How To Use Impart In A Sentence

  • Moreover, she is being asked to do this while remaining scrupulously impartial and keeping the viewer entertained with talk of trade deals, tariffs and employment figures. Times, Sunday Times
  • There is so much to enjoy here that it is a pity that a good deal of the information imparted is demonstrably wrong. The Times Literary Supplement
  • There is a great deal of feeling and perhaps some bitterness, but do you not all agree with me that it is quite possible, since there is a fashion of armament in Europe, and since there has been no withdrawal on the part of the Admiralty from the stand taken by the First Lord some months ago, to have the entire Canadian people approach this situation in a calm and in an impartial manner? Canada and the Empire
  • The BBC must ensure that due impartiality is preserved in its news programmes.
  • Still less can they accept impartial public broadcasting combined with a biased press and biased satellite television.
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  • It's important that this information is imparted to the audience.
  • The broadcasting media are statutorily required to be impartial.
  • An adjudicator must be, and must be seen to be, disinterested, unbiased and impartial.
  • Light whisky is stored in seasoned charred oak casks, which impart little colour or flavour.
  • But the combination of natural materials imparts warmth to the space, which is comfortably scaled.
  • The former world champion imparted a few words of wisdom to the young runners.
  • The poems come to us across a great chronological and cultural divide, and the reader is reminded of this fact by the occasional archaic word and by the unusual compounding, both of which impart a faintly disorienting tone.
  • She teaches how to continue with discretion what is thoughtlessly undertaken; she inclines the mind to cleave steadfastly to what was imposed upon it by authority; and imparts to a choice which, though rash at the time, is now irrevocable, all the sanctity, all the advisedness, and, let us say it boldly, all the cheerfulness of a lawful calling. Chapter X
  • Seek ye then, fair daughters, the possession of that inward grace, whose essence shall permeate and vitalize the affections, adorn the countenance, make mellifluous the voice, and impart a hallowed beauty even to your motions. Searchlights on Health: Light on Dark Corners A Complete Sexual Science and a Guide to Purity and Physical Manhood, Advice To Maiden, Wife, And Mother, Love, Courtship, And Marriage
  • Training imparts a sort of grace to their movements and timbre in their voice.
  • In itself that is no objection provided the witness is fair and impartial.
  • I have run out of " wisdom " to sagely impart to my students.
  • One example of a carbohydrate that doesn't count is cellulose, an insoluble fiber that imparts zero calories per gram.
  • We offer impartial advice on tax and insurance.
  • Today, use such cured meats as ham, prosciutto, bacon, and pancetta for the hints of salt, nuts, and spice that curing imparts.
  • Williams 'position, here, is compatible with the claim that the impartialist considerations actually obtain in this case. Moral Reasoning
  • Those produced in brass, anodized aluminum or galvanized iron impart a golden glow or a silvery shiver.
  • Sometimes these tufts impart a rather brigandish expression to his otherwise solemn countenance. Moby Dick; or the Whale
  • Judges are supposed to be impartial and immune to influence or prejudice from outside the courtroom. The Sun
  • Thus, this new definition of airflow obstruction appears to impart useful prognostic information.
  • These were substantially built of timber and talipots, thatched with cadjans and bamboo leaves, and festooned and decorated as the Singhalese only can decorate - leaves, flowers and fruit being entwined together with so much delicacy and airy tastefulness as to impart an almost fairy-like form to the pavilion.
  • The council today insisted the licensing committee included cross-party representation and would be impartial.
  • Trace amounts of iron oxide impart vibrant red, red-orange, orange, and yellow colors that sometimes contrast markedly with browns and blacks in these silicified trunks.
  • Trusting in her intercession with Christ, who whereas He is the "one mediator of God and men" (1 Timothy ii, 5), chose to make His Mother the advocate of sinners, and the minister and mediatress of grace, as an earnest of heavenly gifts and as a token of Our paternal affection we most lovingly impart the Apostolic Blessing to you, Venerable Brethren, and to all the flock committed to your care. Latest Articles
  • At present the day was drizzling and chilly, while the huge volumes of smoke from a whole forest of factory chimneys tended to impart a deeper shade of dismalness to the dispiriting landscape.
