(1) By now, he was a draughtsman participating in an early scientific project to codify the diversity of nature: henceforward, text would always be a behind-the-scenes presence in his work.
(2) Henceforward their threatening, glowering poses would provoke only derision.
(3) Henceforward syncytial layer has thickened, provisional spines have become conical, their matrix has become fibrous.
(4) The improvement in ultrasonic technics allows henceforward to measure the blood flow inside this anastomosis with a good precision.
(5) But that is where we will see him most henceforward.
(6) In April this year, Mervyn King announced that Winston Churchill would replace Elizabeth Fry on the £5 note; henceforward, the currency, surely the only showcase for achievement and power and legacy that everybody in the country will regularly see, would be entirely male.
(7) Henceforward, it suits to find just a balance between a social protection of a high standard and adapted care of quality for the best cost.
(8) In view of the possibility that educational efforts aimed at drug abuse prevention may be counterproductive, it is suggested that school-based programs henceforward be designed and conducted as experiments with controlled manipulation of relevant variables.
(9) Henceforward, British Airways passengers in first and business classes will again be able to eat their in-flight meals with metal cutlery.
(10) From serial studies of biopsy and autopsy specimens on the one hand, and from assessment of colon carcinoma incidence compared with mortality rates in carcinomas of different localizations on the other, it is evident that special attention should be given henceforward to adenomas, possible precursors, and carcinomas in the upper segments of the colon.
(11) It will be one of the noblest tasks of the profession henceforward to care for the treatment of this dentally underpriviledged part of our population.
Thenceforward
Definition:
(adv.) From that time onward; thenceforth.
Example Sentences:
(1) Influx of glucose into the brain is low in suckling rats but rises after weaning, to reach its highest level in the young adult, thenceforward declining slowly as age increases.
(2) Reasons are given for believing that hypertension may have been the original cause of left ventricular dilatation in some case of congestive cardiomyopathy in which loss of stroke output thenceforward is followed by normotension.