nascence

IPA: nˈeɪsʌns

noun

  • (rare) Birth.
  • Coming into being; inception, beginning.
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Examples of "nascence" in Sentences

  • New Cobley fiction, emerging from nascence into the cold hard glare of reality!
  • The fight against the 1971 bill developed during the nascence of the social right movement.
  • In my pathetic nascence as a comedian, I allowed the audience to become the authority figure.
  • Little did they know in 1964, that the personal computer, still in its nascence, was about to make it even smaller.
  • In his essay Bérubé voices disappointment about Cultural Studies not living up to the promise many felt it harbored with its nascence in the later 1960s.
  • The status of slaves, the political and social requirements of nobility, the draw of the Coliseum, and the cloaked nascence of Christianity are woven into the story seamlessly through the narration of Cecilia.
  • The informal and individual nature of such taxonomies becomes obvious if we take a word like "person" and look at the philosophical problems that arise when it comes to nascence and sentience: many would not consider a human embryo a "person" until a certain stage of development; many would consider any sentient individual a person, regardless of humanity.

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synonyms for nascencedescribing words for nascence
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