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incipiently

/in-sip-ee-uhnt/US // ɪnˈsɪp i ənt //UK // (ɪnˈsɪpɪənt) //

逐渐地,渐渐地,逐步地,逐渐

Related Words

Definitions

adj.形容词 adjective
  1. 1
    • : beginning to exist or appear; in an initial stage: an incipient cold.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • As society progresses toward the Metaverse, companies and platforms in this incipient virtual world are taking steps to ensure that it reflects the diversity of the real world.

  • In contrast, if your thinking is a little cloudy thanks to incipient HACE, that may not seem like such a big problem—and your ability to recognize the problem is compromised by the cloudiness of your thinking.

  • Both companies wanted him to apply the tools of sociology to address things like hate speech and bullying, maybe any incipient plans for an insurrection.

  • But his incipient campaign was scuttled, and he soon separated from his fourth wife.

  • Similarly, much of the policy rhetoric coming from Washington focuses on fears of incipient inflation that have yet to pan out.

  • At a dinner with journalists, hedge-fund manager George Soros spoke of an “incipient war in currencies.”

  • He was a prime mover behind the Saudi military intervention in Bahrain a year ago to smash an incipient Shia reform movement.

  • He takes on multiple projects, but he will prevent incipient confusion if he stops multitasking and completes one thing at a time.

  • Whether he had shot a man, or robbed a bank, or fired a church, the incipient accusation died away.

  • And this failure to get hold of the incipient case applies to all the various kinds of adverse influences that cause destitution.

  • Another arrived with a fine mat, a man of higher rank, whose incipient consumption had often troubled the Master.

  • Spirits of turpentine rubbed in around the base of the horns, will arrest the disease in its incipient stages.

  • It was as if some spirit that had breathed on him, sustaining him, lightening his incipient heaviness, had been removed.