Personality Sentence Examples

personality
  • His personality was quiet and sober.

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  • He had a personality that would tick off Mother Theresa.

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  • A part of her might never forgive him for what he did... and that was a dark part of her personality that she didn't want him to see.

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  • Could it be that his stoic personality was the very thing that kept her interest perked?

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  • It is only in rare instances that some exalted personality is raised to a higher level.

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  • His own personality was his strongest ally.

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  • Nurturing was in his personality.

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  • Helen Keller became so rapidly a distinctive personality that she kept her teacher in a breathless race to meet the needs of her pupil, with no time or strength to make a scientific study.

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  • On the other hand, maybe his personality was what made him an accomplished salesman.

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  • Its eminence, however, was so largely based upon dalliance with Roman society, its weakness so great in having only a mythical character, instead of a personality, as an object of adoration, and in excluding women from its privileges, that it fell rapidly before the assaults of Christianity.

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  • She would be missed, both for her help and her personality, but it was time for the household to get back to some semblance of normal.

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  • It but remains to call attention to the fact that the earlier view of the liver as the seat of the soul gave way among many ancient nations to the theory which, reflecting the growth of anatomical knowledge, assigned that function to the heart, while, with the further change which led to placing the seat of soul-life in the brain, an attempt was made to partition the various functions of manifestations of personality among the three organs, brain, heart and liver, the intellectual activity being assigned to the first-named; the higher emotions, as love and courage, to the second; while the liver, once the master of the entire domain of soul-life as understood in antiquity, was degraded to serve as the seat of the lower emotions, such as jealousy, anger and the like.

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  • Everyone should have at least one friend with a sassy personality and a wild heart.

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  • While leaving intact the general houses of the various confraternities (except that of the Jesuits), the bill abolished the Religious corporate personality of religious orders, handed over Bill, their schools and hospitals to civil administrators, placed their churches at the disposal of the secular clergy, and provided pensions for nuns and monks, those who had families being sent to reside with their relatives, and those who by reason of age or bereavement had no home but their monasteries being allowed to end their days in religious houses specially set apart for the purpose.

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  • The principle of personality, however, gradually gave way to that of territoriality; and in every district, at least north of the Loire, customs were formed in which were combined in varying proportions Roman law, ecclesiastical law and the various Germanic laws.

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  • Magnetic in personality, incisive and powerful in manner of expression, he was in his prime one of the most eloquent of American pulpit orators.

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  • For about thirty years the most important event in Roman literature was the production of the satires of Lucilius, in which the politics, morals, society and letters of the time were criticized with the utmost freedom and pungency, and his own personality was brought immediately and familiarly before his contemporaries.

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  • Personality is the essence of his Epodes; in the Satires it is used merely as illustrative of general tendencies.

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  • His success was due to the power of his personality.

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  • All these writers, however, are entirely eclipsed by the commanding personality of the most famous of the Geonim, Seadiah ben Joseph (q.v.) of Sura, often called al-Fayyumi (of the Fayum in Egypt), one of the greatest representatives of Jewish learning of all times, who died in 942.

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  • It is impossible to deny Persian influence in the development of this conception, and that the Persian Ahriman (Angromainyu), the evil personality opposed to the good, Ahura Mazda, moulded the Jewish counterpart, Satan.

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  • In the domain of history we have first the old Sienese chronicles, which down to the 14th century are so confused that it is almost impossible to disentangle truth from fiction or even to decide the personality of the various authors.

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  • The identity and personality of this "Friend of God," who bulks so largely in the great collection of mystical literature, and is everywhere treated as a half supernatural character, is one of the most difficult problems -in the history of mysticism.

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  • His activity was devoted almost exclusively to the struggle between the papacy and the Italian Risorgimento, the history of which is comprehensible only when the influence exercised by his unscrupulous, grasping and sinister personality is fully taken into account.

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  • That his personality was influential, and his intrepid originality of great value as an example in his own country, is undeniable.

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  • The singularity of Comte's construction, and the test by which it must be tried, is the transfer of the worship and discipline of Catholicism to a system in which " the conception of God is superseded " by the abstract idea of Humanity, conceived as a kind of Personality.

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  • The God of Judaism and Christianity is essentially a person in close personal relation to his creatures; emanation is the denial of personality both for God and for man.

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  • Sigurd himself is not mentioned by any contemporary writer; but, apart from the dragon incident, there is nothing in the story which affords sufficient justification for regarding his personality as mythical.

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  • The nobles were awed by her warlike preparations or won over by adroit diplomacy, and their league was broken up. St Louis owed his realm to his mother, but he himself always remained somewhat under the spell of her imperious personality.

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  • It is true that in some modern developments of idealism the ultimate reality is conceived of in an impersonal way, but it is usually added that this ultimate or absolute being is not something lower but higher than self-conscious personality, including it as a more fully developed form may be said to include a more elementary.

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  • In 1834 he opened in Boston a school which became famous because of his original methods; his plan being to develop self-instruction on the basis of self-analysis, with an ever-present desire on his own part to stimulate the child's personality.

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  • This philosopher, a man of striking and attractive personality, succeeded in fusing the Megarian dialectic with Cynic naturalism.

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  • In Scripture the function of the angel overshadows his personality; the stress is on their ministry; they appear in order to perform specific acts.

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  • Herzl was beyond question the most influential Jewish personality of the 19th century.

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  • His personality stands out at this period as the central power in which each faction chiefly reposed trust, and under which it could join hands with the others in the service of the state.

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  • Mark Twain was an outstanding figure for many years as a popular American personality in the world of letters.

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  • As an actress Nell Gwyn was largely indebted to Dryden, who seems to have made a special study of her airy, irresponsible personality, and who kept her supplied with parts which suited her.

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  • On this account, especially after the death of Lueger (on March 10 1910), a dominating personality who had held all parties together, opinion in Vienna and other towns turned against the Christian Socialists, who were accused of refusing all active measures of relief.

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  • The assessed valuation of taxable property, in the city, in August 1906 was $201,585,127, of which $157,611,560 represented realty and $43,973,567 personality.

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  • The birth of that system, however, cannot be fixed as a definite event by the day and the hour; nor was it created by any single personality.

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  • In spite of the illness of the emperor Frederick a certain number of court festivities were held in her honour, and she had long conversations with Prince Bismarck, who was deeply impressed by her majesty's personality.

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  • By a law of the 19th of December 1900, Algeria was constituted a legal personality, with power to own goods, contract loans, &c., and a decree of 1901 placed the customs department, until then directed from Paris, under the control of the governor-general, whose hands were also strengthened in various minor matters.

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  • By the force of his wide learning and even more of his personality, Ewald exercised for long an all-pervading and almost irresistible influence.

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  • The value of the Fourth Gospel as a narrative of events is a matter of dispute, but the view of the personality of Jesus Christ set forth in it is unquestionably that which the Church has accepted.

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  • Thus, for the first time in the world's history, the ultimate problem of faith is based on the relation of God to the individual believer; and this problem Jeremiah is compelled to face mainly in relation to his own personality, to assure himself that his own faith is a trLic, possession and lifts him above all the calamities that assail him, in spite of the hopeless ruin of his nation.

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  • During 1888 his personality was the dominating feature of French politics, and, when he resigned his seat as a protest against the reception given by the chamber to his revisionist proposals, constituencies vied with one another in selecting him as their representative.

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  • In Schelling, essentially a self-conscious genius, eager and rash, yet with undeniable power, they hailed a personality of the true Romantic type.

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  • It is partly an outcome of Luther's personality - of his violence, no doubt, but also of his great qualities.

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  • It might be put in this way - a really Divine personality, a really human experience.

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  • The late great bandleader rated Tony very highly and referred to him as " A great singer with a great personality " .

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  • Another bit of good news is that, in terms of a personality disposition it's very important, extroversion is going up dramatically.

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  • Many of the most well-known faces in British media attended the awards, which were hosted by TV personality Jo Brand.

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  • This was awarded to Stephen by television personality Ulrika Johnson.

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  • You have the education, the experience in business and the personality.

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  • Roxanne had everything; beauty, a good figure, and a sweet personality.

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  • I tried to recall the terms Quinn had quoted; dissociative fugue, fugue state, entirely different personality.

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  • He smiled at her, understanding what it was to mourn the loss of a sibling.  As much as he missed Jade, he was glad he at least had Hannah to fall back on.  She had Katie's beauty – without the abrasive personality.

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  • Katie accused her of allowing Alex to make decisions because she had no confidence in herself – and that Alex was taking advantage of her because he had a controlling personality.

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  • Felipa was beautiful and had a great personality.

