How To Use Forego In A Sentence

  • This is the very definition of obstructionism: To delay a foregone conclusion for the sake of a petty protest.
  • Whenever possible, forego fashion and stick with ‘sensible’ shoes.
  • To forego means “to go before” – the matching fore in forego and before is a handy way to remember the correct form: Forego and forgo
  • This was a sad day indeed for the big bad wolf of the banking world, and not just because it must forego those rich pickings it planned to cream off from two billion cash machine transactions a year.
  • The foregoing is excerpted from Judgment Ridge by Dick Lehr and Mitchell Zuckoff.
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  • Since the loan is for $10,000, it is our understanding that the foregone interest would not represent taxable income to him. Christianity Today
  • Pauline asked whether she would be willing to forego her drink of water `to save a poor sinner. RIDDLE ME THIS
  • You are suggesting that small RNA would assume the function performed by protein amino acyl synthetases and if we presume all the foregoing what leads you to think this mixture would evolve to produce a cell? Are Stereochemical Explanations Causally Sufficient?
  • The foregoing applies to cases in which a pulmotor would be used, such as apnea from electric shocks, etc. Bronchoscopy and Esophagoscopy A Manual of Peroral Endoscopy and Laryngeal Surgery
  • All of the foregoing, however, can be supported by interpreting the text, history, and structure of the Constitution according to its original meaning.
  • This does not include indirect costs such as earnings foregone.
  • Apart from the foregoing liturgical uses, a flabellum, in the shape of a fan, later of an umbrella or canopy, was used as a mark of honour for bishops and princes. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 6: Fathers of the Church-Gregory XI
  • Notwithstanding the foregoing, I will fight to ensure that all safety net programs remain adequately funded next year, and explore every option to identify resources. Commissioner Nick Fish Promises To Work For Homeless Youth Funding
  • The outcome of the vote is a foregone conclusion.
  • These are: how much they can expect to receive at retirement in today's terms; what the implications are of delaying pension saving or foregoing it completely; and how much it will cost them compared with what they can expect to receive in pensionable income. Public sector managers can help ease changes under pension reforms
  • In the light of our foregoing discussion, it is clear that letting deflation happen must not be simply equated to an apathetic resignation before the power of mysterious forces and blind market mechanisms.
  • Said Walter: "Didst thou find thy foregoer alive here? Wood Beyond the World
  • Not that I regard the foregoing as articles of faith, or as all true; -- I have implied the contrary by contrasting it with, at least, by shewing its disparateness from, the Mosaic, which, 'bona fide', I do regard as the truth. Literary Remains, Volume 2
  • As the dining public tries out new types of cuisine, whether it is Brazilian churrasco or Peruvian ceviche, they're likely to forego the usual Martini and inquire about traditional South American beverages.
  • It was, my friend, necessary upon the foregoing occasion, to insist much upon the finished salvation wrought out by our Re - deemer; all knowledge of the character of Jesus Christ, seemed to be lost among the greater part of the people. Letters, and sketches of sermons : in three volumes
  • In the light of the aforegoing we are therefore satisfied that all the requirements of Section 20 (1) of the Act have been complied with. ANC Daily News Briefing
  • The Democratic Party demonstrated its abandonment of any pretext of opposition by foregoing the traditional response of the minority party to a presidential address to Congress.
  • Yet Harris foregoes mention of this salient fact entirely, arguably an absolute, archimedean point in and of itself. On Thursday, the Legg report will be published along with...
  • He said the trick with cooking grouse was to keep it simple - but, if they stick to the rules, Atkins dieters may have to forego some of the trimmings that come with the new-season bird, such as parsnip crisps and bread sauce.
  • The foregoing remark so fitly tells us of our own participation in the same sinistrous line that we can not but borrow them to preface what follows. Tennessee
  • Here, three Santas forego their sleighs in favor of an underground commute.
