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brave new world

1

noun

  1. a new period in history resulting from major changes in society, especially technological; a future world or society experiencing positive and negative effects from major changes.


Brave New World

2

noun

  1. a novel (1932) by Aldous Huxley.

Brave New World

  1. (1932) A novel by Aldous Huxley that depicts the potential horrors of life in the twenty-fifth century. The title comes from a line in the play , by William Shakespeare .


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Word History and Origins

Origin of brave new world1

< Brave New World

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Example Sentences

With the opportunity to create a brave new world — the metaverse — companies and experts are putting privacy and consent at the forefront of their new virtual societies.

From Digiday

Artificial reproduction was at the heart of his 1932 novel Brave New World.

It marks a brave new world for commercial space tourism, ranking among orbital milestones going back to 1957, when the Soviet Union launched its Sputnik 1 satellite to begin the space age.

From Ozy

However, scientists are researching ways to quickly identify disinformation to not only help regulators and tech companies, but also citizens, as we all navigate this brave new world together.

Teams need new ways to collaborate effectively and safely, and they need to do that for an extended period of one month or longer in this brave new world.

From Digiday

Navigating this brave new world is the inventively-named Anana, an employee at a soon to be obsolete print dictionary.

Kurginyan call it “USSR 2.0” and it seems that Ukraine may be the next step on the way to that Brave New World.

After all, his prophetic 1932 novel Brave New World had long before predicted a society enslaved by the drug soma.

What with Henretta's rips and the glitches in her printing, something seems wrong in our brave new world.

In the brave new world of Weibo, the combination of sex, lies, and videotape is a potent, sometimes toxic mix.

He wanted no part of this brave new world the aliens were creating.

Is not Miranda's exclamation, "O brave new world, that has such people in it!"

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