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  • He was a man of erudition, but he owed his fame chiefly to his personality.

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  • His insistence on moral experience is connected with his insistence on personality.

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  • If it fails - there are other channels; character can be known and trusted even when we are baffled by a thing necessarily so full of mystery as the development of a personality.

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  • He imparted to the title a grander significance out of the riches of his personality.

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  • Brahmanic pantheism and Buddhistic nihilism alike teach the unreality of the seeming world, and preach mystical absorption as the highest goal; in both, the sense of the worth of human personality is lost.

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  • To the student of the original texts Lancelot is an infinitely less interesting hero than Gawain, Perceval or Tristan, each of whom possesses a well-marked personality, and is the centre of what we may call individual adventures.

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  • To call it "pessimism" is merely to apply to it a characteristically Western principle according to which happiness is impossible without personality.

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  • We pass from the extremely shadowy personality of Jordanes to the more interesting question of his works.

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  • His early death prevented any schemes for a revived Romano-Gothic kingdom which may have been based on his personality.

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  • The power of the witan varied according to the personality of the reigning king, being considerable under a weak ruler, but inconsiderable under a strong one.

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  • Antiochus exercised his contemporaries by the riddles of his half-brilliant, half-crazy personality.

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  • Except in royalist Provence he received everywhere a welcome which attested the attractive power of his personality and the nullity of the Bourbons.

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  • While, again, legitimately insisting upon personality as a fundamental constituent in any true theory of reality, the relation between human individualities and the divine Person is left vague and obscure; nor is it easy to see how the existence of several individualities - human or divine - in one cosmos is theoretically possible.

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  • A criticism of Neo-Hegelianism will be found in Andrew Seth (Pringle Pattison), Hegelianism and Personality.

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  • From his writings we derive the impression of an amiable personality, who is honestly at pains to arrive at an understanding with his opponents.

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  • Clowes was a man of fine appearance and open disposition, with a compelling personality that found expression in a steady glance and a thrilling voice.

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  • His personality drew a number of strong men after him, and a society meeting held in a kitchen and then in a warehouse became the nucleus of a circuit, a chapel being built at Tunstall in July 1811, two months after the fusion of the Bourne and Clowes forces.

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  • In 1509 William's young son, Philip, became landgrave, and by his vigorous personality brought his country into prominence during the religious troubles of the 16th century.

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  • He died in 1798, and the success of the church he founded is a tribute to his personality and to the principles for which he strove.

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  • By the universal testimony of his friends, Robert Emmet was a youth of modest character, pure motives and winning personality.

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  • The evil spirit with his wicked hosts appears in the Gathas much less endowed with the attributes of personality and individuality than does Ahura Mazda.

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  • But France's influence, backed by the strong personality of her ambassador, General Sebastiani, was sufficient to enable the sultan to withstand these arguments, and the British ambassador broke off relations and withdrew to the fleet at Tenedos (February 1807).

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  • Under the laws of the state the legal existence and legal personality of a woman are not affected by marriage, and the property rights of a husband and wife are nearly equal.

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  • From such slender material it is not easy to form a clear conception of the saint's personality.

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  • It is made up of a number of points of view which successively appeared acceptable to a personality whose self-appreciation verges more and more upon the insane, and exhibits neither consecutiveness nor consistency.

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  • In his successive offices Mr Roosevelt not merely exerted a strong influence upon the immediate community, whose official representative he was at the time being, but by reason both of his forceful personality and of the often unconventional, although always effective, methods of work which he employed he achieved a national prominence out of ordinary proportion to the importance of his official position.

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  • His attractive personality won him the hand of Constance, the daughter of the French king, Philip I., and he collected a large army.

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  • There many future leaders of public and professional life in Canada came under the influence of Strachan's vigorous personality.

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  • His fame lives in Eastern history as the conqueror who stemmed the tide of Western conquest on the East, and turned it definitely from East to West, as the hero who momentarily united the unruly East, and as the saint who realized in his personality the highest virtues and ideals of Mahommedanism.

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  • A new and conciliatory phase of patripassianism was expounded at a somewhat later date by Beryllus of Bostra, who, while holding the divinity of Christ not to be 181a, or proper to Himself, but irarpudi (belonging to the Father), yet recognized in His personality a new lrpbcrwlrov or form of manifestation on the part of God.

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  • His mind gradually turned from belief in the efficacy of violent measures to the acceptance of constitutional methods; and in his last book, King Stork and King Log, he spoke with approval of the efforts of politicians on the Liberal side to effect, by argument and peaceful agitation, a change in the attitude of the Russian government towards various reforms. Stepniak constantly wrote and lectured, both in Great Britain and the United States, in support of his views, and his energy, added to the interest of his personality, won him many friends.

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  • The work of Wallis had evidently an important influence on the next notable personality in the history of the subject, James Gregory, who lived during the period when the higher algebraic analysis was coming into power, and whose genius helped materially to develop it.

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  • His Pelerinage Au Pays D'Evangeline (1888) Is A Splendid Defence Of The Unfortunate Acadians; And All His Books Attract The Reader By Their Charm Of Style And Personality.

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  • His personality made a powerful impression in Great Britain and also in France, which he visited before his return to Canada.

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  • But into the figure of Arthur as we know him, other elements have entered; he is not merely an historic personality, but at the same time a survival of pre-historic myth, a hero of romance, and a fairy king; and all these threads are woven together in one fascinating but bewildering web.

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  • Upon one famous occasion in 1892 he succeeded in bringing to a peaceful solution a long and bitter strike which had divided the masters and men in the Durham collieries; and his success was due to the confidence which he inspired by the extraordinary moral energy of his strangely "prophetic" personality, at once thoughtful, vehement and affectionate.

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  • Until recently he was looked upon as semi-mythical, but the discovery of the tombs of many kings of the 1st Dynasty including probably that of Menes himself, as well as an abundance of remains of still earlier ages in Egypt has given him a personality.

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  • Resorting to stimulants after illness, his marked excess in this respect on the occasion of his inauguration as vice-president undoubtedly did him harm with the public. Faults of personality were his great handicap. Though approachable and not without kindliness of manner, he seemed hard and inflexible; and while president, physical pain and domestic anxieties, added to the struggles of public life, combined to accentuate a naturally somewhat severe temperament.

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  • Not only the prestige of his victories, but the chance circumstances of the moment, now made Wellington the most influential personality in Europe.

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  • Nevertheless, the personality of an ambassador can play a great part, if he possesses charm, breadth of understanding and interest in the social, intellectual and industrial life of the country to which he is accredited.

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  • God, intuitively known by Conscience, is not a personality (which implies limitations), but an all-inclusive essence (Wesen), which contains the Universe within itself.

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  • He was somewhat erratic in his methods, but his lectures were a triumph of influential personality.

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  • In 1880 The American Journal of Philology, a quarterly published by the Johns Hopkins University, was established under his editorial charge, and his strong personality was expressed in the department of the Journal headed "Brief Report" or "Lanx Satura," and in the earliest years of its publication every petty detail was in his hands.

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  • By his father's side, who followed the occupation of a tanner, he was descended from a family long known in the district, and the purity of whose Scottish lineage had been tinged by alliance with French Protestant refugees; but it was from his mother's race, the Lowthers, farmers or small proprietors in Annandale, that he seems to have derived the most distinctive features of his personality.

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  • His exegesis owes its interest to his subjective resources rather than to breadth of learning; his power lay in spiritual vision rather than balanced judgment, and in the vivid apprehension of the factors which make the Christian personality, rather than in constructive doctrinal statement.

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  • He was a man of strong personality, of measured utterance, "civil" (says Penn) "beyond all forms of breeding."

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  • Having, however, in consequence, lost his professorship at Jena, he gradually altered his views, until at length he decided that God is not mere moral order, but also reason and will, yet without consciousness and personality; that not mankind but God is the absolute; that we are only its direct manifestations, free but finite spirits destined by God to posit in ourselves Nature as the material of duty, but blessed when we relapse into the absolute; that Nature, therefore, is the direct manifestation of man, and only the indirect manifestation of God; and, finally, that being is the divine idea or life, which is the reality behind appearances.

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  • To proceed, however, with voluntarism, Wundt, as we have seen, makes personality turn on will.

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  • English moral philosophy cannot long tolerate a metaphysics which by merging all minds in one would destroy personality, personal causation and moral responsibility, as James Martineau well said.

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  • What makes his vindication of conscious personality all the more interesting is that he has so much in common with the Hegelians; agreeing as he does with Hegel that self-consciousness is the highest fact, the ultimate category of thought through which alone the universe is intelligible, and an adequate account of the great fact of existence.

