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How To Use Embodiment In A Sentence

  • This concept of embodiment doesn't apply just to times of exertion, of course.
  • Sue is hard and resilient and, though she is the film's embodiment of civilization in much the way Grace Kelly is High Noon's, she's neither frightened nor morally repulsed when violence erupts.
  • Categorization of the life-world is a manifest function of this active embodiment.
  • A multi-cyclone dust separator according to an embodiment of the present invention comprises at least three dust separation units for separating dust stepwise from relatively larger size.
  • He is the embodiment of the young successful businessman.
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  • I am convinced that what there is of good in that theory of reform of our evils is not advanced toward embodiment in our law by the character of the men who make the Chicago platform an excuse to get the public confidence and carry out schemes of public plunder, political corruption and miscellaneous incivism. The Complete Works of Brann the Iconoclast, Volume 10
  • It was also a kind of Chartres Cathedral, a perfect embodiment of its genre.
  • The importance of embodiment might have significant implications for rights as well.
  • Thus animals could be seen as the embodiments of evil, like the asp of Macarius of Alexandria.
  • Certainly Lady Lisa might stand as the embodiment of the old fancy, the symbol of the modern idea.
  • Even Englishmen who had some sneaking sympathy for the Stuart cause, you were to understand, must have flinched from its wild embodiment.
  • If the characters intermittently come across as embodiments of ideas and author mouthpieces, the performances go far towards humanizing them.
  • They stretch her hair back and put on this terrible wig and strap her in to the battle garments of queenliness and she comes out and she's the embodiment of power. Fear And Clothing: Cintra Wilson's Fierce Fashion Prowess
  • Jan is an embodiment of a cosmopolitan culture.
  • Long colourful dresses are the style embodiment of hot days and steamy nights, so save the maxi until the mercury rises. Times, Sunday Times
  • In a second embodiment the shoe includes a backsaw and miter box.
  • As Anna, the arty portraitist, Julia Roberts starts slowly-she's the living embodiment of a certain style of knit-browed overconcern Hollywood stars fall back on, especially when forced to act with Brits-but she gathers a serious head of steam, and by the credits has delivered a fine performance. Upmarket, Tastefully Dirty And Deeply Uninvolving
  • In one embodiment of the invention, the reactions are conducted in solid state with the lithium source and arsenious trioxide both being taken in the form of solids.
  • In the drawing, a system for preparing franked postal items according to the presently most preferred embodiment of the invention is shown.
  • As Bulgakov, Jennings is reed-like, glistening with anxiety: the embodiment of febrility and ill-fated aspiration. Collaborators; Three Days in May; His Teeth – review
  • In the early stage of their friendship, Anna's romance with the widow Lehntman involves their common ‘goodness’: their embodiment of Christian caritas and selfless devotion to others.
  • That's why in so many different cultures spirit embodiment is so prevalent.
  • The sensation of disembodiment, an alienated dissociation common to the early phase of readjustment. Skinned
  • As far as symbolism is concerned, material embodiment refers in the first instance to the materiality of the artwork, not the reality of its represented content.
  • Especially when I read of the adventures of Russian and Polish exiles in Siberia -- men of aristocratic lineage wandering amid snow and arctic cold, sleeping on rocks or in hollow trees, and holding their own, empty-handed, against hunger and frost and their fiercer brute embodiments do I recognize a hardihood and a ferity whose wet-nurse, ages back, may well have been this gray slut of the woods. Winter Sunshine
  • He was the personification and embodiment of hip-hop.
  • If the AFL sought to present itself as the perfect embodiment of the 1960s — a hip, wide-open alternative to the stodgier NFL — perhaps no team better represented that ideal than the high-flying San Diego Chargers. Chargers' days with Al Davis set stage for Raiders rivalry
  • These public cameras - the embodiment of the Orwellian "telescreen" - have ushered in a new cinematography. Yoani Sanchez: Big Brother Really Is Watching Us; Here Is the Video to Prove It
  • I will attempt to stay as close as possible to the way that we as embodied beings experience embodiment.
