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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91. Take the Sun, the star from which we ultimately derive nearly all our energy.
92. Thus, females and kids clearly derive some benefit from living in groups.
93. Which suggests that the life patterns imposed on infants in fact derive from biological need.
94. They derive their strength from the realization that not to abide by them would make for an unworkable constitution.
95. The funding to do anything, however, must in the long run derive from national resources.
96. A country can also derive export revenue from service income, e.g. shipping and tourism, together with remittances from overseas workers.
97. Second, to remove the standard dessert from the menu would penalise all those people who derive pleasure from conspicuous self-denial.
98. The studios are set back from the road and are shaded by the olive trees from which they derive their name.
99. Then she decided to wash her hair, thinking she might derive some comfort from this familiar rite.
100. Many of the industries which employ engineers and scientists derive a large portion of their business from defense contracts.
101. The secondary pleasures of the imagination derive from recollection of objects no longer actually present.
102. Derive your component from an existing component type.
103. We derive our sustenance from the land.
104. These defensive behavior patterns derive from our subconscious fears.
105. We now shall derive the converses of these propositions.
106. We derive the relations between physical and tensor components.
107. We derive now a useful variant of that inequality.
108. The two attitudes derive from different historical perspectives.
109. Our bodies derive an abundance of hematin from food.
110. The Teutonic languages derive from Primitive Germanic.
111. Theories derive from practice as well as guide them, especially in the economic field. Therefore(sentencedict.com), the third method is substantial proof combining theories with practice.
112. According to the extensive theory of topological degree for set-valued mapping , the authors derive the topological degree for upper semicontinuous set-valued 1-set-contractive mapping.
113. Quite a lot of us derive our patchy understanding of globalisation from such well - publicised high jinks.
114. In this paper we derive the quantitative analysis formula of Joule-Thomsonian coefficient from the knowledge of common physics.
115. Derive the XML data model based on the specified mapping, and generate the mapping/conversion code.
116. The purpose of this report is to derive a formula for integrating the normal distribution curve.
117. Derive TE modes transfer matrix and modes latent equation of the periodical structure.
118. John: Walkabout is a journey of spiritual renewal. Where one derive strength from the earth.
119. Therefore , it is important to derive sufficient protein from a single Daphnia for phenotypic analyses.
120. In network platform, we derive a soul food, even if the surge came flooding back of this great creation.
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.