How To Use Inward In A Sentence

  • I'’m bored" is a useless thing to say. I mean, you live in a great, big, vast world that you’ve seen none percent of. Even the inside of your own mind is endless; it goes on forever, inwardly, do you understand? The fact that you’re alive is amazing, so you don’t get to say "I’m bored.". Louis C.K. 
  • This type of power - a culture that radiates outward and a market that draws inward - rests on pull, not on push; on acceptance, not on imposition.
  • For some, the inexorable march of years and the pathos of mortality bring an inward, deep resentment. Christianity Today
  • They go in sheep's russet, many great men that might maintain themselves in cloth of gold, and seem to be dejected, humble by their outward carriage, when as inwardly they are swollen full of pride, arrogancy, and self-conceit. Anatomy of Melancholy
  • But the inward thoughts of men, which appear outwardly in their words and actions, are the signs of our honouring, and these go by the name of worship; in Latin, cultus. Leviathan
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  • inward flood of capital
  • Its inward sign is the true spiritual kingdom: the covenantal relationship between God and believers.
  • Prayer, and receive the Sacrament every day; because they do not subject and submit themselves wholly and entirely to him that hath Light, nor deny and conquer themselves, nor give up themselves totally to God, with a perfect divesting and disinteresting of themselves: In a word, till the Soul be purified in the Fire of Inward Pain, it will never get to a State of The spiritual guide which disentangles the soul / by Michael de Molinos ; edited with an introduction by Kathleen Lyttelton and a note by H. Scott Holland.
  • Amateurs can easily fill the tubes using simple agricultural tools, after which bags are arranged in a spiral that is gradually corbelled inwards as it ascends to form a dome.
  • He has on the back of his stone a shield with nine rows of chequers; over the top of the shield is a mascle between two keys fesswise, bits inwards and downwards.
  • But this is a small town as typical as anywhere else in the American heartland: earnest, churchy, amiable, inward-looking, bland, conformist, trusting.
  • If this was the UK, I would expect to be ushered to a table (probably grumbling inwardly about the empty tables I passed on the way), then, once seated, make a curt nod and "hullo" to my table mates before either engaging in quiet conversation with my companion or looking pensively out of the window, trying hard to look like I'm thinking of Very Important Things. Amtrak adventures
  • The rest is torment and anguish, from which she seeks to escape by turning inwards. The Times Literary Supplement
  • Each of the plurality of flukes may be provided with an inwardly sloped bill segment at a distal end of the fluke.
  • But foreign inward investment is not automatically a good thing. Times, Sunday Times
  • It creates a startling atmosphere of intensity and highly unusual inwardness - sometimes disturbing - and makes it utterly distinct from anything in Western dance and theatre.
  • Their inward minds possess different energy configurations to ours.
  • Space has to be carved out and carefully wrapped to create a luminous, inward-looking void, augmented by carefully framed views of the townscape.
  • In time, as the Ecca Sea filled with sediment and the deltas prograded basinward, large tracts of river channels and floodplains emerged.
  • As competition from Asia increases and shareholders clamour for ever faster growth some regard the inward-looking nature of the family corporate setup as untenable.
  • But the fact remains that Wolf and the tendency Wolf represented made an inward-looking discipline possible and, ultimately, respectable.
  • Ian found himself reluctantly letting his lids fall shut, and he heard the door swing inwards.
  • It is a retreat inward and a tacit approval of injustice in society. Christianity Today
  • But her shrill, naive polemicizing caused Michaels to inwardly wince, as if at a cruel reflection of himself. The Cry of the Onlies
  • 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
  • Like Britain again, it looks outwards from Europe as well as inwards, which is why Turkey is also part and not part of the Middle East too. Disgracefully, Turkey's EU accession bid is going nowhere soon
  • Your current shoes may show the telltale signs of overpronation (too much inward rolling of the foot) or excessive supination (too much outward rolling), so bring them along for the salesperson to examine. Long May You Run
  • Osteoporosis causes fractures in bone that project "inward from what we call our spine," she explains. Latest News
  • Ward had certain fastidious instincts, and he rebelled inwardly at eating, sleeping, and cooking all in one small room. The Ranch at the Wolverine
  • Be like your Master who grew inward, outward, and upward; selfward, manward, and The Children's Six Minutes
  • With each inward breath feel your body warming as you draw in colours of red or orange. Repetitive Strain Injury
  • Now, since the current always runs from the positive to the negative pole, and makes its whole circuit in that direction, it will be readily seen that, from the place on the patient where the positive pole is applied, inward as far as to the central point, the direction of the current may properly be said to be _inward_; and that, from the central point to the place of the negative electrode, where the current comes out, its direction may be said to be _outward_. A Newly Discovered System of Electrical Medication
  • The never completed keep is a great round tower divided by a moat from the inner curtain that curves inward to avoid it.
