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130 Sentences With "progenitors"

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

Like its progenitors, however, it's poised and positioned to provoke.
Movies and radio are the twin progenitors of the modernity we inhabit.
After all, why shouldn't he experiment with his progenitors' formulas for sadness?
Typically, the progenitors of gentrification are white, but what about when they're not?
Purdue and the Sacklers have long disputed being labeled the progenitors of the crisis.
The original two progenitors of the sport were Michel Casseux and his student Charles Lecour.
This process was described by Joel Peck, one of its progenitors, as plucking rubies from rubbish.
But genetic tests have now shown that Australia's mainland cats descended from more recent European progenitors.
At the end of Prometheus, David seems baffled about why Elizabeth would want to meet humanity's progenitors.
The same is true of the "Trading Spaces" regulars, progenitors of a torrent of home-remodeling shows.
The news here is that the lives of most of our progenitors were better than we think.
Democratic politicians may reap the rewards of resistance, but they are not the progenitors of it. Nov.
" As Holt writes, "All these ideas come with flesh-and-blood progenitors who led highly dramatic lives.
The attendees at the annual Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) are the progenitors of the Tea Party movement.
For the unfamiliar, the Onewheel is one of the progenitors of the sometimes self-balancing electric rideable movement.
If anything, Arcángel's veteran status both in reggaeton and as one of Latin trap's progenitors may prove advantageous.
And unlike their New Deal progenitors, these liberals believed in advancing equal rights for Americans of all races.
Which musical and ideological stereotypes were the early progenitors of both post-rave ambient and IDM reacting against?
In some cases, scientists suspect, the virus crosses the placenta, infects the developing brain, and kills nerve progenitors.
Equals closely resembles its progenitors, but it comes from a different impulse than they did, and a different mindset.
Here Mr. Watts pays tribute to one of those progenitors, gathering musicians who once played in Mr. Jones's band.
Also connecting Beyoncé to the progenitors of American music is this biographical drama, written and directed by Darnell Martin.
Founders showcases the work of the gallery's progenitors, and Blue Sky Ahead: Futures, opening November 7, will showcase emerging photographers.
In 2009, as early adopters (and possible part-progenitors) of the term, we began referring to the phenomenon as ghosting.
This group moved into Siberia only in the past 2000,25 years — and they are the progenitors of most living Siberians.
Hailed as progenitors of a Pop avant garde, they have been idolized as the most creative members of their generation.
Shards of the earliest known pottery found in a cave in China suggest that our progenitors were dabbling in cooking.
And I've seen artists who were actually the progenitors of that come into that same arena and get treated like shit.
These galaxies are important, explained Wang, because scientists previously couldn't find candidates for the progenitors of the most massive present-day galaxies.
You'd think that she (and other parents) could translate their own experiences with powerful progenitors into smoother dynamics with their own kids.
Its impact was so profound that the style of game has since been dubbed "Metroidvania," in honor of its two most significant progenitors.
Instead of being a flat, endless digital plain, as various cyberlibertarian progenitors would like us to believe, the internet is riddled with lacuna.
When he holds forth on how his generation murdered the cubists, he is just describing the natural course of progenitors and their offspring.
That was where Marvin Minsky and John McCarthy, two of the progenitors of artificial intelligence, landed after they became interested in interstellar communication.
So it may be shocking to learn that the Ancient Greeks, the ostensible progenitors of Western cultural and aesthetic values, abhorred big dicks.
These fallen pieces form a junk drawer of Brown's imagery — perhaps little different than the jewelry box from whence their progenitors were unearthed.
Like black metal progenitors Celtic Frost and Bathory before them, Slaegt's music uses shadowy spiritual overtones to convey a sense of melancholy and darkness.
The intellectual progenitors of Cambridge Analytica found that advertisements designed for different psychological types generated 40-85033 percent more purchases than psychologically mismatched ads.
European socialist parties were the first "modern" parties, progenitors of a type of political organization that would play a critical role in making democracy work.
That is another striking point of divergence from liberalism's 19th-century progenitors, many of whom were also people of faith and advocates of muscular Christianity.
But always the shaming circumvents due process, precedes true justice, and serves mainly to inflate the sense of self-importance and egos of its progenitors.
The third is that many are actually based on — or at least compatible with — existing languages, helping them attract a community drawn from those progenitors.
Within the next 24 hours, the heart progenitors will come together to form a tube, which loops back onto itself to finally make a recognizable heart.
Current models can't explain how these potential massive galaxy progenitors formed so quickly, Debra Elmegreen, a Vassar astronomy professor not involved in the study, told Gizmodo.
