Synonym: bring up, cultivate, develop, produce, race, raise, train. Similar words: breeze, weed, need, speed, exceed, needle, speed up, weed out. Meaning: [briːd] n. 1. a special lineage 2. a special variety of domesticated animals within a species 3. half-caste offspring of parents of different races (especially of white and American Indian parents) 4. a lineage or race of people. v. 1. call forth 2. copulate with a female, used especially of horses 3. cause to procreate (animals) 4. have young (animals).
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91. We are just an advanced breed of monkeys on a minor planet of a very average star. But we can understand the Universe. That makes us something very special. Stephen Hawking
92. To breed for tameness was enough to make the change.
93. The import of the Mallion lines could be considered the most beneficial thing that had happened so far in the breed.
94. We fixed red clay pots to the sides to encourage the birds to breed.
95. A breed of men to whom truth was open not just to minor revisions and nice distinctions, but to management.
96. Adults are easy to keep in aquaria for they rarely climb out if well-treated, and will breed freely in captivity.
97. Entire shoals are surrounded by nets and sucked in for processing and freezing, leaving nothing left to breed and replenish stocks.
98. I know of no pursuit in which more real and important services can be rendered to any country than by improving its agriculture, its breed of useful animals, and other branches of a husbandman's cares. George Washington
99. It requires a solid apprenticeship in the breed before you are able to cope with the responsibility of stud dog ownership.
100. The old guard, too fond of international conferences, has given way to a younger breed of activist.
101. Though Manhattan sports any number of bars capable of making a great drink, the grand hotel bar is a rare breed.
102. Now a new breed of scientists is changing all that.
103. Other breeding season records, however, indicate that between five and 10 pairs probably breed in most years.
104. I see them every day and familiarity doesn't breed contempt so much as disgust in me.
105. As mentioned earlier, there is some connection between temperament and factors such as build, colour, breed etc.
106. I'd like to breed from her when I have a bit more space.
107. Tropical marine invertebrates, unlike marine fish which are notoriously difficult to successfully breed in captivity, are far more accommodating.
108. But he also offers an attribute not commonly found in the breed: intelligence.
109. To breed from an animal obese just because it ate well is a waste of time.
110. Breed exclusively by fresh and brackish water and marshes; often in coastal waters on migration.
111. There are lots of them out there and, apparently, they breed like Kennedys.
112. Keepers must breed from what little they possess.-which itself means evolution.
113. But success in this world seems to breed envy which, in its turn, can breed hostility.
113. Sentencedict.com is a sentence dictionary, on which you can find nice sentences for a large number of words.
114. That said, do not be fooled into thinking that the Internet-only breed will automatically offer higher rates.
115. An estimated 50,000 pairs of kittiwakes breed at Bempton and thousands more breed elsewhere on Flamborough Head.
116. With a wild surmise, 1 began to breed, generation after generation, from whichever child looked most like an insect.
117. It's a very unusual breed of goat, dating back to the time of Cleopatra.
118. A major difficulty with such a test is that familiarity may breed tolerance rather than contempt.
119. Enclaves of this non-dispersing animal can only survive where the adults can breed successfully.
120. Little crimes breed big crimes. You smile at little crimes and then big crimes blow your head off. Terry Pratchett