Conjoined Sentence Examples

conjoined
  • This type is occasionally found conjoined with the preceding; and various details common to both classes show that there was no great difference in time between them.

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  • The most comprehensive view of Rosmini's philosophical standpoint is to be found in his Sistema filosofico, in which he set forth the conception of a complete encyclopaedia of the human knowable, synthetically conjoined, according to the order of ideas, in a perfectly harmonious whole.

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  • The opposition so formed took the name of the " Conjoined Estates."

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  • Socrates and Callias, is their one form or essence only as conjoined with different matters, e.g.

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  • The headquarters of the conspirators was the bishop's palace near Vor Frue church, between which and the court messages were passing continually, and where the document to be adopted by the Conjoined Estates took its final shape.

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  • In specialized biting insects, such as beetles (Coleo C ptera), the labium tends to become a hard transverse plate bearing the pair of palps, a median structure - known as the ligula - formed of the conjoined laciniae, and a pair of small rounded processes - the reduced galeae - often called the " paraglossae," a term better avoided since it has been applied also to the maxillulae of Aptera, entirety different structures.

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  • The crusaders found them everywhere in Syria and Palestine, and corrupted their name to Publicani, under which name, often absurdly conjoined with Sadducaei, we find them during the ages following the crusades scattered all over Europe.

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  • The yolk prepared by the latter is conducted by one or more specialized ducts to the oviduct and the point of union is distinguished by the opening of a " shell-gland " which secretes a membrane around the conjoined mass of ovum and yolk.

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  • This is the condition seen in Arca and Mytilus, the so-called plates dividing upon the slightest touch into their constituent filaments, which are but loosely conjoined by their " ciliated junctions."

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  • He thought not only that a form, or essence, is something different from, and at most conjoined with, matter in a concrete body, but also that in all the bodies of one kind, e.g.

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  • This is the theological, and there is conjoined with it an historical and moral dispute.

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  • They are essentially the size of two conjoined staterooms.

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  • What characterizes a tadpole is the conjoined globular head and body, so formed that it is practically impossible to discern the limit between the two, sharply set off from the more or less elongate compressed tail which is the organ of propulsion.

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  • When one is present it is situated over the conjoined nasal bones; when two, the hinder one is over the frontals.

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  • With the virtuous life was further to be conjoined a humble disposition to adore the Creator, avoiding all factitious forms of worship as worse than useless.

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  • The conjoined organism is, in fact, a colony or association of the protoplasmic tinits, though each unit retains its independence.

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  • With the systematic study of the Latin, and to a slight extent also of the Greek classics, he conjoined that of logic in the prolix system of Crousaz; and he further invigorated his reasoning powers, as well as enlarged his knowledge of metaphysics and jurisprudence, by the perusal of Locke, Grotius and Montesquieu.

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  • Thus, in Philaemon pungens (Lambert) it has the form of a large sac, into which open by a single orifice the conjoined oviducts.

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  • In the words of Hume, "they seem conjoined but never connected."

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  • On the south this gulf is backed by the conjoined peninsulas of Busachi and Manghishlak, into which penetrates the long, narrow, curving bay or fjord of Kaidak or Kara-su.

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  • Tien Ti, Fu Mu, " Heaven and Earth, Father and Mother," are conjoined in common speech, and are the supreme objects of imperial worship. The great altar to Heaven, round in shape like the circuit of the sky, and white as the symbol of the light principle (Yang), stands in the southern suburb of Peking in the direction of light and heat.

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  • The sporophore is obsolete when the spore-bearing hyphae are not sharply distinct from the mycelium, simple when the constituent hyphae are isolated, and compound when the latter are conjoined.

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  • This makes it possible to search inside a conjoined phrase as if it wasn't conjoined phrase as if it wasn't conjoined.

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  • She was pious enough, but her media was not conjoined with the spectactular mystical accomplishments of the Llandderfel woman.

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  • They are closely conjoined, since they arise at the same base, share the same object and fall away together.

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  • For them Church and King were so conjoined as to be almost one word.

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  • A few days later on May 10th, Mercury, Venus, Jupiter and Uranus all conjoined over it.

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  • Are there rules that prohibit the intentional killing of a conjoined twin?

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  • We query the urge to make conjoined twins conform to societal norms.

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  • Each natural substance is a compound (ov6Erov, vuvNTn ouvia) of essence and matter; its essence (Ethos, i top01 7, Tò TL krL, TOri i i' Etva6) being its actual substance, its matter (An) not; its essence being determinate, its matter not; its essence being immateriate, its matter conjoined with the essence; its essence being one in all individuals of a species, its matter different in each individual; its essence being cause of uniformity, its matter cause of accident.

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  • While many media outlets may declare the two-faced cat to be a form of conjoined twin, this is likely not the case in most circumstances.

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  • If a complete separation does not take place during the division process, the result is Siamese (or conjoined) twins.

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  • It is from these cases of late separation that conjoined (Siamese) twins sometimes develop.

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  • Also known as conjoined twins, Siamese twins are attached to each other to varying degrees.

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  • These three concentric tissue mantles are evidently formed by the conjoined bases of the leaf traces, each of which is composed of the same three tissues.

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  • Isaac, too, conjoined tillage with pastoral husbandry, and that with success, for " he sowed in the land Gerar, and reaped an hundred-fold " - a return which, it would appear, in some favoured regions, occasionally rewarded the labour of the husbandman.

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  • Subject and predicate not already seen to be conjoined must be severally known to be in relation with that which joins them, so that more than one direct conjunction must be given.

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  • If what are to be conjoined are severally in relation to a common third it does perforce relate or conjoin them.

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  • Beneke's philosophy is a striking instance of this, with application to Fries and affinity to Herbart conjoined with obligations to Schelling both directly and through Schleiermacher.

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