I feel profoundly satisfied standing atop the words "The progenitors of modernity have yet to be born!" in the middle of a blue-chip art fair.
The progenitors called themselves posse comitatus, and generally believed the United States had been ruled by an illegitimate government since as far back as the 1800s.
We asked people to tell us about stumbling upon the toys, costumes, porn, or other erotic doo-dads that forced them to imagine their progenitors bumping uglies.
Where most hardcore bands stuck to the genre's progenitors, the Black Flags and Bad Brains of the world, AVAIL was unabashed in their embrace of Southern rock.
It's reasonable that someone from Kardashian West's generation would find the style's architect in a '70s pop icon, but in fact, there have been many other progenitors.
Decades later, the Texas Rangers—progenitors of the Border Patrol, first created to protect the property of white settlers coming into Mexico's Texas—killed Mexicans with impunity.
These ultra-niche competition shows thus triple the thrill level of their progenitors, like America's Next Top Model, where the hopefuls faced the music only once per show.
Then you enter the Wild West of merchandise that remained on Earth — various appendages of the Apollo program, and its lesser-known progenitors Project Mercury and Project Gemini.
The tipping point in evolution came some two and a half million years ago, when our distant progenitors started consuming more meat; over time, their brains grew bigger.
"They were giddy to echo the Trump economic prosperity and security messages, and in some cases were almost accidental progenitors of what he stood for," Ms. Conway said.
Instead liberalism, under pressure from the left, has become steadily more anxious about its political and cultural progenitors, with Woodrow Wilson joining Jackson and Jefferson in the dock.
Mr. Guske had two goals: to persuade the rumor's progenitors to publicly disavow their claims, and to find whatever kernel of truth had grown into the tall tale.
"Wolf-Rayet star systems are thought to be the progenitors of long gamma-ray bursts, so if there's one in our galaxy that's an exciting find," Pope told Gizmodo.
As progenitors the gig economy, Uber and Lyft bear a lot of the blame for redefining the nature of employment in a way that many people believe disadvantages workers.
One of the progenitors of the accelerator model in the US along with Techstars and Y Combinator, 500 has been a cornerstone of the early-stage company building platform.
Artistic situations of Dada gazing, such as with Höch, offer a different view on genealogy and a different idea of the relationship between forebears and posterity, progenitors, and descendants.
They're waged by fans who oppose the primal, body-centric thrust of trap and its progenitors' penchant for lyricism that prizes directness and pained realism over metaphors and moralism.
Mr Weigel finds the genre's birth in the heart of the 1960s psychedelic era: the progenitors of prog were young, talented and unsatisfied with the typical three-minute song structure.
Even though their voices may be deeper and their hair grayer, the progenitors of the style still exist, still command a legion of followers, and still have plenty to say.
Hailed by some as the saviors of metal at a vulnerable time for the genre, the progenitors of the Gothenburg sound released their breakout album, Terminal Spirit Disease, in 1993.
It's from here whence the bastard genre's progenitors—Amebix, Antiect, Anti Cimex, Mob 47, Hellbastard—first came, kicking, screaming, and spitting out their visions of war atop atonal kängpunk riffs.
Supernovas, the explosive deaths of massive stars, are among the most spectacular events in the universe, and the progenitors of heavy elements that sustain life on Earth (and perhaps elsewhere too).
The branches of her family tree, Page writes, include the progenitors for Winston Churchill and President Calvin Coolidge's vice president as well as Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, the poet, and Sarah Palin.
Crew Love pulled a classy maneuver in hosting Danish synth-pop duo Laid Back, a live act with a forty-year history that could crown them progenitors of chill dance vibes.
Meanwhile, Virtual World had overestimated how quickly it could grow—the big Virtual World Centers hadn't done appreciably better than their smaller progenitors, while leaving the company with higher upkeep costs.
Radio was Hannity's tutor: From morning till night, he'd tune into local right-wing talkers like Bob Grant and Barry Farber, progenitors of the hyperpoliticized style that Rush Limbaugh would perfect.
This reboot finds its spiritual progenitors not in Dan Aykroyd and Bill Murray but in mystics like the Fox Sisters, and the spiritual and political agitators who gained strength in their wake.
Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band," for example, opens by mentioning the unprecedented $100,000 the band spent to live up to their newly-established reputation as "the progenitors of a Pop avant garde.
Having beaten Leicester last month to inch within two points of the Foxes, Arsenal have subsequently conspired to fall apart in a manner even their misfit progenitors of 2009 would wince at.
"Our discovery has helped to answer these questions, providing evidence that the progenitors of the most massive galaxies in the universe are mostly dusty and remain hidden from optical light," he said.
