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16 Sentences With "in the immediate past"

How to use in the immediate past in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "in the immediate past" and check conjugation/comparative form for "in the immediate past". Mastering all the usages of "in the immediate past" from sentence examples published by news publications.

In the immediate past, the community has been instrumental in the country's struggle against colonialism and eventual freedom.
Though he'd cried wolf about his retirement twice in the immediate past, it really, finally seemed to be over.
"Some Rise by Sin" takes place in the immediate past; a child abuse scandal involving another priest plugs into contemporary concerns.
In the immediate past, this friendlier disposition to America's traditional Gulf allies has, operationally, lent a "hawkish" cast to Clinton's record.
"We see prospective returns on risk at a lower level than in the immediate past years," Future Fund chair Peter Costello said in a statement.
There's always a delay, each of us living in the immediate past of the other, regardless of how tightly he wrapped his arms around my waist.
The remainder of them were product molecules in the immediate past ([ABr]‡). In TST, it is assumed that the flux of activated complexes in the two directions are independent of each other. That is, if all the product molecules were suddenly removed from the reaction system, the flow of [ABr]‡ stops, but there is still a flow from left to right. Hence, to be technically correct, the reactants are in equilibrium only with [ABl]‡, the activated complexes that were reactants in the immediate past.
Bio has also eliminated application fees for students in government-run public universities across Sierra Leone. Bio has recently cancelled China's funded four hundred million dollar loan agreement with the previous Sierra Leone president Ernest Bai Koroma to build a new international airport in Sierra Leone. In his first two months in office, Bio has opened an ongoing review and audit of all government mining contracts, ministry departments, and other government agencies in the immediate past government of Ernest Bai Koroma. In his first two months in office, Bio sacked all of Sierra Leone's ambassadors and permanent representatives abroad in the immediate past government of Ernest Bai Koroma.
He believed the feeling of movement and change that make up our experience of music derive from holding the immediate past and the present in the brain together. The musical notes from the past are transformations rather than memories. The notes that were implicate in the immediate past become explicate in the present. Bohm viewed this as consciousness emerging from the implicate order.
Ikpeng uses to morphemes to conjugate verbs in the "immediate past," meaning a period of time understood to be the moment right before the present and, at the very latest, yesterday (Campetela, 1997). These morphemes are /–lɨ/ and /–lan/, with /–lɨ/ being used for actions witnessed by the speaker, and /–lan/ for actions that were not witnessed by the speaker (1997). "Areplɨ tupi muin." ∅-arep-lɨ tupi ∅ mui-n "The white man's canoe arrived" (1997).
Ecology 66, 1699-1705 This was found to be the case for Anax junius which fed on either mayfly nymphs or tubifex worms. From this Bergelson came up with the rule of thumb that consumers should "continue to pursue only those prey types you have successfully captured in the immediate past." Prey switching can alter the influence of predation on ecosystem function. For example, predators that switch between feeding on herbivores and detritivores can link green and brown food webs.
" Akhila Menon of FilmiBeat also rated the film 4/5 and stated that Ranjith Sankar "manages to bring up a very simple theme and portray it without any entertaining gimmicks or over-dosage of sentiments." She concluded that the film was a "tender and completely engrossing family drama." Padmakumar K of Malayala Manorama rated it 3.5 out of 5 and wrote, "Many scenes are tearjerkers, but they lend an aura of substance as no other film in the immediate past has been able to.
Vendler states that language is not the only barrier to expression in 23 though, continuing to say that when the poem recognizes "that tongue" in line 12 as a rival to the "character", Shakespeare intends "the tongue-tiedness rather as a fear of trusting the audience--the potentially faithless beloved." Manfred Pfister argues that each sonnet has a "speaker" that, like a character in a play, delivers the sonnet with an awareness of the present moment, what has happened in the immediate past, and the audience hearing the text. Heather Dubrow writes that the sonnets are "plotted" too often. She argues that narrativizing them and applying a biographical lens to them is unwise because of how little we know about their original form.
Experts testified that the bullet taken from Abu-Jamal was fired from Faulkner's service weapon. George Fassnacht, the defense's ballistics expert, did not dispute the findings of the prosecution's experts. Amnesty International, with reference to the physical evidence, has expressed the view that "...the police failed to conduct tests to ascertain whether the weapon had been fired in the immediate past...Compounding this error, the police also failed to conduct chemical tests on Abu-Jamal's hands to find out if he had fired a gun recently." In a 1995 hearing, a defense ballistics expert testified that due to Abu-Jamal's struggle with the police during his arrest, such a test would have been difficult to accomplish and, due to the gunpowder residue possibly being shaken or rubbed off, would not have been scientifically reliable.
He writes: > We shall not need to speak of a play's poetry ... something that seemed > relatively unimportant in the immediate past. It seemed not only > unimportant, but misleading, and the reason was not that the poetic element > had been sufficiently developed and observed, but that reality had been > tampered with in its name ... we had to speak of a truth as distinct from > poetry ... we have given up examining works of art from their poetic or > artistic aspect, and got satisfaction from theatrical works that have no > sort of poetic appeal ... Such works and performances may have some effect, > but it can hardly be a profound one, not even politically. For it is a > peculiarity of the theatrical medium that it communicates awarenesses and > impulses in the form of pleasure: the depth of the pleasure and the impulse > will correspond to the depth of the pleasure. Brecht's most influential poetry is featured in his Manual of Piety (Devotions), establishing him as a noted poet.
Contiguous internal minutes for the British Society for Research on Ageing (BSRA) are only currently available from June 1954 onwards. These were written at a time when the society was entering into a period of expansion but picture it (i) as active in the immediate past and (ii) active from a much earlier period (possibly pre-1939 since the Society is described as "instrumental in the establishment of gerontological societies in European and American countries"). The earliest extant List of Members and Rules of the Society available to the Society today dates from 1954 Based on internal document series and the number of members listed this was probably printed after October 1954 but before the close of the year (the executive committee meeting at which the new members were admitted taking place on 15 October). The combined List of Members and Rules of the Society is listed as the 3rd Edition which (assuming the annual or semi-annual printing that is normal practice for lists of society members) is consistent with a (now regrettably lost) 1st Edition probably printed 1950–1952.

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