  • Is the foregoing family a branch of that of Herefordshire, now ennobled; or does it come down from one of the name anterior to the time when such earldom was made patent, viz. from Sir Richard Harley, 28 Edward I.: whose armorial bearings, according to one annalist, is mentioned as _Or, bend cotized sable_? Notes and Queries, Number 184, May 7, 1853 A Medium of Inter-communication for Literary Men, Artists, Antiquaries, Genealogists, etc.
  • From the foregoing, it may be seen that accurately to measure the temperature of the hot end of a thermo-couple, we _must know the temperature of the cold end_, as it is the _difference_ in the temperatures that determines the voltmeter readings. The Working of Steel Annealing, Heat Treating and Hardening of Carbon and Alloy Steel
  • On the contrary, it is to be considered that, without his consent having ever been asked, a man finds himself environed by a government that he cannot resist; a government that forces him to pay money, render service, and forego the exercise of many of his natural rights, under peril of weighty punishments. Can anybody ever consent to the State?
  • There was a reason why they had foregone the privilege of having a singing canary in the dock.
  • The outcome of the battle was a foregone conclusion.
  • He required forceful persuasion to forego county commitments to fly back for the final, but no-one smiled brighter after the previously impregnable Ireland had been clinically defeated by 47 runs.
  • Mrs Chivery derived a surprising force of emphasis from the foregoing circumstantiality and repetition. Little Dorrit
  • Then he went away more disheartened than before and returned to his own house where he saw his wife sitting, for she had foregone him thither by the souterrain. The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • Von Trier did forego the zoom-in camera on a crane for which Hollywood dance production numbers are cosmetically arranged.
  • After the company's promoters assume the foregoing liability, they may file a claim for recovery from the defendant shareholder.
  • But since global markets are not static and needs and priorities always shift with time, trade diversification is a foregone necessity for any economy.
  • I have remarked in the beginning of the foregoing letter that there is a twofold condition of determinableness and a twofold condition of determination. The Works of Frederich Schiller
  • We "alleviate" the stress by teaching more overloads, doing more class preparations, agreeing to larger class sizes, foregoing sabbaticals, never asking for release time, paying for our own conference trips, making fewer copies of articles, concurring with the hiring of more part-timers and temporary instructors, and so forth. MRZine.org
  • The foregoing remarks appear to apply to the case of the Mollusca, which, at a very early period, had reached a high organization and a great development of forms and species in the testaceous Cephalopoda. On the law which has regulated the introduction of new species
  • Maybe we can feel the chiliasm coming, but it's not here yet — we still have to play out the last minutes of the game even if the outcome is a foregone conclusion. Spin
  • Supported by its distinctly "paratactic" nature, Hölderlin's poetry here is presented as a type of scripture that expressly foregoes the desire for closure, as evidenced by the carefully open-ended reception of "the strangers 'tongue" (die Sprache der Fremdlinge) that was "heard ... comprehended ... interpreted" (vernommen/verstanden/gedeutet). [ Pfau, Coda & Works Cited'
  • Conversely, to forego what may prove to be one of the most important sources of intelligence of the war would be insanity itself. LOHENGRIN
  • The scope of this psalm is the same with that of the foregoing psalm, but there is something very singular in the composition of it; for the latter half of each verse is the same, repeated throughout the psalm, Commentary on the Whole Bible Volume III (Job to Song of Solomon)
  • An overlap complicates things slightly: forego is a variant spelling of forgo (“abstain, renounce, do without”) but the reverse is not the case, so avoiding this variation will help retain a useful distinction. Forego and forgo
  • This response encourages creators to forego some rights available under copyright law while retaining others.
  • It must be stressed that the foregoing budgeting system must be viewed as dynamic rather than static in nature.
  • The goal of the present study was to investigate the foregoing issues.
  • Conversely, to forego what may prove to be one of the most important sources of intelligence of the war would be insanity itself. LOHENGRIN
  • Unfortunately, public works employees and clean-water advocates rarely enjoy such a luxury, and recent debate has focused on the final step in sewage processing, chlorine disinfection, which is no longer the foregone conclusion it once was. Chlorine Treatment Seen as Risky
  • His departure was considered a foregone conclusion since the lifeless Trojans were playing uninspired ball.
