Foregone in a sentence as an adjective

At what point does the psychic load of all the digital things equal the foregone physical things?

Even a large number of them vs the military is a foregone conclusion.

They don't have to spend any extra resources on her, she's not a foregone sale, and she's not displacing anyone who would have paid.

But in order to keep committed to those types of goals, necessarily some profit is going to have to be foregone.

Is it a foregone conclusion that others can't bring a baby to work?My biz partner brought his newborn in for about 10 months - it was awesome.

It would have been better if their PR department had foregone the absurd ******* nets and such, and simply said "Look, our ******* rate is lower than the rest of China's, so take that, biatches!

Fortunately, it's this "foregone conclusion" line of argument that the EFF actually pursues, and not the 'Privacy' line that seems to be popular in these replies.

This decision says it is but this is by no means a foregone conclusion under the law and that is why Amazon and Google have taken the conservative route and have not used de-duplication.

The case law the judge quotes says "where the existence and location of the documents are known to the government, no constitutional rights are touched, because these matters are a foregone conclusion.

Under the "foregone conclusion" doctrine, the government knew of the existence and location of these papers so the production of the papers added nothing or little to the government's information.

So the issue is whether the act of producing the documents is a testimonial act and therefore covered by the Fifth AmendmentThe court concludes that the act of production is a testimonial act because, one, the testimony was not a "foregone conclusion.

Foregone definitions

adjective

well in the past; former; "bygone days"; "dreams of foregone times"; "sweet memories of gone summers"; "relics of a departed era"

See also: bygone bypast departed gone