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machinate
[ mak-uh-neyt ]
verb (used with or without object)
- to contrive or plot, especially artfully or with evil purpose:
to machinate the overthrow of the government.
machinate
/ ˈmæʃ-; ˈmækɪˌneɪt /
verb
- usually tr to contrive, plan, or devise (schemes, plots, etc)
Derived Forms
- ˈmachiˌnator, noun
Other Words From
- machi·nator noun
- un·machi·nated adjective
- un·machi·nating adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of machinate1
Word History and Origins
Origin of machinate1
Example Sentences
“He’s been in power, he’s clung to power, he’s machinated to stay in power for all these years, and he’s an ethno-nationalist,” Levin, a member of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, said of Netanyahu.
But college enrollment had exploded in the ‘60s; there was now a mass audience eager to see itself in Benjamin, the “graduate” who steals his life back from the machinating hypocrites.
But my father, meanwhile, I didn’t know this at the time, was busy machinating on behalf of the United States to keep the oil flowing to the West.
In an email, he wrote, “Social justice warriors machinate to get speakers canceled, and social networks purge conservatives, for the same reason: no-platforming works.”
Ms. Johansson defended herself by arguing that the character “has a human brain in an entirely machinate body,” and said, “I would never attempt to play a person of a different race, obviously.”
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