[ US /ˈæsˌpɛkt/ ]
[ UK /ˈæspɛkt/ ]
NOUN
  1. the beginning or duration or completion or repetition of the action of a verb
  2. a characteristic to be considered
  3. the feelings expressed on a person's face
    an angry face
    a sad expression
    a look of triumph
  4. the visual percept of a region
    the most desirable feature of the park are the beautiful views
  5. a distinct feature or element in a problem
    he studied every facet of the question
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How To Use aspect In A Sentence

  • While maintaining a level of accessibility and providing information are important, this must not dumb the work down, compromise the artists' intentions, or remove the challenge aspect of art that many people thrive on.
  • But it is worthwhile teasing this apart a little, unbinding the different aspects of rhetorics lumped together in one component and separating out the semiotic layering (i.e. the use of metaphor and metonym) stuck in with the second. On the Sublime
  • The Oni character is a deep-rooted aspect of Japanese culture.
  • The chapel or church claims greater antiquity than any other in that part of the kingdom; but there is no appearance of this in the external aspect of the present edifice, unless it be in the two eastern windows, which remain unmodernized, and in the lower part of the steeple. The Life of Charlotte Bronte
  • This report is one in a long line showing how essential aspects of care are being neglected. Times, Sunday Times
  • Homeobox genes encode transcription factors involved in many aspects of developmental processes.
  • A copyreader might not find it perfect, for the assault is allotted too much space and the pursuit too little, but it tells the story in its baldest aspect. Newspaper Reporting and Correspondence A Manual for Reporters, Correspondents, and Students of Newspaper Writing
  • The other key aspect of the restoration involved repointing the exterior masonry, in the facades of limestone, sandstone, and granite.
  • Such a cynosure, at least in aspect, and something such too in nature, though with important variations made apparent as the story proceeds, was welkin-eyed Billy Budd, or Baby Budd, as more familiarly under circumstances hereafter to be given he at last came to be called, aged twenty-one, a foretopman of the British fleet toward the close of the last decade of the eighteenth century. Billy Budd
  • It's probably good to keep some of the nonverbal aspects of my mind sharp.
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