How To Use Interpolate In A Sentence

  • Captain Britain wasn't an ersatz copy of an American hero any more; the authors interpolated him into a more densely-realised realm of Druidic myths.
  • Ac and Aw are defined as the interpolated extensions of the calm-day and windy-day values as before, and are defined for all days: Parker 2006: An Urban Myth? « Climate Audit
  • For minor intervals I'd just interpolate from the nearest major/perfect. Boing Boing: January 26, 2003 - February 1, 2003 Archives
  • I pause to interpolate, the witness answers on the basis that it could have been.
  • Horrell finds the hypothesis that these verses were interpolated as plausible and concludes that they were likely a marginal note from church practice incorporated into the text at an early stage of transmission.
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  • In the "interpolated" manuscripts we find that the lapsed, whose caused had now been settled by the council, are "on that hand" (illic), whereas the reference to the schismatics -- meaning the Roman confessors who were supporting Novatian, and to whom the book was being sent -- are made as pointed as possible, being brought into the foreground by the repeated hic, "on this hand". The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 4: Clandestinity-Diocesan Chancery
  • Caroline Sullivan Margo Guryan Someone I Know Singer-songwriter Margo Guryan doesn't interpolate Bach's Jesu just for kicks on this 1968 obscurity – the familiar melody helps conjure an enchanting sense of deja vu as the ethereal New Yorker sings of meeting a stranger she feels she's known her whole life. F&M playlist
  • But people indulge in inter-personal comparison all the time, and there are few people who stick to their own unadulterated Utility functions, many people interpolate socially acceptable behaviour into what they really want, maybe that is the cause of "Mid-Life Crises" and the new "Quarter Life Crises", a conflict between Individual Utility Schedules and some subjectively observed Social Utility Schedule. Surveys and Happiness, Arnold Kling | EconLog | Library of Economics and Liberty
  • Indeed, innovation in scene painting is associated with Sophocles, albeit in a passage of Aristotle which may be interpolated.
  • Shakespeare uses all the mechanisms of alienation, including self-conscious reference to the theatrical situation, interpolated songs, and schematic or symbolic representation of abstract ideas.
  • To date, this is the best estimate for the duration of the Emsian stage because it was interpolated between two methodically consistent and biostratigraphically well-bracketed isotopic ages.
  • Much space is wasted by reports of the readings of several heavily interpolated mediaeval florilegia; more is wasted by an undue attention to mediaeval spellings and attempts to reproduce abbreviations and to show the precise appearance of secondary corrections. The Last Poems of Ovid
  • If I could just interpolate there, when one sees the definition of act in the Northern Territory Code, the way in which it is expressed is: in relation to an accused person, means the deed alleged to have been done by him…
  • From the first performance, however, a pas de deux by Friedrich Burgmüller was interpolated, and other unattributed additions were made in its later Russian productions.
  • Her effort was not merely to interpolate folk sayings in her novels; it was to write fiction according to the aesthetic principles that undergirded oral culture.
  • The remaining 20 percent of the delivery times linearly were interpolated between 10 and 20 minutes, with the upper bound set at 20 minutes.
  • These odd assertions were interpolated into the manuscript some time after 1400.
  • The Charles on the page has a lot more in common with the author's earlier protagonists (especially Continental Op), who clearly don't have a clue what's happening around them, but succeed by taking a crazy situation and exacerbating it to its breaking point another really telling omission (on a par with the excision of the Flitcraft narrative from Maltese Falcon) is the interpolated tale of cannibalism, which casts an extraordinary pall upon even the jokiest moments of Hammett's Thin Man... The Thin Man
  • If they are interpolated which is obviously more work than it should be clear that a change was made. Gambling Runs « Climate Audit
  • Additionally, he tends to repeat these statements from week to week, waiting for the pause in the conversation so he can interpolate them.
  • Sellars also provided Arwady with some interpolated vocal relief by inserting the first part of Vivaldi's Stabat Mater for the less worthy of her later arias. Rodney Punt: Griselda in Peter Sellars Production at Santa Fe Opera
  • Inkscape has a similar tool called "interpolate", which produces lovely lines by "blending" two separate lines into one flowing shapes. Pixel2Life.com: Latest 15 Tutorials
  • Owing to M. VESQUIER's speaking such excellent English, it never occurred to me that he had suddenly interpolated the French word Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 101, September 12, 1891
  • The easiest method is to conceal the changes in the publishing process - i.e., by allowing the editor to interpolate freely.
  • She interpolates historical footage of Greek immigrants coming to Australia, suggesting the hold the past - however distant - continues to have on a schizoid community.
  • It is possible that later Christians not only interpolated this statement, but also removed some negative comments about Jesus of which they disapproved.
  • For the Hamiltonian matrix elements, spline-fitted functions of time were used to interpolate values from the trajectory calculations.
