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"germinate" Definitions
  1. germinate (something) when the seed of a plant germinates or is germinated, it starts to grow

109 Sentences With "germinate"

How to use germinate in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "germinate" and check conjugation/comparative form for "germinate". Mastering all the usages of "germinate" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Seeds detect temperatures to see when it's appropriate to germinate.
Seeds of G.M.O.s can germinate and grow; they are not sterile.
Is such destruction what the Infinite Resistance™ ointment will germinate?
These seeds do not germinate for several months after they've been planted.
Use your bean — do a little brainstorming, to germinate some good IDEAS today.
Yet they also provide the soil in which the seeds of terror germinate.
In Massachusetts, for example, controlled burns help seeds from wild blue lupine germinate.
And with each transformation, a new species of human-designed plant will germinate.
Blazes clear out underbrush, restore nutrients to the soil, and help some plants germinate.
Within just a few days, the farm will see its seeds begin to germinate...
They clear out decaying brush, restore nutrients to soil, and even help plants germinate.
The trees germinate in late winter because they need a freeze, preferably with snow.
Ideas need time to germinate and grow at the start of an innovative enterprise.
The experience planted in his mind the seed that was later to germinate into 1984.
In Australia, fires that are too hot actually allows the flammable undergrowth to germinate more.
Botulism can also occur when spores germinate in wounds, particularly needle puncture sites on drug users.
The festival has budded in Taiwan, Long Beach, and Austin, will germinate Japan later this year.
Two seeds are "planted" within each pillow, to ensure at least one of them will germinate.
Capitalism won't germinate that kind of pure morality on its own, but we can choose it.
The trees are in touch, the white smoke from the grasses, feeding the trees to germinate.
"  "If certain crops germinate/flower prematurely & a freeze follows, crops could fail or drop in yield.
If certain crops germinate/flower prematurely & a freeze follows, crops could fail or drop in yield.
Still other plants, like acacia, have seeds that germinate only after exposure to fire or smoke.
They provide a vital service to forests and grasslands, clearing out decaying brush and helping plants germinate.
It's thought that their seedlings, and those of similar plants, require bare, nutrient-dense soil to germinate.
"If it had some moisture, it can germinate." said Zhangjun Fei, a plant geneticist at Cornell University.
And as in Australia, some native species that produce seeds must be exposed to fire to germinate.
The corn continues to germinate when it's placed atop a layer of peppercorn, folded between two Andean textiles.
And the rewards from the seeds that we're planting are going to germinate later than most other companies.
Fewer than 1% of those seeds were so badly damaged as to suggest that they would not germinate.
For example, some seeds from South Africa need to be exposed to chemicals present in smoke to germinate.
Mr Obama may well have planted a seed that will germinate after Mr Castro steps down in 2018.
That means their seeds are likely to do best if they germinate near the plant that bore them.
That's how farmers plant new potatoes—by cutting up old ones and letting those eyes germinate into new plants.
Once the spores enter the body, they germinate and multiply, causing a flu-like illness that poisons the blood.
Once that seed is discovered, it needs time and space to germinate, often in the shadowy corners of our mind.
A superbloom is a rare botanical phenomenon in which an unusually high proportion of desert wildflowers germinate and blossom simultaneously.
These seeds should be engineered such that they will not germinate until after being in the ground for several months.
In order to make whisky, you first soak barley in water, then transfer it to a malting floor to germinate.
Still, let's assume those days planted the seeds of friendship that would germinate at this moment, when both are coincidentally single.
In architecture, where buildings germinate slowly and early commissions tend to be small, Ms. Johnston and Mr. Lee are still young.
One Amazon description for "rainbow rose seeds" says, conveniently, that it "generally" takes more than 40 days for the seeds to germinate.
This approach is also cheap—trees can be regenerated from existing root systems or from tree seeds that germinate in livestock manure.
Well, to make a plant germinate, you need to make things happen in the right order and with a kind of consistency.
What he learned heavily influenced the Galaxy S233 and, instead of making him more cautious, helped germinate a new approach that asked.
He cuts it, fertilizes it, plows it with his brush, plants objects like a seed so that they might germinate and grow.
Less rainfall prevents seeds from germinating naturally, she explains, and when they do germinate, the young trees struggle to survive without water.
The fabric is a thin white fleece that holds the seeds as they germinate, then keeps the plants upright as they mature.
The lander also has a 6.6-pound (3-kilogram) canister that contains six different biological species that are intended to germinate and grow.
If not for snake intervention, many of the seeds would be destroyed, but they seemed to germinate just fine once they entered rattlesnakes' colons.
The maize seeds he had used in his little 28.6-hectare farm in Chilanga, on the outskirts of the capital, Lusaka, failed to germinate.
The secret sauce has been connecting top-flight investors and influencers with these upstarts who often germinate their breakthrough ideas in their dorm rooms.
