Word
Of
The
Day
engender
engender \in-JEN-der\
verb
Engender is a formal word that means “to be the source or cause of something.”
// Our monthly book club meetings started as a way to connect and ended up being a great place to
engender unity and build life-long friendships.
See the entry >
Examples:
“... ‘During a moment defined by anti-intellectualism, escapism, and AI tools that let you skip cognitive work entirely ... intellectual creators are doing something kinda countercultural,’ says Death To Stock’s culture researcher Agus Panzoni. These influencers, who have already built established communities around intellectual pursuits, hold greater meaning and
engender more trust ...” — Markiel Magsalin,
Vogue, 15 April 2026
Did you know?
A good paragraph about
engender will engender understanding in the reader. Like its synonym
generate,
engender comes from the Latin verb
generare, meaning “to generate” or “to beget,” and when the word was first used in the 14th century,
engender meant “
propagate” or “
procreate.” That literal meaning having to do with creating offspring (which
generate shared when it was adopted in the early 16th century) was soon joined by the “to cause to exist or develop, to produce” meaning most familiar to us today.
Generare didn’t just engender
generate and
engender;
regenerate,
degenerate, and
generation have the same Latin root. As you might suspect, the list of
engender relatives does not end there.
Generare comes from the Latin noun
genus, meaning “origin” or “kind.” From this source we took our own word
genus, plus
gender,
general, and
generic, among other words.