Provenient

Pro`ve´ni`ent


a.1.Forthcoming; issuing.
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary, published 1913 by G. & C. Merriam Co.
References in periodicals archive ?
Other photons emitted at the same time t [approximately equal to] 0, at a comoving position [MATHEMATICAL EXPRESSION NOT REPRODUCIBLE IN ASCII] will reach [psi] = 0 at t > [T.sub.0], together with the other photons provenient from astronomical objects along the way.
According to Yanagisawa (1998), The [Hg.sup.2+] provenient from Hg[Cl.sub.2] forms a complex with sulfhydryl-containing ligands such as albumin and glutathione.
This incongruence probably is provenient of measures in different regions of the pollen grain, since the mesocolpus is thickened in species of Cyclanthera.
Supplications provenient from every comer of Christendom demonstrate that marriage regulations had been adapted everywhere.
There is, however, more disparity than correspondence between Ariosto's knight and his provenient models.
Other photons emitted at the same time t = 0, at a comoving position [MATHEMATICAL EXPRESSION NOT REPRODUCIBLE IN ASCII] will reach [psi] = 0 at t > [T.sub.0], together with the other photons provenient from astronomical objects along the way.