incipience

NOUN
  1. beginning to exist or to be apparent
    he placed the incipience of democratic faith at around 1850
    it is designed to arrest monopolies in their incipiency
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How To Use incipience In A Sentence

  • But also, from its incipience around 1968, liberation theology has been surrounded by controversy because of its often-unabashed association with Marxist analysis.
  • The original score, all a-throb with scary incipience, was composed by David Wingo. '50/50': Cheerful Illness Tale, With Relapses
  • The situation's bad, hence the decision to increase the presence of U.S. and international forces in Baghdad, though not clear that alone will be enough to quell this incipience of a war. CNN Transcript Jul 26, 2006
  • My intention here is to link fate with incipience, or to suffuse the limiting condition known as fate with the limiting condition known as beginning in such a way as to allow the limits to cancel each other.
  • Reliable historians tell us Islam inherited much of the Judeo-Christian imagery, including winged angels, during its incipience.
  • Stile felt his heartbeat and respiratory rate increase with the incipience of this effort. Blue Adept
  • The sky could no longer be seen and the air had grown heavy and dank as if with the incipience of a storm. The Miko
  • My own conclusion after a bit of homework is that the threat to the civil liberties of most Americans is still mainly a matter of incipience.
  • Distraction surely, incipience of the “final deliration” enters upon the poor old English Formulism that has called itself for some two centuries a Church. The Correspondence of Thomas Carlyle and Ralph Waldo Emerson, 1834-1872, Vol. I
  • The sky had lightened a little, but the air was heavy with the incipience of a storm. Black Blade
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