Similar words: derive, derive from, contrived, derisive, dived, live down, perceived, river. Meaning: [dɪ'raɪv] adj. formed or developed from something else; not original.
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31. I have always derived great comfort from William Shakespeare.
32. Some preparation in nursing care and skills is obviously necessary before the full benefit of learning at the bedside can be derived.
33. Reasoning can be applied to arguments that have false premises, however, and logical conclusions can be derived.
34. The beef involved came from locally reared cattle that were fed meat and bonemeal derived from cattle and sheep remains.
35. Law was no longer conceived of as an eternal set of principles expressed in custom and derived from natural law.
36. There was, once upon a time, another book from which this kind of scientific certainty was derived.
37. Then, studying changes over time, he set out to test the main conclusions derived from cross-sectional studies.
37. Sentencedict.com try its best to gather and create good sentences.
38. Indeed the Faculty encourages interdisciplinary activity and recognises that much innovative work has derived from the intellectual stimulus of multidisciplinary study.
39. Their appearance is connected with anharmonicity, which leads to a breakdown of the selection rules derived assuming simple harmonic motion.
40. Support for this comes from the finding that faecal protease activity, largely derived from bacteria, is increased threefold in colitis.
41. Alternatively, the balance conditions of the Hay bridge can be derived to allow L and R to be calculated.
42. Tests will be derived by checking whether generalisations of a model under scrutiny lead to significant gains.
43. The main farming activity was livestock production so that two-thirds of the total farm income derived from livestock.
44. Then a basic algorithm for division is shown in Figure 2.4, again derived from the normal pencil-and paper method.
45. Purcell, Haydn and Schubert were among the many who derived most of their basic musical training from being apprenticed as choristers.
46. Dark, sensuous lilac is derived from the Persian word for midnight blue indigo, itself an import from the Indus.
47. Does one have to be a Scrooge to by cynical about pleasures which are derived from escaping reality rather than embracing it?
48. To read the passage is to be warned against accepting, without careful consideration, anything suspected of being derived from Ephoros.
49. He derived, so far as I could tell, not the slightest satisfaction from seeing his most dire predictions fulfilled.
50. The strange thing was that he derived no real enjoyment from smoking.
51. Later in the year, a multiprocessing operating system derived from Unisys' current product will appear.
52. The method is based on the maturation cycle of gut associated lymphoid tissue derived lymphocytes.
53. A good part of the difficulty is derived directly from the structure of social and cultural values discussed earlier in this book.
54. The knowledge is derived from the actual relationships implicit in the data.
55. The cognitive schemata of the adult are derived from the sensorimotor schemata of the child.
56. The children were wonderfully responsive, with a great sense of humour and they derived enormous excitement from the games and competitions.
57. In the first incident, it still has not been shown that the infection derived from inside the hospital.
58. The trade name Permutit was given to this patented ion exchange process, it being derived from the Latin verb to exchange.
59. None of the major implications derived from the simple model would be affected by the introduction of these mechanisms.
60. From this a distribution of the word scores assigned to the target words was derived.
More similar words: derive, derive from, contrived, derisive, dived, live down, perceived, river, drive, thrive, arrive, drivel, driver, driven, drive up, driveway, drive out, deride, arrive at, contrive, drive home, drive out of, derision, quivering, commander in chief, give rise to, absolved, observed, relieved, improved.