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  • William James (q.v.), on the other hand, in his psychological works shows that the tendency of recent psychology is to personality, interpreted idealistically; though without a very clear appreciation of what a person is, and personality means.

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  • From Reid he adopted the belief in an external world beyond sensation, from Biran the explanation of personality by will, from Schelling the identification of all reason in what he called " impersonal reason," which he supposed to be identical in God and man, to be subjective and objective, psychological and ontological.

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  • Mr Chamberlain went to South Africa in the late autumn, with the hope that his personality would influence the settlement there; and the session of 1903 opened in February with no hint of troubles to come.

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  • The personality of Lazarus in John's account, his relation to Martha and Mary, and the possibility that John reconstructed the story by the aid of inferences from the story of the supper in Luke x.

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  • It was on the whole the personality, however, rather than the discoverer, that was greatest in Tyndall.

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  • Endowed by inheritance with a rich religious character, evangelical traditions, ethical temper and strong intellect, he developed, by wide reading in ancient and modern literature, a personality and attitude of mind which appealed to the characteristic thought and life of the period.

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  • This indifference is not dictated by any realization that death means annihilation of the personality.

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  • Independent personality is never imputed to it.

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  • But although the personality of Odysseus may have had its origin in some primitive religious myth, chief interest attaches to him as the typical representative of the old sailor-race whose adventurous voyages educated and moulded the Hellenic race.

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  • All of which suggests a personality mentally and physically phlegmatic, a suggestion strengthened by the fact that Bartholomaeus de Neocastro (quoted by Wenck) describes him as corpulent in 1290.

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  • De Coster died in 1879, and Pirmez in 1883, and the new movement in Belgian literature dates from the banquet given in the latter year to Camille Lemonnier whose powerful personality did much to turn " Young Belgium " into a national channel.

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  • But in spite of this apparently uneventful life, he was for many years one of the most prominent men of his time, and by his personality and his books he exercised considerable influence on the thought of his generation.

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  • The chronological difficulties which are involved suggest that the floating traditions of this great personality were easily attached to well-known names whether strictly contemporary or not.

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  • The accounts of his sister and niece have the defect of all hagiology; they are obviously written rather with a view to the ideas and the wishes of the writers than with a view to the actual and absolute personality of the subject.

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  • The company was held in unity by the charms of his personality, and by the free intercourse which he inculcated and exemplified.

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  • His very defects were among the chief elements of Pelham's success, for one with a strong personality, moderate self-respect, or high conceptions of statesmanship could not have restrained the discordant elements of the cabinet for any length of time.

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  • But the tendency at the present day is undoubtedly to prize Johnson's personality and sayings more than any of his works.

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  • Under the influence of Luthers strong personality the most active and progressive elements of the nation were soon in more or less open antagonism to the Papacy.

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  • Hence Rothe, unlike Schleiermacher, lays great stress, for instance, on the personality of God, on the reality of the worlds of good and evil spirits, and on the visible second coming of Christ.

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  • After an analysis of the religious consciousness, which yields the doctrine of an absolute personal and spiritual God, Rothe proceeds to deduce from his idea of God the process and history of creative development, which is eternally proceeding and bringing forth, as its unending purpose, worlds of spirits, partially self-creative and sharing the absolute personality of the Creator.

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  • The same mode of address is familiar to us from the prophets of the Old Testament; the human personality disappears, in the moment of inspiration, behind the God by whom it is filled.

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  • While she lived, the personality of the queen secured the devotion of her servants and held all ambitions in check.

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  • He insists throughout on the unity and the indivisibility of God, whereas Plotinus and Porphyry had admitted not only a Trinity, but even an Ennead (nine-fold personality).

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  • Much depended on the character and personality of the young prince who had now taken into his hands the reins of government, and for half a century was to guide the destinies of the nation.

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  • If the whole of a man's personality goes to the making of the truth he accepts, it is clear that his beliefs are not matters of "pure reason," and that his passional and volitional nature must contribute to them and cannot validly be excluded.

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  • Once more in Russia, far from the fascination of Metternich's personality, the immemorial spirit of his people drew him back into itself; and when, in the autumn of 1825, he took his dying empress for change of air to the south of Russia, in order - as all Europe supposed - to place himself at the head of the great army concentrated near the Ottoman frontiers, his language was no longer that of " the peace-maker of Europe," but of the Orthodox tsar determined to take the interests of his people and of his religion "into his own hands."

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  • In painting there is the famous portrait of Hieronymus Holtzschuher at Berlin, in which the personality and general aspect of the sitter assert themselves with surprising power.

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  • Melanchthon felt the spell of Luther's personality and spiritual depth, and seems to have been prepared on his first arrival at Wittenberg to accept the new theology, which as yet existed mainly in subjective form in the person of Luther.

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  • It was already recognized that in him the country possessed not only a public man of exceptionally attractive personality, but one whose literary tastes were combined with a gift for expression which was at once original and fluent.

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  • The dream of an independent and united Wales was never nearer realization than under Owen's leadership. The disturbed state of England helped him, but he was indeed a remarkable personality, and has not undeservedly become a national hero.

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  • When the end of the world foretold by Daniel did not take place, but the book of Daniel retained its validity as a sacred scripture which foretold future things, the personality of the tyrant who was God's enemy disengaged itself from that of Antiochus IV., and became merely a figure of prophecy, which was applied now to one and now to another historical phenomenon.

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  • It is worth while to note that while most of the cures which Jesus had performed appear to have belonged to this class, this particular case is described as an exceptionally severe one, and the visible effect of the removal of his tormentors may have greatly helped to restore the man's shattered personality.

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  • We have followed it long enough to see its directness and simplicity, to observe the naturalness with which one incident succeeds another, and to watch the gradual manifestation of a personality at once strong and sympathetic, wielding extraordinary powers, which are placed wholly at the service of others, and refusing to be hindered from helping men by the ordinary restrictions of social or religious custom.

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  • If not, are we not forced to deny ultimate reality to personality whether human or divine?

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  • The intrinsic value of his poetic work, regarded apart from his personality, is smaller in proportion to its bulk than is the case with many lesser German poets and with the greatest poets of other literatures.

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  • It is the full, rich humanity of his life and personality - not the art behind which the artist disappears, or the definite pronouncements of the thinker or the teacher - that constitutes his claim to a place in the front rank of men of letters.

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  • From the first, too, he was hampered by wretched health; at the age of sixteen he was subjected to one of those terrible attacks of neuralgia which were to torment him to the last; physically and mentally alike he stood in tragic contrast with his grandfather, in whose gigantic personality the vigour of his race seems to have been exhausted.

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  • Reed was a remarkable personality, of whom many good stories were told, and opinions varied as to his conduct in the chair; but he was essentially a man of rugged honesty and power, whose death was a loss to American public life.

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  • His hatred of system, incapacity for abstract thinking, and intense personality rendered it impossible for him to do more than utter the disjointed, oracular, obscure dicta which gained for him among his friends the name of "Magus of the North."

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  • Little is known of the personality of Agnes, beyond the remarkable influence which she exercised over Philip II.

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  • Baur, however, soon came to attach more importance to personality, and to distinguish more carefully between religion and philosophy.

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  • He himself did not take the field, but remained in Medina with the exception of his visit to Syria in 638; he never, however, suffered the reins to slip from his grasp, so powerful was the influence of his personality and the Moslem community of feeling.

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  • But Othman had not the strong personality of his predecessor, and, although he practically adhered to the policy of Omar, he was accused of favouring the members of his own family - the caliph belonged himself to the house of Omayya - at the expense of the Hashimites andthe Ansar.

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  • Even some European scholars have drawn a false picture of his personality, as has been clearly shown by Wellhausen.

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  • Therefore, Jackson's personality and name became a power on the side opposed to banks, corporations and other forms of the new growing power of capital.

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  • When the personality of Socrates is removed, the difficulty as to the nature of the Socratic universal, developed in the medium of the individual processes of individual minds, carries disciples of diverse general sympathies, united only through the practical inspiration of the master's life, towards the identity-formula or the difference-formula of other teachers.

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  • It may indeed be permitted to doubt whether its influence upon subsequent theory would have been a great one apart from the spiritual force of Schleiermacher's personality.

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  • Human personality, we learn, is the temporary manifestation of a complex organization consisting of "seven principles," which are united and interdependent, yet divided into certain groups, each capable of maintaining temporarily a spurious kind GI personality of its own and sometimes capable of acting, so to speak, as a distinct vehicle of our conscious individual life Each "principle" is composed of its own form of matter, determined and conditioned by its own laws of time, space and motion, and is, as it were, the repository of our various memories and volitions.

