from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.
intransitive verb To duplicate, copy, reproduce, or repeat.
intransitive verb Biology To reproduce or make an exact copy or copies of (genetic material, a cell, or an organism).
intransitive verb To repeat (a scientific experiment) to confirm findings or ensure accuracy.
intransitive verb To become replicated; undergo replication.
noun A repetition of an experiment or procedure.
adjective Duplicated, copied, reproduced, or repeated.
adjective Folded over or bent back upon itself.
from The Century Dictionary.
Folded
noun In music, a tone one or more octaves distant from a given tone; a repetition at a higher or lower octave.
To fold or bend back: as, a replicated leaf.
To reply.
In music, to add one of its replicates to (a given tone).
from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.
adjective Folded over or backward; folded back upon itself.
transitive verb obsolete To reply.
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
verb To make a copy (replica) of
verb obsolete To reply.
noun an outcome of a replication procedure.
adjective botany, zoology Folded over or backward; folded back upon itself.
from WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.
verb reproduce or make an exact copy of
verb make or do or perform again
verb bend or turn backward
Etymologies
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition
[Middle English replicaten, from Late Latin replicāre, replicāt-, to repeat, from Latin, to fold back : re-, re- + plicāre, to fold; see plek- in Indo-European roots.]
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
From Latin replicatus, past participle of replicare ("to fold or bend back; reply"), from re ("back") + plicare ("to fold"); see ply.
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Examples
The ability to reproduce or replicate is considered the basic definition of life.
He's said that the one thing he most wanted to replicate from the actual Jim Ellis was the man's composure; whether that's what he does is irrelevant, but he does capture a man choking back his anger, recriminating himself for the times when it erupts.
So I would hope that television would go in a direction of trying to find something that really is different from everything else on the air and that the broadcasters try to originate, as opposed to replicate, which is really what ` s been going on for about the last 10 years.
This is a company that invents or stumbles upon a business model or technology impossible to replicate, meaning it can extract high profit margins for the foreseeable future.
While the Bowery Lane Bicycle seems useful enough and is not as outlandishly priced as other Dutch-inspired bikes sold to Americans, I can't help thinking that if Mr. Bernard wants to "replicate" Amsterdam here he might be better off opening a Van Gogh museum and digging a series of canals.
Already, Mr. Terrill said, he and a group of state lawmakers are drafting legislation to "replicate" Arizona's law and "go beyond it," with stricter penalties for illegal immigrants.
Campaigners claim the new accommodation facility would "replicate" some of the worst aspects of conditions at the notorious Yarl's Wood immigration centre.
Korean ceremonial architecture has changed so little in 1100 years that the traditional carpenters and painters working today don't really have to 'replicate' anything when they rebuild old structures; they just do what they always do, on a building site that dates back millenia.
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