postdate
Example Sentences
Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.
See Examples For:
Most fossils from the Frankincense family have, up until now, been recovered from rocks that postdate the asteroid impact.
From Science Daily ● Dec. 19, 2023
They had a mutual attraction, and mutually expressed it in their postdate interviews: Alex said Katie was “definitely very attractive” while she said she “definitely thought he was handsome.”
From Washington Post ● Jan. 10, 2022
At the end of the chat, the coach suggested that Oliver write down his expectations before his next date and then compare them with his postdate notes.
From New York Times ● Mar. 28, 2018
It’s a good idea to check your state law before you postdate a check and give it to an entity or another person.
From Encyclopedia.com ● Mar. 21, 2018
V. misdate, antedate, postdate, backdate, overdate†; anticipate; take no note of time, lose track of time; anachronize†.
From Roget's Thesaurus of English Words and Phrases by Roget, Peter Mark
Heck, it shouldn’t really be big news if you know Lady Gaga, period: Her entire career as a pop star, all of which postdates the 2005 launch of YouTube, has been fueled by the visual.
From Slate ● Mar. 8, 2019
The bulk of the activity postdates the end of Murray’s second marriage in 2008, but as with his screen performances, the dusting of midlife melancholy adds rather than subtracts from the stories.
From New York Times ● Nov. 29, 2016
“The truth is, nobody knows much of anything about this because the modern case law postdates quarantines,” said Michael Dorf, an expert on constitutional law and civil liberties at Cornell Law School.
From Forbes ● Oct. 27, 2014
A 1658 painting by him is the one work in the opening gallery that postdates the Manchu takeover.
From New York Times ● Sep. 8, 2011
From their character I am led to the belief that the drawing of human figures on pottery was a late development in Tusayan art, and postdates the use of animal figures on their earthenware.
From Archeological Expedition to Arizona in 1895 Seventeenth Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1895-1896, Government Printing Office, Washington, 1898, pages 519-744 by Fewkes, Jesse Walter
On appeal, Holmes plans to challenge several of the judge's rulings, including his allowance of evidence about Theranos' test accuracy that postdated her statements to investors.
From Reuters ● Apr. 11, 2023
These sites were assumed to have postdated the Bronze Age architecture of Mesopotamia and Egypt; instead, they came first.
From The New Yorker ● Jan. 13, 2020
In practice, Lucas’s evocation of Campbell — and his Jungian theories of storytelling — is most likely a postdated attempt to add intellectual heft to the project.
From Washington Post ● Dec. 19, 2019
While you may have written a postdated check in the past or known someone that has done this and given a check to you, is this legal?
From Encyclopedia.com ● Mar. 21, 2018
Eurasia and Mesoamerica developed indigenous writing, which failed to emerge in Polynesia, except perhaps on Easter Island, whose mysterious script may however have postdated the islanders’ contact with Europeans.
From "Guns, Germs, and Steel: The Fates of Human Societies" by Jared M. Diamond
![]()
The Constitution speaks of the right to vote in no fewer than five clauses—all five postdating the Civil War.
From Slate ● Jun. 27, 2016
Mayor Harry Arista Mackey & staff tried to kite the city's pay checks by postdating them until Jan. 1, when Philadelphia could sell $2,000,000 in bonds to the sinking fund.
From Time Magazine Archive
![]()
These glances of wisdom help make All the Real Girls the best, most ornery date movie of the postdating age.
From Time Magazine Archive
![]()
They contain no reference postdating that to Isaac Reed's revised edition of Robert Dodsley's Collection of Old Plays, published in 1780.
From A History of English Poetry: an Unpublished Continuation by Warton, Thomas
This value is -1 under C libraries postdating V6 Unix, but was originally 0.
From The Jargon File, Version 4.0.0, 24 Jul 1996 by Raymond, Eric S.