How To Use Imperfect In A Sentence

  • There's nothing at all wrong with a bit of human imperfection here and there.
  • They parleyed and left us with an imperfect independence.
  • Heart disease is an affection of the heart brought on by morbific agents turned loose in the blood from imperfect digestion.
  • All her meanness and prosaicness was forgotten, all her imperfections and shortcomings; it was home, the one tangible thing in the glittering emptiness of the spheres. Gulliver of Mars
  • “hydrometry,” still in an imperfect state, was little to be depended upon in the days when European ideas concerning the Two Trips to Gorilla Land and the Cataracts of the Congo
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  • There is nothing more rare, nor more beautiful, than a woman being unapologetically herself; comfortable in her perfect imperfection. To me, that is the true essence of beauty. Steve Maraboli 
  • Now seeing in the last section, those we call mathematics are absolved of the crime of breeding controversy; and they that pretend not to learning cannot be accused; the fault lieth altogether in the dogmatics, that is to say, those that are imperfectly learned, and with passion press to have their opinions pass everywhere for truth, without any evident demonstration either from experience, or from places of Scripture of uncontroverted interpretation. The Elements of Law Natural and Politic
  • Ever the courtier alert to the slightest imperfections in his outward mien, the Earl is accustomed to checking his physical appearance in the glass.
  • We love the imperfect shapes in nature and in the works of art, look for an intentional error as a sign of the golden key and sincerity found in true mastery. Dejan Stojanovic 
  • We love the imperfect shapes in nature and in the works of art, look for an intentional error as a sign of the golden key and sincerity found in true mastery. Dejan Stojanovic 
  • While we know that obesity is also a national concern, it is frightening to acknowledge the degree to which girls and women are discontent with the body they have, want a body that is unattainably thin for 98 percent of natural body shapes, are angry at their body imperfections, and are obsessed with fixing their shape. Beth Weinstock: Gloria Steinem Is Alive and Well, Reminding Us 'That Perfect Is Boring' and 'Beauty Is Irregular'
  • Bvt as it hath bene alwayes reputed a great fault to vse figuratiue speaches foolishly and indiscretly, so is it esteemed no lesse an imperfection in mans vtterance, to haue none vse of figure at all, specially in our writing and speaches publike, making them but as our ordinary talke, then which nothing can be more vnsauourie and farre from all ciuilitie. The Arte of English Poesie
  • A little in this way -- but these similes are very imperfect, and will not bear close application -- the sap rises in a tree, stealing up branch by branch; and it is then called _ascending sap_. The History of a Mouthful of Bread And its effect on the organization of men and animals
  • In terms of the analysis of the previous section, the imperfect industry shares become free to vary.
  • And too often, balls were called "perfect" before they stopped rolling in imperfect spots. ESPN/ABC in the rough on British Open coverage
  • The predictions of standard economic theory – the expectation that freely operating markets will produce a certain kind of optimality – only hold good as long as the markets are not marred by serious imperfections. Limitations of markets
  • The imperfections are then cleaned off with tools and the casting is put in the kiln at 1225 cone 6 and becomes vitrified porcelain.
  • Augustinianism), which, by definition, asserted that humans were fallen, imperfect, and imperfectible by their own devices. Dad29
  • I love my children in ways that can never be put into words, but there is no hiding the fact that they are imperfect creatures, capable of the same pettiness, resentment, and mean-spiritedness that sets us adults to warring.
  • For me, his random interviews with various down-and-out characters in Cleveland, on sidewalks and in living rooms, while charmingly syncopated in the Jarmusch family style, with intermittent jazz music and grainy shaky filming, did not result in a clear "what is this about"--although Tom insisted that for him, it was exactly the Cleveland he wished to express, "meant to be an imperfect portrait. Karin Badt: The Thessaloniki Documentary Film Festival: From Soviet Cannibals to Jarmusch's Cleveland
  • It seems Reese thinks he's not handsome enough and must correct some sort of minor orthodontic imperfection.
