Horizon in a sentence as a noun

The worst is, there is no reform over the horizon.

Perhaps they saw the 5 year anniversary of the iPhone on horizon and figured enough BS is enough.

Its this competing against the impossible that makes it so much fun."And what is the distant horizon he's working toward?

" for long enough to realize they should be rallying together to fight this simple yet very destructive change that is right over the horizon.

It might loom large on the horizon for you and for a significant percentage of HN users, but let's not completely lose perspective here.

Now they want to try online retail with its logistics, warehousing, etc in emerging markets without a long term horizon.

Your clients might be, on average, and across some time horizon, buying and selling roughly the same amount of a security.

Yeah, it's great that you want to turn this biz into a billion dollar company but when that horizon is after the options expire it means the options are worthless.

It's traditional and tribal, and looking off toward the horizon and going away for fancy schooling just doesn't rank highly on most peoples' priorities.

Apple, who has to plan on a longer time horizon and who probably enlists the soft power of the government on a regular basis, has to be more cautious.

And that's precisely the coordinate system we typically change to in order to show that there's no essential singularity at the event horizon.

There's a manmade line going diagonally up/left across the center mountain, up the rock face, and then continues up/left to the little snow valley where Everest hits Lhotse along the horizon line.

Small pockets of sea-life survive on reefs in national parks, but as you look up from the water, you see trawlers scattered across the horizon - soundly within the nautical boundaries of the national parks.

You see the transient pleasures of beginnings diminish to nothing in the far future and the enduring rewards of finishing as a steady source of dividends extending out beyond the horizon.

[1][2] As pointed out by Raphael Bousso,[3] Thorn observed in 1978 that string theory admits a lower-dimensional description in which gravity emerges from it in what would now be called a holographic way.\nIn a larger sense, the theory suggests that the entire universe can be seen as a two-dimensional information structure "painted" on the cosmological horizon, such that the three dimensions we observe are only an effective description at macroscopic scales and at low energies.

Horizon definitions

noun

the line at which the sky and Earth appear to meet

See also: skyline

noun

the range of interest or activity that can be anticipated; "It is beyond the horizon of present knowledge"

See also: view purview

noun

a specific layer or stratum of soil or subsoil in a vertical cross section of land

noun

the great circle on the celestial sphere whose plane passes through the sensible horizon and the center of the Earth