effectuated

Implemented; caused to occur.

Adjective

  1. Implemented; caused to occur.
    • I do not question that, for I am frank to confess that no law, after all that is said, can be more effectuated than by the strength of public sentiment behind it. - 1958, Debates and Proceedings of the Constitutional...
    • But nihilism properly stated, as developed by Nietzsche in the last period of his work, owes nothing to Schopenhauer— except as a symptomatic example of one of the most effectuated types of nihilism. - 2016, Peter Pál...
    • In the opposite case, if differentiated integration is actually much more effectuated in practice than in the past, it could also unlock the status quo and grow into a scenario belonging to the reformist vision of the...

Forms

more effectuated most effectuated

Derived

uneffectuated

Verb

  1. simple past and past participle of effectuate