Originate
31originate — v 1. emanate, emerge, issue, come; rise, arise, spring, flow; root, stem, grow, sprout, bud, break out, shoot, burst forth; derive, descend, follow, result, be based or grounded on. 2. begin, start, commence, initiate, inaugurate; conceive,… …
32originate — orig·i·nate …
33originate — verb 1) the disease originates from Africa Syn: arise, have its origin, begin, start, stem, spring, emerge, emanate 2) Bill originated the idea Syn: invent, create, devise …
34originate — [əˈrɪdʒəˌneɪt] verb 1) [I] to begin to exist or appear for the first time 2) [T] to create or start something …
35originate — o•rig•i•nate [[t]əˈrɪdʒ əˌneɪt[/t]] v. nat•ed, nat•ing 1) to take or have origin; arise 2) (of a public conveyance) to begin a scheduled run at a specified place 3) to give origin or rise to; initiate • Etymology: 1645–55 o•rig i•na′tion, n.… …
36originate — [c]/əˈrɪdʒəneɪt / (say uh rijuhnayt) verb (originated, originating) –verb (i) 1. to take its origin or rise; arise; spring. –verb (t) 2. to give origin or rise to; initiate; invent. {probably backformation from earlier origination, from obsolete… …
37originate — See begin …
38originate — To give an origin or beginning to; to bring into existence; to take first existence; to have origin or beginning; to begin or exist or act. Dunbar v Spratt Snyder Co. 208 Iowa 226 NW 22, 63 ALR 1016 …
39originate — v. 1 tr. cause to begin; initiate. 2 intr. (usu. foll. by from, in, with) have as an origin; begin. Derivatives: origination n. originative adj. originator n. Etymology: med. L originare (as ORIGIN) …
40originate in — verb come from (Freq. 7) • Hyponyms: ↑stem • Verb Frames: Something s somebody Something s something …