18 collocations for spawned

Perhaps nature told him that too many beaver dams stopped the run of spawning fish and that where there were many beavers there were always few fish.

'We are told that turtles passion their voices; that an arbour was nested, and a lady's locks gordianed up; and, to supply the place of the nouns thus verbalized, Mr. Keats, with great fecundity, spawns new ones, such as men-slugs and human serpentry, the honey-feel of bliss, wives prepare needments, and so forth.

So it has spawned a conflict between its organs, and a consequent impasse in which the lower centres drive the higher pitilessly into devising means and instruments for the suicide of the whole.

It may be the legislative lady is of that lineage, so she spawns the diurnals, and they at Westminster take them in adoption by the names of Scoticus, Civicus, Britannicus.

This old channel was, however, not only resorted to by salmon as a piece of spawning ground during the colder season of the year, but was sought for again instinctively in summer during their upward migration, when there was no water running through it.

And, since its heyday, the brain of Mars has spawned so many new ideas that this vast creature would have been obsolete, and ready for the scrap heap, even had the Hun not put it there before its time.

But if the characters are unpleasing the craftsmanship of The Magnificent Ambersons is of Mr. BOOTH TARKINGTON'S best, and his description "of the decline and fall of a locally supreme dynasty of plutocrats before the hosts of the Goths and Huns of spawning industrialism is almost a contribution to American social history.

And then, from the fictitious stuff of this rumor was spawned a veritable inspiration.

Nature is profligate both in spawning life and compassing its destruction.

Dyspepsia spawns a moody literature.

According to Lewenhoeck, the cod annually spawns upwards of nine millions of eggs, contained in a single roe.

We spawning, spawning myrmidons, Our turn to-day; we take command: Jove gives the globe into the hand Of myrmidons, of myrmidons.

The main channel in the centre was kept clear and deep to afford an uninterrupted course for navigation; but on either side were rocks that broke the river into pools and shallows, such as here, no less than on Earth, form the favourite haunts or spawning places of the fish.

Priestcraft spawned its theocracy.

" A contemporary critic accused Keats of "spawning" new words, of converting verbs into nouns, of forming new verbs, and of making strange use of adjectives and adverbs.

Statecraft spawned its bureaucracy.

The lechery of this vanity has spawned more writers than the civil law.

They themselves spawned communities of scientists, activists, doctors, and patients, among so many others, dedicated to tackling problems in collaboration across formerly prohibitive geographical and cultural divides.

18 collocations for  spawned