  • I HAVE remarked in the beginning of the foregoing letter that there is a twofold condition of determinableness and a twofold condition of determination. >Letters upon the Aesthetic Education of Man. Letter XXI.
  • ‘These are accounts of people's lives,’ she said, vital for shedding light on foregone times.
  • To accept these proposals would mean we are prepared to forego the principle that life must be consistently protected from conception to birth and settle for a compromise.
  • Under the foregoing definitions, a claim that merely recites software elements without any reference to hardware is per se unpatentable. The "computer programme per se" conundrum
  • I trust that you will insert the foregoing in your next edition, and that it mat catch the eye of the sanitary authorities.
  • From the foregoing analysis, several recommendations can be made.
  • And if that means having to forego Peter Gabriel's orchestral albums, or to somehow avoid shelling out £279.99 for a pair of giant white headphones that make it look like you're wearing the back end of a Sinclair C5 on your bonce, then so be it. Don't Give Up, Dr Dre's new material will be arriving soon!
  • It's painful for cyclo-cross aficionados to forego racing season.
  • Mr. Trevelyan then related the foregoing sallies to the fair arbitress, who listened with keen relish and enjoyment. Lady Rosamond's Secret A Romance of Fredericton
  • Would you go along with that or is that sort of preordaining something that is not a foregone conclusion? CNN Transcript - Saturday Morning News: Political Races Heat Up in Wake of New Hampshire Primary - February 5, 2000
  • I could forego the computer hackers and high-tech recon operatives and burst into the place with a classic, rock-solid team of thugs, gunmen, and safecrackers.
  • Of necessity, the foregoing provides only brief details about the range of ground equipment available.
  • It is here again prophesied of, because the desolations of many of the neighbouring countries, which were foretold in the foregoing chapters, were to be brought to pass by the Assyrian army. Commentary on the Whole Bible Volume IV (Isaiah to Malachi)
  • Although it is not a foregone conclusion that patients with dysplasia will develop cancer, dysplasia remains the best indicator of cancer risk.
  • `The next bit is a little obscure," McCain admitted (as if the foregoing hadn't been). NIGHT SISTERS
  • Hence, if my article was intended as doublespeak, the foregoing is my apology.
  • Such of the foregoing remarks as apply to the results of the vitiation of the pure form of republican government delivered to The Englishwoman in America
  • Some commentators and businessmen have suggested that the successful privatization of the National Freight Corporation was a foregone conclusion.
  • It was a foregone conclusion that I would end up in the same business as him.
  • The foregoing analysis depends, in part, on the correctness of modeling viability differences.
  • Priests promise to forego the pleasures of the flesh.
  • As true Wit consists in the Resemblance of Ideas, and false Wit in the Resemblance of Words, according to the foregoing Instances; there is another kind of Wit which consists partly in the Resemblance of Ideas, and partly in the Resemblance of Words; which for Distinction Sake I shall call mixt Wit. Spectator, May 11, 1711
  • The foregoer of a mill was a quern, first moved by the power of water and later by the power of wind.
  • I speak according to the foregoing definition, by which the affirmativeness or negativeness of any quantity implies a relation to another quantity of the same kind to which it {204} is added, or from which it is subtracted; for it may perhaps be very clear and intelligible to those who have formed to themselves some other idea of affirmative and negative quantities different from that above defined. A Budget of Paradoxes, Volume I (of II)
  • You might think from the foregoing that the French want to phase accents out. Not at all.
  • Now nothing, to a common observer, could be less à-propos than Bronze’s foregoing speech was to Miss Milvar; but the name chimed in so pleasantly with the agreeable dreams, that Sir Philip thought the l’on dit quite à-propos also. The Enchantress; or, Where Shall I Find Her? A Tale
  • Priests promise to forego the pleasures of the flesh.