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  • Belonging neither to the aristocracy nor to the learned class, he was one of the common people yet separate from them - a separation not of race or caste or education, but of unique personality.

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  • This was not a mere sentiment, nor was his sympathy superficial, for it constituted the essential characteristic of his personality - " He went about doing good."

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  • Great as were his words, greater was his personality.

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  • In the Mahayana gnosticism was triumphant, and the historic values of Gautama's teaching and personality are lost.

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  • With emphasis upon God as creator and ruler, and upon man as made in God's image, endowed with an unending existence, and subject to eternal torture if not redeemed, the concept of personality has been exalted at the expense of that of nature, and the future has been magnified at the expense of the present.

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  • But by isolating Reason from all other growths, by representing it as the motor-energy of the Cosmos, in popularizing a term which suggested personality and will, Anaxagoras gave an impetus to ideas which were the basis of Aristotelian philosophy in Greece and in Europe at large.

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  • The enthusiasm aroused by Liszt's playing and his personality - the two are inseparable - reached a climax at Vienna and Budapest in 1839-1840, when he received a patent of nobility from the emperor of Austria, and a sword of honour from the magnates of Hungary in the name of the nation.

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  • It is therefore evident that the personality of Hygelac, and the expedition in which, according to Beowulf, he died, belong not to the region of legend or poetic invention, but to that of historic fact.

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  • Indeed, the personality of the stern God himself exhibits this feature in a very marked degree, whence the term mahayogi or" great ascetic "is often applied to him.

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  • Vishnu, whilst less popular with Brahmans than his rival, has from early times proved to the lay mind a more attractive object of adoration on account of the genial and, so to speak, romantic character of his mythical personality.

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  • This power rested upon his earnest and commanding personality, and also upon the support which he received from the German church, the possession of a valuable private domain, and the care with which he exacted feudal dues from his dependents.

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  • According to this doctrine the personality of Christ is twofold; the divine Logos dwells as a distinct personality in the man Jesus Christ, the union of the two natures being analogous to the relation between the believer and the indwelling Holy Spirit.

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  • Perhaps the final result would not in any case have failed, even had "blood and iron" been necessary to bring it about; but the quiet attainment of the result was due to the personality of Washington, as well as to the political sense of the American people.

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  • In his persuasiveness as an orator and his charming personality lay the secret of his power.

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  • He was of Spanish descent and was gifted with a personality of rare fascination.

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  • The term, however, will have to be used still more vaguely, if it is to cover all attribution of personality, will or vitality.

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  • The primitive community is not so custom-bound that personality has no chance to make itself felt, and the leader of men possessed of an inner fund of inspiration is the wonderworker who encourages all forms of social advance.

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  • By such conceptions the Hellenic polytheism was moralized; the physical character of the greater gods fell into the background, and the sculptor's art came to the aid of the poet by completely enduing them with personality.

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  • And the founder who enters history with an impressive personality can only do his work through the response made to him by the insight and feeling of his time.

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  • Of singularly alert faculties, with a remarkable knowledge of the men and history of his country, and an extraordinary memory, his masterful talent for politics and state-craft, together with his captivating manner and engaging personality, gave him, for nearly two decades, an unrivalled hold upon the fealty and affection of his party.

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  • The oligarchy composed of the great landowners have always been an important factor in the political life of the republic; when President Balmaceda found that he was not a persona grata to this circle he determined to endeavour to govern without their support, and to bring into the administration a set of men who had no traditions and with whom his personality would be all-powerful.

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  • The personality of the president, however, had become of much less importance in modern Chile than in earlier days.

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  • His name was associated with this political reform solely because his was the only vigorous personality which stood out from the mass of rebels, and because he was the principal victim of the repression that ensued.

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  • Legend, poetry, drama and politics have from time to time been much occupied with the personality of Arnold of Brescia, and not seldom have distorted it, through the desire to see in him a hero of Italian independence and a modern democrat.

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  • In his days there arose in Persisprecisely as Cyrus had arisen under Astyages the Medea great personality.

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  • It is almost impossible that a much later period could have produced such unpretentious and almost depreciatory representations of the deeds and personality of the prophet.

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  • Maria Amalia Vaz de Carvalho, a highly gifted critic and essayist whose personality and cercle call to mind the 18th-century poetess, the Marqueza.

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  • In the Page disgracie of Tristan l'Hermite, the page makes the acquaintance of a dramatic author, and his description may be accepted as a contemporary portrait of Theophile's vigorous personality.

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  • By that time he had contracted his first "spiritual marriage," and had persuaded himself that he had been absorbed into the personality of God and had become a visible embodiment of the Holy Spirit.

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  • In the recorded periods of Hellenic history, Zeus was accepted as the chief god of the pantheon of the Greeks; and the religious progress of the people from lower to higher ideas can be well illustrated by the study of his ritual and personality.

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  • Pye, brought him under further suspicion, and his revival of the powers of convocation lessened his influence at court; but his unfailing tact and wide sympathies, his marvellous energy in church organization, the magnetism of his personality, and his eloquence both on the platform and in the pulpit, gradually won for him recognition as without a rival on the episcopal bench.

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  • Each of the two friends had a distinguished personality.

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  • He regarded the orator and the poet as teachers, bound to complete themselves by education, and to exhibit to the world an image of perfected personality in prose and verse of studied beauty.

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  • Much as he effected by restoring to the world a sound conception of learning, and by rousing that genuine love and curiosity which led to the revival, he did even more by impressing on the age his own full-formed and striking personality.

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  • But it is more to the purpose to remark that they were harmonized in a personality of potent and enduring force.

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  • The point to notice in this complex personality is that Petrarch's ideal remained always literary.

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  • His private life had been stainless, and he possessed a singularly attractive personality.

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  • From the first he displayed rare ability as a debater, his inspiring and yet amiable personality attracted hosts of admirers, while his extraordinary tact and temper disarmed opposition and enabled him to mediate between extremes without ever sacrificing principles.

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  • They were followed by two discourses which commanded for him immediate recognition, part friendly and part hostile, as a new and potent personality.

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  • The coherence of his writing lies in his personality.

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  • To administer this domain, carved out of the state lands and treated as the private property of Leopold II., a Fondation was organized and given a civil personality.

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  • He took a leading part in ventilating the Bulgarian and Armenian "atrocities," and his combative personality was constantly to the fore in support of the campaigns of Gladstonian Liberalism.

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  • It was natural that a personality invested with such charms should be regarded as the ideal of womanly beauty, but it is remarkable that the only probable instance in which she appears as such is as Aphrodite, uop4co form ") at Sparta (0.

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  • Strict historical truth we must not ask of them, but they do give us what was believed concerning Jeremiah in the following age, and we must believe that the personality so honoured was an extraordinary one.

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  • A theory of obligation is ultimately found to be inseparable from a metaphysic of personality.

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  • Whiteside was a man of handsome presence, attractive personality and cultivated tastes.

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  • But his austere life and commanding personality made him an effective teacher, and his influence, kept alive by his pupils Polemon and Crates, ceased only when Arcesilaus, the founder of the so-called Second Academy, gave a new direction to the studies of the school.

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  • Plotinus's wide popularity was due partly to the lucidity of his teaching, but perhaps even more to his strong personality.

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  • The Word that became flesh subsisted from all eternity as a distinct personality within the divine nature.

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  • Rosetti was said to be the soul whilst Bratianu was the voice of the same personality.

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  • As an historical figure, it is impossible to dogmatize concerning the personality of Joan of Arc. The modern clerical view has to some extent provoked what appears, in Anatole France's learned account, ably presented as it is, to be a retaliation, in regarding her as a clerical tool in her own day.

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  • It was found that personality played an I mportant part; the average effect might be t", but frequently it reached 3", 4", 5" or even 10", with the same instrument and method, ndr was it fixed for the same observer.

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  • Everywhere he laboured for the Nicene faith, and the impression made by his personality was so great that to hold fast the orthodox faith and to defend Athanasius were for many people one and the same thing.

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  • To have set a dam against this process with the whole force of a mighty personality constitutes the importance of Athanasius in the world's history.

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  • The oldest traces of it, so far as is known at present, are to be found at Titane in the territory of Sicyon, where she was worshipped together with Asclepius, to whom she appears completely assimilated, not an independent personality.

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  • The already existing worship of Athena Hygieia had nothing to do with Hygieia the goddess of health, but merely denoted the recognition of the power of healing as one of the attributes of Athena, which gradually became crystallized into a concrete personality.

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  • Baptism then in the name or through the name or into the name of Christ placed the believer under the influence and tutelage of Christ's personality, as before he was in popular estimation under the influence of stars and horoscope.

