Definify.com
Definition 2024
contracept
contracept
English
Verb
contracept (third-person singular simple present contracepts, present participle contracepting, simple past and past participle contracepted)
- (intransitive) To use contraception
- 1932, On the meaning of life, Will Durant, R. Long & R.R. Smith, Inc., p. 121:
- Through the wisdom of our legislators, only the intelligent may contracept, while the stupid are commanded to reproduce their kind.
- 1965, Stephen J. Plank, quoted in “Professor Warns Against Assuming Birth Pill To Cure Population Boom”, The Harvard Crimson, January 05, 1966:
- … the facile assumption that we may be able to contracept our way to the Great Society.
- 1983, Toni Richards, Comparative analysis of fertility, breastfeeding, and contraception: a dynamic model, National Academies, page 27:
- it is also assumed that women who breastfeed being contracepting as soon as they stop breastfeeding unless the sum of the duration of breastfeeding and the duration of contraception is greater than the length of the interval from last birth to next conception
- 1932, On the meaning of life, Will Durant, R. Long & R.R. Smith, Inc., p. 121:
- (transitive) To administer contraception, especially to a population of wild animals
Usage notes
In sense “to use contraception”, uncommon – more common is phrasal “use contraceptives” or “use contraception”.
References
- 1 2 “contracept” in Dictionary.com Unabridged, v1.0.1, Lexico Publishing Group, 2006.
- ↑ For example, The Medical critic and guide, Volumes 6–7, 1906, p. 40 contains “… it would be a million times better, if the poor sinning girl could use a contracept [contraceptive], than that she should have to have recourse later to poisonous drugs, to the abortionist or, failing these, to the carbolic acid bottle or the river.”