evolve
ವಿಕಸನ
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'
ಬಿಚ್ಚು,
ಹೊರತೆಗೆ
example
Not one word is said about how single cells could 'evolve' into a multiple-celled organism.
the populations are cut off from each other and 'evolve' independently
each school must 'evolve' its own way of working
Dimerization is usually required for proteins to 'evolve' oligomeric proteins.
each school must 'evolve' its own way of working
Over millions of years these organisms would develop, adapt and 'evolve' into newly created organisms.
Above 1500°F water vapor and the metal combine to form the oxide and 'evolve' hydrogen.
The linkage between genes and behaviour is clear, but it did not 'evolve' by natural selection.
The chemical reactions by which they do this 'evolve' gas, which is why peas and beans cause wind.
The limbs of tetrapod vertebrates 'evolved' from fins, with the digits as a novel feature.
Often my films have started in one place and 'evolved' into something very different.
Their concerns have to be built into the 'evolvement' of any development plan.
But with the growth of bowling infrastructure over the years, it has 'evolved' into a popular sport.
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.
Deference to the prime minister has 'evolved' into properly aggressive reporting.
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.
I believe that such tolerances and freedoms are the natural 'evolvement' of successful free-market advances.
For future missions, NASA needs machines that are resilient, 'evolvable' , self-sufficient, ultra-efficient, and autonomous.
His portrayal of dejected loneliness early in the film is subtly done, but this cannot outweigh the nauseating theatrics accompanying his character's emotional 'evolvement' .
Just because certain creatures may look similar does not mean they have 'evolved' from a common ancestor.
What began as a joke 'evolved' into a plan to capture a camcorder keepsake of their trip - then turned into a widescreen spectacular.
Evolutionary biologists call this phenomenon, in which an organism 'evolves' just to stay in place, the Red Queen hypothesis.
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' .
And somewhere along the way, the street-cool ethos of the zine has 'evolved' into a lucrative retail format.
At one end of the continuum we have the notion of a population of organisms 'evolving' into something else.
How many times have truffle parasites 'evolved' from cicada parasites in Cordyceps?
What I inherited from him was a love and knowledge of the countryside which 'evolved' into a more conscious environmentalism.
Infrastructure built on 'evolvable' formats will always be partially incomplete, partially wrong and ultimately better designed than its competition.
Man himself was not created as a separate species but 'evolved' like every other organism by a process of evolution.
Credits: Google Translate