Dichotomy Sentence Examples

dichotomy
  • The conference focused on the dichotomy of public and private education.

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  • They reject the old dichotomy of left vs. right politics.

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  • The dichotomy of nature versus nurture is an ongoing debate.

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  • It was as if she wanted to create a dichotomy between them.

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  • There is a strong dichotomy between modern scientific practices and religion.

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  • The mind/body dichotomy has many consequences for healing practices.

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  • The two remaining political candidates are a representation of the dichotomy between the two parties.

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  • There was a clear dichotomy between what Ashley said she would do and what she actually did.

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  • My account of the historical problem within the religion-secular dichotomy can be found at the end of this paper.

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  • The strict dichotomy between the two personalities caused the relationship to be difficult.

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  • My participants and I struggled to talk about our sexuality completely outside of a gender dichotomy.

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  • This dichotomy allows you look scorchingly sexy, yet surprisingly covered up.

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  • Marriage = The dichotomy of contradictory themes which merge into a homogeneous whole that epitomizes the fragile, ethereal nature of the human condition.

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  • There is a fundamental dichotomy within this concept.

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  • When designs are still in the creation phase, is there a dichotomy in the designing of styles that are both "cutting edge" and "refined"?

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  • Aristarchus of Samos observed at Alexandria 280-264 B.C. His treatise on the magnitudes and distances of the sun and moon, edited by John Wallis in 1688, describes a theoretically valid method for determining the relative distances of the sun and moon by measuring the angle between their centres when half the lunar disk is illuminated; but the time of dichotomy being widely indeterminate, no useful result was thus obtainable.

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  • Rather than accepting such a dichotomy, Deacy sees the figures as embodying the contradictions found in civilized societies that go to war.

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  • He mapped out the whole subject, dividing and subdividing it in accordance with the principle of "dichotomy."

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  • This means that each subject-object dichotomy is also unique.

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  • Priestley thus overturned the traditional philosophical belief of a dichotomy between matter and energy.

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  • The rootlets, which branched by dichotomy, contain a slender monarch stele exactly like that in the roots of Isoetes and some Selaginellae at the present day; they possessed, however, a complex absorptive apparatus, consisting of lateral strands of xylem, connecting the stele with tracheal plates in the outer cortex.

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  • This dichotomy, combined with his apparently inexhaustible energy alienated many people.

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  • This dichotomy of views on taxidermy display strategy is well documented in the literature.

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  • As in Gymnosperms, branching is monopodial; dichotomy or the forking of the growing point into two equivalent branches which replace the main stem, is absent both in the case able variety in form (see Leaf), but are generally small in comparison with the size of the plant; exceptions occur in some Monocotyledons, e.g.

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  • Suspecting that inherent individual differences among their young patients contributed to their developmental paths, two child psychiatrists, Alexander Thomas and Stella Chess, designed a study that challenged the nature-nurture dichotomy.

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  • In the species on which the genus was founded the leaves, as the generic name implies, are cuneate and entire, or toothed on their anterior margina l in other cases they are deeply divided by dichotomy into narrow segments, or the whorl consists of a larger number (up to 30) of apparently simple, linear leaves, which may represent the segments of a smaller number.

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  • The later examples of the Politicus show that the permission of three or more coordinate species is not nugatory, and that the precept of dichotomy is merely in order to secure as little of a saltus as possible; to avoid e.g.

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  • This is the case, for example, with Diplotmema, a genus only differing from Sphenopteris in the dichotomy of the primary pinnae, and with Mariopteris, which bears a similar relation to Pecopteris.

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