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121 Sentences With "prefigured"

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

Populist campaigns have prefigured, provoked, and sometimes precipitated political realignments.
The experiment, he believed, prefigured evolutionary changes to the human organism.
Their recalcitrance prefigured, in certain ways, the reflexively libertarian thinking of today.
Such innovation preserved the trees so well that it prefigured their revival.
Once Lurie joins the cameleers, his story departs from its seemingly prefigured trajectory.
To some on the right, the Crusades prefigured the modern wars that have
Those design and distribution techniques prefigured another mass-market product a century later.
It also requires new technology, some of which is prefigured in the F-35.
The matters to which Hayes referred were, even if not fully predictable, certainly prefigured.
"What she has done is prefigured the young-adult literature market," photographer Connie Samaras said.
While there, he became involved in a number of early projects that prefigured personal computing.
Crews is correct that many of Freud's ideas were prefigured in the findings of others.
Bharara's success with Comey's testimony prefigured some of the methods he has used as prosecutor.
And arguably, it was prefigured with the most 2010s-ish of pursuits: a Twitter war.
Do you take any joy in the degree to which you've prefigured the state of things?
In South Korea and Taiwan inclusive agricultural growth prefigured the inclusive politics of today's thriving democracies.
But her presentation, a collaboration with the rapper Junglepussy, prefigured the performance by Ford and July.
Its design prefigured Kilopower, which built on insights gleaned from the experiment to create a working prototype.
She described going through his archives and discovering thousands of drawings and plans that prefigured his installations.
There is also the matter of how many times Atamanuik's Trump has prefigured the actual president's behavior.
Woody's facial-recognition research in the 1960s prefigured all these technological breakthroughs and their queasy ethical implications.
But the currency crash just prefigured the privacy crash, a lurking, existential horror that tore into everyday relationships.
The softening of the spreads arguably prefigured the collapse in prices which started towards the end of June 2014.
But Descartes and the rationalists insisted that some knowledge was innate, prefigured into the mind of every newborn child.
Pence prefigured the Tea Party in opposing all the major aspects of the economic rescue in 2008 and 2009.
Along with MSN Messenger, that pretty much blew the lid off the chat market, and prefigured today's fractured ecosystem.
That phenomenon, the dreaded "bank run," was a direct outcome of the fractional-reserve banking prefigured by John Law.
Yet Clark made wonderful records which prefigured the successes of others, and they add up to a first-rate catalogue.
With his contrarian bent, rejection of traditional virtuosity and a taste for the absurd, Satie seems to have prefigured Dada.
This was true even with the panels that prefigured electronic screens, including shoji, as well as mirrors and newspaper broadsheets.
The era of American military involvement in Southeast Asia prefigured in several ways the wars of the last 15 years.
A nearby earthquake in 2007 caused fires and radiation leaks at Kashiwazaki-Kariwa in a disaster that prefigured the Fukushima calamity.
Even more than Andy Warhol, it was he who prefigured pop with a famous collage incorporating the face of John Kennedy.
But Broad Band illustrates how they prefigured our modern internet — and, just as importantly, which ideas were lost along the way.
And her compulsive photographing prefigured our own relationship with our phones, Bannos says, our own desire to constantly document our lives.
But ultimately, he aligns himself with his wife and adopts her conviction that Owen's death was in some way cosmically prefigured.
This type of political satire prefigured his use of montage in historical epics like Battleship Potemkin (1925) and Alexander Nevsky (1938).
Republican candidates ground out state-level victories in Wisconsin, Ohio and Michigan that prefigured Republican national gains in such places in 2016.
The latest wrangling between the elite and those below them looks a lot like the manoeuvring that prefigured the Premier League's formation.
It introduced many bookkeeping methods that are used today and is considered to have prefigured many aspects of the modern business world.
If anything, Burnham was a precursor to Trump, or perhaps more accurately, prefigured the divide within the Republican Party that Trump has exploited.
Moreover, it's hard not to see Elon Musk prefigured in the character of Helius, both of whom see untold wealth among the stars.
By cultivating a rarified persona from this complex web of intersections, she prefigured the curated images that are currently populating Instagram feeds everywhere.
Onto Mitski I had projected a pining frailty, believing that the lovesickness in her songs prefigured a neglect of the self, a docile masochism.
Ultimately, Lucasfilm's grand experiment prefigured where the film industry has ended up: studios largely don't invest in just single films: they invest in worlds.
It demonstrates, through archival footage and interviews, how the American musician prefigured punk with her teenage girl band the Runaways in the late 1970s.
This was prefigured by the explosion in "found footage" films over the last decade, which was born from the increased access to video cameras.