"The video album writes black women back into national, regional and diasporic histories by making them the progenitors and rightful inheritors of the Southern gothic tradition," Zandria F. Robinson wrote for Rolling Stone.
But now, scientists from the United Kingdom have pushed back the occurrence of the first heartbeat in mice by 12 hours, to a time when heart progenitors are scattered over a wide area.
Mature body cells (eggs and sperm included) derive from progenitors, known as stem cells, that have the power to divide, proliferate and eventually to turn into particular cellular components of a particular tissue.
Tracks like "Dream House" and "Sunbather" felt like sprawling conceptual exercises in the inherent instability of genre, while others like "Irresistible" and "Vertigo" basked in a lightness completely foreign to the band's progenitors.
The alt-right calls them the "respectable right" These are the gatekeepers at National Review and Fox News who marginalize the alt-right and their intellectual progenitors for the sake of mainstream respectability.
Think, for example, of MoMA's Machine Art, organized by Philip Johnson and Alfred J. Barr in 1934, which fetishized anonymous products of industry, like airplane propellers and ball bearings, rather than their progenitors.
Concentrating on Fender and Paul, Port mentions but doesn't explore the groundbreaking solid-body lap steel guitar sold by Rickenbacker in the early 19693s or other short-lived, solid-body six-string guitar progenitors.
Scientists already have a hard-enough time recognizing hurricane progenitors and figuring out where the storms will go once they're spinning, so adding artificially brighter clouds and cooler waters to the mix could prove dangerous.
Then there are those progenitors who appear to detach themselves from the act of parenting, shruggingly referring to their children online as "the kid" (or "the boy" or "the girl") when reporting their cute acts.
Humans are buckets of bugs, after all, and as ISS progenitors like the Mir space station have aptly demonstrated, our live-in companions will colonize our surroundings whether we are off Earth or on it.
Scientists already have a hard enough time recognizing hurricane progenitors and figuring out where the storms will go once they're spinning, so adding artificially brighter clouds and cooler waters to the mix could prove dangerous.
Supreme pizza nachos perfectly blur the line between their progenitors and a little ranch dressing and a lot of parmesan go a long way in getting the most pizza-like flavors out of your nachos.
And since that culture is, for all its creaking repetitiousness, our only common culture at this point, it would not be surprising if we find ourselves still clinging to it even once its progenitors are gone.
Hence the New York Yankees entering the winter with two closers and exiting with three, the Boston Red Sox and Houston Astros following suit, and ditto for the Baltimore Orioles, arguably the movement's now-forgotten progenitors.
That company, founded by one of the progenitors of the surgical robotics industry, Fred Moll, is the first to offer serious competition to Intuitive Surgical's technological advantage — no wonder, considering Dr. Moll also founded Intuitive Surgical.
There are, of course, literary progenitors—you can hear the satirical scrape of Muriel Spark (whom Smith admires), and detect the influence of Virginia Woolf (fluid interior monologue, an interest in artists, and in genderless creativity).
All of the DNA in the embryo has come from one or other parent, so blocks of embryonic DNA can be matched to well-established sequences from their parental progenitors and an accurate embryonic sequence established.
" While the origins of FRBs remain a wild card, Schneider's team concluded that "massive blue straggler stars seem likely to be progenitors of magnetars" and that "their supernovae may be affected by their strong magnetic fields.
A few blocks from The Compound is Wallworks, at 39 Bruckner Boulevard, which has exhibited work from graffiti progenitors Dondi and Futura since 2014, when John Matos, the graffiti star known as CRASH, helped open the place.
Op-Ed Contributor Today's competition between Turkey and Iran is the latest iteration of an old power game: a struggle their progenitors, the Byzantine and Persian empires, started over the control of Mesopotamia — today's Iraq and Syria.
Described by its progenitors as an "interactive kinetic sculpture," the third and most current iteration of Fauna is a functional, built-from-scratch machine that presses two-sided pennies via a crank mechanism (a handsome ship's wheel).
But our real progenitors were the Puritans, who passed the weeks on the trans-Atlantic voyage preaching about the end times and who, when they arrived, vowed to hang any Quaker or Catholic who landed on their shores.
Dave Meltzer decided not to make the trip to Long Beach and among those who missed him most were The Young Bucks, the best tag team in the world and progenitors of a finishing move called The Meltzer Driver.
Farvegir Fyrndar is such a wholly reverent epitaph to the tenets of black metal—from progenitors Mayhem and Emperor to contemporary envelope-pushers Blut Aus Nord and Deathspell Omega, to whom they're often compared—that I smell a rat.
