Antonyms for engender
Grammar : Verb |
Spell : en-jen-der |
Phonetic Transcription : ɛnˈdʒɛn dər |
Definition of engender
Origin :- early 14c., "beget, procreate," from Old French engendrer (12c.) "engender, beget, bear; cause, bring about," from Latin ingenerare "to implant, engender, produce," from in- "in" (see in- (2)) + generare "beget, create" (see generation). Meaning "cause, produce" is mid-14c. Related: Engendered; engendering.
- verb cause to happen; cause an action
- Youth demands its share in every study that can engender a power or a delight.
- Extract from : « College Teaching » by Paul Klapper
- Man is made for society and not for solitude, and solitude can only engender despair.
- Extract from : « In Search of the Castaways » by Jules Verne
- As I told Weener, if you create a capacity, you engender an appetite.
- Extract from : « Greener Than You Think » by Ward Moore
- It usually applies to a strong current, apt to engender a sort of vortex.
- Extract from : « The Sailor's Word-Book » by William Henry Smyth
- It was impossible that the place should not engender some thought of the kind.
- Extract from : « A Struggle For Life » by Thomas Bailey Aldrich
- Is not faith, blind faith, preferable to endowments which engender doubt?
- Extract from : « The Weird Orient » by Henry Iliowizi
- Our disgust with society does not engender convictions in us.
- Extract from : « Paris and the Social Revolution » by Alvan Francis Sanborn
- All are more or less calculated to engender disease and filth.
- Extract from : « The Sanitary Evolution of London » by Henry Lorenzo Jephson
- I have noticed that they engender feelings of bitterness and seldom do good.
- Extract from : « Memoirs of John R. Young » by John Young
- Most men are led away by the indulgence of their appetites, which engender sin.
- Extract from : « The Rights of War and Peace » by Hugo Grotius
Synonyms for engender
Based on : Thesaurus.com - Gutenberg.org - Dictionary.com - Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2019