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Definitions

precursory

[pri-kur-suh-ree] / prɪˈkɜr sə ri /








Example Sentences

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Any precursory comparisons to “Hamilton” are understandable, given that both stage musicals focus on an outspoken writer, a pivotal president and a years-long war that determined the country’s future.

From Los Angeles Times • Feb. 16, 2025

"There are some cases where there are dramatic and very distinctive precursory seismic signals that precede a catastrophic landslide, sometimes by as much as days," Highman noted.

From Science Daily • May 6, 2024

“It doesn’t give you a precursory, predictive ability because it’s a statement of how you’ve summed it rather than what’s going on at a particular earthquake,” she adds.

From Scientific American • Jul. 20, 2023

And as far as they could tell, no precursory signals were detected before the 2021 outburst.

From New York Times • Sep. 2, 2022

In the precursory stage, which lasts about three months, there is general uneasiness, restlessness, anxiety, sleeplessness, and mental depression, often of a religious type.

From Degeneracy Its Causes, Signs and Results by Talbot, Eugene S.




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