innovate 的 2 个定义
in·no·vat·ed, in·no·vat·ing.
- to introduce something new; make changes in anything established.
in·no·vat·ed, in·no·vat·ing.
- to introduce for or as if for the first time: to innovate a computer operating system.
- Archaic. to alter.
innovate 近义词
等同于 introduce
等同于 originate
更多innovate例句
- I am excited for him to lead our teams and continue innovating for customers.
- More brands innovating their own search engines would create new opportunities for digital marketers and the brands we help build.
- In fact, we have to double down on investment in research and development and empower people to innovate through nontraditional collaboration.
- Businesses are feeling the urgency to dig into data more effectively and innovate more quickly.
- The pandemic is forcing many industries to innovate and come up with ideas that help them stay relevant in the “new normal.”
- So Wilson had to innovate a new business plan—a $950 monthly lease, with 2,000 free copies.
- The key to his success is working in a practice that gives him time to innovate.
- It does so because competition for the kind of high-skill workers it needs to innovate is high.
- But, again, companies accustomed to having monopolies rarely innovate.
- Who gets to innovate in a world where you need to pay AT&T to compete?
- The Greeks found means to improve, or at least to innovate, upon perfection itself.
- In attempting to innovate, some danger of lowering the nobility of the type would be incurred.
- In him assuredly there was no attempt at inventiveness; he has always repudiated the idea that the poet should seek to innovate.
- But every man cannot distinguish betwixt pedantry and poetry; every man, therefore, is not fit to innovate.
- At first they were afraid to innovate even to the slight extent of adaptation.