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"antecedent" Definitions
  1. previous
"antecedent" Synonyms
preceding previous former foregoing earlier prior precedent anterior past precursory preliminary pre-existing erstwhile prevenient aforementioned above supra late aforesaid precursive early first foundational initial original inaugural maiden earliest embryonic foundation prefatory raw pilot prelusive opening undeveloped initiatory ancestral inherited lineal hereditary familial genealogical patriarchal affiliated ancestorial congenital consanguine consanguineous family forefatherly inborn inbred innate maternal old predecessor precursor forerunner prototype archetype daddy foregoer grandaddy granddaddy ancestor forebear progenitor antecessor forefather pioneer originator father parent trailblazer cause occasion causation reason causality justification basis rationale motive excuse grounds inducement pretext causativeness call premise account argument incentive purpose tupuna ascendant ascendent primogenitor grandfather forbear forebearer procreator grandparent patriarch descent extraction stock line birth blood genealogy ancestry roots stirps ancestors forebears filiation forefathers history progenitors background record base core essence heart root cornerstone crux principle groundwork bedrock kernel keystone nucleus underpinning nub bottom footing ground rootstock wellspring agent author beginning connection creator derivation determinant egg element embryo fount fountain fountainhead referent significate denotation designatum term thing protasis conditional hypothesis model example pattern exemplar paradigm authority guide standard lead criterion instance yardstick practice previous case previous instance prior case prior example prior instance genesis origin creation dawning inception initiation origination preface start begetter beginnings starting point factor component characteristic circumstance consideration influence part point aspect attribute constituent detail facet item life autobiography biography profile experience adventure fortunes memoir life history life story personal history family background past life career to date trials and tribulations career More

131 Sentences With "antecedent"

How to use antecedent in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "antecedent" and check conjugation/comparative form for "antecedent". Mastering all the usages of "antecedent" from sentence examples published by news publications.

"Frozen 2" picks up where its groundbreaking antecedent left off.
But it's worth recalling Ken Shamrock, her most immediate antecedent.
Kovács cites an unlikely antecedent: the UK's ravetastic, 90s happy hardcore.
A closer antecedent may be Jason Rohrer's "Gravitation," released in 2008.
Your brain is interpreting it differently because of the antecedent conditions.
The direct antecedent of Kubernetes is a Google project called Borg.
As a whole, the collection was clear in antecedent and concise in effect.
One man serves as the most obvious antecedent to Del Rio: Eddie Guerrero.
Antecedent incidents underscore the perilous ramifications; a literal 2017 stampede injured 16 people.
Everything has an antecedent, a historical "archetype," to use Ms. Antonelli's Jungian term.
But a more helpful antecedent may be another queer criminal: Patricia Highsmith's Tom Ripley.
This resulted in an antecedent distribution of r52,4m Source text for Eikon: Further company coverage:
A higher law, in other words, that is antecedent to human codes governs human relations.
The witchdoctor who led this carnal parade, writes Mr Brewster, was the modern DJ's antecedent.
By contrast, Clinton's antecedent took office in the midst of the worst downturn in 80 years.
In war, before 1945, the capacity to destroy had always required an antecedent capacity to win.
But aren't we all products of history, of antecedent causes over which we had no control?
If there's an obvious antecedent to the music Lil Wayne made on Rebirth, it's Linkin Park.
Mr Niel started out with a porn-chat service for Minitel, a French antecedent to the internet.
But this use of "they" is unusual: traditionally it can refer back only to an indefinite antecedent.
And I can yet remember when I hung it, in a better time Well antecedent to this rhyme.
Mr. Rodgers is one of the great pop bandleaders — an antecedent in many ways for the Roots's Questlove.
The archetype—that item's antecedent—is represented solely by contextual wall text that traces the item's historical lineage.
Since its founding, the military has instituted measures to distance itself from, and stigmatize, its Nazi-era antecedent.
Canadian musician Peaches, possibly electroclash's brightest star, is probably the earliest antecedent to the specific late-00s electropop sound.
The Tribune Company, its corporate antecedent, was bought by the Chicago billionaire Sam Zell for $8.2 billion in 2008.
There will always be disagreements about use of the word "nigga," because of its more destructive and demeaning antecedent.
There are millions of antecedent causes that led you to choose that shirt, and you had no control over them.
That's not to say that Lee succumbs to the offhand improvisation of some abstract expressionists or Japan's antecedent Gutai movement.
Her historical antecedent is Sam Rayburn, the Texas Democrat who was speaker and lost power in the 703s and 1950s.