While Trump has several important precursors such as George Wallace and Ross Perot, no other political figure prefigured Trump quite so exactly as Buchanan.
"What she has done is prefigured the young-adult literature market," said Samaras, who is working on a project for the exhibition in October.
Ms. Palin, whose slashing, populist-in-pumps political style prefigured Mr. Trump's economic nationalist message, bonded with the president, another former reality TV star.
Forward-thinking and world-wise, the members of YMO are presented as artists who prefigured a world of wearable tech, machine learning, and cloud computing.
Although this prefigured modern satellite imagery, the tech used at the time was unable to process many photos each day, so the program was abandoned.
Indeed, so many of the themes and ideas in the new book were prefigured in the last one that ideally the two should be read together.
In Russia, Vladimir Putin's fourth inauguration as president today has been prefigured by peaceful protests across the nation — and the arrests of more than 2,000 people.
Hints of what was to come The group of jihadist terrorists who carried out the 1993 Trade Center attack prefigured much of what would come later.
The malign incompetence of the Brexiteers was precisely prefigured during Britain's exit from India in 1947, most strikingly in the lack of orderly preparation for it.
What was more, as she observed in later work, the transition from scribal culture to print culture prefigured the present-day shift from print culture to digital.
It seems as though you have prefigured the modern movie cinematic universe concept like Star Wars or Marvel, where they establish a framework to drop stories into.
Nvidia obviously doesn't want AMD to get all of the mindshare, so today's announcement makes sense (and was prefigured by a number of leaks in recent weeks).
This rhetorical one-two punch of the Moynihan and Kerner reports has prefigured the general course of racial debate ever since, in mainstream politics and pop culture alike.
Some audience members walked out, and in some ways, the hopelessness of the text prefigured the social unrest that has gripped France at the tail end of 2018.
In this, she prefigured Christine Blasey Ford, who blew up her life to testify that Kavanaugh sexually assaulted her in high school, only to see him confirmed anyway.
"Mattress Performance" not only became a repository of consequences of the assault for Sulkowicz, but also prefigured the explosion of the subsequent #MeToo movement in the United States.
With a candor that prefigured Edmund White, he wrote openly and proudly about his gay friends who shaped American culture, like Leonard Bernstein, Edward Albee and Aaron Copland.
You see, I've been teaching the 17th-century French philosopher Blaise Pascal, and the Existentialist tradition he prefigured, since Bert introduced me to them almost 30 years ago.
" The aspiring auteur was already a fan of Mr. Landis's work from his 1981 horror-comedy, "An American Werewolf in London," which prefigured the scary-funny tone of "Thriller.
Beyoncé released another stunning, spellbinding surprise Saturday night — Lemonade, an hour-long, "visual album" that premiered on HBO and prefigured the release of an album by the same name.
Prefigured by the smoke rings, the more recent pieces from the Scarlatti series, his best efforts in a long while, have a welcome — if still a bit stiff — levity.
He blazed trails in pop music, splicing sounds from life, known as "musique concrete," into rhythmic loops in an approach that prefigured sampling in hip-hop and other genres.
But like all Fischli/Weiss works, it functions slyly on several levels, and it prefigured much of the work to come later, often based on a kind of sprung dialectic.
And one that prefigured what appears to have been an even more major effort by Kremlin agents to deflect voters in the US presidential election, just a few months later.
Here's just one reason: Janeites are known for having organized their networks in an almost magically prescient way that didn't just prefigure Star Trek fan culture, it prefigured the … internet.
H: With FILE Megazine, General Idea created an early network-based approach for producing and sharing images between artists across great distances — a collaborative approach that prefigured early Net Art.
In many ways, the series prefigured what 2016's Rogue One was trying to accomplish: tell a standalone story in the larger Star Wars universe, apart from the main saga story.
Several reactors at Kashiwazaki-Kariwa have been out of action since an earthquake in 2007 caused radiation leaks and fires in a disaster that prefigured the Fukushima calamity and Tepco's bungled response.
This pattern prefigured the death of Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia and McConnell's decision to void Obama's power to appoint a new justice with a full year left in his second term.
They know they're working against ingrained biases: The childfree are keenly aware that they are prefigured in the eyes of most as a band of entitled, disrespectful millennials, trading tradition for self-interest.
It prefigured the turf war between boogaloo and salsa, a rivalry driven in part by stylistic differences but also by the fact that boogaloo musicians were younger and willing to work for less money.
And one of the 1993 conspirators was a US citizen, which prefigured the continuing threat we face today from "homegrown" America terrorists inspired by ISIS, a group that is an offshoot of al-Qaeda.
Occupy Wall Street prefigured the effort to resist urban global capital by taking over a public-private stretch of concrete laughably known as a park and calling it the occupation of New York City.
