English to Spanish Dictionary evolve

evolve

Evolucionar
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'
verb
tomar de,
evolucionar
example
Not one word is said about how single cells could 'evolve' into a multiple-celled organism.
Dimerization is usually required for proteins to 'evolve' oligomeric proteins.
The chemical reactions by which they do this 'evolve' gas, which is why peas and beans cause wind.
each school must 'evolve' its own way of working
The linkage between genes and behaviour is clear, but it did not 'evolve' by natural selection.
each school must 'evolve' its own way of working
Above 1500°F water vapor and the metal combine to form the oxide and 'evolve' hydrogen.
Over millions of years these organisms would develop, adapt and 'evolve' into newly created organisms.
I believe that such tolerances and freedoms are the natural 'evolvement' of successful free-market advances.
In it he stated the principle of ‘irreducible complexity’ and claimed that, amongst other things, the clotting system and the eubacterial flagella were irreducibly complex, and were not 'evolvable' .
But planes would still fly, and life still 'evolves' through natural selection, common descent, and the known workings of genetics.
Their concerns have to be built into the 'evolvement' of any development plan.
It could have 'evolved' into a prize sometimes given to mathematicians and sometimes computer scientists.
By the 17th century, they had 'evolved' into a number of distinct clans.
It owes its recent 'evolvement' to the cultural and social developments of speakers of English and to the growing number of students attending colleges.
For future missions, NASA needs machines that are resilient, 'evolvable' , self-sufficient, ultra-efficient, and autonomous.
Deference to the prime minister has 'evolved' into properly aggressive reporting.
Man himself was not created as a separate species but 'evolved' like every other organism by a process of evolution.
By the next week it had 'evolved' into something I had hoped I might never see again.
Apparently the species 'evolved' from Homo erectus, who somehow managed to reach Flores, perhaps by rafting.
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.
Often my films have started in one place and 'evolved' into something very different.
the populations are cut off from each other and' evolv'e independently
What started as a very limited levy has 'evolved' into the federal government's main source of cash.
But with the growth of bowling infrastructure over the years, it has 'evolved' into a popular sport.
And somewhere along the way, the street-cool ethos of the zine has 'evolved' into a lucrative retail format.
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.
Other cafes 'evolved' into centres for the arts and sciences.
By the late Oligocene, the two modern lineages of cetaceans had 'evolved' from archaeocete ancestors.
What I inherited from him was a love and knowledge of the countryside which 'evolved' into a more conscious environmentalism.
Credits: Google Translate
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