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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
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  • 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
  • More than any other man he laid the foundations of the Byzantine literary and philosophical renascence of the 12th cent.
  • It was a young woman in silvery satins of a Renascence design; she had golden hair in two long shining ropes, and a face so startingly pale between them that she might have been chryselephantine — made, that is, like some old Greek statues, out of ivory and gold. The Complete Father Brown
  • The spirit of the age led many astrologers to attempt a renascence and reformation in astrology: a return to pre-medieval practice, which they took to be preserved in Ptolemy.
  • ‘And now,’ he solemnly announced, ‘let this day be forever marked in history as the renascence of our glorious kingdom's greatest legacy!’
  • Randolph failed: the South supported the war anyway, enthusiastically, and there was no renascence of Jeffersonian decentralism.
  • The status of slaves, the political and social requirements of nobility, the draw of the Coliseum, and the cloaked nascence of Christianity are woven into the story seamlessly through the narration of Cecilia. Nina Sankovitch: Feminist of Ancient Rome: Cecilia by Linda Ferri
  • One English firm was marketing a product called ‘garum’ in the 19th century, for an advertisement appears in an English cookery book of the period; but this seems to have been an isolated survival or renascence.
  • It was tiled with the utmost care, and painted to a beautiful blend of Spanish, Indian, and renascence decor that blended only better with the richly coloured carpets.
  • Serbia; the renascence of Russia; the wonderful upleap to the needs of the times by Great, and still more by Greater Britain; and, not least, the bracing of the loins of our closest Allies just across the water. Raemaekers' Cartoons With Accompanying Notes by Well-known English Writers

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