Get Free Checker

exteriorise

VERB
  1. make external or objective, or give reality to
    language externalizes our thoughts

How To Use exteriorise In A Sentence

  • The wide access approach provides panoramic exposure of the epitympanic, retrolabyrinthine, and supralabyrinthine regions which are exteriorised with the remainder of the open cavity.
  • Caller Errin!) exteriorises on this ourherenow plane in disunited solod, likeward and gushious bodies with (science, say!) peril-whitened passionpanting pugnoplangent intuitions of reunited selfdom (murky whey, abstrew adim!) in the higherdimissional selfless Allself, theemeeng Narsty meetheeng Idoless, and telling Finnegans Wake
  • In the modern era, women's identity moved from being fixed and essential - something ‘in your character’ - to being exteriorised and manipulable, formed by clothing and makeup.
  • I believe it has required a long series of accepted observations for us to have arrived at this idea, now so natural in appearance, that the modifications produced within our nervous system are the only states of which we can have a direct consciousness; and as experimental demonstration is always limited, there can be no absolute certainty that things never happen otherwise, that we never go outside ourselves, and that neither our consciousness nor our nervous influx can exteriorise itself, shoot beyond our material organs, and travel afar in pursuit of objects in order to know or to modify them. The Mind and the Brain Being the Authorised Translation of L'Âme et le Corps
  • She has exteriorised her affliction by simulating it in her self-portraits through blurred grainy patches, thus ridding the body of physiological disease and social malaise.
  • When the Supreme decided to exteriorise himself so that he might see himself, the first thing that he exteriorised out of himself was Knowledge of the world and Power to create it.. Archive 2008-02-01
  • The production of social memory within the corporate mass media has exteriorised memory through the construction of historical imagery.
View all