How To Use Cogitate In A Sentence

  • When she had quite finished and he had dug out enough corroborative detail to get the picture, he went into a long silence and cogitated.
  • Nicholas Martin, the director, apparently wanted to make the play more palatable by emphasizing its comic aspects, both those written by Ibsen and those, more numerous, excogitated by Martin.
  • Although I like being around people, I do need my quiet time to cogitate.
  • More often Arthur tells jokes - set pieces that, though funny, are either old hat or burdened with so much excogitated emphasis as to, rather than prance like Lippizaners, plod like Percherons.
  • The scientist must stop to observe and start to excogitate
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  • John Yates: I should have cogitated and reflected, but it's so bloody obvious there was nothing there that we didn't already know. David Cameron spoke to Rupert Murdoch's executives about BSkyB bid
  • Based on the principle of full flow extinction, this paper excogitated a pocketable opacity smoke meter.
  • Thomas Paine, never modest in his claims to foresight but sometimes correct nonetheless, cogitated years later on the origin of the move to replace the Continental Congress with a true federal government. Robert Morris
  • It's no criticism of your work product, and no one can excogitate the perfect bill. CNN Transcript Sep 24, 2001
  • They will cogitate over policy, and they will issue grave decisions on sustainable development.
  • I'm not exactly over the moon at being another year older but my wife is taking me away for the weekend to meditate, cogitate and recuperate in Cornwall.
  • Most of the contentiousness seems laboriously excogitated.
  • It is my duty to observe, comment, cogitate and deliberate, and then to disseminate the wisdom I have gained by my efforts.
  • But it was impossible to say whether these excogitated phantasms should be played thus or otherwise, and whether the ultimate meaning was how things change or how they don't.
  • Analytical judgements (affirmative) are therefore those in which the connection of the predicate with the subject is cogitated through identity; those in which this connection is cogitated without identity, are called synthetical judgements. The Critique of Pure Reason
  • He apparently went off to work, where he cogitated on matters a little.
  • Nonetheless, by sheer dogged determination I have managed to observe and cogitate on a number of summer's wonders.
  • No matter how hard you study, ponder or cogitate, some things are just a mystery.
  • I suppose I should have simply agreed with Ted's 5 points, moved on and not chosen TN as the forum to excogitate on what appears to be a success for Blizzard. The Golden 1M: Please Welcome the Next Candidate, World of Warcraft
  • It is here contended, on the other hand, that no conservation of any such variations could ever have given rise to the faintest beginning of any such moral perceptions; that by "Natural Selection" alone the maxim _fiat justitia, ruat coelum_ could never have been excogitated, still less have found a widespread acceptance; that it is impotent to suggest even an approach towards an explanation of the _first beginning_ of the idea of On the Genesis of Species
  • In fact, it must require a considerable effort to excogitate novel labor-saving devices. By Water to the Columbian Exposition
  • Twice or thrice he rose from his chair, paced the room with a determined brow, and sat down again with vigorous clutch of the pen; still he failed to excogitate a single sentence that would serve his purpose. New Grub Street
  • The apodeictical proposition cogitates the assertorical as determined by these very laws of the understanding, consequently as affirming a priori, and in this manner it expresses logical necessity. The Critique of Pure Reason
  • John Forrest Dillon, a man of high intelligence, explained, in the preface to the fourth edition of his treatise on local government: No writer on our jurisprudence is authorized to speak oracularly, to excogitate a system, or to give to his views any authoritative sanction. A History of American Law
  • But the figurative synthesis, when it has relation only to the originally synthetical unity of apperception, that is to the transcendental unity cogitated in the categories, must, to be distinguished from the purely intellectual conjunction, be entitled the transcendental synthesis of imagination. The Critique of Pure Reason
  • Not here, pray, I beseech you; but, if I must, suffer me to excogitate these very things on the ground. Clouds
  • When we are rushed to deliver short and sweet responses, we may lose our ability to cogitate and reflect.
  • _Mechanicks_, that I have hitherto propounded to my self, but by a certain method (which I may on some other opportunity explain) I have been able presently to examine the possibility of it; and if so, as easily to excogitate divers wayes of performing it: And indeed it is possible to do as much by _this method_ in _Mechanicks_, as by _Algebra_ can be perform'd in _Geometry_. Micrographia Some Physiological Descriptions of Minute Bodies Made by Magnifying Glasses with Observations and Inquiries Thereupon
  • We get instead more or less cleverly excogitated, linguistically acrobatic flippancy, along with characters who bypass the heart and end up not mattering.
  • On the other hand, while philosophers have not ceased their effort to excogitate what matter must be and cosmologies have still been produced, more interestingly perhaps, because cosmology has not been the center of philo - sophical interest, theories of matter have been derived from, or even only implied by, disciplines that were — epistemology, semantics, theories of action. Dictionary of the History of Ideas
  • I answer: It is absurd to introduce -- under whatever term disguised -- into the conception of a thing, which is to be cogitated solely in reference to its possibility, the conception of its existence. The Critique of Pure Reason
  • It is totally misunderstandings of the government that only normal and arm police are the enough for the job but the state have never cogitated about the importance of possible civic engagement approach while making anti-occlusion strategy. Nepal: Disappearing Security in Occlusion
  • Rubashov had afterwards cogitated a long time over the meaning of this handshake; and over the look of strangely knowing irony which No. 1 had given him from behind his smoke-clouds. Autumn
  • The accursed book of the Recreation of Dice was a great while ago excogitated in Achaia, near Bourre, by that ancient enemy of mankind, the infernal calumniator, who, before the statue or massive image of the Five books of the lives, heroic deeds and sayings of Gargantua and his son Pantagruel
  • What's really bugging me is people trying to put words in my mouth or thoughts in my mind that I never pronounced or cogitated.
