0 present participle of form
1 to begin to exist or to make something begin to exist:
This information formed the basis of the report.
Together they would form the next government.
I formed the impression (= the way she behaved suggested to me) that she didn't really want to come.
Extrusion machinery was based on an entirely different principle for forming clay products.
Nevertheless, small property-owners could dodge this obstacle by forming associations that shared the costs of buying and installing subterranean pumping machinery.
But other scholars have shown that the m mm m initiative for forming hang originated with the state, not merchants themselves.
They show that, under the conditions specified, norms do not reflect individuals' interests in per forming a particular behavior. 61.
Decades of patenting activity prior to mid-century produced three distinctly different procedures for mechanically forming clay products.
This passage is made even stronger by having all instruments play in unison with the vocals, thus forming a powerful hook.
Consequently, we can merge safe x-intervals satisfying these criteria with their adjacent unsafe x-intervals, hence forming one larger unsafe x-interval.
In this sense, negotiation is about adjusting the terms of an agreement as opposed to the protocol-oriented view of forming an agreement.