Just a few months ago, we witnessed another case of fandom gone horribly awry, which — in its own absurd way — prefigured the same entitlement and callousness on display in the instigators of the Wichita shooting.
Kevin Kelly, a co-founder of Wired and one of the editors of The Whole Earth Catalog, thought that the magazine's ethos of sharing products and communications, even its cobbled-together design, prefigured the blog.
Her breakthrough play, "Ironbound," produced at the Rattlestick in 2016, prefigured "queens" in dealing with the double disruption of being a woman who ventures, or is forced to flee, beyond the familiar discomforts of home.
During the winter of 1910 he was preparing to design the Fagus shoe last factory — a campus of industrial buildings that prefigured the union of design and engineering that he later heralded at the Bauhaus.
The seminal, experimental found-footage film combines an assortment of unrelated scenes from newsreels, B-movies, and soft-core pornography, to create an audio-visual collage that prefigured post-modern cinema as well as music videos.
He prefigured the Trump phenomenon in the film, which is about a charismatic television entertainer and rich businessman who runs for office on the Republican ticket, sugarcoating his corrupt ways with an appeal to family values.
It prefigured what has come since: the return of ethnic separatism, the rise of authoritarian populism, the retreat of liberal democracy, the elevation of a warrior ethos that reduces politics to friend/enemy, zero-sum conflicts.
Similarly, the shift of economic clout to the Sun Belt after World War II prefigured the conservative movement's resurgence from the 22014s through the 22016s around Republicans Barry Goldwater of Arizona and Ronald Reagan of California.
He also turned television screens into clothing, furniture, garden decorations and musical instruments; repurposed closed-circuit surveillance cameras into live, participatory installations; and, more practically, invented new video editing technologies that prefigured today's push-button camera filters.
By the end of the 19963s, C64 video game cracktros were sophisticated audiovisual presentations that had become an artform in its own right that prefigured the demoscene that was to come into its own in the 90s.
Clay, the president said, had pioneered an economic philosophy known as the American System, which he said prefigured his approach: steep tariffs to protect American exports and generous government spending on roads, canals and other public works projects.
Mr. Mercer and his daughter Rebekah presided over a growing political empire that included millions of dollars in contributions to conservative groups and a stake in Breitbart, whose nationalist and racially antagonistic content prefigured Mr. Trump's presidential campaign.
Examples by dozens of lesser-known practitioners are featured in a large window display of mail art sent to the San Francisco artist and archivist John Held Jr. Mr. Chéroux's premise that mail art prefigured social media is debatable.
And he pivoted away from hip-hop early as well: "Cowboy" was a rap song with country instrumentation, and it prefigured his wholesale transformation into a pseudo-Southern-rocker who's left hip-hop all but in the rear view.
Competition from services like FedEx and UPS was prefigured in the nineteenth century by startups like Wells Fargo, and, long before President Reagan proposed privatizing the service, Thomas Jefferson complained that it was a dangerous overreach of federal power.
Rooted in the gallery practice of an earlier era, this remarkable woman prefigured in a unique way central features of our current art world, producing curatorially driven exhibitions and combining the historical and the contemporary in an international gallery program.
When the calculator watch hit peak cool in the 1980s, it would've been hard to imagine that the nerdiest gadget ever made also prefigured an impending revolution in wearable tech that for better or worse is still going strong today.
In January 2015, only a few months before Trump announced his candidacy, Sessions wrote a memo to congressional Republicans that prefigured the strategy that would win Trump the presidency: appealing to the white working class by blaming their problems on immigration.
" But it said his programs on the BBC — which prefigured by a few years the American public-television series "Previn and the Pittsburgh," broadcast when he was the music director of the Pittsburgh Symphony — had "clearly widened his box-office appeal.
The poem "Tulsa," which appeared in The Swimmer (2016), opens with an observation about the Civil War: It wasn't just the slaughter–though proportionally it Exceeded all our other wars combined–but what prefigured it And what it brought about.
And it continued to grow during the long reign of pro-globalist orthodoxy: for example, Ross Perot doomed George Bush senior's bid for a second term with a presidential campaign that prefigured many of the themes that Donald Trump has sounded more recently.
In exactly that way, Theodore Roosevelt's 1912 insurgency prefigured Franklin Roosevelt's later consolidation of progressive voters into his durable New Deal coalition and Wallace's 1968 revolt foreshadowed the later shift of conservative Southern whites into the GOP under Richard Nixon and Ronald Reagan.
His unabashedly liberal campaign—which centered on income inequality, or what de Blasio poetically termed a "tale of two cities"—prefigured the unrest that would shake the party, culminating in Bernie Sanders's unlikely challenge to Hillary Clinton in the 2016 presidential primary.
