How To Use Anticipatory In A Sentence

  • Public Prosecutor told the court that the offences of threatening and insulting a woman's modesty are bailable, so there is no need to grant anticipatory bail.
  • The amount of anticipatory glee I have while awaiting a Biden expostulation is no doubt directly proportional to the angst Obama feels with the same anticipation. If we take back 45 seats, we make Biden wear a Little Lord Fauntleroy suit. - Moe_Lane’s blog - RedState
  • She found that she was less bothered by hot flashes and the attendant anticipatory anxiety about when the next hot flash would occur.
  • These seemingly conflicting feelings of hope, fear, detachment, and love are normal and are known as anticipatory grief. Mothering Twins
  • Leading zeros anticipatory logic is implemented based on a set of unified product rule, which can diminish the potential one bit error of original ones.
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  • Tina let something show, something which brought to the back of Deirdre 's neck an anticipatory prickling. DEATH OF A NYMPH
  • The song bolts out with an anticipatory, pulsing rhythm under a soprano sax solo by Bruce Ackley.
  • It is only an anticipatory name for a further associative and terminative process that Meaning of Truth
  • With extraordinary promotional finesse, Buffalo Bill's Wild West heightened anticipatory excitement by plastering its tour route with colorful posters announcing upcoming show dates.
  • Outside, the first footprints of autumn were seen in the yellowing leaves of some of the older poplars and the increasing anticipatory excitement of the birds and squirrels.
  • There is a sense of anticipatory disillusion among those who recall how the high hopes of 1986 were dashed.
  • The population dynamics of the predator could be co-ordinated to that of the host population in an anticipatory way.
  • The reader is kept in an anticipatory state of excitement which is gratified only in the release afforded by the final solution in the last pages.
  • Thanks to all-seater stadiums many football fans spend a large part of the game in a position halfway between leaping in elation and slumping in despair, a sort of anticipatory squat in which the buttocks hover six inches above the seat. Sheepskin-wearing seating bores get my goat | Harry Pearson
  • The thought of his blind date gives him a rush of anticipatory nervous excitement.
  • Plodding and predictable, it seems unable to manufacture suspense from the kind of situation and setting that would have had Hitchcock rubbing his hands with anticipatory glee.
  • At points during the album all the elements come together, and ‘Positive Tension’ provides a song that does exactly what the title suggests, bubbling with anticipatory riffs and lyrics.
  • The very thing he says is an anticipatory excuse for anything he may choose to do.
  • By focusing on major issues that loom ahead, they create a forum for anticipatory thinking.
  • There is an alternative claim for damages for anticipatory breach of contract.
  • At Jolimont Station today, two giggling girls approached the doors, falling all over one another in anticipatory mirth, they waited for the beep, opened the door a crack and threw in a small piece of paper.
  • Was he in anticipatory repudiatory breach in respect of the contracts in respect of vessels 3-6?
  • Slowly he leaned forward, sweaty palms tucked into his jeans' pockets, not wanting to rush this moment, savouring this anticipatory thrill.
  • As will be argued, Rushdie's novel can be approached as an instance of a modernized fairy tale utopia, as well as a move from the sheer critique of the present state of things to the anticipatory vision of a more hospitable world.
  • March in New York is a restless time, an anticipatory time, hopeful yet apprehensive.
  • Inside there was bustle and excited anticipatory chatter.
  • I'm tempted to write him a fan letter care of the magazine," Lisa said, an anticipatory lilt in her voice. LASTING TREASURES
  • Anticipatory fear has two distinct modes: anxiety, a preoccupation with an impending threat, and worry, the internal struggle to find a way to escape the danger.
  • To live in the expectation that time will end permits the expression of chronic, anticipatory mourning for a world about to be lost, and supports a keen public interest in the history and archaeology of lost worlds.
  • It is the nineteenth century doctrine of anticipatory self-defence which claims a right to take necessary and proportionate action in self-defence when there is the danger of an imminent attack.
  • Indeed, the exercise of such anticipatory coping was one of Caplan's central notions for primary prevention.
  • Rather than shouting, residents silently digested as much detail as they could, a series of anticipatory computations filled all heads as everybody tried to visualize the plan that would permanently change the neighbourhood.
  • Anticipatory, that is, the seed whose "fruit," namely, "righteousness," shall be ultimately reaped, is now "sown in peace. Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
  • I stared, with anticipatory pleasure, at the envelopes in my over-flowing in-tray. RESCUING ROSE
  • Assimilation can be anticipatory, where a sound changes to resemble a sound that follows it ('dog' becomes 'gog').
  • They asked us to put on a two-day seminar in Capitol Hill in '75, excuse me, on what we called anticipatory democracy. Creating a New Civilization: The Politics of the Third Wave
  • The song bolts out with an anticipatory, pulsing rhythm under a soprano sax solo.
