How To Use Conjoin In A Sentence

  • Read on, in today's story column, just after the word for the day: conjoint (kon-zhwan) noun, masculine Jean-Marc
  • The wisdom of the retired generals and backbench MPs conjoins.
  • With the digital addition of a unicorn's horn, the heraldic beast conjoins a singularly aristocratic symbol of Christian purity and England's national enthusiasm for horses.
  • There was something brilliantly provocative about the conjoining of two Arsenal related news items this week. Arsenal's failure to win trophies is not down to faint hearts | Barney Ronay
  • We accomplished this by simultaneously establishing two dramatically different, yet complementary, therapeutic environments in the context of conjoint therapy.
Linguix Browser extension
Fix your writing
on millions of websites
Linguix writing coach
  • By conjoining black consumers with black Âbusinesses and black entertainment, Cornelius was able to create one of the greatest economic and entertainment empires in black American history. Dr. Boyce Watkins: What Black People Learned From Soul Train and Don Cornelius
  • This nature, however, is not something superadded to things from outside, like an accident, but conjoined with their substances.
  • The decision of Government to send reinforcements to Ireland was mentioned as a prelude to the information from Vienna of the birth of a son to the Princess Nikolas: and then; having conjoined the two entirely heterogeneous pieces of intelligence, the composer adroitly interfused them by a careless transposition of the prelude and the burden that enabled him to play ad libitum on regrets and rejoicings; by which device the lord of Earlsfont might be offered condolences while the lady could express her strong contentment, inasmuch as he deplored the state of affairs in the sister island, and she was glad of a crisis concluding a term of suspense thus the foreign-born baby was denounced and welcomed, the circumstances lamented and the mother congratulated, in a breath, all under cover of the happiest misunderstanding, as effective as the cabalism of Prospero's wand among the Neapolitan mariners, by the skilful Irish development on a grand scale of the rhetorical figure anastrophe, or a turning about and about. Complete Project Gutenberg Works of George Meredith
  • This sublime sphere, set amid the ordered nature of a landscaped garden, combined the functions of memorial and planetarium, conjoining the transience of humanity with the eternal celestial realm.
  • Instead he decided to use the well-known marketing research technique of conjoint analysis, a practice developed at Wharton by marketing professor Paul Green. When Lower Prices Equal Higher Profits
  • 'India a close friend, Pak a conjoined twin of Afghan' WN.com - Articles related to Bombay HC ready to deal with Muslim girls' marriage age issue
  • There are so many entities in this passage that seem to be mysteriously conjoined in some kind of hermaphroditic unity.
  • Similarly the Buddha taught that human individuals are not to be seen as isolated from each other, but as conjoined to each other in a weighty and consequential relationship.
  • Winnick was, therefore, understandably astonished when the news emerged only three days later that Wallis had not only met Yates over the last two years, but that the former NoW man's Chamy Media a conjoining of the names of Wallis's children, Charlie and Amy, had received £1,000 a day for his part-time consultancy work for the Met between October 2009 and September 2010. Scotland Yard's finest called to account over 'culture of collusion' with the press
  • Ninety-five per cent of conjoined twins die within 24 hours of birth. The Sun
  • Only dogmatic Darwin worshipers could be dumb enough to believe that these stalactites and stalagmites would know where to start growing so that eventually meet at a point, conjoin, become a pillar and hold the roof of the cave up. Rimstone Formation - The Panda's Thumb
  • Folk and country, romance and ruefulness, innocence and experience are all conjoined in their bewitching vocal harmonies.
  • However, in individual couple therapy, the content of the conjoint session is based on issues the couple brings to the session.
  • I would like to hear thoughtful discussions on the nature of relational therapy and avoid limiting the definition of relational therapy to therapy that is conjoint, that is, involving more than one person in the room.
  • Where on this conjoined road of shared experiences did the Prime Minister go so badly wrong and become a Tory?
