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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151. The same phenomenon was documented at two different chimneys within the same vent field.
152. From the standpoint of the ozone layer, there is a quite different way of responding to the allotment phenomenon.
153. This, of course, was an age-old phenomenon, present in all materially advanced societies in the past.
154. This suggests that the phenomenon may also be caused, in some non-specific way, by the ingestion of fresh growing grass.
154. Wish you can benefit from sentencedict.com and make progress everyday!
155. He argues that Marxist accounts assume that the phenomenon occurs solely due to the needs of corporations and their owners.
156. To some extent this phenomenon reflects rapid growth of the small-business community.
157. The use of performance-enhancing substances within the sporting context is, then, a very longstanding phenomenon.
158. Every mental phenomenon includes something as object within itself, although they do not all do so in the same way.
159. This phenomenon can best be observed in Santander, that most elegant of ferry ports.
160. This phenomenon is explained by the fact that elements can be introduced into mental models without being explicitly mentioned.
161. This phenomenon is distinct from onomatopoeia - it is sometimes called sound symbolism: there is no question of auditory resemblance.
162. But, before leaving the Thatcher phenomenon, a glance at the Falklands War and what preceded it is a must.
163. Indeed, the notion that all students should engage in serious academic work and learn it deeply is a relatively recent phenomenon.
164. We tend to regard it as a relatively new phenomenon, yet there are examples in cricket going back over 120 years.
165. It is regarded as a purely natural phenomenon which, by an unusual coincidence, occurs in the walls of their convent.
166. To present Methodism as essentially an urban phenomenon is seriously misleading.
167. The huge variety of shapes is partly fashion and partly an attempt to avoid a phenomenon known as spin out.
168. Johnnie had been an example of a pervasive counterculture phenomenon, a rebellious student but by accident a great educator.
169. Strengthened by his ability to understand the phenomenon of sound, early man became conscious of the creative power inherent in it.
170. It seems a strange way to honour such an amazing phenomenon.
171. More than a decade of performance and change has demonstrated a remarkably consistent, if counterintuitive, phenomenon.
172. Dissent, hitherto confined to a number of intellectuals, became a mass phenomenon with the Protestant Church playing a leading role.
173. The leisure industry was an urban phenomenon at a time when most of the population did not live in towns.
174. What is stressed rather is that the same phenomenon provides the foundation for both historical tendencies.
175. Industrial ReD in the public sector is a relatively new phenomenon and the expectations from it are not very clear.
176. Occasionally, waterlogged conditions can occur inside burial mounds-a temperate-climate version of the Siberian phenomenon.
177. One reason cassette players and other consumer electronics are played so loud, Hull said, is the phenomenon of auditory adaption.
178. And yet I must. Compulsory state education for all is, in the historical sense, a recent phenomenon.
179. The real problem is that the film behaves as if the white-nigga phenomenon is something new.
180. Finally, an evaluative orientation involves your synthesis of facts and feelings into a judgment about some political phenomenon.
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.