Begetter


(especially of a male parent) to procreate or generate (offspring).
to cause; produce as an effect:
a belief that power begets power.
historical examples

such were the deeds of the begetter and giver of being, tepeuh, guc-matz.
the works of hubert howe bancroft, volume 2 hubert howe bancroft

begetter of intelligence reached by intuition, not reason, iii.
plotinos: complete works, v. 4 plotinos (plotinus)

in a text belonging to a still earlier age, the deity is mentioned as the begetter of a king whose name is read lugal-zaggisi.
the religion of babylonia and -ssyria morris jastrow

it was a great and fruitful idea—and the prince was its only begetter.
mr. punch’s history of modern england, vol. i (of 4).–1841-1857 charles l. graves

to -ssign such significance to the word ‘begetter’ was entirely in thorpe’s vein.
browning’s england helen archibald clarke

they loved; and love is the parent of endurance, the begetter of courage.
pierre and his people, [tales of the far north], complete gilbert parker

as is the begetter, so are they also that are begotten of him.
notes on the book of genesis charles henry mackintosh

she is valued first as a begetter of offspring, second as a domestic.
evolution of the j-panese, social and psychic sidney l. gulick

this story is the only begetter of the large army of pathetic figures of failure that crowd the pages of russian literature.
an outline of russian literature maurice baring

who was the “only begetter” of these p-ssionate offerings of the poet’s love?
the atlantic monthly, vol. 13, no. 76, february, 1864 various

verb (transitive) -gets, -getting, -got, -gat, -gotten, -got
to father
to cause or create
n.

mid-15c., agent noun from beget.
v.

old english begietan “to get by effort, find, acquire, attain, seize” (cl-ss v strong verb, past tense begeat, past participle begeaton), from be- + get (v.). sense of “to procreate” is from c.1200. related to old high german pigezzan, gothic bigitan “to get, obtain.” related: begot; begotten.

Read Also:

  • Begetting

    (especially of a male parent) to procreate or generate (offspring). to cause; produce as an effect: a belief that power begets power. contemporary examples but it takes a special kind of ease and openness for all this begetting to take place. why chicago is now america’s hottest city raymond sokolov february 27, 2011 which raises […]

  • Beggar description

    defy or outdo any possible description, as in the stage set was so elaborate, it beggared description. this term, alluding to the idea that words are insufficient to do something justice, was already used by shakespeare in antony and cleopatra (2:2), “for her own person it beggared all description.” historical examples the events that occurred […]

  • Befallen

    to happen or occur. archaic. to come, as by right. to happen to, especially by chance or fate. contemporary examples if someone were to ask me what disaster this was that had befallen my life, i might ask if they wanted the story or the truth. if you read this book, you will not get […]

  • Beggar-my-neighbor

    beggar-your-neighbor. historical examples hide and seek wilkie collins

  • Beggar's opera

    a ballad opera (1728) with text by john gay and music arranged by john pepusch.


Disclaimer: Begetter definition / meaning should not be considered complete, up to date, and is not intended to be used in place of a visit, consultation, or advice of a legal, medical, or any other professional. All content on this website is for informational purposes only.