  • MEDITERRANEAN KIWI said ... please excuse me for forgetting to mention that the commentators know their greek well: the terms KLEPHT and EXOHIKO are common greek words whose meanings are clear. as for that word TRADITIONAL, clearly salmon klephtiko doesn't fit into the tradition: where on earth would an arcadian find salmon? and if an arcadian of the foregone klepht era ever managed to get one, i wonder whether they would ever think to cook it klepht style? no, they couldnt possibly have put it in their head to do so - it just wouldnt be TRADITIONAL (les kai kollousan sto noima tis lexeis) if i were an arcadian in the late 1800's and i were given a gift of salmon, i would definitely have cooked it klepht style, because i wouldnt have wanted even the NEIGHBOURS to find out what delicacy i was cooking ... what on earth is the traditonal method of cooking salmon in arcadia anyway??? Recipe for Salmon "Kleftiko" (Σολομός Κλέφτικος) and Kleftiko: Its Modern Meaning
  • The foregoing analysis showed the importance of rescaling in the reforms of the 1990s.
  • When all a foregone conclusion, I pray for what.
  • The foregoing analysis in my view marches with that advanced by my Lord in paragraph 24 and 25 of his judgment, with which I respectfully agree.
  • When visiting eastern Europe, you could decide to forego the usual experience of slumming it out in some cheap hostel, and instead, find a friendly local in whose house you can reside.
  • You are suggesting that small RNA would assume the function performed by protein amino acyl synthetases and if we presume all the foregoing what leads you to think this mixture would evolve to produce a cell? Are Stereochemical Explanations Causally Sufficient?
  • The couple decided to forego wedding presents and gifts totalling £900 were handed over to the hospital.
  • There's variety in the animals and produce and the freedom to focus on the aspects you most enjoy, such as foregoing a big garden in favor of a herd of animals.
  • dreams of foregone times
  • Back at Balbirnie, it seemed churlish to forego afternoon tea.
  • Once the bridge fell, the battle was a foregone conclusion.
  • The foregoing analysis of [the book on the table] enabled us to exemplify, and to define, three key grammatical notions: head, complement, and modifier.
  • Its readoption is in no way a foregone conclusion.
  • For the less gullible among us, the administration's alarmist rhetoric in 2002 was a grim farce, and the unfolding of the nightmare we see today was a foregone conclusion.
  • So they decided to forego the gastroscopy and open him up to see what was going on. September 19th, 2008
  • Nowadays, even advanced states routinely forego the diplomatic niceties, though all seek and welcome the imprimatur of international support and recognition when they can get it.
  • The outcome of the battle was a foregone conclusion.
  • The rules of evidence likely are what the government most desires to evade, once putatively having reached beyond Geneva articles, and contorted MCA's untested rendition of habeas in its various forms; [the instant case in re K. al-Marri being the test]; Padilla's suit has worked toward the realm of admissible evidence; the foregoing link is JB's discussion recently and a newspaper article; here is another pointer to a government exhibit in the matter of the government's worries that MKhan would receive permission to testify about the same things Padilla wants to discuss in open public record court; i.e., a kind of graymail argument by defense in those two cases; that exhibit appearing in the weblog there. Balkinization
  • This is the typical way that a founder determines sweat equity: foregone wages.
  • I suppose I should say just whom I refer to when I use ‘liberals’ as a noun in the foregoing since I am being so mean to them.
  • Pauline asked whether she would be willing to forego her drink of water `to save a poor sinner. RIDDLE ME THIS
  • Science fiction deliberately foregoes a direct engagement with the world literary fiction confronts more squarely, preferring instead imaginative extrapolations from existing conditions in that world; fantastic fiction ignores the restraints of realism in coming to terms with that world altogether. Genre Fiction
  • The amount of 530,000 milreis under the foregoing convention was paid by Brazil in satisfaction of claims made by United States citizens, and the amount was distributed by the United States.
