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    Synonyme und Definitionen Gehen Sie zu den Synonymen

    Verwenden Sie „nascent“ in einem Satz

    nascent Beispielsätze

    nascent


    1. Kara chuckled as her eyes prickled with nascent tears


    2. The European currency was currently in a state of free-fall, its plummeting value owing to the nascent economic infrastructure; a misalignment with their new credit issuing system


    3. Due to my distaste for Bernadine Dohrn, the SDS, and nascent Weather Underground, I had no love for left wing radicals who practiced violence, but most of the kids beat up during the summer of 1968 struck me as pacifists


    4. But as her magnetic persona and his nascent love made a common cause, he was constrained to contemplate on the consequences of his attraction for her


    5. Learning as he went, Samson discovered he could determine most odors by stooping as he progressed, the disturbance caused by his passage enough to stir air currents of sufficient impact to lift scent enough for adequate perusal by his nascent sense of smell


    6. there were nascent forks appearing in relation to every major


    7. The nascent electrical engineers responsible for building and


    8. The boundary of the old farm lay along the nascent Karumera River, so called by the Dongo people when Kokopoulos first beheld it and said, with arms outstretched


    9. Data collection process is still in a very nascent stage in the media industry


    10. It is much more nascent and academia in the

    11. Customer data collection process is still in a very nascent stage in India


    12. Customer data collection process is still in a very nascent stage in In-effective


    13. Data collection in the online space will continue to face challenges in the near future given the nascent stage that Indian online consumer behaviour is at


    14. Though their mutual liking during the sojourn might enthuse the hearts of the infatuated co-travelers, once they separate, unsupported by the habit that sustains a relationship, their enthusiasm for each other insensibly wanes, pushing the nascent ardor on to the back burner


    15. Seeing his bride thus in the nascent sunlight, he surged to have more of her fresh youth and as he pressed against her ardently, she woke up to his ardor to match him amorously


    16. As though to draw the nectar of love to sustain her nascent life, grabbing his eager lips with her throbbing ones, she deep-kissed him


    17. Then, when it completes its circulations, it turns back into a nascent moon to indicate a new month so that we can compute the years and distinguish among the months and among the days


    18. The howling demon continued to sink into the plowed soil, proclaiming how he would savor feeding upon their souls even as their mortal substance was being ingested and excreted, and only when the nascent Black Mage had fully subsumed himself did Caleb reach for his pants pocket, brushing and squashing away the centipedal creatures that clung there an


    19. In evaluating the ability of technology to enable or amplify an existing or nascent KM initiative, it’s easy to lose sight of the underlying prem-ise of Knowledge Management


    20. This world we live is still very nascent

    21. monopolized the limelight with her antics interrupting and stultifying all nascent conversations


    22. Whatever it was moved closer, and so they snuggled together as best they could, like two nascent butterflies in their separate cocoons


    23. A Wheel – this is the same as the rotating Ether – nascent, and then disappearing


    24. Meditations of evolution increasingly vaster: of the moon invisible in incipient lunation, approaching perigee: of the infinite lattiginous scintillating uncondensed milky way, discernible by daylight by an observer placed at the lower end of a cylindrical vertical shaft 5000 ft deep sunk from the surface towards the centre of the earth: of Sirius (alpha in Canis Maior) 10 lightyears (57,000,000,000,000 miles) distant and in volume 900 times the dimension of our planet: of Arcturus: of the precession of equinoxes: of Orion with belt and sextuple sun theta and nebula in which 100 of our solar systems could be contained: of moribund and of nascent new stars such as Nova in 1901: of our system plunging towards the constellation of Hercules: of the parallax or parallactic drift of socalled fixed stars, in reality evermoving wanderers from immeasurably remote eons to infinitely remote futures in comparison with which the years, threescore and ten, of allotted human life formed a parenthesis of infinitesimal brevity


    25. The film would not just reflect but in many ways define the still nascent but increasingly twisted Nazi mythos


    26. The rooms wherein dozens of infants had wailed at their nursing now resounded with the tapping of nascent chicks


    27. The name implies that we find a market with a trend, whether a nascent trend or an already well-established trend, and then we seek to put on plays in the direction of that trend


    28. The first pullback after a breakout is critical for assessing the strength of the nascent trend


    29. Derivatives were still a mostly nascent market, and stock options were among the first of these instruments to attract much attention


    30. Countries behind the former Iron Curtain, emerging from communism into some type of market systems, had nascent stock markets and shares that were offered at what looked like fire sale prices

    31. So I had to suck it up and live with my parents while I gave my nascent brokerage career a chance to gain traction


    32. 2) shows nascent signs of a reversal as well


    33. By the mid-1990s, several private companies were developing electronic cash systems, mainly hoping to facilitate online purchases in the then nascent Internet


    34. So under nature with the nascent giraffe, the individuals which were the highest browsers and were able during dearths to reach even an inch or two above the others, will often have been preserved; for they will have roamed over the whole country in search of food


    35. But it will have been otherwise with the nascent giraffe, considering its probable habits of life; for those individuals which had some one part or several parts of their bodies rather more elongated than usual, would generally have survived


    36. Assuredly the being able to reach, at each stage of increased size, to a supply of food, left untouched by the other hoofed quadrupeds of the country, would have been of some advantage to the nascent giraffe


    37. In other orchids the threads cohere at one end of the pollen-masses; and this forms the first or nascent trace of a caudicle


    38. As a vast number of species, belonging to widely distinct groups, are endowed with this kind of sensitiveness, it ought to be found in a nascent condition in many plants which have not become climbers


    39. Again, an organ may become rudimentary for its proper purpose, and be used for a distinct one: in certain fishes the swim-bladder seems to be rudimentary for its proper function of giving buoyancy, but has become converted into a nascent breathing organ or lung


    40. They may be in a nascent condition, and in progress towards further development

    41. It is, however, often difficult to distinguish between rudimentary and nascent organs; for we can judge only by analogy whether a part is capable of further development, in which case alone it deserves to be called nascent


    42. The wing of the penguin is of high service, acting as a fin; it may, therefore, represent the nascent state of the wing: not that I believe this to be the case; it is more probably a reduced organ, modified for a new function: the wing of the Apteryx, on the other hand, is quite useless, and is truly rudimentary


    43. The mammary glands of the Ornithorhynchus may be considered, in comparison with the udders of a cow, as in a nascent condition


    44. The ovigerous frena of certain cirripedes, which have ceased to give attachment to the ova and are feebly developed, are nascent branchiae


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