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Generate   /dʒˈɛnərˌeɪt/   Listen
Generate

verb
(past & past part. generated; pres. part. generating)
1.
Bring into existence.  Synonym: bring forth.  "The computer bug generated chaos in the office" , "The computer generated this image" , "The earthquake generated a tsunami"
2.
Give or supply.  Synonyms: give, render, return, yield.  "This year's crop yielded 1,000 bushels of corn" , "The estate renders some revenue for the family"
3.
Produce (energy).  "The hydroelectric plant needs to generate more electricity"
4.
Make children.  Synonyms: beget, bring forth, engender, father, get, mother, sire.  "Men often father children but don't recognize them"






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Generate" Quotes from Famous Books



... will be very ill accounted for, is, how came seeds of crime to rise in the Angelic Nature? created in a state of perfect, unspotted holiness? how was it first found in a place where no unclean thing can enter? how came ambition, pride, or envy to generate there? could there be offence where there was no crime? could untainted purity breed corruption? could that nature contaminate and infect, which was always Drinking in ...
— The History of the Devil - As Well Ancient as Modern: In Two Parts • Daniel Defoe

... demonstration here. Every lunatic asylum furnishes numerous illustrations of the fact. "Authors are universally agreed, from Galen down to the present day, about the pernicious influence of this enervating indulgence, and its strong propensity to generate the very worst and most formidable kinds of insanity. It has frequently been known to occasion speedy, ...
— Plain Facts for Old and Young • John Harvey Kellogg

... amusing as Scott's or Byron's, but because I am struck by the excessive pleasure which Scott appeared to derive from writing his journal, and I am (and this is the principal cause) struck with the important use to which the habit may be turned. The habit of recording is first of all likely to generate a desire to have something of some interest to record; it will lead to habits of reflexion and to trains of thought, the pursuit of which may be pleasing and profitable; it will exercise the memory and sharpen the understanding generally; and though the thoughts may not be very profound, nor the ...
— The Greville Memoirs (Second Part) - A Journal of the Reign of Queen Victoria from 1837 to 1852 - (Volume 1 of 3) • Charles C. F. Greville

... favorable to a violent explosion. Sectional differences of a political and industrial complexion, forty years had sufficed to develop. Sectional differences of a moral and social character forty years had also sufficed to generate. To kindle all those differences, all that mass of combustible feelings and forces into a general conflagration a spark only was wanted. And out of the glowing humanity of one man the ...
— William Lloyd Garrison - The Abolitionist • Archibald H. Grimke

... stone in great plenty; but the cheapness of a frame, or wooden building, is a great inducement for the continuance of this dangerous practice: but there is one still greater, viz. a strange idea, universal in America, that wooden houses are more healthy, and less liable to generate or retain contagious infection than those of brick or stone. This notion has been ably controverted by one of their best writers[Footnote: Jefferson, vicepresident of the United States.], but with little effect; and, like all other deep-rooted ...
— Travels in the United States of America • William Priest


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