Studying any given van Gogh, the visitor is invited to do an about-face and discover its purported Japanese antecedent.
Do they see McVeigh as a singular threat or as an important antecedent to our present-day white power killers?
A younger writer will study the successes and failures of a recent antecedent, as a way of clarifying his own project.
With flashbulbs, and even their riskier, flash-powder antecedent, he was able to own and preserve the instant when— Fiat lux!
Or perhaps a better antecedent is Woodstock '99, the 30-year anniversary event that was the opposite of the original fest.
It could have been some other line of research which would have had more probable antecedent payoff than going into philosophy.
The antecedent is the setup, telling a child, specifically, what you want them to do before you want them to do it.
She also acknowledged an antecedent: a 2017 spreadsheet in which media workers published allegations of sexual misconduct against men in the industry.
Justice Sotomayor finds additional support for this interpretation (an application of the "rule of the last antecedent") in the structure of the law.
Or that Alessandro Michele purposefully presses creases into his tailoring at Gucci, an odd antecedent to the intentionally distressed appearance of the Incroyables.
A contemporary antecedent might include Gregory Amenoff, whose seminal works of the 1980s revisited a Romantic belief in the restorative power of nature.
She's also a fount of hilarity and superlative turns of phrase, which Lockwood appreciates as the antecedent to her own way with words.
Whatever historical antecedent one chooses, the truth is that there is ample precedent, ample motive and ample need for cooperation on this issue.
Goldin's reframing of the quotidian as something more meaningful, her celebration of collective gathering and its expression of catharsis, has its antecedent in disco.
In writing "The Handmaid's Tale," Atwood was scrupulous about including nothing that did not have a historical antecedent or a modern point of comparison.
Dance producers' anonymity via multiple aliases and white label pressings was one key antecedent for today's Daft Punk's robot gear or Marshmello's white bucket.
But there is no antecedent for the kind of feedback loop at work between Mr. Trump and Mr. Netanyahu, at least in stylistic terms.
It may seem strange that "Birdman," Mr. Iñárritu's black comedy, may be the most relevant antecedent for a work as harrowing as this one.
Syntax saves her in this case: the squirrel, not the ball, is the antecedent of "it," and the boy stays out of the road.
One spiritual antecedent might be Food, Gordon Matta-Clark's influential SoHo restaurant-as-performance-piece, which opened in 1971, the same year as Salmon Creek.
It's the natural antecedent to games like Hohokum, and I wonder if it would be made today if the more conventional roadblocks were be removed.
" It goes on to say, "As a last resort, the awkward his or her is tolerable; a plural pronoun with a singular antecedent is not.
The pivot may be a tech-age phenomenon, but it has an antecedent in another rhetorical maneuver favored by Beltway types: ''evolving'' on an issue.
The band's direct antecedent was Roxy Music, which had championed stylised futuristic rock, but the Cars took it further both in depth and commercial appeal.
The justices disagreed sharply, but their disagreement was solely over how to interpret a vague antecedent in the text of the statute establishing the mandatory minimum.
Mr. Chemin also collaborated with Prada on its men's show last month, a clear antecedent, as is increasingly true in many collections from Gucci to Burberry.
And while its closest antecedent is In Rainbows on beauty alone, A Moon Shaped Pool trades that album's sensuality and structural rigor for big, cinematic moments.
Greenberger forgivably tells the same tales as Reeves, but in places "The Unexpected President" closely mimics its antecedent with scant paraphrase and nary a quotation mark.
Every other track has its historical antecedent: The album derives its title from the Blind Willie Johnson tune, recalled here in a spirit of bleary acceptance.
With its new corporate partner, Capitol Records, Q.C. is under the umbrella of a brand that they would like to think of as an antecedent: Motown.
The riveting episode "Cruel and Unusual" examines nitrogen gas's antecedent, the lethal injection, and makes a case, of sorts, for the integrity of the firing squad.
Although this setup can become a bit trying, an explosive dinner near the end provides emotional fireworks and a fit antecedent for the shocks to come.
Schiff, like Marianne Moore—a profound and not entirely metabolized antecedent—has, instead, stanzas: rigid, cratelike stanzas, which often employ regular patterns of syllables per line.
Upwork, whose antecedent companies go back almost two decades, is a positive cash flow business, albeit one growing top line revenue only about 27.6% year over year.
"To me the historical antecedent is Ronald Reagan in 1980," said Howard Wolfson, who was the communications director for Clinton's 2008 campaign for the Democratic presidential nomination.