  • That sensation of disembodiment—pleasurable during a kiss, aversive when you first suffer the death of a loved one—is common in first experiences, as are feelings of heightened reality or unreality.
  • I was not helped that I had been given an airport taxi driver who was a walking, living embodiment of the Pareto Principle.
  • The antithesis he relied upon is between at the one extreme, vague ideas, pipedreams and perhaps a little more specifically, a concrete ‘wish list’ and, at the other, a working embodiment for a proposal.
  • He sometimes seems like an ambassador for his Government, rather than its embodiment. Times, Sunday Times
  • Ferrari has aged Montezemolo, and while he is still the smart-dressing embodiment of that nonchalance the Italians call sprezzatura, he looks tired and lacks some of the verbal dynamism of 20 years ago. Telegraph.co.uk - Telegraph online, Daily Telegraph and Sunday Telegraph
  • Although Buddy did not know the word "sententious," the people he described were the embodiment of it -- licensed bores, as all aborigines seemed to be (so he implied), who had a proverb or a biblical passage for every reversal in life. Beard
  • Employment is the direct embodiment of the citizens' right to work.
  • A praxis is a holistic embodiment in action at a particular time of the values and commitments inherent to a particular story. YOUR HEAD A SPLODE | Jewschool
  • The heart of its original embodiment was a metal-oxide-silicon sandwich , with initial letters responsible for the acronym MOS , as in MOSFET and MOS technology.
  • It so happens that in our particular embodiment this hardware consists most basically of DNA molecules, along with other complex biochemicals.
  • Connecticut is here, and she comes, I doubt not, in the spirit of ROGER SHERMAN, whose name with our very children has become a household word, and who was in life the embodiment of that sound practical sense which befits the great lawgiver and constructer of governments. A Report of the Debates and Proceedings in the Secret Sessions of the Conference Convention For Proposing Amendments to the Constitution of the United States, Held at Washington, D.C., in February, A.D. 1861
  • Prolonged attacks of dyspepsia, nervous headaches, chronic granular kidney disease, gout, sciatic rheumatism, middle ear abscesses, above all vertigo and gall stone colic were intermittent or chronic ailments that gradually made him the typical embodiment of a supersensitively nervous, prematurely old man. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 9: Laprade-Mass Liturgy
  • Neology is the embodiment of economical principle the outcome of self - adjustment in the lexical system.
  • She is beautiful and benign and the embodiment of all the finest qualities of a loyal and loving wife.
  • The embodiment of the invention can simultaneously utilize the wire transmission link and the wireless transmission link to transmit the data, thus improving the use rate of resources.
  • Then, prove the greatness of your leadership by purging the party of all those who have failed to see that you are the physical embodiment of the party and the state.
  • The Kazakhs deem the white swan as a mascot, a embodiment of beauty, a source of beauty, a symbol of pure love and an epitome of great mother.
  • In other words, it bears witness to the laudable belief that it is evil to speak of nations or persons as though they were embodiments of evil.
  • Knowing all this, the Babu asked the Brahman point-blank to perform a false samadhi, that is to say, to feign an inspiration and to announce to the sorrowing mother that her late son's will had acted consciously in all the circumstances; that he brought about his end in the body of the flying fox, that he was tired of that grade of transmigration, that he longed for death in order to attain a higher position in the animal kingdom, that he is happy, and that he is deeply indebted to the sahib who broke his neck and so freed him from his abject embodiment. From the Caves and Jungles of Hindostan
  • The problem of lower integration level of the horizontal thick-film circuit in the prior art is solved through the embodiment of the invention.
  • In one embodiment of the present invention, the Raman optical pumping signal is filtered to reject amplified spontaneous emissions that are generated by the Raman optical pumping signal.
  • In still another embodiment, visible spectrum detection of our out-of-phase digital watermark provides a clue as to whether a printing process needs calibration or is misaligned.