  • A cheaper option is Muji's ice-ball maker, which consists of two conjoining silicone semi-spherical halves, with a hole at the top for pouring in water $12, muji.us . With Ice, Size Matters
  • At the heart of Ivonginus's text, however, is the criticism of artistic performance, and here rhetoric is conjoined to poetics to form a single piece.
  • Thereupon Ardashir fared straight for the bath and washed; after which he arrayed himself in the richest of robes of the apparel of the Kings of the Chosroes and girt his middle with a girdle wherein were conjoined all manner precious stones and donned a turband inwoven with red gold and purfled with pearls and gems. The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • These vertical volumes and the several prismatic cuts into the building's outer envelope suggest a reading of the dormitory less as a single parallelepiped and more as an array of conjoined towers.
  • Thus whilst the wife and the lover were conjoined as much as might be, the hocussed and sleeping husband was dismissed (ma'zul = degraded) like a nunnation dropped in construction. Arabian nights. English
  • X-rays revealed that he had a conjoined kidney called a horseshoe, and though cystic, it was functional. Annabelle Gurwitch: We're Praying For You
  • The brachiopods from the limestone unit are mostly preserved as shells, most with valves conjoined.
  • The individual zoospore-like bodies, with two cilia throughout life, perforating the membranous coats, and by their conjoined action causing a free co-operative movement of the whole group. Scientific American Supplement, No. 384, May 12, 1883
  • We know not with certainty, in the case of most of the phenomena that we find conjoined, which is the condition of the other; which is cause, and which effect, or whether either of them is so, or they are not rather conjunct effects of causes yet to be discovered, complex results of laws hitherto unknown. A System Of Logic, Ratiocinative And Inductive
  • It is because this book has something important to say to ‘normates’ about their own lives, as well as about the lives of conjoined twins, that it stands a real chance of changing how we think about those with atypical anatomies.
  • The wisdom of the retired generals and backbench MPs conjoins.
  • social order and prosperity, the conjoint aims of government
  • It is not necessarily a vicious circle, however, because by conjoining a larger and larger set of good and consistent theories it will become possible, if determinism is true, to diminish the apparent exceptions to nil.
  • He distinguishes three phases, designating them after the programmatic conceit which serves in each case to emblematize the unity of purpose conjoining the individuals depicted.
  • By conjoining these two big subjects in the title, however, it is not my intention to address an issue twice as big in this essay.
  • Whether this quality be simply a stimulus exciting the egg into animal action, which may be called a vivifying principle, or whether part of it be actually conjoined with the egg is not yet determined, though the latter seems more probable from the frequent resemblance of the fetus to the male parent. The Botanic Garden A Poem in Two Parts. Part 1: the Economy of Vegetation
  • Were he to become a copartner, he would, in engaging in the conjoint activity, have the same interest in its accomplishment which others have. Democracy and Education : an Introduction to the Philosophy of Education
  • Kepesh's harried confessional provides the narrative drive for the novel and draws attention to Roth's ability to seamlessly and unforcedly conjoin prose and plotline.
