HASTEN vs INDUCE: VERB
- Cause to occur rapidly
- Step on it
- Speed up the progress of; facilitate
- To move in a quick fashion.
- To make someone speed up or make something happen quicker.
- To cause some scheduled event to happen earlier.
- Move fast
- Act or move at high speed
- Reason or establish by induction
- Cause to do; cause to act in a specified manner
- Cause to arise
- Cause to occur rapidly
- Produce electric current by electrostatic or magnetic processes
- To lead by persuasion or influence; incite.
- To cause, bring about, lead to.
- To cause or produce (electric current or a magnetic state) by a physical process of induction.
HASTEN vs INDUCE: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- To speed up; accelerate.
- To move with celerity; to be rapid in motion; to act speedily or quickly; to go quickly.
- To cause to happen sooner than otherwise would be the case.
- To cause to move or act swiftly.
- To move or act swiftly. : speed.
- N/A
HASTEN vs INDUCE: TRANSITIVE VERB
- To press; to drive or urge forward; to push on; to precipitate; to accelerate the movement of; to expedite; to hurry.
- To bring about or stimulate the occurrence of; cause.
- To lead or move, as to a course of action, by influence or persuasion. : persuade.
- To infer by inductive reasoning.
- To produce (an electric current or a magnetic charge) by induction.
- To produce (radioactivity, for example) artificially by bombardment of a substance with neutrons, gamma rays, and other particles.
- To initiate or increase the production of (an enzyme or other protein) at the level of genetic transcription.
- To cause an increase in the transcription of the RNA of (a gene).
- To lead in; to introduce.
- To draw on; to overspread.
- To lead on; to influence; to prevail on; to incite; to persuade; to move by persuasion or influence.
- To bring on; to effect; to cause.
- To generalize or conclude as an inference from all the particulars; -- the opposite of deduce.
- To cause the expression of (a gene or gene product) by affecting a transcription control element on the genome, either by inhibiting a negative control or by activating a positive control; to derepress.
HASTEN vs INDUCE: OTHER WORD TYPES
- To move or act with celerity; be rapid, speedy, or quick; make haste: applied primarily to voluntary action.
- Facilitate
- Speed up the progress of
- Move hurridly
- Act at high speed
- Synonyms Hasten, Hurry. To hasten is to work, move, etc., quickly, but properly not too quickly; to hurry is to go too fast for dignity, comfort, or thoroughness: as, to hasten to tell a piece of good news; to hasten the erection of a building; to hurry through a lesson; to look hurried. While hasten has come to be thus used only in a good sense, haste, n., hasty, and hastiness retain a bad meaning as well as a good: as, the book was evidently written in haste; he had a hasty temper; he had occasion to regret his hastiness. Indeed, hasty and hastiness usually convey censure.
- To cause to move or act with celerity; cause to make haste; drive or urge forward; expedite.
- To lead in; bring in; introduce.
- To draw on; place upon.
- To lead by persuasion or influence; prevail upon; incite.
- To lead to; bring about by persuasion or influence; bring on or produce in any way; cause: as, his mediation induced a compromise; opium induces sleep.
- In physics, to cause or produce by proximity without contact or apparent transmission, as a particular electric or magnetic condition in a body, by the approach of another body which is in an opposite electric or magnetic state.
- To infer by induction.
- Synonyms and Impel, Induce, etc. See actuate, and list under incite.
- Cause to do
- Cause to act in a specified manner
HASTEN vs INDUCE: RELATED WORDS
- Race, Bucket along, Rush along, Pelt along, Belt along, Cannonball along, Look sharp, Hotfoot, Hie, Rush, Speed, Hurry, Stimulate, Induce, Expedite
- Prompt, Trigger, Arouse, Entice, Engender, Provoke, Elicit, Bring on, Rush, Have, Get, Make, Cause, Hasten, Stimulate
HASTEN vs INDUCE: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Advance, Activate, Streamline, Quicken, Precipitate, Accelerate, Race, Look sharp, Hie, Rush, Speed, Hurry, Stimulate, Induce, Expedite
- Prompt, Trigger, Arouse, Entice, Engender, Provoke, Elicit, Bring on, Rush, Have, Get, Make, Cause, Hasten, Stimulate
HASTEN vs INDUCE: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- But its extreme malfunction may also hasten death.
- Why should anyone hasten to their red elegance?
- One lawsuit was filed to hasten the process.
- Not only in him I hasten to add.
- And they hasten to rescue their captured mother.
- Thou canst not hasten the creation of art.
- Africa must hasten efforts to integrate digital practices.
- Can We Hasten the Second Coming of Christ?
- Anything we can do to hasten your departure?
- Stir not thy tongue herewith to hasten it.
- Xmas induce Y market Building Products Executives confer.
- Use pictures and other materials to induce fear.
- Neither threats nor lashes could induce young Mr.
- Decapitation appears to induce rapid loss of consciousness.
- They thought that early exposure could induce allergies.
- It will also induce violence in the streets.
- Evidence on the effect on public school performance: Vouchers can induce competition between private and public schools and thereby induce higher public school performance.
- Douglass or induce or attempt to induce any such employee to leave the employment of Douglass.
- Thiopental does not predictably induce respiratory arrest, nor does potassium chloride always induce cardiac arrest.
- Attempt to induce or induce policyholders to relinquish their policies.
HASTEN vs INDUCE: QUESTIONS
- Why did the Japanese Emperor hasten to end the war?
- How did the modern state hasten the process of assimilation?
- Why did I hasten round the corner to sift this ancient Boatwright?
- Does double effect apply to palliative care interventions that hasten death?
- Do bad actors hasten the departure of effective board members?
- How many examples of hasten are there in a sentence?
- What does the Bible say about hasten to my assistance?
- Why do some parents hasten the fall from innocence?
- Do opioids hasten death in patients with advanced illness?
- Do physicians hasten death when there is suffering?
- Do autophagosomes induce obligatory intracellular infection?
- Does keratinocyte differentiation induce mtDNA hypermutation?
- How do psychostimulants induce locomotor sensitization?
- Does synchronous stroking induce proprioceptive drift?
- Do ocean currents induce electromagnetic induction?
- Do local anesthetics induce malignant hyperthermia?
- How does photothrombosis induce cerebral infarction?
- Does lamotrigine induce or inhibit glucuronidation?
- Does GADD45 upregulation induce endodermal lineages?
- Does oseltamivir induce pharmacokinetic drug interactions?