  • These days it is he who can impart knowledge. Times, Sunday Times
  • We didn't have the rackets that impart so much power and that made for better players because stroke elegance, grace and skill played more of a part. Times, Sunday Times
  • `Have I come here to listen to you being impartial and fair-minded ? MURDER MOVES IN
  • The ability to impart knowledge and command respect is the essential qualification for teachers.
  • Shekinah was but a poor and transitory symbol has 'tabernacled' amongst men in the Christ, and has from Him been communicated, and is being communicated in such measure as earthly limitations and conditions permit, and that these do point on assuredly to perfect impartation hereafter, when 'we shall be like Him, for we shall see Expositions of Holy Scripture: Romans Corinthians (To II Corinthians, Chap. V)
  • The music imparts a feeling of excitement to the film.
  • The university imparts information, but it imparts it imaginatively. 
  • I shall count my country _lost_, in the loss of the primitive _principles_, and the primitive _practices_, upon which it was at first established: but certainly one good way to save that _loss_, would be to do something, that the memory of _the great things done for us by our God_, may not be _lost_, and that the story of the circumstances attending the _foundation_ and _formation_ of this country, and of its _preservation_ hitherto, may be impartially handed unto posterity. Choice Specimens of American Literature, and Literary Reader Being Selections from the Chief American Writers
  • An historical awareness also imparts a sense of continuity.
  • They have a moral responsibility to be impartial and to show that they are impartial.
  • Leaving the cosmopolitan town of modern Cairo, the iron bridges, and the pretentious hotels, with their flaunting inscriptions, it imparts a sense of sudden peacefulness to pass along the large and rapid waters of this river, between the curtains of palm-trees on the banks, borne by a dahabiya where one is master and, if one likes, may be alone. Egypt (La Mort de Philae)
  • Beef extracts have condimental value imparting taste and flavor, which make them useful for soup stocks, but they furnish little in the way of nutritive substance. Human Foods and Their Nutritive Value
  • It is also about teachers who impart hope and ones who clip wings and about the healing effect of animals. Times, Sunday Times
  • The truth of all popular traditions as to the healing power of herbs will be tried impartially as soon as men again desire to lead healthy lives; but I shall not in 'Proserpina' retain any of the names of their gathered and dead or distilled substance, but name them always from the characters of their life. Proserpina, Volume 2 Studies Of Wayside Flowers
  • He also sought to impart a philosophy of diligence, persistence, and excellence.
  • The media can contribute significantly by taking a responsible and impartial stance on conflicts and violence.
  • I. ii.112 (161,2) Do I impart toward you] I believe _impart_ is, _impart myself_, _communicate_ whatever I can bestow. Notes to Shakespeare, Volume III: The Tragedies
  • However the process of making a planning decision must not only be fair and impartial but must be seen to be so.
  • It is no less rendered necessary by the nature of the divine strength imparted, which is ever communicating itself, and like the ocean cannot but pour so much of its fulness as can be received into every creek and crack on its shore. Expositions of Holy Scripture Second Corinthians, Galatians, and Philippians Chapters I to End. Colossians, Thessalonians, and First Timothy.
  • As for wine, oak not only imparts some specific qualities as extractable substances, it also allows slow oxygenation of the spirit.
  • The almost universal desire to possess some kind of armorial insignia, implies a corresponding recognition of the necessity to obtain them from some Institution or Personage, supposed to be competent and authorised both to determine what they should be, and to impart a right to accept and to assume and bear them. The Handbook to English Heraldry
  • The moon cools your emotions so you can give a relative or close friend the impartial advice that really helps. The Sun
  • Above all, he must be seen by all political groupings to be unaligned and impartial.
  • (Godwin's, for example) might be referred to as strict impartialist theories. Impartiality
  • Sympathy is the easy option but the moon cools emotions so you can give a relative, or close friend, the impartial advice that helps so much more. The Sun
  • The rifled portion of the tube imparts spin to the projectile increasing stability in flight.
  • Careers officers offer impartial advice to all pupils.
