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The word "ameliorative" is correct and usable in written English
It is an adjective used to describe a change or action which makes something better. Example sentence: The manager's ameliorative measures for the company have been very successful.
Dictionary
ameliorative
adjective
Able to repair or ameliorate.
Exact(54)
When one breaks—as happened on board the Deepwater Horizon rig in the Gulf of Mexico a year ago (see article), or at the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant in Japan last month there is no ameliorative technology on a par with that which has failed.
And he believed passionately in the ameliorative effects of integration.His faith in both integration and legal change was sorely tested during his long tenure on the Supreme Court.
Furthermore, he believed that the purpose of the new scientific analysis of society should be ameliorative and that the ultimate outcome of all innovation and systematization in the new science should be the guidance of social planning.
City, state, and federal agencies administer a full range of ameliorative social-service programs.
Experiences of economic discord and social unrest produced the ameliorative social philosophy of English utilitarianism and the revolutionary doctrines of Karl Marx (1818 83).
Woodrow Wilson castigated the "white race" as "the aggressor" in both the Chicago and Washington riots, and efforts were launched to promote racial harmony through voluntary organizations and ameliorative legislation in Congress.
The less saline waters coming from the Black Sea have a distinct ameliorative influence, but the role of their fertility in the Mediterranean in general has been little studied.
In the Senate he opposed the dominant conservative tendencies of the Republican Party, supporting ameliorative farm legislation and, in the 1930s, New Deal measures to relieve unemployment.
Similar(3)
The New Yorker, August 24 , 1963P. 16 Ameliorative Intelligence: "Noise Control," the magazine of the Acoustical Society of America, has changed its name to "Sound".
By Abraham I. Streit and Burton Bernstein The New Yorker, August 24 , 1963P. 16 Ameliorative Intelligence: "Noise Control," the magazine of the Acoustical Society of America, has changed its name to "Sound".
Haslanger has subsequently altered her terminology and nowadays terms her analysis 'ameliorative'ameliorative
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CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com