"We see plenty of people who are super-fit, healthy, and young, who are amazing athletes, who get acute mountain sickness with no antecedent warning," he says.
He might take a slab of taro-based pa'i'ai, a thicker, stickier antecedent to poi, char it on the grill and slip it into a hamburger bun.
Although not originally intended to be played as a set, Gibbons's Fantasy in C and Allemande (Italian Ground) were clearly paired by him as antecedent and consequent.
But in important ways, and not just their backgrounds in real estate, television and hair care travails, there are similarities between Mr. Trump and his Italian antecedent.
For believers who subscribe to this account, Cyrus is a perfect historical antecedent to explain Trump's presidency: a nonbeliever who nevertheless served as a vessel for divine interest.
Most impressively, English kept the show similar to its most obvious antecedent — the newsroom-set Mary Tyler Moore Show — without feeling like a ripoff or even an homage.
To a degree, she's something of an antecedent to Goop, albeit sans the plugs for jade vagina eggs and with more sensible pantsuits and casual references to Jesus.
But it is quite relevant that the antecedent agreement was not one in which the venues bought some product from Ticketmaster in order to resell it to concertgoers.
In the 18th century, well-born male and female children alike were laced into stays (boned bodices, the antecedent of the corset) — boys until the age of 6.
Sadly, the well-documented, pervasive misogyny of Woodstock '99 feels like a more relevant antecedent to America in 2019 than the "free love" politics of the original fest.
Our usually cozy Copland took his rightful place as both the true contemporary of his thornier friend, Ginastera, and the antecedent of young composers like Mr. Norman, 36.
"Few people realize that the anti-American government antecedent to the Tea Party was fomented in the late '70s with money from Charles and David Koch," Graves continued.
The plan to reuse it many times, à la "I Got You Babe" in "Groundhog Day," the show's most obvious antecedent, ate into most of the music budget.
He contends that their early work, in particular, should be considered an antecedent of today's edgier, more subversive Broadway fare, as fresh in its time as "Hamilton" seems now.
Gordon says the closest antecedent to the current stock market pain came in 2011, when it fell 21 percent from its high in May to its low in October.
I think it is worth noting that the President's temperament, which is one type of heart problem, and his health concern, which is another, may have the same antecedent.
However, the massive amount of rain that has fallen across the Plains, Midwest and Mississippi River Valley has created an exceptional antecedent condition that sets up a potentially unprecedented disaster.
While it's difficult to concoct apples-to-apples comparisons, the closest antecedent would be "The Sopranos," which garnered huge ratings and cultural cachet during its run from 1999 to 2007.
The American republic, more idealistic and less brutal than its Roman antecedent, doesn't send former cabinet officials and senators off to practice extractive taxation everywhere that we have military bases.
" In this way, today's true crime resurgence has an antecedent in the works of Fyodor Dostoyevsky, the Russian author of numerous novels about murder including, most famously, "Crime and Punishment.
An antecedent to Parasite's mini-sensation, this lyrical martial arts masterpiece was a surprise phenomenon in its own right, and remains the highest-grossing foreign film at the US box office.
It was interesting to dive deeper into the antecedent political culture of the U.K. and a window on some of our domestic politics from a time when I was growing up.
But Andover Newton, whose antecedent, Andover Theological Seminary, was founded in 1807 as the country's first graduate school of any kind, is selling its campus this year, the result of declining enrollments.
Now a digital cutie with gargantuan ears that hang off each side of his head like heavy leather curtains, the newest, littlest circus addition is conspicuously more animal than his childlike antecedent.
"General ethnocentrism seems to be a powerful antecedent of immigration opinion, typically displaying larger effects than economic concerns," a group of scholars at the University of Michigan write in a 2013 paper.
The clear antecedent for the Polestar 1 is the Volvo P1800, a smashing sports car that arrived in the early 1960s and gained fame when driven by Roger Moore in "The Saint."
"It's shocking that we're even having a conversation comparing Trump to Berlusconi and his antecedent strongmen of Italy, a long line that runs all the way back to Caesar," Mr. Eisen said.
" The suit says the note is "invalid as a matter of New York law because it was given for no consideration and was not given as payment of an antecedent obligation or debt.
The antecedent causes of Trump stretch back decades, long before Black Lives Matter or the "social justice left" were ascendant, so I'm not sure you can draw a straight line between the two.
The Laocoön Group, the Hellenistic masterpiece of baroque, coiled drama, of muscle and bone, of form and void housed in the Vatican's collection, is a distant antecedent of Fujita's spatial-pictorial hurly-burly.
