suppressvsfoster
Suppress means to hold something down by force so it can't be seen, felt, or expressed. Foster means the opposite: to nurture something and create the conditions in which it can grow. One presses down; the other feeds and shelters.
At a meeting table, one person stands and floats a glowing idea above it; the others round on it — scowling, shouting, jabbing fingers — and, fed nothing, the bulb shrinks, dims, and pops out of existence while its owner cowers back into the chair.
/səˈpres//səˈpres/·verbAt the same table the same idea goes up, but here the room beams and claps and each person flicks a spark of their own into it; every addition makes the bulb swell and shine until it blooms into a light that fills the whole room.
/ˈfɑːstər//ˈfɒstə/·verbBoth verbs act on something that could grow or surface, and they pull in opposite directions. Suppress comes from the Latin sub, 'under', plus premere, 'to press' — to hold down by force; what is suppressed is not removed but stored, fully charged, under the hand that holds it. Foster comes from an Old English word for nourishing: it doesn't make a thing directly, it shelters and encourages it until it can thrive. Fostering feeds exactly what suppressing starves.
What each means
suppress
To suppress is to hold something down by force — sub, 'under', plus premere, 'to press'. Regimes suppress dissent, drugs suppress immune responses, people suppress smiles, memories, and grief. The press in the word never gets to rest, because suppression is not removal: what is held down remains, fully charged, directly under the hand that holds it. That is the word's standing warning — pressure is a debt, and what is suppressed in one place tends to surface in another.
foster
To foster is to create the conditions in which something can grow — not to make it directly, but to feed, shelter, and encourage it until it can thrive. Governments foster innovation, teachers foster curiosity, good soil fosters growth. The word also names the care of a child who is not one's own, and that sense colors the rest: fostering is patient, nurturing work that helps a latent thing develop. It does the opposite of suppress, which starves what foster would feed.
At a glance
| suppress | foster | |
|---|---|---|
| Meaning | hold down by force | nurture; encourage growth |
| Direction | presses down, contains | feeds, shelters, lets grow |
| Root | Latin sub + premere (press under) | Old English fostrian (nourish) |
| Often with | dissent, a smile, evidence, the immune system, a revolt | innovation, cooperation, growth, creativity, a sense of |
| Noun | suppression | fostering |
| Example | The regime suppressed dissent. | Small grants foster innovation. |
How to remember the difference
Picture one meeting table twice. In suppress, someone raises a bright idea and the room rounds on it — scowling, shouting, jabbing fingers, not a single nod — so the idea, fed nothing, shrinks and pops out of existence while they move on. In foster, the same idea goes up and the room cheers it on, clapping and nodding and adding sparks of its own, until it swells into a light that fills the room. One starves what could grow; the other feeds it. If you're holding something down so it can't surface, you suppress it; if you're helping it develop, you foster it.
Examples
suppress
- The government tried to suppress every report of the outbreak.
- She suppressed a smile and pretended the news meant nothing.
- The drug suppresses the immune reaction that would reject the transplant.
foster
- Small grants are designed to foster innovation among first-time founders.
- A calm classroom can foster the confidence that shy students need.
- Open data fosters collaboration across borders.
They are opposites where growth or expression is concerned. Suppress is always transitive and carries a sense of force; foster is patient and nurturing, and also names the care of a child who is not one's own (foster care).
FAQ
- What is the difference between suppress and foster?
- Suppress means to hold something down by force so it can't be expressed or grow; foster means to nurture it and help it develop. They are opposites.
- Are suppress and foster opposites?
- Yes. Foster feeds what suppress starves. Foster's listed antonyms include suppress and stifle.
- What are the noun forms?
- Suppression for suppress; fostering for foster (and 'foster' also works as an adjective, as in foster care).
- Does suppress mean to destroy something?
- No. Suppression holds a thing down rather than removing it — what is suppressed remains and tends to surface elsewhere.
- What does foster typically pair with?
- Abstract nouns: foster innovation, cooperation, creativity, growth, or a sense of belonging.
- Is foster the same as facilitate?
- Close but not identical. Foster nurtures something over time so it grows; facilitate removes obstacles so a process runs more easily.