What is the name meaning of VITIA. Phrases containing VITIA
See name meanings and uses of VITIA!VITIA
VITIA
VITIA
Surname or Lastname
English (County Durham, Cleveland)
English (County Durham, Cleveland) : unexplained.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from any of the numerous places so called. The final syllable represents Old English tÅ«n ‘enclosure’, ‘settlement’. The first element has a wide variety of possible origins. In the case of three examples in Lincolnshire it is Old English hÅh ‘spur of a hill’; for places in Oxfordshire and Somerset it is Old English halh ‘nook’, ‘recess’; for one in Dorset it may be Old English holh ‘hollow’, ‘depression’ or holt ‘small wood’; for a further pair in Suffolk it may be hola, genitive plural of holh ‘hollow’, but more probably a personal name HÅla.
Boy/Male
Sikh
Pure consciousness, One whose heart is holy
Girl/Female
Hawaiian
Mist; misty rain.
Male
Hebrew
Variant spelling of Hebrew Yeshayah, YESHAYA means "God is salvation."
Boy/Male
Hindu, Indian, Oriya, Tamil
Jewel
Boy/Male
Indian
Rivulet, River, Stream, Little creek
Boy/Male
British, English
From the Wether-sheep Meadow
Girl/Female
Gujarati, Hindu, Indian
Glow
Female
English
English pet form of Latin Victoria, VICKIE means "conqueror" or "victory."
VITIA
VITIA
VITIA
VITIA
VITIA
v. t.
To cause to fail of effect, either wholly or in part; to make void; to destroy, as the validity or binding force of an instrument or transaction; to annul; as, any undue influence exerted on a jury vitiates their verdict; fraud vitiates a contract.
a.
Corrupting, or tending to corrupt or contaminate; vitiating; demoralizing.
n.
Defective flow or vitiated condition of the milk.
a.
Not vitiated.
v. t.
To imbue; to infect; to vitiate.
n.
A vitiated condition of the body, due to long confinement in a hospital, or the morbid condition of the atmosphere of a hospital.
v. i.
To meddle so as to alter, injure, or vitiate a thing.
a.
Having the fluids of the body vitiated, especially the blood.
v. t.
See Vitiate.
a.
Not vitiated; pure.
v. t.
To cause to decay and perish; to corrput; to vitiate; to mar.
n.
A vitiated appetite that craves what is unfit for food, as chalk, ashes, coal, etc.; chthonophagia.
n.
A vitiated or morbid animal fluid, such as often causes an eruption on the skin.
v. t.
To make vicious, faulty, or imperfect; to render defective; to injure the substance or qualities of; to impair; to contaminate; to spoil; as, exaggeration vitiates a style of writing; sewer gas vitiates the air.
n.
To taint; to corrupt; to vitiate; as, vice poisons happiness; slander poisoned his mind.
n.
A condition of morbid excitability or oversensitiveness of an organ or part of the body; a state in which the application of ordinary stimuli produces pain or excessive or vitiated action.
p. pr. & vb. n.
of Vitiate
imp. & p. p.
of Vitiate
n.
The act of vitiating, or the state of being vitiated; depravation; corruption; invalidation; as, the vitiation of the blood; the vitiation of a contract.
superl.
Free from that which harms, vitiates, weakens, or pollutes; genuine; real; perfect; -- applied to things and actions.