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Definitions

nascent

[nas-uhnt, ney-suhnt] / ˈnæs ənt, ˈneɪ sənt /








ADJECTIVE
underdeveloped
Synonyms
Antonyms


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.

Early in his career, Mr Furie experimented with uploading his work to the nascent social web, where other users began to borrow, remix and reinvent his character.

From BBC

Those reforms are so nascent that not much is known about them, Dee said, and his study is one of a handful that provides a credible evaluation.

From Los Angeles Times

It was remarked on by Robert F. Kennedy Sr. in a speech in March 1968, less than three months before his nascent presidential campaign was ended by an assassin’s bullet.

From Los Angeles Times

TAE is one of the oldest—and most prominent—companies working in the relatively nascent field of commercial nuclear fusion.

From The Wall Street Journal

"A quantum internet is a very different beast from current nascent cryptographic applications. It's the same primary mechanism but you need significantly more photons -- more bandwidth -- to connect quantum computers," said Professor Devitt.

From Science Daily