  • The Buddha's aversion to speculation did not prevent him from insisting on the importance of a correct knowledge of our mental constitution, the chain of causation and other abstruse matters; nor does it really take the form of neglecting metaphysics: rather of defining them in a manner so authoritative as to imply a reserve of unimparted knowledge. Hinduism and Buddhism, An Historical Sketch, Vol. 1
  • Mr. Fischer depicts Champlain as a wise gleaner of facts who listened to Basque whalers, Breton fishermen, African slaves -- anyone who could impart information. A Forgotten Explorateur
  • In Crown & Country he provides the reader with enough intellectual rigour to impart context, before livening the page with pithy tales of treachery or cruelty, of double-dealing or disaster. Crown & Country by David Starkey - review
  • Impartial rule theory, casuistry, and virtue ethics are all consistent with rather than rivals of a principle-based account when it is properly conceived.
  • She managed to impart great elegance to the unpretentious dress she was wearing.
  • They are of interest because of the information they can impart about the nature of the sun. Science, Technology, and Social Change
  • “Dearest wife and daughter,” returned the Emperor, “I have hitherto spared you the burden of a painful secret, which I have locked in my own bosom, at whatever expense of solitary sorrow and unimparted anxiety. Count Robert of Paris
  • When Patrick Douglas, the learned and honoured, but fortuneless soldier, found that his new competitor for the hand of the gentle Jolande was none other than his sovereign, he was dumb with despair, and the last, the miserable _hope_ which it imparts, and which maketh wretched, began to leave him. Wilson's Tales of the Borders and of Scotland Volume 17
  • The ability to impart knowledge and command respect is the essential qualification for teachers.
  • President, regarding these appointments; but the verdict of army and people was that _these first_ selections were made with as much judgment and impartiality as the untried state of the army permitted. Four Years in Rebel Capitals An Inside View of Life in the Southern Confederacy from Birth to Death
  • Now we are much better known as the place to go for impartial employment advice. Times, Sunday Times
  • How these professionals can remain dispassionate and impartial in their job I will never know.
  • It includes two products that work together to hydrate and tone your hair, imparting softness and bounce to natural body.
  • He has vowed to oversee the elections impartially.
  • I think I must leave others to decide for themselves on the point, as my judgement may not be considered to be impartial.
  • He rejuvenates and remoulds spiritually enervated souls and purifies their intellects by imparting unvitiated Gita knowledge to them.
  • Moreover, she is being asked to do this while remaining scrupulously impartial and keeping the viewer entertained with talk of trade deals, tariffs and employment figures. Times, Sunday Times
  • Impartial third party status is a non-profit public welfare institutions.
  • And to draw the last of my title quaternity into the discussion, Edward Tufte proposes as a “grand truth about human behvior that, as Van Wyck Brooks said, “It is a principle that shines impartially on the just and the unjust that once you have a point of view all history will back you up.” AKMA’s Random Thoughts
  • Well the free and impartial bit is good, but the guidance bit is less positive. Times, Sunday Times
  • How willing Clifton is to impart his expertise and tricks of the trade to Bulaga remains to be seen. Green Bay Packers Team Report
  • The sense of calm and silence, the great waste of sea, the monotonous 'plash' of the paddle-wheels, the sort of solitude in the midst of such a crowd, the gradually lengthening distance behind, with the lessening, as gradual, in front, and the always novel feeling of approach to a new country -- these elements impart a sort of dreamy, poetical feeling to the scene. A Day's Tour A Journey through France and Belgium by Calais, Tournay, Orchies, Douai, Arras, Béthune, Lille, Comines, Ypres, Hazebrouck, Berg
  • This right shall include freedom to hold opinions and to receive and impart information '. Times, Sunday Times
  • Conducive to making ideal moral judgments, there is conceptual clarity, rationality, impartiality, coolness, and reference to a valid moral principle.
  • Anyone who has a sister, as I do, understands the mental, emotional and spiritual complexities that biological sisterhood imparts.
  • Depending on how much information is imparted by the clue, it can be very easy or very difficult. Times, Sunday Times
  • I've picked out his gift and struggled over an appropriate note that makes a vain attempt to impart something passing for wisdom.
  • IMAGINE that you are a teacher of Roman history and the Latin language, anxious to impart your enthusiasm for the ancient world – for the elegiacs of Ovid and the odes of Horace, the sinewy economy of Latin grammar as exhibited in the oratory of Cicero, the strategic niceties of the Punic Wars, the generalship of Julius Caesar and the voluptuous excesses of the later emperors. THE GREATEST SHOW ON EARTH
  • Today, use such cured meats as ham, prosciutto, bacon, and pancetta for the hints of salt, nuts, and spice that curing imparts.
