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[ UK /ˈɪnəvˌe‍ɪt/ ]
[ US /ˈɪnəˌveɪt, ˈɪnoʊˌveɪt/ ]
VERB
  1. bring something new to an environment
    A new word processor was introduced

How To Use innovate In A Sentence

  • Bolt on necks may or may not have been innovated by him (they existed on other instruments) but he pulled together the art of manufacturing guitars like no one else.
  • The drive to constantly innovate product and process technology is strongly visible.
  • Stupidity is closer to deliverance than intellect which innovates," is a phrase ascribed to a Mohammedan saint, and do not modern theologians report with enthusiasm, the unlettered condition of Jesus? Cosmic Consciousness
  • Her work innovates ways of perceiving movement and the performer.
  • Nor can they demonstrate any ability to provide better service through innovation; the only remaining room left to innovate is in figuring out how to deny claims. Think Progress » Health Care Industry Front Group Cheers Death Of The Public Option With Large Washington Post Ad
  • What worries me is that so many large companies appear to be run by people who would rather litigate or grizzle than innovate.
  • And that was really critical because they really innovated a new technique and so, in order to innovate something obviously you don't want to practice on the first patient.
  • Actually, by 1907, Ochs made a visionary technological move by working with the inventor of the radiotelegraph, Guglielmo Marconi, to innovate the world's first transatlantic wireless news service. Ashley Rindsberg: Where Is The New York Times Going?
  • The company, he said, intends to innovate by possibly introducing entry-level malts.
  • We can no longer depend on tax breaks for multinationals or cheap labour; we must innovate and be entrepreneurial.
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