Used in a Sentence

horizons

Definitions, parts of speech, synonyms, and sentence examples for horizons.

Editorial note

Which may or may not be true, but it does accurately portray the long time horizons of real-estate (e.g.

Examples17
Definitions4
Parts of speech1

Quick take

The visible horizontal line (in all directions) where the sky appears to meet the earth in the distance.

Meaning at a glance

The clearest senses and uses of horizons gathered in one view.

noun

The visible horizontal line (in all directions) where the sky appears to meet the earth in the distance.

noun

The range or limit of any dimension in which one exists.

noun

Any level line or surface.

Definitions

Core meanings and parts of speech for horizons.

noun

The visible horizontal line (in all directions) where the sky appears to meet the earth in the distance.

noun

The range or limit of any dimension in which one exists.

noun

Any level line or surface.

noun

(figuratively) The range or limit of one's knowledge, experience or interest; a boundary or threshold.

Example sentences

1

Which may or may not be true, but it does accurately portray the long time horizons of real-estate (e.g.

2

We could send a lot more data over that same distance if New Horizons had a large power supply.

3

New Horizons is using a 1/6 rate Turbo code for forward error correction, meaning 5/6 of the data returned is redundant.

4

Right now New Horizons is downloading at 2.11 kbs to Canberra, the max with both amplifiers transmitting with opposite circular polarizations.

5

Real-estate time horizons are long term in order to span across market cycles and because of the underlying nature of the asset.

6

VCs have longer time-horizons (a typical VC fund will be spent over 5 or so years) and appear more stable to landlords.

7

We haven't been able to observe them for the same reasons our telescopes can't see the New Horizons spacecraft out by Pluto, just too small.

8

Broaden your horizons, don't limit yourself to a geographic area.

9

Indeed this is exactly what New Horizons did very recently.

10

The New Horizons project, for example, only cost $700 million.

11

> >There's been a dramatic shift in corporate America, and the time horizons have shortened.

12

Consider the incredible amount of science coming out of projects like this ($600M), New Horizons (750M) or the Planck telescope ($750M), compared to the cost of the international space station (~$100B).

Quote examples

1

Assuming we could somehow accelerate a "New New Horizons" probe to near light speed, that's a disappointingly long time to wait for a flyby.

2

> Memory today is cheap (even if we're talking about the radiation-hardened stuff, for "space mission" levels of cheap) New Horizons was launched in January 2006, but I suspect you know this and you're just being dramatic to make a point.

Proper noun examples

1

New Horizons, for example, can't communicate with Earth unless it points its transmitter / receiver directly at us.

2

I saw a lot of people complaining online about the cost of New Horizons.

3

And Voyager 2, which doesn't have much to say, is still plugging away with a smaller Canberra antenna at 159 b/s, and a received power about that of New Horizons.

Frequently asked questions

Short answers drawn from the clearest meanings and examples for this word.

How do you use horizons in a sentence?

Which may or may not be true, but it does accurately portray the long time horizons of real-estate (e.g.

What does horizons mean?

The visible horizontal line (in all directions) where the sky appears to meet the earth in the distance.

What part of speech is horizons?

horizons is commonly used as noun.