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132 Sentences With "forerunners"

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

After all, Apple and Amazon are forerunners in their fields.
We are already seeing the first forerunners in this space.
Soon afterward, Europeans began rebuilding, creating the forerunners of the European Union.
Torsun's band was one of the forerunners of political electronic music, too.
Related: Hillary Clinton's female forerunners Chisholm was born in 1924 to immigrant parents.
Forerunners of the Liberal Democrats picked up seats in the Highlands and islands.
His claim to the presidency, unlike that of his forerunners, is bitterly contested.
No pattern, no forerunners, just me defining what matters most to me as laureate.
On the outskirts new, faux-bucolic housing estates sprawl between their pre-war forerunners.
But unlike her forerunners, Al-Sharif recorded it all and uploaded it to YouTube.
His forerunners' work was mostly static, he says, so he created forms in motion.
Like its Nazi and Italian fascist forerunners, it wants to infiltrate and remake popular culture.
It still carries the DNA of its former shareholders, the forerunners of Chevron and ExxonMobil.
He sees the Bolshevik revolutionaries as forerunners to those who might challenge his power today.
Like their Hungarian forerunners, the migrants, mostly from the Middle East, await an onward journey.
Essentially, modern scientists are picking up where their forerunners of the '50s and '60s left off.
"One of the children of slaves is marrying a royal whose forerunners sanctioned slavery," she said.
The earlier films are as different from each other as this latest version is from its forerunners.
If all that sounds familiar...it is: The formula's been tried before in countless sci-fi/horror forerunners.
He filled in the one big remaining gap in the American welfare state when all his forerunners couldn't.
It places him in a context of important forerunners—Hopkins, Whitman, Stein, and Stevens, to name a few.
These grass-roots services were the forerunners of globe-spanning social media services like Twitter, Facebook and YouTube.
"Enterprise zones", British forerunners to special economic areas, were found mainly to attract relocating firms, rather than new ones.
Equally important, these entrepreneurs are the forerunners of new systems that will have daily launches – instead of monthly launches.
But the visual similarity with any forerunners is less overt than in the portraits that made Mr. Wiley famous.
He died in 1998, so he never held an iPhone or, I'm willing to bet, any of its forerunners.
He died in 1998, so he never held an iPhone or, I'm willing to bet, any of its forerunners.
The women of color affirming each other today have more in common with their activist forerunners than political exclusion, however.
He needed a great leap forward to regain his status as the leader of the Federalists, forerunners of today's Republicans.
He could leave behind some of the mistakes and encumbrances of his forerunners and emerge as a freshly inspiring leader.
They've influenced entire generations of designers that have followed him, and changed the way his forerunners do their jobs today.
The Last Poets, who acknowledged Baraka as a mentor, were among Black Arts' most fascinating offspring — forerunners of contemporary rappers.
The show features work by forerunners who mined the gap between sculpture and design, starting in the 1970s and '80s.
" Or the bit where they say that politicians who "rally different races to be one are forerunners of the antichrist.
It can continue to collapse until it's transformed into something new, like the nineteenth century Whigs, forerunners of the Republican Party.
Its forerunners to cloud computing go back to the 226.2s, with Microsoft's MSN online service and later its Bing search engine.
We have inherited from our nonhuman and human forerunners a complex affect apparatus suited to life circumstances very different from ours.
It can continue to collapse until it's transformed into something new, like the nineteenth-century Whigs, forerunners of the Republican Party.
Shop Leesa hereLeesa is best-known for being one of the forerunners in the increasingly crowded direct-to-consumer mattress space.
In 1996, I was on a team that created one of the forerunners to VR with the VRML browser OZ Virtual.
These cholo forerunners wore flashy oversized ensembles called zoot suits, spoke a distinct border Spanglish, and connected with jazz and street culture.
The idea that our forerunners might have made a different choice at a critical juncture, and subsequently altered our future, fascinates us.
Lahiri's command of Italian grows palpably; over time, the reflections grow more capable of abstraction and tangent than their tightly focused forerunners.
