In his frescoes the qualities essential to the style of the Renaissance--what Vasari calls the modern manner--appear precociously full-formed.
What led him to the study of the arts we do not know; but that his talents were precociously developed, is proved by his registration in 1441 upon the books of the painter's guild at Padua.
In warm climates the first manifestations of puberty occur precociously in man as well as in woman; and with them come all the transformations that are associated with puberty, among others the rapid increase of stature.
At the other extreme, another group of children are so neurotically and precociously sensitive that no precautions will preserve them from such influences.
Several species produce small peculiar flowers, precociously fertilized in the bud and particularly fruitful; and the ordinary flowers are often dimorphous or even trimorphous in the relative length of the stamens and styles.
Perennials, with rather large and showy blue or purple flowers, mostly in axillary clusters, sometimes also with small flowers precociously close-fertilized in the bud.
It is eminently the capital city of this fertile Languedoc, where art and luxury developed precociously in the earlier periods of the Middle Ages.
As the Norman's creative genius was not on a par with his constructive abilities, it seems reasonable to look for foreign influence when finding its school precociously formed by the middle of the XI century.
Miall (1895) has pointed out that the insect grub is not a precociously hatched embryo, like the larvae of multitudes of marine animals, but that it exhibits in a modified form the essential characters of the adult.
Her mindprecociously expanded to a keen sense of the beautiful, and a warm appreciation of nature and poetry.
Her talents were precociously developed, and whilst yet the merest girl, she would listen with eager and intelligent interest to the conversation of the eminent savans who constantly visited her father's house.
It was scarcely to be supposed, however, that the young King, precociously aware of all the dangers of his position, could remain subject willingly as he grew up to the sway of a vassal of the Crown however great.
Both asceticism and debauchery make men precociously old, wean them from love and enthusiasm for the things of this world.
And becoming precociously sophisticated--only too often precociously vicious--her nature and future are wrecked at the outset.
This friend was a rather precociously dissipated youth, and with him I had actually now and then--very rarely--a glass at a bar and oysters.
He had been from boyhood as precociously a man of the world as I was the opposite.
This was the case of a boy of 16, precociously mature and fairly bright.
The late precociouslygifted and prematurely lost Mary Suddard, in Essays and Studies (Cambridge, 1912).
Their son John was educated at St Paul's school and showed talent and inclinations which drew him precociously into the literary movement of the time.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "precociously" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.