replicate

1 of 3

verb

replicated; replicating
Synonyms of replicate

transitive verb

: duplicate, repeat
replicate a statistical experiment
replicated his mentor's writing style

intransitive verb

: to undergo replication : produce a replica of itself
virus particles replicating in cells

replicate

3 of 3

noun

: one of several identical experiments, procedures, or samples

Examples of replicate in a Sentence

Verb They are working on computer-generated speech that replicates the human voice. DNA replicates itself in the cell nucleus. DNA replicates in the cell nucleus.
Recent Examples on the Web
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Verb
By owning the actual planes, trucks and sorting hubs required to move goods globally, these companies possess a structural advantage and a level of operational scale that new competitors cannot replicate overnight. Arthur Zaczkiewicz, Footwear News, 10 July 2026 For starters, Ferrari has developed a whole new Manuale By-Wire system that uses electronics to replicate the feel of a conventional manual gearbox. New Atlas, 10 July 2026
Noun
There is a particular cognitive advantage that no career coach teaches and no MBA program replicates. Nick Lichtenberg, Fortune, 3 July 2026 The Jevons Paradox will allow humans to move away from robotic tasks and toward work requiring empathy, ethical judgment and complex social intuition—capabilities no model reliably replicates. Vaibhav Dani, Forbes.com, 30 June 2026 See All Example Sentences for replicate

Word History

Etymology

Verb

Middle English replecaten "to repeat," borrowed from Latin replicātus, past participle of replicō, replicāre "to turn back on itself, bend back, unroll (a papyrus book), go over (a thought, topic) repeatedly, make a replication" (Late Latin also "to restore, repeat, reply"), from re- re- + -plicāre "to fold, bend" — more at ply entry 3

Adjective

borrowed from Latin replicātus, past participle of replicō, replicāre "to turn back on itself, bend back, unroll (a papyrus book), go over (a thought, topic) repeatedly" (Late Latin also "to restore, repeat, reply") — more at replicate entry 1

Noun

noun derivative of replicate entry 1

First Known Use

Verb

15th century, in the meaning defined at transitive sense

Adjective

1915, in the meaning defined above

Noun

1929, in the meaning defined above

Time Traveler
The first known use of replicate was in the 15th century

Browse Nearby Words

Cite this Entry

“Replicate.” Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/replicate. Accessed 11 Jul. 2026.

Kids Definition

replicate

1 of 2 verb
replicated; replicating
1
2
: to produce one or more exact copies of itself
DNA replicates in the cell nucleus

replicate

2 of 2 noun
: one of several identical experiments, processes, or samples

Medical Definition

replicate

1 of 2 verb
replicated; replicating

transitive verb

: to repeat or duplicate (as an experiment)

intransitive verb

: to undergo replication : produce a replica of itself
virus particles replicating in cells

replicate

2 of 2 noun
1
: one of several identical experiments, procedures, or samples
2
: something (as a gene, DNA, or a cell) produced by replication

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