Purges Sentence Examples
So too when the reflection is made that scepticism is after all a medicine that purges out itself with the disease, the disciple of Pyrrho and Aenesidemus bows and says, Precisely!
Nowhere was the chaos more apparent than in the country's past, which witnessed wholesale political purges and the slaughter of Buddhist monks.
So why not share what truly inspires us, or touches the heart, or purges the conscience?
Coughing - This happens because mucus is breaking up in your lungs as your body purges built-up toxins.
Not every iPhone application makes the cut and it is now become apparent that Apple purges apps even after they made it through the initial approval process.
Apple purges apps like this from its app store.
That could be way Apple purges apps related to Wi-Fi scanner apps.
It purges the body of carbon dioxide, oxygenates the blood, and promotes relaxation.
Most people are familiar with the victim of bulimia, who purges by forcing herself to vomit after eating.
In this way he is led to regard the sophist successively - (t) as a practitioner of that branch of mercenary persuasion in private which professes to impart " virtue " and exacts payment in the shape of a fee, in opposition to the flatterer who offers pleasure, asking for sustenance in return; (2) as a practitioner of that branch of mental trading which purveys from city to city discourses and lessons about " virtue," in opposition to the artist who similarly purveys discourses and lessons about the arts; (3) and (4) as a practitioner of those branches of mental trading, retail and wholesale, which purvey discourses and lessons about " virtue " within a city, in opposition to the artists who similarly purvey discourses and lessons about the arts; (5) as a practitioner of that branch of eristic which brings to the professor pecuniary emolument, eristic being the systematic form of antilogic, and dealing with justice, injustice and other abstractions, and antilogic being that form of disputation which uses question and answer in private, in opposition to forensic, which uses continuous discourse in the law-courts; (6) as a practitioner of that branch of education which purges away the vain conceit of wisdom by means of crossexamination, in opposition to the traditional method of reproof or admonition.
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