forebear - use in sentences

Converse of object

  • fight: Too many of our forebears not only fought and died for it.
  • use: Long Melford village is in very close proximity to area where his forebears used to live for centuries.
  • prescribe: For I have sworn before you and Almighty God the same solemn oath our forebears prescribed nearly a century and three quarters ago.
  • find: However, nothing quite beats the thrill of suddenly finding a forebear on a film or handling a document signed by a great-great-great-grandfather.

Adjective modifier

  • illustrious: Today's evangelicals are surely no less concerned than their illustrious 19th century forebears for holistic societal reform.
  • Victorian: Compared to their Victorian forebears, today's local administrations lack the powers to govern in the round.
  • spiritual: One of the achievements of our spiritual forebears was to embody love.
  • own: He said his own forebears had come from central Europe in a previous wave of immigration, no doubt to escape persecution.
  • immediate: There is little in the 18th-century that suggests any immediate forebears.
  • medieval: The English philologist and historian, Owen Barfield, has pointed out how our medieval forebears enthusiastically elaborated the possibilities of logical judgment.

Modifies a noun

  • regiment: The Queen's Regiment The Queen's Regiment inherited a rich history of traditions including marches from the forebear Regiments.
  • appendice: Aircraft designed and built by McDonnell-Douglas and forebears Appendices: A: Production summary.

Noun used with modifier

  • century: The Quaker families in those concerns, like their 18th century forebears, accumulated wealth on a stunning scale.
  • pagan: In his reply the Imam accuses him of enmity toward the prophets and of the love of his pagan forebears.

Preposition: in

  • faith: They literally and symbolically hold the DNA of the stories of these who are our forebears in the faith.

Preposition: of

  • today: Such innovations are, perhaps, the spiritual forebears of today 's non-invasive imaging techniques, such as ultrasound.

The word usage examples above have been gathered from various sources to reflect current and historical usage. They do not represent the opinions of YourDictionary.com.