intended
IPA: ɪntˈɛndʌd
noun
- Fiancé or fiancée.
adjective
- Planned.
- (obsolete) Made tense; stretched out; extended; forcible; violent.
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Examples of "intended" in Sentences
- No kids either—the phrase intended to cast a fresh and jazzy light on our post-kids world.
- "Lacanian feminism" — a term intended very broadly — is influential in France, England, and (I understand) Italy.
- In fact, the true solution that Einstein intended is that in no part of the question was there even a mention of a fish.
- • Assists the Intercontinental Labeling Coordinator with creation and update activities of the label intended to be used in emerging markets
- The title intended by Sheridan for this paper was "Hernan's Miscellany," to which his friend Halhed objected, and suggested, "The Reformer," as a newer and more significant name.
- For liberals, pro-lifers are “single-issue Catholics” or “single-issue voters”, a label intended to accuse us of ignoring all the other life issues in the “seamless garment” that makes up their precious “consistent life ethic.”
- The chair of the fund was given to Tommy Thompson, the American secretary of health and human services, while Kofi Annan was designated “honorary president,” a title intended by the United States to advertise his lack of authority over the effort.
- Indeed, candidates who choose to take the government subsidies are deemed "clean candidates," a term intended to bias the electorate in their favor, and the government in effect instructs voters that "clean candidates" are less likely to engage in corruption once in office—a most dubious proposition.
- Bush issued a rule at the end of his term intended to serve as a poison pill against using endangered species protections to regulate climate change; Obama has hinted he would repeal that "midnight rule," but he has yet to do so, despite congressional authority to revoke the Bush rules with the stroke of a pen.
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