  • Historians of the Sixties have long emphasized that there were many anticipatory developments, from the introduction of Playboy and stars like Marilyn Monroe in the Fifties, to the Beat Generation of the same era.
  • This is consistent with previous observations of clinically bradykinetic PD patients who may show normal movement durations when reaching for 3D targets, particularly when full vision is available Sub-Optimal Use of Sensorimotor Memories for Anticipatory Modulation of Fingertip Contact Points and Forces in PD PLoS ONE Alerts: New Articles
  • The thought of his blind date gives him a rush of anticipatory nervous excitement.
  • A constructive dismissal may arise by way of an anticipatory breach.
  • The strategy document itself articulates the principle as follows: The greater the threat, the greater is the risk of inaction — and the more compelling the case for taking anticipatory action to defend ourselves, even if uncertainty remains as to the time and place of the enemy's attack. 14 Important Science Questions
  • Even after we had become used to the fascinating jumble of treasures piled throughout the house our visits were marked by an anticipatory, nervous excitement.
  • Representatives of concerned residents held a meeting on Tuesday to discuss anticipatory measures to be taken in case of floods in the near future and the administration's lack of preparation.
  • The population dynamics of the predator could be co-ordinated to that of the host population in an anticipatory way.
  • Perkins asked, crossing his legs at the knee, his expression anticipatory, respectful, his pen poised over his clipboard. The Glass Rainbow
  • Health promotion and disease prevention include age specific counselling called anticipatory guidance.
  • I really must stop living one whole extra life in anticipatory fantasy, on top of my actual life which is altogether more ordinary. Back To The Books « Tales from the Reading Room
  • The assumption has to be made that, had there been no anticipatory breach, the defendant would have performed his legal obligation and no more.
  • Usually, once the story begins then I kind of relax into it, but there is sort of an anticipatory work up that happens.
  • Inside there was bustle and excited anticipatory chatter.
  • The Plaintiff takes the position that there is an anticipatory breach of contract by the Defendant.
  • Curiously, there was an anticipatory quality to her voice -- as though she had thrown a conversational bone. THE CALLIGRAPHER
  • The perceiving individual's terminal attitudes constitute an anticipatory contact experience in which the futurity of distant objects is reduced to an abstract contemporaneity.
  • Anticipatory exam dread and its accompanying crabbiness seem to have arrived exceptionally early this year.
  • We have taken some anticipatory measures and will not be affected by the new ruling.
  • In such instances, finite and infinitive clauses are commonly postposed and anticipatory it takes their place in subject position: ‘It is obvious that nobody understands me’; ‘It was a serious mistake to accuse them of negligence.’
  • With reference, in particular, to the ansated cross of Egypt, Letronne, Raoul-Rochette, and Lajard discuss with much learning the symbolism of that simple hieroglyphic of life, in which the Christians of Egypt seem to have recognized an anticipatory revelation of the Christian Cross, and which they employed in their monuments. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 4: Clandestinity-Diocesan Chancery
  • I got a few anticipatory glances from the penny-pinching woman who couldn't wait to get her hands on my property.
  • The thought of his blind date gives him a rush of anticipatory nervous excitement.
  • From all other activities that are elsewhere ascribed to the Holy Spirit we conclude that His work in this case must have been anticipatory of the creative work that followed, a kind of impregnation with divine potentialities. Exposition of Genesis: Volume 1
  • A common denominator for many returnees is the experience of having sustained anticipatory anxiety about potential threats to life and limb at any hour of the day and at any place within the theater of operations.
  • The population dynamics of the predator could be co-ordinated to that of the host population in an anticipatory way.
  • The intentional note of grief, imagined, anticipatory, and incipient, is again an important element of that defense.
  • While 'unconcealment', the recapitulatory incidence of this third category, indicates general constellations of presence endowed with a certain duration, its anticipatory incidence, the 'event' scatters the general, disregards even the particular thing, and fragments any thought-content other than this or that presencing singularized by its distinct absencing. Enowning
  • In my view, establishing what he called a quarantine, what the world thought of as a blockade, and preventing if you will the Soviet Union from placing nuclear missiles in Cuba, that was certainly self-defense, it was certainly anticipatory self - defense, it was certainly preventative, and we were very close to a crisis of historic proportions. CNN Transcript Sep 26, 2002
  • Even after we had become used to the fascinating jumble of treasures piled throughout the house our visits were marked by an anticipatory, nervous excitement.
  • Tina let something show, something which brought to the back of Deirdre's neck an anticipatory prickling. DEATH OF A NYMPH
  • Slowly he leaned forward, sweaty palms tucked into his jeans' pockets, not wanting to rush this moment, savouring this anticipatory thrill.
  • It is the hope of the Nonesuch Press that this announcement will cause the blood of many true collectors to tingle in anticipatory possession … 2009 October 01 | NIGEL BEALE NOTA BENE BOOKS

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