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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
inoculate
verb
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ And Isle of Muck had inoculated his tenants against the smallpox at a cost of two shillings and sixpence per head.
▪ By mid-November 1953 plans were in place to start inoculating children on February 8, 1954.
▪ His dark throat lay inoculated beneath that hollow of wrinkled skin.
▪ I sometimes think that the principal function of professional training in education is to inoculate teachers against books on education.
▪ Net fluid transport was measured 18 hours after inoculating the intestine with the bacterial strain.
▪ She had been inoculated April 21 with the Cutter vaccine, along with almost four-hundred Clearwater County first-and second graders.
▪ Still, the day after the announcement in Ann Arbor, communities started inoculating children.
▪ To be sure, scientists have created disease by inoculating animals with brain tissue from infected animals.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Inoculate

Inoculate \In*oc"u*late\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Inoculated; p. pr. & vb. n. Inoculating.] [L. inoculatus, p. p. of inoculare to ingraft; pref. in- in, on + oculare to furnish with eyes, fr. oculus an eye, also, a bud. See Ocular.]

  1. To bud; to insert, or graft, as the bud of a tree or plant in another tree or plant.

  2. To insert a foreign bud into; as, to inoculate a tree.

  3. (Med.) To communicate a disease to (a person) by inserting infectious matter in the skin or flesh, especially as a means of inducing immunological resistance to that or related diseases; as, to inoculate a person with the virus of smallpox, rabies, etc. See Vaccinate.

  4. Fig.: To introduce into the mind; -- used especially of harmful ideas or principles; to imbue; as, to inoculate one with treason or infidelity.

  5. (Microbiology) To introduce microorganisms into (a growth medium), to cause the growth and multiplication of the microorganisms; as, to inoculate a fermentation vat with an actinomycete culture in order to produce streptomycin.

Inoculate

Inoculate \In*oc"u*late\, v. i.

  1. To graft by inserting buds.

  2. To communicate disease by inoculation.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
inoculate

mid-15c., "implant a bud into a plant," from Latin inoculatus, past participle of inoculare "graft in, implant," from in- "in" (see in- (2)) + oculus "bud," originally "eye" (see eye (n.)). Meaning "implant germs of a disease to produce immunity" first recorded (in inoculation) 1714, originally in reference to smallpox. After 1799, often used in sense of "to vaccine inoculate." Related: Inoculated; inoculating.

Wiktionary
inoculate

vb. 1 (context transitive immunology English) To introduce an antigenic substance or vaccine into the body, as to produce immunity to a specific disease. (from ''a''. 1722) 2 (context transitive by extension English) To safeguard or protect something as if by inoculation. 3 To add one substance to another; to spike. 4 To graft by inserting buds. (from ''c''. 1420) 5 (context figurative English) To introduce into the mind (used especially of harmful ideas or principles); to imbue. (from ''a''. 1600)

WordNet
inoculate
  1. v. introduce an idea or attitude into the mind of; "My teachers inoculated me with their beliefs"

  2. introduce a micro-organism into

  3. perform vaccinations or produce immunity in by inoculation; "We vaccinate against scarlet fever"; "The nurse vaccinated the children in the school" [syn: immunize, immunise, vaccinate]

  4. insert a bud for propagation

  5. impregnate with the virus or germ of a disease in order to render immune

Usage examples of "inoculate".

Thus, we would have to inoculate ourselves against such pressure by eliminating all waiver provisions.

It was supposed that in pulling on the boots each of the subsequent owners had scratched himself and became fatally inoculated with the venom, which was unsuspected and not combated.

Cordiani inoculated in my veins the poison of jealousy, although I never dreamed of accusing her of the same crime towards him that she had committed upon me.

And now, sorry things began to happen to his inoculated guinea-pigs and rabbits.

He took two apes, inoculated them with the syphilitic virus fresh from a man, and then, one hour later, he rubbed the grayish ointment into that scratched spot on one of his apes.

The sheriffs had got inoculated and they had that task force thing trying to round up cold-hearted killers loose.

Some rural urchins who had ambled back were inoculated and ready to prowl for zombies.

They said they have already come up with it, and we are gonna get inoculated again.

And when soil is once inoculated it remains so for a long time, even though the proper legume should not be grown again on the same soil.

However, there are good reasons for believing that with the introduction of hardy varieties and through the use of Northern grown seed, an inoculated soil, where inoculation may be necessary, that medium red clover will yet be grown over wide areas in all the provinces of Northwestern Canada, south of and including the Saskatchewan valley.

Much of the soil in Illinois, it is said, must first be inoculated with the bacteria proper to alfalfa before vigorous crops can be grown, and this is probably true of sections of Indiana soil.

Because of this, growers should be slow to conclude that alfalfa will not flourish on the soils on which they sow it until they have first tried to grow it on those soils that have been inoculated with the requisite alfalfa bacteria.

Isaac Smith, reporting that Abigail, acting on her own, had decided that she and the children must be inoculated for smallpox.

The ordeal of the patient, however, could be considerable, as Adams knew from all he had seen at the time he was inoculated, and largely because of various purges that were thought essential to recovery.

The majority of the delegates, believing that the Democratic party had been inoculated with the serum of reform, were ready for the sake of a principle to risk the destruction of the party they had labored so hard to build.