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Definition of "early days" []

  • A time too soon to make a decision or come to a conclusion. (noun)
  • The initial period of an innovation (noun)
  • Initial stages of a project. (noun)

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Use "early days" in a sentence
  • "It was a sad and complicated affair, with the three astronauts—Dave Scott, Al Worden, and Jim Irwin—unfairly bearing the brunt of the blame for a questionable practice involving personal mementos that had been going on ever since the early days of Mercury."
  • "In his early days he was a colourist of great purity, a composer with dramatic force, regarded as one of the greatest masters of his time, and surrounded by pupils; but later on, his very success proved his undoing, and the pictures of his maturity and old age, though marked by facility and skill, evidence a certain monotonous melodrama and a thinness of impasto which has not tended to their permanency."
  • "The Nevada Gaming Board NGB, which oversees all casino gambling in the state of Nevada, would have been none too pleased, either, if it had found out—although there have been suggestions that the NGB in its early days was nothing but a rubber stamp, approving whatever the casinos wanted."