(Of a situation) characterized by or causing suspense.
1 The king could affix a suspensive veto to the acts of the Cortes.
2 We are not to be allowed even a suspensive veto.
3 In 1768 Paucton conceived the idea of an apparatus with two screws, suspensive and propulsive.
4 The question was whether the veto-power was suspensive or absolute as to amendments of the Constitution.
5 You mean those little metal balls that they used to put in machinery before suspensive magnetic interfaces?
6 Thus the clause conferring a suspensive veto on the President is an almost literal transcript from the Massachusetts constitution.
7 The ordinary man of letters does not readily put up with suspensive expressions, any more than common people do so.
8 Their anti-tumoral efficacy has been shown, their effect seems to be suspensive which raises the question of their tolerability for long term use.
9 He is armed with a veto or suspensive power, which allows him to stop, or at least to retard, its movements at pleasure.
10 6 Conditions relating to past or present time either make the obligation void at once, or have no suspensive operation whatever.
11 The king could affix a suspensive veto to the acts of the Cortes.
12 We are not to be allowed even a suspensive veto.
13 In 1768 Paucton conceived the idea of an apparatus with two screws, suspensive and propulsive.
14 The question was whether the veto-power was suspensive or absolute as to amendments of the Constitution.
15 You mean those little metal balls that they used to put in machinery before suspensive magnetic interfaces?
16 Thus the clause conferring a suspensive veto on the President is an almost literal transcript from the Massachusetts constitution.
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