View example sentences and word forms for Forerunners.

Forerunners

Forerunners | Forerunner

Forerunners meaning

plural of forerunner

Example sentences (20)

They were almost forerunners to the later industrial landscape photography of Edward Burtynsky, who’s written the forward to Mastin’s book.

In the coming decades this is likely to change, even though, under UK government net zero targets for 2030, floating windfarms are set to remain in the shadow of their forerunners, at 5GW capacity, while fixed windfarms mushroom to 60GW.

Lockheed has strengthened its position as one of the forerunners in the military helicopter market, driven by continuous advancements in its combat-proven helicopters, backed by growing demand for more agile and lethal defense products.

The Revisionists, a group that was active before Israel’s independence and conflicted with the socialist programs of the pre-state’s Labor establishment, were the forerunners of the Prime Minister’s Likud Party.

The second speaker is revealed to be Guilty Spark, aka "The Montior," one of the AI constructs left behind by Halo's creators, the Forerunners.

Even in countries that have been ‘progressive’ forerunners in the world there are setbacks both concerning growing class differences and gender equality.

Running metrics are well covered, but on this model you don't get the sort of advanced dynamics or navigation that some of the other Forerunners offer.

The Health Ministry clinic and another in Bangkok are forerunners of a planned nationwide network, if they show positive results.

While most young Forerunners could choose whatever rate they wanted to join, they were also generally expected to join whatever one their family tended to be in. There were rates such as Builders, Miners, Warrior-Servants, Lifeworks and Engineers.

Nevada – The state that legalized the activity ages ago is also among the forerunners when online betting is concerned.

The company’s increasing challenge in differentiating its new handsets from their forerunners has proved to be a liability, with customers choosing to hold out longer for upgrades.

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.

We were kind of the forerunners of it.

Our Marxist forerunners opposed the creation of the Israeli state in Palestine 70 years ago, foreseeing that it would not bring security for Jews and that it would bring suffering to the Palestinians.

The Nigerian Army, led by the Chief of Army Staff (COAS) and leader of the anti-terrorism campaigns went to extremes to tame these destructive sects and forerunners of the foreign sponsored destabilizations plots against the country.

The second explanation — backed up, as we'll see, by hanging signs — has blue posts as the forerunners of taxi ranks.

ASL was influenced by its forerunners but distinct from all of them.

Conrad Grebel wrote in a letter to Thomas Müntzer in 1524: error Origins Medieval forerunners Anabaptists are considered to have begun with the Radical Reformers in the 16th century.

In the painted scenes, the padded dancers and phallic figures of the Dionysan throng leading the mule show that the procession was a part of the dithyrambic celebrations that were the forerunners of the satyr plays of fifth century Athens.

Jazz-funk musicians such as Roy Ayers and Donald Byrd are often credited as the forerunners of acid jazz. citation Nu jazz is influenced by jazz harmony and melodies, and there are usually no improvisational aspects.