Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

152 Sentences With "presciently"

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

And he presciently observed that those targets were sitting ducks.
" He presciently added, "There will be 100 points scored tonight.
Her early photographs of drag queens were presciently unconcerned with gender.
"The politicians come to power early in Minneapolis," Mr. Reston wrote presciently.
Soon he was presciently raising alarms about Al Qaeda and its leader.
It refused, presciently, to set up an internet fund in the late 1990s.
" He added presciently, "She is 31 years old and has a brilliant future.
Ms Nooyi presciently invested in healthier offerings, offsetting weakness in sales of sugary products.
Presciently, she predicted that Trump would attack her on social media during the speech.
Perhaps presciently, local officials there raised those exact issues with the FCC in July.
The new incarnation, headed by the original creator, Diane English, can be presciently timely.
Let's go back to Galston, writing on the Brookings website, presciently, in June 623.
He presciently predicted Ackman would have a difficult time exiting his bearish Herbalife position.
Presciently, too, Mike grasped in 1992 the political gifts of a young governor from Arkansas.
In 2012, you created a list of overrated white people, which, presciently, listed Donald Trump.
Tusa presciently went negative on GE in May 2016, when the stock was trading at $30.
In other words, markets were due for a correction, as Goldman Sachs presciently warned last week.
Almost alone among his peers, he was presciently aware that chattering could be a way of mattering.
" He added, presciently, "A violinist of Miss Beilina's formidable powers will not be an unknown for long.
In that sense, she embodies Woolf's presciently fluid character, invented long before gender fluidity reached the mainstream.
Perhaps presciently, when I tried to prepare Uma by giving her a bottle, she refused to drink.
Read through that lens, Hughes was presciently warning us about the perils of unchecked capitalism and massive inequality.
Fortunately, 40 years ago Congress presciently enacted a minerals policy to meet the nation's future need for minerals.
But as Trump presciently warned, the risk of this strategy is it can make a bad situation worse.
Schöffer's ever-sensing connected cybernetic city concept is all-at-once kitschy, way-too-real terrifying, and presciently breathtaking.
In the pre-cyber world, Peters wrote presciently of critical computer-driven capabilities and hideous new asymmetric weapons systems.
Ultimately, despite the consternation he so presciently expressed in the spring of 1964, Vietnam did mean something to Johnson.
"What a variety of people called to be saints, crotchety, giddy, cranky ones, bibulous ones," Ms. Day said presciently.
It lacks the same thing Emeril Lagasse presciently criticized television for in the heyday of Food Network personalities: smells.
"You may be asking yourself: What kind of sociopath complains about ice cream sundaes?" our food writer asks, perhaps presciently.
Oaktree Capital's Howard Marks presciently cautioned investors on the risks of high-flying technology growth stocks nearly two weeks ago.
A "billionaire with some sense of humor," Musk has co-founded a new satirical media company called — perhaps presciently — Thud.
"Do we want Vladimir Putin or drug cartels to be influencing American elections?" she presciently asked at a 2015 commission meeting.
Mr. Case presciently sounded the alarm about the danger posed by rising subprime borrowing in the decade before the financial crisis.
That's the crux of Shaw's presciently modern plot, which in part uses vowels to examine class differences, with a feminist angle.
He also endorsed a conservative social agenda, which, he presciently insisted, would intensify the red in purple states in the Midwest.
When I told my mother, she presciently wondered aloud if this was the only way she was going to have grandchildren.
Justin Roiland presciently tweeted "let's get this song to the top of the charts," and apparently, Rick and Morty fans obliged.
During the 2015 conservative forum in Russia, he spoke presciently about the looming online battle for the attention of American voters.
First Reformed seems presciently poised for 2018's frightening times, though there are no overt references to the era of Trump.
He called that project — presciently, terribly — L'animita, the term used for roadside shrines left to honor those killed in car wrecks.
Instinet analyst Anthony DiClemente presciently wrote a report Thursday that Amazon would disrupt grocery business next and that justifies its surging price.
In 1867, the British philosopher John Stuart Mill issued what presciently endures as a warning to the do nothing Democrats of today.