  • Are You There God, It's Me Margaret engaged in hegemonic discourse that disrupted narratives of power; I gave the benefit of the doubt to the dumbass who thought "interpellate" and "interpolate" were synonyms; I gritted my teeth when an author dismissed the gendered meaning of "avuncular" as "deriv [ing] only from its etymology. Xoom
  • And right here I'd like to interpolate a word or two about Canadian poetry, our native poetry as you will find it, for example, in that precious but often impoverished quarterly known as the Canadian Poetry Magazine. Canada Finds Her Voice
  • But right now, none of the observing sites are operating above about 6,600 feet or so, so we have to kind of interpolate a little bit, and we're guessing at this time maybe into the low teens at best for the temperature at this hour. CNN Transcript Dec 17, 2006
  • Act II was made even more tedious by an overlong interpolated scene and song, full of diva in-jokes, for Sylvia McNair as the Duchess of Crackentorp. Glum Season for St. Louis
  • The idea of commemoration shows up most strongly in the retrospective narrative provided by the interpolated tales.
  • The young farmer in question possessed only a very elementary education, and had never been taught French, yet almost from the moment when he first began to speak he occasionally interpolated a French word in his conversation, and the practice extended as he grew older. Two Gallant Sons of Devon A Tale of the Days of Queen Bess
  • Actual film footage is interpolated into the standard narrative, along with ‘re-created’ film footage made to look real, not to mention ‘simulated’ home movies to make us see what's happening as if by accident.
  • The graph tracer did not always allow the proper coordinates to be read directly; in those cases, values were interpolated on the basis of the coordinates that could be read.
  • In the later collage poetry this materialism interpolates political and economic facts with society verbiage, relating to Boston's high society and the heiresses tracked by gossip columnists.
  • I Esdras, ix-x, and they likewise hold that Nehemiah 'name has been interpolated in Neh., viii, 9, and x, 1. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 10: Mass Music-Newman
  • The viewer feels he has seen enough variety to allow the imagination to interpolate all potential additional variations.
  • A shive of beef, Sister?" interpolated Rachel, who had no notion of allowing the theoretical to take precedence of the practical. Clare Avery A Story of the Spanish Armada
  • In my previous post on ‘under God,’ I missed the real meaning of the expression, as Lincoln and others used it - and so, by a wide mark, did the people who interpolated it in the Pledge.
  • He would interpolate values between his data points and he did this using a cubic interpolation formula.
  • There are lots of interpolated stories here; there are episodes written in alexandrine verse; and there are enough characters to satisfy even the most hardened devotee of the serial genre.
  • In the score's fourth section, the composer interpolates a text from a poem called ‘The Dream,’ written by the 19th century Ukrainian poet Taras Shevchenko.
  • For every (x, y) point in the original image, modify its x coordinate through a forward transform, and then determine where it is relative to the estimated lines, and linearly interpolate the y coordinate. Dewarping pages « The Half-Baked Maker
  • If needed, the missing values may be interpolated by averaging the exchangeability-as-source of the source amino acid, and the exchangeability-as-destination of the destination amino acid.
  • The earlier copyist leaves off the first instance of the epithet, creating an ambiguity that a Christian could only read as referring to James the Jerusalem pillar, which reading a second scribe made explicit, or added as marginalia that was subsequently incorporated into the text, a well-attested source of interpolated material. More Mythicist-Creationist Parallels
  • In _Cur. _ 462 ff. the _choragus_ interpolates a recital composed of topical allusions to the manners of different neighborhoods of Rome. The Dramatic Values in Plautus
  • The receipt as drawn up by le Febre reads like a botanist's catalogue interpolated with oriental pearls, ambergris, and bezoardic stones, to add mystery. Sir Walter Ralegh A Biography
  • Just by touching the delicate surface of the sensor you risk permanent damage or misalignment, which is why some DSLRs now offer dust detection and removal software - they basically say don't touch the dust, the computer will interpolate the missing portions of the image. TechCrunch
  • Though Erasmus suspected the truth, that the verse had been interpolated from the Latin text, he added it in his third edition The Age of the Reformation
  • The action of the bakery is interpolated with scenes of domestic discord: the declining relationship between Di and her husband, conducted over ritualistically awkward meals.
  • He didn't cut the score, or interpolate pop songs into it; it really was ‘Bohème.’
  • Close inspection showed that many lines had been interpolated into the manuscript at a later date.
  • Several verses of the work song ‘John Henry’ ‘show internal evidence of being interpolated from English ballads’.
  • The vertically filtered station data from each section are interpolated onto an evenly spaced latitudinal or longitudinal grid depending on section orientation at 0.033° spacing using a shape-preserving piecewise cubic Hermite interpolant at each pressure level. Recyclable AbathyThermograph Instruments « Climate Audit
  • This means that instead of having to interpolate the values of neighbouring pixels the X3 sensor ‘sees’ full colour at individual pixel locations.
