0 past simple and past participle of engender
1 to make people have a particular feeling or make a situation start to exist:
Her latest book has engendered a lot of controversy.
The vice-president's speech did not engender confidence in his judgment.
They found that the exercises engendered rhythm, balance, spatial awareness, and receptivity within their ensemble.
An engendered rebalancing of the scales is long overdue and critically important to the trajectory of the discipline.
More specifically, popular preferences for cultural unity are powerful influences on attitudes towards immigration, despite elite endorsements of a multicultural society engendered by immigration.
Internationally and locally, race (and/or ethnic difference) and gender remain crucial aspects of conflicts engendered by, or engendering, migration.
Indeed, the campaign's rhetoric and tactics and the response these engendered over time had probably widened this gulf.
Discussions of philosophy, theology and aesthetics engendered lively debate, while theoretical analysis, inter-cultural studies and genre also made significant appearances.
However, the junta could still have been greatly constrained from bluffing by the ' audience costs ' engendered by its military constituency.
Personal rivalries, di^erences in interpretation, and tactical disagreements have engendered divisions within the movement.