Antonyms for origination
Grammar : Noun |
Spell : uh-rij-uh-neyt |
Phonetic Transcription : əˈrɪdʒ əˌneɪt |
Definition of origination
Origin :- 1640s, from Middle French origination (15c.), from Latin originationem (nominative originatio), from originem (see original (adj.)).
- noun origin
- The power of origination is open to anyone, and we can either affirm the power or deny it.
- Extract from : « Herein is Love » by Reuel L. Howe
- I cannot separate the origination of ideas from the reception of ideas.
- Extract from : « The Private Library » by Arthur L. Humphreys
- Of origination there is no speck in his reflections or spark in his style.
- Extract from : « Senatorial Character » by C. A. Bartol
- But what conception are we to form of the nature and mode of this Origination?
- Extract from : « The Theistic Conception of the World » by B. F. (Benjamin Franklin) Cocker
- To ascribe the origination of order to law is a manifest evasion of the real problem.
- Extract from : « Theism » by Robert Flint
- The advantages of this method of origination are quite evident.
- Extract from : « Modern Machine-Shop Practice, Volumes I and II » by Joshua Rose
- The origination of electric waves in a circuit by a sounding magnet.
- Extract from : « The Telephone » by A. E. Dolbear
- In both cases the difference of the novella is in the motive, or the origination.
- Extract from : « Literature and Life » by William Dean Howells
- This is an example, not of reasoning only, but of origination.
- Extract from : « Atlantic Classics, Second Series » by Henry C. Merwin
- Some power of origination animals, and dogs especially, certainly have.
- Extract from : « Atlantic Classics, Second Series » by Henry C. Merwin
Synonyms for origination
Based on : Thesaurus.com - Gutenberg.org - Dictionary.com - Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2019