  • But the ministrations of the grounds crew had succeeded in imparting a friendly, hospitable air to it, one that was beginning to cover over the remembered apprehension that was still attached to it in her mind.
  • Some of the ready -- to-eat brands are cooked, dried, and crushed, and sugar, glucose, salt, and various condimental materials added to impart taste. Human Foods and Their Nutritive Value
  • This narrative must be placed within a historic, political and cultural context to re-frame the relationship between the state and the citizen, and will require the development of robust and impartial rule of law backed by independent judiciaries. Ziad J. Asali, M.D.: Arabs Deserve a Party of the Citizen
  • After the summer solstice, although the days are shortening in consequence of the sun's recession, their diminution is for some time scarcely perceptible, and as the days are still much longer than the nights, more heat is imparted to the earth than is lost by night-radiation. Census of the City of Charleston, South Carolina, For the Year 1861. Illustrated by Statistical Tables. Prepared under the Authority of the City Council by Frederick A. Ford
  • The line element, we know, is incredibly useful, as it provides us with an invariant quantity and also imparts information about causal structure. Bad Language: Metric vs Metric Tensor vs Matrix Form vs Line Element
  • Now, journalists, of course, are supposed to be impartial recorders and reporters of fact.
  • Surfer was the comically subversive tale of a group of ski bums (the Slackers) visited by a mysterious stranger who skis magically and imparts mystical knowledge.
  • Civil servants serve elected government ministers and must be politically impartial What jobs are on offer? Times, Sunday Times
  • The proportion of the dearness which the increased quantity of money brings about in the State will depend on the turn which this money will impart to consumption and circulation.
  • Following the Mass, parishioners will march in procession as one body to the Convent of Mercy where Benediction will be imparted.
  • Baker added that Mr. Broder's great strength was the impartiality in his writing - not a splitting of the difference on people and issues, but instead a judiciousness in his analysis of individuals and institutions. David Broder, 81, dies; set 'gold standard' for political journalism
  • The final polish can soon be imparted by means of a small boxwood slip, or flattened peg-wood, and diamantine and alcohol. A Treatise on Staff Making and Pivoting Containing Complete Directions for Making and Fitting New Staffs from the Raw Material
  • The ready reckoner also imparts information on basic car care, safe repairing and various types of accessories.
  • ‘Make sure to use superfatted soaps and cleaners (which include a high degree of moisturizing agents) to clean and impart moisture,’ she says.
  • This affair being settled to his satisfaction, and the night at odds with morning, he took an opportunity of imparting to the ear of this aged dulcinea a kind whisper, importing a promise of visiting her when his sister should be retired to her own chamber, and an earnest desire of leaving her door unlocked. The Adventures of Peregrine Pickle
  • Also: "The aspiration to impartiality is just that — it's an aspiration because it denies the fact that we are by our experiences making different choices than others. Sotomayor speech at center of court nomination
  • He is said to have riled them by making negative comments about players - when they thought he should remain impartial as a host. The Sun
  • He showed tactful impartiality.
  • BBC must become more impartial" is the headline on its own take (HERE) on its deep-rooted culture of leftist-liberal bias, implying that it is already impartial and merely needs to adjust a little to become even more so. Archive 2007-06-17
  • We have a few difficulties at the moment because the fungus does not impart resistance to wear, particularly from heavy armoured vehicles!
  • The report found, among other defects, that the Iraqi High Tribunal was undermined from the outset by Iraqi government actions that threatened the independence and perceived impartiality of the court. Iraq
  • Left to herself, Saxon worked with frantic haste, assuming the calm she did not possess, but which she must impart to the screaming bedlamite upon the floor. CHAPTER XIX
  • It starts off as a series of brush strokes in brown, red and green, but ends up as an exquisite painting imparting a beautiful luminosity.
  • The applicator is a brush (which I happen to prefer over sponge tip!) and not only does it impart a high shine, it is pigmented too. My Women Stuff
  • They are of interest because of the information they can impart about the nature of the sun. Science, Technology, and Social Change
  • Instead of acting impartially, these governors have been acting in most partisan manner, virtually watching the interests of the sangh parivar.