  • When she tried to look at anything else, the imperfections and the failings leapt out at her, the single thread unravelling in the otherwise perfect tapestry.
  • Thus the totality of intervals is thought of as a graduated structure leading from unitas via the perfect and imperfect assonances to the dissonances and nonharmonic rela - tionships. MUSIC AS A DIVINE ART
  • He smashed Imperfect Mountain by butting his head against it.
  • What would be more exciting would be to load up our own versions of Mom — cigarette-smoking, gravel-voiced and imperfectthough she may be. I’m pretty sure I’m offended by this — or, at the least, nonplussed « Dating Jesus
  • But I speak with practical accuracy when I give that title to such views as on the whole affirm the attainableness here below of a spiritual condition in which man needs no longer confess himself as now a sinner, and in which his attention tends to be drawn more to his perfectness than to his imperfections of condition. Philippian Studies Lessons in Faith and Love from St. Paul's Epistle to the Philippians
  • Gray matter burns through a fifth of the body's oxygen, while its natural protectants against oxidative stress, which are imperfect to begin with, only weaken as you get older.
  • The film is, like its centerpiece child, compelling precisely because it weaves together perfection and imperfection, artistry and reality, reason and sentiment.
  • Discovering blessing starts with accepting imperfection, both our own and other's.
  • For whats its worth, recognizing that the the fed is an imperfect institution, it makes sense to have some checks and balances built into the system. "This doesn't feel right" (Jack Bog's Blog)
  • They comprise chiefly: sigmatism or imperfect pronunciation of s; rhotacism or imperfect pronunciation of r; lambdacism or imperfect pronunciation of l; gam - The Montessori Method
  • It's not a perfect system but it's the best imperfect system we have. Times, Sunday Times
  • The image is sharp and well defined without any imperfections.
  • The court referred to the concept of arra contractu imperfecto data, a rather obscure institution of Roman law (paras 44-55).
  • It's tough trying to be perfect in an imperfect world.
  • I think many people need to see a bit of imperfection, a touch of corruption, to identify with many politicians - those with untarnished integrity tend to inspire dislike as they seem to uphold a standard others don't think they can meet.
  • It is impossible to have a portfolio where you are not investing in companies with ethical issues because it is an imperfect world. Times, Sunday Times
  • Quartz is colourless when pure but minute amounts of impurities or lattice imperfections give rise to varieties such as amethyst, cairngorm, rose quartz, and smoky quartz.
  • For me the different religions are beautiful flowers from the same garden, or they are branches of the same majestic tree. Therefore they are equally true, though being received and interpreted through human instruments equally imperfect
  • And as a result, we still have only an imperfect, incomplete understanding of the answers to the problem of pain. Christianity Today
  • Imperfect development or absence of this organ, or an inactive condition of it, produces in the child arrested growth and deficient mental development known as cretinism, and in the adult the same condition gives rise to mental deterioration, swelling of the skin, due to a greater content of water, and loss of hair. Disease and Its Causes
  • The singers are miked only for the dialogue, but their excellent diction makes the supertitles unnecessary, bringing out mad rhymes like "You very imperfect ablutioner" for "The Lord High Executioner. Taking Gilbert
  • Alcoholics are inclined to suppose that their waywardness is the response of a sensitive soul to the imperfections of the world, and by their biliousness, turning their own small corner of it into a hell for others.
  • For the union lasts until that which is analogous to the semen has done its work, and when they separate the female produces the embryo quickly; for the young is imperfect inasmuch as all such creatures give birth to scoleces. On the Generation of Animals
  • Given a choice between a note-perfect performance with no particular atmosphere and an imperfect performance with special excitement or insight, I'll always take the latter.
  • A man must be strong enough to mould the peculiarity of his imperfections into the perfection of his peculiarities.
