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"incipiency" Definitions
  1. the state or fact of being incipient : BEGINNING

5 Sentences With "incipiency"

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

But looking back on that stuff is fascinating because it shows a genre in its fruitful incipiency, when people weren't afraid to make mistakes, be silly, and play with the idea of what rap actually could be.
It reaffirmed a pro-enforcement stance on "market definition" (that imperfect, art-and-science effort by which courts gauge a merger's competitive effects), relying extensively on another big Federal Trade Commission victory in the 2014 case challenging ProMedica's acquisition of its rival St. Luke's Hospital, and reaffirmed merger law's once-strong "incipiency" rule, which takes competitive threats seriously enough to stop even those deals that merely threaten some potential harm.
384 U.S. 321-22. But that made no difference, the Court said, and quoted this passage from the MPAS decision: > It is . . . clear that the Federal Trade Commission Act was designed to > supplement and bolster the Sherman Act and the Clayton Act . . . to stop in > their incipiency acts and practices which, when full blown, would violate > those Acts . . .
The Clayton Antitrust Act of 1914 (, codified at , ), was a part of United States antitrust law with the goal of adding further substance to the U.S. antitrust law regime; the Clayton Act sought to prevent anticompetitive practices in their incipiency. That regime started with the Sherman Antitrust Act of 1890, the first Federal law outlawing practices considered harmful to consumers (monopolies, cartels, and trusts). The Clayton Act specified particular prohibited conduct, the three-level enforcement scheme, the exemptions, and the remedial measures. Like the Sherman Act, much of the substance of the Clayton Act has been developed and animated by the U.S. courts, particularly the Supreme Court.
When the term "socialized medicine" first appeared in the United States in the early 20th century, it bore no negative connotations. Otto P. Geier, chairman of the Preventive Medicine Section of the American Medical Association, was quoted in The New York Times in 1917 as praising socialized medicine as a way to "discover disease in its incipiency," help end "venereal diseases, alcoholism, tuberculosis," and "make a fundamental contribution to social welfare." However, by the 1930s, the term socialized medicine was routinely used negatively by conservative opponents of publicly funded health care who wished to imply it represented socialism, and by extension, communism. Universal health care and national health insurance were first proposed by U.S. President Theodore Roosevelt.

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