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Synonyms

evolve

American  
[ih-volv] / ɪˈvɒlv /

verb (used with object)

evolves, present (3rd person singular) evolved, past participle, past evolving present participle
  1. to develop gradually.

    to evolve a scheme.

  2. to give off or emit, as odors or vapors.


verb (used without object)

evolves, present (3rd person singular) evolved, past participle, past evolving present participle
  1. to come forth gradually into being; develop; undergo evolution.

    The whole idea evolved from a casual remark.

  2. to gradually change one's opinions or beliefs.

    candidates who are still evolving on the issue;

    an evolved feminist mom.

  3. Biology. to develop by a process of evolution to a different adaptive state or condition.

    The human species evolved from an ancestor that was probably arboreal.

evolve British  
/ ɪˈvɒlv /

verb

  1. to develop or cause to develop gradually

  2. (intr) (of animal or plant species) to undergo evolution

  3. (tr) to yield, emit, or give off (heat, gas, vapour, etc)

"Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged" 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

evolve Scientific  
/ ĭ-vŏlv /
  1. To undergo biological evolution, as in the development of new species or new traits within a species.

  2. To develop a characteristic through the process of evolution.

  3. To undergo change and development, as the structures of the universe.


Other Word Forms

Derived Forms

Inflected Forms

Participles

Conjugated Forms

Present

Past

Future

Etymology

Origin of evolve

First recorded in 1635–45; from Latin ēvolvere “to unroll, open, unfold,” equivalent to ē- e- 1 + volvere “to roll, turn”

Explanation

When something evolves, it changes, or develops over time, like your taste in music and clothes, which evolve as you get older. Evolve comes from the Latin word evolvere, "to unroll" — the perfect image to keep in mind when thinking of this verb. When something is unrolling or unraveling, it is doing so gradually, not all at once. Evolve describes a development that is taking its time to reach its final destination. Think change with a speed limit. Your taste in music evolved from the nursery rhymes you loved as a little kid to whatever you like today. Even places can evolve, like the old-fashioned coffee shops that evolved into Internet cafés as people began to bring their laptops with them.

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Vocabulary lists containing evolve

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.

“How can we evolve musically if we keep trying to re-create our grandparents’ music?”

From Los Angeles Times • Jun. 24, 2026

And as investors hunt for the next AI bottleneck, leadership could continue to evolve.

From MarketWatch • Jun. 24, 2026

Powerful volcanic eruptions and rapid climate shifts repeatedly reshaped habitats, driving extinctions and opening opportunities for new species to evolve.

From Science Daily • Jun. 23, 2026

Long before our consumer gadgets are built with fully customized energy-storing materials, 3-D-printed batteries will evolve in one of history’s most reliable tech incubators: the military.

From The Wall Street Journal • Jun. 19, 2026

It took nature hundreds of millions of years to evolve a bacterium, and billions to make a grasshopper.

From "Cosmos" by Carl Sagan

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