[
US
/ˈneɪsənt/
]
[ UK /nˈeɪsənt/ ]
[ UK /nˈeɪsənt/ ]
ADJECTIVE
-
being born or beginning
a nascent insurgency
the nascent chicks
How To Use nascent In A Sentence
- This nascent bleach can also react with primary or secondary amines to form longer lasting, antimicrobial chloramines.
- Is that strangling the nascent ‘alarm tone’ market?
- The comparison of newly formed polyploids with their haploid progenitors has revealed that nascent polyploids have a defect in stationary-phase viability.
- I began composing an introduction praising the spiritual enlightenment exhibited in choosing to congregate in taverns, like 1849 San Jose legislators stepping in from muddy streets to drink whisky on barrelheads, before plotting out the future of nascent California.
- What followed was a chaotic period in which Sparta, Thebes, and a renascent Athens jostled for power, with Persia stirring the pot.
- In this section, we focus on how businesses are using nascent concepts such as "anything-as-a-service", "multisided business models", "the co-creation of content" and "innovation from the bottom of the pyramid" to create successful and sustainable businesses in the face of disruption. Rebooting Business
- Once destined to take the place of the Saturn Aura, the Regal should meet a happier fate as part of the renascent Buick lineup. Driving impressions: Buick Regal
- No adult should be permitted to take a child from her parent or guardian, and then take away her nascent free will.
- Mumbai already boasts a nascent advertising industry and China made it into the top 10 countries for patent applications last year.
- But it also stymied Egypt's nascent transition towards democracy. Times, Sunday Times