He placed the incipience of democratic faith at around 1850. From Wordnet, Princeton University.
The sky had lightened a little, but the air was heavy with the incipience of a storm. From Wordnik.com. [Black Blade]
Stile felt his heartbeat and respiratory rate increase with the incipience of this effort. From Wordnik.com. [Blue Adept]
Her teenage daughter, Mandy Ashley Rickards, is autistic, and that incipience can give way to utter chaos without warning. From Wordnik.com. ['Incendies' Burns With Mystery, Truth] Reference
It is almost the contrary: signification has its incipience in transcendence; transcendence is the intersubjective quality of sensibility. From Wordnik.com. [Emmanuel Levinas] Reference
The situation's bad, hence the decision to increase the presence of U.S. and international forces in Baghdad, though not clear that alone will be enough to quell this incipience of a war. From Wordnik.com. [CNN Transcript Jul 26, 2006] Reference
Our author, as we see, begins his above quoted deliverance quite at a loss with regard to the agency to which the incipience, growth, and fructification of man's faculties should be attributed. From Wordnik.com. [West Indian Fables by James Anthony Froude Explained by J. J. Thomas] Reference
He made Kaethe Gregorovius feel charming, meanwhile becoming increasingly restless at the all-pervading cauliflower — simultaneously hating himself too for this incipience of he knew not what superficiality. From Wordnik.com. [Tender is the Night] Reference
He aspired, moreover, to be known as the pilot of stars, at least in the incipience of their courses, to be taken seriously by association, since nature had arranged that he never could be on his intrinsic merits. From Wordnik.com. [Hilda A Story of Calcutta] Reference
Through the windows, he had seen sunlight streaking the Georgica Pond - the name a deliberate understatement typical of the local gentry, it being more the size of a lake - like pigment upon a painter's brush: there was a sense about the light of incipience, of colour that was not yet vivid, of an idea not yet formed. From Wordnik.com. [Black Blade]
He has no ray, no incipience of faculty beyond this. From Wordnik.com. [On the Old Road, Vol. 2 (of 2) A Collection of Miscellaneous Essays and Articles on Art and Literature] Reference
I am stranded is picked out in sketchy incipience around me. From Wordnik.com. [Under Fire: the story of a squad] Reference
Thus the Pullman boycott, sympathetic in its incipience, swiftly became a gigantic trial of issues between the associated railroad corporations and the union. From Wordnik.com. [History of the United States, Volume 5 (of 6)] Reference
To read fully as an adult must be -- I believe -- to relive something of that wondrous childhood incipience tempered with the adult's chastened backward vision. From Wordnik.com. [quotidian] Reference
I believe we are witnessing the incipience of a convergence of economic and ecological repercussions of actions that have been steered by power desideratum for way too long. From Wordnik.com. [Countercurrents.org] Reference
The pain in his head had given place to a strange sense of dilation, and there was a silent, confused riot in his fevered brain, which seemed to him like the incipience of insanity. From Wordnik.com. [The Ghost] Reference
The Corporate-S.ate and U.S. Law, now as in the past and, really since incipience, claims for itself property-rights and 'eminent domain' upon all within the borders of the territory. From Wordnik.com. [AlterNet.org Main RSS Feed] Reference
As I had determined to find out the germs of faults in children, which, when neglected, led to confirmed vices in the adult; so I was determined to discover disease in its incipience, and wherever possible, to remove the exciting cause. From Wordnik.com. [Another World Fragments from the Star City of Montalluyah] Reference
Mr. Mindon, though no biologist, was vaguely impressed by the way in which that accomplished woman had managed to transmit an acquired characteristic to her children: it struck him with wonder that traits of which he had marked the incipience in Millicent should have become intuitions in her offspring. From Wordnik.com. [The Line of Least Resistance] Reference
Sotomayor recommended The International Judge as a resource "of the politics and pragmatics of developing an international rule of law and of institution-building and offers some captivating portraits of the pioneers who work tirelessly to bring these institutions from their incipience to their maturity.". From Wordnik.com. [Latest Articles] Reference
While this dream does not exemplify trial-and-error processes in response to a psychic cue, it is proper to state that the same mechanism can be demonstrated in the more purely psychic dreams, as well as in this one, wherein we have followed the trial apperceptions of a stimulus, from their incipience, to the point of awaking to a conscious recognition of the source of excitation. From Wordnik.com. [The Journal of Abnormal Psychology] Reference
A specific territory, with a new ordinance which would allow more leeway in forming the States and give Congress more control over the domain from its incipience. From Wordnik.com. [The United States of America, Part 1] Reference
"developing an international rule of law and institution-building" and idealizes the "pioneers who work tirelessly to bring these institutions from their incipience to their maturity.". From Wordnik.com. [Lake Minnetonka Liberty] Reference
He sniffed once: the incipience of rain. From Wordnik.com. [beneath an opal moon]
incipience breaks moods easily isn’t always this way clipping nails once lent dignity insight-seeking, a catharsis in letting go but I already did that. From Wordnik.com. [Archive 2009-03-01] Reference
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