Definition: 1. For this reason. 2. (used to introduce a logical conclusion) from that fact or reason or as a result. 3. From this time. 4. From this place.
Use 'hence' in a sentence:
1. Hence, the issue of hybridity is felicitous rationale for the elaboration of Kureishi's works.
2. They grew up in Asia, hence their interest in oriental culture.
3. The descending rock is substantially cooler than the surrounding mantle and hence is less ductile and much more liable to fracture.
4. Hence, the rats told one another about this and moved one after another into his house, where they ate their fill all day long and lived in safety.
5. Admittedly, young people are generally more energetic than the elders, hence it is more likely for them to come up with new ideas.
6. The gases that may be warming the planet will have their main effect many years hence.
7. The university town is two miles hence.
8. Generally, young women have had growing success in the paid labor market since 1960 and hence might increasingly be expected to be a be to afford to afford to live independently of their parents.
9. In the foregoing example, the voltage source is nonideal and hence presents no difficulty.
10. Hence data governance becomes a very critical process for business success.
11. Hence, this session is of great importance.
12. European music happens to use a scale of eight notes, hence the use of the term octave.
13. Hence the growing importance of the student survey.
14. Other Europeans wrongly thought them migrant Egyptians, hence the derivative Gypsy.
15. Eighty percent of them are thought to involve small birds like doves and larks, and hence go largely unnoticed.
16. Most cancer has no obvious early symptoms, hence it is easy for it to escape diagnosis or be misdiagnosed.
17. It had a wider and deeper hull than the galley and hence could carry more cargo: increased stability made it possible to add multiple masts and sails.
18. Hence, 1930 and 1948 are generally considered bookends to Hollywood's Golden Age.
19. They can do only so much to represent the full complexity of the global climate and hence may give only limited information about natural variability.
20. The trade imbalance is likely to rise again in 1990. Hence a new set of policy actions will be required soon.
21. For centuries, medicine was impotent and hence unproblematic.
22. Hence, depictions of violence among teenagers should be prohibited from movies and television programs, if only in those programs and movies promoted to young audiences.
23. If the population of these other species were increased, the number of ticks acquiring the bacterium and hence the number of people contracting Lyme disease would likely decline.
24. They get caught in trees (hence the epithet "Witches' Knickers"), take hundreds of years to decompose and push up demand for oil, used to make plastics.
25. He is now in golden hence.
26. Generally, young women have had growing success in the paid labor market since 1960 and hence might increasingly be expected to be able to afford to live independently of their parents.
27. Hence people who began by beholding him ended by perusing him.
28. He was crude, drank too much, knew little law, and hence was undeserving to be lincoln's equal partner.
29. Ancient scholars believed that the position of the planets and hence the dates have a great influence on human lives.
30. Hence the surface texture can also provide information on the last fault activity.
31. Hence, the research of cost control is significant for oil production enterprises.
32. The trade imbalance is likely to rise again in 2007. Hence a new set of policy actions will be required soon.
33. Hence the sitting of refineries is at a distance from population centres.
34. Hence, the Jovian planets are often called giants.
35. Other Europeans (wrongly) thought them migrant Egyptians, hence the derivative Gypsy.
36. One day, when Epimetheus was out, she lifted the lid and out it came unrest and war, plague and sickness, theft and violence, grief sorrow, and all the other evils. The human world was hence to experience these evils.
37. Carousels are essentially slideshow navigations, in which the content rotates vertically or horizontally (hence the name "carousel").
38. Hence this letter.
39. It is good to consume tomatoes as they have lycopene, which is an antioxidant and hence works as a sunscreen from within.
40. Generally, the layering occurs on an annual basis, hence the observed changes in the records can be dated.
41. Hence, the system design has good practical and broad market prospects.
42. Hence, there is a real concern throughout Europe about the damage to the forest environment which threatens these three basic roles.
43. Hence, urbanization becomes the core of these three problems.
44. Whatever is hidden is harmful ( hence revelation equals security)
45. Hence our army must and certainly will triumph.
46. Hence, the transmission-reception system breaks down.
47. Some people seemed to believe that with the abolition of the emperor, China had become a democratic country and that hence forth everything would take its proper course.
48. You can customise the behavior of the Asynchronous Server and hence re-brand it by defining your own command set for invoking services.
49. We suspect they are trying to hide something, hence the need for an independent inquiry.
50. Hence the description of America as a "graveyard" for languages.
51. Smell is cultural, hence it is a social and historical phenomenon.
52. It is a rather shallow bowl that was crudely made in a mold; hence, in only a limited number of standard sizes.
53. Everyone wanted to bowl, hence everyone wanted to open a bowling alley.
54. All the isotopes of a given element have the same number of protons, but differ in their number of neutrons, and hence in their atomic mass.
55. The true consequences will only be known several years hence.
56. Hence the analogy that likens the conduct of monetary policy to driving a car with a blackened windscreen, a cracked rear-view mirror and a faulty steering wheel.