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  • Nay, more, it imported that personality into him, making him a limb or member of Christ's body, and immortal as Christ was immortal.

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  • Nearly all the passages in which the word name is used in the New Testament become more intelligible if it be rendered personality.

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  • He taught him to distinguish in all cognitions, and especially in the simplest facts of consciousness, the fact of voluntary activity, that activity in which our personality is truly revealed.

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  • Voluntary facts alone are marked in the eyes of consciousness with the characters of imputability and personality.

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  • And further, the principle of causality, if fairly carried out, as universal and necessary, would not allow us to stop at personality or will as the ultimate cause of its effect - volition.

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  • The Quest versions again fall into three distinct classes, differentiated by the personality of the hero who is respectively Gawain, Perceval or Galahad.

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  • There was small doubt as to the personality of his successor; possession is nine points of the law, and Henry of Bolingbroke for the moment had the whole nation at his back.

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  • The rebellion was headed by well-known adherents of the earl, and the nickname of Robin of Redesdale seems to have covered the personality of his kinsman Sir John Conyers.

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  • It would seem that the key to his conduct was that he hated the hard work without which a despotic king cannot hope to assert his personality, and preferred leisure and vicious self-indulgence.

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  • Save for the commanding personality of Pitt, the new government was scarcely stronger than that which it had replaced.

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  • His sudden death was felt, not only throughout the empire but throughout the world, with even more poignant emotion than that of Queen Victoria herself, for his personality had been much more in the forefront.

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  • There have been many more effective orators, for lack of imaginative suppleness prevented him from penetrating to the inner mind of his hearers; defects in delivery weakened the intrinsic persuasiveness of his reasoning; and he had not that commanding authority of character and personality which has so often been the secret of triumphant eloquence.

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  • By his extraordinary force of character he exercised a wide personal influence during his lifetime, but failed to stamp his personality upon any measure or policy of lasting importance..

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  • Concurrently, there was a speculative or philosophical interest; and some prefer to defend Trinitarianism as a reconciliation of the personality with the infinity of God.

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  • It seeks to prove its case by asserting first the divinity of Christ, and secondly the personality of the Holy Spirit.

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  • The modern idea of personality, though with doubtful fairness, helps the change.

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  • His discussion of the Trinity began (1565) with doubts of the personality of the Holy Ghost.

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  • For Aristotle remained content with a successful demonstration of the dependence of "voluntariness" as an attribute of conduct upon knowledge and human personality.

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  • And if freedom of choice be a possibility at all, it must in future be regarded as the prerogative of a man's whole personality, exhibited continuously throughout the development of his character, displayed to some extent in all conscious conative processes, though especially apparent in crises necessitating deliberate and serious purpose.

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  • It is possible to treat will as a permanent cause manifesting itself through a series of sequent changes, and obedient to the laws which govern the development of the personality of the single individual.

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  • For, inasmuch as scientific proof depends upon the evidence of causality, such efforts after scientific demonstration would end only by bringing either the man's whole personality or some element in it within the sequence of the chain of natural causes and effects, under the domination of that natural necessity from which as a conscious being he is free.

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  • No man can exhaust by introspective analysis the hidden elements in his personality.

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  • And they would lose a great part of their significance if they did not testify to the continued existence in a man's personality of motives and tendencies likely to influence his conduct in the future as they have already influenced it in the past.

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  • The organization he desired was one on collective principles, a free association which would take account of the division of labour, and which would maintain the personality both of the man and the citizen.

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  • As slavery is assassination inasmuch as it destroys all that is valuable and desirable in human personality, so property is theft inasmuch as it appropriates the value produced by the labour of others without rendering an equivalent.

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  • From Leibnitz, Lessing, Fichte, Jacobi and the Romantic school he had imbibed a profound and mystical view of the inner depths of the human personality.

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  • While therefore we cannot, as we have seen, attain the idea of the supreme unity of thought and being by either cognition or volition, we can find it in our own personality, in immediate self-consciousness or (which is the same in Schleiermacher's terminology) feeling.

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  • Feeling in this higher sense (as distinguished from "organic" sensibility, Empfindung), which is the minimum of distinct antithetic consciousness, the cessation of the antithesis of subject and object, constitutes likewise the unity of our being, in which the opposite functions of cognition and volition have their fundamental and permanent background of personality and their transitional link.

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  • Concrete reality or personality is given to this divine Ternar, as Baader calls it, through nature, the principle of self-hood, of individual being, which is eternally and necessarily produced by God.

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  • A great deal of unpublished material of the highest interest with regard to Ibrahim's personality and his system in Syria is preserved in the British Foreign Office archives; for references to these see Cambridge Mod.

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  • Statements which originally had a different significance are misinterpreted, he thinks, and names of human beings are also misinterpreted in such a manner that early races are gradually led to believe in the personality of phenomena.

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  • The chief distinction between his mode of conceiving the world and ours is his vast extension of the theory of personality.

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  • The savage's notion of personality is more a universally diffused feeling than a reasoned conception, and this feeling of a personal self he impartially distributes all over the world as known to him.

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  • The savage regards all animals as endowed with personality.

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  • Once more, the great forces of nature, considered as persons, are involved in that inextricable confusion in which men, beasts, plants, stones, stars, are all on one level of personality and animated existence.

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  • As used here, gods merely mean non-natural and powerful beings, sometimes " magnified non-natural men," sometimes beasts, birds or insects, sometimes the larger forces and phenomena of the universe conceived of as endowed with human personality and passions.

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  • But EbroIn was assassinated next year in the midst of his triumph, having like Fredegond been unable to do more than postpone for a quarter of a century the victory of the nobles and of Austrasia; for his successor, Berthar, was unfitted to carry on his work, having neither his gifts and energy nor the powerful personality of Pippin.

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  • His personality was everything, institutions nothing.

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  • An orator of a business-like, straightforward type, cool and hard-hitting, his spare figure, incisive features and single eye-glass soon made him a favourite subject for the caricaturist; and in later life his aggressive personality, and the peculiarly irritating effect it had on his opponents, made his actions and speeches the object of more controversy than was the lot of any other politician of his time.

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  • Never has a statesman's personality been more bitterly associated by his political opponents with the developments they deplored.

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  • In November 1902 it was arranged that Mr Chamberlain should go out to South Africa, and it was hoped, not without reason, that his personality would effect more good than any ordinary official negotiations.

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  • All this activity on Mr Chamberlain's part represented a great physical and intellectual feat on the part of a man now sixtyseven years of age; but his bodily vigour and comparatively youthful appearance were essential features of his personality.

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  • Mr Chamberlain had relied on his personal influence, which from 1895 to 1902 had been supreme; but his own resignation, and the course of events, had since 1903 made his personality less authoritative, and new interests - such as the opposition to the Education Act, to the heavy taxation, and to Chinese labour in the Transvaal, and indignation over the revelations concerned with the war - were monopolizing attention, to the weakening of his hold on the public. The revival in trade, and the production of new statistics which appeared to stultify Mr Chamberlain's prophecies of progressive decline, enabled the free-trade champions to reassure their audiences as to the very foundation of his case, and to represent the whole tariff reform movement as no less unnecessary than risky.

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  • God exists as an eternal personality, and the creation is an overflowing of the divine love, which was unable to contain itself.

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  • The latter are thus no mere representations, but as it were emanations from the archetype, vehicles of the supernatural personality represented, and possessed of an inherent sacramental value and power, such as the name of Jesus had for the earliest believers.

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  • Each is a real being, with a well-defined personality.

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  • He was a man of magnetic personality, with an intense belief in the significance of his own career; and his character may be described as feminine, both in its strength and in its weakness.

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  • The code of laws which he gave to Sicily in 1231 bears the impress of his personality, and has been described as "the fullest and most adequate body of legislation promulgated by any western ruler since Charlemagne."

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  • The personality and name are derived from a Babylonian-Assyrian demon Lilit or Lilu.

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  • Maybe nurturing was in his personality.

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  • Her personality is the attraction after that.

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  • While personality differences abounded, we'd learned to accommodate one another's quirks with no more than a raised eyebrow or occasional huff.

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  • Could've been a little more discreet, but it fits Rhyn's personality.

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  • He's one of these type A personality guys who's always wound up tighter than a spring—wears whatever face suits the crowd.

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  • He smiled at her, understanding what it was to mourn the loss of a sibling.  As much as he missed Jade, he was glad he at least had Hannah to fall back on.  She had Katie's beauty – without the abrasive personality.

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  • Alex was not only attractive, but had a magnetic personality.

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  • Katie accused her of allowing Alex to make decisions because she had no confidence in herself – and that Alex was taking advantage of her because he had a controlling personality.