Author and researcher Dennis M. Gormley presciently warned of the use of drones and missiles by non-state terrorist groups already in 2003.
Lewis also presciently warned that Christians were tempted to abuse political power in ways that were bad for both Christianity and the state.
He predicted in 1956 that there would be "saucerlike" space stations, elevators that moved horizontally as well as vertically and, presciently, driverless cars.
Quite presciently, Roosevelt tasked Bush with formulating postwar strategy for a national research effort that would build on the successes achieved during the war.
And, after winning his nomination, he presciently said that he thought his and President Obama's success was unrelated to the mechanics of their campaigns.
"I don't know if anybody is watching Donald Trump in the United States, but it's mind-boggling, it's just pure personality," Finkelstein said, presciently.
In "La Chinoise" — presciently released in 1967, a year before the student protests — she played a student revolutionary in Paris struggling with Maoist philosophy.
A satirical short film released this month by a collective of local artists imagined, almost presciently, what would happen if the butter ran out.
"It's fun to watch young guys kind of get their feet wet and figure all of it out," Bruce said, presciently, after the game.
Barnum called himself the "Prince of Humbugs," which, generously and perhaps presciently, left open the possibility that one day there would arise a king.
Tusa's GE calls are powerful because he presciently went negative on the iconic company in May 2016, when the stock was trading at $30.
He created a parochial school system and sited the new St. Patrick's Cathedral in what he presciently knew would be the heart of Manhattan.
More from Tonic: Presciently, the authors suggested that decreases in condom use could be counteracted by earlier diagnosis and treatment of STIs through PrEP programs.
This year's entrant, Ovidiu Anton, was selected to perform the presciently titled "Moment of Silence" at this year's contest, which begins May 10 in Stockholm.
Voltaire proved to be, as Nietzsche presciently wrote, the "representative of the victorious, ruling classes and their valuations," while Rousseau looked like a sore loser.
He liked that, and relished how other channels copied him; cable, he said presciently in 2003, was "beginning to change the agenda of what is news".
Their magic only worked together: Their long-lost mother had named them presciently, as souls can live without hope, but hope can't live without a soul.
Its introductory run almost presciently coincided with Donald Trump's presidential campaign and subsequent questions about who was manipulating the online world that increasingly dominates our lives.
Presciently, Xu criticized the repression and intolerance for academics under Xi's increasingly oppressive regime in his essay, saying it would hamper free discussion among Chinese intellectuals.
" As former Republican Senate aide Chris Jacobs presciently described the situation in February, it appears legislators have split into two camps: "the repealers" and the "replacers.
"A foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds, adored by little statesmen and philosophers and divines," wrote Ralph Waldo Emerson, perhaps presciently about our current president.
It was a prime example of the breakdown in consumer trust, which we had been highlighting for years, and presciently previewed the ad blocking crisis to come.
" However, whether this campaign is smart or too smart for its own good, funny or frustrating, as another YouTuber presciently states, it'll certainly get people "thinking about whoppers.
Despite a brief bout of infection, Jamie lives — obviously — thanks for a lovely modern invention called penicillin, which Claire has presciently thought to bring along to the past.
Warren Buffet told CNBC (perhaps presciently) earlier in January, "In terms of cryptocurrencies, generally, I can say with almost certainty that they will come to a bad ending."
While the CIA was assuring Carter that Iran was not even in a pre-revolutionary stage, Israel was more presciently evacuating the last of its citizens from Iran.
In our correspondence, Di Filippo tells me he first started publishing fiction set in this universe back in the 90s—and presciently posited a President Trump, decades ago.
Black women onscreen are rarely anything but the impeccably dressed and infallible "superheroes" that the noted black feminist writer Michelle Wallace presciently understood, even back in the 1970s.
"Hostile foreign forces will certainly exploit this act of copying out the party Constitution on a wedding night, and they will stir up mockery of it," he presciently warned.
Analysts said they viewed him as a strong candidate for the position, noting he bluntly and presciently warned of a "dog's breakfast" in the market before the financial crisis.
George Romney predicted presciently that Goldwater's candidacy would be devastating to the GOP, a party where northern moderates still played a huge role in the electorate and the party leadership.
