Emergent [adjective]

Definition of Emergent:

resulting

Synonyms of Emergent:


Opposite/Antonyms of Emergent:


Sentence/Example of Emergent:

Throughout the year, with cases staying stubbornly high, doctors warned about the consequences of non-Covid-19 patients were postponing care for chronic or emergent conditions.

Readily available digital technologies can be used to provide local and remote computing power, enable information retrieval and analysis, and disseminate emergent knowledge.

In this approach, quantum mechanics is emergent from a deterministic hidden-variables model which acknowledges that everything in the universe is connected with everything else.

Names like that emerge in the wave of secondary scholarship reacting to a new idea, and emergent names aren’t always bad.

To that end, the call to Crusades was possibly an intentional measure taken by the Pope with the aim to politically unite the Eastern Orthodox church with the emergent Catholic church of Europe.

Britain is an emergent mass of land rising from a submarine platform that attaches it to the Continent of Europe.

She was to act in the same manner if emergent cases required a prompt decision.

Notopodia reduced to small lobes at base of neuropodia above, these lobes smooth, bearing no emergent setae in the type.

So the burden of national crises is squarely upon the dominant classes who fight so foolishly against the emergent ones.

What if diabolic shapes lurked there, ready to become stealthily emergent?