  • The development of adventitious growths by chorisis or enation has been frequently alluded to in the foregoing pages, and many illustrations have been given of the power that leaves have of branching in more than one plane, owing to the projection of secondary growing-points from the primary organ. Vegetable Teratology An Account of the Principal Deviations from the Usual Construction of Plants
  • The Government is confident that the foregoing general ruling will enable junior and inexperienced officers, temporarily employed on famine duty, to classify appropriately and with facility as denticulate or edentulous all individuals afflicted with dental hiatus, mal-conformation and labefaction, without further reference to higher authority. Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 156, February 12, 1919
  • The foregoing is a description of the proposed plan.
  • And in the canons of 1603, after alluding to the foregoing constitution, and observing that it was too much neglected in many places, it is appointed “That there shall be a font of stone in every church and chapel where baptism is to be ministered; the same to be set in the _ancient usual places_.” The Principles of Gothic Ecclesiastical Architecture, Elucidated by Question and Answer, 4th ed.
  • I have submitted the foregoing to a practical birdcatcher and maker of bird-lime, and he has "passed" it as correct, only adding that the oil takes somewhere about four hours to slowly boil before it becomes sufficiently tenacious for use. Practical Taxidermy A manual of instruction to the amateur in collecting, preserving, and setting up natural history specimens of all kinds. To which is added a chapter upon the pictorial arrangement of museums. With additional instructions in modelling a
  • We stood apart in ideas but together in mourning of a foregone moment, of black communities with a long gone connectedness although just as much disagreement.
  • I believe it will not be necessary to employ many words in shewing the weakness of this argument, after what I have said of the foregoing.
  • The election result was a foregone conclusion.
  • Because such changes could not be equally justified across the models tested, and our goal was to compare a priori models, we chose to forego modifications.
  • For all the foregoing reasons, therefore, I conclude that the distraint upon the plaintiff's goods was contrary to law.
  • Conversely, to forego what may prove to be one of the most important sources of intelligence of the war would be insanity itself. LOHENGRIN
  • The name Tiberius, I hope, will keep, howe'er he hath foregone The dignity and power. Literary Remains, Volume 2
  • In truth, there is another aspect to this kind of soothsaying, and that is the element of creating excitement for an event where the outcome runs the risk of being a study in foregone conclusions. Another Gaze into the Kristol Ball
  • People I have spoken to have found the foregoing hard to believe and communist policies have been mentioned more than once.
  • The excellent results from the method described in the foregoing paragraph has relegated laryngostomy to those cases that come in with a severe cicatricial stenosis from an injudicious laryngofissure; and even in these cases cure of the stenosis as well as the papillomata can usually be obtained by endoscopic methods alone, using superficial scalping off of the papillomata with subsequent laryngoscopic bouginage for the stenosis. Bronchoscopy and Esophagoscopy A Manual of Peroral Endoscopy and Laryngeal Surgery
  • Moreover, the discussion in the foregoing pages demonstrates that it is erroneous to regard money transfer orders as comprising a single type of transaction.
  • Others worry that she (or he, of course) may have the feeling that her life has already been lived, that she is predetermined to do the same things and repeat the choices made by the genetically identical foregoer, and may thereby have difficulty assuming responsibility for her actions (Habermas 2003, 62 “ 3, Levy and Lotz 2005). Cloning
  • Pauline asked whether she would be willing to forego her drink of water `to save a poor sinner. RIDDLE ME THIS
  • And when something like that fulness of existence—love, wealth, ease, refinement, all that her nature craved—was brought within her reach, why was she to forego it, that another might have it, —another, who perhaps needed it less? XIII. Borne Along by the Tide. Book VI—The Great Temptation
  • The foregoing examples illustrate this point.
  • As the dining public tries out new types of cuisine, whether it is Brazilian churrasco or Peruvian ceviche, they're likely to forego the usual Martini and inquire about traditional South American beverages.
  • The foregoing paragraphs dispose, it is hoped, of some mistaken ideas as to the state and progress of sexuality in adulthood.