  • I deem it my duty further to observe that much of the imperfections in the returns of the last and perhaps of preceding enumerations proceeded from the inadequateness of the compensations allowed to the marshals and their assistants in taking them. State of the Union Address (1790-2001)
  • He saw the country in full dress, and had little or no opportunity of judging of it unhouselled, unanointed, unannealed, with all its imperfections on its head, as I and my family too often had. Life on the Mississippi
  • In the 18th century ours was a very imperfect system. Times, Sunday Times
  • Larger, heavier bullets buck wind better and they make up for an unforseen slight change in angle that makes that perfect shot an imperfect one. What is the deal with all the talk about tiny calibers and big game?
  • The summer-shoot may be recognized, during growth, by its green, not scarious bracts and, at the end of the season, by the imperfect growth of its wood and foliage (fig. 14). The Genus Pinus
  • He or she can resort to autobiographies and biographies - some positive, others negative, and all imperfect in one way or another.
  • This is Southern California, pal, where physical imperfection will NOT be tolerated.
  • The imperfections are then cleaned off with tools and the casting is put in the kiln at 1225 cone 6 and becomes vitrified porcelain.
  • And while its 'system of national education was realised only in its most imperfect fashion, its _system of religious instruction_ was carried into effect with results that would alone stamp the First Book of Discipline as the most important document in Scottish history' (Hume Brown). John Knox
  • There are no perfect relationships. It's how you accept the imperfections that makes it perfect.
  • Nevertheless the imperfection inherent in its inferiority can be overcome as it returns towards its cause.
  • In fact, on several occasions other characters draw attention to his obtuseness: fresh from the country, he is only imperfectly the rakish figure he imitates.
  • They comprise chiefly: sigmatism or imperfect pronunciation of s; rhotacism or imperfect pronunciation of r; lambdacism or imperfect pronunciation of l; gam - The Montessori Method
  • But remember," she added quickly, `you said you liked a little imperfection. LEO: STAGE FRIGHT
  • When medicines become necessary to obviate that kind of costiveness which arises from imperfect intestinal contraction, physicians usually administer rhubarb, aloes, and similar laxatives, combined with tonics. Popular Education For the use of Parents and Teachers, and for Young Persons of Both Sexes
  • The finest leaves get muddled for the drink; imperfect leaves go into a simple syrup.
  • So never forsake perfection, because then you get imperfection.
  • But in the Senate of the United States, both of these formalities are dispensed with; the breviate presenting but an imperfect view of the bill, and being capable of being made to present a false one; and the full statement being a useless waste of time, immediately after a full reading by the clerk; and especially as every member has a printed copy in his hand. A MANUAL OF PARLIAMENTARY PRACTICE
  • In practice, the invisible foot is sometimes a very imperfect incentive structure.
  • Fortunately, the picture itself is sharp enough that these imperfections are at least tolerable.
  • Scale economies, product differentiation and other aspects of imperfect competition will necessarily receive less formal treatment. Competing in a Global Economy
  • We know how much misery pain is able to bring upon the body in this life; (in which our pains and pleasures, as well as other things, are but imperfect;) there being never a limb or part, never a vein or artery of the body, but it is the scene and receptacle of pain, whensoever it shall please God to unfence it, and let in some sharp disease or distemper upon it. Sermons Preached Upon Several Occasions. Vol. III.
  • The Indian nation, howsoever imperfect, was in the process of formation.
  • And the prints that reflect the etched texts do so imperfectly, because their appearance was affected by the way they were printed (e.g., underinked, overinked, inked with a stiff or oily ink onto paper of varying thickness and dampness). Introduction
  • Among the rich and famous, there's nary a female snaggletooth to be found (Madonna and Lauren Hutton's charming gaps don't count), but more than a few imperfect male mouths. I Love Your Smile - Or, Discrimination In The Workplace
  • This product's zesty enzymes will unclog skin and sort imperfections. The Sun
  • Sparing no religious sentiments, Hunter explained: ‘There is a regular and continued gradation of these from the most imperfect of the animal, to the most perfect of the human species.’
