Use "imitative" in a sentence

1. Man is an imitative being.

2. Acting is an imitative art.

3. The style is imitative of Basque architecture.

4. Boink, boing, interjections imitative of a reverberating sound

5. 4 synonyms for Apish: emulative, imitative, slavish, apelike

6. Apatetic definition is - imitative in color or form.

7. Origin of Blunge Probably imitative; compare plunge, blend.

8. Education in oral language is context-based and imitative.

9. This disproves the theory that children are purely imitative.

10. Blooey, interjection representing an explosive sound (of imitative origin)

11. There are other forms of imitative music played on instruments.

12. Babies of eight to twelve months are generally highly imitative.

13. Apery definition: imitative behaviour; mimicry Meaning, pronunciation, translations and examples

14. His work has been criticized for being imitative and shallow.

15. The world of the gods is Anthropomorphic, an imitative projection of …

16. He's an imitative artist, with very little originality in his work.

17. And I could turn out imitative verse which expressed similar sentiments.

18. With these toys, their play tends to be more imitative than imaginative.

19. 1300, imitative (compare unrelated Spanish borbollar, Old… See definitions of Burble.

20. The world of the gods is anthropomorphic, an imitative projection of ours.

21. An object devoid of intent -- it's random, it's imitative, it repels us.

22. At the same time, the curiosity of young people and strong imitative.

23. (C15 Blabberen, probably of imitative origin) Dictionnaire anglais Collins English definition-Thesaurus

24. Archaistic: 1 adj imitative of an archaic style or manner “ Archaistic writing”

25. Children before this stage of development may use words in a imitative way.

26. C15 Blabberen, probably of imitative origin Examples of 'blabber' in a sentence blabber

27. And with these toys, their play tends to be more imitative than imaginative.

28. Barf Meaning: "to vomit or retch,"1960, American English slang, probably imitative

29. Cassirer takes the imitative theory of culture as a main opposite theory to criticize.

30. Apelike definition: being or given to servile imitation synonyms: apish, imitative antonyms: nonimitative, nonhuman, sincere

31. French Boubou (sense 1) probably imitative of its call; Boubou (sense 2) from Malinke bubu.

32. He writes in a very individual way, ie an original way, not derived or imitative.

33. Young people might be provoked into imitative crime by the exploits they see on TV.

34. Baa — intransitive verb (baaed; Baaing) Etymology: imitative Date: circa 1586 to make the bleat of …

35. According to the existing situation of the western enterprises, imitative innovation is a practical choice.

36. The identification of the imitative or genuine the laser carve seal andthe new problem for people.

37. Archaistic (adj) like, or imitative of, anything archaic; pertaining to an archaism How to pronounce Archaistic?

38. (C15 Blabberen, probably of imitative origin) Dicionário de inglês definição

39. Imitative of an archaic style or manner Familiarity information: Archaistic used as an adjective is very rare.

40. The great thing about our experiment was that it freed painting from all imitative or conventional contexts.

41. Clunk (v.) 1796, "to make the sound of a cork being pulled from a bottle;" imitative

42. Apish: 1 adj being or given to servile imitation Synonyms: apelike imitative marked by or given to imitation

43. The word Creak is an Old English word, imitative of the sound that it is trying to describe.

44. Late Middle English (in the sense ‘roar, bellow’): from Middle Dutch Blaren, bleren, or Low German Blaren, of imitative origin

45. Idle chatter vb (intr) to talk without thinking; chatter [C15 Blabberen, probably of imitative origin] blabber Past participle: blabbered Gerund

46. Brontothere Meaning: "thunder" (probably imitative) + Greek therion "beast" (from PIE root *ghwer- "wild beast")

47. Rosamond, however, was on her side much occupied with Conjectures, though her quick imitative perception warned her against betraying them too crudely.

48. Anxious, Depressed, Angry, Worried, Insecure, Tense, Vulnerable, Highstrung Spiteful, Self-Centred, Self- Aggrandizing, Hostile, Indifferent, Cold, Coarse, Meanspirited Simple, Concrete, Narrow, Imitative, Unimaginative

49. [French, from Old French, latch or from obsolete French Cliquer, to click, clink, of imitative origin.] cliqu′ey, cliqu′y, cliqu′ish adj.

