How To Use Homogeneousness In A Sentence
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What we call his mistake is in that he regarded "homogeneousness" as negative.
The Book of the Damned
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General Morin believes this alloy to be a perfect chemical combination, as it exhibits, unlike the gun metal, a most complete homogeneousness, its preparation being also attended by a great development of heat, not seen in the manufacture of most other alloys.
Scientific American Supplement, No. 362, December 9, 1882
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The explanation had to account for the homogeneousness of the snakes.
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But sound is a stroke of a sounding body; and a sounding body is that which has homogeneousness and uniformity, and is easy to be moved, light, smooth, and, by reason of its tenseness and continuity, it is obedient to the stroke; and such is the air.
Essays and Miscellanies
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In fact, this vast empire, 4,000,000 square miles in extent, does not possess the homogeneousness of the states of Western Europe.
Michael Strogoff
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As the previous stage was characterized by the homogeneousness and hatred of everything different, this stage showed an increasing interest in what was different and was marked by an extreme expressionistic individualism.
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The homogeneousness and stability of the mixture are of the highest importance.
Nitro-Explosives: A Practical Treatise
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Were we weak enough to consent to a sudden homogeneousness in virtue, many industrious persons would be thrown out of employment.
The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 06, No. 38, December, 1860
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And it is not just ethnic minorities who are challenging received ideas of Japanese homogeneousness.
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The Renaissance livened up considerably the severe lines of the Gothic chateaux of France, and though invariably the marks of the transition are visible to the expert eye it is also true, as in the case of Maintenon, that there is frequently a homogeneousness which is sufficiently pleasing to effectually cover up any discrepancies which might otherwise be apparent.
Royal Palaces and Parks of France
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A number of eyewitnesses stress the lack of ethnic homogeneousness within what superficial observers regarded as being cohesive Italian settlements in American cities.
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But we do not call the seedling the cause of the full-grown tree; the invariable antecedent it certainly is, and we know very imperfectly on what other antecedents the sequence is contingent, but we are convinced that it is contingent on something; because the homogeneousness of the antecedent with the consequent, the close resemblance of the seedling to the tree in all respects except magnitude, and the graduality of the growth, so exactly resembling the progressively accumulating effect produced by the long action of some one cause, leave no possibility of doubting that the seedling and the tree are two terms in a series of that description, the first term of which is yet to seek.
A System Of Logic, Ratiocinative And Inductive
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Ever since the improvements that have been introduced into the manufacture of steel, and especially into the erection of works for its production, have made it possible to obtain this metal in very large masses, it has necessarily been preferred to iron for all pieces of large dimensions, inasmuch as it possesses in the highest degree that homogeneousness and resistance which are so difficult to obtain in the latter metal.
Scientific American Supplement, No. 303, October 22, 1881
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So completely did they occupy the country, that the few stray English or Irish settlers among them did not sensibly affect the homogeneousness of the population. '
The Continental Monthly, Vol. 4, No. 1, July, 1863 Devoted to Literature and National Policy