Definitionadj. happening or arising without apparent external cause
Last update: February 10, 2016
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He gave a spontaneous offer of help. [adjective]
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Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis is common in end-stage liver disease. [adjective]
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The result was the spontaneous blockade of an oil refinery which led to the blockades of September 2000. [adjective]
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The spontaneous, instinctive, and--so to speak--physiological origin of royalty gives it, in the beginning, a superhuman character. [adjective]
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For all these social facts, so spontaneous and free from all levelling intentions, are the legitimate fruits of the instinct of equality. [adjective]
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Communism--or association in a simple form--is the necessary object and original aspiration of the social nature, the spontaneous movement by which it manifests and establishes itself. [adjective]
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Can anyone assume for a moment that a man like Ferrer would affiliate himself with such a spontaneous, unorganized effort. [adjective]
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His conception of God and a future life is spontaneous and instinctive, and his expressions of this conception have been, by turns, monstrous, eccentric, beautiful, comforting, and terrible. [adjective]
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Many a work has appeared to the world to be the spontaneous creation of transcendent genius, which has, in reality, been conceived, studied, and elaborated during years of silence. [adjective]
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Without urging by us, they ought, of course to take a spontaneous interest in the lives for which they are responsible. [adjective]
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Almost all day long the house resounded with their running feet, their cries, and their spontaneous laughter. [adjective]
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