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Showing results for florescence. Search instead for florescenc.
Definitions

florescence

[flaw-res-uhns, floh-, fluh-] / flɔˈrɛs əns, floʊ-, flə- /
NOUN
flowering
Synonyms


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Mr. Latham was a strapping Texan who first made his name on the East Coast in the 1970s, embarking on his magazine career when the movement known as New Journalism was in florescence.

From Washington Post • Jul. 27, 2022

They in turn are part of a broader florescence of nature-writing in Britain led by Robert Macfarlane, whose book, “The Old Ways”, perambulates around the country’s ancient byways.

From Economist • Jul. 5, 2018

After the ancestors of apes and monkeys split into two groups roughly 25 million years ago, apes underwent a remarkable florescence, evolving into more than 30 different types.

From Science Magazine • Oct. 29, 2015

Behind this florescence of often-aggressive debate lies the pressure of decades of fast economic growth on the country’s rigid political framework, little changed since Mao’s day.

From New York Times • May 5, 2011

But even if it happened, he told me, “The entire Maya florescence took place during a prolonged dry period.”

From "1491" by Charles C. Mann