VERB
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give individual shape or form to
Language that individuates his memories - give individual character to
How To Use individuate In A Sentence
- To name or individuate the deceased would reduce the national ghost to an ordinary self.
- Fathers, he says, help the child "individuate"; they are more willing than mothers to let a child out of their sight, and on average will let a baby crawl as much as twice as far before retrieving her. It's A Wise Father Who Knows. . .
- It is the condition of beatitude - the divine vision of the person of God by an individuated soul.
- They are not individuated by an haecceity or primitive thisness. Structural Realism
- Solving it would require finding a suitable way to individuate cognitive processes and specifying the precise role of back-up processes.
- Mars is the planet through which we individuate and know ourselves as separate and distinct.
- In particular, contingent entities can not be individuated in an absolute sense by any kind of descriptive phrase.
- God is not individuated by his true description, since it is impossible to conceive of any other entity from which he could be distinguished.
- Microstructuralism in the philosophy of chemistry is the thesis that chemical kinds can be individuated solely in terms of their microstructural properties (Hendry 2006). Natural Kinds
- Substances are things to which we can refer by use of a demonstrative phrase of the form ‘this so-and-so’; they are things that can be picked out, identified, individuated.