50. [Middle English Bawlen, to bark, from Medieval Latin baulāre, to bark (probably of Scandinavian origin) or from Old Norse baula, to low (of imitative origin).]

51. This page shows answers to the clue Apish, followed by 3 definitions like “Slavishly imitative”, “Having the qualities of an ape” and “Foolishly affected; silly

52. [French bouffon, from Old Italian Buffone, from buffa, jest, from buffare, to puff, of imitative origin.] buf·foon′er·y (bə-fo͞o′nə-rē) n

53. Bleat Meaning: "to Bleat"), of imitative origin (compare Greek blekhe "a Bleating; the wailing of children," Old Church… See definitions of Bleat.

54. Previously, I proved that imitative amplification with weak HCH, approval-based amplification, and recursive reward modeling access PSPACE while AI safety via market making Accesses EXP

55. [Middle English Bawlen, to bark, from Medieval Latin baulāre, to bark (probably of Scandinavian origin) or from Old Norse baula, to low (of imitative origin).] bawl′er n

56. Buss Meaning: "a kiss," 1560s; probably of imitative origin, as are Welsh and Gaelic bus "kiss, lip," French baiser… See definitions of Buss.

57. TYPICAL IMITATIVE CLAUDIUS SPES SESTERTIUS WITH DEVALUATION Countermark Pangeri 85d, (29mm, 14.6gm) Obverse Countermark DV (denoting half value) on neck This is a devaluation Countermark indicating this coin is …

58. Artificial: 1 adj contrived by art rather than nature “ Artificial flowers” “ Artificial flavoring” “an Artificial diamond” “ Artificial fibers” “ Artificial sweeteners” Synonyms: unreal counterfeit , imitative not genuine; imitating something superior arranged , staged deliberately arranged for …

59. Aquinas Benighten itinerantly predislike historiometric shrewdy Pynchon breadstitch redaction claimsman ,pellagras Heartener salthouse imitative thorny-pointed samaras Catskill offertorial McCool Uchee ,bipectinate semihastate tucuma mutational poetastress unresolved debones rhynchotous rhetorics cytisine ,salutations devily killick magistrate

60. Noun zoology any of several rails that occur in the Old World, such as the cornCrake and the spotted Crake Word Origin for Crake C14: from Old Norse krāka crow or krākr raven, of imitative origin

61. Cachinnation (n.) "loud laughter," 1620s, from Latin Cachinnationem (nominative cachinnatio) "violent laughter, excessive laughter," noun of action from past-participle stem of cachinnare "to laugh immoderately or loudly," of imitative origin

62. Ache (v.) Old English acan "suffer continued pain," from Proto-Germanic *akanan, perhaps from a PIE root *ag-es-"fault, guilt," represented also in Sanskrit and Greek, which is perhaps imitative of groaning.

63. Nks Apetalies attracta ncy jealouse sanctorium sonic cubitus gumtree unanalagous interassuring anthologion metamorphosed underwitted alloch lorophyll~~ tumultus del imitative stuffings roughrid e, preoc casioned triangulat.es quamashes outsophisticating impenitible unabbreviated hypohemia trident conch victimising mi sdire~~cted rev~~eries

64. [Latin Barbarismus, use of a foreign tongue or of one's own tongue amiss, barbarism, from Greek barbarismos, from barbarizein, to behave or speak like a barbarian, from barbaros, non-Greek, foreign (imitative of the sound of unintelligible speech).]

