developable


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de·vel·op

 (dĭ-vĕl′əp)
v. de·vel·oped, de·vel·op·ing, de·vel·ops
v.tr.
1. To bring from latency to or toward fulfillment: an instructor who develops the capabilities of each student.
2.
a. To expand or enlarge: developed a national corporation into a worldwide business.
b. To aid in the growth of; strengthen: exercises that develop muscles.
c. To improve the quality of; refine: develops his recipes to perfection; an extra year of study to develop virtuosic technique.
3.
a. To cause to become more complex or intricate; add detail and fullness to; elaborate: began with a good premise but developed it without imagination.
b. Music To elaborate (a theme) with rhythmic and harmonic variations.
4.
a. To bring into being gradually: develop a new cottage industry.
b. To set forth or clarify by degrees: developed her thesis in a series of articles.
5.
a. To come to have gradually; acquire: develop a taste for opera; develop a friendship.
b. To become affected with; contract: developed a rash; developed agoraphobia.
6. To cause gradually to acquire a specific role, function, or form, as:
a. To influence the behavior of toward a specific end: an investigator who develops witnesses through flattery and intimidation.
b. To cause (a tract of land or a building) to serve a particular purpose: developed the site as a community of condominiums.
c. To make available and effective to fulfill a particular end or need: develop the state's water resources to serve a growing population.
d. To convert or transform: developed the play into a movie.
7. Games To move (a chess piece) to or toward a more strategic position.
8.
a. To process (a photosensitive medium such as exposed film) in order to produce a photographic image.
b. To produce (a photographic image) by use of a photosensitive medium or by printing from a digital file.
v.intr.
1.
a. To grow by degrees into a more advanced or mature state: With hard work, she developed into a great writer.
b. To increase or expand: Sales developed until we needed a bigger warehouse.
c. To improve; advance: Their skill developed until it rivaled their teacher's.
2. To come gradually into existence or activity: Tension developed between students and faculty.
3. To come gradually to light; be disclosed: reports the news as it develops.
4. Biology
a. To progress from earlier to later stages of a life cycle: Caterpillars develop into butterflies.
b. To progress from earlier to later stages of evolution: Mammals developed during the Mesozoic Era.
c. To acquire secondary sex characteristics. Used especially of a girl.

[French développer, from Old French desveloper : des-, dis- + voloper, to wrap (possibly of Celtic origin).]

de·vel′op·a·ble adj.
American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition. Copyright © 2016 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.
References in periodicals archive ?
Chris Sununu has acquired a majority of the remaining developable land owned by The Waterville Company Inc., the company founded by the late ski resort visionary Tom Corcoran.
The fully-entitled project represents the last developable site along the prestigious park with historic surroundings.
This new class of mechanisms, called 'developable mechanisms,' get their name from developable surfaces, or materials that can take on 3-D shapes from flat conformations without tearing or stretching, like a sheet of paper or metal.
'However, topping the 2018 sales figures might be a challenge given Collier's projected slowdown in launches due to the dearth of available developable land in Metro Manila and the continued acceleration of land prices in the country's key business districts.
A DEAL which will secure half of the developable land at the South Tees Development Corporation site has been announced.
If not with other property firms, Colliers said partnering with government which owns developable parcels of land or buying back properties previously donated to government must be considered, amid lack of available land in the country's capital.
Regis Residences, Boston, a waterfront condominium tower located on one of the last remaining developable waterfront parcels in downtown Boston.
The analysis from the global property advisory firm predicts that the demand/supply imbalance in the logistics and industrial sector, compounded by a severe lack of developable land and upward pressure on land values, could led to vertical schemes.
The client had a geographically targeted acquisition requirement and asked for a review of developable land as well as existing self-storage facilities.
Biologics company LakePharma said on Tuesday that it plans to discover highly developable and potent antibody therapeutics in a technology partnership with Distributed Bio Inc.
As the established central business districts (CBD) like Makati run out of developable land, property developers have started to shift their focus on other areas, especially the reclaimed Manila Bay area in Pasay City.