  • We still have a faint echo of the old Intercession in the clause about the newly-baptized interpolated into the "Hanc igitur" at The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 9: Laprade-Mass Liturgy
  • All day long the phrase interpolated her thoughts. The Ragged Edge
  • Taylor, in his translation of this passage, was so strongly imbued with the "grey-headed errour," that in order to elucidate the somewhat obscure meaning of Aristotle, he has actually interpolated the text with the exploded fallacy of Ctesias, and after the word reclining to sleep, has inserted the words "_leaning against some wall or tree_," which are not to be found in the original.] Sketches of the Natural History of Ceylon
  • Captain Britain wasn't an ersatz copy of an American hero any more; the authors interpolated him into a more densely-realised realm of Druidic myths.
  • Later Edward III interpolated a royal claim for it, on the basis that the Templar lands had escheated to the crown.
  • In the case of Mrs Burdett, this seems unlikely: the extract fits neatly between other entries, written in the same handwriting, and so there is no evidence that it has been interpolated at a later date.
  • It's only a flesh-wound, and he isn't going to die," Sheldon managed to interpolate. Chapter 7
  • Michael interpolates his repertoire, transposing any tune without difficulty in the smoothest of transitions.
  • Many lines have been interpolated into the manuscript at a later date.
  • We kind of interpolated that to about an 85 mile-per-hour gust, where Beaumont where Anderson Cooper was, actually was 104. CNN Transcript Sep 24, 2005
  • Tear a page from a book and you may be able to interpolate.
  • We had no TV, so we had no idea what a Sobers sweep or a Hall bouncer actually looked like; we were left to interpolate between newspaper stills and glossies from cricket books.
  • Textured areas, 512 x 512 (trilinear 15 megatexels/second interpolated, mip-mapped) 2D graphics performance* FAQ: The PC 3D Graphics Accelerators FAQ v0.6 (Part II)
  • The gofpel of John» of which Kerinthus had given me a copy interpolated by him to a conformity with his notions» and the expofition which» being ignorant myfelf of »ay other copy» I delivered to the brethren % 60 HISTORY OW i brethren in their aflfemblies, on the mjrf - teries contained therein, had an extra - ordinary efFedt; my authority and influ« Private history of Peregrinus Proteus, the philosopher
  • Medieval theologians interpolated this passage into the canon law doctrine ‘Scientia Donum Dei Est, Unde Vendi Non Potest’ (Knowledge is a gift from God, consequently it cannot be sold).
  • It is interpolated from two of his suites for orchestra.
  • Valuable commentaries are interpolated into the main text, using a slightly smaller typeface which took me a little time to adjust to (though vastly preferable to a mass of italic print).
  • As a textually bound remnant of the past, he is already determined, ‘enslaved’ in Browning's metaphor, by the documentary record into which he has been interpolated.
  • This interpolates between rotation values, and is suitable for routing into a Transform node's set rotation field.
  • Best heed the sea's rote and an iron keel rotten with salt clanging on the rocks; second best, read several thousand lines of interpolated verse and various lists ascribed to a quite imaginary rhapsode called Homer.
  • blend fields" will blend, you can try "interpolate", it might give better results. VideoHelp.com Forum
  • In this species the suspension may resolve ornamentally, that is, it may have some note or notes interpolated between the suspension and its resolution. A Treatise on Simple Counterpoint in Forty Lessons
  • It requires that one believe the closed system was arranged in specific ways at specific times which we can postulate, argue for, interpolate, or otherwise justify but cannot experientially prove. Does It Matter If We're "Reality-Based"?, Bryan Caplan | EconLog | Library of Economics and Liberty
  • In the medieval local rites the Sanctus was often "farced" (interpolated with tropes), like the Kyrie and other texts, to fill up the long musical neums. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 13: Revelation-Stock
  • Reoffered at 99. 50 to yield three basis points above the interpolated curve.
  • _Solus_ was lost through haplography ( 'fulua solus': the elongated 's' form common in manuscripts would have facilitated the error) and _tristis_ interpolated to restore the metre. The Last Poems of Ovid
  • Questions are profusely interpolated into the authorial commentary and characters interrogate themselves and others constantly.
  • Berry chose to interpolate music from other leading choral composers including Richard Allain, whose Night wraps Shelley's poem in velvet chords as thick as darkness, adding a sonorous cello melody beautifully played by Katherine Jenkinson that floats through the stars to ravishing effect. Così fan tutte; Dream Hunter; Commotio; Stephen Hough, LPO/Alsop – review
  • She interpolates historical footage of Greek immigrants coming to Australia, suggesting the hold the past - however distant - continues to have on a schizoid community.
  • To make it so would be to interpolate into the text of the Refugee Convention definition of refugee an additional requirement of international condemnation.
  • Meteorological data are spatially interpolated to attain the spatial resolution matching remotely sensed data.
  • The Australian IPS Radio and Space Services offer several maps that attempt to depict interpolated propagation conditions, based on ionosonde measurements. EHam.net News
  • This passage was interpolated into the report.
  • I should interpolate that his friends generally read to him to save his eyes.
  • If I decrease the resolution to anything other than the native resolution, images and text are interpolated.
  • The interpolated chapters about the paper's past aren't very interesting; the final entry ends with a ghastly shock; and the postscript is too cute. The Imperfectionists: Summary and book reviews of The Imperfectionists by Tom Rachman.

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