0 past simple and past participle of perpetuate --
1 to cause something to continue: --
The aim of the association is to perpetuate the skills of traditional furniture design.
Increasing the supply of weapons will only perpetuate the violence and anarchy.
The antagonisms have been crystallised and a pattern entrenching conflict between the two groups has been perpetuated.
Those properties are differentially perpetuated in the population maintained by the current selection contingency.
It is not matter but the memory of the form that is perpetuated during cell division and genetic transmission, he insisted.
And power, in the final analysis, is what this study is about - how it was granted, how it was perpetuated, and how it was expressed.
The big question about epigenetic states, of course, is how they are perpetuated through cycles of cell division.
But what features of our biology are to be perpetuated, what are the nobler traits of man?
The policies of the postcolonial government have perpetuated the colonial inheritance of local disempowerment.
Women were excluded from inheritance as well as asset formation under the pre-war civil code, and such gender discrimination has been perpetuated.