  • The pressure from the big toe pushing inwards affects the other toes.
  • This inclination was supported by his decision in 1909, to join the Theosophical Society, where the religious mysticism encouraged him to turn inward to spiritual life.
  • Pinnæ lanceolate, deeply pinnatifid, the lower most often turned inward. The Fern Lover's Companion A Guide for the Northeastern States and Canada
  • Whatever be our inward frame, we are apt to perceive a wonderful congeniality in the world without us.
  • Sara, while remaining outwardly amiable toward all concerned, was inwardly furious.
  • Snow sagged against the inward cliff and around the big blocks of broken stone.
  • His frame was portly and he shuffled when he walked, his feet turned slightly inwards. KANDAHAR COCKNEY: A Tale of Two Worlds
  • That is, the church of Christ founded in humility appearing outwardly afflicted, and as it were black and contemptible; but inwardly, that is, in its doctrine and morality, fair and beautiful. The Bible, Douay-Rheims, Complete The Challoner Revision
  • It is the breath of life and the inward light that animates the human body and inspires the human soul.
  • Of Byron the passional man, we know nearly everything, while of Shakespeare's inwardness we know nothing. Pilgrim to Eros
  • When air flows in the spaces between the disks, the spacers are arranged in such a way as to provide inward momentum to the air, causing the disks to move. Tesla-Inspired Bladeless Wind Turbine Could Generate Power Comparable to Coal Power Plants | Impact Lab
  • I clearly remember the day it finally occurred to me that insects, animals and the like had "inwardness"--that they felt pain and fear the same way I did. Instant Empathy?
  • Inwardly as distressed as the Thienz, Scait strode from the hall without pause to call a lackey to replace the rent limb of his throne arm. Shadowfane
  • Martin frowned inwardly at the citation of that worthy gentleman, and went on: I put stamps on all my manuscripts and started them off to the editors again. Chapter 22
  • Our bewilderment derives from our failure to turn inward and really examine the workings of our own minds.
  • The inner and outer margins of the annulus were observed to bulge outwards but when the nucleus was removed the inner margins bulged inwards.
  • Indeed, Moulsworth vows to transmute the faulty model provided by the Biblical Martha, the archetypal busy housewife: Moulsworth plans to "dight" (or make ready) her "Inward house" (l. 19) and thus prepare an appropriate habitation for Christ. My Name Was Martha: A Renaissance Woman's Autobiographical Poem
  • This means 'to fold inward' ... so we may be led to explore the notion that in some sense each region contains a total structure 'enfolded' within it ". Notes From The Geek Show
  • The anterior border of the sterno-mastoid must be pulled backwards, and the digastric and stylo-hyoid forwards and inwards. A Manual of the Operations of Surgery For the Use of Senior Students, House Surgeons, and Junior Practitioners
  • Inward-looking austerity and Tea Party populism is not the answer, neither for the US nor for Europe. Raymond Johansen: Cooperative Leadership, Not Tea Party Cocktail
  • He scrambled to the floor and was about to dive under the bed when the door swung inwards and the light from the corridor blinded him for a moment.
  • Eventually they would withdraw those investments, turn inward, lick their wounds, repair their factories, and bolster their stock.
  • O Truth, Truth, how inwardly did even then the marrow of my soul pant after Thee, when they often and diversly, and in many and huge books, echoed of Thee to me, though it was but an echo? The Third Book
  • I'’m bored" is a useless thing to say. I mean, you live in a great, big, vast world that you’ve seen none percent of. Even the inside of your own mind is endless; it goes on forever, inwardly, do you understand? The fact that you’re alive is amazing, so you don’t get to say "I’m bored.". Louis C.K. 
  • Pockets that tilt slightly inward are good, since they draw the eye toward the center.
