Promising in a sentence as an adjective

The investor loans funds to the company and the company signs a note promising to repay the principal with interest.

A promising, arguably 'disruptive' company lost at a TechCrunch event to a startup backed by Michael Arrington?

I clicked the one that seemed most promising and somehow ended with a new Zip-Archiver installed ...So I went back and found the Partition Magic installer.

The tiles are smart, the apps are beautiful, the solution to multitasking is promising, but this whole new approach cannot coexist with a Windows desktop.

I've been harsh on Light Table because the source was nonfree and the promise to "open source" it eventually didn't look promising or community-friendly.

Nancy Pelosi's opposition, on the other hand, is somewhat surprising, but also quite promising.

Contaminated by an over-promising under-performing competitor that thought that 'growth' is equal to 'health'.

I suppose it boils down to this "By sending an email that repels all but the most gullible the scammer gets the most promising marks to self-select, and tilts the true to false positive ratio in his favor.

As a result our universities are increasingly populated by the over-vetted specialist to become the dreaded centers of excellence that infantilize and uniformize the promising minds of greatest agency.

Lest any youngsters take seriously the value of shares a startup is offering you, take a look at how seriously the author takes it:> With retention structures and contracts, a buyer can make sure the money goes where they want it to go to a promising junior engineer they want to keep on, for example, instead of the office manager who technically owned 20% of the companys equity.

Promising definitions

adjective

showing possibility of achievement or excellence; "a promising young man"

adjective

full or promise; "had a bright future in publishing"; "the scandal threatened an abrupt end to a promising political career"; "a hopeful new singer on Broadway"

See also: bright hopeful