Earlier this year, the cybersecurity site Dark Reading presciently warned that criminals would soon target Internet of Things devices in an attempt to turn them into a Botnet of Things.
Shit goes sideways for Jasmine when she watches one of her clients get choked out by a mystery murderer during a private show (presciently foreshadowing various YouTube/Facebook Live dystopias).
Ms. Arroyo's efforts to stack the bench were presciently self-serving: The court dismissed corruption charges against her in July 2016 — just a few weeks after Mr. Duterte became president.
In his book "Irrational Exuberance," for example, he presciently outlined the psychological factors and herd thinking that sowed the seeds of the dot-com bust and the 2008 financial crisis.
It also helps that Fleischer gets to work with such an amazing cast — including, presciently, a hilarious surprise cameo by an actor who also appears in Jarmusch's The Dead Don't Die.
The firm led by David Rubenstein had been presciently cautious starting in 2007 and NBTY, as the vitamin seller was known then, was its first sizable acquisition since the financial crisis.
Working Families Party national director Dan Cantor, after warning presciently that "this may well not be the last version of Trumpcare we see," all but thanked Republicans for joining the battle.
But now that season arrives like a presciently timed herald of the #MeToo-Time's Up revolution, with 13 female directors and 9 of 13 episodes written or co-written by women.
The firm, led by David Rubenstein, had been presciently cautious starting in 2007, and NBTY, as the vitamin seller was known then, was its first sizable acquisition since the financial crisis.
In 2017, it is hard not to see the woman-killing, basement-dwelling, skin-stitching Buffalo Bill as a cartoonish projection of modern misogyny, something that Demme presciently ties to white nationalism.
National Review's Michael Brendan Dougherty presciently noted in January, months before Kennedy announced his retirement, that the court's swing justice may have been the glue that's holding the American political system together.
In 2012, MintPress published a piece looking at the uptick in the recruitment of women, and this past year, Teen Vogue, somewhat presciently, rolled out a modern version of the same observation.
Her 2012 play, "We Are Proud to Present a Presentation …," about genocide in a German colony in Africa, presciently examined issues of cultural appropriation and representation in history through metatheatrical game-playing.
As the switch from Model T to Model A plunged Ford into loss, Alfred P. Sloan, president of General Motors, presciently observed that carmakers would need to "adopt the 'laws' of Paris dressmakers".
It opens with Jones (played with sincerity and conviction by James Norton) presciently explaining the danger of Germany's National Socialist party to Lloyd George, his boss at the Foreign Office, and his colleagues.
Mr. Sasse's book was published before these events, but he presciently described what he believes lonely people increasingly do to fill the hole of belonging in their lives: They turn to angry politics.
The premise was more fanciful than the current reality, but the show presciently dramatized the disinformation campaigns we're now witnessing across social media, except the social media companies are also the unwitting tools.
" Video "In this crazy election year, there are no straight-line projections," he noted, adding presciently, "As Clinton leaves Philadelphia, her lifelong drive for the ultimate prize is perilously close to a coin flip.
Apple's global accessibility head on the company's new features for iOS 13 and macOS Catalina People like to point to 1989's Back to the Future II as presciently showing technologies that exist today.
A senior administration source also pointed out that the president genuinely likes Stepien and often name drops him at political events as the guy who presciently saw a path to election victory in Florida.
"The Afghan government would have reacted strongly against M.S.F." In 2011, M.S.F. opened the hospital in Kunduz, a location it chose because it believed, presciently, that the province's bloody past presaged a violent future.
If anything, her brief movie career looks presciently campy — less like porn than like a Mike Myers parody titled, "Cool It Baby" (which is also the title of a 221 Signorelli von Braunhut film).
He cites a 1376 letter from the mystic Catherine of Siena to a disciple, in which she presciently warns of schisms within the Catholic Church and invokes the Eucharist as a symbol of unity.
" Forty-three years earlier, in 21763, another British statesman, Foreign Secretary Sir Edward Grey, presciently remarked, "The lamps are going out all over Europe; we shall not see them lit again in our lifetime.
