Similar words: boiling point, rallying point, melting point, selling point, starting point, sticking point, freezing point, turn into. Meaning: n. 1. an event marking a unique or important historical change of course or one on which important developments depend 2. the intersection of two streets.
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(121) Last year Cai Fang, the director of the Institute of Population and Labour Economics at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, argued that China has reached the "Lewis turning point".
(122) The Triangle Shirtwaist Fire remains as a turning point in US history.
(123) The picture was a turning point for Asano in other ways: the female lead, singer Chara, eventually became his wife.
(124) It is our present center job to take the talent's training mode reformation and the open education pilot project as the turning point, and realize the reform of teaching mode. We must carefully con...
(125) Non-monotone curve of the musculi skeleti is divided into two parts at the turning point between monotone increasing and monotone decreasing.
(126) Abnormality as a deconstruction of normality requires divergent thinking and a probe into as many forms as possible, which is the turning point of one's thinking style and aesth...
(127) That meeting ushered in a new historic period of reform and opening-up, marking the most significant turning point in the Party's history since the New China was founded in 1949, he said.
(128) Magna Charta has been rightly regarded as a turning point in English history.
More similar words: boiling point, rallying point, melting point, selling point, starting point, sticking point, freezing point, turn into, turning, returning, point of no return, turn in, saturnine, burning, mourning, churning, pointing, disappointing, disappointingly, point the finger at, ping-pong, watering pot, swimming pool, turnip, purchasing power, furniture, point, pointy, points, taciturnity.