  • It also gave me the ability to get some important training, and work with big beefy blokes who are the embodiment of Aussie mateship.
  • The final version of this enigmatic character is in one sense an embodiment of Christian gentleness, but it is a gentleness deeply flawed by lack of self-knowledge, confused desire and passivity – an ironic picture which reflects what some would indeed see as Christlikeness, yet incorporates an oblique recognition of something like a Nietzschean critique of Christianity as dealing in unrealities and depending on the resentment of the weak. Clark Lectures, Trinity College, Cambridge Grace, Necessity and Imagination: Catholic Philosophy and the Twentieth Century Artist Lecture 4: God and the Artist
  • Senator Obama has shown himself to be the embodiment of a solar radiometer: The more heat and light (scrutiny) he gets, the faster he spins. Obama Backlash in His Online Backyard - The Caucus Blog - NYTimes.com
  • Classical greek culture is responsible for the disembodiment of pagan divinities : what the Archaic Greeks would have called divinities, became with Plato : "ideas", "forms" and "archetypes". Archive 2005-11-01
  • It's a strange feeling seeing something like that, a kind of disembodiment, and I felt dizzy. Associated Writing
  • Therefore, we must resist any and all architectures of disembodiment which remove labor from manufacturing in the global economy, war from geography, privacy from security, gender from race and dissent from justice.
  • So clowning features high on the agenda, although clowns aren't exactly embodiments of leadership or teambuilding skills.
  • a circle was the embodiment of his concept of life
  • He identifies himself as a staunch optimist and an embodiment of positive thinking.
  • Ghandi's passive resistance to British rule, however, which was really the embodiment of soul force, was unsuccessful in appeasing the masses, because they understand no other agent of possession than that of brute force. The Political Situation in India
  • In a preferred embodiment, the deactivation of the free electron pair of the nitrogen atom occurs by mesomerism and/or one or more electron-attracting and/or space-filling groups in the vicinity to the nitrogen atom.
  • A style, on this reading is a metaphor of an embodiment, and the multiplicity of his styles a sign of his multiple embodiment. Philosophy at the Limit
  • Furthermore, based in our own sense of embodiment and observation of other bodies, our corporeality defines the starting point and ultimate limit of human perception.
  • In another embodiment, sliders are carried in the support surface of the platen to minimize frictional contact with the moving belt.
  • In both embodiments, interconnections between electronic components forming the electronic circuit are made without the use of glass feedthroughs which greatly simplifies the cost and complexity of the package.
  • It is the beginnings of an organisational and political embodiment of a mood previously visible only in opinion polls.
  • Her actions reveal the ability for self-aware introspection, as she acts on her awareness of the disjunction between her disembodiment and the humanly embodied knowledge she possesses.
  • I chose flamenco thinking it was the embodiment of wild, anarchic abandonment built on unstructured improvisational outpourings and learned that el arte is as strictly regimented as haiku. A Conversation with Sarah Bird, author of the novel The Flamenco Academy
  • Although his official powers are limited, the king—who carries the title yang di-pertuan agong in Malay, or His Royal Highness— is seen by some residents as the highest embodiment of Malay political supremacy, adding weight to his advice. Malaysian King Makes Rare Thrust Into Politics
  • Big, bald and ugly, he appears the embodiment of what the XFL sees itself becoming.
  • The two parts of the Charterhouse were the embodiments of "justice and innocence. Hugh, Bishop of Lincoln A Short Story of One of the Makers of Mediaeval England
  • Because he matched the profile, hundreds of people around the world believed that Patel was the living embodiment of a figure they called Maitreya, the Christ or "the world teacher". "BANPC" via James Bow in Google Reader
  • The naturalness of this co-embodiment is perhaps the play's most violent re-writing of contemporary colonial conflict. Through Colonial Spectacles: the Irish Vizier and the Female-Knight in James Cobb
  • The Lady is eventually rescued by Sabrina, the nymph of the river Severn and an embodiment of chastity.