  • Well-meaning pedants may wonder why so gifted a verbal prestidigitator as Mr. Ives has resorted so often to imperfect rhymes, each one of which diminishes the hectic glitter of the play's verbal surface by a tiny but measurable increment. Flying Couplets and Canapés
  • It has something that is similar, but it is really a distinction between imperfective and perfective aspect.
  • You could see the imperfections in the repair when the light caught it.
  • No doubt some such exceptional cases may be met with in the course of future investigations, for we are still imperfectly acquainted with the entire fauna of the age of stone in Denmark as we may infer from an opinion expressed by Steenstrup, that some of the instruments exhumed by antiquaries from the Danish peat are made of the bones and horns of the elk and reindeer. The Antiquity of Man
  • In the 18th century ours was a very imperfect system. Times, Sunday Times
  • Moreover, institutions, along with concepts from the new microeconomics such as bounded rationality and imperfect information, are now in vogue, which is all to the good.
  • However, it is thought that that can cause imperfections in the glass which sometimes cause it to explode without warning.
  • The independent suspension soaks up all manner of road imperfections from concrete joins to ruddy great holes quietly and without a jolt.
  • I'm not asking that you be able to name the preterit, imperfect, and subjunctive forms of the verb ‘to be.’
  • Unsure of his choice at times, Vlad learns to live the imperfection of a robust capitalist society.
  • Thus, a piece of fiction usually begins with an imperfective verb by way of introduction (“I was sleeping”); then, shifting into a perfective verb, the narrative launches into the plot (“I woke”). The Metamorphosis, in The Penal Colony,and Other Stories
  • True there are imperfections in the Bible: antilogies, repetitions, want of continuity; but these imperfections become perfections by leading us to the allegory and the spiritual meaning (Philoc., The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 11: New Mexico-Philip
  • You would need a tactically intelligent defensive midfielder and here options are imperfect. Times, Sunday Times
  • In this one character, the arc of slow, painful and imperfect female emancipation is being traced. Times, Sunday Times
  • The ancients, who had a very faint and imperfect knowledge of the great peninsula of Africa, were sometimes tempted to believe, that the torrid zone must ever remain destitute of inhabitants; 126 and they sometimes amused their fancy by filling the vacant space with headless men, or rather monsters; 127 with horned and cloven-footed satyrs; 128 with fabulous centaurs; 129 and with human pygmies, who waged a bold and doubtful warfare against the cranes. The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire
  • And, as everyone knows, those who are imperfect must be punished mercilessly.
  • Narcissists may deny their mistakes or flagellate themselves into a froth of self-pitying hatred, but they never laugh at their imperfections.
  • The only true imperfections I spotted were a few nicks and scratches in the print.
  • The great breadth and the shallows near either jaw prevent the rain-floods being perceptible unless instruments are used, and "hydrometry," still in an imperfect state, was little to be depended upon in the days when European ideas concerning the Congo River were formed. Two Trips to Gorilla Land and the Cataracts of the Congo Volume 2
  • They comprise chiefly: sigmatism or imperfect pronunciation of s; rhotacism or imperfect pronunciation of r; lambdacism or imperfect pronunciation of l; gam - The Montessori Method
  • Sonia is a freak, and a picture of Sonia whose face bears the manifestations of the congenital syndrome that afflicts her oblique palpebral fissures, I have learned they are called, epicanthal folds, and a mouth that is disproportionately small will serve as a constant reminder to Dad that he created for the second time in his life a child with physical and mental imperfections. A Traitor to Memory
  • In Spanish, Senora Montoya invited me into her classroom, boasting about my superior abilities to conjugate verbs in the imperfect tense the quickest in the class.
