incubate
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English 5++LDOCE 5++in·cu·bate /ˈɪŋkjəbeɪt/ verb [intransitive, transitive] 1. HBBif a bird incubates its eggs, or if the eggs incubate, they are kept warm until they hatch (=the birds inside are born) 孵〔卵〕;孵化2. medicalHBMMI if a disease incubates, or if you incubate it, it develops in your body until you show physical signs of it 〔疾病〕潜伏(于人体内) —incubation /ˌɪŋkjəˈbeɪʃən/ noun [uncountable] Hepatitis has a long incubation period. 肝炎有很长的潜伏期。→ See Verb table
Examples from the Corpus
incubate• What is important is that I added some additional enzyme to the incubate.• They took their generous severance packages to incubate an entirely different lifestyle.• There it is incubated, and there the young sits until it is large enough to fly away.• The second strand reaction was incubated at 12°C for 30 minutes, 22°C for 30 minutes and 70°C for 10 minutes.• The reaction mixture was incubated at 37°C.• The mixtures were incubated for 30 minutes at 25°C and centrifuged for 10 minutes.• Taken in mid-morning, it coated the teeth and then incubated until lunchtime; the lactose fermented into lactic acid.• When these cells were incubated with serum from diabetic patients prostacyclin production was inhibited.Origin incubate (1600-1700) Latin past participle of incubare “to lie on”, from cubare “to lie”in·cu·bate verbChineseSyllable
its a the if eggs or bird if eggs, incubates Corpus
incubate
in‧cu‧bate /ˈɪŋkjəbeɪt, ˈɪŋkjʊbeɪt/
verb [intransitive and transitive]
2. medical if a disease incubates, or if you incubate it, it develops in your body until you show physical signs of it
—incubation /ˌɪŋkjəˈbeɪʃən, ˌɪŋkjʊˈbeɪʃən/ noun [uncountable]:
Hepatitis has a long incubation period.
in‧cu‧bate /ˈɪŋkjəbeɪt, ˈɪŋkjʊbeɪt/
verb [intransitive and transitive] Date: 1600-1700
Language: Latin
Origin: past participle of incubare 'to lie on', from cubare 'to lie'
1. if a bird incubates its eggs, or if the eggs incubate, they are kept warm until they hatch (=the birds inside are born)Language: Latin
Origin: past participle of incubare 'to lie on', from cubare 'to lie'
2. medical if a disease incubates, or if you incubate it, it develops in your body until you show physical signs of it
—incubation /ˌɪŋkjəˈbeɪʃən, ˌɪŋkjʊˈbeɪʃən/ noun [uncountable]: