precipitate
/prɪˈsɪpɪteɪt/ (bre, ipa) · /prɪˈsɪpɪteɪt/ (ame, ipa) · /pri-ˈsi-pə-ˌtāt/ (ame, mw) · /prɪˈsɪp.ɪ.tət/ (bre, ipa) · /priːˈsɪp.ə.t̬ət/ (ame, ipa)
precipitate — verb
- precipitatepresent simple I / you / we / they
- precipitateshe / she / it
- precipitatedpast simple
- precipitating-ing form
1. to cause an event or change, often an unpleasant one, to begin at once or earlie
to cause an event or change, often an unpleasant one, to begin at once or earlier than people expected.
The mayor's angry speech precipitated a strike by bus drivers.
precipitate + strike / crisis / conflict
A sharp price rise precipitated panic buying across the island.
The minister's sudden resignation precipitated a leadership battle inside the party.
The court ruling precipitated changes that schools were not ready for.
One careless post online precipitated an argument among the parents.
- trigger
common and slightly less formal; often for a chain reaction
- spark
suggests starting something suddenly, often conflict or interest
- hasten
stresses making something happen sooner
- bring about
broader and less focused on sudden timing
文法句型
precipitate + crisis / conflict / change
precipitate + reaction
用法筆記
Object is usually an event, crisis, change, or reaction, not a person or thing. It often suggests that the result comes quickly and is difficult to control.
常見錯誤
2. to send someone or something hurtling down from a high place with strong force.
to send someone or something hurtling down from a high place with strong force.
The blast precipitated rocks onto the road below.
precipitate + object + onto/down
A wave precipitated the swimmer against the harbor wall.
The horse stumbled and precipitated its rider into the mud.
The broken lift cable precipitated the box to the ground.
During the riot, a guard was precipitated down the steps.
文法句型
precipitate + object + down / into / onto + place
用法筆記
This sense is literary and strongly physical. It is usually followed by a phrase showing downward direction such as into, onto, or down.
常見錯誤
3. in chemistry, to form a solid that comes out of a liquid, or to make this happen
in chemistry, to form a solid that comes out of a liquid, or to make this happen.
When the liquid cooled, white crystals precipitated at the bottom.
intransitive: solid appears from liquid
Adding salt precipitated the protein from the warm solution.
transitive: precipitate + substance from solution
A yellow solid precipitated after Dr. Lin mixed the two liquids.
The lab worker precipitated copper from the blue liquid.
- separate
broader and not limited to chemistry
- deposit
often focuses on the solid left behind
- crystallize
narrower; suggests crystal formation
- dissolve
become part of the liquid instead of coming out of it
文法句型
substance precipitates from solution
precipitate + substance + from solution
用法筆記
Common in chemistry writing. Intransitive use names the solid that appears; transitive use names the action or substance that causes the separation.
常見錯誤
precipitate — noun
- precipitatesingular
- precipitatesplural
1. a solid left behind when a chemical change makes material separate from a liquid
a solid left behind when a chemical change makes material separate from a liquid.
The students filtered the white precipitate from the beaker.
filter + precipitate
A dark precipitate formed after the two clear liquids were mixed.
a precipitate forms
Dr. Huang weighed the dry precipitate before writing the report.
The red precipitate stayed at the bottom of the test tube.
文法句型
a precipitate forms
filter / collect / weigh a precipitate
用法筆記
Usually modified by a color word such as white, red, or brown. Common verbs with it are form, settle, filter, collect, and weigh.
常見錯誤
precipitate — adjective
- precipitatepositive
- more precipitatecomparative
- most precipitatesuperlative
1. made in a rush, before there has been enough time to think or prepare properly.
made in a rush, before there has been enough time to think or prepare properly.
The board regretted its precipitate decision to close the village clinic.
precipitate + decision / action
A precipitate attack left the soldiers without maps or enough food.
Because of one precipitate move, Nora lost the trust of clients.
The judge warned against precipitate action before all the facts arrived.
The firm's precipitate exit from the market cost the company millions.
- cautious
careful and slow to act
- deliberate
done after careful thought
文法句型
precipitate decision / action / move / departure
用法筆記
Usually modifies decision, action, move, exit, or attack. It is formal and often critical, unlike neutral quick or fast.