65. Origin of Chincherinchee Afrikaans tjienkerientjee tjienker- imitative of a tinkling sound (from the sound the stems make when rubbed together) uintjie bulb diminutive of ui onion (from Middle Dutch uyen) (ultimately from Latin uniō a kind of onion)

66. Creak (v.) early 14c., creken, "utter a harsh cry," of imitative origin.Compare Old English cræccettan "to croak." Used from 1580s of the sound made by rusty gate hinges, wooden floorboards, and aged bones

67. [Latin Barbarismus, use of a foreign tongue or of one's own tongue amiss, barbarism, from Greek barbarismos, from barbarizein, to behave or speak like a barbarian, from barbaros, non-Greek, foreign (imitative of the sound of unintelligible speech).] American …

68. [Latin Barbarismus, use of a foreign tongue or of one's own tongue amiss, barbarism, from Greek barbarismos, from barbarizein, to behave or speak like a barbarian, from barbaros, non-Greek, foreign (imitative of the sound of unintelligible speech).] American …

69. (C15 Blabberen, probably of imitative origin) Diccionario de inglés definición . blabber 1 n busybody, gossip, informer, rumour-monger, scandalmonger, talebearer, tattler, telltale 2 vb blather, blether (Scot.) chatter, gab (informal) jabber, prattle, run off at the mouth …

70. Blather (v.) 1520s, blether, Scottish, probably from a Scandinavian source such as Old Norse blaðra "mutter, wag the tongue," perhaps of imitative origin, or from Proto-Germanic *blodram "something inflated" (the source of bladder).Related: Blathered; Blathering.

71. Yes, “Brouhaha” is a real word, meaning “fuss,” “argument” or “ruckus.” “Brouhaha” comes to English directly from French, where it originally meant “noisy chattering.” It is probably what linguists call an “echoic” or “imitative” word, the “haha” in particular imitating the sound of …

72. Blather (v.) 1520s, blether, Scottish, probably from a Scandinavian source such as Old Norse blaðra "mutter, wag the tongue," perhaps of imitative origin, or from Proto-Germanic *blodram "something inflated" (the source of bladder).Related: Blathered; blathering.

73. Crow (n.) general common name of birds of the genus Corvus (the larger sort being sometimes called ravens), Old English crawe, which is held to be imitative of the bird's cry.Compare Old Saxon kraia, Dutch kraai, Old High German chraja, German Kräke.

74. (Zoology) zoology any of several rails that occur in the Old World, such as the cornCrake and the spotted Crake [C14: from Old Norse krāka crow or krākr raven, of imitative origin] Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014

75. (Zoology) zoology any of several rails that occur in the Old World, such as the cornCrake and the spotted Crake [C14: from Old Norse krāka crow or krākr raven, of imitative origin] Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014

76. Bib (n.) linen worn over the breast, especially by children, to keep the front of the dress clean while eating, 1570s, from verb Bibben "to drink" (late 14c.), which is perhaps imitative of lip sounds; or else [Skeat] it is from Latin bibere "to drink" (from PIE root *po(i)-"to drink")

77. Absurd (adj.) "plainly illogical," 1550s, from French Absurde (16c.), from Latin Absurdus "out of tune, discordant;" figuratively "incongruous, foolish, silly, senseless," from ab-"off, away from," here perhaps an intensive prefix, + surdus "dull, deaf, mute," which is possibly from an imitative PIE root meaning "to buzz, whisper" (see susurration)

78. Brag (v.) late 14c., Braggen "to make a loud sound," also "to talk boastfully," of obscure origin, perhaps related to bray of a trumpet and imitative, or related to the Middle English adjective brag "ostentatious, proud; spirited, brave" (early 14c.), which probably is from Celtic, and is the source of the surname Bragg (attested from mid-13c.)

79. Absurd (adj.) "plainly illogical," 1550s, from French Absurde (16c.), from Latin absurdus "out of tune, discordant;" figuratively "incongruous, foolish, silly, senseless," from ab-"off, away from," here perhaps an intensive prefix, + surdus "dull, deaf, mute," which is possibly from an imitative PIE root meaning "to buzz, whisper" (see susurration)

80. Caterwaul (v.) "disagreeable howling or screeching," like that of a cat in heat, late 14c., caterwrawen, perhaps from Low German katerwaulen "cry like a cat," or formed in English from cater, from Middle Dutch cater "tomcat" + Middle English waul "to yowl," apparently from Old English *wrag, *wrah "angry," of uncertain origin but somehow imitative