How To Use Emanation In A Sentence

  • The ten Light emanations purines a n d cytosine which is a are necessary to preserve the cor - pyrimidine. Recently Uploaded Slideshows
  • He despised Hitler and Nazism as an emanation of ‘mass man’ and he believed the defeat of the Nazis would also bring an end to the power of the masses too.
  • The heavy cotton impervious counterpane is bad, for the very reason that it keeps in the emanations from the sick person, while the blanket allows them to pass through. Notes on Nursing: What It Is, and What It Is Not
  • And there's a chance that the box might have some kind of radio emanations that reveal the raw, unencrypted data to an attacker who has a good radio and directional antenna.
  • Maybe there was some kind of emanation from it -'A magical aura? THE GREENSTONE GRAIL: THE SANGREAL TRILOGY ONE
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  • Taking the atomic weight of uranium as 238.5, the atomic weight of ionium should be 230.5, of radium 226.5, of the emanation 222.5, and so on. Ernest Rutherford - Nobel Lecture
  • Still his doctrine seems to have been a heathen Gnosticism, in which he proclaimed himself as the Standing One, the principal emanation of the Deity and the Redeemer.
  • Hanuman is more well-known as the son of Vayu, the deva of wind or his emanation.
  • We are not prepared enough to handle the intensity of that emanation.
  • If the Ghost becomes a private emanation resulting from Hamlet's binge - drinking, it undercuts the play's debate about the ethics of revenge.
  • The lovely Cloacina was an emanation of Venus, and her statue overlooked the imperial city's sewer pipes as they transported 100,000 of ancient excrementum a day. TPMCafe
  • Slowly the uranium changes into radium, the radium changes into a gas called the radium emanation, and that again to what we call radium A, and so the process goes on, giving out energy at every stage, until at last we reach the last stage of all, which is, so far as we can tell at present, lead. The World Set Free
  • Maybe there was some kind of emanation from it -'A magical aura? THE GREENSTONE GRAIL: THE SANGREAL TRILOGY ONE
  • Kabala comes to describe God's emanations, and as such it deals with subjective reality as perceived by man.
  • She appeared to be in a state of transcendental well-being, wholly aglow with radiant emanations of health. THE LONGEST WAY HOME
  • The brilliant emanation enfolded her, before it dispersed completely. THE ANCIENT FUTURE: THE DARK AGE
  • They feed on various things, perfume, music, incense, smoke from cooking, or emanations from a monk's meditation. The Gaki in "Children of the Night" by Mercedes Lackey
  • The place gave off a strong emanation of evil.
  • Measurements of ethylene emanation were also performed.
  • Mrs Proudie in truth believed that the archdeacon was an actual emanation from Satan, sent to those parts to devour souls — as she would call it — and that she herself was an emanation of another sort, sent from another source expressly to Barchester, to prevent such devouring, as far as it might possibly be prevented by a mortal agency. A dollop from Trollope | clusterflock
  • Though Islamic philosophers had a independent, religious tradition of allegorical literature from which they could draw, the allegories from medieval Islamic thinkers tend to concern the same Neoplatonic themes of the ascent of the soul and the Neoplatonic structure of the cosmos, allegorizing the stages of emanation from and return to the One. Literary Forms of Medieval Philosophy
  • We are clued in by the dankly hallucinatory style that "Fight Club" transpires somewhere to the left of the real world, like an emanation of the untrammeled male id. A Fistful Of Darkness
  • (Averroism); naturalistic theories of miracles and prophecy; the eternity of the world and the concept of eternal creation; the active intellect as giver of forms; the first cause as necessary existent; the emanation of intelligences from the first cause; the distinction between essence and existence; the theory of primary concepts; the concept of human happiness as resulting from perfect conjunction with the active intellect. Influence of Arabic and Islamic Philosophy on the Latin West
  • In the Mutazalite tradition of Islam there was also a tendency to slide towards emanationism and pantheism, as a result of endorsing the pantheistic necessitarianism of Aristotle.