  • What makes this almost parodic is the self-conscious whimsy that conjoins animate and inanimate in a gesture of closeness conventionally reserved for animate beings alone, an archness that often cloys in Hunt but that points to a more serious scrambling of subjects and objects in bibliophilic writing generally, where books repeatedly turn into quasi-subjects and persons into quasi-objects. Bibliographic Romance: Bibliophilia and the Book Object
  • In the conjoint relation plain whose is always used, as in “whose hat is that? Chapter 9. The Common Speech. 4. The Pronoun
  • The pistil consists of a stigma supported on a style; but in some Compositae, the male florets, which of course cannot be fecundated, have a rudimentary pistil, for it is not crowned with a stigma; but the style remains well developed and is clothed in the usual manner with hairs, which serve to brush the pollen out of the surrounding and conjoined anthers. Darwin and the vermiform appendix - The Panda's Thumb
  • The majority report recommended the adoption of what is known as the conjoint scheme. Science & Education
  • Yet, over a century ago, carpetbagging Arizona politicians bucked a US House Committee's recommendation to conjoin Arizona and New Mexico as a single state. Jeff Biggers: Dear Gov. Jan Brewer: Wax On, Wax Off, Or, Welcome to Arizona, Now Go Home
  • Jupiter, conjoin within the same triplicity twelve con - secutive times in 240 years or thirteen times in 260 years and travel, then, through the four triplicities in something very close to 1,000 years. ASTROLOGY
  • Thus whilst the wife and the lover were conjoined as much as might be, the hocussed and sleeping husband was dismissed (ma’zul = degraded) like a nunnation dropped in construction. The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • This is curiously illustrated by what may be termed a conjoint epistle addressed to Professor Janet by Madame B. and her secondary self, Léonie II. Real Ghost Stories
  • His life and that of his age: the two conjoined in his mind early on. The Times Literary Supplement
  • I don't see why being a conjoined twin should stop me having a love life and feeling like a woman. The Sun
  • It was a family living, always held conjointly with a tolerably good estate, enough to qualify the owner for the dangerous position of 'squarson,' as no doubt many a clerical Underwood had been ever since their branch had grown out from the stem of the elder line, which had now disappeared. The Pillars of the House, V1
  • I have known it conjoined with a declarator of marriage. Redgauntlet
  • A steady backbeat conjoined with the wonderfully pacifist chorus ‘You've got to tolerate / All those people that you hate’ make the song one of the album's highlights.
  • Several adjacent farms would be conjoined, and amalgamated for profit, by outside investors at the expense of sitting tenants.
  • A metaphor typically conjoins a term drawn from the physical world with a term belonging to a ‘higher’, non-material domain.
  • Politics and chess, however, remained conjoined. Times, Sunday Times
  • For the conjoined holiday may be seen as a sustained exercise in cultivated non-communication. Times, Sunday Times
  • Tincture is a Spirit, a Mist and Fume; as aforesaid, which can penetrate and pass through all Bodies, if you can take it, and acuate it by the Spirit which is in the Salt of _Mars_, and then conjoin the Of Natural and Supernatural Things Also of the first Tincture, Root, and Spirit of Metals and Minerals, how the same are Conceived, Generated, Brought forth, Changed, and Augmented.
  • Conjoined since your teens, it's time to commit. Times, Sunday Times
  • Conjoined nerve roots are one pair of unilateral nerve roots in a unique dural sleeve that leaves the spinal canal through a single intervertebral foramen or at two separate levels.
  • In the amitie I speake of, they entermixe and confound themselves one in the other, with so universall a commixture, that they weare out and can no more finde the seame that hath conjoined them together. Of Friendship.
  • The sheet of graphite has rows of conjoined hexagons, separated by horizontally running zig-zag lines.
  • In the case of the conjoined twins we saw two good moral traditions at work.
  • All those railway sleepers we'd unloaded now formed a substantial complex of enclosures and conjoining gates.
  • But then you spy the Jivaro Shrunken Head (it's real, it's the size of a tennis ball); conjoined piglets in a jar; an assload of taxidermy, including a gorgeous zebra head; giant's rings ... Boing Boing: September 29, 2002 - October 5, 2002 Archives
  • His life and that of his age: the two conjoined in his mind early on. The Times Literary Supplement
  • The term Siamese twin is no longer used, but was coined in the 1800s for the Thai born Chang and Eng bunker, arguably the most famous conjoined twins ever. CNN Transcript Jul 4, 2003
  • The court said a conjoint reading of the advertisement by-laws leaves no room for doubt that all kinds of advertisement hoardings cannot be erected anywhere and everywhere.
  • There, most voices conjoin in reverential awe.