In that 2015 presentation, which he dubbed a cure for the "industry's value-destroying addiction to capital", Marchionne presciently argued for car-business consolidation to reduce capacity and share the burden of future investments.
Would they heed Du Bois's call, as students like John Lewis and Julian Bond, Charlayne Hunter and Diane Nash did under the leadership of the "Negro Gandhi" presciently predicted by Du Bois back in 1948?
This exhibition both represents and is premised on the gallery's success in presciently choosing to invest in and support the work of these women when it was not necessarily fashionable or lucrative to do so.
In "An Ideal Husband", Wilde presciently imagines his fate through the character of Sir Robert Chiltern: "public disgrace, ruin, terrible shame, the mockery of the world, a lonely dishonoured life [and] a lonely dishonoured death".
MUMBAI, India — Three years before the 2008 global financial crisis, an Indian economist named Raghuram G. Rajan presciently warned a skeptical audience of top economic thinkers that excessive risk threatened the entire global financial system.
Some of his observations in Mr. Roth's script, largely culled from 80 hours of recorded conversations between its two characters (who both died in the 1980s), are so presciently on-target they leave you reeling.
As Charlie Cook wrote presciently on March 21964, The Republican Senate majority is tenuous even if the G.O.P. underperforms even a little on Election Day, even without a disruptive candidate at the top of the ticket.
" But, as I wrote (perhaps presciently) in March for The Hill: "If Saudi Arabia tries to destabilize Iran by promoting insurrection, as MbS has said privately to visiting interlocutors, its own vulnerability may be quickly exposed.
The way to do it is not to pray for more diversified economies — Latin America has never had those and won't for a long time — but rather to manage resource-based economies more wisely and presciently.
Lyndsey must be credited for being one of the first officials to spot the stock market euphoria of the late 1990's, presciently warning about wild price increases that would sooner or later come crashing down.
A notorious penny-pincher, Taft argued that NATO would soon "cost more each year than the housing, education, and limited health plans combined," and he presciently warned that the alliance would lead to a costly arms race.
In 19503, during the economic slump, when many building plans were being shelved, Portland presciently began to allow homeowners the right to develop accessory dwelling units on standard 5,000-square-foot residential lots for the first time.
The tech billionaire who so presciently jumped on file-sharing and social networking is now giving $250 million to the current darling of cancer research, which is all about triggering the immune system to fight cancer cells.
But, the report presciently warned, "the involvement of a large number of operatives and group leaders based in multiple countries in future ISIL-linked plotting could create significant obstacles in the detection and disruption" of new plots.
And after questioning Jacqueline's hairdresser Frances Fallon (Isabel Jewell) about Jacqueline's whereabouts, Mary is led to her sister's apartment—above an Italian restaurant presciently called Dante's—and discovers a living room with a noose and a chair.
Some items will speak to you via their pop culture or sports provenance: outlandish silver platform boots once worn by Elton John, jerseys belonging to Michael Jordan and Colin Kaepernick (the latter presciently selected a year ago).
Bill Clinton was acknowledging, presciently, a skewing of the American economy that has only worsened since his presidency, the steady pulling away of the superrich from everyone else — the division between the 403 percent and the 1 percent.
Gómez is a kind of pragmatic, nonideological revolutionary; he presciently reflects that the guerrillas must not be seen as Marxists, in order to prevent the blood bath that will ensue if the United States backs the Salvadoran military.
It presciently introduced the Big Ten Network a decade ago, and new television contracts that bring in $240 million a year solidified its place as the richest conference in college sports (challenged only, of course, by the SEC).
In Martin's 1996 movie adaptation, everything worked out for Bilko—an iconic, affably crooked motor-pool NCO who presciently kept a signed photograph of Donald Trump on his desk, sticking it to The Man in the peacetime Army.
"United Shades" presciently touched on some of the year's biggest stories, so if you need a refresher of just how crazy the past 12 months have been in America, there are worse places you could go to catch up.
Lost, perhaps, amid all the jollity was the story of how a single cashmere sweater was eventually transformed into a lifestyle brand presciently pitched at a population whose growth could hardly have been predicted when Mr. Cucinelli started out.
