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Showing results for precocity. Search instead for promielocito.
Definitions

precocity

[pri-kos-i-tee] / prɪˈkɒs ɪ ti /




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.

Add six ODIs and a solitary T20i, it still makes for a dismal aggregate of international appearances for a batsman whose precocity had promised a long, dazzling career.

From BBC • Dec. 7, 2024

“Such precocity, such regularity, is rare, almost unique. He’s someone who, if he is not injured, can manage to score between 45 and 55 goals each year, for years to come.”

From Washington Times • Nov. 20, 2023

On the 21st of April, only a third of the way through spring, our 88 degrees may have seemed thermal precocity, an unsought rush to summer.

From Washington Post • Apr. 21, 2023

Massie’s precocity is often just for show, and she is constantly learning that true friendship is more valuable than Fendi or facials.

From New York Times • Oct. 5, 2021

But the case of an imitative artist reproducing impressions derived from literature is different; and the circumstances of Terence's Phoenician origin and early life may well have developed in him a precocity of talent.

From The Roman Poets of the Republic by Sellar, W. Y.




Vocabulary lists containing precocity