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mitigate

verb

mit·​i·​gate ˈmi-tə-ˌgāt How to pronounce mitigate (audio)
mitigated; mitigating

transitive verb

1
: to cause to become less harsh or hostile : mollify
aggressiveness may be mitigated or … channeled Ashley Montagu
2
a
: to make less severe or painful : alleviate
mitigate a patient's suffering
b
: extenuate
attempted to mitigate the offense
mitigative adjective
mitigator noun
mitigatory adjective
Mitigate vs. Militate: Usage Guide

Mitigate is sometimes used as an intransitive (followed by against) where militate might be expected. Even though Faulkner used it

some intangible and invisible social force that mitigates against him William Faulkner

and one critic thinks it should be called an American idiom, it is usually considered a mistake.

Did you know?

The meaning of mitigate is straightforward enough: it is most often used to talk about making something, such as a problem, symptom, or punishment, less harsh or severe. Sometimes, however, it appears where the similar-looking militate is expected. That word, which is often followed by against, means "to have weight or effect," as in "your unexcused absences might militate against your getting a promotion." The two words are not closely related etymologically (mitigate descends from the Latin verb mitigare, meaning "to soften," whereas militate traces to militare, another Latin verb that means "to engage in warfare"), but the confusion between the two has existed for long enough that some usage commentators have accepted "mitigate against" as an idiomatic alternative to militate. If you want to avoid criticism, you should keep mitigate and militate distinct.

Did you know?

mitigate or militate?

Would it be correct to say, "His boyish appearance mitigated against his getting an early promotion"? Most usage commentators would say "no." They feel such examples demonstrate a long-standing confusion between mitigate and the look-alike militate. Those two words are not closely related etymologically (mitigate descends from the Latin verb mitigare, meaning "to soften," whereas militate traces to militare, another Latin verb that means "to engage in warfare"), nor are they particularly close in meaning (militate means "to have weight or effect"). The confusion between the two has existed for long enough that one commentator thinks "mitigate against" should be accepted as an idiomatic alternative to militate, but if you want to avoid criticism, you should keep mitigate and militate distinct.

Choose the Right Synonym for mitigate

relieve, alleviate, lighten, assuage, mitigate, allay mean to make something less grievous.

relieve implies a lifting of enough of a burden to make it tolerable.

took an aspirin to relieve the pain

alleviate implies temporary or partial lessening of pain or distress.

the lotion alleviated the itching

lighten implies reducing a burdensome or depressing weight.

good news would lighten our worries

assuage implies softening or sweetening what is harsh or disagreeable.

ocean breezes assuaged the intense heat

mitigate suggests a moderating or countering of the effect of something violent or painful.

the need to mitigate barbaric laws

allay implies an effective calming or soothing of fears or alarms.

allayed their fears

Example Sentences

At the far end of the room is a sliding glass door, taped with an X to mitigate shattering. The framing is flimsy, and rattles from mortar rounds even a half mile away. William Langewiesche, Atlantic, May 2005 … a genre novel whose inevitable cinematic ending doesn't mitigate the visceral and emotional power of what has come before. It lingers in the memory like a very bad dream. Joyce Carol Oates, New York Review of Books, 14 Aug. 2003 For 65 holes Norman dominated the classic rolling fairways and small, subtle greens of Olympic … with driving and iron play so solid that it mitigated mediocre putting. Jaime Diaz, Sports Illustrated, 8 Nov. 1993 Emergency funds are being provided to help mitigate the effects of the disaster. medicines used to mitigate a patient's suffering
Recent Examples on the Web Actions elsewhere at the Fed, though, could hobble the world’s ability to respond to and mitigate the climate crisis. Kate Aronoff, The New Republic, 9 Sep. 2022 The records and information Starbucks provided during the investigation did not refute or mitigate the agency's determination that Starbucks illegally fired him, the DCWP added. Aaron Katersky, ABC News, 2 Sep. 2022 This year’s Inflation Reduction Act provided a further boost to water systems, including funds to improve water access in vulnerable communities, prevent storm water runoff and mitigate drought. Brady Dennis And Sarah Kaplan, Anchorage Daily News, 1 Sep. 2022 The bill that passed Tuesday would require social-media companies to study products and features deemed likely to be accessed by minors to assess and mitigate potential harm before releasing them publicly. Christine Mai-duc And Meghan Bobrowsky, WSJ, 30 Aug. 2022 The report called for research into treatment options that could help people mitigate their long Covid symptoms. Aria Bendix, NBC News, 25 Aug. 2022 Without a concerted Ukrainian ground offensive that takes advantage of the chaos behind the front lines, Russian troops could adapt and mitigate future Ukrainian attacks. BostonGlobe.com, 19 Aug. 2022 The other side is to prevent or mitigate AI that does the exact opposite and drags SDGs into a spiraling abyss. Lance Eliot, Forbes, 17 Aug. 2022 No attempts to mitigate or approach the leak have been made so far, fire officials said. Orlando Mayorquin, USA TODAY, 12 Aug. 2022 See More

Word History

Etymology

Middle English, from Latin mitigatus, past participle of mitigare to soften, from mitis soft + -igare (akin to Latin agere to drive); akin to Old Irish moíth soft — more at agent

First Known Use

15th century, in the meaning defined at sense 1

Time Traveler
The first known use of mitigate was in the 15th century

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