Incepted
[in-sept] /ɪnˈsɛpt/
verb (used with object)
1.
to take in; ingest.
/ɪnˈsɛpt/
verb (transitive)
1.
(of organisms) to ingest (food)
2.
(Brit) (formerly) to take a master’s or doctor’s degree at a university
noun
3.
(botany) a rudimentary organ
v.
1560s, from Latin inceptus, past participle of incipere “to begin” (see inception). Related: Incepted.
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- Incepting
[in-sept] /ɪnˈsɛpt/ verb (used with object) 1. to take in; ingest. /ɪnˈsɛpt/ verb (transitive) 1. (of organisms) to ingest (food) 2. (Brit) (formerly) to take a master’s or doctor’s degree at a university noun 3. (botany) a rudimentary organ v. 1560s, from Latin inceptus, past participle of incipere “to begin” (see inception). Related: Incepted.
- Inception
[in-sep-shuh n] /ɪnˈsɛp ʃən/ noun 1. beginning; start; commencement. 2. British. 3. (in science fiction) the act of instilling an idea into someone’s mind by entering his or her dreams. /ɪnˈsɛpʃən/ noun 1. the beginning, as of a project or undertaking n. early 15c., “beginning, starting,” from Middle French incepcion and directly from Latin inceptionem […]
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[in-sep-tiv] /ɪnˈsɛp tɪv/ adjective 1. beginning; initial. 2. Grammar. (of a derived verb, or of an aspect in verb inflection) expressing the beginning of the action indicated by the underlying verb, as Latin verbs in -scō, which generally have inceptive force, as calēscō “become or begin to be hot” from caleō “be hot.”. noun, Grammar. […]
- Inceptisol
[in-sep-tuh-sawl, -sol] /ɪnˈsɛp təˌsɔl, -ˌsɒl/ noun 1. a soil so young that horizons have just begun to form: especially prevalent in tundra areas.
- Inceptor
[in-sept] /ɪnˈsɛpt/ verb (used with object) 1. to take in; ingest. /ɪnˈsɛpt/ verb (transitive) 1. (of organisms) to ingest (food) 2. (Brit) (formerly) to take a master’s or doctor’s degree at a university noun 3. (botany) a rudimentary organ v. 1560s, from Latin inceptus, past participle of incipere “to begin” (see inception). Related: Incepted.