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animate
[an-uh-meyt, an-uh-mit]
verb (used with object)
to give life to; make alive.
God animated the dust.
Antonyms: killto make lively, vivacious, or vigorous; give zest or spirit to.
Her presence animated the party.
to fill with courage or boldness; encourage.
to animate weary troops.
to move or stir to action; motivate.
He was animated by religious zeal.
to give motion to.
leaves animated by a breeze.
to render or produce (a story, character, movie, etc.) by using animation: to animate the characters in a video game;
to animate a children's story;
to animate the characters in a video game;
an animated film.
adjective
alive; possessing life.
animate creatures.
Antonyms: deadlively.
an animate expression of joy.
of or relating to animal life.
able to move voluntarily.
Linguistics., belonging to a syntactic category or having a semantic feature that is characteristic of words denoting beings regarded as having perception and volition (inanimate ).
animate
verb
to give life to or cause to come alive
to make lively; enliven
to encourage or inspire
to impart motion to; move to action or work
to record on film or video tape so as to give movement to
an animated cartoon
adjective
being alive or having life
gay, spirited, or lively
Other Word Forms
- animately adverb
- animateness noun
- animatingly adverb
- interanimate verb (used with object)
- nonanimate adjective
- nonanimating adjective
- nonanimatingly adverb
- semianimate adjective
- unanimating adjective
- unanimatingly adverb
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of animate1
Synonym Study
Example Sentences
Schaeffer, who has the mien of Marine drill instructor, is animated and intense.
When I look at him, I see Roy Cohn’s protégé, a man animated by his life’s mission of attaining unlimited power.
The enormous success of Netflix’s animated film “KPop Demon Hunters” was unprecedented by the streamer’s standards, but not by the audience’s.
The miss reignited a debate about audience interest in original animated films, which have had a harder time at the box office than sequels or movies based on existing intellectual property.
A sharper debate has opened over social and cultural issues: Should Democrats break with the identity politics — the stuff Republicans deride as “woke” — that animates much of their progressive wing?
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When To Use
To animate is to make lively or give spirit to. Someone can animate a dull situation by bringing some energy to it, such as with humor, music, or anything that is associated with movement or emotion.To animate also means to give motion to, the way a cartoonist or animator does with drawings. Animated media include cartoons, 3D films, video games, and visual effects.To animate also means to motivate or to encourage to take action, as in Coach really animated the team with her pre-game speech.Animate can be used as an adjective to mean lively or full of energy, as in Carly had an animate spirit that people liked to be around.Animate can also mean able to move voluntarily. It can also broadly describe any living being as separate from inanimate objects, which cannot move on their own and don’t have their own will.When animate is used as an adjective, it is pronounced as [ an-uh-mit ], rather than [ an-uh-meyt ], as the verb form is.Example: I animate characters for children’s shows using a computer program.
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