15912 examples of futures in sentences

Nor is this the only instance in which even the noble among men have sought to clutch the grand opening futures, and wreathe the beauty of their promise about the consecrated graves of the past.

We give thee joy of new powers, new work, unprecedented futures!

The silence which is like that darkness which could be felt; the sudden awakening in the night with a wonder what it means that the loved one is not there; the pitiless morning light which fills the empty house, room after room; and harder than all else to forget, to rise abovethe perpetual sense of no future: even the little near futures of the next hour, the next day, all cut off, all closed, to the human being left utterly alone.

It furnisheth youth with action, and age with discourse, and both by futures; for a man must never boast himself in the present tense.

The young Mesuriers, for example, were all eagerly hastening towards their several futures.

"I deal with my employees, not with their futures or their mothers.

Isn't it ratheroh, unthrifty, to let pasts and futures spoil presents?

Isn't there a popular notion that our pasts have something to do with our futures?"

"We know, don't we, how hard it is for army men to find futures as civilians?" "I'm going into the forest service.

All these three great countries are still full of men, of gear, of saleable futures.

The life-histories of our relatives are prophetic of our own futures; they are far more instructive to us than those of strangers, far more fitted to encourage and to forewarn us.

My father held within his mighty frame A people's life: great futures died with him Never to rise, until the time shall ripe Some other hero with the will to save The outcast Zincali.

Commodity exchanges and futures trading: principles and operating methods.

Precisely the same thing exists to-day, only we term it the buying of futures, or the attempt to create a corner.

We shall find that the buying of futures, that is to say, of crops not yet grown or outputs not yet created, is still obnoxious to many of our legislatures to-day, and has been forbidden, or made criminal, in many States.

Our modern equivalent is the buying of futures or dealing in stocks without intent to deliver, both of which have been forbidden or made criminal in many of our States.

Regrating is narrowed to victuals, alive or dead, and to the reselling them at the fair or market where they were bought or within four miles thereof; and engrossing is given a definition very similar to our "buying of futures."

Laws protecting the public against fraud, which from earliest times has been a branch of police legislation, have been of late years numerous, principally in connection with the prohibition of dealing in futures or sales on margin, of sales of goods in bulk without due precautions and notice to creditors, of the issue of trading stamps or other device tending to mislead the public.

There is a very decided tendency throughout the country, particularly in the South, to prohibit all buying or selling of futures, that is to say, of a crop not actually sold, or of any article where physical delivery is never intended, and it will be remembered we found plenty of precedent for such legislation in early English statutes.

Gambling contracts may be forbidden only in specified places, such as stock exchanges; and the buying of futures may be specially permitted to favored persons, such as actual manufacturers intending to use the goods; and both such statutes will be held constitutional and not an undue interference with the liberty of contract.

At common law, then, these obnoxious acts may be analyzed into five definite heads: forestalling, regrating, and engrossingwhich have been thoroughly defined in an earlier chapter and the modern form of which in modern language might be called restraining production or fixing prices, the buying and selling of futures or gambling contracts, and cornering the marketrestraint of trade, and monopoly.

Gambling, contracts forbidden (see Futures), Game (see Fish and Game).

Even the best adjusted have moments of uncertainty and indecision about their occupational futures.

Contemplating the blind fury of these urchins, he thought of the cruel and abominable law of the struggle of existence; and, although these children were mean, he could not help being interested in their futures, yet could not but believe that it had been better for them had their mothers never given them birth.

Le roman des Fausses Confidences se joue au contraire dans le pays lumineux des songes, et Dorante et Araminte charmeront encore les générations futures quand déjà il ne sera plus parlé du Maxime Odiot de M. Feuillet et de sa Marguerite Laroque."

15912 examples of  futures  in sentences