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conceive
[kuhn-seev]
verb (used with object)
to form (a notion, opinion, purpose, etc.).
He conceived the project while he was on vacation.
to form a notion or idea of; imagine.
to hold as an opinion; think; believe.
I can't conceive that it would be of any use.
to experience or form (a feeling).
to conceive a great love for music.
to express, as in words.
to become pregnant with.
to beget.
to begin, originate, or found (something) in a particular way (usually used in the passive).
a new nation conceived in liberty.
Archaic., to understand; comprehend.
verb (used without object)
to form an idea; think (usually followed byof ).
to become pregnant.
conceive
/ kənˈsiːv /
verb
to have an idea (of); imagine; think
(tr; takes a clause as object or an infinitive) to hold as an opinion; believe
(tr) to develop or form, esp in the mind
she conceived a passion for music
to become pregnant with (young)
rare, (tr) to express in words
Other Word Forms
- conceiver noun
- nonconceiving noun
- reconceive verb
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of conceive1
Synonym Study
Example Sentences
John Adams, the nation’s first vice president, declared the position to be “the most insignificant office that ever the invention of man contrived, or his imagination conceived.”
Whoever came up with the saying about reading a person by looking at their shoes did not conceive of barefoot tech billionaires.
The couple had been trying to have a baby for four years before Macie-Mae was conceived.
Olsen: For you as a performer, have you already conceived of what that backstory is?
Betro, 45, had travelled to England from her home in West Allis, Wisconsin, to carry out a planned assassination that was conceived by co-conspirator Mohammed Nazir, whom she had met on a dating app.
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