Tikibu: pronunciation dictionary with use examples

Word: developments
IPA transcription: [dɪv'ɛləpmənts]
Pronunciations of developments
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Usage examples
  • But you will mingle with our people, and you will see here developments that will surprise you."
  • The final extermination of the sailing ship is popularly expected as one of the first developments of the twentieth century in maritime traffic.
  • The steam-engine at the same time opened up the long line of mechanical inventions by which wood and iron are shaped and wrought, and the iron industry underwent notable developments.
  • In one letter the Major said he agreed with Mr. Hawkins that the inquirer seemed not altogether on the wrong track; but he also agreed that it would be best to keep quiet until more convincing developments were forthcoming.
  • These developments lead us to suspect that urticaria and pemphigus are identical in essence; this fact is richly substantiated by the hom[oe]opathic law which furnishes identical means of cure for either of these affections.
  • Shakespeare, himself an actor, and an intelligent man, knew how to express by the means not only of speech, but of exclamation, gesture, and the repetition of words, states of mind and developments or changes of feeling taking place in the persons represented.
  • The latter would become still stronger if we separated from the thought of Aristotle a few developments which are not essential, though he allowed them great importance: I refer to the continual comparison he makes with the form and matter of corporeal objects.
  • It was modern to the highest degree in construction and operation; there was very little manual labor there; no poverty; every person had all the benefits of modern developments in power, transportation, and communication, and of all other resources provided by scientific progress.
  • Their developments and completions, due to such men as Clairaut, Euler, D'Alembert, Lagrange, Laplace, Airy, Leverrier, Adams, we should of course not have had to the same extent; because the lives and energies of these great men would have been partially consumed in obtaining the main facts themselves.
  • However, he set to work to polish it up and finish it, and added to it a great number of later developments and embellishments, especially the part concerning the lunar theory, which gave him a deal of trouble--and no wonder; for in the way he has put it there never was a man yet living who could have done the same thing.
0. Word pronunciation is derived from article recording Star Wars: Episode I – The Phantom Menace, License CC BY-SA 4.0
1. Word pronunciation is derived from article recording Martin Luther, License CC BY-SA 4.0
2. Word pronunciation is derived from article recording Transhumanism, License CC BY-SA 4.0
3. Word pronunciation is derived from article recording Theory of Colours, License CC BY-SA 4.0
4. Word pronunciation is derived from article recording Sheffield, License CC BY-SA 4.0
5. Word pronunciation is derived from article recording Robert Garran, License CC BY-SA 4.0
6. Word pronunciation is derived from article recording Broad Creek, North Carolina, License CC BY-SA 4.0
7. Word pronunciation is derived from article recording Hillary Clinton, License CC BY-SA 4.0
8. Word pronunciation is derived from article recording Hamlet, License CC BY-SA 4.0
9. Word pronunciation is derived from article recording Glasses, License CC BY-SA 4.0