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Definitions

pullulate

[puhl-yuh-leyt] / ˈpʌl yəˌleɪt /


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Those of us in my trade should remember it can generate communities and pullulate with kindness and creativity rather than conspiracy and contempt.

From BBC • Jan. 12, 2024

Merriam-Webster, the dictionary that Scripps relies on, says the definition of pullulate includes both “to breed or produce freely” and to “swarm, teem.”

From New York Times • Jun. 2, 2022

Willows pullulate with blotchy foliage that recalls her fellow Austrian Gustav Klimt.

From New York Times • Jan. 27, 2020

What documentaries will look like ten or twenty years from now, when every life, prominent or otherwise, will pullulate with digital traces, one shudders to think.

From The New Yorker • Jul. 1, 2015

Therefore spodizators, gesinins, memains, and parazons, be not culpable of dilatory protractions in the apposition of every re-roborating species, but rather let them pullulate and superabound on the tables.

From Gargantua and Pantagruel, Illustrated, Book 5 by Motteux, Peter Anthony