CREATE


Meaning of CREATE in English

I. krēˈāt adjective

Etymology: Middle English creat, from Latin creatus, past participle of creare to create — more at crescent

archaic : created

II. (ˈ)krē|āt, usu -ād.+V verb

( -ed/-ing/-s )

Etymology: Middle English createn, from Latin creatus

transitive verb

1. : to bring into existence : make out of nothing and for the first time

God created the heaven and the earth — Gen 1:1 (Authorized Version)

2. : to cause to be or to produce by fiat or by mental, moral, or legal action: as

a. : to invest with a new form, office, or rank : constitute by an act of law or sovereignty

create one a peer

create a new administrative post

: appoint

create one a judge

b. : to produce or effect as an act of grace

create in me a clean heart — Ps 51:10 (Authorized Version)

c. : to bring about by a course of action or behavior

create an impression of invincibility

create an opportunity to talk to someone

create a demand for a product by advertising

create a disturbance

3. : to cause or occasion — used of natural or physical causes and especially of social and evolutionary or emergent forces

a famine creates high food prices

modern science, which created this dilemma, is also capable of solving it — Bruce Bliven b. 1889

4.

a. : to produce (as a work of art or of dramatic interpretation) along new or unconventional lines

created a new Hamlet

b. : to design (as a costume or a dress)

intransitive verb

1. : to make or bring into existence something new (as something of an imaginative or artistic character) : invent

quick to imitate but powerless to create

2. slang Britain : to complain loudly : carry on : gripe

don't go near him while he's creating

Webster's New International English Dictionary.      Новый международный словарь английского языка Webster.