abeyant

IPA: ʌbˈeɪʌnt

adjective

  • Being in a state of abeyance; suspended.
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Examples of "abeyant" in Sentences

  • This peerage became abeyant in 1406.
  • This creation became abeyant again in 1951.
  • The Earldom went extinct and the Barony abeyant.
  • He is a co heir to the abeyant barony of Grandison.
  • What is the difference between dormant and abeyant titles
  • Can I say this too or is it added slowly a confection abeyant synonym agreement hologr meu lar meu lar
  • He was what was called at Hintock “a solid-going fellow;” he maintained his abeyant mood, not from want of reciprocity, but from
  • He was nervously fingering the few coins in his pocket; but he had a curiously abeyant sense, as though he were looking, waiting for the climax.
  • Hintock "a solid-going fellow;" he maintained his abeyant mood, not from want of reciprocity, but from a taciturn hesitancy, taught by life as he knew it.
  • The wild romanticist, the lover of the strange and the lurid and the grotesque who created the "Symphonic Fantastique," never, perhaps, became entirely abeyant.
  • The women were apparently serious, too, and where they were associated with the men were, if they were not really subject, strictly abeyant, in the spectator's eye.
  • He was well descended and well connected (there was an abeyant peerage in his family), but in point of fact, his social position was not better than that of some other boys in the school.
  • But when restraints to which he had long been accustomed and to which he yielded passive obedience were removed, and he was left in a condition of license, all the abeyant passions of his undisciplined nature were brought into prominence and antagonism with an environment where reciprocal obligations have not always found their highest expression.

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synonyms for abeyant
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