incipient
incipient — 形容詞
- incipientpositive
- more incipientcomparative
- most incipientsuperlative
1. only just starting to appear or develop, and not yet clearly established.
初期的
剛開始出現或形成的
only just starting to appear or develop, and not yet clearly established.
Dentists found incipient tooth decay during Sumin's school checkup.
牙醫在 Sumin 的學校檢查中發現了蛀牙初期的跡象。
collocation: incipient tooth decay
After the quake, engineers watched the wall for incipient cracks.
地震後,工程師密切查看那面牆是否出現了初期裂縫。
pattern: for + incipient noun
The coach stopped incipient conflict between two defenders after practice.
教練在練習後制止了兩名後衛之間剛冒出的衝突。
An incipient fire in the kitchen filled the hallway with smoke.
廚房裡一場初起的火勢讓走廊充滿了煙。
Scientists recorded incipient disease in the young trees by the river.
科學家記錄到河邊年輕樹木出現了初期病害。
- emerging
More common and slightly broader; it can describe people, trends, or markets becoming noticeable.
- developing
Stresses an ongoing process of growth or change, not just the first sign.
- nascent
Very close in meaning but often sounds more academic or technical than 'incipient'.
- established
Describes something already firmly formed or widely recognized.
- mature
Suggests full development rather than an early stage.
- full-blown
Highlights that the condition or problem is already obvious and complete.
文法句型
incipient + noun
用法筆記
Usually placed before a noun, especially with words for disease, conflict, damage, or other problems that have only begun to show. It is more formal than 'starting' or 'early' and often suggests that the first signs are visible but still limited.