[
US
/ˈɪntɹoʊ/
]
NOUN
- a brief introductory passage to a piece of popular music
- formally making a person known to another or to the public
How To Use intro In A Sentence
- If we have spent several class periods introducing conventions of reasoned evidence in argumentative writing, we usually look for such features in student papers.
- Your essay gets a bit confused halfway through when you introduce too many ideas at once.
- After the introductory parts, the book begins with a summary of the scientific papers presented at the seminar.
- You come along with me and I'll introduce you (he's not what you call a refined sort of feller, yer know, 'he explained forbearingly,' but still we've always been friends in a way); you can't stop? The Giant's Robe
- This textbook provides a modern and accessible introduction to magnetohydrodynamics.
- But that previous column leads one to question whether a session bean is necessary at all, introducing the possibility of using entity beans and their Home methods instead of session beans.
- So I'm pleased to introduce our first presenter , one of the stars of Traffic , Catherine Zeta - Jones .
- Ralphs et al. suggested no difference in locoweed consumption between native cattle and cattle introduced to locoweed under natural grazing conditions.
- Even as large numbers were reintroduced to former habitats, it was not easy to prove that they were surviving and reproducing, the true measure of the project's success.
- We have introduced singers like Madeline Bell as headliners and I think the club is beginning to take off.