  • Mr. Philbrick, who lives around the corner from Ms. Thayer, called the remodeled homes in the neighborhood "perfect embodiments of some yuppie nightmare. Living History in Nantucket
  • Mrs Thatcher appeared to see herself as the embodiment of revenge upon a whole generation of social engineers.
  • Oscar Wilde's ability to skewer societal hypocrisies is masterful -- and his 1895 farce The Importance of Being Earnest is a pitch-perfect send-up of Victorian pseudo-morality and the embodiment of fin de siècle British dandyism. Fern Siegel: Stage Door: The Importance of Being Earnest
  • In some embodiments, communication ports are provided between the units.
  • Sholom Aleichem is known as the Jewish Mark Twain, but Bikel enlarges and ennobles the man in ways that turn the world's greatest Yiddish writer into the living embodiment of Huckleberry Finn -- keenly observing the end of the 19th Century in Europe and Russia, the dawn of Jewish life in America, and the incremental death of Yiddish culture that was foreshadowed in that migration. Thane Rosenbaum: Tevye From Fiddler Back With Bikel
  • In a preferred embodiment of the process of the present invention, the cycloparaffin is cyclohexane or cyclododecane.
  • By one of those strange coincidences, however, that drive comic novels, Gutman finds himself accidentally dispatching one of his tormentors, a horribly over-confident and over-articulate graduate student by the name of Dirck van Camper, and subsequently presents an essay of van Camper's, entitled "Total Mindfuck: A Study in Ethics and Embodiment," as his own. Posthegemony
  • And she is all the more real because it is France, impure, the country of light loves and immodest passions, where all that is sensual comes to the surface, and the courtesan is the queen of ignoble fancy, that has brought forth this most perfect embodiment of purity among the nations. Jeanne d'Arc
  • In one embodiment, the storage element is a data latch comprising a clock-enabled inverter serially coupled with a flip-flop.
  • One of the flunkies is this clubkid who, as a zombie, is the unliving embodiment of "graver". Black Rain of the Evil Dead Highlanders: Versus
  • One embodiment of mine fuze intelligence is attack judgment and anti - minesweeping.
  • He was the embodiment of the English gentleman.
  • To love is to see myself in you and to wish to celebrate myself with you. What I love is the embodiment of my values in another person. Love is an act of self-assertion, self-expression and a celebration of being alive. Nathaniel Branden 
  • According to Gandhi, it is when symbols become fetishes and embodiments of the divine, that they might be construed as idols.
  • A long-faced nurse in a sickroom is a visible embodiment and presence of the disease against which the eager life of the patient is fighting in agony. The Seaboard Parish, Complete
  • The founders of CAVU Resources chose the name CAVU because they believe that the Company will be the embodiment of its name. Marketwire - Breaking News Releases
  • But the chronological sequence begins with David, himself an embodiment of contradictions—an ardent enemy of the ancienne régime who sided with the extremists and was imprisoned for his association with Robespierre during the Terror, he became, essentially, Napoleon's court painter. Drawn to Revolution
  • The firm position of Church of England, one of the oldest embodiments of Christianity, shows that the country still stands tall on the framework of religion.
  • At least one embodiment provides for micromachining with pulsewidths in the range of femtoseconds to nanoseconds.
  • To begin with, the Buddhas and bodhisattvas, the embodiments of awakened compassion, were ordinary beings exactly like ourselves.
  • In other words, for all the images and metaphors music often presents us with, an album cover is its tangible embodiment.
  • It is the microscopic embodiment of city traffic pattern that resident makes trip mode.
  • Such is the nature of our intimate, carking, rueful relationship with William Holden, on the surface one of the Hollywood century's typical all-purpose leading men, but beneath it the keeper of poisoned secrets, and a living embodiment of America's postwar self-doubt and idealistic failure. William Holden--noir hero?