  • In this regard it would go some way towards making it a more attractive proposition for inward investment and would help to reduce the peripherality of the region.
  • No fellow human being could be surprised, wrote Edward to King Alfonso as one father to another, if we were inwardly desolated by the sting of this bitter grief, for we are human, too.
  • Even when carrying out needful tasks, do not let your intellect be idle but keep it meditating inwardly and praying.
  • The Major government, achieving the only things that matter – stable prices, rising employment and bouyant inward investment – would have been recognised as a success but for the running internal revolt that she busily inflamed. Letters: Bringer of division and bitterness
  • Then in the next instant she groaned inwardly, cursing her wayward thoughts.
  • The hardening typically affects the hands, causing the fingers to curl inwards.
  • Tough executives are tacitly understood to be well kempt on the outside, whilst inwardly crumbling, decaying, turning to sludge.
  • Terming such revelation the "inward light, " the "Christ within, " or the "inner light, " the first Friends identified this spirit with the Christ of history.
  • But this is a small town as typical as anywhere else in the American heartland: earnest, churchy, amiable, inward-looking, bland, conformist, trusting.
  • And yet, repeat the word inwardly as often as she would, the attempt to reason out and prove that she was sure, always came after it and failed. Our Mutual Friend
  • Barth clung to his bit of splintered wood, it bit into his arms and fingers, his eyes were open but turned inwards.
  • It serves to convince us that there is large body of people who are merely self-interested, inward-looking and consumption oriented.
  • Gently curl your spine and pelvis inwards, then arch outwards. BE YOUR BEST: How Anyone can become Fit, Healthy and Confident
  • This penitency consists in three things -- First, An inward insight of sin, and sense of mercy; Secondly, A bewailing of thy vile state; The Practice of Piety: Directing a Christian How to Walk, that He May Please God.
  • And having deduced 'that good of man which is private and particular, as far as seemeth fit,' he returns 'to that good of man which respects and beholds society,' which he terms DUTY, because the term of duty is more proper to a mind well framed and disposed towards others, as the term of VIRTUE is applied to a mind well formed and composed in itself; though neither can a man understand _virtue, without some relation to society_, nor _duty, without an inward disposition_. The Philosophy of the Plays of Shakspere Unfolded
  • She explains how different mixes of cooperation and resistance were used and how people were often outwardly supportive but inwardly contemptuous. Times, Sunday Times
  • The Church has lost a sense of mission, turning inwards in self-absorption, anxious to protect itself, forgetting that it is no more than a means to an end, the end being the Kingdom of God.
  • YOU stand with your back towards the pool and then throw yourself inwards towards the board, so that's scary too. The Sun
  • The pattern of differentiation could thus be visualized as a centripetal wave moving inward from a ring of already differentiated cells.
  • Just as a sweeping hand motion in freestyle (the "S" pattern) can help you grab more water, this inward-moving kick can help you grab a bit more water during the path to the finish of the kick.
  • Specifically, the normally green stems began to discolor (turn brown) from the outside of the tree inward.
  • In such struggles life spends itself fast; an inward wound does not carry one deathward more surely than this worst wound of the soul. The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 04, No. 23, September, 1859
  • Look outwards not inwards. Times, Sunday Times
  • Beneath the kitsch of the souvenir shops, Lourdes is raw and elemental; situated in rather gloomy inward-looking craggy mountains.
  • Work from left to right, with the needle pointing inwards towards the fabric. Collins Complete Books of Soft Furnishings
  • The salesperson at a quality store will be able to offer you specific models that correct pronation or supination where your foot turns inward or outward, or aid flat feet or high arches. How To Buy & Sell just about Everything
  • What we are seeing from some reasserters is outward forms which are Anglican accompanied by an inward ecclessiology which is congregationalist. Who are the real Anglicans? « Anglican Samizdat
  • The party was written off as an authoritarian, inward-looking dinosaur, made obsolete by the country's opening to the global economy.
  • But inwardly, you're in a linen suit, wearing a straw boater and swinging a walking stick.
  • Researchers at the Koestler Unit think that vision may involve a two-way process, an inward movement of light and an outward projection of mental images.
