How To Use Ascription In A Sentence

  • These questions lead to some reflections on the ways in which créolité translates time-honored models of literary history, while providing new ascriptions of literary genesis, genealogy, and genetic criticism.
  • This strategy for reconciling ascriptions of perfect goodness and omnipotence to God might be judged effective as long as three important theistic beliefs about God's power were respected by any such restriction.
  • While I have tried to identify as many poems as I can, many have remained true to their seventeenth-century nature and are still devoid of ascription.
  • These ascriptions of meaning may be as public and contentious as the land claims of competing religions, or as particular and personal as the anchoring of ideals in iconic places.
  • When ascriptions are given, they are often incorrect.
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  • Among Robert Gordon's distinctive contributions in (Gordon 1987) was the development of an idea first broached by (Thalberg 1977) that most ascriptions of emotions with propositional objects are "factive" ” that is, that they presuppose the truth of their propositional objects. Emotion
  • Dr Kruse accepts the traditional ascription of the Gospel to the apostle John, writing in Ephesus towards the end of the first century.
  • His conclusion is that God is only - and rarely - compared to a woman, whereas masculine ascriptions to God as metaphors are constitutive of a growing structure of meaning about God in the Bible.
  • Her ascription to Smithian discourse as the source for this ethic of reading and writing is problematic in that Smith's own writings undercut the sentimental version of narrative identification.
  • Just as we do with other humans, introspective experience allows ascription of similar mentality to other species.
  • ˜measurement™, prefer to understand (*) as a property ascription: “the system has a certain categorical property, which corresponds to the observable A having, independently of any measurement, a value in the set B”. Puppet X: 1
  • And why use anonymous transmission during Josquin's lifetime as negative evidence when we really know so little about why a piece bears an ascription in one source but not in another?
  • Knowledge of the law is hardly an appropriate test on which to base ascription of responsibility to the mentally disordered.
  • Some Romanies use Romá as an ethnic name, while others (such as the Sinti, or the Romanichal) do not use this term as a self-ascription for the entire ethnic group. WN.com - Articles related to Expulsion of Roma Raises Questions in France
  • Marian's writing and eavesdropping defies the traditional ascription of maleness to narrative agency, although it is later re-established.
  • Modern psycho-analysts question this physical ascription as they work on the basis that our cognitions and emotions have a greater role than repetition of physical acts in forming habits.
  • The eleven poems not definitely known to be by writers other than Shakespeare are included in the Oxford edition, with a statement that the ascription is very doubtful.
  • The author puts ‘to the Hebrews’ in quotation marks because he, like many other scholars currently working on Hebrews, does not believe that this ascription describes the addressees of this text.
  • Reaching us, every human being must grasp our hands, amid exclamations of ‘Bress you, mas'r,’ and ‘Bress de Lord,’ at the rate of four of the latter ascriptions to one of the former.
  • Matthew and Luke somehow stumble over Mark's bald ‘all things are possible to you’, a traditional ascription of omnipotence.
  • The purpose of this article was to explore academic origin of communication ascription of Public Relations.
  • This ascription depends on dating Berling's print of the ‘Rest on the Flight into Egypt’ to 1795, as I did in an earlier paper.
  • Perched above my desk is an old Christmas card with a reproduction of a seventeenth-century Italian etching of the Madonna and Child, the ascription of the artist long since lost.
  • Less often are we aware of the privileges accorded us by affiliation and ascription; I did get a job interview, a grant, a publication offer because of my academic pedigree, my identity, or both.
  • This ascription of praise to ‘Our Father ‘is found in 491 out of 500 existing manuscripts.’
  • Conversely, the ascription of Les grans regretz to Agricola in the Savoyard manuscript B-Br 11239 should be disregarded in favour of that to Hayne in F-Pn fr.2245 and US-Wc M2.1. Archive 2009-05-01
  • Furthermore, it seems likely that 52's ascription is the source for the other three ascriptions to Monck.
  • And the ascription of beauty is never unmixed with moral values.
  • The authors of the Homilies are hard in some cases to specify, and there is wide discrepancy in ascription.
  • An account of our mental habits does enter into the explanation of our ascriptions of causality; but this is not to say that when we attribute causal properties to some physical object, we are also making an assertion about ourselves.
  • The ascription of such powerlessness has been part of an assault on institutions by social scientists, among others.