The sophisticated air quality models used in these studies were the forerunners to the climate models now used to understand climate change.
Sometime in the 1930s, ragamuffin begging gave way to ragamuffin parades, which, in many cases, were the forerunners of Thanksgiving Day parades.
They weren't put there by Forerunners for the Covenant to get around, but by one of our testers, who would always get lost.
Drawing her life from the lives of the unknown who were her forerunners, as her brother did before her, she will be born.
He is one of the forerunners of what is now known as "behavioral economics," one of the most vibrant subfields in the economics discipline.
State-backed private-equity funds, which can be seen as forerunners to the investment function of the SCIOs, are already making a big impact.
Some researchers have argued that by Lucy's time, our forerunners were no longer good tree-climbers, having evolved to find food on the ground.
The materials of "Lakescape V," a departure from its more tranquil "Lakescape" series forerunners, have had an even greater distance across which to spring.
The Sunday tastings at home were forerunners to our Wednesday tastings for the book, which happened in my test kitchen in Camden, North London.
Over the last couple of years there have been a number of signals that tech forerunners are serious about taking AI to the next level.
Its early forerunners were only open to athletes with spinal cord injuries, and competitors with other disabilities only began to participate as late as 21947.
It's from when neon art was in its genesis, and he is one of the most innovative forerunners in neon art, which is quite interesting.
David Bowie, the original Starman and his backing band, the Spiders From Mars, were the forerunners in the genre, combining decadence with showmanship and rebellion.
The bars that astronauts ate during the Apollo 15 mission 1971 were the products of this research, and the forerunners of the bars we eat today.
The Reader doesn't retcon the language of these forerunners—the word "faggot" was in common usage then, "scare drag" also (drag queens who scared the straights).
As time went on, this was a side he'd continue to indulge, even adopting the fellow dream-pop forerunners in Cocteau Twins as rare outside collaborators.
Driver-assistance systems provide features such as automatic braking, keeping cars in lane and alerting drivers to danger - and are the forerunners of fully automated driving.
Quantum computing forerunners like Charlie Bennett, Isaac Chuang, Seth Lloyd, and David DiVincenzo were coming up with lots of new ideas that percolated quickly through the community.
Brandt's Modernist formalism hardly sets him apart from immediate forerunners like Alfred Stieglitz or Edward Steichen, or such generational peers as Edward Weston or Henri Cartier-Bresson.
Deuchars, in Edinburgh, and Greene King, in Suffolk, continued to make authentic IPAs, though the beers lacked the kick of hops and alcohol that their forerunners boasted.
Like their 20th century forerunners, who fled to Los Angeles to escape the bigotries of the Jim Crow South, they're migrants in search of safety and stability.
University of Kansas paleontologist Paul Selden said Chimerarachne represents "a kind of missing link" between true spiders and earlier spider forerunners that had tails but lacked spinnerets.
Also known as wunderkammers, or "wonder-rooms," these motley (and often scientifically and culturally dubious) collections served as the forerunners of what today we know as museums.
The fossils "are most primitive-known mammal forerunners that took to air," said Zhe-Xi Luo, a paleontologist at the University of Chicago who led the research.
John McCain holds Trump in contempt, but selected as his running mate Sarah Palin, the Know-Nothing of Wasilla, one of Trump's most vivid forerunners and supporters.
"The Cro-Magnon (forerunners of modern man) in Europe didn't have to sail anywhere, but people had to cross the sea in order to reach Japan," said Kaifu.
Thrash too has made inroads in Nepal, and one of the forerunners of the modern-day thrash scene in the country is Lalitpur/Kathmandu old school ragers Disorder.
While more women enter the STEM fields, strong and dynamic female forerunners who worked to recover species and preserve America's natural history have emerged to pave the way.
In the last nine decades, the S&P 500 and its forerunners have closed at a record high on an average of 13 days each year (tmsnrt.rs/32lDuqE).
