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
  • More cross-pollination of Showtime and Paramount+ offerings might help, especially with a new season of Yellowjackets on the horizon.
    Katie Campione, Deadline, 25 Dec. 2024
  • 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

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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