Though I was one of the early progenitors of the idea that became opportunity zones, one of my concerns was that the idea would just fade on the vine as investors couldn't figure out how to make it work.
Although Eugène Ionesco is esteemed as one of the progenitors of absurdist drama, people who attend the Shakespeare Theater of New Jersey's current production of "Exit the King" in Madison are likely to find his story to be straightforward.
In many ways, the family saga runs a blinkered race, eyes locked on the straightaway between the present and its most obvious progenitors — those who managed, despite every obstacle or with the assistance of every unjust privilege, to reproduce.
That may seem counter-instinctual and not particularly enjoyable, but in indie game design — including American Freeform Larps and their progenitors, Nordic Larp — it's common for players to seek out forceful emotional experiences, particularly from perspectives other than their own.
It's fair (and true!) to argue that it's still early days for intelligent assistants, and to trust that a standard like RSS (and its progenitors and descendants) will emerge that will make apps more fully and fairly integrated with these bots.
These portraits of the progenitors of the Twelve Tribes of Israel are spryer and less mystical than Zurbarán's more Caravaggesque — and more famous — tortured saints, like the ascetic, cloaked St. Francis kneeling in sepulchral darkness in the National Gallery of London.
The band's music is heavily atmospheric, melodic and monochromatic, with occult overtones (audience members can expect to "behold death, darkness, chaos and the void" at a typical show) and a frosty Scandinavian mien that belies its progenitors' South American origin.
The fruit doesn't fall far from the tree, and the tendency of these companies to start up and grow nearby their progenitors has contributed to the virtuous cycle that maintains the Bay Area as the premier destination for entrepreneurship and technology today.
"Ancestral travel is a way of connecting oneself with their progenitors and finding one's rootedness in a confusing and fast-paced world," Dallen J. Timothy, a professor at Arizona State University and editor of The Journal of Heritage Tourism, wrote in an email.
It proved to be the first installment of a blockbuster series whose vivid, even preposterous characters — living "a long time ago in a galaxy far, far away," as the opening sequence announced — became pop culture legends and the progenitors of a merchandising bonanza.
The German photographer's recently been emphasizing the musical side of his output, releasing an album called 2016/1986 last month, and teasing an EP called Device Control, which is apparently set to feature the first music in years by the witch house progenitors SALEM.
Children attending can make their own percussion instruments — shakers filled with dried beans — and play them during a concert by the drummer Joe Dyson's Truth N' Light Project, a group offering West African rhythms as well as numbers by punk progenitors like Jimi Hendrix.
His knack for incorporating satisfying combinations of shapes, colors, and concepts into his work led him to these progenitors of Op Art, though he gives credit to the album cover of Above and Beyond's Tri-State for sparking his obsession with the Penrose Triangle.
It's not clear what Roosevelt said about Jackson that day, but in his 22 autobiography he cited "Good King Andrew," as he put it, and Lincoln as the progenitors of the modern idea of the president as a strong leader who sets the nation's agenda.
"Tech parties are more a by-product of a dynamic, inclusive, vibrant tech ecosystem; they are not its progenitors...If and when countries successfully foster their own start-up cultures, tech parties will organically grow," explained Justin Hall, SHDH co-organizer and principal at Golden Gate Ventures.
Back in 2007 a report by researchers at Akvaforsk, now part of the Norwegian Institute of Food, Fisheries and Aquaculture Research (NOFIMA), showed that three decades of selective breeding by the country's salmon farmers had resulted in fish which grew twice as fast as their wild progenitors.
"This work adds to the mounting absence of evidence for accreting white dwarfs as the progenitors of type Ia supernovae," the little-star-eats-big-star scenario, astronomy professor Dan Maoz from Tel-Aviv University, who is not involved in the research, told Gizmodo in an email.
A core member of the Independent Group in post-World War II Britain, which served as the progenitors of British Pop Art, Mr. Paolozzi made bronze sculptures throughout the 1950s and '60s, such as his "Robot" (1956), that bear a striking resemblance to Ms. Bhabha's works, both past and present.
Germany's Chapel of Disease alloy OSDM with licks reminiscent of metal's progenitors Blue Oyster Cult and Deep Purple, bringing the genre's evolution full-circle on … and as We Have Seen the Storm, We Have Embraced the Eye (they even threw some Dire Straits chicken-picking in there, and somehow it sounds excellent).
In the 1980s, Sottsass' own design firm, Sottsass Associati, began releasing a Bitossi-produced line of totems, but the original 2 still stand as symbols of the designer's rebellion against the sober gestures of Modernism, as well as his idiosyncratic take on such progenitors as ancient Vedic diagrams and the Vienna Secessionist Josef Hoffmann.