Feminists both young and old are still building on the work of their forerunners as they try to forge a future in which women might at last be free.
Dr. Blanc, the expert at the University of California, said the cases of silicosis related to engineered stone already reported may be the forerunners of many more to come.
It is one of the forerunners in the field of commercial genetic testing, as it is the first to provide genetic reports that meet Food and Drug Administration standards.
Savage cost-cutting and a nose for the next big thing, in this case smaller cars and minivans, forerunners of the craze for SUVs, returned Chrysler to bumper profits.
The awards were created to reward a medium with four networks — ABC, CBS, NBC, and PBS's various forerunners — and they've had trouble evolving to reflect our Peak TV universe.
This fossil tells the story of a group of birds that evolved in parallel with the forerunners of today's modern birds, but didn't make it through the mass-extinction event.
Moreover, this new approach is able to make this happen in natural settings and in real time—unlike its forerunners, there's no need to prep the computer for the analysis.
"One of the children of slaves is marrying a royal whose forerunners sanctioned slavery; the lion is lying down with the lamb," said Denise Crawford, a court stenographer from Brooklyn.
RELATED: Hillary Clinton's female forerunners The role is a natural fit for Larson, an outspoken advocate for Planned Parenthood and survivors of sexual assault and a participant in January's Women's March.
These types of clouds do not produce rain or snow, but they often are forerunners of a low pressure system that could produce rain or snow in a day or two.
Intriguingly, the authors of the new study find that the forerunners of plants gained some of their ability to survive on land by grabbing genes from other species — specifically, from bacteria.
The big tech companies will only find themselves enmeshed in a growing public crossfire if they become active arbiters of content, purveyors of speech codes, and forerunners of a "Bladerunner" future.
It's a record that instantly made the band one of the forerunners of the new scene of crossover gazey-emo, casting spells of rich reverb and melodies anybody could melt into.
His company in Illinois performs fantasy-level restorations of the Ford Bronco, the utilitarian, sought-after truck — first sold in 1966 — that's among the forerunners of the modern sport utility vehicle.
In the film, Silverman supplements her stand-up in front of a live audience with sketches that could be viewed as forerunners to the semi-autobiographical TV series she'd star in next.
The intergenerational lineup of 20123 sculptors at Hauser Wirth & Schimmel includes younger artists like Kaari Upson and Shinique Smith alongside modernist forerunners like Louise Bourgeois, Claire Falkenstein, Eva Hesse and Lynda Benglis.
Already in the late 18th century, members of the Shaker religious sect used special vises to craft the forerunners of our current flat straight-edged brooms — in the interest of godly cleanliness.
On this mix, this inimitable skill is rarely as evident as when she barrels through dizzy originals and blistered edits of friends and forerunners like SCRAAATCH's lawd knows, Stud1nt, and Fatima Al Qadiri.
Without being able to interact with the openness and ease of their Nationalist forerunners, current Chinese officials charged with bridging the still wide East-West gap are deprived of an essential building block.
Archaeologists date the discovery to the 13th or 14th century, opening a new window on forerunners of the 15th- and 20013th-century sailing vessels that discovered the New World, including those of Columbus.
Francis is wagering biotech copies that work like their forerunners despite slight variations - no biologic drug can be exactly duplicated - will be irresistible for insurers, health care systems and governments aiming to contain costs.
The movie is painfully conscious of its 1940s forerunners, in which a lone dedicated gumshoe slithers through the underbelly of a city (usually Los Angeles) and encounters layer upon layer of corruption and evil.
Guy can mimic any of his forerunners and sometimes he will emulate B. B. King, interrupting a prolonged silence with a single heartbreaking note sustained with a vibrato as singular as a human voice.
We had our poets, like Gyorgy Petri; our writers, like Imre Kertesz; our painters, like Gabor Karatson (one of the most important forerunners of the Hungarian Green movement); we had our singers and historians.
Gibbon relied on Pococke and Sale to inform "The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire", though both he and Voltaire generally avoided making new arguments, instead pushing their less famous forerunners to the mainstream.