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  • The idea of his naked body on top of her, beneath her, any way he wanted her … She'd even let him hold her down, as much as she hated his dominant personality.

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  • She had an amiable personality, always ready with a kind word and a smile.

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  • By becoming an impartial umpire in civil disputes, the state slowly developed its own institutional autonomy from the personality of the king.

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  • The salesperson had a confident manner with plenty of personality.

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  • The personality trait was innate in the two men.

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  • This little silver agouti was the runt of the litter but what she lacked in size she made up for in personality.

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  • Foster's interest, whether it is in the human figure or in animals lies more in personality than the purely anatomical.

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  • Sun in Pisces, so good for an actor, and Sagittarius ruling the ascendant, a larger than life personality.

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  • He also made the first man given a personality in the bible in his image, and he was not asexual.

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  • Using events from his life and actual quotes from others, he has made Shuttleworth an utterly authentic, believable personality.

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  • This is King's story, a much loved GSD with a rather bossy personality.

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  • Personal factors include intellectual, motivational, and personality characteristics.

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  • He or she will be present throughout your wedding day, so personality clashes should be avoided.

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  • Loaded with personality and decked out in swanky collars, these lovable animal pals come with leashes that fit around a Groovy Girl wrist.

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  • Darrow's personality, by contrast [with Chesterton ], seemed rather colorless and certainly very dour.

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  • Their own musical personality cults preclude any free exchange.

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  • It may be that the Government has in mind personality disordered individuals with sexually deviant behaviors.

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  • Problem is, he is totally devoid of all personality.

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  • These include five related to personality disorder in a new joint program with the Home Office.

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  • A wonderful hand-crafted doll, bubbling with personality and lovingly made to the highest standards.

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  • To listen to her music is to bear witness to a gradual erosion of personality.

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  • He is a street evangelist and his personality shows all the signs of a tough, weathered and fearless ' front line ' evangelist.

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  • Your personality - are you a real extrovert or a backroom person?

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  • Bags of personality It's an incredible eye-opener to be at such events in person.

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  • Dancers 1 female Choreographic Style Each of the waltzes depicts a different facet of Duncan's personality.

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  • Impeccably dressed in a large fedora and razor-sharp suit, Dr. Peter McFarlane has the kind of presence and personality that immediately grab attention.

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  • Education shall be directed to the full development of the human personality and to the strengthening of respect for human rights and fundamental freedoms.

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  • In Virgil's Aeneid, Allecto unleashes furor, an evil and uncontrolled quality which can dominate and consume a human personality.

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  • But above the hut the valley fans out with short side glens adding their own personality to the overall scene.

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  • Art makes people humane, forms a wholesome personality; moreover, art is able to correct psychological pathologies.

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  • Although noted for her apparently indefatigable personality, closer reading of the auto/biographical material on Guggenheim also reveals her emotional weaknesses.

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  • It didn't occur to them to say anything about the child's individuality or personality.

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  • There may be a display of basic personality traits and emotions much the same as with alcoholic intoxication.

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  • Personality Traits Sagittarians are known for their broad vision, tolerant attitude, freedom-loving philosophical air, and generally jovial spirits.

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  • I loved doing research, studying dominance behavior and personality in a group of macaque monkeys.

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  • Topics include neuropsychology, sensation and perception, learning and memory, emotion, language, personality, and psychological disorders.

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  • The ideal candidate will have a minimum of two years previous cleaning experience and a down to earth and fairly outgoing personality.

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  • Emiliana's endearing personality has evoked an equally positive response from the media.

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  • A. No, sites reflect the personality of the churches which create them.

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  • He is a man with an outgoing personality who also happens to have Tourette's.

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  • The Grammy Award-winning mezzo-soprano is reknowned for expressive voice, statuesque stage presence warm, bubbly personality.

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  • You have to be careful if you have an addictive personality.

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  • He is what might be described as a forceful personality.

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  • Every year a message from a well-known dance personality is circulated throughout the world.

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  • The minute you got near that machine and opened the receiver, waves from your subconscious personality flowed into it.

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  • Naved Ali (Jackie Shroff ), a successful media personality, takes him under his wing and Suraj believes in him completely.

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  • They're a taste of what happens when the barriers of our personality become porous.

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  • My personality profile from the first to second interview is so different.

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  • Yoga & Personality Workshop There is also a day workshop on Yoga & Personality with Dr., Brian Thomson an eminent Australian consultant psychiatrist.

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  • He received his PhD in 1975 from the University of Pennsylvania, where he specialized in personality and experimental psychopathology.

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  • They also show signs of having personality quirks that are probably not integral to any purpose.

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  • The monsoon ragas are defined by various characteristics, all inspired by the personality of the rain.

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  • It is softly and elegantly aggressive, sculpted to express the powerful personality of a prestigious high performance, surprisingly roomy car.

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  • The progress of an artist is a continual self-sacrifice, a continual extinction of personality.

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  • Sulloway argues that birth order affects personality - ' eldest siblings being conservative and responsible compared with their more rebellious younger sibs.

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  • In effect, they create a personality for the uncouth swain.

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  • This together with his friendly personality, accommodates the multi-role requirements of any modern day toastmaster.

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  • Think about your personality traits do you prefer to work alone or with other people around?

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  • His diverse experience, combined with his exuberant personality, erudition and often trenchant views make him a compelling and entertaining speaker.

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  • Jupiter trine Moon The Moon forms a trine with Jupiter showing you possess a glowing, generous personality.

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  • I dont drink so, get over it... I have a personality without having to get smashed thank ut having to get smashed thank u very much!

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  • Being raised on Okinawa by relatives and neighbors, Luna was able to develop an innocent, yet uninhibited, personality.

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  • What makes philosophy universal is the fact that we have identical intellects which are the core of our personality.

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  • So find out whether Matt really is a Vacuous Presenter type in the vacuous Presenter type in the Vacuous Personality Test.

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  • Behavior is largely contingent; personality tests have little or no predictive validity.

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  • Sue has a slightly zany, self-effacing, bubbly personality, which opposes her meticulous, time-consuming love for something bright and beautiful.

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  • The Lettres a Marcie (1837) are a testimony to his ennobling and spiritualizing personality.

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  • Pottier, who does not dispute the historical personality of Minos, in view of the story of Phalaris considers it probable that in Crete (where a bull-cult may have existed by the side of that of the double axe) victims were tortured by being shut up in the belly of a red-hot brazen bull.

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  • His system shows the influence of Kant's destructive criticism of the claims of Pure Reason, recognition of the value of morally conditioned knowledge, and doctrine of the kingdom of ends; of Schleiermacher's historical treatment of Christianity, regulative use of the idea of religious fellowship, emphasis on the importance of religious feeling; and of Lotze's theory of knowledge and treatment of personality.

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  • It was at one of these, a town of the Malli, that a memorable incident occurred, such as characterized the personality of Alexander for all succeeding time.

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  • His energy, and his apparent disdain for the effete civilization which he protected, but which did not affect his character, make his personality one of the most interesting of the 4th century.

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  • He rejects the attempt to explain human personality as " generated by the material molecular aggregate of its own unaided latent power," and affirms that the " universe where the human spirit is more at home than it is among these temporary collocations of matter" is " a universe capable of infinite development, of noble contemplation, and of lofty joy, long after this planet - nay the whole solar system - shall have fulfilled its present spire of destiny, and retired cold and lifeless upon its endless way " (pp. 199-200).

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  • This is the line of argument developed by Professor Hugo Miinsterberg in his lecture on The Eternal Life (1905), although he states it in the terms peculiar to his psychology, in which personality is conceived as primarily will.

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  • But his ostentatious visit to Friedrichsruh, and a subsequent speech at Turin, in which, while professing sentiments of friendship and esteem for France, he eulogized the personality of Bismarck, aroused against him a hostility on the part of the French which he was never afterwards able to allay.

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  • Prajapatiwho (probably for practical considerations, as better representing the sacrificer, the earthly ruler, or "lord of the creatures") here takes the place of the Purusha, the world-man or allembracing personality - is offered up anew in every sacrifice; and inasmuch as the' very dismemberment of the lord of creatures, which took place at that archtypal sacrifice, was in itself the creation of the universe, so every sacrifice is also a repetition of that first creative act.

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  • And the whole subject of the action of the subconscious personality - the "subliminal self" - has since been more fully worked out by psychologists.

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  • The hopes expressed in the word Immanuel, " God with us," were to become embodied in a personality of the royal seed of David, an ideal righteous ruler who was to bring peace to the war-distraught realm.

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  • He was certainly the most imposing personality of his day in eastern Europe, and his martial valour was combined with statesmanlike foresight.

