Sentence Examples
The demand for social change offers them but one alternative, viz., that of upholding the violent method or of maintaining the status quo. |
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But theologians are rather poorly represented, so I will have to resort to antique methods, viz., visiting a library. |
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Let us consider the durable vision of our Constitution and the commitments that unite us as Americans, viz., the Bill of Rights. |
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As observed earlier, the Convention applies to biodiversity from all sources, viz. terrestrial, marine, and other aquatic sources. |
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But at least there was a coherent stance behind it, viz. an absolutist rejection of force, whatever the consequences. |
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To our mind, there is a far better handicap than any of these, viz., the bisque. |
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The article focuses on what proves to be the two most distinctive uses of MAKE, viz. the delexical and causative uses. |
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An Arabian author mentions other tribes beside the Himyarites as adherents of Judaism, viz., the Banu Kinana Banu Hareth ben Kab, and Kinda. |
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He argues as if a tick of the clock, viz. the arrival of the Middle Ages, could cause the widespread destruction which India suffered. |
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From the gunas manifest the five material elements, viz., earth, water, fire, air and ether. |
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The first describes the threshold for its operation, viz. the officer being of the opinion that a worker who qualifies has not received the national minimum wage. |
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The bank giro credit, which is delivered to the drawee bank and not to the payee, is payable as soon as the drawee, viz. the originator's bank, can make payment. |
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He was multifaceted and multi-dimensional genius, who excelled in every sphere viz., as a teacher, a poet, a scholar and a public relations officer. |
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I had a pretty dinner for them, viz. a brace of stewed carp, six roast chickens and a jowl of hot salmon. |
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The draft guidelines from the Commission refer to one very specific aspect of the policy on State aids viz. regional aids. |
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The article focuses on what prove to be the two most distinctive uses of MAKE, viz., the delexical and causative uses. |
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For practical reasons, agricultural products are sometimes divided into two groups, viz. tropical products and others. |
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They are material, viz., temporary, full of ignorance and miserable, and thus just opposite to the original constitution of the soul. |
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Such a practice helps harmonize two hemispheres of the brain and the two aspects of autonomous nervous system viz. sympathetic and parasympathetic. |
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This has the appearance of dispensing with the use of proper names and dispensing also with the recognition of what proper names typically refer to, viz. individuals. |
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He ends up looking exactly the sort of person his former girlfriends reckoned him to be, viz. a twerp. |
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This programme consists of three activities, viz. nursery raising activities, sapling plantation activities and fodder farming. |
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So imagine a world in which plants and animals instantiate the key property associated with vitalism, viz., élan vital. |
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The broadcasters' neighbouring right is there to protect the broadcasters' entrepreneurial efforts and investments in the form in which they materialize as an end product from their activity, viz. the broadcasts. |
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As to, the joint intention, like any intention, commits the intending agents to carry out its content, viz. to act. |
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Now there is no denying some people don't suit certain colours ever, and in fairness some colours don't suit people ever viz. tangerine so be careful. |
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Apparently, it is because the skeptic is justified in thinking that 'water is scrumptious' might express a different thought than the one it actually expresses on Earth, viz., that water is wet. |
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Be that as it may, the real issue in terms of competition is to analyse what affects the accounts of La Poste relative to its competitors, viz. the contributions payable. |
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There are four terms in the year, viz. 1. Michaelmas term, which begins on the 10th of October, and ends on the 17th of December. |
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Lastly, in 1896, Kellogg described two new species, viz. D. calwu from a variety of the Common Guillemot, and D. acutipedus from a Fraterculine host. |
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There are seven mysteries, or sacraments, in the Greek church, viz. baptism, the chrism, the eucharist, confession, ordination, marriage, and the holy oil. |
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The problem isn't just Brenda, it is that there will never be agreement on what to replace her with. viz. the House of Lords debacle, the Australian Republican referendum. |
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Examples from Classical Literature
The object of the enjoyment of women is twofold, viz., pleasure and progeny. |
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Then there is the other consideration, viz., if there is to be this purifying it must be done by myself. |
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He knew of but one justification for the thing he said, viz., that it was the thing he thought. |
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And lastly, there is a fourth coincidence, viz., that neither of these places exists. |
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As an illustration of this metamorphosis, we give figures of the zoea Taurus in two states, viz., Fig. |
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On the other hand, when peptone was introduced in larger quantity, viz., in a twenty per cent. |
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Now there is a certain amount of statements to this very effect, viz., to the Welsh origin of the Armorican. |
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The knight is clad in armour, viz., a spherical bascinet, with a camail of chain-mail. |
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The griffin is rarely borne in other than two positions, viz., passant and segreant. |
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My creature, viz., a particular expression of will, would have become my dominator. |
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So we come to the only one of the present forms of evolution which remains for us to mention, viz., neo-Lamarckism. |
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My visit was at the least favourable time of the year, viz., in winter. |
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The study of the diseases of the eye has greatly developed another specialty during the century, viz., ophthalmology. |
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The burden of all these articles is the same, viz., the unity of Swedenborgianism and Fourierism. |
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This resembles that for the tubercle bacillus, viz., drying on a cover glass and staining with fuchsin or methyl-olin. |
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The fauna and flora are therefore to be regarded as having reached them in the normal mode, viz., by migration on land. |
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And on the first opportunity he did get into tights, viz., as the brigand. |
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