The concerns about plutocracy, political corruption, technological change, and mass immigration were similar, and the reformers' high-minded cures were forerunners of today's ideas for limiting campaign funds and drawing congressional districts in nonpartisan ways.
This user tried an alternative method of colouring, using charcoal to make a reverse image: This one says it's challenging colouring in all the leaves: Basford is one of the forerunners cashing in on this fad.
Doom and other Strafe forerunners like Quake are among the first generation of first-person shooters (FPS), where the gameplay is entirely from the player's point of view as you hold a gun and shoot things.
He lived in a world of huge salaries and lucrative deals; a world which was far more compatible with the philosophies of New Labour than it was with the trade unionist ideals of his managerial forerunners.
Ms. Kjaersgaard, one of the earliest forerunners of the European far right, established the Danish People's Party in 1995 and turned what were once considered fringe, racist ideas about restricting immigration into a potent political force.
He played in only four games with the Hawks and seven with the Knicks in the 1959-60 season, then in two games with the Syracuse Nationals, the forerunners of the Philadelphia 76ers, in 1960-61.
The next Republican secretary of state, Charles Evans Hughes, brought off such diplomatic feats as the naval disarmament treaties of 1921 and the Dawes and Young Plans to aid European economic recovery — forerunners of the Marshall Plan.
Sports and politics have drawn nearer to one another for some time; our best politicians use them as a tether to ordinary people, and jocks have lately become more willing to emulate socially conscious forerunners like Muhammad Ali.
Weirdest of all is a party of happy Klansmen, watching "Birth of a Nation" (1915) and leaping up to laud the scenes in which their forerunners, robed in spotless white, ride to the rescue of a pure America.
Once Monet could afford to buy art, he focused initially on works by his immediate forerunners: Delacroix ("Cliffs near Dieppe," 1852-1855, a watercolor) and Corot ("Ariccia, Palazzo Chigi," 1826-27, a view of a hilltop Italian town).
However, attributing the achievements of the forerunners of darker-skinned peoples to aliens because you believe they couldn't have possibly done it themselves might be perceived as racists to the people of color who descend from these ancient innovators.
After all, the forerunners of this kind of exploration — the Farm Security Administration project in Depression-era America and la Mission photographique de la DATAR in France in the '80s that focused on French landscapes — employed at least some native photographers.
We went through a lot of back and forth on visual design, in terms of the story we wanted the character design to tell, and what we wanted people to understand about the Prometheans and Forerunners just by looking at them.
While there is no way to articulate the full scope of those arguments in a single essay, it's worth considering the philosophical contributions of some of the forerunners of the movement that is our most urgent manifestation of black thought today.
Before Eccles was the father of the modern Federal Reserve, Roosevelt&aposs staunch ally in defense of the New Deal, and one of the forerunners of what is now known as Keynesian economics, he was a banker and a Republican.
The London duo Rezzett have built a hefty catalog of puzzling techno efforts over the last decade, releasing five EPs and a collection of live explorations that established them as experimentalist forerunners of a sort of playfully fuzzy form of dance music.
While I understand his implication that there are relatively few forerunners against which to compare it, the ranking of films directed by women seems in poor taste, especially when many of the year's most critically acclaimed and audacious films were made by women.
Until now, it had been thought that this evolution revolution occurred in warm climes because the fossils of all the earliest-known amphibians, as well as their fish forerunners, had been found in places that were tropical or subtropical at the time.
Bondi told the publication Saturday that she didn't believe the heckler's actions were in line with the teachings of Mr. Rogers, whose "Mister Rogers&apos Neighborhood," which ran on PBS and its forerunners from 1968 to 2001, emphasized inclusivity and acceptance of all people.
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Fossils unearthed in northern Uzbekistan's remote Kyzylkum Desert of a smaller, older cousin of Tyrannosaurus rex are showing that the modest forerunners of that famous brute had already acquired the sophisticated brain and senses that helped make it such a horrifying predator.
