corrupt
— Verb
– English
~ place under suspicion or cast doubt upon; "sully someone's reputation"
corrupt
— Verb
– English
~ alter from the original
corrupt
— Verb
– English
~ corrupt morally or by intemperance or sensuality; "debauch the young people with wine and women"; "Socrates was accused of corrupting young men"; "Do school counselors subvert young children?"; "corrupt the morals"
corrupt
— Verb
– English
~ make illegal payments to in exchange for favors or influence; "This judge can be bought"
corrupt
— Adjective
– English
~ lacking in integrity; "humanity they knew to be corrupt...from the day of Adam's creation"; "a corrupt and incompetent city government"
corrupt
— Adjective
– English
~ touched by rot or decay; "tainted bacon"; "`corrupt' is archaic"
corrupt
— Adjective
– English
~ containing errors or alterations; "a corrupt text"; "spoke a corrupted version of the language"
corrupt
— Adjective
– English
~ not straight; dishonest or immoral or evasive
corrupted
— Adjective
– English
~ containing errors or alterations; "a corrupt text"; "spoke a corrupted version of the language"
corrupted
— Adjective
– English
~ ruined in character or quality
corruptedly
— Adverb
– English
~ in a corrupt manner
corruptibility
— Noun
– English
~ the capability of being corrupted
corruptible
— Adjective
– English
~ capable of being corrupted; "corruptible judges"; "dishonest politicians"; "a purchasable senator"; "a venal police officer"
corrupting
— Adjective
– English
~ harmful to the mind or morals; "corrupt judges and their corrupting influence"; "the vicious and degrading cult of violence"
corrupting
— Adjective
– English
~ seducing into corrupt practices
corrupting
— Adjective
– English
~ that infects or taints
corruption
— Noun
– English
~ destroying someone's (or some group's) honesty or loyalty; undermining moral integrity; "corruption of a minor"; "the big city's subversion of rural innocence"
corruption
— Noun
– English
~ moral perversion; impairment of virtue and moral principles; "the luxury and corruption among the upper classes"; "moral degeneracy followed intellectual degeneration"; "its brothels, its opium parlors, its depravity"; "Rome had fallen into moral putrefaction"
corruption
— Noun
– English
~ in a state of progressive putrefaction
corruption
— Noun
– English
~ decay of matter (as by rot or oxidation)