Elapse in a sentence as a verb

Once two weeks elapse, you'll be able to post comments and they won't be struck down.

From the photon's perspective there is no time elapse.

Weeks, months, or years may elapse between the commission of the crime and its discovery.

But just how much time does elapse, in real life, between stepping off a cliff and beginning to fall?Meh, not so much.

If you're just sitting there waiting for your 3 hours of "practice time" to elapse so you can go chill you may as well just not do it.

I think it renders your comments to you alone until $delay minutes elapse.

For instance, while a whole hour elapses in the real world, only a half hour might elapse in the simulation.

After watching the time elapse video it is only turning when the museum is open and people are moving about.

So you cannot know for sure exactly how many seconds there will elapse from now until for instance July 1st 2020 midnight UTC.

This might be valuable if you happen to have a list of domains that are about to elapse the 90-day renewal grace period.

Suffice to say that no, no time elapses between dropping and falling, but at the same time no, no signal or interaction has to propagate upward from the ground to Wile E. in order to make him start falling.

Nearly three minutes elapse during this sequence, during the captain and the first officer chatted constantly.

Yes, or sleep to elapse a time that's longer than needed to queue up the async message, say half a second, before returning the message to the browser.

But just how much time does elapse, in real life, between stepping off a cliff and beginning to fall?We can approach the problem naively by remembering that all propagating phenomena in the universe are limited by the speed of light.

They include the overall duration of vesting, whether there is any up front vesting, what period of time, if any, must elapse before there is any additional vesting, and under what circumstances there may be additional or accelerated vesting-for example in connection with a change of control of the company, or upon the termination of the founder.

Elapse definitions

verb

pass by; "three years elapsed"

See also: lapse pass