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  1. Dictionary
    dor·mant
    /ˈdôrm(ə)nt/

    adjective

    • 1. (of an animal) having normal physical functions suspended or slowed down for a period of time; in or as if in a deep sleep: "dormant butterflies"
    • 2. temporarily inactive or inoperative: "that dormant urge to write fiction has re-emerged"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. 3 days ago · Aerobic mechano-RDRP process dismantles into mechanochemical activation and RDRP process two parts. Organic mechano-labile complexes (molecules labeled red and blue) were activated by mechanical ...

  3. Jul 17, 2024 · In January 2023, Mr. Vance signed a letter asking the Justice Department to enforce the Comstock Act, a long-dormant law from 1873, to ban the mailing of abortion medication.

  4. The meaning of DORMANT is represented on a coat of arms in a lying position with the head on the forepaws. How to use dormant in a sentence. Synonym Discussion of Dormant.

  5. Dormant adjective. sleeping; as, a dormant animal; hence, not in action or exercise; quiescent; at rest; in abeyance; not disclosed, asserted, or insisted on; as, dormant passions; dormant claims or titles. Dormant adjective. in a sleeping posture; as, a lion dormant; -- distinguished from couchant. Dormant adjective.

  6. DORMANT definition: 1. Something that is dormant is not active or growing but has the ability to be active at a later…. Learn more.

  7. 1. inactive, as in sleep; torpid. 2. being in a state of minimal metabolic activity with cessation of growth. 3. undeveloped, unasserted, or inactive; latent: talents that lay dormant. 4. (of a volcano) not erupting. 5. held in abeyance; temporarily inoperative.

  8. Synonyms for DORMANT: sleeping, asleep, resting, at rest, slumbering, napping, dozing, slumbrous; Antonyms of DORMANT: awake, aware, wakeful, sleepless, conscious, wide-awake, revived, aroused

  9. DORMANT meaning: 1. Something that is dormant is not active or growing but has the ability to be active at a later…. Learn more.

  10. Being in an inactive state during which growth and development cease and metabolism is slowed, usually in response to an adverse environment. In winter, some plants survive as dormant seeds or bulbs, and some animals enter the dormant state of hibernation. Not active but capable of renewed activity.

  11. A lesson in geometry, given by Ostilio Ricci to the pages of the grand-ducal court, chanced, tradition avers, to have Galileo for an unseen listener; his attention was riveted, his dormant genius was roused, and he threw all his energies into the new pursuit thus unexpectedly presented to him.