We are using cookies This website uses cookies in order to offer you the most relevant information. By browsing this website, you accept these cookies.
Did you know? You can double click on a word to look it up on TermGallery.
Meanings of rapid accumulation in English
We have no meanings for "rapid accumulation" in our records yet.
Usage of rapid accumulation in English
1
Investors have slowed their rapidaccumulation of gold-backed ETFs seen earlier this year.
2
A rapidaccumulation of wealth led to increased leverage and risk-taking.
3
Despite the rapidaccumulation of genetic knowledge, therapies have remained nonspecific and largely inefficient.
4
The tendency is towards a rapidaccumulation of huge fortunes.
5
Under such a Government the rapidaccumulation of wealth and population was a natural consequence.
6
His rapidaccumulation of wealth speaks volumes for the constancy and activity of his services.
7
The air became increasingly difficult to breathe, probably from the rapidaccumulation of the radioactive gas.
8
There was no rapidaccumulation of lump upon lump such as is generally seen in intense cold.
9
Man is so constituted as to be unable to bear, with safety, a rapidaccumulation of property.
10
Protection correlated best with rapidaccumulation of specific CD8(+) T cells in infected tissues of challenged mice.
11
In this country you are aware that the rapidaccumulation of wealth always creates much envy, and envy soon augments to malice.
12
Annual profits either shrank or barely grew over 2011-2015, which contributed to the rapidaccumulation of debt.
13
Etiopathogenesis of skeletal dysplasias is better documented now, with rapidaccumulation of knowledge concerning defective genes and proteins causing this group of disorders.
14
Direct transduction of I-PpoI protein results in rapidaccumulation and turnover of the endonuclease in live cells, facilitating comparisons across multiple cell lines.
15
A still more interesting inquiry arises, how far the nations of Europe were really enriched by the rapidaccumulation of gold and silver.
16
When we compress the veins alone there is a rapidaccumulation of blood in the extremities through the accessions derived from the uninterrupted arteries.