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  • On the basis of his idea of God Origen was obliged to insist in the strongest manner on the personality, the eternity (eternal generation) and the essential divinity of the Logos.'

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  • All the earlier accounts agree that he had a winning personality and considerable talent, but he was badly educated, systematically terrorized by a brutal governor and hopelessly debauched by corrupt pages, and grew up a semi-idiot.

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  • To rescue Merswin from the charge of deceit involved in this theory, Jundt puts forward the suggestion, more ingenious than convincing, that Merswin was a "double personality," who in his primary state wrote the books ascribed to him, and in his secondary state became "the Friend of God from the Oberland," writing the other treatises.

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  • Altogether, in spite of some shortcomings, Grant was a massive, noble and lovable personality, well fit to be remembered as one of the heroes of a great nation.

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  • Emphasis was made to fall on the reason, the conscience and the will of the finite personality; and just as these were found to be native in him they were held to be immanent in the cause of his universe.

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  • His personality, on account of the sharp religious antagonisms with which his name is inevitably associated, has rarely been judged with impartiality.

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  • The system of rattachement was in great part abandoned, and decentralization was obtained by augmenting the powers of the governor-general, and by granting to Algeria legal personality and a special budget (see above, Central Government).

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  • Once committed to the Russian alliance, however, he became the faithful henchman of the emperor Alexander, whose fascinating personality exercised over him to the last a singular power, and began that influence of Russia at the court of Berlin which was to last till Frederick William IV.'s supposed Liberalism was to shatter the cordiality of the entente.

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  • Besides, he was deeply impressed by the fact of man's personality and by the problem of his personal immortality, which brought him back through Schelling to Leibnitz, whose Monadologie throughout maintains the plurality of monadic souls and the omnipresence of perception, sketches in a few sections (§§ 23, 78-81) a panpsychic parallelism, though without identity, between bodily motions and psychic perceptions, and, what is most remarkable, already uses the conservation of energy to argue that physical energy pursues its course in bodies without interacting with souls ., and that motions produce motions, perceptions produce perceptions.

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  • At the same time, he refused to regard this " world-eject " as personal, because personality implies limitation.

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  • Ladd (q.v.) also believes in " a larger all-inclusive self," and goes so far as the paradox that perfect personality is only reconcilable with one infinite being.

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  • There the great secession from Rome was brought about by Martin Luther; but, in spite of his striking personality, the upheaval which was destined to shatter the unity of the Western Church was not his undivided work.

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  • But though Philo sees the difficulties of the orthodox Judaism he cannot accept pantheism or mysticism so far as to give up the personality of God (see Logos).

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  • Thus so far from simplifying or really elucidating the religion, these priestly labors tended rather to confuse one legend with another and to efface the personality of individual gods.

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  • It expressly refers itself to the maxim of Protagoras that "man is the measure of all things," and is best conceived as a protest against the assumption that logic can treat thought in abstraction from its psychological context and the personality of the knower, i.e.

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  • In its detached yet intimate way, this is a model of the art by which a good judge of men, possessed at the same time of a just historical sense, may, from the point of view of a contemporary on the opposite side in politics, correct the perspective of an official biography written under the limitations of filial obligation, and give tone and value to the picture of an interesting personality.

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  • He was singularly sweet-tempered, and shrank from the impassioned political bitterness that raged about him; bore with relative equanimity a flood of coarse and malignant abuse of his motives, morals, religion, 4 personal honesty and decency; cherished very few personal animosities; and better than any of his great antagonists cleared political opposition of illblooded personality.

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  • The king, owing to his charm of manner, his handsome face, and his brilliant personality, gained many sympathies, and began to aspire to absolute independence.

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  • His cheerful serenity of manner, his tranquil mirthfulness, and the steady charm of his personality made him a favourite with his fellows, in spite of a certain reserve.

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  • The epithet Maleatas, which, as the quantity of the first vowel (a) shows,' cannot mean god of "sheep" or "the apple-tree," is probably a local adjective derived from Malea (perhaps Cape Malea), and may refer to an originally distinct personality, subsequently merged in that of Apollo (see below).

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  • This is important as a preliminary stage, but philosophy properly begins when it attempts to coordinate or systematize those convictions in harmony, to conciliate apparent contradiction and opposition, as between the correlative notions of finite and infinite, the apparently conflicting notions of personality and infinitude, self and not-self; in a word, to reconcile the various sides of consciousness with each other.

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  • In the ceaseless strife between the old English kingdoms, therefore, it was the personality of the king which was the main factor in determining the hegemony of one state over another.

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  • By this process of forgetfulness and misinterpretation, mountains, rivers, lakes, sun and sea would receive human attributes, while men would degenerate from a more sensible condition into a belief in the personality and vitality of inanimate objects.

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  • On the whole, then (though degeneracy, as well as progress, is a force in human evolution), we are not tempted to believe in so strange a combination of forgetfulness with long memory, nor so excessive a degeneration from common sense into a belief in the personality of phenomena, as are required no less by Spencer's system than by that of Max Muller.

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  • Yet, while these are essential merits of the book, its endearing charm lies deeper, in the sweet and kindly personality of the author, who on his rambles gathers no spoil, but watches the birds and field-mice without disturbing them from their nests, and quietly plants an acorn where he thinks an oak is wanted, or sows beech-nuts in what is now a stately row.

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  • Miss Sullivan has in addition a vigorous personality.

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  • He was too much absorbed in observing the famous man's personality.

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  • As often occurs with old men, it was only after some seconds that the impression produced by Prince Andrew's face linked itself up with Kutuzov's remembrance of his personality.

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  • Jungr is one of those rare types with a spectacularly rich and rangy voice as well as a mesmerizing personality.

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  • What looked like creative suicide on paper was turned into a rip-roaring success by the sheer strength of Handel 's artistic personality.

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  • On applying for membership please provide a detailed description of why you are interested in the subject of schizoid personality disorder.

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  • The most annoying aspect of Disco Queen 's personality is that she seems impervious to both cold and scornful looks from women like you.

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  • Who has killed the showbiz personality of the year?

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  • With a bit more of this sparky personality, the film could have been a lot more fun.

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  • Saturn in weak trine with Pluto This aspect will bring out the forceful side of your personality both at work and in romance.

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  • The " true Christian " is n't someone who scores well on a range of esthetic performance indicators or even personality types.

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  • I dont drink so, get over it... I have a personality without having to get smashed thank u very much !

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  • He was also its host, but Messer did not speak much and projected an unassuming on-air personality.

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  • Regard for the employe 's personality must be carried down in an unbroken chain through all the ranks.

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  • What 's On September Friday 1st JOHN OTWAY The self-confessed unsuccessful singer songwriter with a surreal sense of humor and a winning underdog personality.

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  • All segregation statutes are unjust because segregation distorts the soul and damages the personality.

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  • A vacillating character easily influenced by people of stronger personality than himself, Arran nevertheless had a great talent for self-preservation.

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  • So find out whether Matt really is a Vacuous Presenter Type in the Vacuous Personality Test.

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  • Sarah Danes played the part of Gloria, and her vivacious personality suited the part admirably.

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  • Aim to show the employer that you have a well-rounded personality.

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  • Cardhu 's winsome personality and " good taste ", however, will make things right in short order after the proper introduction.

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  • Kaitlin readily admits her overly sassy personality.

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  • His temper flared, and the bellicose aspect of his personality became apparent.

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  • The endearing personality that Derek had attracted many to him.

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  • Trying to talk to Jim about seriousfinancial issues is difficult because of his facetious personality.

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  • After finding the right group of friends, Norah no longer felt insecure about her personality.

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  • His over-the-top personality was a mixture of confidence, humor, and a slight bit of machismo.

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  • Her fickle personality makes it difficult to be her friend, her moods change so quickly.

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  • If they contain even a bit of abusiveness in their personality, they would not be a good candidate for this leadership position.

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  • Her constant optimistic personality is a very attractive trait.

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  • Her chilled, zen personality was especially helpful in stressful situations.

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  • Even in the midst of a rough week, Brianna never lost her affable personality.

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  • You can't change your personality to conform to the ideal founder, but you can be aware of the qualities that increase the likelihood of success.

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  • Your child has her own personality, so why shouldn't her clothing be as unique as she is?

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  • While baby clothes can be found anywhere, it may be more difficult to find something that truly speaks to you and your child's personality.

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  • Before choosing a preschool for your child, think about your child's personality, needs, insecurities, likes, and dislikes.

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  • After all, you want your child's name to capture the essence of his personality.

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  • A potential nanny must employ a wide breath of knowledge about children; have a flexible personality and the strong ability to handle emergencies.