  • Two subsumptively unified states will have what they call a conjoint phenomenology: a phenomenology of having both states at once that subsumes the phenomenology of the individual states: The Unity of Consciousness
  • I believe that such a Left is emerging, conjoining a nascent, heterogenous anti-capitalism with full-blooded anti-imperialism.
  • As with all terribles simplificateurs, some of his ideas are, at least, suggestive. For example, among the characteristic features of disintegrating civilisations he finds the conjoined twins of archaism and futurism.
  • This article offers a new explanation of the explosive tension by arguing that an organized male political campaign conjoined with a socioeconomic protest led by market women.
  • I have known it conjoined with a declarator of marriage. — Redgauntlet
  • As such, her poetry signifies a self-determining moment in the history and reception of African American writing, conjoining aspects of expression that cross-refer to both adults and children in Appalachia and beyond.
  • When upon exposed parts, stimulation of the patches, with the view of producing hyperæmia and consequent pigment deposit; conjoined with suitable applications to the surrounding pigmented skin, with a view to lessen the coloration (see _treatment of chloasma_), will be of aid in rendering the disease less conspicuous. Essentials of Diseases of the Skin Including the Syphilodermata Arranged in the Form of Questions and Answers Prepared Especially for Students of Medicine
  • Over the past 10 years, researchers and treatment professionals have begun to consider these issues in more depth, with a growing interest in conjoint couples therapy being one result.
  • He seeks to avoid a ‘one-sided materialistic’ view of history, and therefore attempts to conjoin analysis of the material with the spiritual - that is, between patterns of belief and systems of social action.
  • I recorded the date of my marriage and the conception of my wife and the birth of my daughter; and from her horoscope I find that her name is conjoined with that of her cousin; 401 and there are damsels in foison for our lord the Sultan.’ The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • Indeed, there is a huge industry devoted especially to the supply of protocols, advice, personnel, and moral encouragement for inter-faith combinations and conjoint weddings.
  • The table next to us - actually, not so much next as conjoined to us - got served a beef maki. Times, Sunday Times
  • Actually, the conjoined may have worked this one out, too. Times, Sunday Times
  • Part of the problem is Gifted's creators pegged their paint-by-numbers biography to an event — his attempt to separate conjoined twins — inadequate to the purpose. TNT's 'Gifted Hands' wasn't made by gifted hands
  • My father here interrupted my client, and reminded him that there was a good deal of business to do, as he proposed to give the young counsel an outline of the state of the conjoined process, with a view to letting him into the merits of the cause, disencumbered from the points of form. Redgauntlet
  • But the students of the future, while recognizing an obvious affinity between the other two, may be puzzled to find Daudet's name conjoined with theirs. The French Immortals Series — Complete
  • RIYADH: A pair of conjoined Palestinian twins who came to the Kingdom from the Gaza Strip to undergo separation surgery died in Riyadh on Saturday, said Saudi Health Minister Dr. Abdullah Al-Rabeeah. Arabnews - frontpage
  • The rotator cuff refers to a group of 4 muscles in the shoulder and their associated tendons which combine to form a broad conjoined tendon called the rotator cuff tendon. SeekingAlpha.com: Home Page
  • 1978 Baby A and Baby B were conjoined from the chest through the pelvis; one survived and one died following the separation. Conjoined Twins
  • The proposal to conjoin the city's large student population into one ward is not new.
  • The presidents who fell prey to the curse all were elected in years when Jupiter and Saturn conjoined in an earth sign.
  • This study compares the two calibrations in a conjoint analysis involving donations to a public good.
  • The therapist is guided in conducting individual and conjoint sessions not only with nonoffending family members, but also with the offending family member.
  • We know not, in the case of most of the phenomena that we find conjoined, which is the condition of the other; which is cause, and which effect, or whether either of them is so, or they are not rather conjunct effects of causes yet to be discovered, complex results of laws hitherto unknown. A System Of Logic, Ratiocinative And Inductive (Vol. 1 of 2)
  • The best twinsets are versatile enough to allow the wearer to separate them in an instant or conjoin them as designed without hesitation. The Style Checklist
  • Thirty males and 22 females (all those available) underwent conjoint therapy focusing on the marital relationship.
