Emerging in a sentence as an adjective

It is designed for low-end phones in emerging markets.

The article missed the point which is an open system for a cheap device aimed at emerging markets.

How many great people joined Google when it was an up and coming start up who loved the emerging culture and the idea of having a great chef.

Streams and Storm target the emerging area of "big data" where you need to distribute your computation across a cluster.

As a developer, I have to admit that I feel a lot of ambivalence about this emerging discipline.

This is another example of the emerging electronic class system.

There's an extremely disconcerting email monoculture emerging around gmail.

In microcosm it's an example of the emerging gap between Silicon Valley and DC, and gives a sense of how policy makers can inadvertently form their opinions from echoes of echoes.

Successive waves of these businesses created a climate of tremendous economic mobility, with workers constantly jockeying to jump to each emerging income tier.

] My only quibble is that both the pricing model and emerging standard marketing/sales model for SaaS companies have made the no-man's land he talks about a very interesting place to be in the ~10 years since this was written.

But hopefully after actually peeking in to see what it's about rather than making flawed generalizations based on traditional views of an emerging way of seeing the world, you would have learned a new way of looking at the world.

These factors seemed to be reported even by folks who cited other benefits such as a high degree of autonomy and the opportunity to work with other highly passionate top level engineers on important emerging technologies.

Emerging definitions

adjective

coming to maturity; "the rising generation"

See also: rising

adjective

coming into existence; "an emergent republic"

See also: emergent