  • Yet even this ascription of purity was streaked with ambiguity.
  • ‘Lord and Our God’ was the royal ascription in use about the time John was written.
  • Assessing the available evidence about the life history of ‘The Recruited Collier,’ Roy Palmer concluded that Lloyd's ascription of it to Huxtable is untenable.
  • The ascription of an alethic morphology to the mass of epistemic certainties is always ultimately a premise in and of itself, a supposition of relevance. Bukiet on Brooklyn Books
  • The most noticeable rhetorical development in this sequence is the profound infantilization of Stephen's represented speech and the repeated ascription of shyness, timidity, and silence to Stephen and his soul.
  • the ascription to me of honors I had not earned
  • For Philips's ensemble works, the ascription is usually abbreviated to ‘P.P.’
  • The third is the emergence of new attitudes, usually described as postmodernist, which challenge the Church's traditional ascription of authority to the Bible.
  • Of course, the ascription is tenuous, and wars are fought over the erasure of place, as though to suggest it was malleable.
  • This ascription has notoriously become a matter of debate and controversy in the modern era.
  • All four, however, lack ascriptions, and presumably their composer's name was omitted simply because Nathaniel saw no need to write it out.
  • The three-voice O Venus bant has ascriptions to ‘Gaspar’ and Josquin; the editors of the New Josquin Edition observe details that make it unlikely to be by Josquin and note similarities in La stangetta. Archive 2009-06-01
  • If we conclude that the ascription of sensations and feelings to a disembodied spirit does not make sense, it does not obviously follow, as you might think, that we must deny the possibility of disembodied spirits altogether.
  • Even when the trinitarian ascription of praise is not used, ‘forever’ ends prayers.
  • There are excellent reasons for maintaining the traditional ascriptions of Gospel authorship, when standard tests for such determinations are applied;
  • To facilitate ascription to previously defined ribotypes in the genus, the diagnostic nucleotides based on Fuertes Aguilar and Nieto Feliner are given at the end of the table
  • But while I have tried to put poets to as many poems as I can, most verses have remained true to their seventeenth-century nature and elude ascription.
  • Too many commentators opt much too quickly for an ascription of confusion in order fallaciously to 'solve' a problem in textual interpretation.
  • In any proportionality inquiry the relevant interests must be identified, and there will be some ascription of weight or value to those interests, since this is a necessary condition precedent to any balancing operation.
  • However, the style of the ascriptions of works to Philips in the section devoted to instrumental works may be an important clue in support of the hypothesis.
  • The hundreds of texts on this theme contain two main elements: the description of the experience; and its ascription to the nightmare.
  • Potential effetcs of corticosteroids during septic shock Activation of IKB -  Inhibition of NFk -  Correction of a relative adrenocortical deficiency Reversal of adrenergic receptor desensitization deficiency Inhibition of inducible iNOS Hemodynamic improvement Decrease in the dosage of catecholamines Decreased trascription for proinflammatory cytokines, Cox-2, Recently Uploaded Slideshows
  • At the same time, they are careful to avoid any blanket ascription of authority to scripture.
  • K. Anthony Appiah argues that racial ascriptions are problematic whether one adopts an ideational or a referential theory of language.
  • Without ascriptions of meaning, formal and analytical knowledge is inert, unactualised, imperceptible.
  • Given this discrepancy, solution may be elusive, and ascription of the patterns to a pervasive pathology whose outbreaks are unpredictable makes sense.
  • There's an underlying ascription of bad faith to language writers, that they are somehow cultural commissars, in a sentence like that.
  • Too much emphasis on feeling or ascription of meaning could only obscure what was truly musical about music, its articulation of style, form, and structure.
  • This ascription has notoriously become a matter of debate and controversy in the modern era.
  • Another ascription is to Nicetas of Remesiana, a Dacian bishop of the early 5th century.
  • For surely our ordinary judgments typically, if not exclusively, are motivated by moral concerns - in particular, the ascription of responsibility, the recognition of rights and obligations, and the acknowledgment of commitments.
  • It begins to appear that the metaphysical question of determinism is quite irrelevant to the rationality of our ascription of responsibility.
  • Nor could America's achievement have been done without a certain levelling down of attitudes and ascriptions, in parallel with the remorseless rise of the American wealth machine.

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