Hyperonyms
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01641914-v:
take the lead or initiative in; participate in the development of
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Hyponyms
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01642717-v:
introduce gradually
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Hyponyms
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01645421-v:
open up an area or prepare a way
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Hyponyms
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01718015-v:
present for the first time to the public
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Related
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00240184-n:
the act of starting something for the first time; introducing something new
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Related
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01687586-a:
being or producing something like nothing done or experienced or created before
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Related
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03582658-n:
a creation (a new device or process) resulting from study and experimentation
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Related
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10434725-n:
someone who helps to open up a new line of research or technology or art
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Glosses
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08567235-n:
the area in which something exists or lives
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Glosses
(gloss)
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13934596-n:
the totality of surrounding conditions
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Glosses
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00240184-n:
the act of starting something for the first time; introducing something new
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Glosses
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00549766-n:
an acting technique introduced by Stanislavsky in which the actor recalls emotions or reactions from his or her own life and uses them to identify with the character being portrayed
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Glosses
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00963057-n:
a revolution whose aim is to reverse the changes introduced by a previous revolution
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Glosses
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01301080-n:
battle in World War I (1917); an Allied offensive which eventually failed because tanks bogged down in the waterlogged soil of Flanders; Germans introduced mustard gas which interfered with the Allied artillery
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Glosses
(rgloss)
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01642657-a:
markedly new or introducing radical change
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Glosses
(rgloss)
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01642717-v:
introduce gradually
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Glosses
(rgloss)
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03070352-a:
of or relating to Pope Gregory XIII or the calendar he introduced in 1582
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Glosses
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05634767-n:
originality by virtue of introducing new ideas
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Glosses
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06881360-n:
the symbol of the Democratic Party; introduced in cartoons by Thomas Nast in 1874
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Glosses
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06881662-n:
the symbol of the Republican Party; introduced in cartoons by Thomas Nast in 1874
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Glosses
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07057539-n:
a type of serial music introduced by Arnold Schoenberg; uses a tone row formed by the twelve semitones of the chromatic scale (and inverted or backward versions of the row)
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Glosses
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07068324-n:
an affected elegance of style that was introduced into Spanish literature by the poet Gongora
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Glosses
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07097831-n:
a stanza form having seven lines of iambic pentameter; introduced by Chaucer
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Glosses
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09969869-n:
a revolutionary whose aim is to reverse the changes introduced by an earlier revolution
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Glosses
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10812800-n:
the son of Nicholas I who, as czar of Russia, introduced reforms that included limited emancipation of the serfs (1818-1881)
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Glosses
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10881616-n:
Czech writer who introduced the word `robot' into the English language (1890-1938)
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Glosses
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10929886-n:
United States dancer and choreographer who introduced formal dance to a wide audience (1905-1993)
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Glosses
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10931854-n:
French philosopher and mathematician; developed dualistic theory of mind and matter; introduced the use of coordinates to locate a point in two or three dimensions (1596-1650)
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Glosses
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10933449-n:
Russian ballet impresario who founded the Russian ballet and later introduced it to the West (1872-1929)
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Glosses
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10947628-n:
United States inventor of a dry-plate process of developing photographic film and of flexible film (his firm introduced roll film) and of the box camera and of a process for color photography (1854-1932)
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Glosses
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10975583-n:
United States athlete who revolutionized the high jump by introducing the Fosbury flop in the 1968 Olympics (born in 1947)
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Glosses
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11004333-n:
Russian writer who introduced realism to Russian literature (1809-1852)
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Glosses
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11007332-n:
United States clarinetist who in 1934 formed a big band (including black as well as white musicians) and introduced a kind of jazz known as swing (1909-1986)
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Glosses
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11033003-n:
English philosopher who introduced the theory of the association of ideas (1705-1757)
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Glosses
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11057925-n:
English scientist who formulated the law of elasticity and proposed a wave theory of light and formulated a theory of planetary motion and proposed the inverse square law of gravitational attraction and discovered the cellular structure of cork and introduced the term `cell' into biology and invented a balance spring for watches (1635-1703)
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Glosses
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11147533-n:
Austrian physicist and philosopher who introduced the Mach number and who founded logical positivism (1838-1916)
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Glosses
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11151579-n:
British anthropologist (born in Poland) who introduced the technique of the participant observer (1884-1942)
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Glosses
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11154174-n:
United States educator who introduced reforms that significantly altered the system of public education (1796-1859)
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Glosses
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11154355-n:
French architect who introduced the mansard roof (1598-1666)
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Glosses
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11157719-n:
English poet and playwright who introduced blank verse as a form of dramatic expression; was stabbed to death in a tavern brawl (1564-1593)
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Glosses
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11200090-n:
Scottish mathematician who invented logarithms; introduced the use of the decimal point in writing numbers (1550-1617)
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Glosses
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11222054-n:
Swiss physician who introduced treatments of particular illnesses based on his observation and experience; he saw illness as having an external cause (rather than an imbalance of humors) and replaced traditional remedies with chemical remedies (1493-1541)
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Glosses
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11302224-n:
English electrical engineer who founded a company that introduced many innovative products (born in 1940)
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Glosses
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11306920-n:
Dutch ophthalmologist who introduced the Snellen chart to study visual acuity (1834-1908)
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Glosses
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11339534-n:
United States clockmaker who introduced mass production (1785-1859)
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Glosses
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11362452-n:
English logician who introduced Venn diagrams (1834-1923)
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Glosses
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11397885-n:
French couturier (born in England) regarded as the founder of Parisian haute couture; noted for introducing the bustle (1825-1895)
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Glosses
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11399446-n:
English poet who introduced the sonnet form to English literature (1503-1542)
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Glosses
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13661820-n:
the basic monetary unit of most members of the European Union (introduced in 1999); in 2002 twelve European nations (Germany, France, Belgium, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Italy, Spain, Portugal, Ireland, Greece, Austria, Finland) adopted the euro as their basic unit of money and abandoned their traditional currencies
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Glosses
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15174218-n:
the solar calendar now in general use, introduced by Gregory XIII in 1582 to correct an error in the Julian calendar by suppressing 10 days, making Oct 5 be called Oct 15, and providing that only centenary years divisible by 400 should be leap years; it was adopted by Great Britain and the American colonies in 1752
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Glosses
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15174885-n:
the solar calendar introduced in Rome in 46 b.c. by Julius Caesar and slightly modified by Augustus, establishing the 12-month year of 365 days with each 4th year having 366 days and the months having 31 or 30 days except for February
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