Ms. Seydoux holds her own in a lineage that has seen Paulette Goddard and Jeanne Moreau play Célestine in celebrated screen realizations directed by Jean Renoir (in 1653) and Luis Buñuel (1964) and each as different from one another as this latest version is from its forerunners.
Ms. Seydoux holds her own in a lineage that has seen Paulette Goddard and Jeanne Moreau play Célestine in celebrated screen realizations directed by Jean Renoir (in 1946) and Luis Buñuel (1964) and each as different from one another as this latest version is from its forerunners.
Ms. Seydoux holds her own in a lineage that has seen Paulette Goddard and Jeanne Moreau play Célestine in celebrated screen realizations directed by Jean Renoir (in 216) and Luis Buñuel (217) and each as different from one another as this latest version is from its forerunners.
Ms. Seydoux holds her own in a lineage that has seen Paulette Goddard and Jeanne Moreau play Célestine in celebrated screen realizations directed by Jean Renoir (in 95683) and Luis Buñuel (95673) and each as different from one another as this latest version is from its forerunners.
Jacobs belongs to that small tribe of people (as does, say, the director David Lynch, or the artist Lynda Benglis) whom the world initially greets with puzzlement, but whom, having proven themselves forerunners to so much else in the culture, no one can imagine the world without.
In the age of live-action heroes, it seems only fitting for Into the Spider-Verse to upend the heightened semi-realism of its cartoon forerunners, like the Batman and Spider-Man TV shows, by totally departing from reality — breaking many of the established rules of CGI animation in the process.
The new European identity politics — like those of the revivified white supremacism here at home — are as ignorant as they are xenophobic, and the ignorance is part of the appeal: In this sense, the American "Know Nothing" party of the 1850s really is one of the great forerunners of present-day reaction.
Your local fed still put on intimate events, and the forerunners of the modern indie promotions like ROH and IWA Mid-South had some scintillating shows, but it all felt diminished compared to the wild days of earlier decades, when wrestling was on every other channel at any hour of the day.
A good chunk of that was driven by security researcher Thomas Ptacek's promise to stop tweeting about Eric S. Raymond, a notorious figure in the open-source community whose bizarre and abundant ramblings on everything including race and sex could be considered early forerunners of current alt-right strains in the tech community.
Lore has it that in 19533 (unless, maybe, it was 1906), some members of the Ottawa Silver Seven, forerunners of the modern Senators, left a celebratory banquet together and decided it would be fun to see (or made a bet to determine) if the Stanley Cup could be kicked across the canal.
If someone asks, "Why do you do this?" they should be able to clearly answer, "Because we value X." For context, here the values Sharethrough has established, plus how we put them into play: Action: "We value decision and learning over perfection" Being the forerunners in a new two-sided marketplace, learning is imperative.
Concrete Poetry, instead, focuses on the purists of the movement, particularly the Brazilian Augusto de Campos, the Scottish poet Ian Hamilton Finlay (who also worked in stone and other sculptural mediums), and the Austrian poet Ernst Jandl, while representing figures such as Eugene Grominger, Kurt Schwitters, Hans Arp, F.T. Marinetti, and Hugo Ball, as forerunners.
Already in "When I Was a Child I Read Books" (2012), my favorite of her collections, Robinson was troubled by Donald Trump's forerunners, self-described patriots who sought to restore an American past that never was, dismissing as un-American values and institutions — public welfare, public education, religious pluralism — whose roots run back to Plymouth Rock.
Dr. Cohen went on to create an ultra-high-speed networking system, which made practical the first commodity computing clusters — groups of computers used for shared storage and computing that were the forerunners of today's cloud computing systems, in which a network of remote servers, rather than a local one or a personal computer, is used to store, manage and process data.
Dr. Cohen went on to create an ultra-high-speed networking system, which made practical the first commodity computing clusters — groups of computers used for shared storage and computing that were the forerunners of today's cloud computing systems, in which a network of remote servers, rather than a local one or a personal computer, is used to store, manage and process data.

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