WordNet
adj. having just or recently arisen or come into existence; "new nations"; "with newborn fears" [syn: newborn, new-sprung(a)]
Usage examples of "newly arisen".
He seemed to be worried that in her newly arisen condition she might prove vulnerable to attack, but she sensed there was something more to it than that.
Ten feet away I sheered off for the pungent odour of rum in the air was so overwhelming as to give rise to the thought that they hadn't so much been drinking the stuff but were newly arisen from immersion in a vat of the best Demerara.
After a while, no new galaxies, no new stars, no new planets, no newly arisen lifeforms -- just the same old crowd.
After a while, no new galaxies, no new stars, no new planets, no newly arisen lifeforms--just the same old crowd.
These millions of lives past, present, and future, these structures newly arisen from ancient edifices and followed themselves by structures yet to be born, seemed to me to succeed each other in time like waves.
She had forgotten Mr Rensley, newly arisen from his bed of sickness.
His three Gates Falls mills were going like a house afire, stuffed with the profits of a world war and comfortable with the orders of the newly arisen or (arising) middle class.