Synonym: acquire, gain, get, obtain, receive, secure. Similar words: derive from, drive, thrive, driver, driveway, drive out, drive up, arrive at. Meaning: [dɪ'raɪv] v. 1. reason by deduction; establish by deduction 2. obtain 3. come from 4. develop or evolve from a latent or potential state 5. come from; be connected by a relationship of blood, for example.
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61. Against this, many who take the plunge derive enormous satisfaction from building up a family enterprise.
62. The Detailed Spectrum Investigation process is intended to ensure that everyone should derive maximum benefit from the limited radio spectrum resource.
63. They have questioned the view that stratification systems derive ultimately from shared values.
64. A small set of rules are used to derive the syntactic information for the word.
65. Data which go toward answering the first two of these questions derive from a number of sources.
66. From none of these can the reader derive any composite picture of the Azores.
67. The first is to have the carbonaceous meteorites derive directly from low-speed near-Earth asteroids that are extinct comet cores.
68. In this context, capital market theory is used to derive an expression for the risk premium of index futures.
69. From a Marxist perspective, systems of stratification derive from the relationships of social groups to the means of production.
70. We are concerned with the quality of goods and the satisfactions we derive from them.
71. Of course, we can be alone and derive pleasure from it.
72. What computer processing methods are used to derive thematic maps from multispectral remotely-sensed images?
73. Butterflies have an intimate relationship with flowering plants, which they pollinate, and themselves derive nourishment from the nectar.
74. In contrast, the active-positive presidents derive great pleasure out of their work and believe that they can achieve their goals.
75. The strong structure we have put on our example allows us easily to derive prices and output per fIrm.
76. And yet, symbolic meanings do not derive only from cultures.
77. This model is also used to derive a theoretical expression for the risk premium.
77. Wish you can benefit from our online sentence dictionary and make progress day by day!
78. These criticisms of stratification theory derive from the known importance of gender as a criterion of social differentiation in modern society.
79. Some women derive intense pleasure from it, others less and some none at all.
80. Hemingway's short sentences derive their power from their revolt against earlier, more discursive styles.
81. They are attracted to novel situations and appear to derive satisfaction from exploring new aspects of their environment.
82. Statistical analysis of language requires investigation of corpora to derive probabilistic models of the language.
83. They may have views on issues which derive from previous experience.
84. You don't have to be training for the Boston Marathon to derive real health benefits from physical activity.
85. A corollary is that these fans derive pleasurable excitement from going on away trips and invading the territories of opposing fans.
86. Many colleges derive most of their income from tuition fees.
87. One consents to the establishment of a political society and to its authority because of the benefits one will derive from its existence.
88. Elderly people who have had an accident derive great benefit from the project.
89. This Board rejected both these submissions and held that the profits did not arise in or derive from Hong Kong.
90. Many of those who call themselves farmers because they still own land derive the major part of their incomes from non-agricultural occupations.
More similar words: derive from, drive, thrive, driver, driveway, drive out, drive up, arrive at, drive home, give rise to, rival, arrival, privacy, privately, period, inherit, series, gathering, mothering, offering, American, heritage, the private sector, criteria, material, interior, bacteria, pioneering, enter into, experience.