inoculate | | |
v. (communication) | 1. inoculate | introduce an idea or attitude into the mind of.; "My teachers inoculated me with their beliefs" |
| ~ inform | impart knowledge of some fact, state or affairs, or event to.; "I informed him of his rights" |
v. (change) | 2. inoculate | introduce a microorganism into. |
| ~ put in, inclose, insert, stick in, introduce, enclose | introduce.; "Insert your ticket here" |
| ~ seed | inoculate with microorganisms. |
v. (body) | 3. immunise, immunize, inoculate, vaccinate | perform vaccinations or produce immunity in by inoculation.; "We vaccinate against scarlet fever"; "The nurse vaccinated the children in the school" |
| ~ practice of medicine, medicine | the learned profession that is mastered by graduate training in a medical school and that is devoted to preventing or alleviating or curing diseases and injuries.; "he studied medicine at Harvard" |
| ~ inject, shoot | give an injection to.; "We injected the glucose into the patient's vein" |
v. (body) | 4. inoculate | insert a bud for propagation. |
| ~ propagate | cause to propagate, as by grafting or layering. |
v. (body) | 5. inoculate | impregnate with the virus or germ of a disease in order to render immune. |
| ~ impregnate | fertilize and cause to grow.; "the egg was impregnated" |
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