Antonyms for outgrowth
Grammar : Noun |
Spell : out-grohth |
Phonetic Transcription : ˈaʊtˌgroʊθ |
Definition of outgrowth
Origin :- 1837, from out (adv.) + growth. Figurative sense "natural product" is earlier (1828).
- noun projection
- noun product, consequence
- Men would fain have a revival as the outgrowth of their agencies and progress.
- Extract from : « The Ministry of Intercession » by Andrew Murray
- This pamphlet and the project it presents is an outgrowth of that experience.
- Extract from : « Marriage Enrichment Retreats » by David Mace
- His affection for her had, indeed, been merely the outgrowth of life-long intimacy.
- Extract from : « 'Smiles' » by Eliot H. Robinson
- The parable is the outgrowth of the events immediately preceding it.
- Extract from : « Jesus the Christ » by James Edward Talmage
- Colorado was the outgrowth of the great financial crisis of 1857.
- Extract from : « Over the Rocky Mountains to Alaska » by Charles Warren Stoddard
- It is an outgrowth and culmination of instincts, a fusion of them into a new product.
- Extract from : « The Psychology of Nations » by G.E. Partridge
- A title is apt if it is an outgrowth of the plot—a text, as I have said.
- Extract from : « Short Story Writing » by Charles Raymond Barrett
- Finally, modern systems of education are the outgrowth of the experiences of the past.
- Extract from : « History of Education » by Levi Seeley
- Divisions are the outgrowth of carnality and not of the Spirit of God.
- Extract from : « Sanctification » by J. W. Byers
- Nor was it the outgrowth of any morbid or sentimental emotion.
- Extract from : « The History of Sir Richard Calmady » by Lucas Malet
Synonyms for outgrowth
Based on : Thesaurus.com - Gutenberg.org - Dictionary.com - Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2019