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germinal
1[jur-muh-nl]
Germinal
2[jur-muh-nl, zhe
noun
(in the French Revolutionary calendar) the seventh month of the year, extending from March 21 to April 19.
(italics), a novel (1884) by Émile Zola.
germinal
1/ ˈdʒɜːmɪnəl /
adjective
of, relating to, or like germs or a germ cell
of, or in the earliest stage of development; embryonic
Germinal
2/ ʒɛrminal /
noun
the month of buds: the seventh month of the French revolutionary calendar, from March 22 to April 20
Other Word Forms
- germinally adverb
- nongerminal adjective
- subgerminal adjective
- subgerminally adverb
Word History and Origins
Origin of germinal1
Word History and Origins
Origin of germinal1
Example Sentences
It is being led by a Belfast-based plant breeding company, Germinal.
She first considers the Repository for Germinal Choice, stocked with the sperm of Nobel laureates who have agreed to share anonymously their gifted DNA with the world.
He had been reading Emile Zola’s great novel about the rural underclass, “Germinal,” and was under the spell of paintings of farm labor by his hero, Jean-Francois Millet.
In 1971, Robert Graham founded the Repository of Germinal Choice, informally called the "Nobel Prize sperm bank".
Their heretical names would be changed from the revolutionary names their dead parents had given them: Passionaria, Luxemburg, Prairial, Germinal, Danton, St Just.
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