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  1. Dictionary
    engender
    /ɪnˈdʒɛndə/

    verb

    • 1. cause or give rise to (a feeling, situation, or condition): "the issue engendered continuing controversy"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. 1. : beget, procreate. 2. : to cause to exist or to develop : produce. policies that have engendered controversy. intransitive verb. : to assume form : originate. Did you know? A good paragraph about engender will engender understanding in the reader.

  3. to make people have a particular feeling or make a situation start to exist: Her latest book has engendered a lot of controversy. The vice-president's speech did not engender confidence in his judgment. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases. Causing things to happen. activation. actuation. agent. attribute something to someone. hyperstimulate

  4. to be produced or caused; come into existence: Conditions for a war were engendering in Europe. engender. / ɪnˈdʒɛndə / verb. tr to bring about or give rise to; produce or cause. to be born or cause to be born; bring or come into being.

  5. to make people have a particular feeling or make a situation start to exist: Her latest book has engendered a lot of controversy. The vice-president's speech did not engender confidence in his judgment. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases. Causing things to happen. activate. activation. actuation. agent. attribute something to someone.

  6. engender. verb. /ɪnˈdʒendə (r)/ /ɪnˈdʒendər/ (formal) Verb Forms. engender something to make a feeling or situation exist. The issue engendered controversy. problems engendered by the restructuring of the company. The place engendered immediate feelings of friendship and belonging. Oxford Collocations Dictionary. Word Origin.

  7. Negative feelings are engendered when patients try to get effective treatment - only to be disappointed. Times, Sunday Times ( 2008 ) It can engender feelings of sympathy or pity , outrage and disgust .

  8. engender meaning, definition, what is engender: to be the cause of a situation or feelin...: Learn more.

  9. Engender is a fancy way of saying "to make happen," like when you engender the spirit of teamwork and cooperation by encouraging others and doing your share of the group's work. The verb engender has nothing to do with being male or female, though originally, it did mean "beget, procreate."

  10. 1. to produce, cause, or give rise to: Hatred engendered violence. 2. to beget; procreate. v.i. 3. to be produced or caused; come into existence. [1275–1325; Middle English < Old French engendrer < Latin ingenerāre = in- en - 1 + generāre to beget]

  11. to make people have a particular feeling or make a situation start to exist: Her latest book has engendered a lot of controversy. The vice-president's speech did not engender confidence in his judgment. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases. Causing things to happen. activation. actuation. agent. attribute something to someone. hyperstimulate