No, "comprehensive" is not a synonym for "lasting." "Comprehensive" refers to something that is thorough and inclusive, covering all or nearly all elements or aspects. In contrast, "lasting" describes something that endures over time or remains in existence for a long period. These two words convey different meanings and are used in different contexts.
Nothing
A synonym for "initial incident" could be "primary event" or "preliminary occurrence." These terms convey the idea of an event that occurs first or serves as a starting point for subsequent developments.
Belgium and Germany
First europian to live among native americans
The Library at Alexandria was the first comprehensive collection of works from around the world at that time, and was the first library available to those people not of aristrocracy.
There are too many synonyms to make a sentence with all of them. Nearly every word in the language has a synonym. A synonym is another word that means the same thing.
the declaration of independence was the first lasting representation of a constitutional government in the new world
first
typical, standard, model, regular, usual, ideal, characteristic, definite, masterly, best, fines, world-class, consummate, first-rate, lasting, enduring, abiding, immortal, undying, ageless, deathless, masterpiece, prototype, paradigm, exemplar
According to the Thesaurus there are none.Another answerIn some contexts, "that" is a synonym of "who." For example: "The person who speaks first loses" could also be written "the person that speaks first loses."
The first step to a comprehensive strategic management plan is to develop vision and mission statements!
position
It is the first sentence of a paragraph which is the topic sentence.
Aristarchus, in the 3rd century BC, was the first to postulate that our Solar System is heliocentric. Later, in 1743, Copernicus advanced the same hypothesis, but in a more comprehensive form.
Sometimes when I try to reword something, all I can think of is antonyms. Bad isn't a synonym for good; it's an antonym! The word cleave first meant to join together, but it is now its own antonym.
Peaceful? That's the first thing that comes to mind.
The first sentence of a story doesn't have a special name -- it's just the first sentence.