  • These early forays into so-called conjoint therapy were inspired in part by psychiatrist Harry Stack Sullivan, the one who argued that life is a series of “security operations” to fend off anxiety. THE HUSBANDS AND WIVES CLUB
  • We implemented new customer surveys, focus panels, and conjoint analyses to better ensure that the specifications of the products matched up with our customers' unmet needs and requirements.
  • Listen to the word "conjoint" in the following sentence: Je vous presente mon conjoint. Jean-Marc
  • America's rise in rates was conjoined with higher rates elsewhere.
  • Lexandro stared at Valence, and it was as if their minds conjoined for an instant - Valence would never abandon Lexandro.
  • Where on party of the conjoints is a foreigner, the adoption of Chinese citizens' children in China by the said conjoints shall also be handled in accordance with these Measures.
  • the interplay of these conjoined yet opposed factors
  • For instance, one sizable jar contained conjoined twin lambs, their wool stained orange by the medium in which they were immersed.
  • Azure, two wolf's heads erased addorsed and conjoined at the neck issuant from the battlements of a demi-tower argent.
  • As such, it is the critical aspect of making art, the linchpin that unites theory with practice and conjoins the intellect and the hand.
  • The quantity of matter is the measure of the same, arising from its density and bulk conjointly .
  • What about conjoining a passive with an active?
  • Actually, the conjoined may have worked this one out, too. Times, Sunday Times
  • For example, 10 carbon atoms can be arranged into two conjoined hexagons, each hexagon sharing two carbon atoms with the other.
  • He distinguishes three phases, designating them after the programmatic conceit which serves in each case to emblematize the unity of purpose conjoining the individuals depicted.
  • That the problems of thinking about the other in romantic love can come to seem ethical -- veering around questions of projection, violation, respect -- as well as epistemological, is the burden of this essay; and my argument is that the Romantic (capital R) and the romantic (little r) are conjoined in the ethics of thinking. Thinking about the Other in Romantic Love
  • The chances of twins being born conjoined at the head with a shared supply of blood to the brain are ten million to one. Times, Sunday Times
  • Indeed, the uneven vocabulary of sexual difference can be seen as part of a movement that itself sought to conjoin and serialize socio-sexual practices and behaviors.
  • In a kind of literary sleuthing, Ms. Zanganeh haunts many of the places where Nabokov lived, visits his grave in Clarens, Switzerland, detects portents that link her with him, celebrating fluky coincidences between Nabokov and herself and correlations that conjoin them in some sort of "relationship," although she does point out that she was only 10 months old when he died on July 2, 1977. The Trouble With Ardor
  • They respond to specific treatments including individual psychotherapy, conjoint family therapy, and even pharmacotherapy.
  • The chances of twins being born conjoined at the head with a shared supply of blood to the brain are ten million to one. Times, Sunday Times
  • What happens when entire continents are firestormed as urban fire fronts spread and conjoin, reaching into natural forests and farm land across the nation? Comic-Con 08: Awesome Terminator Salvation Updates - Rated R?! « FirstShowing.net
  • This, dear reader, is my mud-faced conjoint* and that curious behavior of his, in a clamshell, is the difference between him and me; the difference, I now realize, between really living life and poetically lusting after it from the boardwalk above. Jean-Marc
  • KABUL -- At the Pakistani Embassy in Kabul these days, a visitor is likely to be handed a booklet about the two countries by Ambassador Mohammad Sadiq titled "The Conjoined Twins. Afghanistan builds up strategic partnership with Pakistan
  • Comparably little research has involved couples voluntarily seeking conjoint treatment for intimate violence.
