[n. of action f. STULTIFY v.: see -FICATION.] The action of the vb. STULTIFY, the state of being stultified; an instance of this.

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1832.  Whistle-binkie, Ser. I. (1839), 95. Whilst others contrive with their speeches and songs, To complete her stultification, O.

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1856.  Miss Yonge, Daisy Chain, II. x. ‘But as to the Market Cross, that came down a year before he was born.’ ‘It was the Town Council!’ said Ethel. ‘One of the ordinary stultifications of Town Councils?’

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1901.  ‘Linesman,’ Words by Eyewitness, xi. 225. Result as before, the daily arrival of refugees and a great stultification of the dominant Power.

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