  • Inwardly glowing with impatience, Arthur yet saw the necessity of obeying his guide; and when he had pulled the long and loose upper vestment from the old man, he stood before him in a cassock of black serge, befitting his order and profession, but begirt, not with a suitable sash such as clergymen wear, but with a most uncanonical buff-belt, supporting a short two-edged sword, calculated alike to stab and to smite. Anne of Geierstein
  • If the orbital velocity is increased, the orbit moves outward from the Sun; if the velocity is decreased, the orbit moves inward toward the Sun.
  • The film's characters are so inwardly focused that they only rarely emerge from a neurotic bubble.
  • Benefactress! benefactress!" said I inwardly: "they all call Mrs. Reed my benefactress; if so, a benefactress is a disagreeable thing. Jane Eyre: an autobiography, Vol. I.
  • The walls of the conceptacle (Fig.  26, _B_) are composed of closely interwoven filaments, from which grow inward numerous hairs, filling up the space within, and often extending out through the opening at the top. Elements of Structural and Systematic Botany For High Schools and Elementary College Courses
  • Fold the four edges of the pancake inwards to make a square. Times, Sunday Times
  • Inwardly I rolled my eyes, but kept my peppy smile in place.
  • Settling in his chair, Richard inwardly frowned and struggled to shake off the premonition Seamus's opening paragraph had evoked. SCANDAL'S BRIDE
  • A breeze blew the curtains inwards.
  • The God-centered religion of most synagogues and churches does not inspire the postmodern seeker; she wants to turn inward.
  • It conveyed exquisitely the notion of the bouleversement de tous les sens: that state of neurasthenic excitement in which images whirled chaotically before the inward eye, impressing on the seer an overwhelming sense of their vividness and spiritual truth (Castle 159). Smoke and Mirrors: Internalizing the Magic Lantern show in _Vilette_
  • He is inwardly and sometimes outwardly raging with bitterness and frustration. Times, Sunday Times
  • He raged inwardly, pacing the room as if to outdistance comprehension. THE LAST RAVEN
  • The Earle of Pancalier aduertised hereof, began incontinently to feele a certaine remorse of conscience, which inwardly gript hym so nere, as he endured a torment lyke to very death. The Palace of Pleasure, Volume 1
  • And there are two small volumes on the qualities of the modern book-binding leathers which the collector will do well to read, mark, learn and inwardly digest at the outset of his bibliopegic studies. The Book-Hunter at Home
  • The liberalized policy would not necessarily bring in inward investment from foreign automakers.
  • These three layers are called ectoderm, mesoderm, and entoderm from outside inwards respectively. Physiology or Medicine 1935 - Presentation Speech
  • It is perfectly true, of course, that inwardness - or self-cultivation or self-overcoming or whatever you like to call it - requires a sufficiency of material goods.
  • This involves looking more outward than inward. Times, Sunday Times
  • Reply Obj. 2: The teacher enlightens outwardly and ministerially by catechizing: but God enlightens the baptized inwardly, by preparing their hearts for the reception of the doctrines of truth, according to John 6: 45: "It is written in the prophets ... Summa Theologica, Part III (Tertia Pars) From the Complete American Edition
  • Ministers claim that the public diplomatic spat has little effect on inward investment. Times, Sunday Times
  • His lashes now grow inwards and must be plucked out. The Sun
  • It turned with a click, and the door swung inward to allow them inside.
  • There are four eggs, arranged in a circle with their points inward. Times, Sunday Times
  • (link) I'm somewhat jealous of your and kateelliott's ability to generate more and more extra plot with even trying -- that things always seem to spin outwards rather than twining inwards every chance they get ... Msagara: Michelle West DAW books update
  • When stars that are more than three times the mass of our Sun finally exhaust their reserves of nuclear fuel they have no means of opposing the inward pull of gravity.
  • That question will prompt much navel-gazing when the theatre's first productions appear, but looking inwards is only one way to answer it.
  • It is an inward and sibylline sound of swazzle notes and speaking stones. A Year on the Wing
  • It swung gently inwards and for a moment all was lost in a sea of white light.
  • In their discussion of prayer the rabbis of the Talmud introduced the concept of kavvana (direction, intention), or inwardness.
  • She lifted the bouquet from the ground, and then, as if inwardly ashamed at having stepped aside from her maidenly reserve to respond to a stranger's greeting, passed swiftly homeward through the garden.
