originate

[uh-rij-uh-neyt] /əˈrɪdʒ əˌneɪt/
verb (used without object), originated, originating.
1.
to take its origin or rise; begin; start; arise:
The practice originated during the Middle Ages.
2.
(of a train, bus, or other public conveyance) to begin a scheduled run at a specified place:
This train originates at Philadelphia.
verb (used with object), originated, originating.
3.
to give origin or rise to; initiate; invent:
to originate a better method.
Origin
1645-55; probably back formation from origination (< F) < Latin orīginātiō etymology; see origin, -ate1, ion
Related forms
originable
[uh-rij-uh-nuh-buh l] /əˈrɪdʒ ə nə bəl/ (Show IPA),
adjective
origination, noun
originator, noun
self-originated, adjective
self-originating, adjective
self-origination, noun
Synonyms
3. See discover.
Examples from the web for origination
  • Jobs will be lost on the origination side for private lenders but jobs will be retained by the servicing side.
  • The economics of mortgage origination quality was the driver of the catastrophe.
  • We should have the option to turn on verification of packet origination.
  • If one collapses, the other dimensions will help with the origination of the new one.
  • Countrywide had an unparalleled mortgage origination and distribution platform.
  • If it's higher than what you were promised, the bank may have slipped in an origination fee or given you a higher interest rate.
  • But rising rates are bad for credit origination and increase the debt-service burden for existing borrowers.
  • It would not be the first time that their pursuit of loan origination fees has led to laxity in their credit judgments.
  • The loan-origination platform has high fixed costs, so it is a scale business.
  • In addition, the risk management folks were under a lot of pressure to lower origination standards to lend to as many as possible.
British Dictionary definitions for origination

originate

/əˈrɪdʒɪˌneɪt/
verb
1.
to come or bring into being
2.
(intransitive) (US & Canadian) (of a bus, train, etc) to begin its journey at a specified point
Derived Forms
origination, noun
originator, noun
Word Origin and History for origination
n.

1640s, from Middle French origination (15c.), from Latin originationem (nominative originatio), from originem (see original (adj.)).

originate

v.

1650s, probably a back-formation of origination. In earliest reference it meant "to trace the origin of;" meaning "to bring into existence" is from 1650s; intransitive sense of "to come into existence" is from 1775. Related: Originated; originating.

origination in Medicine

originate o·rig·i·nate (ə-rĭj'ə-nāt')
v. o·rig·i·nat·ed, o·rig·i·nat·ing, o·rig·i·nates

  1. To bring into being; create.

  2. To come into being; start.