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invent
[ in-vent ]
verb (used with object)
- to originate or create as a product of one's own ingenuity, experimentation, or contrivance:
to invent the telegraph.
- to produce or create with the imagination:
to invent a story.
- to make up or fabricate (something fictitious or false):
to invent excuses.
Synonyms: concoct
- Archaic. to come upon; find.
invent
/ ɪnˈvɛnt /
verb
- to create or devise (new ideas, machines, etc)
- to make up (falsehoods); fabricate
Derived Forms
- inˈventible, adjective
Other Words From
- in·venti·ble in·venta·ble adjective
- outin·vent verb (used with object)
- prein·vent verb (used with object)
- self-in·vented adjective
- unin·vented adjective
- well-in·vented adjective
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of invent1
Synonym Study
Example Sentences
“It was a simple idea of, ‘What if Wallace invents a smart gnome, a robot gnome, to help Gromit in the garden, and things inevitably go wrong?’
One such technology was invented at Penn State and is currently garnering support from the agricultural technology sector to address the problem at scale.
My third-grade teacher tried a few strategies, including sending me on errands invented just to get me out of the classroom.
Secondly, throw into the mix a political rule first invented by The Economist magazine: “Never pick a fight with a profession that appears in a children’s book.”
The behavior spread so far so quickly that scientists considered it unlikely that individual birds across a continent were inventing this trick on their own.
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