Synonym: appear, come into view, come out. Antonym: submerge. Similar words: emergency, emerging, at the mercy of, energy, undergo, urge, undergraduate, large. Meaning: [ɪ'mɜːdʒ] v. 1. come out into view, as from concealment 2. come out of 3. become known or apparent 4. come up to the surface of or rise 5. happen or occur as a result of something.
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91. After twelve months of reorganising and repositioning, Tyzack began to emerge as a contender in the top echelons of executive search.
92. Out of the gloom emerge the later paintings, charnel house visions of desolation.
93. Her doll sits stiffly, pointed straight ahead at the fixtures that emerge from the wall.
94. The welfare state and the managed economy did not suddenly emerge full-blown in this period.
95. As better adapted successors emerge, others are forced into a corner.
96. At intervals along its length groups of nerve fibres emerge from the spinal column to connect with the peripheral nervous system.
97. A powerful coalition of committed advocates will, in this way, emerge out of those modest coalitions that exist today.
98. Regrettably, neither these nor any other conflicts emerge with any conviction from 7:84's dull and disappointing production.
99. These are new antagonisms which emerge as social conflict is diffused to more social relations.
100. But before they emerge as adults they have a rather longer incarnation as larvae walking about the river bottom.
101. You could spend nearly the whole day watching nothing but nature documentaries, and if you did you would emerge exhausted.
102. In fact, John Major promises to emerge mildly well from the schemers' cauldron.
103. Once the father was imprisoned, new and even more disturbing allegations began to emerge from the children.
104. If the reformists emerge as the largest group, they will sweep the board.
105. It seems however, that adequate professional preparation can only emerge as the result of developing the relationship between theory and practice.
106. Social relations of cooperation begin to emerge from interactions with peers during preoperational development.
107. That is a good step as we emerge from the cold war, but it is not enough.
108. More to the point, as resistant strains emerge, the greater becomes our need for new antibiotics to cure sick people.
109. The existence of rules that ensure that complex and relatively stable structures emerge in the universe suggests an intelligent rule-giver.
110. The worm is now poised to emerge from its dormant phase and begin to spread rapidly by colonising more machines and sites.
111. When given such a cue, the reply had to emerge.
112. A significant fraction of their water content can emerge from the explosion at a speed below the escape velocity of Mercury.
113. The principles of design which emerge from this development will be available for application to further areas of the mathematics curriculum.
114. But the dutiful reader will emerge with an impressively thorough account.
115. The picture that began to emerge in the early 1980s was not encouraging.
116. Bullock's report says companies that emerge from such university environments follow a distinctive pattern of development.
117. Your natural ability is the thing that should emerge, and if you have been well coached the coaching won't show.
118. They remain in hibernation for ten months of the year and emerge during Holy Week of each year.
119. As their celebrations continue more facts emerge with enough twists and turns to keep you guessing up to the final curtain.
120. The late 1980s and early 1990s have seen lifestyle techniques emerge as the most talked about development in the industry.
More similar words: emergency, emerging, at the mercy of, energy, undergo, urge, undergraduate, large, target, surgery, surgeon, at large, largely, farmer, former, forget about, summer, camera, by and large, in charge of, formerly, cameras, performer, American, take charge, numerous, merchant, come round, consumer, customer.