  • The chair back is the embodiment of elegance, suggesting an open plume of feathers supported by lyrical S-shaped side rails.
  • Paradox lends itself to the expression of religious ideas, especially Christian notions concerned with the doctrine of the incarnation, with its mix of divine inconceivability and worldly embodiment.
  • In their wild and alien nature, these animals were the embodiment of all that was uncivilized and, therefore, of barbarian irrationality and evil.
  • Then follows a series of embodiments, or incarnations, from lower to higher, in which occurs an evolution or "unfoldment" of the nature of the soul, in which it rises to higher and higher planes of being, until finally, after æons of time, it enters in Union with the Divine Nirvana and Reincarnation and the Law of Karma A Study of the Old-New World-Doctrine of Rebirth, and Spiritual Cause and Effect
  • It is somewhat disconcerting to find her an embodiment of French chic. Times, Sunday Times
  • In returning idealism to the question of embodiment, Schelling unavoidably confronts the concomitant question of sexual difference; but he also holds the question away, and economizes it to the degree that his argument is itself complexly interpellated into the patriarchal structures of the Symbolic order. Mourning Becomes Theory: Schelling and the Absent Body of Philosophy
  • By then the real embodiment of air power - the aeroplane - was not quite five years old.
  • This invention will be hereinafter described with particular reference to an embodiment thereof applied to the microreader used as the interface.
  • Pine was the only redeeming factor of Smokin 'Aces but based on the trailers he seems like the embodiment of "Maverick" from Top Gun. Star Trek Movie Trailer | /Film
  • Apparently, she figured that if I were her daughter, she'd have made sure that I was the embodiment of elegance and poise, not to mention maturity.
  • Reverting to conventional photography, the artist insists we look at these people as embodiments of the limitations of science and technology.
  • Musical, with a clear, refined technique and a demeanor that favors restraint over flashiness, he appears to many the embodiment of the high classicist.
  • This inspiration permeated the whole soil of national thought, and its embodiment in art and letters has hardly any parallel except in that brilliant morning of English thought which we know as the Elizabethan era. The Great German Composers
  • Her idea was that elephants were machines of destruction and embodiments of terror.
  • Dobzhansky set forth that the individual is not the embodiment of some ideal type or norm, but rather a unique and unrepeatable realization in the field of quasi-infinite possible genetic combinations.
  • My observation is that directly as our choric insistence on the restoration of values has swelled, so our own personal embodiment of those values in our daily conduct has sunk. The Values Split Screen
  • Moreover, the way that the myths are modified over time also quite plainly reveals that their protagonists were regarded as exempla, that is, embodiments of traditional virtues.
  • In the icebergs and the blue heart of the glacier, Muldrow glimpses cold inhuman embodiments of the natural world that promise another reality.
  • Central among their philosophical interests here are sexual difference, embodiment, and intersubjectivity.
  • Oscar Wilde's ability to skewer societal hypocrisies is masterful -- and his 1895 farce The Importance of Being Earnest is a pitch-perfect send-up of Victorian pseudo-morality and the embodiment of fin de siècle British dandyism. Fern Siegel: Stage Door: The Importance of Being Earnest
  • 'The next page is a scalping, and then we go to decapitation and finally disembodiment.' Social Security Privatization, Arnold Kling | EconLog | Library of Economics and Liberty
  • The what and how of a living embodiment, as of a living world, are entirely indeterminate horizons of facticity which can only be made determinate through concrete ethnographic research.
  • Father and son are not simply embodiments of conflicting political stances, but well-developed characters who gain individuality as the film unfolds.
  • In another embodiment, both the thumb mold and hand mold employ a male-female configuration wherein a male form pushes the appropriate materials into a female cavity so that a fully contoured shape is attained for the full-fashioned glove.
  • Also shown in this embodiment, are a third 506, a fourth 508, a fifth 510, a sixth 512, and a seventh band 514 of operation which are in the high band.
  • The voice is more honeyed than the typical British tenor but a pleading urgency tugs at the ear as much as his intense physical embodiment of the music rivets the eye.