I learned that the French progenitors of the Statue of Liberty wanted it to symbolize a liberal, humanitarian politics, steering between right-wing reactionaries and the left-wing radicals of the Paris Commune, and that many of its American funders were small donors out to shame decadent Gilded Age robber barons who wouldn't contribute to a civic monument.
The band deals in the kind of fetid, backward-facing death that we've come to expect from the underground post-2010, replete with shuddering riffs, mouldering roars, blackened malevolence, and an overall vibe of churning, oozing chaos that's perhaps an unintentional (but welcome) relic of the progenitors' time spent playing in black metal bands like Lake of Blood and Doctorshopper.
It is here that we are introduced to a cadre of characters unfamiliar to the Western genre—Greek, Turkish, and Arab camel drivers from the Eastern Mediterranean who have arrived in America with a boatload of dromedaries, which are the first of their kind to set foot on the continent since their progenitors died out in the last Ice Age.
Identifying new neurons is technically challenging — in our own recent study we made similar observations to what Boldrini et al report, but after performing extensive additional analysis of the shape and other characteristics of the cells in question, including electron microscopy and gene expression, we determined that these cells were not in fact young neurons or neural progenitors but different types of cells altogether.
As science marches forward, and age reversal and the elimination of diseases becomes a real possibility, what once seemed like a science fiction dream is becoming more real, transforming the transhumanist movement and its role in society from a crazy subculture to a Silicon Valley money- and technology-fueled "shot on goal" and more of a practical "hedge" than the sci-fi dream of its progenitors.
And now, in order to protect God from the charge that He was responsible for the innate defects in His creation, everything depended on Augustine somehow showing that in Paradise it could all have been otherwise; that our progenitors Adam and Eve were not originally designed to reproduce as we now reproduce but that they perversely made the wrong choice, a choice in which we all participate.
If the many allusions to "Macbeth" in the works of Agatha Christie, Dorothy Sayers, P. D. James and other crime writers are any indication, Shakespeare's play may be seen as one of the great progenitors of the genre, making Jo Nesbo, the celebrated Norwegian writer of thrillers, an ideal choice to update the play for Hogarth Shakespeare, a series in which best-selling novelists turn Shakespeare's works into contemporary fiction.
"You will never find a ranking of top wrestling games that doesn't have No Mercy or one of its predecessors in contention for the top spot," said /r/N23WrestlingGames moderator homer22 (whose first name is Dan), who created the subreddit less than a year ago to create a centralized location where fans could discuss No Mercy and its progenitors like WCW Revenge and the Japan-only Virtual Pro Wrestling 264.
You believed that these people would wear these clothes, both those who milled around after the show eating dumplings and sipping weed-leaf cocktails and those who had featured in it: among them, the singer Kelela, the artist Lucy Chadwick, young Coco Gordon Moore (Sonic Youth scion of Kim and Thurston) and Susan Cianciolo, whose art-house fashion shows for her Run line in the 1990s were in some way the progenitors of Eckhaus Latta's.
The band deals in the kind of fetid, backward-facing death that we've come to expect from the underground post-2010, replete with shuddering riffs, mouldering roars, blackened malevolence, and an overall vibe of churning, oozing chaos that's perhaps an unintentional (but welcome) relic of the progenitors' time spent playing in black metal bands like Lake of Blood and Doctorshopper [Full disclosure: I did PR for a Lake of Blood album back in 2011, which is how I became properly acquainted with Eric and Tim's work].
Reynolds's books are typically exhaustive in excavating every nook and cranny of the subject matter at hand, and Shock and Awe is no different; although Bowie is a frequent presence throughout, Reynolds digs deeper to look at glam's progenitors and practitioners—from Alice Cooper's campy surrealist hard rock, to the New York Dolls' gender-bending proto-punk antics, to the hippy-dippy swagger of Marc Bolan and T. Rex—while also explored the social and economic factors that contributed to the genre's forging and allowed it to thrive during its peak.
Even the Washington Post could barely stomach these fabrications, giving Senators Kamala HarrisKamala Devi HarrisEight Democratic presidential hopefuls to appear in CNN climate town hall Biden, Buttigieg bypassing Democratic delegate meeting: report The Hill's Morning Report - Trump on defense over economic jitters MORE (D-Calif.) and Patrick LeahyPatrick Joseph LeahyAppropriators warn White House against clawing back foreign aid House panel investigating decision to resume federal executions Graham moves controversial asylum bill through panel; Democrats charge he's broken the rules MORE (D-Vt.), the progenitors of these claims, a respective four and three pinocchios.

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