  • But if there is a conclusion to be drawn from the foregoing theses, it would seem to be that pneumatology ought not to be a distinct department of theological understanding, so much as an integrator of other departments.
  • And the foregoing is a sample of the ten days I spent in the Bonin Chapter 16
  • The foregoing discussions suggest that we can use classical and neoclassical models of location to consider the spatial behaviour of large firms, or firms in environments with good information and low relocation costs.
  • Conservative estimates are that a woman foregoes $160,000 in earnings when she stops to have a child.
  • From the foregoing, and also from III.xxviii. it follows that everyone endeavours, as far as possible, to cause others to love what he himself loves, and to hate what he himself hates: as the poet says: “As lovers let us share every hope and every fear: ironhearted were he who should love what the other leaves.” The Ethics
  • _Supplement to the foregoing Voyage, in a Letter from Anthony Ingram the chief Factor, written from Plymouth to the Owners, dated 9th September, the day of arriving at Plymouth_ [315]. A General History and Collection of Voyages and Travels — Volume 07
  • This produces a conservative estimate of annual earnings of $11,466 in 2001, which partially offset earnings foregone.
  • The foregoing analysis confirms what the parents of college-age children have known for some time: The real cost of higher education has risen well in excess of the rate at which real incomes have risen.
  • I, Robert J. Townes, Secretary of State of the State of Texas, do hereby certify that the foregoing is a true and correct copy of the original, now on file in my Department. Texas. Legislature. Resolutions of the State of Texas, Concerning Peace, Reconstruction, and Independence.
  • Conversely, to forego what may prove to be one of the most important sources of intelligence of the war would be insanity itself. LOHENGRIN
  • The foregoing analyses adopt a comparative notion of reasonableness as a basic or primitive notion.
  • The second volume commences with a poem of considerable length, entitled, "Salamis," with a notice that "The foregoing poem was presented to his father, by John William Smith, January 23d, 1821, the day on which he completed his twelfth year. Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine - Volume 61, No. 376, February, 1847
  • He cursed softly to himself and watched the fire fade from her face and the soft luminous glow of the appealing woman spring up, of the appealing woman who foregoes strength and panoplies herself wisely in her weakness. IN THE FOREST OF THE NORTH
  • After assuming the foregoing liability, such directors and senior management personnel may file a claim for recovery from the defendant shareholder.
  • It has beautiful black and white markings on its head and the foregoing adults of both sexes have very long horns.
  • They clearly interact with one another, as has been obvious from the foregoing.
  • The aforegoing is a just and true Copy of the original Protest on Privateering and Piracy in the Colonial Period Illustrative Documents
  • John came to the dawning of the gospel-day, and therein excelled the foregoing prophets, but he was taken off before the noon of that day, before the rending of the veil, before Commentary on the Whole Bible Volume V (Matthew to John)
  • The portents are that, despite all the problems, the outcome is a foregone conclusion and he will not need to call in the removal men next year for a flit to his new £3.5m gaff.
  • Likewise, children or adults with egg allergies typically should not receive the influenza or yellow fever vaccines, and children with severe gelatin allergies may need to forego certain immunizations. Vaccines and Society
  • Across the country, hospital management has engaged in schemes to compel hospital workers to forego breaks and put in longer shifts in order to maintain operations.
  • The foregoing words and expressions are probably provincialisms rather than Devonianisms, good old English forms of expression; as are, indeed, many of the so-called Hibernicisms.
  • John is greater than man, peer unto the angels, sovereign holiness of the law of the gospel, the voice of the apostles, the silence of the prophets, the lantern of the world, the foregoer of the Judge, and moyen of all the Trinity. The Golden Legend, vol. 5
  • Edward Hill was more than the foregoing; he was a fair type of a large class of colored men who were then as now struggling against adverse fate in the South, in the laudable effort to vindicate the good name of the so called freedmen of that section. Recollections of the Inhabitants, Localities, Superstitions, and KuKlux Outrages of the Carolinas. By a "Carpet-Bagger" Who Was Born and Lived There
  • But "forego" (as distinct from foregoing) is almost always wrong. Christian Science Monitor | All Stories
  • At the turn of the century, misled conservationists would have had us forego the joys of a Christmas tree.
