Word info

due course

Noun

Meaning

due course (usually uncountable, plural due courses)

(idiomatic) Regular or appropriate passage or occurrence

Source: en.wiktionary.org

Examples

Sometimes people carry to such perfection the mask they have assumed that in due course they actually become the person they seem. W. Somerset Maugham

The format of the nightly newscasts is still very much 1981 - "Tremble, onlookers! I am the anchorman and now here is a miracle: a report by satellite from many thousands of miles away. I will return to introduce another one in due course." Keith Olbermann

It was the technique of a man who selected thoughts as one might select pieces of a jigsaw puzzle. In due course they would be reassembled together so as to make a clear and coherent picture. At the moment the important thing was the selection, the separation. Agatha Christie

In due course of time, Hindus will cease to be Hindus and Muslims will cease to be Muslims, not in a religious sense because that is the personal faith of an individual, but in a political sense as citizens of one state. Muhammad Ali Jinnah

I think that if men treat animals badly, they will almost certainly treat human beings badly in due course. Malcolm Muggeridge

But in due course it became evident that not only a physical situation qua physics, but the meaning of that situation to people, was sometimes a factor, through the behavior of people, in the start of a fire. Benjamin Lee Whorf

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