Normally, farmers tend to wrap winter sowing in early November so that the crop has time to germinate before winter forces it into dormancy.
The story began to germinate on March 6, when the Pittsburg Community Schools announced it had hired Amy Robertson as the high school principal.
Instead of weeding, it's easier to use chemicals to keep seeds from germinating, and to kill the ones that germinate anyway with more chemicals still.
Even though most of the "planting" was already done by AeroGarden, watching your seeds germinate and grow is rewarding, and the fresh results are delicious.
The lander will also conduct a biology experiment to see if plant seeds will germinate and silkworm eggs will hatch in the moon's low gravity.
These biophore-carrying space capsules could be dispersed to nearby star systems where they might germinate life on new worlds like spacefaring versions of plant seeds.
The choice to germinate the seeds has to be that of the individual who purchased the kit; essentially, germinating it is an act of political protest.
One of the pods also didn't germinate and instead grew weird white mold, which we later found out was actually normal, but had already thrown out.
Made of clay or other absorbent material, these bombs are more like cocoons, protecting and hydrating their contents until the seeds can germinate and break free.
Mackk didn't live long enough to see his music fully germinate, so it's Rucci who's responsible for ensuring their places in Los Angeles' emerging rap order.
All we can say with some degree of certainty is that the next crash will probably germinate in a different corner of the financial ecosystem before spreading.
Farmers usually finish sowing wheat by mid-November, and under normal circumstances two rainy spells in November and December drench the fields, allowing the seeds to germinate.
Farmers usually finish sowing wheat by mid-November and, under normal circumstances, two rainy spells in November and December drench the fields, allowing the seeds to germinate.
Additional Emirati experiments include one studying oil emulsification in a weightless environment, as well as a second to germinate a palm date seed native to the country.
They and others have done far more than emblazon their names on buildings: they have fostered an atmosphere in which new work can germinate and thrive. ♦
The results yesterday in Britain were a sobering lesson in the consequences of destroying age-old party alliances before new ones had time to germinate, analysts said.
ICOs could stall if too many dollars are required to buy an ether or if too many of these business-plan companies fail to germinate,"" Yardeni said.
Mr. O'Reilly said the project began to germinate when he was teaching his daughter, Anna, now 14, how to tie her shoelaces when she was about five.
"This season's rains are again late and inadequate, with planted seeds having failed to germinate in many areas," the World Food Programme (WFP) said in a statement.
In exchange, the ants drop seeds from the poop just outside their nests, where they're likely to germinate and grow in the ants' nutrient-rich "trash" piles. Nice!
During this time she realized that baobab seedlings had little chance of survival against goats in the area who eat the seeds before they have time to germinate.
On Sunday, the brand kept its promise, offering a bonanza of a show that was proof positive that sometimes the best ideas need patience to germinate and be refined.
I had hoped Ms. Cummins's words would germinate in the toxic American dirt where my own words, and those of other Latino writers, have often failed to take root.
The seeds of the mighty sequoia trees that people flock from around the world to see won't even germinate unless a wildfire comes through to clear the forest floor.
It contains all the seeds that were to germinate in the two dozen novels that followed, not least Mr Roth's predilection for provocation and a kind of burnished, resplendent blasphemy.
"Imagine dormant seeds being sent to exoplanets to release microbial life or the building blocks of life, even if the seeds themselves might not germinate and form plants," he said.
Yellow birch seeds can't germinate without bare soil, so after a timber sale, I find small patches of churned soil from the logging equipment and toss down a few seeds.
Blending first-person reporting from a variety of conspiracist gatherings with a measured survey of the existing research on conspiracy theories, she explores why and how demonstrably untrue ideas germinate.
According to the Xinhua news agency, Chang'e-20193 is also carrying an intriguing biology experiment to see if plant seeds will germinate and silkworm eggs will hatch in the moon's low gravity.
The socioeconomic disparities between white and black people inspired Mr. Lindor to study Urban Policy at the New School, where the seed of what would become The Gentlemen's Factory started to germinate.
"There is something liberating and strange indeed about gazing upon these vignettes from strangers' lives and finding in them a space for our own imaginations to germinate," Kaplan writes in a book foreword.
At the end of the garden, they've already meticulously restored a 19th-century greenhouse, where they will plant peppers and aubergines, germinate seedlings and experiment with cold-hardy citrus over the winter months.
Parrots pooh-pooh the fruit pulp and home in on the seeds, crushing the casings to extract the plant embryos and the cache of fats and proteins intended to help those embryos germinate.
If the role of the art critic is to write critically about art, using all the tools at their disposal, it is also about understanding the environment within which images circulate and germinate.
Image: Archaeological Zone Caral"The reliefs symbolize the fertilization of the earth: snakes represent the deity, linked to water, which filters into the earth and makes the seed germinate," explained Shady Solís in TeleSur.
