Originate in a sentence as a verb

I can see blocking CC transactions that originate from a VPN provider's IP space, as having a high risk of fraud.

Credit cards are where these crazy policies originate, and unless you're prepared to stop accepting them, you'll have to play ball.

The innovation didn't originate in the conception of the device itself.

They both drive around Los Angeles and carry guns ..." In the case of Stratfor and Wikileaks, one group finds secret information and makes it public, the other group takes secret information and sells it back to the same secret community from where the leaks originate.

If you have an engineer using publicly broadcast random numbers in your cryptography, the problem did not originate in the font size of the "Beware of the Leopard" sign.

This makes print reporters much more knowledgeable about their respective beats than other kinds of reporters, and that's why most breaking stories originate in newspapers.

I do not think that most of them are supportable - they seem to originate from a mono-cultural understanding of the world which muddles influences from non-Western cultures with the effects of technology.

Government sponsored economic espionage activities that are out of proportion to American efforts against the rest of the world will originate at the provincial level.

Next up: suing the midwives who delivered the miners who dug out the coal that was burned to generate the electricity that powered the factory that manufactured the computer that was used to originate the offending tweet.

This legal arrangement is made with a few specific business models in mind, but those business models originate from the age of printing presses, and this legal arrangement is not conducive to free collaboration and improvements of the works in question, as is the expected norm in, for example, science.

Originate definitions

verb

come into existence; take on form or shape; "A new religious movement originated in that country"; "a love that sprang up from friendship"; "the idea for the book grew out of a short story"; "An interesting phenomenon uprose"

See also: arise rise develop uprise grow

verb

bring into being; "He initiated a new program"; "Start a foundation"

See also: initiate start

verb

begin a trip at a certain point, as of a plane, train, bus, etc.; "The flight originates in Calcutta"