Thesaurus.com
Dictionary.com
Showing results for precocity. Search instead for precocia.
Definitions

precocity

[pri-kos-i-tee] / prɪˈkɒs ɪ ti /




Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

But Pollack-Pelzner pays attention to Miranda’s stumbles and wrong turns, including a failed time-travel musical, as well as to his precocity.

From Los Angeles Times • Sep. 8, 2025

Add six ODIs and a solitary T20i, it still makes for a dismal aggregate of international appearances for a batsman whose precocity had promised a long, dazzling career.

From BBC • Dec. 7, 2024

Mbappé has also been compared with Brazil great Pelé for his precocity.

From Washington Times • Nov. 20, 2023

With warmth and humor, Hsu evokes the precocity of college life: “We stayed up so late, possessed by delirium, that we came up with a theory of everything, only we forgot to write it down.”

From Washington Post • Oct. 4, 2022

The precocity of Moore's rhyming genius had been also exemplified by a sonnet, written when he was only fourteen years of age, and inserted in a Dublin magazine called "The Anthologia."

From Harper's New Monthly Magazine, vol 1-98, 1850-1899 None by Harper, Various (magazine)