Premeditate in a sentence as a verb

If the police are lying they would have had to actually premeditate the lie and synchronize their stories.

People will premeditate and ploy much more, if a consensus is the only thing standing between them and power.

Of course there's a premeditated PR campaign -- it's the launch of a major new initiative!

In this case, it would likely be "premeditated assault with a deadly weapon," and, if, God forbid, that child dies, the charge becomes first-degree ******.

From the post:"It is amazing how many candidates will not premeditate before diving into this interview question.

He made the premeditated decision to **** when he threw everything he knew about driving safely out the window and put the pedal to the metal.

It's about preventing impulsive suicides, not premeditated ones.

I know it's implied in your comment, but I hope that upon discovering someone was playing Netflix at home and not watching it, that the conclusion is still only "he was not at home while his Netflix is playing" and not "he put on Netflix to premeditate a ******.

This is a touchy subject and my statements are merely conjecture to kick off a discussion:Given the greater proportion of males to females using the service, is it fair to infer that men are more likely to cheat, or more likely to premeditate the act of being unfaithful?If the latter, and we assume both sexes are just as likely to cheat, for women it's more likely to be an impulsive act - one of passion - whereas for men it's a planned behavior.

Premeditate definitions

verb

consider, ponder, or plan (an action) beforehand; "premeditated murder"

verb

think or reflect beforehand or in advance; "I rarely premeditate, which is a mistake"