English language

How to pronounce outgrowth in English?

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Type Words
Synonyms appendage, process
Type of body part
Has types apophysis, appendix, arista, caruncle, caruncula, cecal appendage, cirrus, condyle, coronoid process, crest, eminence, enation, epicondyle, excrescence, fetlock, fimbria, flagellum, gum ridge, hair, horn, mastoid, mastoid bone, mastoid process, mastoidal, metaphysis, odontoid process, olecranon, olecranon process, osteophyte, papilla, plant process, processus coronoideus, pseudopod, pseudopodium, pterygoid process, ridge, zygomatic process, acromion, acrosome, aculea, ala, alveolar arch, alveolar process, alveolar ridge, villus, acromial process, spicule, spiculum, spine, style, styloid process, tail, tentacle, transverse process, trochanter, tubercle, tuberosity, vermiform appendix, vermiform process
Type Words
Synonyms emergence, growth
Type of beginning
Has types rise
Type Words
Synonyms branch, offset, offshoot
Type of issue, upshot, event, effect, outcome, consequence, result

Examples of outgrowth

outgrowth
Recruiting future dancers is an inevitable outgrowth of the production she says.
From the kentucky.com
The festivities are an outgrowth of the school's Global Studies Diploma Program.
From the charlotteobserver.com
Robert, B.Bone morphogenetic protein signaling in limb outgrowth and patterning.
From the nature.com
Anthropology can best be understood as an outgrowth of the Age of Enlightenment.
From the en.wikipedia.org
The algae project is an outgrowth of Green Plains'conventional ethanol operation.
From the desmoinesregister.com
Robert Hahn's choreography seems an organic outgrowth of Simon's sublime score.
From the ocregister.com
The science of oceanography is, in part, an outgrowth of classical hydrography.
From the en.wikipedia.org
It's an outgrowth of the typically steady demand for electricity and natural gas.
From the dailyherald.com
It is, indeed, in some ways an outgrowth of the older field of political economy.
From the en.wikipedia.org
More examples
  • A natural consequence of development
  • Emergence: the gradual beginning or coming forth; "figurines presage the emergence of sculpture in Greece"
  • Process: a natural prolongation or projection from a part of an organism either animal or plant; "a bony process"
  • Anything that grows out of something else A branch or offshoot of a plant An appendage of an animal A byproduct or consequence of an action or event