英:['næsns]
美:['næsəns]
英:['næsns]
美:['næsəns]
词根:nascent
adj.nascent 初期的;开始存在的,发生中的
n.nascency 起源;发生
Noun
1. the event of being born;
"they celebrated the birth of their first child"
The first known use of nascence was in 1570
1 All of the pieces were manufactured in the early 1940s—which happens to be the era when surfing was in its nascence as a sport in America.
2 The nascence of that kind of animal is unknown.
那种动物的起源不为人知。
3 In 1965, when Mr. Chadabe was 27 and computer music was in its nascence, he was asked by the State University of New York at Albany to run its electronic music studio.
4 Every heart should make peace not with its moods, but rather with the permanent and absolute amateurism that comes with feeling your way through the nascence of what’s next.
5 To say this approach has been well-received by customers and critics is perhaps the understatement of the year, and though still in its nascence Musaafer looks to become a landmark on Houston’s culinary landscape.
6 Delić has worked on the experiment since its nascence—first as an undergraduate student, then a PhD student, and now as a postdoctoral researcher.
7 The in silico movement for drug discovery is in its nascence, but researchers like Shoichet have advanced the field over the past four years.
8 And Supergrass’ association with the glut of Britpop bands of their nascence, most of whom didn’t make a dent in the American consciousness, has no bearing on their music, which boasts a timelessness that is admirable.
9 That spirit alone can preclude the gradual nascence of desire to call into existence a new balance of power.
10 When Congress created Medicare in 1965, hearing aids were in their nascence, Dr. Lin said, and hearing loss was “not seen as anything remotely important.”
11 Robb refused, calling the request “unprecedented since the nascence of the National Labor Relations Act” and saying his removal “would set an unfortunate precedent,” in a letter he sent the White House.
12 “From the genre’s nascence as an oral tradition, rap artists have played the part of storytellers, providing a lens into their lives and those in their communities,” Hall wrote.
13 the poem's publication is often regarded as the nascence of the Beat movement
14 Go back further, and at its nascence, the entire industry was predicated on the labor of enslaved Black people.
15 There's no guarantee the footage will air, though, due to the nascence of the technology and concerns like bad weather.
16 Races like Paris-Roubaix or the Tour of Flanders or Gent-Wevelgem take place in the cold nascence of a Northern European spring.
17 For 20 years, I’ve been saying we’re in the Model A phase of technology, and that level of nascence shows no signs of abating.
18 In a letter to the White House, he called the request “unprecedented since the nascence of the National Labor Relations Act” and said his removal “would set an unfortunate precedent,” according to Law360.
19 That’s where Dory was born, and she will venture back to the site of her nascence to try to learn more about her childhood and family.
20 Despite his political nascence, the right-wing freshman has already distinguished himself as a rising star in the Republican Party, particularly for his ability to make headlines.
2 发生
genetic spermatic up nascency spring rise generation creation evolve evolution occurrence incidence emergence genesis germination bechance be do go come give start become happen fall develop break pass occur shape arrive cook arise stem proceed crop emerge originate germ accrue germinate transpire befall eventuate betide redound develope pullulate work take cause generate breed hatch fetch engender
3 发生起源
4 刚开始存在