How to Use cross-pollination in a Sentence
cross-pollination
noun-
The cross-pollination of Hollywood and Japan goes back for decades.
— Yuri Kageyama, USA TODAY, 6 Mar. 2023 -
Almond trees depend on bees for cross-pollination, and bees in turn feed on almond pollen, which helps sustain the hives throughout the bloom.
— Amy Taxin, The Christian Science Monitor, 11 Apr. 2023 -
There's also the issue of cross-pollination, which will happen the second year these two are in the garden together.
— Heather Bien, Southern Living, 3 July 2024 -
One of Antwerp’s distinctions is its cross-pollination of creative scenes.
— Mary Winston Nicklin, Condé Nast Traveler, 2 Apr. 2024 -
More fluidity among work teams and cross-pollination of skills gives both employees and employers ways to adapt when change comes.
— Sarah Peiker, Forbes, 19 Apr. 2023 -
Webb sees potential not only for sowing and reaping but for cross-pollination as well.
— Frank E. Lockwood, Arkansas Online, 4 Nov. 2023 -
There’s so much cross-pollination between scenes, a lot of different people playing on each other’s records and sitting in with each other.
— Simon Vozick-Levinson, Rolling Stone, 28 June 2023 -
The main course is another lesson in culinary cross-pollination.
— Emily Heil, Washington Post, 25 Apr. 2023 -
Yet for all of that cultural cross-pollination, the role that Indian arts and crafts have played in shaping global aesthetics has not always received its due.
— Marley Marius, Vogue, 15 Mar. 2023 -
When ordering your pawpaws, be sure to plant two or more selections to ensure cross-pollination of the different pawpaw trees.
— Southern Living Editors, Southern Living, 10 Sep. 2023 -
This cross-pollination of ideas is already influencing the main series.
— Naman Ramachandran, Variety, 16 Oct. 2024 -
Fashion is a cross-pollination of different mediums and interests and cultures and ideas.
— José Criales-Unzueta, Vogue, 15 Aug. 2024 -
Such cross-pollination of ideas among diverse hackathon participants -- who may not speak the same tongue but who do understand the same code -- unleashes new creative energies.
— Hilary Tetenbaum, USA TODAY, 8 Aug. 2023 -
For David Weiss, an American designer who sees a revolution in the making, a cross-pollination of ideas is essential.
— Julia Zaltzman, Robb Report, 29 July 2023 -
Pecans need cross-pollination between a compatible pair of cultivars to produce a crop.
— Miri Talabac, Baltimore Sun, 18 Jan. 2024 -
With so much cross-pollination going on, there’s a logic to having someone at Erwich’s level serving as a day-to-day creative director and content traffic cop.
— Josef Adalian, Vulture, 11 Apr. 2024 -
And Taylor offered some insight into why the Cal and Stanford coaching ranks have experienced such cross-pollination.
— Steve Kroner, San Francisco Chronicle, 8 Apr. 2023 -
Disagreement creates cross-pollination between groups and that back-and-forth makes an even bigger cultural moment.
— Alison Foreman, IndieWire, 6 Aug. 2024 -
The effect of all that creative cross-pollination is awesome; every moment bursts with color, texture, humor, movement.
— Marley Marius, Vogue, 16 Jan. 2024 -
Apples grow naturally with cross-pollination — meaning wind or bees transfer pollen from one apple plant to the blossoms on another.
— Sydney Page, Washington Post, 4 Nov. 2023 -
Great for eating fresh and baking, this apple type came to exist thanks to a humble Minnesota honeybee's path during natural cross-pollination.
— Katlyn Moncada, Better Homes & Gardens, 14 Dec. 2023 -
The cross-pollination of ideas and conversations that spring organically from her relationships, in turn, feed her writing.
— Hazlitt, 4 Sep. 2024 -
Long before the narrative overcrowding of cross-pollination, composite timelines and the damn multiverse brought fatigue to the modern comic-book superhero adventure, those movies had freshness and a buoyant sense of fun.
— David Rooney, The Hollywood Reporter, 16 Aug. 2023 -
Though the Playhouse was not attached officially to the university, there was some cross-pollination, with Smith being much in demand as a cast member for student productions and revues at what was still then a largely male institution.
— Rebecca Mead, The New Yorker, 28 Sep. 2024 -
Some apple cultivars can fruit by themselves, but most require cross-pollination with another apple tree of a different cultivar.
— Miri Talabac, Baltimore Sun, 25 Apr. 2024 -
This change requires a focus on cross-pollination of ideas, encouraging executives to work outside their traditional domains and bringing fresh perspectives to challenges.
— Chris Morris, Fortune, 5 Nov. 2024 -
Leaders must never lose track of key performance indices, such as vision sharing, team bonding, cross-pollination of ideas, derivation of learnings, improvement of workplace culture, client relations or customer experience, etc.
— Abiola Salami, Forbes, 11 Dec. 2023 -
While downplaying his assistance to the campaign, Rufo described it as an inspiring and novel cross-pollination of his political and personal experiences.
— Yiyun Li, Harper's Magazine, 23 Oct. 2024 -
And nothing spurs cross-pollination like space exploration, which draws from the ranks of astrophysicists, biologists, chemists, engineers, planetary geologists, and subspecialists in those fields.
— Neil Degrasse Tyson, Foreign Affairs, 15 Feb. 2012 -
Charleston connection There is little cross-pollination between programs separated by 2,157 miles.
— Mark Zeigler, San Diego Union-Tribune, 13 Mar. 2023
Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'cross-pollination.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.
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