  • So he reluctantly changed it for one I had made for his birthday which shows the British and Phillipine flags conjoined, their poles placed together as a symbol of the friendship between our two countries.
  • I was a bit daunted by the prospect of three new blog characters all at once, so I conjoined them into two.
  • Yet, something is wrong with these beasts, disturbing deformities that make no sense: a parrot with no feathers, a pair of Capuchin monkeys conjoined at the hip, a jaguar cub with the dentition of a saber-toothed tiger. Altar of Eden by James Rollins: Book summary
  • Today's students commonly do a conjoint degree - the equivalent of two degrees at once, but with the work crammed into four years instead of six.
  • Lexandro stared at Valence, and it was as if their minds conjoined for an instant - Valence would never abandon Lexandro.
  • The papier-mâché city, one might say, is a dialectical image: it conjoins grim desperation with possibility, an earthy materialism with idealism, the old and discarded with the utterly new.
  • He found the nutritional consultations most helpful and family meetings least useful, preferring to return to the individual therapist and suggesting that his parents needed conjoint therapy.
  • By conjoining black consumers with black businesses and black entertainment, Cornelius was able to create one of the greatest economic and entertainment empires in black American history. Dr. Boyce Watkins: What Black People Learned From Soul Train and Don Cornelius
  • In accordance with the growing numbers of Americans on the autism spectrum (1.5 million and counting) there lies before us an opportunity for unlimited possibilities if we conjoin in a partnership that decrees "we are all more alike than different. William Stillman: Autism: The Last Human Rights Movement
  • If possession of a human mind and body is sufficient for something's being a human, then ‘merging’ the divine mind with a human mind and conjoining both to a human body will yield one person with two natures.
  • Although controversy exists about the appropriateness of treating partners conjointly, there are a variety of reasons to recommend conjoint therapy for some couples in violent relationships.
  • The eldest son is the rector of four conjoined parishes nearby.
  • As we have already remarked, one hemisphere of the earth (whether we divide the sphere through the equator or through the meridian of Teneriffe) has a much greater expansion of elevated land than the opposite one: these two vast ocean-girt tracts of land, which we term the eastern and western, or the Old and New Continents, present, however, conjointly with the most striking contrasts of configuration and position of their axes, some similarities of form, especially with reference to the mutual relations of their opposite coasts. COSMOS: A Sketch of the Physical Description of the Universe, Vol. 1
  • Something is happening in the world of the conjoined and it ain't pretty. Times, Sunday Times
  • Or, alternatively, for many speakers of English, “I” and other subject pronouns have been converted to clitics, and thus can’t stand alone but only work in conjoined phrases (thus “for Bob and I”) or with verbs (thus “Who wants lunch? Whoever v. Whomever! Cases collide! Match of the Century! « Motivated Grammar
  • Or do these final chapters represent conjoined failures of imagination and tolerance on the author's part?
  • This process by which utilities are simultaneously assigned within classes and in total so as to satisfy an additivity property has become known as conjoint measurement. Dictionary of the History of Ideas
  • One of the elements, the polka dot, festoons buildings and the street, conjoining elements of a broken urban environment into an aesthetic whole. Vince Carducci: Aesthetic Community in Detroit
  • One of the elements, the polka dot, festoons buildings and the street, conjoining elements of a broken urban environment into an aesthetic whole. Vince Carducci: Aesthetic Community in Detroit
  • From seashore strands to moors and mountains, from sand specks and protozoa to all-embracing panoramas, knowing and feeling were conjoined, not conflicting, modes of apperception.
  • As the embodiment of Goddess the hierodule conjoined in the sacred marriage with the king or priest, and this ritual became intertwined with the fecundity of nature.
  • Cloacal exstrophy variants: Can blighted conjoined twinning play a role? Publications of the Urology Division
  • One of the most critical decisions was when to deliver the babies, who had been identified as conjoined twins through an ultrasound, Mari said. Doctors describe conjoined twins surgery
  • That spiraling stair conjoins two crucial moments of national history in architectonic form.