  • To address the foregoing question, we applied the arbitrary primed polymerase chain reaction technique.
  • In view of the aforegoing, the applicant's application for amnesty succeeds," the committee said. ANC Daily News Briefing
  • The result gave the lie to cynics who suggested the result was a foregone conclusion.
  • An important implication of the foregoing is that the essential preparation for Christmas is ‘remote, not proximate,’ to recall an ancient distinction.
  • He says that it is a foregone conclusion that Labour will win the next election.
  • What's that, foregone conclusion then you reckon sir ?' said the barman. " Arsenal without a chance?
  • Consequently, not only because of the bank's move to inflation targeting, but also because of the exposure of the government's account and the consequent losses, the bank did not intervene in the aforegoing manner in support of the rand in 2001, ANC Daily News Briefing
  • She says the department has decided to forego what she called bells and whistles like mobile detection machines, but she could not tell me how many machines ultimately the department will buy -- Lou. CNN Transcript Nov 20, 2007
  • At the time these cuts were announced, at least one member of the Office of the Publisher stated in an e-mail that all three would "forego" bonuses. The Minnesota Daily - mndaily.com
  • Cassia or kulit manis (Laurus cassia) is a coarse species of cinnamon which flourishes chiefly, as well as the two foregoing articles, in the northern part of the island; but with this difference, that the camphor and benzoin grow only near the coast, whereas the cassia is a native of the central parts of the country. The History of Sumatra Containing An Account Of The Government, Laws, Customs And Manners Of The Native Inhabitants
  • The eventual outcome is a foregone conclusion - overqualified employees holding jobs they find boring, unchallenging, and unrewarding.
  • The results showed poorer students were more likely to leave early - failing to finish or foregoing the chance to go on to a more advanced course.
  • You might think from the foregoing that the French want to phase accents out. Not at all.
  • The foregoing strongly suggests that dividend policy and practice contains important information for the shareholder.
  • For example, those who suggest that Mr Haughey's restoration throughout the 1970s was inevitable and that his election as party leader was a foregone conclusion for a long time before it happened, are being simply unhistorical.
  • But with Liverpool likely to field a weakened team to face an obdurate Burnley side buoyed by back-to-back wins and clean sheets, it may not be such a foregone conclusion.
  • By saving money, by earning more, and by each of us foregoing a bicycle on his birthday, we had collected the purchase price of the Mist, a beamy twenty-eight-footer, sloop-rigged, with baby topsail and centerboard. To Repel Boarders
  • Preach peace to him as much as thou wilt, I will never be he will say thee nay; but as for bidding the first armourer in Scotland forego the forging of swords, curtal axes, and harness, it is enough to drive patience itself mad. The Fair Maid of Perth
  • Cod-liver Oil may also be used by inunction, in the foregoing disorders, but it is best administered internally, and in the following diseases, viz.
  • The Secretary of the Corporation, elected at the Special Meeting of Stockholders, convened on February 19, 2009, hereby certifies that the foregoing is a true and correct copy of the By-Laws of the Corporation named in the title thereto and that such By-Laws were duly adopted by the Board of Directors of said Corporation on the date set forth below. WebWire | Recent Headlines
  • Confrontation might be a foregone conclusion, milord.
  • But you also have to learn that you don't have all the answers and you may not have the best insight in how to solve an issue as you have not necessarily come across it before ... but don't take the aforegoing to mean that you always have to bring on older people. How to create the winning team...
  • Most German commentators now regard the dismembering of the Kirch empire as a foregone conclusion, leaving other sports and TV companies across Europe facing an uncertain future.