  • You would need a tactically intelligent defensive midfielder and here options are imperfect. Times, Sunday Times
  • For me the different religions are beautiful flowers from the same garden, or they are branches of the same majestic tree. Therefore they are equally true, though being received and interpreted through human instruments equally imperfect
  • Penelope" tells the perfectly -- well, imperfectly -- inane tale of a snouty young woman from a snooty family. Two heads better than one in 'The Other Boleyn Girl'
  • One simply had to accept the world as an imperfect place. America Past and Present
  • The result of the whole is that we must recur to the monitory reflection that no Government of human device, & human administration can be perfect; that that which is the least imperfect is therefore the best Govt. The Volokh Conspiracy » Wishful Linguistics
  • One simply had to accept the world as an imperfect place. America Past and Present
  • It has now been shown, though most briefly and imperfectly, how the law that "_Every species has come into existence coincident both in time and space with a pre-existing closely allied species_," connects together and renders intelligible a vast number of independent and hitherto unexplained facts. Contributions to the Theory of Natural Selection A Series of Essays
  • For me the different religions are beautiful flowers from the same garden, or they are branches of the same majestic tree. Therefore they are equally true, though being received and interpreted through human instruments equally imperfect
  • They can also help conceal cellulite and other imperfections.
  • But of course the variations within England DO take account of variations, albeit imperfectly, and the question we should probably be asking rather than: "How far from £7,362 are we? would be "How does the above list vary from the amount that might be generated by the huge multinomial equation accounting for these and other pertinent factors? Doh! Dimwittery: Game Over For Barnett Formula?
  • Under imperfect legal system, the fund - provider system with decentralization and balance frame would gain anticipative effect.
  • Being happy doesn't mean that everything is perfect. It means that you've decided to look beyond the imperfections.
  • This is properly called eugenic abortion - the ending of "imperfect" lives to remove the social, economic and emotional costs of their existence. THE IRATE NATION
  • Last step was sanding with 400 grit sandpaper to get a smooth but imperfect surface for the primer to bind to.
  • During the wooing scene, Petruchio assesses Kate as though she were a piece of horseflesh, checking her ‘gait’ for imperfections.
  • The final consumer good is beauty in our surroundings, and beauty is both individual and imperfectible. A Kingdom for a Frame, Bryan Caplan | EconLog | Library of Economics and Liberty
  • Groves of rigging were about the chains; and there, peering from behind a great stay, like an Indian from behind a hemlock, a Spanish sailor, a marlingspike in his hand, was seen, who made what seemed an imperfect gesture towards the balcony, but immediately as if alarmed by some advancing step along the deck within, vanished into the recesses of the hempen forest, like a poacher. The Piazza Tales
  • When you're a child you always imagine that your own bodily imperfections are somehow freakish.
  • Sarraute did in fact state over and over again that her chief preoccupation in writing was to reveal to the reader a previously hidden reality, using the imperfect and distinctly unreal, or at least nonmaterial, tool that is language.
  • All our limitations are bound up in our intellectual mind with its boundaries and imperfections and its tendency to emotional distortion.
  • The role does, however, expose a flaw in her technique, namely imperfect control in her voice's upper registers.
  • Against this, her vocals stood even more intensely as the pure residue, the hauntology in the machine, the tragedy of the soul imperfectible by science. Drowned In Sound // Feed
  • Yet however imperfect, however crude, they afford the historian's best access to even a rough estimate of public opinion of the period.
  • This is the sense in which the atheist mathematician's cognitio, or clear awareness, is imperfect. Certainty
  • All democratic systems are imperfect. Times, Sunday Times
  • A scream from Theresa now told, that she knew Valancourt, whom her imperfect sight, and the duskiness of the place had prevented her from immediately recollecting; but his attention was immediately called from her to the person, whom he saw, falling from a chair near the fire; and, hastening to her assistance, — he perceived, that he was supporting Emily! The Mysteries of Udolpho
  • The real electricity market is an imperfect competition market. And to simulate the strategies of suppliers, some models such as Cournot and supply function equilibrium are employed.
