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germinative
[ jur-muh-ney-tiv, -muh-nuh-tiv ]
Other Words From
- germi·native·ly adverb
- non·germi·native adjective
- re·germi·native adjective
- re·germi·native·ly adverb
- un·germi·native adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of germinative1
Example Sentences
More and more, as that initiating episode of what is sometimes called postmodernism recedes into history, it looks to be one of 20th century art’s finest, most germinative hours.
The wind’s mythologically sexual aspect can be aggressive, relentless and even, in some legends, germinative.
Some of these names, it may be observed, are expressive not only of their primordial character, but also of a germinative or productive power.
Society is the germinative power in the common-place child, who gives out his sparks only under external blows.
The egg of the Star-fish, when first formed, is a transparent, spherical body, enclosing the germinative vesicle and dot.
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