0 present participle of discover --
1 to find information, a place, or an object, especially for the first time: --
Los Angeles is full of young actors working as waiters, hoping to be discovered by a movie agent.
[ + obj + -ing verb ] The boss discovered him stealing money from the cash register.
[ + to infinitive ] Following a routine check-up, Mrs Mason was discovered to have heart disease.
[ + (that) ] She discovered (that) her husband was having an affair.
[ + question word ] Scientists have discovered how to predict an earthquake.
We searched all morning for the missing papers and finally discovered them in a drawer.
Who discovered America?
However, the threat of oil-dependent nations discovering vast new reserves or developing energy policies that do not rely on fossil fuels looms on the horizon.
On the other, the walker emerges from the city, by discovering the boundaries between real and imagined, familiar and unfamiliar spaces.
Discovering this relationship is important because it may explain how people form policy opinions with little political knowledge.
Axial coding is a more focused process than open coding and is geared toward the discovering and relating of subcategories to categories.
The process of discovering and organizing categories and subcategories takes place during the open and the axial coding.
There is a need to devise methods aimed at learning and discovering knowledge by intelligently combining these distributed data and information sources.
In this process, discovering, mapping, and cloning of mutations is a major task.
And perhaps these cosmic laws, which take effect world-wide and throughout life, were worth discovering, to establish their effect also in great building works.