  • 26 Admittedly, "precolonial" imperfectly describes Europe, but it is equally uncomfortable for Africa. Belongings: Property, Family, and Identity in Colonial South Africa
  • This change results from an imperfect petalody of the anther; the two wings on each side of the central vascular cord represent the front and back walls of an anther lobe, or rather of that portion of the anther which, under ordinary circumstances, produces pollen. Vegetable Teratology An Account of the Principal Deviations from the Usual Construction of Plants
  • While the deal was imperfect, it beat lurking alternatives like another generation split by minefields or another cyclic war of revenge.
  • Notwithstanding these imperfections, originalism does answer most constitutional questions, and I remain unpersuaded that there is a better method of constitutional interpretation available.
  • To produce grip, a tyre needs a partner - the track surface - to stimulate the mechanisms that generate grip: a tyre's ability to mould itself to surface imperfections and molecular adhesion.
  • Since “actual economic quantities denominated in dollars” does not account for all the things that happen inbetweentimes of transactions, economists for many decades have studied various aspects of valuing the “extraneous, inbetween things” that still require physical effort and mentation: including neighborhood effects, externalities, public goods, transactions costs, asymmetric information, imperfect competition, monopoly, and institutions. Tax Cuts for the Rich, Arnold Kling | EconLog | Library of Economics and Liberty
  • Unfortunately their findings have been largely overlooked and most pomologists assume that apple flowers have an imperfectly syncarpous gynoecium.
  • All the specimens of this species of scalaria which fell under my observation were imperfect at the aperture. Report of the North-Carolina Geological Survey. Agriculture of the Eastern Counties: Together with Descriptions of the Fossils of the Marl Beds
  • Even when only the front two seats are occupied small road imperfections are smoothed out and even rough roads are dealt with effectively.
  • At each exterior angle of the imperfect polygon was a column with a cubiform capital. Two Summers in Guyenne
  • Very "imperfective" and hardly a "story," it is nevertheless done with sober and conscientious craftsmanship, very much like Bunin and very unlike the usual idea we have of Pilniak. Tales of the Wilderness
  • I worry that this advice may be misconstrued, especially at a time when the news is full of journalistic imperfections.
  • Moreover, this book reminds me that we live in an imperfect world. Times, Sunday Times
  • The copying process, however, is deliberately made imperfect, so that the occasional error creeps in.
  • Comte may be described as a syncretic, who, like the Gnostics of early Church history, attempted to combine the substance of imperfectly comprehended contemporary science with the form of Roman Christianity. Collected Essays, Volume V Science and Christian Tradition: Essays
  • Scale economies, product differentiation and other aspects of imperfect competition will necessarily receive less formal treatment. Competing in a Global Economy
  • The theory of international trade in imperfectly competitive markets suggests that dumping in the sense of international price discrimination should not be a matter of concern.
  • Marilyn Monroe: Imperfection is beauty, madness is genius and it's better to be absolutely ridiculous than absolutely boring.
  • The "tollbooth" analogy is imperfect because traffic through the public peering points is free. Nemertes Research - Independence, Integrity, Insight
  • It was a well-known fact that imperfect drainage, impure water, overcharged graveyards and want of ventilation, which was usual in places like this, carried the cholera germs.
  • Although they do not explicitly speak of an ingressive imperfect, they do mention the conative imperfect.
  • Al is a pundit for a broadsheet newspaper and is paid to find imperfection in everything; Davina works in an art gallery and is paid to make life more beautiful.
  • In the Slavonic languages, the perfective and imperfective are signalled by inflections on the verb, the perfective denoting the completion of the activity and the imperfective its non-completion.
  • It rather exemplifies the fact that our love is often imperfect. Times, Sunday Times
  • It's true that, as you point out, one can also argue that imperfection is not proved. Collins' Deistic Hangover
  • However, we are all of us imperfect beings, and punishing the individual for life-style imperfections seems to me to be unsupportable in a civilized society.
  • The only slight imperfection in the painting is a scratch in the corner.