  • Archimedes stroked his beard and retired to cogitate.
  • With a frustrated sigh, he sat back and cogitated, going over his various options.
  • Consider and reconsider and think and ponder and ruminate and cogitate all you will - Lady Josephine - but my convictions remain the same.
  • Amelia sat opposite Amanda, silently tending her own thoughts, letting her twin cogitate undisturbed. ON A WILD NIGHT
  • It was a day to stay home and cogitate in front of the fire with a good book, a cup of coffee, and a warm blanket.
  • The whole obesity thing was just something to cogitate on.
  • Mitch didn't want to give the temps time to cogitate over unionizing.
  • Those, therefore, who have excogitated [the theory of] emissions have not discovered anything great, or revealed any abstruse mystery, when they have simply transferred what all understand to the only-begotten Word of God; and while they style Him unspeakable and unnameable, they nevertheless set forth the production and formation of ANF01. The Apostolic Fathers with Justin Martyr and Irenaeus
  • Whoever it was, he must have excogitated the idea at a distance, and in some splenetic humour; it never could have entered through his eyesight standing here. Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine - Volume 61, No. 376, February, 1847
  • Holmes broke open a packet of plain chocolate hob nobs and looked at me. ‘If you don't mind, Watson, I wish to cogitate alone.'
  • It is said that at an early age he disliked the Logic of Aristotle, and began to excogitate his system of English Literature, Considered as an Interpreter of English History Designed as a Manual of Instruction
  • I need to cogitate and ruminate on it a bit more before the official electoral prediction.
  • He also owes debts to the cultural anthropology of Clifford Geertz and to the theory of scientific revolutions excogitated by Thomas Kuhn.
  • Considering the divorce rate in this country, one might cogitate on why so many people still want to get hitched.
  • The terrible Torquemada dwelt for years in Valladolid and must there have excogitated some of the methods of the Holy Office in dealing with heresy. Familiar Spanish Travels
  • And because they doubted, that the Volscians would not easely be perswaded thereunto, beinge so oft vanquished and ill intreated, they excogitated some other newe occasion. The Palace of Pleasure, Volume 1
  • All the conveniences that modern ingenuity has excogitated -- in accordance with the requirements of the present era -- have been introduced into this huge structure. By Water to the Columbian Exposition
  • Murray and I cogitated and decided that the only way forward was to check every four-figure prefix. Appreciation: Murray Sayle obituary
  • All life is connected, Megan cogitated to herself as she looked at a diagram of a complex forest root system in her textbook.
  • Editorials and longer opinion pieces shout crudely at us, whereas a good essay should meditate, cogitate and ruminate in a solid literary style.
  • Thus a single category may include many things, and we cannot discover them except through their signs displayed corporeally and by the things being excogitated by the mind. Confessions and Enchiridion, newly translated and edited by Albert C. Outler
  • Objective To excogitate Alisma orientate(Sam. ) Juzep. flower bolt Cultivating and standardization cultivating technology of field planting management.
  • If we had to cogitate every time we did anything, chances are we'd have a difficult time getting out of bed in the morning.
  • Further, the idea that only Salieri, the mortal enemy, fully appreciated Mozart's genius - albeit clandestinely and self-tormentingly - also feels excogitated and incredible.
  • It has a carefully excogitated circular structure, whereby its beginning manages to bite its tail, its way of getting there is haphazard and halting, its often windy dialogue a poor antimacassar for its spindly furnishings.
  • excogitate a way to measure the speed of light
  • They believe differently: they think, cognize, conceptualize, perceive, understand, comprehend, and cogitate differently.
  • The apodeictical proposition cogitates the assertorical as determined by these very laws of the understanding, consequently as affirming a priori, and in this manner it expresses logical necessity. The Critique of Pure Reason
  • At the heart of the social vision prevalent among contemporary intellectuals is the belief that there are "problems" created by existing institutions and that "solutions" to these problems can be excogitated by intellectuals. Notable & Quotable
  • Amelia sat opposite Amanda, silently tending her own thoughts, letting her twin cogitate undisturbed. ON A WILD NIGHT
  • I waited, while he cogitated, chin in hand, eyes bright as a bird's. THE NUMBERS
  • He sounded much like Loyd Grossman, whom older readers may recall used to present the original Masterchef programme, and who invariably preceded the judges' result by saying, "We have digested, cogitated and deliberated. A rough ride for Andrew Lansley
  • Amelia sat opposite Amanda, silently tending her own thoughts, letting her twin cogitate undisturbed. ON A WILD NIGHT
  • In Twelfth Night or What You Will, the subtitle, I assume, refers to what an audience desires, not to what a director excogitates.
  • They ruminated in train stations and on buses; they cogitated in hotels as they clocked up visa charges; but they could reassure themselves that they weren't plummeting from the sky, swatted down by ash from the great cloud of the world's most unpronounceable volcano, Eyjafjallajokull. Not-So-Risky Business

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