0 to put something into use, operation, or a place for the first time: --
1 to tell someone another person's name the first time that they meet: --
2 to be the beginning of something: --
I'd now like to introduce our next guest, who will be singing songs from her latest album.
This is the first official biography of her and it is introduced by her daughter.
The director will introduce the film personally at its premiere.
A haunting oboe solo introduces the third movement of the concerto.
3 to arrange for you to meet and learn the name of another person: --
4 to put something into use for the first time, or to put something into a new place: --
5 to make goods or services available to be bought for the first time: --
Demand can not be measured or estimated, but demand will materialise if a suitable product and marketing mix are introduced.
Positive form can be introduced into any polygon or polyhedron by regarding it as a closed skin subjected to internal expansion.
The chairman introduced them, and then invited the chairman of the appropriate popular committee to speak.
He himself was still quietly married to a girl he had been introduced to at high school.
He, the loose-end, filthy-earth drunkard, introduces the shawl as he does so many motifs.
Is a deep indetermination introduced by this further consideration, which shows without saying so the danger hidden in the therapy, the poison in the cure?
A strong and unenigmatic opening introduces the troupe of travelling artistes as symbols of modern humanity, only 'a little more fleeting than ourselves'.
The article examines the use of time adverbials by advanced adult learners, whereby the temporal forms are introduced in a progressively systematic way.