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[ US /ˈsəbsəkwənt/ ]
[ UK /sˈʌbsɪkwənt/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. following in time or order
    subsequent developments

How To Use subsequent In A Sentence

  • Added to which there is a large increase in the fees receivable in 1994 to a level of almost £123,000 which accounts for the large increase in the gross profit over the previous and subsequent years.
  • The fall in popularity of the death's head and the subsequent prevalence of the cherub was a reflection of the Great Awakening and the belief in the immortality of the soul: "Cherubs reflect a stress on resurrection, while death's heads emphasize the mortality of man. Headstones for Dummies, the New York Edition
  • Animals are humanized, that is, the kinship between animal and human life is still keenly felt, and this reminds us of those early animistic interpretations of nature which subsequently led to doctrines of metempsychosis. The Art of the Story-Teller
  • These works have subsequently become the most widely performed and appreciated in the Boyce repertoire.
  • Both these pursuits found their way into his writing, as well as motivating his subsequent relocation to Berlin.
  • A subsequent kerfuffle (rather drawn out) sounding not unlike a fist fight interspersed with successive shards of glass falling. BEHINDLINGS
  • She subsequently has to steal, freeload and dumpster-dive to get by. Times, Sunday Times
  • The IP pellet was resuspended in final wash buffer and aliquoted for subsequent biochemical analyses.
  • The ostraca are included, while texts from other sites in the Judean Desert will be included in a subsequent volume of the concordance.
  • Mercury is thermally desorbed from solid samples, trapped on an in-line gold trap, and subsequently determined by cold-vapour atomic absorption spectrometry.
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