Foster in a sentence as a noun

Google said that it wants to foster an open ecosystem.

It's not their job to maintain, foster, or enhance company culture.

I'd strongly disagree that it's not the CFO's job to foster and enhance company culture.

The idea that we need patents to foster innovation is a self-serving lie.

We should foster an atmosphere of encouragement, even if the idea seems silly.

Foster in a sentence as a verb

You can foster them by identifying in advance what decision needs to be made and sending it around in advance.

Another spent her teenage years in the foster care system and took classes at a community college to bring herself up to speed.

They make statements like this in order to foster plea discussions, which resulted in the 4-6 month offer she mentioned in the second statement.

Its structure was put in place with the pace and methods of innovation fostered by the industrial revolution.

Then the email I got from TaskRabbit about being unprofessional my answer to that is, if you actively suppress what you actually foster, it is abuse.

Foster in a sentence as an adjective

There are an infinite number of variables, biases, and contexts that foster or hinder "creativity" and the very notion of "rebellion" is defined entirely by context.

The state and its avatars must recognize that it cannot and must not have the ability to exercise absolute power over citizen's thoughts, computations, and communications if it wishes to foster a healthy and free society.

"We hold that one who distributes a device with the object of promoting its use to infringe copyright, as shown by clear expression or other affirmative steps taken to foster infringement, is liable for the resulting acts of infringement by third parties.

Foster definitions

noun

United States songwriter whose songs embody the sentiment of the South before the American Civil War (1826-1864)

See also: Foster

verb

promote the growth of; "Foster our children's well-being and education"

See also: further

verb

bring up under fosterage; of children

verb

help develop, help grow; "nurture his talents"

See also: nurture

adjective

providing or receiving nurture or parental care though not related by blood or legal ties; "foster parent"; "foster child"; "foster home"; "surrogate father"

See also: surrogate