0 used to refer to times or events that are very important because they involve new developments and great change: --
How very true, and in this epochal book the reviewer is hard-pushed to give even a summary, such is the diversity and range of the material presented.
This book is part of a recent spate of work by scholars which should refocus attention on this epochal experience.
State-party conflation is especially likely when parties perceive their role as that of a hegemonic movement with an epochal transformational mission.
In his hands, the fast became an epochal, almost sacred event.
Have we witnessed epochal new empirical or conceptual breakthroughs that would warrant the over turning of that sober 19th-century decision?
Behind this epochal transition is the global downturn in fertility, a trend which is affecting societies across almost every region and stage of economic development.
He was claiming an epochal breakthrough, the way discovered to connect mind and brain within the framework of rigorous neurophysiology.
Regarding the painting's relationship to epochal transitions, it is perhaps significant that a mixture of pedestrians and horse-drawn carts populate this area.