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Other Words From
- none·mergence noun
- ree·mergence noun
Word History and Origins
Origin of emergence1
Example Sentences
Thorgerson and Powell turned to video and film—a smart move given the emergence of MTV.
We saw the emergence of fashion designers who specialized in creating abayas.
Instead there was the emergence of a Tea Party movement that brought many traditionally low-propensity voters to the polls.
Nomani said her activism, which took root before the emergence of social media, has often been lonely and isolating.
The emergence of new technology can have the most unexpected results on human behavior.
It was the emergence of his own youth again, as why should it not be, since he had never married and had never dallied!
Great truly, O thou remarkable Dogleech, is this thy day of emergence and new-birth: and yet this same day come four years—!
For the reader very probably, as for most people outside a comparatively small circle, it meant my emergence from obscurity.
It was in closer relations with the United States that this emergence from isolation chiefly manifested itself.
Such traces are abundant in Maori tradition; and they point to a comparatively recent emergence from female kinship.
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