different between engender vs impregnate

engender

English

Alternative forms

  • engendre [14th–16th c.], ingender [15th–17th c.]

Pronunciation

  • (UK) IPA(key): /?n?d??n.d?/, /?n?d??n.d?/
  • (US) IPA(key): /?n?d??n.d?/, /?n?d??n.d?/
  • Rhymes: -?nd?(?)

Etymology 1

From Middle French engendrer, from Latin ingener?re, from in- + gener?re (to generate).

Verb

engender (third-person singular simple present engenders, present participle engendering, simple past and past participle engendered)

  1. (obsolete, transitive) To beget (of a man); to bear or conceive (of a woman). [14th–19th c.]
  2. (transitive) To give existence to, to produce (living creatures). [from 14th c.]
    • 1891, Henry James, "James Russell Lowell", Essays in London and Elsewhere, p.60:
      Like all interesting literary figures, he is full of tacit as well as of uttered reference to the conditions that engendered him [].
  3. (transitive) To bring into existence (a situation, quality, result etc.); to give rise to, cause, create. [from 14th c.]
    • 1928, "New Plays in Manhattan", Time, 8 Oct.:
      Richard Rodgers and Lorenz Hart managed to engender "Better Be Good to Me" and "I Must Love You," but they were neither lyrically nor musically up to standards of their Garrick Gaieties or A Connecticut Yankee.
    • 2009, Jonathan Glancey, "The art of industry", The Guardian, 21 Dec.:
      Manufacturing is not simply about brute or emergency economics. It's also about a sense of involvement and achievement engendered by shaping and crafting useful, interesting, well-designed things.
  4. (intransitive) To assume form; to come into existence; to be caused or produced.
  5. (obsolete, intransitive) To copulate, to have sex. [15th–19th c.]
Synonyms
  • (to bring into existence): beget, conjure, create, produce, make, craft, manufacture, invent, assemble, generate
  • (to copulate): do it, get it on, have sex; see also Thesaurus:copulate
Translations

Etymology 2

From en- +? gender.

Verb

engender (third-person singular simple present engenders, present participle engendering, simple past and past participle engendered)

  1. (critical theory) To endow with gender; to create gender or enhance the importance of gender. [from 20th c.]

Anagrams

  • engendre, regenned

engender From the web:

  • engender meaning
  • what engenders football enthusiasm
  • what engenders amour propre
  • engender what does that mean
  • what is engendering trust
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  • what is engender competence
  • what slavery engendered


impregnate

English

Etymology

Earlier impregn, from Middle French imprégner, from Old French enpreignier.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?m?p???ne?t/

Verb

impregnate (third-person singular simple present impregnates, present participle impregnating, simple past and past participle impregnated)

  1. (transitive) To cause to become pregnant.
    Synonyms: knock up, inseminate, cover (of animals)
  2. (transitive) To fertilize.
  3. (transitive) To saturate, or infuse.
  4. (transitive) To fill pores or spaces with a substance.
    • 1937, Hugh Bertie Campbell Pollard, The mystery of scent (page 121)
      It takes a little time for the personal fatty acids to impregnate new shoes or boots, but from the scent point of view leather is a sponge, and the personal scent is left.
  5. (intransitive, dated) To become pregnant.
    (Can we find and add a quotation of Addison to this entry?)

Translations

See also

  • conceive
  • sire
  • father

Anagrams

  • permeating, rimegepant

Italian

Verb

impregnate

  1. second-person plural present of impregnare
  2. second-person plural imperative of impregnare
  3. feminine plural of the past participle of impregnare

Anagrams

  • pigmentare, pigmenterà, pigramente

impregnate From the web:

  • what impregnated means
  • what's impregnated wood
  • impregnate what does it mean
  • what animal impregnates itself
  • what is impregnated paper
  • what is impregnated gauze
  • what is impregnated turquoise
  • what is impregnated carbon
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