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Stagnate   /stˈægnˌeɪt/   Listen
Stagnate

verb
(past & past part. stagnated; pres. part. stagnating)
1.
Stand still.
2.
Cause to stagnate.
3.
Cease to flow; stand without moving.  "Blood stagnates in the capillaries"
4.
Be idle; exist in a changeless situation.  Synonyms: idle, laze, slug.  "He slugged in bed all morning"  Antonym: work.






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Stagnate" Quotes from Famous Books



... beautifies them. We need that multiform capacity and facility of hand and brain which only experience in the Arts can bestow and diffuse. The National Industry is the People's University; to confine it to a few and those the ruder branches is to stunt and stagnate the popular mind—is to arrest the march of improvement in Agriculture itself. Hence, nearly or quite all the modern improvements in Cultivation have been made in immediate proximity to a dense Manufacturing population; hence Belgium is now a garden, while ...
— Glances at Europe - In a Series of Letters from Great Britain, France, Italy, - Switzerland, &c. During the Summer of 1851. • Horace Greeley

... you why. At Eltham we yawn and stagnate together. The weavers prick and pinch me in a thousand places. They make ...
— The Hallam Succession • Amelia Edith Barr

... faces were not made for wrinkles, their Pure blood to stagnate, their great hearts to fail; The blank grey was not made to blast their hair, But like the climes that know nor snow nor hail They were all summer: lightning might assail And shiver them to ashes, but to trail A long and snake-like life of ...
— Don Juan • Lord Byron

... happen, though it rarely does, that a sluggish child desires to stagnate in idleness, you must not give way to this tendency, which might stupefy him entirely, but you must apply some stimulus to wake him. You must understand that is no question of applying force, but of arousing ...
— Emile • Jean-Jacques Rousseau

... inauspicious gestures, on which the gleams of the torches flickered faintly, in struggles with the rising morn. Above them, the dangling noose claimed her averted eye, and sent through her nerves shivers that seemed to make the blood run back in the veins, and stagnate about the heart. In any other position but that in which she was placed, she would have made the castle ring with involuntary screams; and it was only the intense anxiety with which she watched every sound in the distance, in the struggling hope that Cockburn ...
— Wilson's Tales of the Borders and of Scotland, Volume III • Various


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