  • For evil purposes are, perchance, due to the imperfection of human nature; that it should be possible for scoundrels to carry out their worst schemes against the innocent, while God beholdeth, is verily monstrous. Consolation of Philosophy
  • And it's the bodily imperfections and decay which lead us to desire a permanence of the human essence.
  • The only slight imperfection in this painting is a scratch in the corner.
  • He was equipped for instant duty, as far as the imperfect twilight would allow me to see; the long sword clanked upon the floor as he made his way through the lobbies which led to my place of confinement; his ample military cloak hung upon his arm; his cocked hat was upon his head, and in all points he was prepared for the road. The Purcell Papers
  • Imperfection clings to a person, and if they wait till they are brushed off entirely, they would spin for ever on their axis, advancing nowhere. Thomas Carlyle 
  • In 1880, the technique of examination of the blood was unfortunately very imperfect, which contributed to the prolongation of the discussion relative to the new haematozoon and it was necessary to perfect this technique and invent new staining procedures to demonstrate its structure. Alphonse Laveran - Nobel Lecture
  • A very small fraction of this is due to imperfect elasticity of the solid Earth.
  • Now, brethren, that is true in regard to our present imperfect denizenship within the city; and it is true in regard to men's passing into it in its perfect and final form. Expositions of Holy Scripture Isaiah and Jeremiah
  • What is not to be regretted is the passing of the typewriter: it was the least amenable tool, requiring such a tedious process to make corrections that it encouraged writers to leave imperfect work unamended.
  • UPDATE: (October 11) And here is mana tangata whenua, the power of the Maori struggles for tino-rangatiratanga ("self-determination" being the imperfect translation). Archive 2007-10-01
  • It was one of my great disappointments with my father; we're all imperfect, but he just never accepted responsibility.
  • This has probably caused the imperfectness of the manuscript in the above passage; though, at the same time, it must be acknowledged to be somewhat uncertain, whether Darnford is the stranger intended in this place. Maria; or The Wrongs of Woman
  • This proportion is only an imperfect surrogate of the presence of mutations giving rise to resistance to antiretrovirals.
  • But whatever may be the variations in the mere quantity of urine voided under the influence of alcohol, the alterations in quality pretty uniformly show an increase in the products of imperfect internal metamorphosis or oxidation, such as uric acid, oxalates, casts, leucocytes, albumen and potassium, with less of the normal products, as urea and salts of sodium. Alcohol: A Dangerous and Unnecessary Medicine, How and Why What Medical Writers Say
  • Anyway, imperfection is what makes things INTERESTING. Deadly sins « Magic Lantern Arts
  • Thus, from the Assyrian researches as well as from other sources, it has come to be acknowledged by the most eminent scholars at the leading seats of Christian learning that the accounts of creation with which for nearly two thousand years all scientific discoveries have had to be "reconciled" -- the accounts which blocked the way of Copernicus, and Galileo, and Newton, and Laplace -- were simply transcribed or evolved from a mass of myths and legends largely derived by the Hebrews from their ancient relations with Chaldea, rewrought in a monotheistic sense, imperfectly welded together, and then thrown into poetic forms in the sacred books which we have inherited. A History of the warfare of Science with Theology in Christendom
  • The only blemish is a small mole just under his left eye, but somehow that little imperfection makes him so much better looking.
  • Our guardians of purity have magnified the pain of this family and willfully and vindictively punished them for the ‘crime’ of a biological imperfection.
  • As I am still in possession of that imperfect organ, I will proceed to use it to the confutation of some of his other fallacies. Chesterton's Response to Shaw (Part Two)
  • the break was due to an imperfect splice
  • I am not perfect. Are you? Let us accept the fact that nobody is perfect. Let us learn to accept our imperfections as well as those of others. RVM 
  • Male spikelets are geminate, one sessile and one pedicelled, 2-flowered or imperfect, and with four glumes, which are subequal. A Handbook of Some South Indian Grasses
  • When there was light, it only made you see the imperfections more clearly.
  • So I'm pig-headedly refusing to take out my chisel and chip away at any slight imperfections.