  • This can give rise to substantial queries over the independence and impartiality of the judiciary.
  • She imparted the secret to her friend.
  • His views on private prisons may not have sat comfortably with the Executive but it would be very sad if they were not reappointing him because they feared his impartiality.
  • Some manicurists will then buff the nail with a chamois pad to impart a sheen on the finished item.
  • This contrasts with the common image of scientists being objective and impartial analysts who allow the empirical facts to speak for themselves.
  • In that long, burning look, it seemed as if the emotions of each were imparted to the other, not in slow succession as through words and sentences, but daguerreotyped or electrotyped in perfected form upon the conscious understanding. The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 10, No. 57, July, 1862
  • The notion of teaching with impartation -acceptance as its main method holds the primary place of university teaching activity.
  • I think it is dishonest to advertise their service as impartial.
  • Chromium additions impart improved resistance to oxidizing media such as nitric and chromic acids.
  • It may well be doubted, on an impartial view, if the mutilation of the country's industrial system by such measures of isolation does not after all rather weaken the nation even for warlike ends; but then, the discretionary authorities in the dynastic States are always, and it may be presumed necessarily, hampered with obsolete theories handed down from that cameralistic age, when the little princes of the Fatherland were making dynastic history. An Inquiry Into The Nature Of Peace And The Terms Of Its Perpetuation
  • The rules provide a framework for public competition; ensuring commercial leasing is a fair, open, impartial and transparent process.
  • Although I'm surprised to find I miss the faint tanginess Nigella's sour cream imparted although full marks for accuracy, Marcus, this is the first cheesecake I find myself actively picking at as I portion it out – it is indeed deliciously smooth, rather than fluffy, and really quite moreish. How to cook perfect cheesecake
  • How much of the exaggerated information on the then new divorce laws which Beaucock imparted to his listener was the result of ignorance, and how much of dupery, was never ascertained. The Woodlanders
  • Therefore, we need constantly perfect the public servant merit system and improve the checking method, so as that we can choose and employ the talents fairly, impartially and objectively.
  • The pork was deliciously succulent and tender with a great flavour being imparted from the meat's fat.
  • In acting in this way he not only taught them about geology but imparted lessons about how geological knowledge should be acquired. Science, Technology, and Social Change
  • (_Rhus coriaria_), native of the South of Europe, but which is also grown in Syria and Palestine, for its powerful astringent properties, which renders it valuable for tanning light-colored leather, and it imparts a beautiful bright yellow dye to cottons, which is rendered permanent by proper mordants. The Commercial Products of the Vegetable Kingdom Considered in Their Various Uses to Man and in Their Relation to the Arts and Manufactures; Forming a Practical Treatise & Handbook of Reference for the Colonist, Manufacturer, Merchant, and Consumer, o
  • The retailer of the anecdote intends it to impart a message, the success of which depends on the degree to which the hearer regards the anecdote as factual.
  • Can one hold such strong views and yet remain impartial and objective?
  • But like many who have tried to examine this body of evidence impartially, I remain sceptical, and in virtually all cases it is never really clear that dogs can be excluded outright. The Cupar roe deer carcass
  • That said, we're quite peachy with the notion that curtailing one's self-interest in the name of impartiality is a virtue. Outer Alliance Pride Day
  • I am about to impart knowledge to you that you will never forget.
  • Before the referendum he ignored impartiality to spread gloom about Brexit. Times, Sunday Times
  • In acting in this way he not only taught them about geology but imparted lessons about how geological knowledge should be acquired. Science, Technology, and Social Change
  • Today, use such cured meats as ham, prosciutto, bacon, and pancetta for the hints of salt, nuts, and spice that curing imparts.
  • The moon cools your emotions so you can give a relative or close friend the impartial advice that really helps. The Sun
  • The music in its patience and sense of perseverance imparts a sense of sympathetic healing.
  • It was a glorious morning, the impartial sun shining over everything with a kind of benison.
  • Brass snaps impart a utilitarian elegance, and its hook hangs as easily from a bathroom door as from the branches of a baobab tree.
