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Ramify   /rˈæməfˌaɪ/   Listen
Ramify

verb
(past & past part. ramified; pres. part. ramifying)
1.
Have or develop complicating consequences.  Synonym: complexify.
2.
Grow and send out branches or branch-like structures.  Synonym: branch.
3.
Divide into two or more branches so as to form a fork.  Synonyms: branch, fork, furcate, separate.






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"Ramify" Quotes from Famous Books



... we can predict in some degree the consequences of a stroke with any material weapon. But a lie has no bounds at all. The nature of the thing is to ramify beyond human calculation. ...
— The Cloister and the Hearth • Charles Reade

... with organs of locomotion, their food must therefore be within easy reach. Every breeze wafts gaseous nutriment to their expanded leaves, and their rootlets ramify throughout the soil in search of appropriate mineral aliment. But no matter how abundant, or however easy of reach may be the food of plants, the vegetable organism is incapable of partaking of it unless under the influence of light. Exposed to this potent stimulus, the plant collects ...
— The Stock-Feeder's Manual - the chemistry of food in relation to the breeding and - feeding of live stock • Charles Alexander Cameron

... neighbourhood of Paris, of which the most important is Fontainebleau. Dijon and Macon are good resting-places. Lyons is the largest city on the line. Avignon and Arles should, if possible, be visited. Among the branch lines which ramify from this great central ...
— The South of France--East Half • Charles Bertram Black

... systems are trees, the roots of one in the heart, of the other in the brain. Has not our body its trunk, bearing aloft the head, like a flower: a cup to hold the precious juices of the brain? Has not that trunk its tapering limbs which ramify into hands and feet, and these into fingers and toes, after the manner of the twigs and branches of ...
— Architecture and Democracy • Claude Fayette Bragdon

... good for us to sentimentalize on the subject. We must not blink facts. And the fact is that "it's a long way" to Never Again. The causes of War must be destroyed first; and, as I have more than once tried to make clear, the causes ramify through our midst; they are like the roots, pervading the body politic, of some fell disease whose outbreak on the surface shocks and affrights us. To dislodge and extirpate these roots is a long business. But there is this consolation about it—that it is a business which we can ...
— The Healing of Nations and the Hidden Sources of Their Strife • Edward Carpenter


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