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Naturalised   Listen
Naturalised

adjective
1.
Planted so as to give an effect of wild growth.  Synonym: naturalized.



Naturalise

verb
1.
Adopt to another place.  Synonym: naturalize.
2.
Make more natural or lifelike.  Synonym: naturalize.  Antonym: denaturalize.
3.
Make into a citizen.  Synonym: naturalize.  Antonym: denaturalize.
4.
Adapt (a wild plant or unclaimed land) to the environment.  Synonyms: cultivate, domesticate, naturalize, tame.  "Tame the soil"






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Naturalised" Quotes from Famous Books



... of those strong plain words, Anglo-Saxon or Norman-French, of which the roots lie in the inmost depths of our language; and that he felt a vicious partiality for terms which, long after our own speech had been fixed, were borrowed from the Greek and Latin, and which, therefore, even when lawfully naturalised must be considered as born aliens, not entitled to rank with the king's English. His constant practice of padding out a sentence with useless epithets, till it became as stiff as the best of an exquisite, his antithetical forms of expression, constantly employed even where ...
— Famous Reviews • Editor: R. Brimley Johnson

... we leave out of account the Marcionite gnostic criticism of ecclesiastical Christianity, Paul of Samosata and Marcellus of Ancyra may be mentioned as men who, in the earliest period, criticised the apologetic Alexandrian theology which was being naturalised (see the remarkable statement of Marcellus in Euseb. C. Marc. I.4: [Greek: to tou dogmatos onoma tes anthropines echetai boules te kai gnomes k.t.l.] which I have chosen as the motto of this book). We know too little of Stephen Gobarus (VI. cent.) ...
— History of Dogma, Volume 1 (of 7) • Adolph Harnack

... wooden railing to keep off the pigs and cattle that were allowed to root and rummage around the other homesteads at their own sweet will. The owner of this farm was an Englishman, named John Colton: but he was a naturalised burgher and married to a Dutch wife, so that every one—perhaps even Colton himself—had long forgotten that he had not been born and bred in ...
— Chatterbox, 1906 • Various

... all the week fighting battles for conscience sake, and resisting smooth, cunning temptation to the farthest limits of their lives and in unimaginable ways. Kate herself, although a person quite unaffected by preaching, had also naturalised the sermon in her life with much practical and vivid detail. Carmichael was Elijah, the prophet of the common people, with his simple ways and old-fashioned notions and love of hardness, only far more gentle and courteous and amusing ...
— Kate Carnegie and Those Ministers • Ian Maclaren

... pursuits and tempers: and what was more than all, of quieting forever his apprehensions from the government at Stuttgard. Since his arrival at Mannheim, one or two suspicious incidents had again alarmed him on this head; but being now acknowledged as a subject of the Elector Palatine, naturalised by law in his new country, he had nothing more to fear from the ...
— The Life of Friedrich Schiller - Comprehending an Examination of His Works • Thomas Carlyle


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