What is another word for springing from?

Pronunciation: [spɹˈɪŋɪŋ fɹɒm] (IPA)

There are several synonyms for the phrase "springing from." Some of these include "emerging from," "originating from," "stemming from," "arising from," and "resulting from." These phrases are often used interchangeably in writing or speaking to describe the source or beginning of something. For example, one might say "the conflict arose from a misunderstanding," or "the idea emerged from a brainstorming session." Using different synonyms can help add variety to your writing and make your ideas more interesting to read. It is important to choose the right synonym for your context to ensure that your meaning is clear and accurate.

What are the hypernyms for Springing from?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.

What are the opposite words for springing from?

Springing from is a phrase used to describe the origin or source of something. Antonyms for springing from could be ending, finishing, stopping, or concluding. These words signify the cessation or completion of an action rather than its beginning. Other possible antonyms for springing from include dissipating, disappearing, vanishing, or evaporating. These words suggest the gradual or abrupt disappearance or dissolution of something, in contrast to the emergence that springing from implies. It is important to note that the antonym of a word often depends on the context in which it is used, and may vary based on the specific connotations of the word being considered.

What are the antonyms for Springing from?

Famous quotes with Springing from

  • There is something in the Olympics, indefinable, springing from the soul, that must be preserved.
    Chris Brasher
  • So far from vegetarianism springing from the anthropomorphism of predominantly urban dwellers, as has been suggested by its more superficial critics, it and its inevitable successor veganism are increasingly being recognised as a logical, even inescapable, process, essentially relevant, essentially practical, essentially compassionate to all species.
    Jon Wynne-Tyson
  • Burglars! Good gracious!' cried the little woman, springing from the bed in one bound. The word 'burglar' was a terrible one to her, as it is indeed, to every well-constituted woman. 'Robbery' does not sound nearly so awe-inspiring.
    L. Frank Baum
  • What has been presented as Christianity during these nineteen centuries is only a beginning, full of mistakes, not full blown Christianity springing from the spirit of Jesus.
    Albert Schweitzer
  • But when we freed the slaves we did not say to them, 'Caste shall not grind you with the right hand, but it shall with the left'. We said, 'Caste shall not grind you at all, and you shall have the same guarantees of freedom that we have'. President Johnson defines the liberty springing from the Emancipation amendment as the right to labor and enjoy the fruit of labor to its fullest extent. It is easy to quarrel with this as with every definition. But it is good enough, and it is as true of Connecticut as of Missouri that no man fully enjoys the fruit of his labor who does not have an equality of right before the law and a voice in making the law. That is the final security of the commonwealth, and we are bound to help every citizen attain it, whether it be the foreigner who comes ignorant and wretched to our shores or the native whom a cruel prejudice opposes. Do you tell me that we have nothing to do with the State laws of Alabama? I answer that the people of the United States are the sole and final judges of the measures necessary to the full enjoyment of the freedom which they have anywhere bestowed. If we choose, we may trust a certain class in the unorganized States to secure this liberty, just as we might have chosen to trust Mister Vallandigham, Mister Horatio Seymour, and Mister Fernando Wood to carry on the war. But as we wanted honor and not dishonor, as we wanted victory and not surrender, we chose to trust it to Farragut and Sherman, to Sheridan and Grant. If you don't want a thing done, says the old proverb, send; if you do, go yourself. When Grant started. Uncle Sam went himself. So, if we don't care whether we keep our word to those whom we have freed, we may send, by leaving them to the tender mercies of those who despise and distrust them. But if we do care for our own honor and the national welfare, we shall go ourselves, and through a national bureau and voluntary associations of education and aid, or in some better way if it can be devised, keep fast hold of the hands of those whom the President calls our wards, and not relinquish those hands until we leave in them every guarantee of freedom that we ourselves enjoy.
    George William Curtis

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