Alternative terms

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Lexicographical Neighbors of

newgrouping
newgroups
newie
newies
newing
newish
newishly
newishness
newline
newlines
newling
newlings
newly
newly-formed
newly arisen (current term)
newlywed
newlywedded
newlyweds
newmake
newmaking
newmarkets
newmodel
newmodelize
newmodelled
newmodelling
newmould
newmown
newname
newness

Literary usage of

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia by Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia (1903)
"If we look at the bell- margin from the oral side, the newly arisen tentacles in the four quadrants have apparently crowded in between the sense-organ and ..."

2. History of the City of Rome in the Middle Ages by Ferdinand Gregorovius, Annie Hamilton, Irving Stone (1894)
"... the necessity of strengthening one another and giving a permanent form to the newly-arisen system of the world. Gregory the Great had already announced ..."

3. History of the City of Rome in the Middle Ages by Ferdinand Gregorovius (1894)
"... ecclesiastical and political, the necessity of strengthening one another and giving a permanent form to the newly-arisen system of the world. ..."

4. History of the City of Rome in the Middle Ages by Ferdinand Adolf Gregorovius (1894)
"... ecclesiastical and political, the necessity of strengthening one another and giving a permanent form to the newly-arisen system of the world. ..."

5. The Journal of Speculative Philosophy: Ed. by Wm. T. Harris edited by William Torrey Harris (1871)
"But in reflection the newly-arisen consciousness says: there is also an image, a representation of the thing. Moreover, since this consciousness is the ..."

6. Works by Leo Tolstoy (1904)
"... feeling that first he had to reflect on the newly arisen circumstance. ... but now that he had begun to reflect on this newly arisen circumstance, ..."

7. Reports of Cases Decided in the Supreme Court of the State of Oregon by Oregon Supreme Court (1876)
"Code, g 292) are proceedings in the nature of an action, which afford means of disposing of many, if not all, such newly arisen issues; ..."

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