Similar words: enough, enormous, give notice, take note of, indigenous, take notice of, by no means, astronomer. Meaning: [fɪˈnɒmɪnən] n. 1. any state or process known through the senses rather than by intuition or reasoning 2. a remarkable development.
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91. I had obtained Soviet agreement about its themes: Is nostalgia for the past a positive or a negative phenomenon in literature?
92. The west welcomed the great universal goddess as a phenomenon neither alien nor imposed from without.
93. From this point moral indignation became more than simply a grassroots phenomenon.
94. A convergence of prophecies agrees that something big is coming soon,[www.Sentencedict.com] some end of cycle phenomenon.
95. The girl's afore-mentioned burden - a phenomenon - had been perpetually exacerbated by Carl's boorish, bullying behaviour towards her.
96. Recently a hitherto unknown phenomenon has appeared in Illela: property speculation.
97. Such beliefs, coinciding with the growing phenomenon of abrupt cessation of full-time employment, encouraged the growth of the preparation-for-retirement movement.
98. The problem lies in how to account for this, to the Western observer, astonishing phenomenon.
99. Since glow-worms, fireflies, electric eels and many fish exhibit a similar phenomenon, the statement is not unrealistic.
100. Everyone, even newspaper editors, were caught unawares by the Princess Diana phenomenon.
101. This phenomenon may also explain some of our anomalous fossil distributions and extinctions.
102. It becomes a term whose reference is linguistic and whose meaning is not determined by the phenomenon of the early modern period.
103. Game fortunately is no longer a one or two season phenomenon.
104. Stereotyped deviant behaviour is inevitably a social phenomenon, and concerns us almost as much as it does social psychologists or psychiatrists.
105. Pianist-composer Childs is a hometown phenomenon busy carving out a career between the jazz and classical worlds.
106. Instead they see low concentrations of magnesium as a natural phenomenon exacerbated by air pollution.
107. Diets rich in polyunsaturated fatty acids enhance the phenomenon of adaptive cytoprotection and render the duodenal mucosa more resistant to acid.
108. But all the evidence is that increased managerial accountability lies behind the big-bucks phenomenon.
109. Another new phenomenon was the downturn in dealers offering works fresh out of the salerooms.
110. Data accumulated by the Bureau of Labor Statistics underscore this phenomenon.
111. The mass of uranium soon becomes so hot that it melts and disperses, a phenomenon called meltdown.
112. All across the world, ...increasingly dangerous weather patterns and devastating storms are abruptly putting an end to the long-running debate over whether or not climate change is real. Not only is it real, it's here, and its effects are giving rise to a frighteningly new global phenomenon: the man-made natural disaster. Barack Obama
113. This phenomenon is often regarded as a paradox, although the total amount of resources expended on such rescues is comparatively small.
114. Yet this relationship was deeply problematic, which helps to explain the diversity of opinion and the contradictions within the phenomenon.
115. It is an ancient but enduring phenomenon, and it needs to be explored.
116. There is one other cautionary lesson that can be drawn from the Huffington campaign and applied to the Forbes phenomenon.
117. Chomsky explains this phenomenon by suggesting that human individuals are innately endowed with a deep structure grammar of language.
118. It appears that this phenomenon requires the encapsulation by a head of a gradable modifying notion.
119. Most of the difficulty stems from the fact that an eruption is an extremely complex phenomenon.
120. This fairly common phenomenon stresses the interaction that normally takes place between our body clock, our social commitments, and time-cues.
More similar words: enough, enormous, give notice, take note of, indigenous, take notice of, by no means, astronomer, moment, momentum, in a moment, at the moment, for the moment, not to mention, at this moment, come home, commencement, amendment, sphere, atmosphere, euphemism, photographer, then, when, by then, hence, and then, no more, kitchen, now and then.