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Answer for the clue "Gradually develop passion for climbing: very English! ", 6 letters:
evolve

Alternative clues for the word evolve

Word definitions for evolve in dictionaries

Wiktionary Word definitions in Wiktionary
vb. 1 To move in regular procession through a system. 2 To change; transform. 3 To come into being; develop. 4 (context biology English) Of a population, to change genetic composition over successive generations through the process of evolution.

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
Evolve may refer to: Evolution , incremental change over time Evolve , a product in Kainos's suite of healthcare products Evolve (TV series) on The History Channel Evolve Cars , an after-market manufacturer of sport-parts for Volvo cars Evolve (professional ...

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
1640s, "to unfold, open out, expand," from Latin evolvere "to unroll, roll out, roll forth, unfold," especially of books; figuratively "to make clear, disclose; to produce, develop," from assimilated form of ex- "out" (see ex- ) + volvere "to roll" (see ...

Usage examples of evolve.

But as absolutely crucial and important as experiential disclosures are, they can be finally assimilated only in a subjective structure that grows and evolves to meet the demand, and experiences thrown at a subject do not necessarily and profoundly grow the subject itself.

Because they evolved rapidly, had worldwide distribution by virtue of their open-water habitats, and species are readily distinguished, ammonoids are index fossils for the Jurassic.

Indeed, since Ancel Keys started advocating low-fat diets almost 50 years ago, the science of fat and cholesterol has evolved from a simple story into a very complicated one.

Even when you do mow it, the dandelion roots are still there and ready to do the whole thing all over again --examples of the kind of angiosperm that evolved to survive heavy low feeding.

What follows, then, is a cheerful parable of your being and your becoming, an apologue of that Emptiness which forever issues forth, unfolding and enfolding, evolving and involving, creating worlds and dissolving them, with each and every breath you take.

It reminded her of the baobab of Madagascar, but that had evolved in dry conditions.

Council on Bioethics, I was confident that a sensible and a sensitive policy might evolve from what was sure to be a cacophony of voices of scientists and philosophers representing a spectrum of opinions, beliefs and intellectual backgrounds.

I sometimes wonder what a modern biramous creature would be like, if it had evolved and come onto land with the rest of us.

Young some specimens of the Boghead coal, with which he renewed his experiments, distilling the mineral at a low temperature, until he evolved a considerable quantity of crude paraffin.

The lesson was one of the many aspects of Bushido that his father had taught him in childhood, indoctrinating him with this philosophy, which had evolved over the course of six hundred years.

I wish here only to draw attention to the fact that all holons possess a degree of depth, with its correlative rights, existing in a span with correlative responsibilities, and that as our own awareness evolves to greater depth itself, it more adequately unpacks the Basic Moral Intuition, which infuses us with an awareness, and a drive, and a demand, to extend the greatest depth to the greatest span, as best we can under the ridiculous circumstances known as samsara.

But Quintus Fabius Maximus Verrucosis Cunctator evolved a strategy which eventually wore Hannibal down: relentlessly, he shadowed the Carthaginian army with an army of his own, yet never offered battle or allowed his forces to be pushed into battle.

Some cynodonts, such as traversodonts and tritylodonts, evolved back to become herbivorous and were widely dispersed.

Just because one nucleotide varies, does not determine how cytochrome c evolved in other species, long before man or monkey.

If anything, his playing grew more insistent, more convoluted, evolving into the didgeridoo equivalent of a fugue.