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  • Even if you've never traveled further than the corner grocery store, giving your baby a foreign name can add a worldly allure to his/her personality.

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  • As you form an attachment with your child, you are molding his personality and his sense of self.

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  • What is the personality of the caregiver?

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  • Each one has a special personality and needs, and you will learn how to respond to those needs.

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  • The best way to throw a great shower is to do something that goes well with the mother-to-be's personality, and this can also be true with favors.

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  • According to International Adoption Help, the emotional effects of adoption will vary depending on a child's age, personality, and the circumstances of the adoption.

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  • For older children, learning to live with one parent and adapting to his or her personality traits may be easier than trying to fit in with two parents.

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  • Adoption photo listings offer you a glimpse into the personality of the children who are available for adoption.

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  • Develop a day sleep routine based on awake times, her personality and her signals.

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  • Maine Coon cats are very fluffy and known to have a "dog-like" personality.

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  • When considering a litter, you want to make sure you have a good idea of a kitten's health and personality.

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  • Try to time the visit when the litter would normally be active so that you can get a sense of each puppy's personality.

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  • The dishes you use on your table make a statement about your personality and style.

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  • Choose a card that both matches the occasion and personality of the receiver.

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  • Choose one that you think best suits the occasion, as well as the recipient's personality.

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  • Choose a design - traditional, contemporary, elaborate, or utilitarian - that matches not only your personality and lifestyle, but one that coordinates with your china and other dishes to give the table a matching look.

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  • Once you have selected a few bags from which to choose, make sure that the handbag's style matches your individual personality.

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  • If you are not sure about your personal style, check out some catalogs, magazines, and websites for photos of formal wear and tuxedoes that you think will look good on your body type and will suit your personality.

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  • Great for controlling algae, these hardy fish have personality and are compatible with many other fish.

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  • People usually collect specific things that reflect their personality.

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  • Some may say to just "choose what you like" or "choose what fits your personality" but unless you want to deal with the potential buyer's remorse, it's best to dig a bit deeper than that.

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  • From there, you can experiment with different materials to give each monkey a different look or personality.

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  • These pages will give you plenty of info on each breed, including a physical description, personality traits, and health concerns common to each breed.

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  • Actually, though, there's nothing preventing an older cat from bonding with you, and you have a much better idea what type of personality your pet has.

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  • Kittens don't seem to develop identifying personality characteristics until ten to twelve weeks, so if you want a calm cat, or a lively cat, you're simply guessing when you pick a kitten.

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  • The Maine Coon's striking good looks make it a real standout at cat shows, but its personality also makes it a wonderful family companion.

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  • When purchasing one, consider your own cat's unique personality for clues about which condo might be his/her perfect match.

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  • Although some feline enthusiasts might have some concerns about this breed's wild heritage affecting its personality, today's Bengal has been bred to be a friendly family companion that just happens to look exotic.

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  • The goal was to capture the look of the exotic cat, and combine it with a pleasant personality that would make it a good house pet.

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  • This has resulted in pets with enormous personality.

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  • Be aware that when you take on a Bengal cat, you are taking on a pet with a big personality, one who is very self-assured, open and loving, but one who is also quite capable of getting whatever it wants.

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  • The style you choose should be based on your pet's personality.

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  • Consider your cat's personality, and the spot where you plan to locate the bed before you decide on a purchase.

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  • Available in several sizes, each model is designed with a specific theme in mind, so you can purchase a carrier particularly designed to match your pet's personality.

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  • When you take the time to live with your kitty or cat, get to know their personality, their likes and dislikes.

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  • Because this is such an instinctive part of your cat's personality, it is very hard to get your cat to stop kneading.

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  • Three weeks ago, he was full of energy, very communicative, and had personality plus.

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  • It's like his energy and personality have been taken from him.

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  • Cats each have their own special personality, so while many traits are common in most felines, that is not to say that your cat will conform!

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  • I'm sure his sweet personality makes up for some of these things, so let's see if we can get some of these issues solved for you.

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  • Even if you have already been thinking of names for the little fellow, by the time he arrives and his personality starts to shine through, many new names may begin to come to mind.

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  • Sometimes an amusing name just seems to fit the cat based on its color, personality or breed.

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  • Your cat's personality can also make a difference.

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  • From their unique personality and delightful characteristics to their interesting history and charming traits, there are many fascinating facts about Siamese cats.

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  • Your cat may also exhibit a personality change.

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  • If a cat has a history of being a lap cat, it's likely he will remain that way, whereas it's more difficult to tell what a kitten's final personality will be.

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  • Himalayans were originally created through breeding Persian cats and Siamese cats, the result is a beautiful animal with all of the good personality traits of both breeds.

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  • Flame points have the same personality as other Himalayan and Persian cats.

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  • Located in Texas, this rescue organization seeks to place Maine Coon cats in homes where the personality and lifestyle of the owner and the cat are compatible.

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  • Whatever personality and physical traits you want in a cat, you are certain to find just what you're looking for in one of this popular breeds.

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  • No matter which breed you think might be right for you, remember to consider any potential cat's personality before adopting him or her into your family.

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  • The owner, Cora Cobb, was impressed with the personality and appearance of one of the kittens that was produced from the stray, and she began to carefully breed the cats to produce an identical look.

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  • Problems a cat might have can include personality disorders, medical issues or even litter box problems.

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  • However, not all cats have the same personality, and the trouble lies within cats that also possess a fear response to heights.

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  • The Himalayan is a popular cat because of its unique personality and appearance.

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  • The cat's personality may begin to change.

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  • Any name or personality that is common in society will not make a completely original name for a feline.

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  • Some cats are inherently blessed with a relaxed personality, and the introduction of a new pet causes only minimal stress.

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  • He has a less than endearing personality and ends up grating on other characters due to his tendency to show off and seem important.

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  • The novel merges humor with poignancy as Birdy fends off a variety of suitors and attempts to express her strong-minded personality despite the social constraints of the time in which she lives.

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  • Although the plot details may sound mundane to some kids, the book is a riveting read that includes plenty of personality and zip.

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  • Like adults, children respond to divorce in a wide variety of ways depending upon factors like age, personality, temperament and the severity of the divorcing parents' conflict.

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  • Both have advantages and drawbacks, so research which type best suits your personality before committing to one particular approach.

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  • Some cushions have accents that give them a bit of personality.

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  • Furniture designs for living rooms should reflect your personality and sense of style.

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  • Hooker describes their Eclectic furniture as personality filled pieces with mixed materials, hand painting and delightful details.

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  • From kids' rooms featuring their favorite cartoon characters to bohemian chic bedrooms for globe trotting grown-ups, personality reigns supreme when designing this room.

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  • Interview several designers so you can compare style, price, and personality.

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  • Of course, one of the most important aspects of choosing an interior designer is personality.

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  • Interview more than one designer, try to find someone that meshes well with your personality and understands your vision.

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  • Display the things that make you love - get a book shelf and have the books you love to read out in the open or your favorite music on display and let your personality shine through.

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  • Posters are a popular way to add some personality to a dorm's drab, institutional walls.

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  • Temple's room was judged to lack personality, and Tym's room was considered a little cold - Vern Yip called it a "nice dorm room or prison room."

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  • Think creatively to find ways to keep yourself organized and your room clutter-free while you infuse it with personality and style.

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  • Sheets, pillow cases, and a blanket or comforter in a fun color or pattern can go a long way towards brightening a room and showing some personality.

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  • Giving your room some personality and good energy will go a long way in keeping you motivated and upbeat, you'll need both to get through those long nights of studying!

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  • It's also a way to add your personality and creativity to a piece of furniture and match it exactly to the décor and design scheme of your room.

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  • All these factors will help you decide which school is right for your budget, career goals, and personality.

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  • Whatever design and decorating elements you use, make it your own to reflect your distinct personality.

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  • Decorating is a great way to express your creativity, your passions and your personality.

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  • Add personality, not clutter - Display a few of your favorite treasures to enhance your signature look.

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  • With the wide selection of table lamps available today, there is something for every personality and decorating scheme.

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  • It can take a basic design and infuse a distinct style and personality.

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  • Because they come in varied shapes and sizes, they will work almost anywhere in your home adding character and style to reflect your individual personality.

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  • No matter what you decide, the most important thing is that your furniture is comfortable for you and adds uniqueness reflective of your own style and personality.

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  • Log homes can benefit from these items that will add color and personality to any space.

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  • These items will create a cohesive look because they will all reflect your personality.

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  • Many stores sell a variety of different types of furnishings, allowing the homeowner to mix and match different styles and color palettes to obtain an interior that reflects their own values and personality.

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