Inconsistently Sentence Examples

inconsistently
  • Whewell, indeed, explains that this latter formula must be practically interpreted by positive law, though he inconsistently speaks as if it supplied a standard for judging laws to be right or wrong.

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  • Blue granites are rare, with the minerals that cause the blue pigment to show up sporadically and inconsistently.

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  • If any rules exist in the home, they are followed inconsistently.

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  • The game runs fine when using it with Windows 7, but when you try to snap the window to the left or right, the window inconsistently snaps to one-quarter of the screen or snaps correctly, as Snap is suppose to do.

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  • Irregular fibers, that absorb the fabric dyes inconsistently, results in shading differences.

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  • Most of the other pages are official pages from the network or fan pages that are inconsistently updated.

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  • It states essentially the Roman doctrine of purgatory, and asserts the world-wide primacy of the pope as the "true vicar of Christ and the head of the whole Church, the Father and teacher of all Christians"; but, to satisfy the Greeks, inconsistently adds that all the rights and privileges of the Oriental patriarchs are to be maintained unimpaired.

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  • Consequently, a species or genus is not a substance, as Aristotle says it is in the Categories (inconsistently with his own doctrine of substances), but a whole number of substances, e.g.

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  • Consequently, the universal essence of a species of substances is not one and the same eternal essence in all the individuals of a species but only similar, and is not substance as Aristotle calls it in the Metaphysics, inconsistently with his own doctrine of substance, but is a whole number of similar substances, e.g.

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  • In the state the Tory inherited the ideas of Clarendon, and, without being at all ready to abandon the claims of parliaments, nevertheless somewhat inconsistently spoke of the king as ruling by a divine and indefeasible title, and wielding a power which it was both impious and unconstitutional to resist by force.

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