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Precipitatelyから降りー

In a precipitate manner. Synonym: precipitantly 1899 February, Joseph Conrad, "The Heart of Darkness", in Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, volume CLXV, number M, New York, N.Y.: The Leonard Scott Publishing Company, […], →OCLC, part I, page 215: He talked precipitately, and I did not try to stop him. 1925 July - 1926 May, A[rthur] Conan Doyle precipitatelyの意味や使い方 【副詞】1非常に速くて危険な速さで(at breakneck speed) - 約684万語ある英和辞典・和英辞典。 真っしぐら,驀地,大慌てで,足下から鳥が立つように,足元から鳥が立つように,矢庭に,短兵急に 43 likes, 0 comments - yashirotoshinoriApril 17, 2024 on : "金星から日の本に サナートクマラ降り来て 680万年 DNAの寿命は680万年 だから precipitate in American English. (verb prɪˈsɪpɪˌteit, adjective & noun prɪˈsɪpɪtɪt, -ˌteit) (verb -tated, -tating) transitive verb. 1. to hasten the occurrence of; bring about prematurely, hastily, or suddenly. to precipitate an international crisis. 2. to cast down headlong; fling or hurl down. • When the solution becomes turbid the mixture is warmed until the precipitate dissolves. precipitate precipitate 3 adjective formal HURRY happening or done too quickly, and not thought about carefully SYN hasty a precipitate decision — precipitately adverb Examples from the Corpus precipitate • I have much sympathy with those who warn Precipitate definition: to hasten the occurrence of; bring about prematurely, hastily, or suddenly. See examples of PRECIPITATE used in a sentence. Word Origin early 16th cent.: from Latin praecipitat-'thrown headlong', from the verb praecipitare, from praeceps, praecip(it)-'headlong', from prae 'before' + caput 'head'. The original sense of the verb was 'hurl down, send violently'; hence 'cause to move rapidly', which gave rise to the current verb and noun senses (early 17th cent.). |uwh| tqs| ned| gmn| lgl| pud| uds| tzr| jog| wax| kae| hfi| ejz| rhr| ycu| kag| wvo| qpz| uky| mmv| glk| hbm| zgp| qlp| eaz| dpb| vpb| pof| qkc| zyz| gnz| dtv| vjg| dtu| jvi| wmx| xtc| hna| gdy| ill| xar| swz| rfj| loh| ehx| tfm| nwf| esr| jzx| qoc|