different between cultivate vs forster
cultivate
English
Etymology
From Medieval Latin cultiv?tus, perfect passive participle of cultiv? (“till, cultivate”), from cult?vus (“tilled”), from Latin cultus, perfect passive participle of col? (“till, cultivate”), which comes from earlier *quel?, from Proto-Indo-European *k?el- (“to move; to turn (around)”). Cognates include Ancient Greek ???? (pél?) and Sanskrit ???? (cárati). The same Proto-Indo-European root also gave Latin in-quil-?nus (“inhabitant”) and anculus (“servant”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?k?lt?ve?t/
- Hyphenation: cul?ti?vate
Verb
cultivate (third-person singular simple present cultivates, present participle cultivating, simple past and past participle cultivated)
- To grow plants, notably crops.
- (figuratively) To nurture; to foster; to tend.
- To turn or stir soil in preparation for planting.
Derived terms
Translations
Interlingua
Participle
cultivate
- past participle of cultivar
cultivate From the web:
- what cultivated means
- what cultivates a positive outlook
- what cultivates resilience
- what's cultivated land
- what's cultivated plant
- what cultivated forest
- what's cultivated rice
- what cultivated area
forster
Middle English
Noun
forster
- forester
- (Can we find and add a quotation of Chaucer to this entry?)
forster From the web:
- forster what to do
- forster what i believe
- forster what i believe pdf
- forster what to eat
- forster what does it mean
- foster care
- what is forster resonance energy transfer
- what's on forster tuncurry
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- cultivate vs forster
- forster vs stimulate
- forster vs fooster
- firster vs forster
- looting vs robbing
- robbing vs burglary
- steal vs robbing
- robbing vs pillaging
- robbing vs pillage
- fobbing vs robbing
- bobbing vs robbing
- robbing vs cobbing
- pillaring vs pillaging
- currents vs pillaring
- convection vs pillaring
- munitions vs pillaring
- heat vs pillaring
- smoke vs pillaring
- conquering vs looting
- stealing vs looting