Procession in a sentence as a noun

This whole procession was washing past many of the famous rocks.

They're dealing with a procession of people each of whose stated position is to judge them.

People go to jail for decades for procession of *********.

Too bad they didn't roll out a funeral procession like they did for the iPhone when Windows Phone launched...

In the vast majority of personal combat games, a huge amount of enemies come at you, in an endless procession.

My wife was in the audience and I was so engrossed in our Cybiko chat that I took a wrong turn on the stage and ended up getting into the procession line twice.

Where the iPhone funeral procession would look like anything other than premature celebration?

When was the last time you watched a Formula 1 race?It was boring because there weren't any restrictions, and so the best teams were so far ahead the races just became a procession.

Are these theoretical or have they been done in the real world?I have seen an endless procession of game-theoretic illustrations of nove problem solving techniques.

>> leads them to judge your work in the harshest light instead of an evaluative one> Should any professionals have to present apologetics for others in his procession doing such a thing?

It's also effective to put loops in your procession, so that you return to a topic that you covered earlier, reiterating its significance and reminding the audience of it.

History is nothing but an endless procession of empires and civilisations falling in tatters, no matter how many of their plucky young problem-solvers were united in worry.

A meaningless procession of skill building that builds the muscle memory and "know how" required to be successful at the more complex task of managing a game and leading an offence, which is what a quarterback really does.

Procession definitions

noun

(theology) the origination of the Holy Spirit at Pentecost; "the emanation of the Holy Spirit"; "the rising of the Holy Ghost"; "the doctrine of the procession of the Holy Spirit from the Father and the Son"

See also: emanation rise

noun

the group action of a collection of people or animals or vehicles moving ahead in more or less regular formation; "processions were forbidden"

noun

the act of moving forward (as toward a goal)

See also: progress progression advance advancement