In January 2016, as he tried unsuccessfully to stop Donald Trump's march to the Republican presidential nomination, the Texas senator presciently argued that his rival, a pragmatic dealmaker, would find it just as easy to work with Democrats as Republicans.
" Jake then predicted, presciently, that the virus had likely already reached the warehouse, since it is staffed by "tons and tons of working-class people who ride the subway all the time, who have not been able to work from home.
He was able to treat 183 of the victims of a radical cult's subway poison gas attack in 218 (all but one survived), because he had presciently equipped his hospital the year before to handle mass casualties like an earthquake.
He may have presciently endorsed the musical's theme 400 years ago when he had Malcolm worry that "my more-having would be as a sauce to make me hunger more," but "Scotland, PA" is something even he never predicted: a kick-ass party.
Related: 'We Are Going to Light Up the Whole Country on Fire': The Arson That Led to the Oregon Militia Standoff In an interview on Monday with The Oregonian, Finicum spoke presciently about the possibility of a violent encounter with federal agents.
The book presciently predicts that advances in communication technology "will make us geographically independent of our homes and offices," leading to "cerebral nomadism" — we will travel the world hunting down information and relationships, much as our ancestors stalked the plains for prey.
Dr. Barnard, on the other hand, was governed by more liberal laws in South Africa — legislation he himself had presciently advocated — which allowed a neurosurgeon to confirm death if a patient showed no response to light or pain, a much lower bar.
But two decades ago, the rebellious destruction sprang from the imagination of the playwright Tony Kushner, who presciently placed a Confederate statue-toppling in his powerful musical "Caroline, or Change," which ran briefly on Broadway in 2004 and has been widely performed since.
Rooted in the pre-Brexit world of Cameron's big society, their record deserves even more credit now than it did on its release for just how presciently it evoked the desperation of the nation's forgotten corners, and how close to breaking point they were.
House Democrats are moving to hold those who ignore subpoenas in contempt of Congress — a process that Speaker Nancy Pelosi presciently streamlined shortly after assuming control by giving the power to pursue legal action against noncompliant witnesses to a bipartisan panel of five members.
In the ensuing backlash, he was widely seen as a presciently inspired choice for diffusing tensions looming over the awards following only other turn as Oscar emcee in 2005, when he drew mixed reviews for a performance many saw as too provocative at the time.
Back in 2011, Zingales presciently wrote that the country should be glad that Trump decided not to run for president because he had enormous potential as a Berlusconi-like figure who would mix business connections, media savvy, and discontent with existing political parties into a potent cocktail.
Susan J. Tolchin, a political scientist who explored the workings of political patronage, women in politics and, most presciently, the electoral power of voter anger in several popular books, most of them written with her husband, Martin Tolchin, died on Wednesday at her home in Washington.
Peter Binzen, a newspaperman who covered Philadelphia for more than five decades and whose books presciently explored the frustrations of working-class Americans, the rise of Mayor Frank L. Rizzo as their bellicose local political hero and the bankruptcy of the Penn Central railroad, died on Nov.
In November, Kerby Jean-Raymond, the designer behind the New York-based label Pyer Moss, won the CFDA/Vogue Fashion Fund prize — an award that recognized his unique ability to presciently capture the zeitgeist and comment on the state of black culture with his radically joyful collections.
She concedes that her ideas would reduce consumers' access to credit cards and large mortgages but regards that as a good thing — presciently warning, for example, that the then-current boom in subprime lending to low-income and minority households was likely to end in tears.
" Frank H. Lyell's review for The New York Times Book Review concluded presciently: "Movie-going readers will be able to cast most of the roles very quickly, but it is no disparagement of Miss Lee's winning book to say that it could be the basis of an excellent film.
Alvin Toffler, the celebrated author of "Future Shock," the first in a trilogy of best-selling books that presciently forecast how people and institutions of the late 21957th century would contend with the immense strains and soaring opportunities of accelerating change, died on Monday at his home in Los Angeles.
This posthumous book might have been read strictly as elegy, yet Wright, as if presciently marking a trail through the woods for future readers, came up with a sly signpost of a title as "pre-amble" to her work, briskly excluding melancholy even while taking stock of crimes against nature.
