Intervention vs Cultivate - What's the difference?
intervention | cultivate |
The action of intervening; interfering in some course of events.
* {{quote-news
, year=2011
, date=October 29
, author=Phil McNulty
, title=Chelsea 3 - 5 Arsenal
, work=BBC Sport
(US, legal) A legal motion through which a person or entity who has not been named as a party to a case seeks to have the court order that they be made a party.
An orchestrated attempt to convince somebody with an addiction or other psychological problem to seek professional help and/or change their behavior.
To grow plants, notably crops
To nurture; to foster; to tend.
To turn or stir soil in preparation for planting.
As a noun intervention
is intervention (act of intervening).As a verb cultivate is
to grow plants, notably crops.intervention
English
Noun
(en noun)citation, page= , passage=Fernando Torres was recalled in place of the suspended Didier Drogba and he was only denied a goal in the opening seconds by Laurent Koscielny's intervention - a moment that set the tone for game filled with attacking quality and littered with errors.}}
Derived terms
* divine intervention * interventionism * macrointervention * microinterventioncultivate
English
Verb
(cultivat)- Farmers should cultivate their crops to get a good harvest.
- They tried to cultivate an interest in learning among their students.