The AI-powered English dictionary
countable and uncountable, plural inventions
Something invented. quotations examples
Warren Sheffield is telephoning Rose long distance at half past six. […] Personally, I wouldn't marry a man who proposed to me over an invention.
1944 November 28, Irving Brecher and Fred F. Finklehoffe, Meet Me in St. Louis, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
British inventions have done more to influence the shape of the modern world than those of any other country. Many—football, the steam engine and Worcestershire sauce, to take a random selection—have spread pleasure, goodwill and prosperity. Others—the Maxim gun, the Shrapnel shell and jellied eels—have not.
2013 October 5, “The widening gyre”, in The Economist, volume 409, number 8856
The act of inventing. quotations examples
Digging deeper, the invention of eyeglasses is an elaboration of the more fundamental development of optics technology. The ability of a segment of a glass sphere to magnify whatever is placed before it was known around the year 1000, when the spherical segment was called a reading stone, […] .
2013 September-October, Henry Petroski, “The Evolution of Eyeglasses”, in American Scientist
The capacity to invent. examples
(music) A small, self-contained composition, particularly those in J.S. Bach’s Two- and Three-part Inventions. quotations examples
INVENTION. A term used by J. S. Bach, and probably by him only, for small pianoforte pieces — 15 in 2 parts and 15 in 3 parts — each developing a single idea, and in some measure answering to the Impromptu of a later day.
1880, George Grove (editor and entry author), A Dictionary of Music and Musicians II, London: Macmillan & Co., page 15, Invention
(archaic) The act of discovering or finding; the act of finding out; discovery.