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germinate
[ jur-muh-neyt ]
verb (used without object)
- to begin to grow or develop.
- Botany.
- to develop into a plant or individual, as a seed, spore, or bulb.
- to put forth shoots; sprout; pullulate.
- to come into existence; begin.
verb (used with object)
- to cause to develop; produce.
- to cause to come into existence; create.
germinate
/ ˈdʒɜːmɪˌneɪt /
verb
- to cause (seeds or spores) to sprout or (of seeds or spores) to sprout or form new tissue following increased metabolism
- to grow or cause to grow; develop
- to come or bring into existence; originate
the idea germinated with me
Derived Forms
- ˈgerminable, adjective
- ˌgermiˈnation, noun
- ˈgermiˌnator, noun
Other Words From
- ger·mi·na·ble [jur, -m, uh, -n, uh, -b, uh, l], adjective
- germi·nation noun
- germi·nator noun
- non·germi·nating adjective
- nonger·mi·nation noun
- re·germi·nate verb regerminated regerminating
- reger·mi·nation noun
- un·germi·nated adjective
- un·germi·nating adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of germinate1
Word History and Origins
Origin of germinate1
Example Sentences
Texas may be a testing ground, but it is in Silicon Valley that ideas germinate and incubate.
But without a reasonable expectation that security will materialize, better governance will not germinate.
That sent to Sind, though said to have been carefully sown, also failed to germinate.
More thinking, and a greater experience of life, may cause him to germinate agreeably in a few years.
Does anyone know for sure how to get pawpaw seed to germinate?
This is a seed of such force and vitality, that it does not ask our leave to germinate.
The spores of a heartwood-inhabiting fungus cannot germinate and thrive unless they fall upon the heartwood of the tree.
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