The credulousness of all too many journalists about the supposed misconduct revealed by "Climategate," a pseudo-scandal that relied on selective, out-of-context quotes from emails at a British university, prefigured the disastrous media handling of hacked Democratic emails in 2016.
Carey's "Lambs" prefigured the rise of fan group names like Katy Perry's "KatyKats," Lady Gaga's "Little Monsters," or Nicki Minaj's "Barbz," usually cutesy labels made up and taken up either by fans or the stars themselves, rather than imposed from the outside by critics.
His support for a "Caesarist" president, or "plebiscitary dictator of the masses", would later draw criticism that it prefigured the overthrow of the Weimar Republic by the Nazis, despite the fact that Weber's proposals mixed parliamentary and directly elected elements, and remained liberal, not authoritarian.
Jackson didn't win the Democratic nomination, but his model of a Rainbow Coalition (made up of minority groups, feminists, the young, and LGBT people) prefigured the Obama coalition more than the old-school liberalism of Walter Mondale or the technocratic politics of Michael Dukakis.
With it's Sammy Davis Jr. cover, though we found it necessary to obscure the swastika pendant Sammy sported in the illustration, it managed to be "funny" without being "humorous", befitting a record prefigured as the latter half of a suicide letter started with Fuckfest.
"The Only Woman in the Room," which enters the hardcover fiction list at No. 11, homes in not on Lamarr the movie star but on Lamarr the inventor (with the composer George Antheil) of a "frequency-hopping" radio communication technology that distantly prefigured wifi.
I listened to everything — even Ray Briem, whose late-night show prefigured conservative talk radio and whom I barely comprehended — and I expected to be heard in return, even if I didn't agree with every point made and even though I never actually called in.
Mr. Onfray's "Decadence" begins with early Christian history, traverses the French Revolution, then sweeps in the Holocaust, the fall of the Berlin Wall and the 1989 fatwa against Salman Rushdie, which Mr. Onfray says prefigured the 2015 attacks at the French satirical journal Charlie Hebdo.
Mr. Jewell died in 2007, a symbol for those who have faced trial by media during the 24-hour news cycles that came about when cable television was on the rise, a syndrome that prefigured the rushes to judgment of the social media era.
In the same year that Léger painted the proto-Pop "Le Cirque Medrano," he also dabbled in abstraction with his non-figurative works "Le Disque" ("The Disk," 21850) and "Les helices" ("The Blades," 21), which in turn prefigured "Elément mécanique" ("Mechanical Element") of 230.
After all, he recently played O.J. Simpson in a TV mini-series whose depiction of the media circus that can be made out of the American justice system is directly prefigured by this musical's portrait of two murderous chorus girls, Roxie Hart and Velma Kelly, in 1920s Chicago.
In an extraordinary departure from the previous norms for the treatment of a senior royal, a campaign of anonymous statements to the news media and over social media was launched against him, apparently to justify his removal and replacement, and it prefigured the recent campaign against Prince Mutaib.
An unexpected album from a major act, while owned in the popular imagination by Beyoncé thanks to back-to-back sneak attacks, including last month's "Lemonade," was in some ways prefigured by Radiohead: In 2007, the band independently released "In Rainbows" with a pay-what-you-want model online just days after announcing the album.
Before he was diagnosed with cancer in 2010, he was better known as an insult comic than a man of letters—less a sage our political era would have left homeless than a voice who prefigured an age of blowhards and possessed few of the traits his namesake prize has been created to honor.
Except for Cendrars's three major and extended poetic works — which continue to bear a tremendous influence today — he focused on what he characterized as "verbal snapshots," astonishing works of rhythm, vocabulary and style that prefigured so-called "poetic cubism," a pioneering movement that made its official appearance soon after in the work of certain avant-garde poets.
Mr. King, eagerly awaiting who will move into Mr. Kennedy's office, is a well-known and influential activist in Georgia whose flavor of anti-illegal immigrant activism prefigured that of Mr. Trump: He is president of a group called The Dustin Inman Society, named for a teenage boy killed in 20153 in a wreck with an undocumented immigrant driver.
But over the past several years Republican leaders made a variety of decisions that prefigured both the Trump phenomenon and Cruz's Iowa victory: The GOP now falls back on its hope that Rubio can convert his third-place performance in Iowa to a leap into second place in New Hampshire next week, and, eventually, to outright victory in some future primary.
He argues that Mallarmé's transcendence of conventional poetics, his spatio-temporal gyrations, his yearning efforts to collapse signifier and signified, his wish to erase all boundaries between word, idea, and object, as well as between art and life, paved the way for innovative Modernist thought and practice in literature, music, visual art, philosophy, modern physics, and even prefigured aspects of today's digital era.

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