Sundered Sentence Examples

sundered
  • He hated her and was forever sundered from her.

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  • By evening it was expected that the whole would have crossed the Sambre, and would bivouac between the sundered allies.

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  • When Frederic the Great gained West Prussia by the first partition of Poland (1772), he was uniting together once more the dominions of the Order, sundered since 1466; and it is the kings of Prussia who have inherited the Order's task of maintaining German influence on the banks of the Vistula.

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  • The Tegean territory occupied the southern part of this space; the northern half, sundered by projecting spurs from the parallel ranges, belonged to Mantineia.

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  • The allies would thus be irremediably sundered, and all that remained would be to destroy them in detail.

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  • The post-orbital processes of the frontal and jugal are widely sundered, and the former may even be small (Xerus).

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  • In New Zealand, Chinese, Vedic, Indian and Greek myths the pair had to be sundered.'

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  • Their chains had indeed been sundered by the sword, but the broken links still hung upon their limbs.

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  • Marriages sundered, jobs lost, careers ruined, students expelled, and even lives lost, as we saw earlier.

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  • In the case of the southern continents the difficulty is, however, to determine whether allied groups of mammals (and other animals) have reached their present isolated habitats by dispersal from the north along widely sundered longitudinal lines, or whether such a distribution implies the former existence of equatorial land-connexions.

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  • In addition to the occurrence of their fossil remains almost throughout the world, the former wide range of the tapirs is attested by the fact of their living representatives being confined to such widely sundered areas as Malaysia and tropical America.

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  • It had been entirely sundered from the body; whoever had cut his throat had managed to sever the neck as well.

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  • Could we assume that there is in the adult man reflex machinery which is of higher order than the merely spinal, which employs much more complex motor mechanisms than they, and is connected with a much wider range of sense organs; and could we assume that this reflex machinery, although usually associated in its action with memorial and volitional processes, may in certain circumstances be sundered from these latter and unattendant on them - may in fact continue in work when the higher processes are at a standstill - then we might imagine a condition resembling that of the somnambulistic and cataleptic states of hypnotism.

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