Definitions
American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition
- v. To bring into being; give rise to: generate a discussion.
- v. To produce as a result of a chemical or physical process: generate heat.
- v. To engender (offspring); procreate.
- v. Mathematics To form (a geometric figure) by describing a curve or surface.
- v. Computer Science To produce (a program) by instructing a computer to follow given parameters with a skeleton program.
- v. Linguistics To construct (a sentence, for example), as in generative grammar.
Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia
- To beget; procreate; engender by sexual union.
- To produce; cause to be; bring into life.
- To cause; form; give origin to.
- In mathematics, to give rise to, as to a geometrical figure; especially, to move so that the locus of the motion shall constitute (the figure specified): thus, a right line moving with one point fixed generates a conical surface.
- To produce; evolve; as electricity, force, friction, gas, heat, light, velocity, etc.
- In music, of a tone fundamental to a chord, to suggest or fix (the remaining tones of the harmony).
Wiktionary
- v. transitive To bring into being; give rise to.
- v. transitive To produce as a result of a chemical or physical process.
- v. transitive To procreate, beget.
- v. transitive, mathematics To form a figure from a curve or solid.
- v. intransitive To appear or occur; be generated.
GNU Webster's 1913
- v. To beget; to procreate; to propagate; to produce (a being similar to the parent); to engender.
- v. To cause to be; to bring into life.
- v. To originate, especially by a vital or chemical process; to produce; to cause.
- v. (Math.) To trace out, as a line, figure, or solid, by the motion of a point or a magnitude of inferior order.
WordNet 3.0
- v. give or supply
- v. make children
- v. produce (energy)
- v. bring into existence
Etymologies
- From Latin generātus, perfect passive participle of generō ("beget, procreate, produce"), from genus ("a kind, race, family"); see genus. (Wiktionary)
- Latin generāre, generāt-, to produce, from genus, gener-, birth; see genə- in Indo-European roots. (American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition)
Examples
“Only a grammar containing both phrase structure and transformation rules, Chomsky argued, could generate a natural language ” ˜generate™ in the sense that by stepwise application of the rules, one could in principle build up from scratch all and only the sentences that the language contains.”
“And did the title generate the story theme or did the story idea bring that particular title to mind?”
“She has no brain of her own, so her ideas must generate from the GOP itself.”
Palin warns of 'Second Holocaust' if Iran gains nuclear weapons
“The vaccine did not work well enough – Some people get the vaccine, but the immune response their bodies generate is not strong enough or long-lived enough to protect them from infection.”
“She added that the current space is too small for the amount of production Chrysler now intends to generate from the plant.”
The Wall Street Journal: Chrysler to Invest $600 Million in Illinois Plant
“In the end, facing an economy that may never again generate in such quantity the sorts of "middle class" jobs Rembold was used to, what we may be seeing is the creation of a graying class of permanently unemployed (or underemployed) Americans, a genuine lost generation who will never recover from the recession of 2008.”
The Huffington Post: Andy Kroll: Unemployed: Stranded on the Sidelines of a Jobs Crisis
“It's sad that the only attention you find you can still generate is over non-political tabloid issues.”
“No, seriously, let me trundle on over to the random number generator ... and the number generate is 6.”
“The dialplan is in XML, so it is easy to generate from a database with standard web tools.”
The importance of being available – (tech stuff) « Baby is 60 – Tim Panton on voice and computers
“Too often lost in both the pervasiveness of religion and the commotion it can generate is the key question of its purpose.”
A Progressive on the Prairie » Book Review: God’s Brain by Lionel Tiger and Michael McGuire » Print
Lists
These user-created lists contain the word ‘generate’.
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GRE Barrons Wordlist
A complete Barron's Wordlist for GRE preparation. Your online flashcard replacement.
abase, abash, abate, abbreviate, abdicate, aberrant, aberration, abet, abeyance, abhor, abject, abjure and 4087 more...
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EN - academic vocabulary
Use these and get promoted
abandon, abandonment, abnormally, abstract, abstraction, abstractly, abstracts, academia, academic, academically, academics, academies and 3119 more...
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IMCO - EU nomenclature
includes words of the "Prodcom list"
veal, valve, used, yak, wax, wan, teak, vat, vas, strip, use, strap and 4515 more...
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INTERP - terminology management terms
Terms from the fields of terminology, lexicography, lexicology and corpus linguistics
reworder, rewording, parser, parsing, tagger, tagging, aligner, aligning, content analysis, content analyzer, corpus management, glossary and 546 more...
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TECH - web application frameworks
limit, pack, automatic, HTTP, database, poi, event, coverage, core, hibernate, function, product and 310 more...
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webdev
random webdev lingo used primarily in computer programming.
( open list, randomness, technical jargon, geek speak )
more:
ajax, user, admin, frontend, backend, database, sql, protocol, call, dom, layout, ui and 439 more... -
EU Buzz - single words (1+2+3)
1. Strictly EU terms with special European meaning used only in the EU
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2. Keywords central to the understanding of the EU (people working for the EU are usually able to give thematic...acceleration, action, additionality, administrator, agenda, agricultural, agri-environmental, agriflation, agri-food, applicant, approach, assent and 1325 more...
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big book gre
abase, abbess, abbey, abbot, abdicate, abdomen, abdominal, abduction, abed, aberration, abet, abeyance and 6689 more...
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Basic English Vocabulary
Very basic words for ESL students.
a, abandon, ability, able, abortion, about, above, abroad, absence, absolute, absolutely, absorb and 4334 more...
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my list
executive, oxide, slang, paddy, calamity, pledge, carved, deliberate, vastly, tolerate, simultaneous, ornamental and 114 more...
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my dictionary
able, abnormally, abroad, absent, abstract, acceptable, acceptance, access, accessible, accession, according to, account and 4551 more...
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Learned words
Words which are highly likely to be found in the work of learned writers.
ailurophile, labyrinthine, lagniappe, colleague, anechoic, reglets, fluctuations, scalar, implicit, constitute, mortification, ambassadors and 629 more...
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ash
ash
abash, abate, abbreviate, abdicate, aberrant, aberration, abet, abeyance, abhor, abide, abject, abjure and 4874 more...
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b, e, d, g, p and t
decidedly, drench, defeat, delirium, deviant, distance, dimension, dust, dope, dissolve, dissipate, distortion and 63 more...
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List 9
Derivatives from Chapter 9 of Part One of English Words from Latin and Greek Elements
collateral, senile, unilateral, generate, luminary, turbulent, aquatic, corpulent, precarious, invoke, gregarious, deflate and 9 more...
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Effect (verb)
Words related to effect (verb).
effect, effectuate, actualize, realize, accomplish, execute, produce, engender, generate, originate
Tweets
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