  • Here the petals were increased in number and variously modified, the stamens also; while in the centre and at the top of the flower, conjoined at the base with some imperfect stamens, was a carpel open along its ovuliferous margins. Vegetable Teratology An Account of the Principal Deviations from the Usual Construction of Plants
  • Then Adopt injection reinforce strata, reinforced timbering , stiffen resist support for resist let conjoint compound support, roger good effect.
  • This is why the Primum Mobile has the swiftest movement; for because of the most fervent desire that each part of the ninth heaven has to be conjoined with every part of that divinest, tranquil heaven, to which it is contiguous, it revolves beneath it with such desire that its velocity is almost incomprehensible. Dante Alighieri
  • By the light into which men are elevated, we mean intelligence and wisdom; because spiritual light, which proceeds from the sun of the spiritual world, which sun in its essence is love, acts in equality or unity with those two principles; and by the heat into which women are elevated, we mean conjugial love because spiritual heat, which proceeds from the sun of that world, in its essence is love, and with women it is love conjoining itself with intelligence and wisdom in men; which love in its complex is called conjugial love, and by determination becomes that love. The Delights of Wisdom Pertaining to Conjugial Love
  • So it should be perfectly fine to conjoin two noun phrases as complements of expect, and indeed it is.
  • However, because our task requires observers to identify an object's primary axis, multiple symmetry axes would lead to confusion, and would make the interpretation of conjoint and disjoint results impossible.
  • Empedocles, gluing, (as it were) and conjoining the elements together by heats, softnesses, and humidifies, gives them in some sort a mixtion and unitive composition; but these men who hunt and drive together the atoms, which they affirm to be immutable and impassible, compose nothing proceeding from them, but indeed make many and continual percussions of them. Essays and Miscellanies
  • As mentioned, family schemas originally develop from individual and conjoint belief systems that evolved from what the parents bring to the family relationship.
  • It is covered anteriorly by, P, Fig. 1, Plate 44, the upper cornu of the falciform process; and behind, it is in connexion with, k, the conjoined tendon. Surgical Anatomy
  • They know they are lonely together, even when conjoined, and that this imagery is a big part of that loneliness. Naomi Wolf: Porn Turns Men Off The Real Thing | Disinformation
  • I don't see why being a conjoined twin should stop me having a love life and feeling like a woman. The Sun
  • Overall, we speculate that differences in struggle dynamics between individual and conjoint therapy may be more in terms of structural dynamics than therapist process.
  • The most obvious hybrid views simply conjoin or disjoin the probability and process views.
  • Although not stating so much at this point, this list of conjoined opposites will eventually also encompass Protestant and Catholic, Loyalist and Republican, Nationalist and Unionist.
  • AN 18-year-old woman is due to become the mother of conjoined twins within the next two weeks. Times, Sunday Times
  • In the cognition of an object of sense, both sides are presented conjointly.
  • This shadowy musing conjoins the two sides of the equation to memorable effect.
  • In theory, a fair few of the conjoined suffer from insomnia. Times, Sunday Times
  • If in a no-trump hand the partners conjointly hold 3 aces, they score 30 for honours; if 4 aces, 40 for honours. 4 aces in 1 hand count 100. Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 4, Part 3 "Brescia" to "Bulgaria"
  • A conjoint folk musical element is a looseness, an improvisational openness that enlivens every track.
  • It means she has yet to see a photo of herself when she was conjoined. The Sun
  • In theory, a fair few of the conjoined suffer from insomnia. Times, Sunday Times
  • These conjoined applications raise one point in common and others discrete to the individual cases.
  • That Light, I say, of those lights, severally and conjointly, which are called the conformations of the King, or of the Crown of the King, that which shineth and adhereth to that Light, which is the innermost of all things, nor ever shineth without them. Hebrew Literature
  • Where on party of the conjoints is a foreigner, the adoption of Chinese citizens' children in China by the said conjoints shall also be handled in accordance with these Measures.
