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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

Not only does immobile magma stay silent, but the molten mass was already so close to the surface that should the flank have broken apart, it would have immediately erupted without the usual precursory clamor.

From New York Times • Sep. 2, 2022

Mozart, he's the precursory genius—the first who endowed an orchestra with an individual voice; and those two will live mostly because they created Beethoven.

From His Masterpiece by Vizetelly, Ernest Alfred




Vocabulary lists containing precursory


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