Sentence examples for envisaging the possibility from inspiring English sources

Exact(2)

Envisaging the possibility of neuromuscular blockade invites us to question our intentions.

When the latter misses classes for health care reasons, they just say he/she is sickly, without envisaging the possibility that the pupil has AIDS.

Similar(58)

The tendency of the former is to relate to a concrete, magical presence of the sacred and to envisage the possibility of using this presence for the achievement of such desired ends as healing, blessing, or success in an undertaking.

Among the leading personalities of this early period was David Sarnoff, later of the Radio Corporation of America and the National Broadcasting Company, who first, in 1916, envisaged the possibility of a radio receiver in every home.

He was the first dramatist to identify violence as "the defining quality of modern civilisation" and the first to envisage the possibility of social disintegration, offering "the sort of imaginative dislocation of reality" that would become characteristic of modern drama.

The aim of this article is to explore the psychiatric origin of many psychoanalytical theories of "trans-sexuality" and pinpoint their limits, so as to envisage the possibility of post-trans-sexuality psychoanalysis.

105 Here, with regard to the right to the fair compensation payable to authors under the private copying exception, it does not follow from any provision of Directive 2001/29 that the European Union legislature envisaged the possibility of that right being waived by the person entitled to it.

Ignore the instant and predictable froth that will be generated in the right-wing press over the fact that the draft envisages the possibility - but it is only that, a possibility - that the new Europe might eventually be called the United States of Europe.

But arbitrary cuts that fall suddenly give people no chance to adjust.To stretch the point, there's a reason why hipster local labour exchanges use the unit of "hours" as currency, a move that actually goes back to Robert Owen's National Equitable Labour Exchange in the 1830s, and why sci-fi plots like that of "Time Out" envisage the possibility of substituting time for money entirely.

For slightly larger differences, we could envisage the possibility of reducing the length of the longest limb or slow its growth.

It is true that the complex mechanisms required to set up DAs may be so tiresome as to envisage the possibility of numerous failures or dropouts.

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