A more relevant antecedent may be the psychologically intricate art of Louise Bourgeois, on view concurrently at the MoMA mother ship, though Ms. Wilkes takes a less autobiographical, more open-ended approach than Bourgeois did.
In a recent study I published with the Task Force along with a team of graduate students, we examined antecedents, consequences, and antecedent-behavior-consequence patterns that occur around student verbal aggression directed toward teachers.
The first day I was back at work, I told a writer her story had an unclear antecedent; I was immediately filled with glee that I not only had noticed, but had selected the right word.
Arguably America's mobilization in the run up to WWII is the only historical antecedent that conveys anything like the scale involved — the rapid reallocation of industrial resources, the new factories and output, the unity of purpose.
The VR Play Store, for example, will supposedly include all the features of its antecedent, but app previews will have what Bavor calls "worldshots" instead of screenshots — 360-degree freeze-frames that users will teleport inside.
This method involves explicitly telling your child how you want them to behave in a given moment (Antecedent), modeling good behavior for them (Behaviors) and noting approval when the child has done what you wanted (Consequence).
The kaleidoscopic imagery and spinning colors in the experimental filmmaker Jordan Belson's 26888 short "Allures," for instance — which was part of Kubrick's ample pre-"2001" viewing list — play like an antecedent to the Star Gate sequence.
A recent review of the PG-13 blockbuster Skyscraper pointed out that it contains exponentially more death and destruction than its clear antecedent Die Hard, but the Christmastime classic landed an R rating due to its bloodshed.
Incorporating creativity was always one of the biggest challenges in the advancement of AI, and it has almost become the antecedent of a chess-playing situation, because chess is transformed into a sublimely creative game when played by humans.
The closest antecedent to "Changes" may well be adult-contemporary R&B, which makes sense given that Bieber's primary songwriting collaborator is Poo Bear, a 41-year-old singer and songwriter who's released R&B music of his own.
For instance, Sapolsky begins by examining a person's behavior in the moment (why we recoil or rejoice or respond aggressively to immediate stimuli) and then zooms backward in time, following the chain of antecedent causes back to our evolutionary roots.
Fast-forward 25-plus years and Twin Peaks: The Return has its own murder mystery and plenty of other loose threads and red herrings to pick apart — all the strange atmosphere of its antecedent seasons are there, and then some.
In the antecedent, speedy era of the music industry, it was necessary to find a young and attractive star—some sort of street urchin, really, who could be modelled into a backstory adequate enough to set-up a three album career.
This antecedent process for writs to search protects Americans' security against unreasonable government intrusions and trespasses, and should naturally apply to digital "papers," which include emails, photographs, and other electronically stored documents and records of individuals, businesses and nonprofit organizations.
I think the categorical definition, the box that people would like to place us in, or even that we ourselves can see the company as being in, continues to morph because Stripe doesn't have a direct historical analog or antecedent. Right.
The effort is the ideological antecedent to the student-led "Donate60" campaign of 2018, in which commencement speakers were similarly encouraged to donate 00003 seconds of their speeches to Gen Z–centric causes including gun violence, racial and gender equality, and climate change.
"The reason I put cheese on it was to play into that joke I've seen on Twitter before," Jorgensen told MUNCHIES over the phone on Tuesday morning, referencing the platform's vibrant cottage industry of ugly food photographs much like the sandwich's strawberry pizza antecedent.
Although he is quite careful to avoid any direct association with the Support/Surface group, which preceded him by a few years, it is hard to imagine Bonnefoi's paintings without the antecedent of Daniel Dezeuze's 1967 pieces made of clear plastic stapled over wooden stretchers.
His own forays into the area came about because his love of the trumpet led him to trace its origins further and further back until, in 1962, he found himself reconstructing an antecedent to the instrument that had been found in Tutankhamen's tomb in Egypt.
Perhaps the most important antecedent for the banana sculpture is his notorious "A Perfect Day" (1999), for which Mr. Cattelan used duct tape to fasten his dealer Massimo De Carlo to a white wall, who stayed taped above the ground for the show's opening day.
Though used only during World War II, Churchill's tidy war rooms, with their lifelike wax figures and careful attention to historical detail, provide an excellent antecedent for the bunker fever that would sweep England, which was very much informed by the German bombing raids during the war.
The most recent antecedent, said David Greenberg, an associate professor at Rutgers University, might be the 1912 election, when a former president, Theodore Roosevelt, led an exodus of progressive voters from the Republican Party and ran as a third-party candidate against the incumbent, William Howard Taft.