  • Names of Jesus and Mary, teachers (mother-houses of all the foregoing are in Marseilles); Sisters of the Holy Name of Jesus, a teaching order founded in 1832 (mother-house at La Ciotat), discalced The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 9: Laprade-Mass Liturgy
  • This may be referred either to the immediately foregoing verse, That you faint not, &c., or, rather, the apostle is here resuming what he began at the first verse, from which he digressed in those which are interposed. Commentary on the Whole Bible Volume VI (Acts to Revelation)
  • Accounting for new irreducibly complex structures by the foregoing mechanisms is a completely different proposition.
  • The foregoing analysis allows us to suppose that our version is of a better quality compared to the revised map presented on the website.
  • The usual hot summer features ferocious mosquitoes at sunset, gnats, biting nits, mayflies, moths and green flies, and spiders and their webs everywhere, harvesting the foregoing.
  • After all, we have arrived at a time when men are foregoing their neighborhood barber for hairstylists, and some guys are even paying premium prices for high-end hairstyling products.
  • You can forget the vows of both parties to forego vituperation in campaigning.
  • Given the foregoing, we conclude that Section 5 does not violate the First Amendment.
  • Those of us with Mexican partners quickly learn that all of the foregoing is necessary and MAKE the changes in our lifestyle. Page 3
  • In her attempts to reconstruct her past Searle was confronted by the lacunae in the archives, which are mute on the histories of the disempowered: the stories of slaves and women who forego their names, are mostly absent.
  • However, we have here much the same management of Paul's case as we had in the foregoing chapter; cognizance is here taken of it, I. Commentary on the Whole Bible Volume VI (Acts to Revelation)
  • From the foregoing correspondence it will be seen that one of Booker Washington's many rôles was to act as a kind of plenipotentiary and interpreter between his people and the dominant race. Booker T. Washington Builder of A Civilization
  • The shophar was made of horn, as we see from its now and then being called qeren, "horn" (cf. Jos., vi, 5); in fact, in the foregoing passage, it is designated a "ram's horn", qeren yobel. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 15: Tournely-Zwirner
  • The foregoing discussion should establish the ambiguous, ambivalent, problematic, yet intriguing position of rhetorical studies within the academy.
  • THAT the author of the said work applied himself to his task in malice prepense and with wickedness aforethought; a fact which, your Dedicator contends, is sufficiently demonstrated, by his assuming the name of Quiz, which, your Dedicator submits, denotes a foregone conclusion, and implies an intention of quizzing. Sketches by Boz
  • If there are traditions that you find to be triggering or simply don't like, allow yourself to forego them.
  • Well, as I hope you now understand from the foregoing, GDP growth is extremely well correlated with CO2 emissions.
  • The reason for the foregoing restraint on bankrupts ' pursuing claims in relation to their property which they owned before a sequestration order is well explained in the cases.
  • In the foregoing narrative, the mildest view has been adopted of his remorseless cruelty: of his gross and revolting indulgences, of his daily demeanour, which is said to have outraged everything that is seemly, everything that is holy, in private life, little has been written. Memoirs of the Jacobites of 1715 and 1745 Volume II.
  • The outcome of theelection is a foregone conclusion.
  • The foregoing examples illustrate this point.
  • The foregoing is irrefutable evidence that the fool-killer is enacting the rôle of cunctator. The Complete Works of Brann the Iconoclast, Volume 10
  • While he lyricized the locale, Piano did not forego the practical aspects of architecture.
  • In the foregoing pages the history of five medieval South Slav states has been briefly outlined.
  • But in the real world, instances don't yield general truths with anything like the haste of a typical Myers paragraph (of which the foregoing is a parody). Book Reviews: The Misguided Anger Of A Critic
  • I can testify to the foregoing since I was actually present when it happened.
  • The outcome of the battle was a foregone conclusion.
  • He listens fascinated for a thousand-and-one nights until finally he lets her live as his wife and foregoes his murderous ways. Arab Spring influence closes out Edinburgh Festival

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