ingeminate


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Related to ingeminate: reiterate, contumaciousness

ingeminate

(ɪnˈdʒɛmɪˌneɪt)
vb
(Literary & Literary Critical Terms) (tr) rare to repeat; reiterate
[C16: from Latin ingemināre to redouble, from in-2 + gemināre to geminate]
inˌgemiˈnation n
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014

ingeminate


Past participle: ingeminated
Gerund: ingeminating

Imperative
ingeminate
ingeminate
Present
I ingeminate
you ingeminate
he/she/it ingeminates
we ingeminate
you ingeminate
they ingeminate
Preterite
I ingeminated
you ingeminated
he/she/it ingeminated
we ingeminated
you ingeminated
they ingeminated
Present Continuous
I am ingeminating
you are ingeminating
he/she/it is ingeminating
we are ingeminating
you are ingeminating
they are ingeminating
Present Perfect
I have ingeminated
you have ingeminated
he/she/it has ingeminated
we have ingeminated
you have ingeminated
they have ingeminated
Past Continuous
I was ingeminating
you were ingeminating
he/she/it was ingeminating
we were ingeminating
you were ingeminating
they were ingeminating
Past Perfect
I had ingeminated
you had ingeminated
he/she/it had ingeminated
we had ingeminated
you had ingeminated
they had ingeminated
Future
I will ingeminate
you will ingeminate
he/she/it will ingeminate
we will ingeminate
you will ingeminate
they will ingeminate
Future Perfect
I will have ingeminated
you will have ingeminated
he/she/it will have ingeminated
we will have ingeminated
you will have ingeminated
they will have ingeminated
Future Continuous
I will be ingeminating
you will be ingeminating
he/she/it will be ingeminating
we will be ingeminating
you will be ingeminating
they will be ingeminating
Present Perfect Continuous
I have been ingeminating
you have been ingeminating
he/she/it has been ingeminating
we have been ingeminating
you have been ingeminating
they have been ingeminating
Future Perfect Continuous
I will have been ingeminating
you will have been ingeminating
he/she/it will have been ingeminating
we will have been ingeminating
you will have been ingeminating
they will have been ingeminating
Past Perfect Continuous
I had been ingeminating
you had been ingeminating
he/she/it had been ingeminating
we had been ingeminating
you had been ingeminating
they had been ingeminating
Conditional
I would ingeminate
you would ingeminate
he/she/it would ingeminate
we would ingeminate
you would ingeminate
they would ingeminate
Past Conditional
I would have ingeminated
you would have ingeminated
he/she/it would have ingeminated
we would have ingeminated
you would have ingeminated
they would have ingeminated
Collins English Verb Tables © HarperCollins Publishers 2011
ThesaurusAntonymsRelated WordsSynonymsLegend:
Verb1.ingeminate - to say, state, or perform again; "She kept reiterating her request"
tell - let something be known; "Tell them that you will be late"
perseverate - psychology: repeat a response after the cessation of the original stimulus; "The subjects in this study perseverated"
ditto - repeat an action or statement; "The next speaker dittoed her argument"
harp, dwell - come back to; "Don't dwell on the past"; "She is always harping on the same old things"
translate, interpret, render - restate (words) from one language into another language; "I have to translate when my in-laws from Austria visit the U.S."; "Can you interpret the speech of the visiting dignitaries?"; "She rendered the French poem into English"; "He translates for the U.N."
paraphrase, rephrase, reword - express the same message in different words
sum up, summarize, summarise, resume - give a summary (of); "he summed up his results"; "I will now summarize"
quote, cite - repeat a passage from; "He quoted the Bible to her"
Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.
References in periodicals archive ?
(Smithson, who cocurated "10," speaks of a "nice interplay of consciousness" between the exhibitions.) Lippard recalls in her monograph on the artist that she had initially conceived of "Eccentric Abstraction" in response to Hesse's "organic" sculptures (Ingeminate, 1965; Several, 1965; and the like) and the apparently comparable practices of Frank Lincoln Viner, Louise Bourgeois, and Bruce Nauman, among others.
In the same way, we ingeminate the gravels, determining [x.sub.2], [[??].sub.2] and then [[??].sub.2] and so on till the value of the motion reaches the limited established value.
"From the entrance into this unnatural war," Clarendon writes, "his natural cheerfulness and vivacity grew clouded and a kind of sadness stole upon him." When it appeared that there was no hope for peace, Falkland fell into despondency, and "sitting among friends, often, after a deep silence and frequent sighs, would, with a shrill and sad account, ingeminate the word Peace, Peace" (59-60).