  • At the same time, the tiny imperfections break the illusionary surface created by the photographs.
  • All our limitations are bound up in our intellectual mind with its boundaries and imperfections and its tendency to emotional distortion.
  • Every shot has been artistically approved, but you can have too much of a good thing, however tasteful, and perfection only counts when contrasted against imperfection.
  • In thin gilt lettering on the creamy white of the menu, how little those words conveyed to the bulk of the imperfectly educated diners.
  • In a society with an imperfect legal system, any false case can be fabricated, and they will also seem serious and perfect from the outside.
  • As the poor Flutterer, who by hard struggling has escaped from the birdlimed thorn-bush, still bears the clammy Incumbrance on his feet and wings, so am I doomed to carry about with me the sad mementos of past Imprudence and Anguish from which I have been imperfectly released. Coleridge & Southey Letters
  • Why shouldn't I just pay someone to fix my every flaw, cover my every blemish and erase my every imperfection?
  • It is customary in this House to have a bill, after each election and before the next, to tidy up any areas in which there are deficiencies or imperfections.
  • Our understanding of cancer remains imperfect.
  • The Asian crisis has shown the danger of free capital flows when vital information is imperfect, domestic financial systems are weak, and governments pursue unsound economic policies.
  • The spleen is, I believe, an internal organ whose functions are very imperfectly understood, still it is an accepted article of faith in France that every Briton is "devore de spleen," and that this lamentable state of things embitters his whole outlook on life, and casts a black shadow over his existence. Here, There and Everywhere
  • Like all secular humanism it puts its faith not in angels but in mortal, imperfect human beings.
  • God's ideas of creatures are, as Saint Thomas says, only his essence, insofar as it is participable or imperfectly imitable, for God contains every creaturely perfection, though in a divine and infinite way; he is one and he is all ¦. Malebranche's Theory of Ideas and Vision in God
  • So you open up the packages, trying to identify the ‘imperfection’ and figure out if it makes that particular pair wearable or unwearable.
  • The cognitive origin is taken to be the basic linguistic distinction between imperfective and perfective aspects of verbs, which describe uncompleted and completed actions.
  • It is the very fact of death that allows us to know that God loves us, as we are taken from this imperfect world into the perfection of heaven where the saints and angels gather.
  • The corpuscule is sometimes defined as a particle of negative electricity, which, in the existing state of electrical knowledge, is a very imperfect definition. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 2: Assizes-Browne
  • The claimant's evidence was that the purported but imperfect gift had been made a long time previously and not (as the letter said) after receipt of Mr Blake's letter.
  • a poor colour, and apodous either because it has no feet at all or because it has imperfect feet. Metaphysics
  • All our sale items are slightly imperfect.
  • What is not to be regretted is the passing of the typewriter: it was the least amenable tool, requiring such a tedious process to make corrections that it encouraged writers to leave imperfect work unamended.
  • We turned our backs on that, which was good; but it seemed like the world got a little smaller when we weren't among people who were trying to build the chiliasm, however imperfectly. Spin
  • No thou pitiful flatterer of thy master's imperfections; thou maukin made up of the shreds and parings of his superfluous fopperies. The Comedies of William Congreve Volume 1 [of 2]
  • Night after night they endure such culinary imperfections at the hands of the nation's top chefs.
  • For me the different religions are beautiful flowers from the same garden, or they are branches of the same majestic tree. Therefore they are equally true, though being received and interpreted through human instruments equally imperfect
  • The laws which excuse, on any occasions, the ignorance of their subjects, confess their own imperfections: the civil jurisprudence, as it was abridged by Justinian, still continued a mysterious science, and a profitable trade, and the innate perplexity of the study was involved in tenfold darkness by the private industry of the practitioners. The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire
  • We love the imperfect shapes in nature and in the works of art, look for an intentional error as a sign of the golden key and sincerity found in true mastery. Dejan Stojanovic 

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