Terminated vs Germinated - What's the difference?
terminated | germinated |
(terminate)
To end, especially in an incomplete state.
* J. S. Harford
To kill.
To end the employment contract of an employee; to fire, lay off.
Terminated; limited; bounded; ended.
Having a definite and clear limit or boundary; having a determinate size, shape or magnitude.
(label) Expressible in a finite number of terms; (of a decimal) not recurring or infinite.
(germinate)
To sprout or produce buds.
*
* '>citation
To cause to grow.
* {{quote-book, year=1913, author=
, title=Lord Stranleigh Abroad
, chapter=5
As verbs the difference between terminated and germinated
is that terminated is past tense of terminate while germinated is past tense of germinate.terminated
English
Verb
(head)terminate
English
Verb
(terminat)Synonyms
* (to end incompletely) discontinue, stop, break off * (to kill) See alsoAntonyms
* (to end incompletely) continueSee also
* abortExternal links
* *Adjective
(en adjective)References
*Anagrams
* English ergative verbs ----germinated
English
Verb
(head)germinate
English
Verb
- (Francis Bacon)
citation, passage=These were business hours, and a feeling of loneliness crept over him, perhaps germinated by his sight of the illustrated papers, and accentuated by an attempted perusal of them.}}