Their most celebrated antecedent is the apostle St. Paul, shipwrecked on Malta in A.D. 22, according to the Book of Acts, and who converted the Roman governor and the local population to Christianity, making the Maltese among the earliest Christians and the island a profoundly Christian state.
That story picks up shortly after the time frames of each of the antecedent series, with Jones (Krysten Ritter) and Daredevil (Charlie Cox) licking their wounds after deadly battles, Cage (Mike Colter) newly released from prison and Iron Fist (Finn Jones) traveling the world seeking revenge.
Predicted result: 33% on Rotten Tomatoes for Justice League Without a social-media lift, and with that stingy embargo-to-release turnaround time, it looks like Justice League may hew closer to its direct antecedent, the critically razed Batman v Superman, which ultimately came in at 27% (rotten).
On his debut solo album, "Palo Colorado Dream," released in 2014, his nearest antecedent is Nels Cline — the downtown New York guitarist known for his palette of ghostly effects — but you'll also quickly find the warble of Bill Frisell; Sonny Sharrock's searing swarm; the noisy clatter of Glenn Branca.
For when she travels to Ankara and Bahrain, and hosts Emirati and Qatari financiers on the eve of giving Brussels notice, Britain's prime minister, Theresa May, is retracing a path first taken by Queen Elizabeth I when she left the European Union's spiritual antecedent, the Catholic church, 450 years ago.
She is usually presented as one of Latin America's great villains and race-traitors, an antecedent of the Frenchwomen who consorted with Nazi occupiers, but Mr. Enrigue delivers a much more nuanced and sympathetic portrait of her, implying that she is just as much a victim of history as Anne Boleyn.
Held in a massive tent steps from the Santa Monica Pier, the Indie Spirits are the looser, fancy-free antecedent to Sunday's ultra-formal Oscars, and generally feature hip, youngish and irreverent hosts — this year it was Nick Kroll and John Mulaney — along with cameos from "Saturday Night Live" performers, past and present.
The aforementioned devil with the yellow eyes becomes a less and less frightening entity with every prolonged glimpse of his prosthetic fat suit and C.G.I.-enhanced jaundice; comparisons to the character's antecedent, the demonic but earthy Bob from "Twin Peaks" (an influence showrunner Noah Hawley has acknowledged), do the creature no favors.
If you imagine the big bang is the bubbling-off of this universe from some antecedent proto-universe or from chaotically inflating space-time, then there's going to be the physics of that bubbling-off, and you would hope the physics of the bubbling-off might imply that the bubbles would be of a certain character.
President Trump is not only notorious for his "post-literate" obsession with cable TV, but Ward's characterization of the president as insisting on watching only gorilla fight scenes has a real-life antecedent: a 1997 New Yorker report in which Trump made one of his sons fast-forward through an action movie solely so he could watch only the fight scenes.
Antetokounmpo and fellow young "unicorns" like Kristaps Porzingis of the Knicks and Joel Embiid of the Sixers — their taxonomic I.D., co-opted from Silicon Valley, refers to a singular talent without antecedent — will go a long way toward determining whether the pro-basketball industrial complex can make as much money appealing to liberated fans as to their hidebound, local-market counterparts.
"My relationship with the Gurkha Rifles goes back to June 11, 1977 when I became Colonel-in-Chief of the 2nd King Edward VII Own Goorkhas, one of your antecedent regiments, thus renewing the Royal connection with the Regiment and the Gurkhas that began 101 years earlier in 1876 when the then Prince of Wales, my great-great grandfather, was the first Colonel-in-Chief," Prince Charles said in a speech.
If Louie, the C.K. vehicle that is the clearest antecedent to Better Things, was about finding moments of grace amid the muck of everyday life, about its title character's constant failures when he wanted only to succeed (a message that seems more and more like a confession in this new, harsh light), then Better Things is about how the grace and the muck of everyday life are one and the same, and how you only succeed by failing and vice versa.
In 20163, shortly after Coates's essay was published, Vox's Dylan Matthews explained how cash payments have been used in previous reparations programs implemented in the US and other countries: The six clearest antecedent programs are those set up by Germany to compensate victims of the Holocaust, by South Africa to compensate victims of apartheid, by the US to compensate victims of Japanese internment during World War II, by the state of North Carolina to compensate victims of its forced sterilization programs in the mid-20th century, by the federal government to compensate victims of the Tuskegee experiment, and by Florida to compensate victims of the Rosewood race riot of 1923.

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