Do we say emergence or immergence

emergence 103 occurrences

Born, say, with more of a posterior pituitary than he had, which would have rendered him more sensitive to the sufferings of his fellow-creatures, if nothing else, and the forces of the Revolution probably would have swamped him from the very first moment of his emergence at Toulon, when the whiff of grape-shot, symptom of an inexorable, merciless intellect and will, started him upon the road that led to the Napoleonic Era.

I know not, my lords, whether it be possible to imagine an emergence that can more evidently require the interposition of the legislative power, than this which is now proposed to your consideration.

" There is something singularly fascinating in the appearance of a developing photograph; in the gradual, mysterious emergence of the picture from the blank, white surface of plate or paper.

THE EMERGENCE OF MODERN ENGLISH Three Languages used in EnglandFor three hundred years after the Norman Conquest, three languages were widely used in England.

Demagogism But, as this period witnessed the rise of a rabble by the side of the burgesses, so it witnessed also the emergence of a demagogism that flattered the populace alongside of the respectable and useful party of opposition.

Their villages, or towns, consist of these huts; yet even of such villages they have but few, because the grandees, the viceroys, and the emperour himself, are always in camp, that they may be prepared, upon the most sudden alarm, to meet every emergence in a country, which is engaged, every year, either in foreign wars or intestine commotions.

To strengthen their position these benevolent men referred to the rapid progress of the belated people, many of whom within less than a generation from their emergence from slavery had become intelligent, virtuous, and respectable persons, and in not a few cases had accumulated considerable wealth.

Yes, I will not deny, I have seen old quarrels forgotten, Ill to avert from the state; I also have witnessed how friendship, Love of parent and child, can impossibilities venture; Seen how the stripling at once matured into man; how the aged Grew again young; and even the child into youth was developed, Yea, and the weaker sex too, as we are accustomed to call it, Showed itself brave and strong and ready for every emergence.

" She was startled at this abrupt emergence of the name which secretly filled her mind and was aware with exasperation that she was blushing.

She did not know what was taking place within her, something rackingspasmodic throes of sudden growth, the emergence for the first time in all her life of the capacity for pity ...

First, the emergence of neo-communism, as in Czechoslovakia in 1968, in an attempt to soften traditional communist practice.

Chapter Five p. 63: The analysis of the emergence of Ch'in bureaucracy has profited from general sociological theory, especially M. Weber (see the new analysis by R. Bendix, Max Weber, an Intellectual Portrait, Garden City 1960, p. 117-157).

The necessity of transports of grain and salt was one of the reasons for the emergence of the Hsin-an and Hui-chou merchants.

The emergence of a slickly printed and produced Konkani-monthly Gulab also hastened its death.

Without doubt, one owes one's career in journalism to the emergence of Konknni (Devnagari) journalism with the launch of Sunaparant.

Taken together, both books are amongst the most important and influential books published in English during the Great War, being in no small part responsible for the emergence of the "Lost Generation" myth of the 1920's.

2: The emergence of existing conditions and ways of thinking.

The emergence of man.

The emergence of the Soviet citizen.

6Jul70; R487198. MCLEAN, EUNICE M. The emergence of an American art.

The emergence of an American art.

Ballet in America: the emergence of an American art.

The logic of the fact is perfect, and Gabriel's emergence from the quiet of his retreat inevitably follows from the nature of the agitator as the logic of his own past and has the approval at least of the perrero and the allegiance of the rest.

One may suspect that Mrs. Sterne soon had cause for jealousy, and it is at least certain that several years before Sterne's emergence into notoriety their estrangement was complete.

[Footnote H: Coleridge read 'Descriptive Sketches' when an undergraduate at Cambridge in 1793before the two men had metand wrote thus of them: "Seldom, if ever, was the emergence of a great and original poetic genius above the literary horizon more evidently announced.

immergence 0 occurrences

Do we say   emergence   or  immergence