evolve
યથાર્થ
definition
verb
the company has evolved into a major chemical manufacturer
develop gradually, especially from a simple to a more complex form.
Tertiary amines dissolve in nitrous acid without evolving any gas.
give off (gas or heat).
translation of 'evolve'
નક્કી,
બરાબર,
ચોક્ક્સ,
ચોકસ,
યથાર્થ
example
each school must 'evolve' its own way of working
Dimerization is usually required for proteins to 'evolve' oligomeric proteins.
Not one word is said about how single cells could 'evolve' into a multiple-celled organism.
each school must 'evolve' its own way of working
Over millions of years these organisms would develop, adapt and 'evolve' into newly created organisms.
The linkage between genes and behaviour is clear, but it did not 'evolve' by natural selection.
Above 1500°F water vapor and the metal combine to form the oxide and 'evolve' hydrogen.
the populations are cut off from each other and 'evolve' independently
The chemical reactions by which they do this 'evolve' gas, which is why peas and beans cause wind.
Just because certain creatures may look similar does not mean they have 'evolved' from a common ancestor.
By the 17th century, they had 'evolved' into a number of distinct clans.
Other cafes 'evolved' into centres for the arts and sciences.
Trains on railways such as these moved slowly, and the footpaths alongside them gradually 'evolved' into roads.
He envisions society as an organism that 'evolves' and develops by differentiation.
If all organisms 'evolved' from a single common ancestor, what do these groups actually represent?
And somewhere along the way, the street-cool ethos of the zine has 'evolved' into a lucrative retail format.
But planes would still fly, and life still 'evolves' through natural selection, common descent, and the known workings of genetics.
They 'evolved' from a common ancestor but for both nations to play each other at all a hybrid set of rules has had to be devised.
It is now thought that the genes for the rod and cone pigments 'evolved' from a common ancestral gene.
I'm a big believer in Darwin's theory that all life forms 'evolved' from amoebae.
Their concerns have to be built into the 'evolvement' of any development plan.
Some of the new names at past British Opens soon 'evolved' into familiar names.
Deference to the prime minister has 'evolved' into properly aggressive reporting.
The theory of evolution is seen as tracing the historical 'evolvement' of those structures or competencies that formal pragmatics describes as universal features of language use.
His son Charles joined the firm at the age of 13 and the business gradually 'evolved' into providing pet and garden supplies.
Man himself was not created as a separate species but 'evolved' like every other organism by a process of evolution.
For future missions, NASA needs machines that are resilient, 'evolvable' , self-sufficient, ultra-efficient, and autonomous.
As expected, homoplasy shows a negative relationship with number of character states for all values of evolutionary rate, and a positive relationship with rate for every number of 'evolvable' states.
By the 17th century, the simple knot garden had 'evolved' into designs as complicated as those of embroidered cloth.
The limbs of tetrapod vertebrates 'evolved' from fins, with the digits as a novel feature.
Credits: Google Translate