  • In A Chorus of Names of Manjushri, the Sanskrit word murti appears in the expression jnanamurti, the physical form (embodiment) of deep awareness, used in reference to Manjushri. The Kalachakra Presentation of the Prophets of the Non-Indic Invaders (Full Analysis)
  • In the preferred embodiment, the air outlet 16 is comprised of a louvered vent 16a integrally molded into at least one side surface 12c, 12d of the housing 12.
  • He was tall, elegant, handsome and "very Czech, by which I mean passionate and pessimistic" – the very embodiment of a romantic emigre, one who came to London after Soviet tanks had crushed the Prague spring in 1968, with £50 in his pocket. The Saturday interview: architect Amanda Levete
  • While this is interesting to look at, it does create a sense of disembodiment and distance from the work as a whole. Eat Me
  • Her patrician bearing and light, unstudied style of vocal delivery make her the perfect embodiment of natural sophistication, but there's a warmth to her that makes us believe she's a nice kid underneath.
  • Above all, Seymour sees the monster as an embodiment of Mary's social conscience.
  • Systems and methods in accordance with various embodiments can provide for reduced program disturb in non-volatile semiconductor memory.
  • A base station radio frequency device provided by the embodiment of the invention comprises a shell, an intermediate radio frequency processing unit and a duplexer.
  • He proposes ways of going beyond this toward a conception of dynamic embodiment.
  • In addition, in some embodiments, the optical filter 21 2 is designed to reject optical signals that propagate in an optical supervisory channel.
  • Above all, Seymour sees the monster as an embodiment of Mary's social conscience.
  • Yes, ‘uh’, you pinheaded embodiment of the word ‘carelessness’.
  • I feared him, feared she'd die without me, feared the disembodiment I felt like a rising breeze inside me. Creatures: A Memoir
  • Embodiments of the package structure for chips of the invention packaged by a wafer level packaging (WLP) process may be applied to active or passive devices, or electronic components with digital or analog circuits, such as optoelectronic devices, micro electro mechanical systems (MEMS), micro fluidic systems, and physical sensors for detecting heat, light, or pressure. FreshPatents.com: Notable Patent Applications - 07/01/2010
  • In a wireless mobile phone embodiment, the cover is attached to a rotabable sub-section of a pivotable section.
  • Could a sane person accuse his god of such unreasoned hatred, while simultaneously proclaiming it the embodiment of divine love?
  • For example, it is frequently said that the doctrine is an embodiment of the policy that defendants should be protected from stale claims and that claimants should not sleep on their rights.
  • Presumably what he means is that at that point they will have lost their representative character and become embodiments of the divine.
  • Long colourful dresses are the style embodiment of hot days and steamy nights, so save the maxi until the mercury rises. Times, Sunday Times
  • Both embodiments produce hybrid gel electrolyte systems in which gel and liquid electrolyte co-exist.
  • With his straggling, white hair, the moustache stained yellow by the smoke from his pipe of home-grown, herbal tobacco and his generally battered work-clothes, he looked the embodiment of the artisan.
  • From H. Rider Haggard's novel She, Jung found an embodiment of the anima.
  • Customs Value Evaluation Policy is a link of the tariff policy under the state taxation system, which is regarded as the embodiment of the nation's economic sovereignty right.
  • In that sense, he is the perfect embodiment of the nullity of the modern Democratic Party.
  • As the story of the annunciation has already told us, Jesus' life and ministry are the embodiment of the work of God's Spirit.
  • She becomes a fleshly embodiment of spiritual wholeness.
  • Huck's heroic decision not to inform on the runaway slave Jim and his choice to "go to hell" persisted in Oe's imagination, and the mischievous and free-spirited Huck became his favorite hero, the embodiment of what is best in democracy. Kenzaburo Oe: Laughing Prophet and Soulful Healer
  • Indeed, the electron microscopy pictures of the transversal cuts show this last organization and demonstrate the embodiment of the nanotubes.
