Antonym: retrospect. Similar words: introspect, introspection, aspect, suspect, spectrum, inspector, spectacle, inspection. Meaning: ['prɑspekt /'prɒspekt] n. 1. the possibility of future success 2. belief about (or mental picture of) the future 3. someone who is considered for something (for an office or prize or honor etc.) 4. the visual percept of a region 5. a prediction of the course of a disease. v. 1. search for something desirable 2. explore for useful or valuable things or substances, such as minerals.
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241. Having someone to do all my cleaning for me was an appealing prospect.
242. For two years Jim was alternately exhilarated and terrified by the prospect of dedicating his life to the Church.
243. And if it entailed a degree of sacrifice, there was always the prospect of better times, just around the corner.
244. BAs gloomy as this prospect might be, it also set us apart.
245. This amounts to compulsory purchase, but holds out the prospect that the shares will rise.
246. People here get just as excited about the prospect of buying a new bike as they might a new car.
247. Police shudder at the prospect of facing a population which has anti-aircraft guns and rocket launchers at its disposal.
248. Meanwhile Friday's retail sales figures allayed some concerns about the prospect of an abrupt economic landing.
249. Finding schools abroad may be a daunting prospect for employees.
250. It is this prospect that has prompted trade union leaders with a public-sector contingent to be wary about the single currency project.
251. Sometimes, the prospect of a breach of the peace may form the basis of pre-planned preventive action.
252. The extra cost of upgrading computers alone would be a daunting prospect for already over-stretched education budgets.
253. Often, the main obstacle between them is the prospect of dealing with forbidding galleries charging forbidding commission fees.
254. The bleak prospect of the labour camps, slavery in Siberia?
255. The auguries for such reforms are not good, and further urban unrest remains in prospect.
256. He is far from dismayed by the prospect of achieving financial independence at a time of a publishing recession.
257. Starting the time-consuming process of interviewing childminders all over again was a daunting prospect.
258. The very prospect of her life being picked over like some succulent titbit chilled her to the bone.sentencedict.com/prospect.html
259. Voice over Katharine Spencer-Nairn faces the rest of her life in a wheelchair, with now no prospect of receiving any compensation.
260. A handsome yet sylvan prospect where you could promenade to the music of brass bands.
261. The prospect of increasing the risk of cancer is frightening, but you must keep certain facts in mind.
262. She was surprised at the intensity of her disappointment at the prospect of missing Rob's party.
263. The strategy raises the prospect of voters with mobile phones being bombarded with election slogans from all parties.
264. So the spooky prospect of Prime Minister Hague is just too science fiction to scare the Labour herd into the polling booths.
265. The prospect of artificial hearts replacing reliance on cadaver hearts is already in sight.
266. The prospect of Hitler's trial in the aftermath of the failed putsch caused the Bavarian authorities acute embarrassment.
267. You might have thought that, in the abstract, the immediate prospect was attractive.
268. This handsome son of the Derby winner Shirley Heights looked a first-rate prospect when cantering home at Haydock.
269. The prospect of being marooned on Gullholm for days with a Heathcliff bereft of his Cathy gave her the creeps.
270. We have in prospect eight months of solitude, clinging to the edge of the world's coldest, remotest continent.
More similar words: introspect, introspection, aspect, suspect, spectrum, inspector, spectacle, inspection, perspective, spectacular, respectively, with respect to, irrespective of, to speak of, so to speak, special, species, specify, specific, expect, prosecutor, speculate, specialty, especially, prosecution, specialize, specialist, expected, speculation, specifically.