Reverts Sentence Examples

reverts
  • It possesses many edifices, public and private, which are handsome or elegant, but it has almost nothing to which the memory reverts as a masterpiece of architectural art.

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  • The granter retains an interest in the land similar to that of the donor of an estate for life, to whom the land reverts after the life estate is ended.

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  • It came into force on the 13th of July 1907, and produced during the remainder of the financial year U544,987; 2 5% of this revenue is ceded to the public debt; the remainder reverts to the government.

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  • In its modern usage it is practically confined to the money endowment given to the younger children of reigning or mediatized houses in Germany and Austria, which reverts to the state or to the head of the family on the extinction of the line of the original grantee.

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  • But in this case the presentation reverts to the patron and not to the crown.

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  • At a very early period - prior to 3000 B.C. - Nippur had become the centre of a political district of considerable extent, and it is to this early period that the designation of En-lil as Bel or "the lord" reverts.

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  • It will not thrive in rivers; in large ponds it readily reverts to the coloration of the original wild stock.

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  • But an analysis of his results leaves the reader in more perplexity than satisfaction at the kind of information imparted, and he reverts insensibly to the sources from which his instructor has himself been instructed.

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  • The historical models to which Epictetus reverts are Diogenes and Socrates.

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  • One thing that a lot of people forget after flashing the bios is that it often reverts to a default state.

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  • Unfortunately rather than then playing through the whole six episodes, at the end of each one it automatically reverts to the titles menu.

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  • The world almost divides into two, but stops short of the split as Descartes reverts back to the comfort of medieval scholasticism.

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  • In one system the seat of Mercury, representing divine intelligence as the source of all knowledge - a view that reverts to Babylonia where Nebo (corresponding to Mercury) was regarded as the divine power to whom all wisdom is due - was placed in the liver as the primeval seat of the soul (see Omen), whereas in other systems this distinction was assigned to Jupiter or to Venus.

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  • Coming Up Phil tries to do things right by Ben, but reverts to form when things do n't go his way.

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  • Reverts the defined Sim character back to default settings, including everything related to motives and moodlets.

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