nascence

NOUN
  1. the event of being born
    they celebrated the birth of their first child
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How To Use nascence In A Sentence

  • A recent renascence of Baptist life in Britain has resulted in Baptist churches being among the limited number of churches that are growing rather than declining.
  • The fight against the 1971 bill developed during the nascence of the social right movement. Marie Wilson: From Right to Wrong: Daycare, Abortion and a Health Care Bill with Women at the Center
  • Little did they know in 1964, that the personal computer, still in its nascence, was about to make it even smaller. Gerit Quealy: Windows on the World
  • Arid let it not be overlooked that this was the time of Poland's intellectual renascence ” a time when the influence of man over man is greater than at other times, he being, as it were, charged with a kind of vivifying electricity. Frederic Chopin as a Man and Musician
  • New Cobley fiction, emerging from nascence into the cold hard glare of reality! New Cobley fiction, emerging from nascence into the cold hard glare of reality! « INTERSTELLAR TACTICS
  • In its early stages the literary and humanistic preoccupations and the conviction of the vast superi - ority of antiquity to anything offered by the medievals no doubt led to the neglect of some interesting medie - val inquiries e.g., those into “uniform difform” (uni - formly accelerated) motions just as the logical, cosmo - logical, and theological preoccupations of the thirteenth century had probably retarded a literary renascence. Dictionary of the History of Ideas
  • Her current repertoire has evolved entirely within the past two years - no mean feat - and she has undergone an impressive renascence of creative energy.
  • In his essay Bérubé voices disappointment about Cultural Studies not living up to the promise many felt it harbored with its nascence in the later 1960s. POETRY AND CULTURAL STUDIES: A READER, Eds. MARIA DAMON & IRA LIVINGSTON
  • The informal and individual nature of such taxonomies becomes obvious if we take a word like "person" and look at the philosophical problems that arise when it comes to nascence and sentience: many would not consider a human embryo a "person" until a certain stage of development; many would consider any sentient individual a person, regardless of humanity. THE HALLS OF PENTHEUS -- PART THREE
  • In my pathetic nascence as a comedian, I allowed the audience to become the authority figure. Dear Mrs. Fitzsimmons
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