" Or maybe from one of our founding mothers, Abigail Adams, who presciently cautioned her husband that, "If particular care and attention is not paid to the ladies, we are determined to foment a rebellion, and will not hold ourselves bound by any laws in which we have no voice or representation.
Further, the report, which was written before the U.N. climate meetings in Paris, presciently notes that a primary driver in support of U.S. LNG imports to Asia, in particular China, India and South Korea, is a forced shift from coal to natural gas or LNG to help the region achieve its climate goals.
Once presciently interested in climate change—the scientist Thatcher had organized an early conference, in 1989, devoted to "Saving the Ozone Layer," and a subsequent seminar at which she sat with the environmentalist James Lovelock—she appeared to recant it all in the book "Statecraft" (2002), a dull collection of right-wing speeches and anecdotes.
"Romance in Marseille," like his sprawling 1929 classic "Banjo," also set in the south of France, shows McKay presciently grappling with the destinies of those he calls the "outcasts and outlaws of civilizations" — migrants in thriving port cities central to the flow of global commerce — and with the violent upheavals and desperate striving that deposited them there.
In 1847, two years before the Gold Rush transformed the city into a teeming boomtown, a 30-year-old Irish immigrant named Jasper O'Farrell presciently surveyed the street to be 120 feet wide  — which is broader than the Philadelphia main street it was named after  — even though the city was only 500 residents strong at the time.
And when the Korean War was close to ending in 1953, and he contemplated the perils of the atomic age, Mr. Baldwin wrote presciently: "There is no such thing as absolute security in the world of man — least of all today in the midst of a technological revolution in warfare which has foreshortened distance, eliminated American geographical isolation, and exposed us to attack."
This was presciently forecast in an exchange between the state solicitor for Missouri and Justice Antonin Scalia during the oral argument in Roper: Solicitor: Well, I... I must assume that if we... if the Court says [juveniles] are immune from the... from capital punishment that someone will come and say they also must be immune from, for example, life without parole.
Even before Monday's incidents, it was inevitable that the bridge collapse would reignite conversations about the city's infrastructure problem, which Atlanta magazine summarized presciently and poetically in a 2012 feature story: Like ghosts rising out of a Confederate cemetery, Atlanta's past lapses in judgment haunt the region today, leaving a smoky trail of suburban decay, declining home values, clogged highways, and a vastly diminished reputation.
Not only does the Senate legislation limit the dismissal of the special counsel to instances of "misconduct, dereliction of duty, incapacity, conflict of interest or other good cause," but it also presciently specifies only an attorney general "who has been confirmed to the position by the Senate" or the most senior confirmed Justice Department official "who is not recused" may dismiss the special counsel.
A presciently-titled Wired article from 2001—the headline "When Gamer Humor Attacks" is a lot less innocent post-Gamergate—charted the meme's rise from a flash video to forum mainstay, and its description of the world's response presaged what happens today when a new meme emerges from the ether of the web to freak out the Olds and the Normals: A sign of simpler times?
" As for colleges — those supposed hotbeds of tenured radicals — Genet presciently observes that inside American universities, the "only recognized values are quantitative" and thus our schools "turn [students] into a digit within a larger number" and cultivate in them "the need for security, for tranquility and quite naturally [professors] educate you to serve your bosses and beyond them, your politicians, although you are well aware of their intellectual mediocrity.
Presciently, he worried about impeachment processes becoming political power struggles rather than honest attempts to determine the truth of the charges: "In many cases it will connect itself with the pre-existing factions, and will enlist all their animosities, partialities, influence, and interest on one side or on the other; and in such cases there will always be the greatest danger that the decision will be regulated more by the comparative strength of parties than by the real demonstrations of innocence or guilt.
Our guides: Jim Rutenberg, The Times's media columnist, who figured out what the syringe really was and exposed the hidden connections that fanned the original, inaccurate reporting; Charlie Sykes, an influential conservative radio show host who has sounded the alarm about the partisan warfare that has left us with no referees who can separate fact from fiction; and Sarah Ellison, a contributing editor at Vanity Fair, who has presciently reported on the possibility that Donald J. Trump's campaign may be evolving into a media empire.

No results under this filter, show 152 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.