| • | To produce as offspring; to bring forth; to bear; to
   procreate; to generate; to beget; to hatch. | 
											
															| • | To take care of in infancy, and through the age of youth;
   to bring up; to nurse and foster. | 
											
															| • | To educate; to instruct; to form by education; to train;
   -- sometimes followed by up. | 
											
															| • | To engender; to cause; to occasion; to originate; to
   produce; as, to breed a storm; to breed disease. | 
											
															| • | To give birth to; to be the native place of; as, a pond
   breeds fish; a northern country breeds stout men. | 
											
															| • | To raise, as any kind of stock. | 
											
															| • | To produce or obtain by any natural process. | 
											
															| • | To bear and nourish young; to reproduce or multiply
   itself; to be pregnant. | 
											
															| • | To be formed in the parent or dam; to be generated, or to
   grow, as young before birth. | 
											
															| • | To have birth; to be produced or multiplied. | 
											
															| • | To raise a breed; to get progeny. | 
											
															| • | A race or variety of men or other animals (or of plants),
   perpetuating its special or distinctive characteristics by inheritance. | 
											
															| • | Class; sort; kind; -- of men, things, or qualities. | 
											
															| • | A number produced at once; a brood. |