newfound Meaning & Definition

  • En [ ˈnjuː.faʊnd]
  • Us [ ˈnuː.faʊnd]

Meaning of newfound In English

More Definitions of newfound

Examples of newfound

  • Adroitly reacting to the newfound opportunity, conservative intellectuals penned their writings accordingly.

  • This newfound interest in epistemology concerns the practical question of how to define and to test causal relations.

  • Most commercial actuaries, for all their newfound criticism of private knowledge, continued to restrict their data pool to the select lives of insurance companies.

  • The problem of inconsistency between ideals and practice, which had always existed beneath the surface of the actuaries' professional ideology, now appeared with newfound urgency.

  • Likewise, aspects of the material culture and architecture might show innovations or, alternatively, newfound traditionalism as houses struggled in the wake of political upheaval.

  • Her newfound musical power and force of expression superposes a telling element on to her confession.

  • Nonetheless, he highlights the newfound warmth between these two traditionally hostile powers now resolved to face the challenges together rather than individually.

  • This newfound freedom was achieved in part by cutting the links between tax revenues and spending on education.

More Examples of newfound

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