Forebear in a sentence as a noun

Sure, I'm just saying ML, just like its forebear AI, doesn't live up to the hype.

Rate setting is a part of Title II, whether or not the FCC says they will forebear.

The FCC is expected to forebear a lot of the Title II rules, and that may well be one of them.

It would better to forebear the loan for later repayment and gain the goodwill.

Freedom and choice is the whole point, isn't it?If you prefer an alternative or forebear to systemd, that is great.

The Westminster-style parliament they installed in Tokyo, like its British forebear, has two houses.

Do you credit the millionth timid mammal, your potential forebear, for surviving the Cretaceous-Paleogene extinction?

Reclassification will be a huge opportunity for consumer protection types to push for rate setting, and the FCC will have to defend why forebearance is appropriate.

Similarly, the premiere "news for nerds" site today is Hacker News, which comes out of the corporate world, while its forebear Slashdot of the early millennium had a more varied mix of professional IT people and hobbyists.

Nothing new under the sun."According to Zuboff, surveillance capitalism distinguishes itself from its industrial forebear as “a new economic order that claims human experience as a free source of raw material.” "

" I would love to meet one of these anarcho-linguists, since they sound like a lot of fun, but I'm afraid that they only live in the imagination of folks like Bloom and Acocella, following the path of their distinguished forebear in descriptivist strawmanism, David Foster Wallace.> Actual linguists and lexicographers who answer to the "descriptivist" label tend to be quite concerned with precisely those matters Bloom claims that they neglect.

Forebear definitions

noun

a person from whom you are descended

See also: forbear