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breed (v.)

Old English bredan "bring (young) to birth, procreate," also "cherish, keep warm," from West Germanic *brodjan (source also of Old High German bruoten, German brüten "to brood, hatch"), from *brod- "fetus, hatchling," from PIE root *bhreu- "to boil, bubble, effervesce, burn." The etymological notion is incubation, warming to hatch.

Intransitive sense "come into being" is from c. 1200; that of "beget or bear offspring" is from mid-13c. Of livestock, etc., "procure by the mating of parents and rear for use," mid-14c. Sense of "grow up, be reared" (in a clan, etc.) is late 14c.; meaning "form by education" is from mid-15c. Related: Bred; breeding.

breed (n.)

"race, lineage, stock from the same parentage" (originally of animals), 1550s, from breed (v.). Of persons, from 1590s. Meaning "kind, species" is from 1580s.

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Definitions of breed from WordNet
1
breed (v.)
call forth;
Synonyms: engender / spawn
breed (v.)
copulate with a female, used especially of horses;
Synonyms: cover
breed (v.)
cause to procreate (animals);
She breeds dogs
breed (v.)
have young (animals) or reproduce (organisms);
pandas rarely breed in captivity
Synonyms: multiply
2
breed (n.)
a special variety of domesticated animals within a species;
he experimented on a particular breed of white rats
Synonyms: strain / stock
breed (n.)
a special type;
Google represents a new breed of entrepreneurs
From wordnet.princeton.edu