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precursory
[ pri-kur-suh-ree ]
adjective
- of the nature of a precursor; preliminary; introductory:
precursory remarks.
- indicative of something to follow:
precursory indications of disease.
precursory
/ ±è°ùɪˈ°ìɜ˲õÉ™°ùɪ /
adjective
- serving as a precursor
- preliminary or introductory
˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins
Origin of precursory1
Example Sentences
Any precursory comparisons to “Hamilton†are understandable, given that both stage musicals focus on an outspoken writer, a pivotal president and a years-long war that determined the country’s future.
"There are some cases where there are dramatic and very distinctive precursory seismic signals that precede a catastrophic landslide, sometimes by as much as days," Highman noted.
“It doesn’t give you a precursory, predictive ability because it’s a statement of how you’ve summed it rather than what’s going on at a particular earthquake,†she adds.
These observations suggest perhaps there really are precursory signals for at least some huge quakes.
But researchers said there are few large-scale earthquakes to study in California and that makes it difficult to indicate whether precursory signals at one fault would apply to others.
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