for overcharging the government.
  • hopelessly: So no one could find out that BRS has, at its very core, hopelessly corrupted logic?
  • inherently: It sheds light on the institutionalized racism that assumes the Third World to be inherently corrupt and corruptible, a view which underwrites bribery.
  • fundamentally: It is the destruction of Western society and democracy, which they believe are fundamentally corrupt and weak.
  • utterly: This was how the utterly corrupt bureaucracy of the British trade unions received its training.

Used with adjective complement

  • become: Paper won't suffer from system failures at critical times or become corrupt ( you can't hack something already on paper!

Preposition: by

  • sin: How could his best, which was corrupted by sin, be acceptable in any way to a Holy God?

The word usage examples above have been gathered from various sources to reflect current and historical usage. They do not represent the opinions of YourDictionary.com.