What does CONCEIVE mean?

Definitions for CONCEIVE
kənˈsivcon·ceive

This dictionary definitions page includes all the possible meanings, example usage and translations of the word CONCEIVE.

Princeton's WordNet

  1. gestate, conceive, conceptualize, conceptualiseverb

    have the idea for

    "He conceived of a robot that would help paralyzed patients"; "This library was well conceived"

  2. think, believe, consider, conceiveverb

    judge or regard; look upon; judge

    "I think he is very smart"; "I believe her to be very smart"; "I think that he is her boyfriend"; "The racist conceives such people to be inferior"

  3. conceiveverb

    become pregnant; undergo conception

    "She cannot conceive"; "My daughter was conceived in Christmas Day"

Wiktionary

  1. conceiveverb

    To develop an idea.

  2. conceiveverb

    To understand someone.

  3. conceiveverb

    To become pregnant.

  4. Etymology: From conceiven, from concevoir, concever, from concipere, from con- + capio. Compare deceive, perceive, receive.

Samuel Johnson's Dictionary

  1. To CONCEIVEverb

    Etymology: concevoir, Fr. concipere, Latin.

    I was shapen in iniquity, and in sin did my mother conceive me. Psalm li. 5.

    Nebuchadnezzar hath conceived a purpose against you. Jer.

    This kiss, if it durst speak,
    Would stretch thy spirits up into the air:
    Conceive, and fare thee well. William Shakespeare, King Lear.

    If you compare my gentlemen with Sir John, you will hardly conceive him to have been bred in the same climate. Jonathan Swift.

  2. To Conceiveverb

    The griev’d commons
    Hardly conceive of me: let it be nois’d,
    That, through our intercession, this revokement
    And pardon comes. William Shakespeare, Henry VIII.

    Conceive of things clearly and distinctly in their own natures; conceive of things completely in all their parts; conceive of things comprehensively in all their properties and relations; conceive of things extensively in all their kinds; conceive of things orderly, or in a proper method. Isaac Watts, Logick.

    The flocks should conceive when they came to drink. Gen.

    The beauteous maid, whom he beheld, possess’d:
    Conceiving as she slept, her fruitful womb
    Swell’d with the founder of immortal Rome. Addison.

Wikipedia

  1. conceive

    Fertilisation or fertilization (see spelling differences), also known as generative fertilisation, syngamy and impregnation, is the fusion of gametes to give rise to a new individual organism or offspring and initiate its development. While processes such as insemination or pollination which happen before the fusion of gametes are also sometimes informally referred to as fertilisation, these are technically separate processes. The cycle of fertilisation and development of new individuals is called sexual reproduction. During double fertilisation in angiosperms the haploid male gamete combines with two haploid polar nuclei to form a triploid primary endosperm nucleus by the process of vegetative fertilisation.

ChatGPT

  1. conceive

    To conceive means to form or develop an idea, thought, plan, or understanding in one's mind. It can also refer to the action of becoming pregnant or starting the process of producing a baby.

Webster Dictionary

  1. Conceiveverb

    to receive into the womb and begin to breed; to begin the formation of the embryo of

  2. Conceiveverb

    to form in the mind; to plan; to devise; to generate; to originate; as, to conceive a purpose, plan, hope

  3. Conceiveverb

    to apprehend by reason or imagination; to take into the mind; to know; to imagine; to comprehend; to understand

  4. Conceiveverb

    to have an embryo or fetus formed in the womb; to breed; to become pregnant

  5. Conceiveverb

    to have a conception, idea, or opinion; think; -- with of

Chambers 20th Century Dictionary

  1. Conceive

    kon-sēv′, v.t. to receive into and form in the womb: to form in the mind: to imagine or think: to understand: to express.—v.i. to become pregnant: to think.—ns. Conceivabil′ity, Conceiv′ableness.—adj. Conceiv′able, that may be conceived, understood, or believed.—adv. Conceiv′ably.—adj. Conceived′, imagined, thought. [O. Fr. concever—L. concipĕre, conceptum, from con, and capĕre, to take.]

British National Corpus

  1. Verbs Frequency

    Rank popularity for the word 'CONCEIVE' in Verbs Frequency: #779

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Numerology

  1. Chaldean Numerology

    The numerical value of CONCEIVE in Chaldean Numerology is: 8

  2. Pythagorean Numerology

    The numerical value of CONCEIVE in Pythagorean Numerology is: 4

Examples of CONCEIVE in a Sentence

  1. Charles de Gaulle:

    How can one conceive of a one party system in a country that has over 200 varieties of cheese.

  2. Martin Dempsey:

    But I could conceive of one potentially somewhere in the corridor that runs from Baghdad to Tikrit to Kirkuk and over into Mosul. So we're looking at that area.

  3. F. Scott Fitzgerald:

    To write it, it took three months; to conceive it - three minutes; to collect the data in it - all my life.

  4. Adam Brumm:

    The images of therianthropes may also represent the earliest evidence for our capacity to conceive of things that do not exist in the natural world, a basic concept that underpins modern religion, therianthropes occur in the folklore or narrative fiction of almost every modern society, and they are perceived as gods, spirits or ancestral beings in many religions worldwide.

  5. Alfred Sommer:

    To most people, especially ophthalmologists, common sense would suggest that there is little harm in simply measuring the vision at a distance during a patient’s routine visit to their primary care physician, nor can one conceive how that might prove harmful.

Popularity rank by frequency of use

CONCEIVE#10000#22827#100000

Translations for CONCEIVE

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"CONCEIVE." Definitions.net. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 28 Apr. 2024. <https://www.definitions.net/definition/CONCEIVE>.

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