  • When women understand that governments and religions are human inventions; that Bibles, prayerbooks, catechisms, and encyclical letters are all emanations from the brain of man, they will no longer be oppressed by the injunctions that come to them with the divine authority of "Thus saith the Lord. Eighty Years and More: Reminiscences 1815-1897
  • the emanation of the Holy Spirit
  • While a city is from one point of view but an emanation from the government's sovereignty and an agent thereof, when it borrows money it is held to be acting in a corporate or private capacity, and so to be suable on its contracts. The Constitution of the United States of America: Analysis and Interpretation Annotations of Cases Decided by the Supreme Court of the United States to June 30, 1952
  • And it is not inconceivable that the still more unstable emanation from the matter named actinium by Debierne and emanium by Giesel may be found to possess an even higher atomic weight than uranium; judging by the phenomenon of brilliant illumination when a preparation of emanium is held above a screen of zinc sulphide, the impression is formed that a very dense matter is falling down on the screen. Sir William Ramsay - Nobel Lecture
  • The cardinal principle upon which his attempt rests is the doctrine, already foreshadowed by Iamblichus and others, that in the process of emanation there are always three subordinate stages, or moments, namely the original (mone), emergence from the original (proodos), and return to the original (epistrophe). The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 10: Mass Music-Newman
  • The emanation of all beings from the soul of the universe, and their refusion in it, which were tenets closely connected with this system of dogmas, border on a species of Pantheism, and are liable to all the difficulties attendant upon that doctrine. Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 56, Number 347, September, 1844
  • Even the Tetragrammaton (YHVH) which is called God's "proper name" only denotes His highest emanation in creation.
  • The penumbra of his face, and the emanations of light leaking from behind his ears, and his hair, was blinding.
  • The world evolves by emanation, and matter is a phase of that process.
  • But in its unlikeness to God and its dependence upon him it is a confined or restricted emanation. Dietrich of Freiberg
  • So a Contitutionally-unenumerated right to privacy results in emanations and penumbras from the Constitution that allows third trimester partial birth abortions, and restricts laws against sodomy and makes birth control a subject for strict scrutiny of legislation limiting its availability. The Volokh Conspiracy » Diane Wood on the Second Amendment
  • He discovered the liquid light of her dark eyes in the rippling darkness of the streams; the lilies recalled the faintly tinted paleness of her cheeks; the silene roses, scattered throughout the hedges, called forth the remembrance of the young maiden's rosy lips, and the vernal odor of the leaves appeared to him like an emanation of her graceful and wholesome nature. The French Immortals Series — Complete
  • The radium emanation is a gas about 111 times heavier than hydrogen; to this gas Sir William Ramsay has given the name _niton_. The Story of Alchemy and the Beginnings of Chemistry
  • From a more accommodating perspective that regards psychic phenomena as emanations from a spiritual source, they can be viewed as complementary.
  • The far better explanation is "You find the right in the emanations from the penumbras. Balkinization
  • Like the Arab the Indian is profuse in personification; but the doctrine of pre-existence, of incarnation and emanation and an excessive spiritualism ever aiming at the infinite, makes his imagery run mad. The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • Without a view of Earth, telescopes built on the Moon could point in any skyward direction, without the risk of contamination from the Earth's electromagnetic emanations.
  • But right before I arrived, I could feel very strong emanations radiating from beyond the forest.
  • This emanation, for which the name niton has been proposed, seems to have the characteristics of an element, and chemically is most like the so-called noble gases, whose discovery was rewarded at the time with the Nobel Prize for Chemistry. Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1911 - Presentation Speech
  • So strong were the emanations given off by the intense personal bubble they occupied that I averted my gaze and quickened my pace.
  • The sample was place in the dynamizer, causing emanations to pass through a series of machines; a rheostat dynamizer, a vibratory rate rheostat, a strain rate rheostat, a measuring rheostat, and finally a proximal electrode.
  • The unique symbol for the comprehensive oneness that holds together this entire process of emanation or divinization is the concept of Sophia.
  • One of the most puzzling emanations of Sati appears to symbolize this: Chinnamasta, holding her severed head in her hand, drinking the blood spurting from her neck.
