[
UK
/ɪntˈɛndɪd/
]
[ US /ˌɪnˈtɛndɪd, ɪnˈtɛndɪd/ ]
[ US /ˌɪnˈtɛndɪd, ɪnˈtɛndɪd/ ]
ADJECTIVE
-
future; betrothed
his intended bride -
resulting from one's intentions
an intended insult
your intended trip abroad
How To Use intended In A Sentence
- It's not because I'm worried about what they might think, or anything ridiculous like that, it's because in a lot of cases this material was intended for me alone - either through an oral tradition or as a gnostic revelation from the spirits.
- This facility is intended to help a few hundred families living in public housing by training them to be grocery store clerks.
- In contrast, although not originally intended as permanent implants, in practice bioabsorbable hemostats are often left in the surgical bed to prevent rebleeding after surgical closure.
- That is, the Olympian Zeus 'ban on human creativity: which shows Zeus's intended bestialization of all mortal human individuals, by forbidding, not only the use, but the discovery of any universal physical principle, such as "fire," or, today, nuclear-fission power. LaRouche's Latest
- Use of a University-owned mobile telephone and mobile telephone airtime service is intended for official University business.
- However, the measure intended to foster democracy will result in all three party leaders imposing a three-line whip on their respective MPs – a move hardly likely to ease the public's mistrust of Parliament. European Union: The referendum is an absurd sideshow | Observer editorial
- Every single one of his intended blows was blocked and parried, even when the man tripped and fell backwards.
- The *victim* of the defacement is the person who is intended to be fearful. The Volokh Conspiracy » The Shmulevich Case — Facts and New York Law, as I Can Best Figure Them Out:
- The antidote is intended to protect residents from radioactive fallout from any missile attack on the nuclear station.
- Many of the chapters in this volume specify educational programs that are intended to increase procedural knowledge. Advanced Educational Psychology For Educators, Researchers and Policymakers,