It can take a few months for the seeds to germinate and grow into herbs and vegetables you can use for dishes, but it's oddly satisfying to know they came straight from your kitchen.
Image: CNSA/Chongqing UniversityChina's miniature biosphere experiment has yielded a sprouting cotton seed, and it's the first plant to germinate on the Moon—an important first step in creating a viable, self-sustaining lunar colony.
Seeds take between 10 and 20 days to germinate, and once you see them thriving, you can transplant them into pots or right into your garden so they'll have plenty of room to continue growing.
As his team continued sifting through video footage and the studio's silver bunny named U-Ko hopped around, Azuma ran his hands over his shaved head as if nurturing the ideas that had begun to germinate.
Rather, the raison d'être of such institutions is to encourage unconventional, contrarian and sometimes distressing ideas to germinate and incubate in a "safe space" immune from domination by political, religious and even intellectual dogmas, orthodoxies and trends.
These seeds are easily spread by human feet, animal fur and the treads of bicycle tires, and though they usually germinate within their first year, they have been known to linger five or more, awaiting suitable conditions.
This cyclical process is called masting, and it flushes the forests every few years with spruce seeds, overwhelming seed-eating animals like red squirrels and white-winged crossbills, and thereby ensuring many uneaten seeds go on to germinate.
"I could see the way things were starting to germinate in the media that the story was becoming more about the addition than about all the good creative community labor that it took to create the mural," Toombs said.
We are watching it germinate through executive orders and national emergency declarations, because it is only a matter of time before the other side – usually vocal, sometimes restrained, but nevertheless only temporarily tolerant — gains control and tolerates no longer.
Van Leeuwenhoek was simply following the example of classical thinkers like Aristotle, who believed female partners at most provided a fertile bed of soil in which the seed provided by a man could germinate and flower into a child.
"You have so little soil moisture available to a crop that in some places didn't even germinate, (or) it's so poorly established that the root structure is in danger of just dying," said David Streit, an agricultural meteorologist with the Commodity Weather Group.
Yes, you need to watch all of it, not only because it's so terrific (it really is!) but also because the show is very methodical: Characters reappear after long stretches away, ideas germinate for several episodes and consequences are not always immediate.
And Google's People + AI Research (PAIR) program aims to improve interactions between humans and AI. Regardless of where the different technologies ultimately germinate, it is the responsibility of inventors to teach AI to make decisions according to some moral code, says Holmes.
He has announced a benevolent little think-tank army of artists who will be helping him, including Nico Muhly, Esperanza Spalding and Julia Bullock, and their plans will germinate through next year, as the orchestra turns to celebrating Mr. Thomas's final season.
Sometimes the stray accounts I hear do germinate into articles, like my story this week on the dwindling catch in the Copper River, 250 miles east of Anchorage, where for the first time in memory many of the salmon didn't return from the sea.
But after injecting a modest embellishment here and another there, she finally let loose with a flourish in the Sarabande that seemed to strike even her own fancy and germinate into a freedom that greatly benefited the rest of the work, especially the concluding Giga.
Instead, Google Showtimes appeared to germinate more from the company's strategy to expand into more vertical search categories, providing landing places for people who are going to the web to look for specific information and choosing specific portals to get there, rather than Google's catch-all Google.
Indeed, experiment shows that the silencer has no effect on the productivity of an otherwise genetically un-engineered cultivar, as measured by such things as the number of seed grains per plant, the weight of those grains, the percentage of them that germinate, and the survival rates of the resulting seedlings.
But increasingly, another argument is creeping in: Letting marijuana cases go actually makes communities safer, by shifting the focus to stopping violence and untangling a legacy of racial discrimination, allowing the seeds of trust to germinate in neighborhoods where a chief complaint of police officers is that no one will help them solve crimes.
Because if we could create an architecture — a platform — for those young people to thrive, and to grow, and to scale up all the amazing stuff they're already doing locally, and not to just root themselves locally but to germinate and seed all around the country and all around the world, then there's no problem we couldn't solve.
Although he is understandably covert about his process, the artist is eager to explain why he's called the show Borderless: "The title for the show is a metaphor for the multiplicity factor inherent in photography, which was born out of experimentation and has continued to sporadically germinate in all forms, methods, processes, and directions," Parlá explains.
Brought to my attention by Laurel Dunn, a microbiologist and assistant professor of food science at the University of Georgia, "fried rice syndrome" is actually just a colloquial term for vomiting and diarrhea brought on by consuming Bacillus cereus, a "Gram-positive, rod-shaped, aerobic, facultatively anaerobic, motile, beta-hemolytic bacterium," which can survive, as a spore, being boiled and fried, then come out the other side ready to germinate and grow when left at room temperature.

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