1. blighting - Noun
2. blighting - Adjective
3. blighting - Verb
of Blight
Causing blight.
Source: Webster's dictionaryAnd Dame Esther Rantzen, who presented the BBC series That's Life! for 21 years, joined in. She believes that by working together, we can put an end to the sight of litter blighting our natural world. Source: Internet
• Aid in the prevention or elimination of slums and blighting conditions. Source: Internet
Derbyshire County Council is investing extra cash and using more roadworkers to tackle the pothole problem that’s blighting our roads. Source: Internet
Equally, the Buddhist angle in Sri Lanka and the terrible trauma blighting Buddhists in Southern Thailand means that Western and Islamic media agencies are out of touch with events on the ground. Source: Internet
Brewer Xavier Vanneste had an idea: pumping beer from his Bruges brewery to a bottling plant outside of town in a pipeline instead of having hundreds of transportation trucks blighting the cobblestoned streets of the UNESCO-protected medieval city. Source: Internet
Gove calls for tougher measures against 'inexcusable' fly-tippingThe Surrey Heath MP said illegal waste dumps and fly-tipping are 'blighting local communities' Source: Internet