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English

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Etymology

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From incubate +‎ -or.

Pronunciation

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Noun

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incubator (plural incubators)

  1. (chemistry) Any apparatus used to maintain environmental conditions suitable for a reaction.
  2. (medicine) An apparatus used to maintain environmental conditions suitable for a newborn baby.
    Synonym: brooder
  3. An apparatus used to maintain environmental conditions suitable for the hatching of eggs.
    Synonym: brooder
  4. A place to maintain the culturing of bacteria at a steady temperature.
  5. (business) A support programme for the development of entrepreneurial companies.
    • 2006, Philip N. Cooke, Creative Industries in Wales: Potential and Pitfalls, page 34:
      So the question that is commonly asked is, why put a media incubator in a media desert and have it managed by a civil servant? This gets to the heart of the institutional support problem in Wales.
    • 2014 March 10, Cory Doctorow, “The slow death of Silicon Roundabout”, in The Guardian[1], →ISSN:
      Tech City is very big on "incubators" – places where startups are supposed to grow out of a collection of adjacent desks in a huge barracks of other adjacent desks – and on luring big firms to the East End of London.
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Translations

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Romanian

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Etymology

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Borrowed from French incubateur. By surface analysis, incuba +‎ -tor.

Pronunciation

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Noun

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incubator n (plural incubatoare)

  1. incubator

Declension

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