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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
emerging
adjective
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
a developing/emerging nation (=one that is starting to have more industry)
▪ Food shortages are often a problem in developing nations.
an emerging/fledgling democracy (=new)
▪ the emerging democracies of Eastern Europe
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADVERB
newly
▪ The anti-Aristotelianism and the newly emerging concept of natural philosophy were, then, not private but public developments.
▪ They never in any case became a significant part of the newly emerging pattern, whereas the other four did.
▪ The former idea represents the older model, the latter the newly emerging picture.
▪ Indeed, by the late Silurian, colonization of the changing land with its newly emerging continents was well under way.
▪ It may interest you to be reminded that around 1911 a rather similar crisis was facing the newly emerging car industry.
■ NOUN
democracy
▪ And the growth of an emerging democracy over the past two years provides an outlet for his critics' denunciations.
market
▪ Why should emerging markets be particularly attractive?
technology
▪ The conference will seek to identify ways in which emerging technology can be more closely geared to end-user needs.
▪ All the banks say that the government's Loan Guarantee Scheme has stimulated small businesses involved with emerging technologies.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ In 1911 the newly emerging car industry faced a crisis.
▪ Opinions vary on emerging markets such as China and Indonesia.
▪ The program is designed to help identify emerging trends in drug use.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ A new view of war, albeit one which had close links with past ideas, was gradually emerging.
▪ But the issue also epitomized the emerging dilemma for Laura, caught between the dictates of commerce and social responsibility.
▪ But to those in distress, and towards unrecognized or emerging talent, he was unfailing in his generosity and support.
▪ Details of the operation to remove the boat people are now emerging.
▪ Rural recreation geography: An emerging or mature discipline?
▪ The anti-Aristotelianism and the newly emerging concept of natural philosophy were, then, not private but public developments.
▪ This emerging kind of organization within production is sometimes called flexible specialization.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Emerging

Emerge \E*merge"\, v. i. [imp. & p. p. Emerged; p. pr. & vb. n. Emerging.] [L. emergere, emersum; e out + mergere to dip, plunge. See Merge.] To rise out of a fluid; to come forth from that in which anything has been plunged, enveloped, or concealed; to issue and appear; as, to emerge from the water or the ocean; the sun emerges from behind the moon in an eclipse; to emerge from poverty or obscurity. ``Thetis . . . emerging from the deep.''
--Dryden.

Those who have emerged from very low, some from the lowest, classes of society.
--Burke.

Wiktionary
emerging
  1. Becoming prominent; newly formed; emergent; rise. n. emergence v

  2. (present participle of emerge English)

WordNet
emerging
  1. adj. coming into view; "as newly emerging emotions and ideas well up in him"

  2. coming into existence; "a nascent republic" [syn: emergent, nascent]

  3. coming to maturity; "the rising generation" [syn: rising]

Wikipedia
Emerging

Emerging is the title of the only album by the Phil Keaggy Band, released in 1977 on NewSong Records. The album was re-released on CD in 2000 as ReEmerging with a different track listing, including four newly recorded songs by the original band members.

Emerging (film)

Emerging is a 1985 Australian TV movie about a paraplegic.

Usage examples of "emerging".

Waiting every day from the ninth hour onward to see if her husband would come home for dinner, postponing the meal a few minutes only at a time, she drove her appallingly expensive cook mad, and all too often ended in sniffling her way through a solitary repast designed to revive the vanished appetite of a glutton emerging from a fasting cure.

Another, wearing an aqualung and mask, and carrying a long spanner, was emerging from the water.

Upon emerging from it, the bather is plunged into cold water or receives a cool, shower bath.

The bather then returns through the various apartments, and, upon emerging from that of the lowest temperature, he experiences a delightful sensation of vigor and elasticity.

When he blinked it blinked, emerging into normal space as he emerged, waiting as he explored still another world, always within easy range of his eyes, his senses, but undetected.

Swanee saw the one called Bowler, then, emerging from the crowd, pushing to the front.

The retro lifestyles emerging from the corporate enclaves had less historical accuracy than a Shen tableau but a softer, more buyable feel.

Simon and Eliza in the house, and Markie emerging from his seclusion, I had the feeling that Caragh was coming to life after years of standing like a great silent tomb.

Out there on the golf course, with the sun shining and a soft breeze blowing, he fed them his little speeches about the emerging wonders of biotech, and the power of the cytokines manufactured by the Burnet cell line BioGen had acquired.

He started to run, past a line of cars and a one-ton dually truck, then between two eighteen-wheelers, emerging on the other side facing the highway before he saw her.

The liquid looked to be emerging from at least two of the tunnels, and slowly ebbing out of the others.

Such an expression belongs to men who would always be aware of the thoughts and feelings of others concerning them, but who would throw those thoughts and feelings off as decisively and energetically as a dog shakes the waterdrops from its coat on emerging from a swim.

In her eagerness to confront the pair after espying the coach lanterns emerging from the tree-shrouded lane, Melora had caught up her skirts and raced ahead of Charles.

The Felk fleet was still emerging, though about half of it was now positioned around its base.

Even when a fleeting edge of surprise could be seized, attacking ships emerging one by one from a warp point into concentrated defensive firepower were at such a disadvantage that military historians could only compare them to infantrymen advancing across an open field of Flemish mud against machine-gun emplacements.