innovate in the PONS Dictionary

Monolingual examples (not verified by PONS Editors)

English
However, this view is being challenged by new research that shows they did indeed innovate, and on a wide scale.
en.wikipedia.org
This is where an agent (person or business) innovates in order to sell the innovation.
en.wikipedia.org
The team wanted to innovate the role-playing game by putting it in a first-person setting, believing that the genre had become stale.
en.wikipedia.org
The defining elements of the dialect might come from any language or be innovated.
en.wikipedia.org
Rambler innovated various design features and was the first to equip cars with a spare wheel-and-tire assembly.
en.wikipedia.org
It aims to build an environment in which manufacturing businesses can evolve, innovate and compete in a fast-changing world.
en.wikipedia.org
Thus, this act had sparked and innovated a new and a large conflict in the relationship.
en.wikipedia.org
The couple taught their four daughters who continued innovating their own styles and then teaching the two generations after them.
en.wikipedia.org
Faculties not only innovate, but also conduct applied research on innovation processes public policies, organizational processes, history and a range of important topics.
en.wikipedia.org
Adjacent to this was the redefinition of skills and roles that would create, build, sustain, and innovate this dynamic environment.
en.wikipedia.org

Would you like to add some words, phrases or translations?

Just let us know. We look forward to hearing from you.

Choose your language Deutsch | български | English | Français | Italiano | Polski | Русский