Humanities Sentence Examples

humanities
  • He studied at Paris from 1509 to 1512, and in 1519 was appointed professor of humanities at Louvain.

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  • It was, however—and this is sure to earn me the wrath of many humanities professors—a time of surprisingly little originality.

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  • Arts & humanities citation index (AHCI) is worth using if your dissertation spans these subject areas.

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  • Increased communication between different humanities disciplines would be welcomed, as would better ways to socially contextualize texts and genres.

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  • In all cases examples are given for both the humanities style and the scientific style.

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  • Staff are accommodated in a tastefully refurbished building linked to the Humanities building (The Geoffrey Manton Building).

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  • Certainly there must be freedom to frame the law as a humanities discipline and not solely as a branch of social science.

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  • It is an independent and self-governing fellowship of scholars, elected for distinction and achievement in the humanities or social sciences.

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  • These will address both social science and humanities constituencies, encouraging the rapprochement of disciplines in a comparative approach to contemporary global cultural change.

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  • Staff are accommodated in a tastefully refurbished building linked to the Humanities building (The Geoffrey Manton Building ).

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  • For the Humanities in particular, further selectivity is to be avoided.

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  • On-line syllabi The database includes a searchable listing of arts and humanities based educational courses for healthcare professionals.

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  • The process of constructing a thesaurus in the humanities becomes at some point a subjective affair.

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  • The distinctiveness of the Leeds French degree programs compared to other Arts and Humanities programs is therefore twofold.

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  • Continuing his study of the humanities, he became in 1628 professor of rhetoric at Innsbruck, and in 1635 at Ingolstadt, whither he had been transferred by his superiors in order to study theology.

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  • Suarez maintains that, though the humanity of Socrates does not differ from that of Plato, yet they do not constitute realiter one and the same humanity; there are as many "formal unities" (in this case, humanities) as there are individuals, and these individuals do not constitute a factual, but only an essential or ideal unity ("ita ut plura individua, quae dicuntur esse ejusdem naturae, non sint unum quid vera entitate quae sit in rebus, sed solum fundamentaliter vel per intellectum").

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  • As discussed in chapter 4, it is not easy to assess the needs of the well-found laboratory for the arts and humanities.

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  • The company's creator, Julie Clark, sought to create products that helped children discover humanities and the world.

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  • While other fields (such as the humanities or other sciences) are still warming up to the idea of online education, the healthcare industry has embraced the advent of the Internet and budding technology with open arms for awhile now.

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  • Those looking for degree programs in basic academic divisions such as science, math, the humanities, or the social sciences shouldn't have trouble finding suitable options.

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  • General master's programs cover specific subjects within business, administration, science, math, social sciences, communications, the arts, and the humanities.

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  • They believe this applies whether the class is in art, history, science, or humanities.

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  • He studied history and humanities at the university of Moscow, and, after having gone through his military training in a grenadier regiment, left for Germany where he read political economy in Berlin under Prof. Schmoller.

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  • When Ignatius arrived in Paris, he lodged at first with some fellow-countrymen; and for two years attended the lectures on humanities at the college de Montaigu, supporting himself at first by the charity of Isabella Roser; but, a fellowlodger defrauding him of his stock, he found himself destitute and compelled to beg his bread.

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  • But, if his truculent character was thus early displayed, his abilities were no less conspicuous; and, though still in his teens, he became lecturer on the Humanities at Tournai, whence, after but a short stay, he returned to Paris, to take his degree of doctor of canon law, and become regent of the college of Navarre.

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  • His father was a lawyer, and, designing Moses for his own profession, sent him on the completion of his study of the humanities at Orleans to the university of Poitiers.

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  • At Carpentras, under the direction of Convennole of Prato, he studied the humanities between the years 1315 and 1319.

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  • This national movement of the 15th century was not paralleled in France or England, where the classical humanities reigned.

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  • White, his fellow member of the state senate, decided to found a university of a new type - which should be broad and liberal in its scope, should be absolutely nonsectarian, and which should recognize and meet the growing need for practical training and adequate instruction in the sciences as well as in the humanities.

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  • He joined the Jesuits on the 29th of September 1745 and in course of time became successively professor of philosophy and humanities at the seminaries of Madrid and Murcia.

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  • On the one hand, one can describe the humanities as almost abject in the contemporary socio-political context.

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  • He entered that university in 1506, studied law and the humanities, and became Master of Arts in 1510.

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  • The plural "humanities" is a generic term for the classics.

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  • Du Bellay returned with Ronsard to Paris to join the circle of students of the humanities attached to Jean Daurat at the College de Coqueret.

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  • Luisa Sigea was both an orientalist and a Latin poetess, while Publia Hortensia de Castro, after a course of humanities, philosophy and theology, defended theses at Evora in her eighteenth year.

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