  • As I have said, although they were subject of separate extradition requests, the committal hearing was conjoined or consolidated.
  • Son -- who possessed all the infirmities and lusts of humanity without sin -- because they were overcome by the Father and the God within, to whom the Son was conjoined when the conquest, called his glorification, was complete. The Rev. J. W. Loguen, as a Slave and as a Freeman. A Narrative of Real Life.
  • He also displayed a graphic image of the conjoined twins in an incubator. Times, Sunday Times
  • Probably the best plan is to use a lotion and a dusting-powder conjointly; dabbing on the wash freely, allowing it to dry, and then dusting over with the powder. Essentials of Diseases of the Skin Including the Syphilodermata Arranged in the Form of Questions and Answers Prepared Especially for Students of Medicine
  • In the conjoining of the two bodies, arms wrapped around the other, one may eroticize the encounter or stab the other in the back - or both.
  • America's rise in rates was conjoined with higher rates elsewhere.
  • Such ethnographic explorations of film, video and television elsewhere place the book at some distance from many ongoing discussions that conjoin film and anthropology.
  • Insofar as a human brain that knows about logical conjunction (Boolean AND) would similarly classify logically conjoined sentences, this TLU knows something like logical conjunction.
  • Presently they brought the tray of wine which friends doth conjoin and clarified draughts in flagons of gold and crystal and silver, and the host smote with a rattan-wand on the door of an inner chamber, whereupon behold, it opened and out came three damsels, high-bosomed virginity with faces like the sun at the fourth hour of the day, one a lutist, another a harpist and the third a dancer-artiste. The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • He is a worshipper not merely of his subject but of his metaphor - and he is compelled to conjoin them, despite the well-documented agnosticism.
  • However, this sort of construction seems to be quite rare, and I haven't been able to find any similar examples involving conjoined nominal heads.
  • We were impressed with the differences in the behavioral goals of each partner and, further, with the profoundly different treatment needs of the men and women who were seen in conjoint therapy.
  • Siamese, or conjoined, twins form with the incomplete split of a single fertilised egg. The Sun
  • Mr. HUNT: Yes, and this piece is particularly fun to sing because it's written in a polychoral style whereby one choir sings to the other, the other answers it, and then you have this wonderful coming together of the two choirs as the lovers conjoin. Stile Antico: Young Voices Revive Old Music
  • Much of the book's power, much of its importance, derives from the ways in which the stories it tells resonate with the lives of those who are neither conjoined nor intersexual.
  • As such, it is the critical aspect of making art, the linchpin that unites theory with practice and conjoins the intellect and the hand.
  • An improved fastening means conjoining the heel and shank part to the forepart of the mid-sole is disclosed.
  • India a friend but Pak a conjoined twin, says Karzai photo: Press Information Dept. of Pakistan WN.com - Articles related to Bombay HC ready to deal with Muslim girls' marriage age issue
  • The fact that A and B are constantly conjoined, or even necessarily connected, does not have the slightest tendency to prove that A does not exist.
  • AN 18-year-old woman is due to become the mother of conjoined twins within the next two weeks. Times, Sunday Times
  • In this study we tested the prediction that fluctuations in the intensity of sexual desire occur as a conjoint function of conceptive probability and current relationship status.
  • Thus it not so much the Lawless Act of the Lawless One; but that he considers himself to be God; thus he is conjoined to a State of "fana" in which he believes he is but the "hand" or "extension" of Allah on earth; namely; the Sword of Allah itself. OpEdNews - Diary: Darkness and Light; the Caliphate of Barack Obama and the Judas of Islam

Report a problem

Please indicate a type of error

Additional information (optional):

This website uses cookies to make Linguix work for you. By using this site, you agree to our cookie policy