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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

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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