What is another word for gestating?

Pronunciation: [d͡ʒɪstˈe͡ɪtɪŋ] (IPA)

Gestating is a term commonly used to describe the process of carrying a child in the womb during pregnancy. However, there are many other words that can be used to describe this experience. These synonyms include "conceiving," "gesticulating," "incubating," "nurturing," "forming," and "developing." Each of these words carries a slightly different connotation, but all ultimately refer to the process of creating and nurturing new life within the female body. Regardless of which word is used, the experience of gestating is an incredible and transformative one that is not easily forgotten by those who undergo it.

What are the hypernyms for Gestating?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.

Usage examples for Gestating

He had never seen anything about descent with modification in any book, nor heard any one talk about it as having been put forward by other people; if he had, he would, of course, have been the first to say so; he was not as other philosophers are; so the mountain went on for years and years gestating, but still there was no labour.
"Luck or Cunning?"
Samuel Butler
What must be the effect, long continued, of this class of jugglers working upon the sympathies and the imagination of a nation of gestating women?
"Birds and Poets"
John Burroughs
With Emerson alone we are rich in sunlight, but poor in rain and dew,-poor, too, in soil, and in the moist, gestating earth principle.
"Birds and Poets"
John Burroughs

Famous quotes with Gestating

  • He had come there dissatisfied with his work, even though his multi-kinetic work was admired and winning him professional recognition. However, at that moment, other ideas were gestating and he wanted to add what he called a "fifth dimension" to his art - that of artificial intelligence. [...] : [At the colony,] he was able to turn his thoughts inward, hoping to discover the new methods and direction that would more deeply satisfy his creative needs. It was at this point, while watching the motions and patterns of sun on leaves in the New Hampshire woods one morning, that Tsai finally achieved the revelatory breakthrough that changed his art and liberated his creative energies. As he put it, he wanted to create "natural movements in dynamic equilibrium, with intelligence," and he found his solution in an unlikely combination of natural phenomenon, the precedent of Gabo's singular (and unrepeated) kinetic sculpture, and the new resource of contemporary analog and digital technology.
    Sam Hunter

Word of the Day

PROHIBITORY INJUNCTION
Synonyms:
abnegation, acknowledge, action, appendage, authorisation, authorization, bachelor of arts in nursing, banish, banning, bar.