  • If Guthrie wishes to be seen as having left the world of hemline journalism behind him, now is his heaven-made chance to demonstrate a headmasterly fairness and impartiality - one that is quite clearly beyond Marr and the boys.
  • These aspects are: 1. mystical experience consists of pre-rational immediate consciousness or feeling; 2. mystical experience removes the distinction between subject and object; 3. mystical experience is prior to language and is therefore ineffable; and 4. mystical experience dissolves or annihilates the self; 5. mystical experience cannot be sustained, and is therefore transient; 6. mystical experience is nevertheless noetic, that is, it imparts insights about the nature of Reality. About religious experience (William James, Schleiermacher etc)
  • He looked at me across the table – steadily, eye to eye, as if he would fain impart to my spirit the calmness that was in his own. John Halifax, Gentleman
  • Only Shakspeare was endowed with that healthy equilibrium of nature whose point of rest was midway between the imagination and the understanding, -- that perfectly unruffled brain which reflected all objects with almost inhuman impartiality, -- that outlook whose range was ecliptical, dominating all zones of human thought and action, -- that power of verisimilar conception which could take away _Richard III_ from The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 02, No. 08, June 1858
  • It is also about teachers who impart hope and ones who clip wings and about the healing effect of animals. Times, Sunday Times
  • It is useful, then, to draw a distinction between two sorts of impartialist moral theory. Impartiality
  • Since Mill's utilitarian is liberal, Mill has little patience for views, which he considers caricatures, in which utilitarianism doesn't care about distribution -- Mill reiterates, over and over, the importance of what he calls impartiality, and one soon realizes that this is in fact a principle governing distribution of benefits, one that he thinks is built into the principle of utility itself. Siris
  • What wisdom did he impart after the horrors of San Marino? Times, Sunday Times
  • Back on topic though, I think a search party should be sent out to find this wonderful anonymous Japanese person whio has newly and conveniently imparted truthiness and lightheadedness to Batshit Michelle. Think Progress » Bachmann Suggests Critics Of Health Care Reform Will Be Put On A ‘List’ And Denied Treatment
  • Writing about a case in which someone in a lifeboat must choose between saving a stranger and saving his or her spouse, Williams argued that an impartialist morality that would demand that the agent consider whether giving preference to the spouse is permissible gives that agent “one thought too many” (Williams 1981, 18). Moral Reasoning
  • The reasons for introducing these measures remain valid and the parking restrictions are now being enforced by the city council on an impartial basis.
  • The advantage is that he will be able to take a more distant and dispassionate view of things and will be seen to be impartial.
  • But the wisdom from above is first pure, then peaceable, gentle, open to reason, full of mercy and good fruits, impartial and sincere.
  • And it held the ball on the strings longer, allowing athletes to impart greater topspin on the ball than they would with a normal topspin stroke.
  • In the internet, a good algorithm of rate allocating must impartially reflect the utility of users.
  • A secondary benefit of these contacts is the information you impart regarding your camp mission, programming, and counseling opportunities.
  • They have both played for Newcastle and I support the team, so being impartial was always going to be a challenge.
  • It is not entirely soluble in water, to which it imparts less viscidity than ordinary Gum Acacia.
  • Manning said the clerks of the T & T Parliament had been known to perform their duties with a high level of impartiality, and were outstanding in the region for this.
  • I need to impart a sense of certainty and urgency. Christianity Today
  • He said it in a tone that suggested he was imparting great wisdom.
  • But can your critic remain impartial while commenting on a member of the Sun team? The Sun
  • Impartialist theories which allow for some first-order partiality, but which nevertheless insist that all such behavior be justified in second-order impartialist terms, might be referred to as fundamentally impartialist moral theories. Impartiality
  • Fading occurs when any chemical process breaks the sequence of conjugated double bonds constituting the chromophore - the dye moiety that imparts colour.
  • Legally, an executor is a fiduciary, who is expected to act prudently and be impartial. New Heirs Face Confusing Tax Choice
  • He had survived the infamous ordeal on the raft and had privileged information to impart. Times, Sunday Times
  • Don't be put off by the anchovies - you don't end up with a fishy taste, they just dissolve and impart their special kind of saltiness to the dish - you won't need to salt the dish when you use the anchovies. Archive 2006-09-01
  • the impartial eye of a scientist
  • The focus was on well-being and a positive healthy lifestyle as well as to impart awareness and knowledge about biological, psychological, and sociocultural aspects of body weight. Dr. Sharma’s Obesity Notes » Blog Archive » Weight Acceptance Prevents Weight Gain?
