From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishdevelopmentalde‧vel‧op‧men‧tal /dɪˌveləpˈmentl/●くろまる○しろまる○しろまる adjectiverelating to the development of someone or somethingthe developmental stages of childhoodHigher education is a continuing developmental process. —developmentally adverbExamples from the Corpusdevelopmental• Or, they could have their developmentalpathwayspecified before they begin migrating and then would migrate to the correctsites.• It was very much the sort of developmentalpedagogy that compositionscholars and learning theoristsprescribe for remedial students.• Some developmental processes are like sculpting in clay.• Furthermore, developmentalpsychologists found evidence that self-recognition correlates with empathy.• Currently, injectable forms of disulfiram are in the developmentalstage.• Whole days or whole summers may be filled with this mutuality; it can even dominate an entiredevelopmental stage.• The latter is a developmentalvocabulary primarily used with deaf children with learning difficulties.• The research and developmental work on which this advancedepends is well financed and comprehensive.developmental stages• Alternatively, significant levels of expression may be limited to a subset of cells or developmental stages.• Endoderm is not, however, representative of small intestine of later developmental stages.• I was more tolerant of her developmental stages.• Women can love their children but not like particular aspects of mothering or specificdevelopmental stages.• The appropriatepercentage of oxygen in the gasphase at different developmental stages is shown in Figure 6.• Changes in the diurnalcycle allow different developmental stages of embryos to be available during normal working hours.• The transgenicmouse lines also provide a source for future studies on early developmental stages of the immune system.• Blocking any one of these developmental stages stops the whole process.