List of synonyms from "devastation" to synonyms from "deviousness"


Discover all the synonyms available for the terms devil dust, developer, devious, devilish, device, devices and many more. Click on one of the words below and go directly to the synonyms associated with it.

Definition of the day : « developmental »

  • As in broadening : adj cultivating
  • As in cultural : adj educational, enlightening
  • As in experimental : adj exploratory
  • As in formative : adj influential, impressionable
Example sentences :
  • They are devised for disciplinary, postural, developmental, and health purposes.
  • Extract from : « College Teaching » by Paul Klapper
  • The developmental period was 30-41 days at room temperature.
  • Extract from : « The Biotic Associations of Cockroaches » by Louis M. Roth
  • I do not call the upholder of the developmental doctrine a believer of this kind.
  • Extract from : « Opuscula » by Robert Gordon Latham
  • In fact, it is a developmental sequence, like that from the grub to the butterfly.
  • Extract from : « A General Introduction to Psychoanalysis » by Sigmund Freud
  • Neutral, because his efforts were conserving, not developmental.
  • Extract from : « Blue Goose » by Frank Lewis Nason
  • All of which points to relative lowness of developmental type.
  • Extract from : « The Color Line » by William Benjamin Smith
  • But this has been merely the developmental stage, the tuning-up of the orchestra.
  • Extract from : « War of the Classes » by Jack London
  • Amphioxus is the type in which the developmental phenomena are least interfered with by the presence of food-yolk.
  • Extract from : « The Works of Francis Maitland Balfour, Volume III (of 4) » by Francis Maitland Balfour
  • The pronephros is distinguished from the mesonephros by developmental as well as structural features.
  • Extract from : « The Works of Francis Maitland Balfour, Volume III (of 4) » by Francis Maitland Balfour
  • D and E, Illustrating the developmental process in bony Actinopterygians and higher vertebrates.
  • Extract from : « Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 14, Slice 3 » by Various