  • I wouldn't insult him by trying to impart any wisdom, he has been around the game long enough. The Sun
  • You could try blaming your teachers' inability to impart knowledge on their boring and monotonous voices. Times, Sunday Times
  • Designer Susan Benson imparts the allusive quality of a Japanese watercolour, and Michael Whitfield beautifully recreates changing natural light.
  • I would need to be convinced that the centre would provide impartial advice.
  • Aalto's trademark ribs of cobalt blue tiles impart a lively rhythm to the angled wall that faces the bank of elevators.
  • Anyone who thinks the Beeb is impartial and is not controlled by Government should wake up and smell the coffee! Catflap to US TV networks
  • It also involves imparting emotional and moral values and polishing the character of these individuals.
  • From my impartial position, I understand why Christians are offended by Dawkins, but I don't see anything he does as impinging academic freedom or being uncivil. Bradley Monton's Paper criticizing Dover Decision
  • The career diplomat, elected on a rota basis, promised she would be impartial.
  • Before the referendum he ignored impartiality to spread gloom about Brexit. Times, Sunday Times
  • But given his munificent nature, he would never agree to step off this bridge before imparting to me every single thing he knows about its history.
  • Both titles bespeak what our nation claims to stand for in education: a passion for imparting knowledge to all our children, equity for all students 'performance, and dedication and commitment from instructors to the ideals of universal education across the country. Karen Symms Gallagher: Teachers Wanted: Our Ailing Education System Needs Quality Teachers with Staying Power
  • Since children start off focused on their own gratifications, getting them to internalise a kind of impartiality that constantly requires them to make large sacrifices for the sake of others would have extremely high costs.
  • She imparts something of her own elaborateness to them. The Kempton-Wace Letters
  • Meanwhile, the number of those vying to impart higher trading wisdom appears to be growing almost as quickly as the number of green punters. Times, Sunday Times
  • It would deny a speedy and public trial before an independent and impartial tribunal. Times, Sunday Times
  • I think that imparts a bit of a club feel and helps with the vibe.
  • Does location within such an appellation impart additional value to vineyards? The Full Feed from HuffingtonPost.com
  • Only by researching stocks thoroughly or by taking skilled impartial advice can a client ensure against being misled.
  • Use a piece of fresh ginger to impart a Far-Eastern flavour to simple ingredients.
  • The hymen was not simply a sign or proof of chastity; rather, being physically ‘intact’ supposedly imparted strength, youth and holiness to the woman.
  • This early phase of expression in proliferating segmental precursors may impart basic positional information which the expressing cell ‘remembers’ during later morphogenesis.
  • At no time during the impartation or tutoring to the requisite response on the test is it the job of any teacher to tell little Johnny that his beliefs that God created it all are "wrong. A View: The Science=Atheism Meme
  • While this was a deviation for the English population (particularly the middle-class English), who had come from a legal tradition of primogeniture and impartible inheritance, it was less a departure for the Irish population, for whom communal property and partible inheritance had been long-standing customary practices. Gutenber-e Help Page
  • Despite his claims to impartiality, the colonel indulged Captain Charles Lewis, brother of Andrew Lewis, who had helped get him his colonelcy. George Washington’s First War
  • Meanwhile, the number of those vying to impart higher trading wisdom appears to be growing almost as quickly as the number of green punters. Times, Sunday Times
  • It uses a swash plate design that imparts reciprocating motion via the inclination of a faceplate on a shaft relative to the axis of rotation.
  • Moreover, she has to do this while remaining scrupulously impartial and keeping the viewer entertained with talk of trade deals and employment figures. Times, Sunday Times
  • As well as the binding functionality provided by the biochemically-specific moieties they contain, the oligosaccharide might impart a steric stiffness to the polypeptide core.
  • The rhythmic angularity of the recontextualized rift imparts a temporary sense of disorientation that subverts the song's forward momentum.

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