  • The primary Buddha is Vairocana, the Sun Buddha, of whom all other Buddhas and divine beings are emanations.
  • In the process of emanation there is gradual loss; for every effect is slightly inferior to its cause.
  • His colleagues take him for a moralistic prig, but we sense powerful appetites, and honesty that is less an emanation of virtue than a stay against chaos.
  • As for Ed Gillespie and his famous charge of sexism and elitism, I don't think serious conservatives believe Ed is up nights pondering whiffs and emanations of class tension and gender bias in modern America.
  • The air was suffocating to white lungs, what with human emanations combined with the thick fumes of kinnikinic. The Fur Bringers A Story of the Canadian Northwest
  • If the court could remove the legal impediments to education provided by the state, why couldn't it also read, in penumbras and emanations, any number of other rights and privileges that they thought it would be nice for people to have?
  • Many Americans now expect their job to feel as if it were an emanation of their own desires and on their own time.
  • The disputes concerning the theory of vision had very much divided the ancient philosophers; some of them imagining that vision was caused by the reception of rays into the eye; while a great many others thought it more agreeable to nature, that certain emanations, which they called visual rays, should flow from the eye to the object. Popular Lectures on Zoonomia Or The Laws of Animal Life, in Health and Disease
  • [1] The word "wraith" is here used in an obviously inexact sense; but the wraith seemed to be the nearest equivalent in English mythology to the Scandinavian "fylgie," an attendant spirit, often regarded as a sort of emanation from the person it accompanied, and sometimes (as in this case) typifying that person's moral attributes. The Vikings of Helgeland The Prose Dramas Of Henrik Ibsen, Vol. III.
  • Aside from intense natural atmospheric discharges, there were no electrical emanations of any kind that he could detect, nor any sign of city lights or aerial activity.
  • She had cards prepared which described her as a mystical and dramatic entertainer and an aurapathic delineator—an occult study involving the aura emanations from the human body. Cora Minnett
  • But here, as he hath plainly declared the original emanation of all things from his eternal power, so hath he testified unto his constant rule over all in all times, places, ages, and seasons, by instances incontrollable. Pneumatologia
  • They trace their ancestry to the copulation of an ape, an emanation of Avalokiteshvara, and an ogress, an emanation of the goddess Tara, whose progeny gave birth to the Tibetan people in the Yarlung valley.
  • Or put in Quabbalistic terms, everything that exists in Malkuth is an emanation of the The Divine and therefore contains a part of it.
  • Light of the Infinite flowed into that void through a line or certain slender canal; and that Light is the Emanative and emitting Principle, or the out-flow and origin of Emanation: but the Light within the void is the emanant subordinate; and the two cohere only by means of the aforesaid line. Morals and Dogma of the Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite of Freemasonry
  • The earliest account of Nechung can be traced back to his relationship with the great Indian Spiritual King Kunchog Bhang, who was an emanation of Arya Avalokiteshvara.
  • The alien host, the spongy nebulae, the zip and twang of the photon torpedo, the bluster of the starship captain at his bridge — these, according to Hubbard, were not the idle tropes of pulp-fictioneers and drugged-up sci-fi hacks but the stuff of deepest prehistory, somber emanations from the memory of the species. Lost In Space
  • We in this way wish to honor Nik Douglas 'life's work of dedication to the Dharma, interdisciplinary scholarship and research, avid connoisseurship and arduous efforts to collect an extraordinary body of work documenting this central vein of the artistic emanation body. Mike Ragogna: The Buddha Image...Out Of Uddiyana : A Conversation with Collector Nik Douglas, plus a Forward by Tibet House's President Robert Thurman
  • The brilliant emanation enfolded her, before it dispersed completely. THE ANCIENT FUTURE: THE DARK AGE
  • Indeed, when the lines are uttered by Rennie Hurley under that almond tree, it's almost as though we are meant to understand that they are an emanation of the surrounding landscape.
  • It seems equally capable of being fitted in to the 'dispersive' theory, and of being regarded as an emanation or radiation proceeding direct from the human heart. Recent Developments in European Thought
  • The only fix is to silence the equipment, or to actively distort its signal emanations.
