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Definition of perpetrate verb from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

perpetrate

verb
 
/ˈpɜːpətreɪt/
 
/ˈpɜːrpətreɪt/
(formal)
Verb Forms
present simple I / you / we / they perpetrate
 
/ˈpɜːpətreɪt/
 
/ˈpɜːrpətreɪt/
he / she / it perpetrates
 
/ˈpɜːpətreɪts/
 
/ˈpɜːrpətreɪts/
past simple perpetrated
 
/ˈpɜːpətreɪtɪd/
 
/ˈpɜːrpətreɪtɪd/
past participle perpetrated
 
/ˈpɜːpətreɪtɪd/
 
/ˈpɜːrpətreɪtɪd/
-ing form perpetrating
 
/ˈpɜːpətreɪtɪŋ/
 
/ˈpɜːrpətreɪtɪŋ/
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  1. to commit a crime or do something wrong or evil
    • perpetrate something to perpetrate a crime/fraud/massacre
    • security breaches perpetrated by people working for the company
    • perpetrate something against/upon/on somebody violence perpetrated against women and children
    Extra Examples
    • They believed that a crime had been perpetrated against them.
    • They were victims of a fraud being perpetrated on companies in search of cash to help them ride the recession.
    • We will not tolerate violence perpetrated against women and children.
    Topics Crime and punishmentc2
    Oxford Collocations DictionaryPerpetrate is used with these nouns as the object:
    • act
    • atrocity
    • crime
    See full entry
    Word Originmid 16th cent.: from Latin perpetrat- ‘performed’, from the verb perpetrare, from per- ‘to completion’ + patrare ‘bring about’. In Latin the act perpetrated might be good or bad; in English the verb was first used in the statutes referring to crime, which led to the negative association.
See perpetrate in the Oxford Advanced American DictionarySee perpetrate in the Oxford Learner's Dictionary of Academic English
trait
noun
 
 
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