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Time machine option
Answer for the clue "Time machine option ", 6 letters:
future
Alternative clues for the word future
Word definitions for future in dictionaries
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
Future is the ninth studio album of the music project Schiller created by the German electronic musician Christopher von Deylen . The album was released on . On this album Schiller has collaborated with the singers Kêta, Arlissa , Emma Hewitt , Samu Haber ...
WordNet
Word definitions in WordNet
n. the time yet to come [syn: hereafter , futurity , time to come ] [ant: past ] a verb tense that expresses actions or states in the future [syn: future tense ] bulk commodities bought or sold at an agreed price for delivery at a specified future date
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Future \Fu"ture\, n. [Cf. F. futur. See Future , a.] Time to come; time subsequent to the present (as, the future shall be as the present); collectively, events that are to happen in time to come. ``Lay the future open.'' --Shak. The possibilities ...
Usage examples of future.
Normans and Saracens, abjured all future hostility against the person or dominions of their conqueror.
That would require leaving sufficient men aboard to subdue the prisoners, which in turn made any future action more hazardous.
They were going to charge Abies with the murder of Deputy Marshal Bascombe, and Mellis with assault on a federal officer, while reserving future charges against twelve-year-old Judith.
In our space-time, the acausal eschaton particle is always in the future, rather like the singularity inside a black hole.
He was an acausal double, a synchronous mirrorself, the echo of the godmind returning from the future, as unconscious of his power as the Delph was aware.
Thyrza, and, though she could only acquiesce, the future had looked grey and joyless.
When the negro colleges first opened, there was a glow of enthusiasm, an eagerness of study, a facility of acquirement, and a good order that promised everything for the future.
Godfrey without children, or on the future acquisition of a new seat at Cairo or Damascus.
Their substitutes for adaptability can sustain them only in the limited enclaves of civilization, not in the wide open spaces of the desert, or in the terrifying futures Paul opens himself to in his visions.
The confirmation of that truth becomes irresistible when we see how reason and conscience, with delighted avidity, seize upon its adaptedness alike to the brightest features and the darkest defects of the present life, whose imperfect symmetries and segments are harmoniously filled out by the adjusting complement of a future state.
And he drew from recollection, the raw enthusiasm of his adolescence, when ideals were a substitute for judgment, life was play, and the future entailed nothing more lively than horse raids and begetting children.
FELLOW-CITIZENS:--When the General Assembly, now about adjourning, assembled in November last, from the bankrupt state of the public treasury, the pecuniary embarrassments prevailing in every department of society, the dilapidated state of the public works, and the impending danger of the degradation of the State, you had a right to expect that your representatives would lose no time in devising and adopting measures to avert threatened calamities, alleviate the distresses of the people, and allay the fearful apprehensions in regard to the future prosperity of the State.
I recollect his warmth of heart and high sense, and your beauty, gentleness, charms of conversation, and purely disinterested love for one whose great worldly advantages might so easily bias or adulterate affection, I own that I have no dread for your future fate, no feeling that can at all darken the brightness of anticipation.
Finally, after having remarked that times of tranquillity were the proper seasons for lessening the national debt, and strengthening the kingdom against future events, he recommended to the commons the improvement of the public revenue, the maintenance of a considerable naval force, the advancement of commerce, and the cultivation of the arts of peace.
I reluctantly infer from the war that we may not remain a nation made up solely of agriculturalists, lest in a future conflict the United States overwhelm us with their numbers and their industries.