  • Men were vainly attempting to worship angels as emanations from God in a step-ladder effort to reach God.
  • In emphasizing the political semiotics of mid-century popular culture, James resisted the temptation to condemn or champion all of its emanations.
  • But the ‘power’ is palpable, described as a radiant emanation influencing everyone it touches.
  • Although God Himself is absolutely unknowable and unnameable, the Tetragrammaton is His highest emanation in creation.
  • That is a first principle, whose powerful emanations reach high and low.
  • One porcelain bird skull is penetrated, acupuncture-style, by several dozen wire skewers that suggest emanations of pent-up energy or thought.
  • He may identify with it utterly, as though the authority and respect appropriate to his structural symbolic position is a direct emanation of his self.
  • The breath and emanations from the skin transmit the _contagium_ from the appearance of the first symptom to the disappearance of the eruption. The Home Medical Library, Volume I (of VI)
  • Many of the local gods and tribal leaders became Dharma Protectors and/or wrathful emanations of Bodhisattvas.
  • The explanation appears to be that the nervo-vital emanations from the body of the seer act upon the static odyle in the agent, which in turn reacts upon the brain centres by means of the optic nerves. Second Sight A study of Natural and Induced Clairvoyance
  • Likely they are trying to detect weird electronic emanations from his laboratory.
  • As we know, this emanation of virtue would in time cause Robespierre and his followers to lose their heads under the severe and inflexible blade of the guillotine.
  • Finally, if I may speak freely in a flowery fit of pure emanation, I conclude by signing here on the garrotted line that mine is a philosophy of becoming. Excerpt from Calembouria (in collaboration with Anthony Metivier)
  • These emanations come from rapidly spinning neutron stars called pulsars - rotating beacons that periodically send energy in the direction of the earth.
  • _ It should appear that Moses believed with the Egyptians the divine emanation of souls: according to him, _ "God formed man of the dust of the ground, and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life; and man became a living soul:" _ nevertheless, the Catholic, at this day, rejects this system of _divine emanation, _ seeing that it supposes the The System of Nature, Volume 1
  • The word aeon (aion) signifying "age", "the ever-existing", "eternity", came to be applied to the divine eternal power, and to the personified attributes of that power, whence it was extended to designate the successive emanations from the divinity which the Gnostics conceived as necessary intermediaries between the spiritual and the material worlds. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 1: Aachen-Assize
  • This emanation, for which the name niton has been proposed, seems to have the characteristics of an element, and chemically is most like the so-called noble gases, whose discovery was rewarded at the time with the Nobel Prize for Chemistry. Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1911 - Presentation Speech
  • Sophia, divine wisdom, was the emanation of the that, by her very nature, desired to truly comprehend her Father, the unknowable One, the so-called Alien God.
  • Penumbras and Emanations have no measurable, quantifiable, or even ascertainable standards. The Volokh Conspiracy » Destroying the Constitution’s Structure is not Constitutional
  • She pinpointed the locations of the positive ley lines under the ground, and carefully dowsed the inside of the church for noxious rays, evil emanations, and something she called malevolent attachments. Water Witches
  • The term appropriated by Gnostic heresiarchs to designate the series of spiritual powers evolved by progressive emanation from the eternal The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 1: Aachen-Assize
  • A rich electromagnetic field is a natural energy field, found in nature from the electrical and electromagnetic emanations from the earth, the sun and natural processes such as lightning.
  • 36For the preparation of radium C, Dagmar adopted Pettersson's innovative method of using thin capillary tubes filled with radium emanation and dry oxygen. Trafficking Materials and Gendered Experimental Practices: Radium Research in Early 20th Century Vienna
  • Some information about the internal working of computing devices can be derived by looking at power consumption and electromagnetic emanations.
  • = -- Cesspool emanations usually consist of a mixture of sulphuretted hydrogen, sulphide of ammonium, and nitrogen; but sometimes it is only deoxidized air with an excess of carbonic acid gas. Aids to Forensic Medicine and Toxicology
  • As we know, this emanation of virtue would in time cause Robespierre and his followers to lose their heads under the severe and inflexible blade of the guillotine.