  • However, each set of to occupy those realms by multiple complete physical form into an mand for the regeneration of the bodies can be made to carry a dif - physical embodiments all connected energy form which can be pro - Adamic race and the preparation of ferent nucleic acid template on with one mind. jected to a vehicle or a n environ - the Christ people for n e w worlds which proteins of specific 15 Thus, one mind will transmit ment in the lower heavens where it of creation, a change in biological stereoisomeric forms have been to many bodies as one genetic code can be remodulated into the same life could not now evolve on Earth, synthesized. is used a s the master code for physical form. Recently Uploaded Slideshows
  • While there are many Buddhas in Buddhism, starting with the historical Buddha, Shakyamuni, Amida Buddha is unique in that he is the embodiment of Buddhahood made completely available to all beings in all times and in all circumstances, offering complete and unconditional liberation through his compassionate activity. Printing: Boors versus Buddhists
  • Director Carmen Jakobi produced some wonderfully fresh ideas, including an excellent freeze-frame tableau from Sampiero and Domenico, engrossed in their gambling like a living embodiment of Cézanne's The Card Players, while the contemporary music ensemble Lontano played with needle-sharp precision under the decisively assured direction of Odaline de la Martinez. Così fan tutte; Dream Hunter; Commotio; Stephen Hough, LPO/Alsop – review
  • I'm quite willing to agree that Rilla Blythe is the embodiment of all the virtues, if that will please you. Rilla of Ingleside
  • If the characters intermittently come across as embodiments of ideas and author mouthpieces, the performances go far towards humanizing them.
  • Employment is the direct embodiment of the citizens' right to work.
  • The stannic and antimonious heat stabilizers which are very widely used at the present time, because of their efficiency, are very strongly recommended for a preferred embodiment of the invention.
  • Remember – Prince of Darkness - Ken D. is an excellent embodiment of a common affliction in progs – hypocrisy. Think Progress » Matalin Defends Coulter’s Attack on 9/11 Widows
  • A former company executive describes him as the embodiment of Nike's image.
  • Actually, your "lobsters", and those I'm familiar with are a unique product of nature wherein a parasitic mushroom (Hypomyces lactifluorum) "engulfs" a host mushroom (thought to usually be a Russula or Lactauius), and in its final embodiment, is known as Hypomyces lactifluorum. Mex Mushrooms?
  • Thus, what alarms him is the dehumanization, disembodiment and moral anaesthetization that is now, he believes, accompanying the substitution of virtuality for reality.
  • The project furthermore makes doubtful the possibility of posthumanism that is conditioned by cyborgization and human disembodiment because these two are virtually the outcomes of the metaphoric relationship.
  • Narrative trumps biology; what makes Mrs. Thomas "Mama," not Nell, is her affective embodiment of Maisie's history: "For there, before me on the bed, lay all my past--suspired within her bosom, the gentle casing of my own heart" 373. Grange House
  • Supervenience physicalism, as we have been understanding it, is a contingent thesis that is consistent with the possibility (if not the actuality) of disembodiment. Physicalism
  • Thus I have been led to recognise species as exemplifying the continuous operation of natural law, or secondary cause; and that not only successively but progressively; "from the first embodiment of the vertebrate idea under its old ichthyic vestment until it became arrayed in the glorious garb of the human form. The World's Greatest Books — Volume 15 — Science
  • Fuentes has the ability to turn ideas almost into characters and characters into the embodiments of historical process.
  • According to another embodiment, the second cover is dielectrically isolated from a current collector.
  • In a preferred embodiment, the axis of axial pivoting is the axis of pronation of a foot while running in the shoe.
  • This presumes Williams's concept of the ‘action sign’, and thus locates semasiology where it belongs at the forefront of anthropological theories of human embodiment.
