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Answer for the clue "Expert is broadcast live before now ", 8 letters:
preexist

Alternative clues for the word preexist

Word definitions for preexist in dictionaries

WordNet Word definitions in WordNet
v. exist beforehand or prior to a certain point in time; "Did this condition pre-exist?"

The Collaborative International Dictionary Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Preexist \Pre`["e]x*ist"\, v. i. [imp. & p. p. Pre["e]xisted ; p. pr. & vb. n. Pre["e]xisting .] To exist previously; to exist before something else.

Wiktionary Word definitions in Wiktionary
alt. To exist before something else. vb. To exist before something else.

Usage examples of preexist.

The Hobbesian variant focuses primarily on the transfer of the title of sovereignty and conceives the constitution of the supranational sovereign entity as a contractual agreement grounded on the convergence of preexisting state subjects.

In a typical forest, what probably happens is that the preexisting ecosystem is hammered by few years of drought, says Steve Jackson, a paleoclimate researcher from the University of Wyoming.

They kept their scientists and engineers together in their preexisting teams, still working on WMD projects but dispersed and attached to bland government agencies where Baghdad assumed the inspectors would never think to look.

One fear is that insurers will classify the mutations as a preexisting condition and so refuse to cover treatments related to the condition.

If it concedes the permission, it must leave the whole electoral people under the preexisting electoral law free to take part in the work of reorganization, and to vote according to their own judgment.

With a little help from Erda, the Earth Mother (another of those preexisting beings), he gains enough insight to realize that he must surrender the ring.

Extreme mental agitation and confusion, possibly related to preexisting alcoholism, drug abuse, mental illness or some combination of all three.

Or, just as often, individuals had a satori-like experience and then used it to bolster their preexisting stage of adaptation: a businessman used the new freedom to return to the office and more aggressively one-up his associates.

The Winnebago dealer had a preexisting GI complaint, peptic ulcer disease, which, though controlled by an over-the-counter medication, gave Ebola an easy target.

Algernon Blackwood, for instance, wrote of intelligent beings who preexisted mankind on earth.

I wonder if the rituals of bonding have to do with this similarity which preexisted or if, more interestingly, that similarity is an outcome of the bonding process.

For this reason every night I spend hours and hours spelling out, with great concentration, the letters of the written Torah, to confuse them, to make them spin like the wheel of a mill, and thus cause to reappear the original order of the eternal Torah, which preexisted creation and had been given to the angels by the Almighty, blessed be his name always.

When mind reflects on nature, much of the nature is preexisting or pre-mental (the sensorimotor components).

And in that creation of culture, a reflection paradigm is woefully inadequate, because preexisting holons are not being discovered, but rather newly created holons are being produced.

All of the preexisting problems might have doomed the regime change plan anyway, but what clearly sunk it was the Kosovo war.