traditionate
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Verb
[edit]traditionate (third-person singular simple present traditionates, present participle traditionating, simple past and past participle traditionated)
- To inculcate in a set of traditions.
- 1878, George D Watt, Journal of discourses. By B. Young [and others].:
- Remember to traditionate your children in the nurture and admonition of the Lord.
- 1885, Francis A. Brown, A Heroic and Eloquent Plea:
- My parents belonged to the Methodist Episcopal Church, and I was traditionated in their doctrines and reareed in their faith, until I was twenty-one years of age, when I first heard the fullness of the Gospel of Jesus Christ as revealed through the Prophet Joseph Smith.
- 1919, The Improvement Era - Volume 23, page 341:
- Name some of the desires in which parents should traditionate their children.