  • The effluvia, the radiating emanations by the aid of which two distant bodies form a calorific communication with each other, have been very appropriately designated by the name of _radiating caloric_. Biographies of Distinguished Scientific Men
  • Godhead is complete without his various emanations.
  • These emanations come from rapidly spinning neutron stars called pulsars - rotating beacons that periodically send energy in the direction of the earth.
  • C, deposited from the radium-emanation on a thin wire, was used. Ernest Rutherford - Nobel Lecture
  • (neg. people=neg. earth reaction) or emanations from the planet(s) that make everyone GO CRAZY @ the Report Abuse "Already a major problem in New Zealand, with tens of thousands of incidents reported each year, one local study showed the incidence of domestic abuse could triple during natural disasters. Yahoo! News: Business - Opinion
  • It was an alchemy of soul occultly subtile and profoundly deep -- a mysterious emanation of the spirit, seductive, sweetly humble, and terribly imperious. THE SEED OF McCOY
  • This meditation focuses on a guided visualization and muscle-experiencing of the breath moving into the mouth and throat, to be carried in the blood to each of the body parts that in Kabbalah are the map of God's emanations - the Sephirot.
  • If the great god Poseidon made a record it could not be wetter than the puddly emanations of this Irish good-for-nothing, a member of that lowest of all pop castes the singer-songwriter.
  • Some of Erickson's buildings have the grim, stolid blankness of brutalism, but others, especially the well-sited ones that have gathered a cloak of greenery, feel primitive in a good way, magical emanations from the earth. Profile of Vancouver architect Bing Thom
  • We are now ready to introduce the Ten Sefirot - the ten emanations of God.
  • The next important figure in the Tibetan hierarchy is the Panchen Lama, an emanation of the Buddha Amitbbha.
  • If naked singularities do not occur in Nature then we could still observe the totally unpredictable emanations from a naked singularity, but we would have to be inside a black hole horizon in order to do so.
  • Indeed, when the lines are uttered by Rennie Hurley under that almond tree, it's almost as though we are meant to understand that they are an emanation of the surrounding landscape.
  • Rather poetry aspires to have the same relation to being - that of pure emanation - as does a cry or tear.
  • Both Khandro Rinpoches were emanations of Yeshe Tsogyal, consort of Padmasambhava, the great guru who brought Buddhism to Tibet in the eighth century.
  • These begin with shuddha maya, pure spiritual energy, the first evolutes, emanations or creations out of God.
  • In this scheme Jesus Christ was but one of many emanations from God - only a partial revelation of the divine.
  • When one walks around to look at this light barrier from the other side, the yellow reflection on the barrack walls is seen to be the result of emanations of soft pink highlighted by green.
  • Every time she was photographed emanations from inside her breasts would impact the film surface which could be detected and decoded later off the published page by men in adjoining bathroom stalls at Area 51. Anna Nicole Smith Update
  • spectral emanations
  • They decided that the mysterious emanation must consist of gamma rays, the third form of radiation produced by radioactive decay.
  • It doesn't appeal to me as inherently worthy (or unworthy for that matter), but for him it appears (to me anyway) as an emanation of idealism and good health.
  • Remember, this emanation of collective intelligence is not just a couple of months old.
  • He argues that Kunti's sons are not to be judged by human standards since they were emanations of gods, who were all different aspects of Indra and thus one in essence.
  • Technically perhaps a true statement, but the emanations and penumbras of the bill will result in bureaucratic decision-making when it comes to who gets treatment and who does not. Ben Smith: Wilson wins? - Moe_Lane’s blog - RedState
  • If you study the origin of the Dharma protector, he had connections with the Indian Religious King, Kunchok Bhang, an emanation of Arya Avalokiteshvara.
  • Note 27: The German physicist Friedrich Ernst Dorn first noticed in 1900 that radium was giving off a gas which he named niton, the radium emanation later known as radon. Trafficking Materials and Gendered Experimental Practices: Radium Research in Early 20th Century Vienna

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