  • When Patrick takes too much heroin, his sense of disembodiment becomes so extreme that it is indistinguishable from schizophrenia. The Sins of His Father
  • Like the fasces carried by Roman lictors, weaving, in which separate strands are plaited together to form a new and far more robust entity, becomes the embodiment of communal strength and unity of purpose.
  • But the cat he's unmistakably struggling to keep bagged is that influence-wise, neither Gone Dad nor Fake Dad was a match for that embodiment of the pleasure principle, Virginia (Cassidy, Blythe, Clinton, Dwire) Kelley — good-time gal, unrepentant gambling addict, and staunch believer in working hard and playing by her own rules. Policy Wank
  • Other starting points would have given Gowing very different types of embodiment.
  • He is also an unapologetic parasite on our great national conversation, the note-perfect embodiment of the malignant tumor on political discourse his party has opted to become since the election of President Obama. Daniel Cluchey: The Shame of Our Nation
  • They are not given the freedom to express themselves and tap into their embodiment of sexual desire through positive social vehicles like film.
  • What is relevant in the economic realm is not an abstract concept or formula - no matter how beautiful - but its physical embodiment.
  • These buildings look north across Prince's Street Gardens to the contrasting world of the Georgian New Town, the embodiment of enlightened neoclassicism.
  • Women are not only the embodiment of heavenly qualities but can also aspire t find and occupy a heavenly space.
  • Employment is the direct embodiment of the citizens' right to work.
  • He is the embodiment of the young successful businessman.
  • It is for the Congress, not the courts, to consult political forces and then decide how best to resolve conflicts in the course of writing the objective embodiments of law we know as statutes.
  • But if done well such a ritual can provide that sense of the embodiment of land and history and people that has characterized the ‘magic’ of royal enthronements back into the mists of time.
  • The new highway is the embodiment of the very latest designing ideas.
  • These subjects come together for us when we discuss the representation of embodiment that insists both on the fleshly materiality of the body, and the ubiquity of unconscious fantasy that underpins being-in-the-body.
  • Colonel Lewis Pick, the architect of the tribes' inundation, was the embodiment of a no-nonsense military man.
  • Such is the contradiction of an exoticist poem conceived as the embodiment of the rational humanist ideals of Hartley and Godwin. The Allure of the Same: Robert Southey's Welsh Indians and the Rhetoric of Good Colonialism
  • Once at their table, Agee describes the colors and the tastes, textures, and odors of the food, claiming that these things represent the physical embodiment of home.
  • This is about growing comfortable with your new physicality, dealing with issues of disembodiment and bodily alienation. Skinned
  • Hegel's philosophy of history holds that the idea of right has developed within interactions among and within institutional embodiments of the idea.
  • He might reply to the dilemma by saying, species do not exist _as species_ in the sense in which they are said to vary (variation applying only to the concrete embodiments of {272} the specific idea), and the evolution of species is demonstrated not by individuals _as individuals_, but as embodiments of different specific ideas. On the Genesis of Species
  • But as dependent origination equals emptiness (Skrt: śûnyatâ; Jpn: kû) in Buddhism, this cosmic body is an embodiment of the Dharma qua emptiness. Laughter
  • the embodiment of hope
  • Interwar feminism rejected the philanthropic 'tea-drinking' culture represented by Parren and the women of the Lyceum, their idealisation of folk arts and crafts for their perceived ethnic authenticity and supposed embodiment of true Greek femininity. Arms and the Woman: Just Warriors and Greek Feminist Identity
  • In an embodiment, the gate of a drive transistor is controlled by the charge on a storage node.
  • Don Pedro's arc moves him from proud hidalgo to magnificent obsessive, an all-macho embodiment of the extremes of empowerment, totally devoid of any self-doubt.
  • Arthur Dimmesdale is the hero of The Scarlet Letter, the embodiment of Hawthorne's consciousness of confession.
  • He also identified the anima (an archetype of female wisdom) and the animus (the embodiment of masculine qualities).
  • On stage, he becomes an archetypal embodiment of the debased American dream.

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