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NOUN
  1. an overall summary

How To Use conspectus In A Sentence

  • There are lots of things it is not, but more relevantly it fulfills the author's intention to produce a conspectus of environmental themes that have necessitated official attention.
  • Long before Shakespeare's death the playwrights had lost confidence in their power to offer a conspectus or compendious view.
  • * [529] Conspectus ab utrâque acie aliquanto augustior humano visu, sicut cœlo missus piaculum omnis deorum iræ, qui pestam ab suis aversam in hostes ferret; A Brief Declaration and Vindication of The Doctrine of the Trinity
  • These two historians provide an excellent conspectus on the development of manufacturing industry in Argentina up till the mid-1970s.
  • To keep things manageable for this short conspectus of my view, I shall restrict myself to bases on which a belief is originally formed.
  • Its aim was to provide ‘a conspectus of the movement that has been termed Expressionism’.
  • A conspectus of his doctrines is given in the Syntax, which deals mainly with article, pronoun, verb, preposition, and adverb, successively.
  • Optimum est amicum fidelem nancisci in quem secreta nostra infundamus; nihil aeque oblectat animum, quam ubi sint praeparata pectora, in quae tuto secreta descendant, quorum conscientia aeque ac tua: quorum sermo solitudinem leniat, sententia consilium expediat, hilaritas tristitiam dissipet, conspectusque ipse delectet. Anatomy of Melancholy
  • Thus far, we have seen him presenting images in which the only true sight comes from outside his image, on the part of the discerning viewer, or from the eye of God in omniscient conspectus over the universe of sinful humanity.
  • The Christian conspectus or theatre in the old sense has a happy ending, whether the protagonist triumphs or is damned, because God's justice has been done.
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