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  1. Precipitate usually means "bringing something on" or "making it happen" — and not always in a good way. An unpopular verdict might "precipitate violence" or one false step at the Grand Canyon could precipitate you down into the gorge.

  2. In chemistry, a precipitate is an insoluble solid that emerges from a liquid solution . The emergence of the insoluble solid from solution is called precipitation. Often the precipitate emerges as a suspension . Precipitates can form when two soluble salts react in solution to form one or more insoluble products. soluble salt 1 + soluble salt 2 ...

  3. 1 precipitate /prɪ ˈ sɪpəˌteɪt/ verb. precipitates; precipitated; precipitating. Britannica Dictionary definition of PRECIPITATE. 1. [+ object] formal : to cause (something) to happen quickly or suddenly. Her death precipitated a family crisis. The budget problem was precipitated by many unexpected costs. 2. technical.

  4. Define precipitate. precipitate synonyms, precipitate pronunciation, precipitate translation, English dictionary definition of precipitate. hasten the occurrence of; ...

  5. precipitate somebody/something into something to suddenly force somebody/something into a particular state or condition The assassination of the president precipitated the country into war. Word Origin early 16th cent.: from Latin praecipitat- ‘thrown headlong’, from the verb praecipitare , from praeceps , praecip(it)- ‘headlong’, from prae ‘before’ + caput ‘head’.

  6. Synonyms for PRECIPITATE: hurried, rushed, rash, precipitous ... Subscribe to America's largest dictionary and get thousands more definitions and advanced search ...

  7. precipitate in American English. (verb prɪˈsɪpɪˌteit, adjective & noun prɪˈsɪpɪtɪt, -ˌteit) (verb -tated, -tating) transitive verb. 1. to hasten the occurrence of; bring about prematurely, hastily, or suddenly. to precipitate an international crisis. 2. to cast down headlong; fling or hurl down.

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