engendered / ɛnˈdʒɛn dər /

产生了形成了产生的生成的

engendered2 个定义

v. 有主动词 verb
  1. to produce, cause, or give rise to: Hatred engenders violence.
  2. to beget; procreate.
v. 无主动词 verb
  1. to be produced or caused; come into existence: Conditions for a war were engendering in Europe.

engendered 近义词

v. 动词 verb

cause to happen; cause an action

更多engendered例句

  1. At the same time, dreaming creates narratives that unfold in our minds across time and allows us to experience the thoughts, sensations, and emotions engendered by those narratives.
  2. Many of our dreams may feel strange and meaningless, but a surprising number of them seem to engender in us a strong sense of their importance.
  3. The first hurdle is engendering confidence in the vaccine development process.
  4. That is what it is about, engendering compromise and moderation.
  5. The initial response by many on Twitter to Facebook’s announcements was decidedly skeptical, reflecting the deep levels of mistrust the company has engendered after years of privacy scandals and a reluctance to police its platforms.
  6. His policies helped engender the rise of an intolerant and severe nationalism that conflates piety with patriotism.
  7. Many of the corporations affected by counterfeiting engender a widespread lack of sympathy and trust in the general public.
  8. King: We must expunge from our society the myths and half-truths that engender such groundless fears as these.
  9. But their point is to show how strong Putin is rather than engender competition.
  10. Moreover, it will engender even greater dissatisfaction among the population.
  11. The air grows heavy and seems to engender invisible beings, who have life and whose presence can be felt.
  12. There are, however, two motives which engender this belief and give form and colour to the ideas and emotions springing from them.
  13. Also, whether the Monsters are endowed with reasonable Souls; and whether the Devils can engender; is here briefly discussed.
  14. He was utterly without that didactic pedantry which yachting has a fatal tendency to engender in men who profess it.
  15. It is the effect of marriage to engender in several directions some of the reserve it annihilates in one.