  • Except when incorporated as part of the cap device, the corps device shall be so place on the uniform that the staff of the caduceus is vertical and the anchor is pointing inward. EXECUTIVE ORDER 9993
  • This continues until there is a well-developed inward bulge which goes about half-way across the interior.
  • Pratyaahaar means withdrawal of senses from their objects and turning the mind inward.
  • A man had to be a hero inwardly and outwardly to be able to draw that bow. What the Bee Knows - reflections on myth, symbol and story
  • The horns of the male are sub-triangular, much compressed laterally and posteriorly; in fact one may say concave at the sides, that is, from the base of the horn to about one half; transversely sulcated; curving outwards, and returning inward towards the face; points convergent. Natural History of the Mammalia of India and Ceylon
  • The image clearly showed that her knees were torqued inward.
  • She quietly called and then inwardly winced at how weak her voice sounded to her.
  • Word of God, instead of allowing it to penetrate more and more the inner spiritual nature: he therefore counsels them to purify themselves from all that is evil, all excrescences of the inward life which passion nourishes, and in meekness to suffer the word implanted in their hearts to take deeper and deeper root therein. The Scriptural Expositions of Dr. Augustus Neander: II. The Epistle of James, Practically Explained.
  • “Confound the nyctalopia!” said Paganel, inwardly, though delighted to be of any service to his friend. In Search of the Castaways
  • This meant French eyes and energies were turned inwards again. ELIZABETH AND MARY: Cousins, Rivals, Queens
  • Not only do they lead to capital flight from economies, they also deter inward investment. Times, Sunday Times
  • The word insular derives from the Latin word for island, and most islands become just that: inward-looking, self-sufficient and self-absorbed.
  • The garden was in a yard about thirty meters by sixty, surrounded by the towering curtain wall with inward-facing crenellations.
  • Other characters include Maggie, a keen but green young journalist; Ellen, the supportive owner of the hotel, who has her own worries; and various suspicious, inward-looking locals who don't take kindly to what they see as outside interference. Book review
  • Protagoras, Parmenides, Democritus and Socrates looked inward to the human mind and there discovered logos, Human Reason.
  • The fibres which come ultimately from the dorsal aspect of the spinal marrow are those which carry inwards the effect of a stimulus applied towards their ultimate termination, and are therefore called afferent, or sensory. The Common Frog
  • Surely smoke becomes a kitchin farre better than a dining chamber, and yet it makes a kitchin also oftentimes in the inward parts of men, soyling and infecting them with an vnctuous and oily kind of soote, as hath been found in some great tobacco takers, that after their death, were opened. History of English Humour, Vol. 1 (of 2) With an Introduction upon Ancient Humour
  • The big door swung heavily inward behind them, wheezed against its sealing gasket, and clacked shut. STONE CITY
  • Looking inward, officers see the army not only as a highly-valued institution but also as a corporate or nearly free-standing entity whose internal coherence and unity they must protect from outsiders.
  • They lived under constant scrutiny - and it turned inwards. Times, Sunday Times
  • As expected, the inward currents elicited by carbachol (1 mM, 30 s) persisted for a longer duration compared to the inward currents elicited by acetylcholine (1 mM, 30 s) in both males and females, as seen in the voltage clamp traces in PLoS ONE Alerts: New Articles
  • Rather than kick up and down, try to snap your feet down and inward.
  • Courtyard rooms face "inwards" - a quiet winter choice away from blustery winds. Telegraph.co.uk: news, business, sport, the Daily Telegraph newspaper, Sunday Telegraph
  • The cry for forgiveness was also the cry for inward healing and deliverance from the mental and physical effects of sin.
  • God the Great, Thou knowest the things by secrecy ensealed and their outwards revealed and their inwards concealed! Arabian nights. English
  • As far as I know our inward mail has been lost only once - when the delivery postman was robbed in broad daylight and his mailbag stolen by hopheads.
  • His heart palpitated as he inwardly started to panic.
  • Not only do they lead to capital flight from economies, they also deter inward investment. Times, Sunday Times
  • The rest is torment and anguish, from which she seeks to escape by turning inwards. The Times Literary Supplement
  • Angstrom slammed the door to his flat shut, cursing inwardly at his own stupidity.
  • It is available to all those who hear the new truth and feel inwardly convinced of its desirability.
  • Using the magazine lipper, carefully bend the lips inward until the smaller bit just fits between the lips. Mr. Completely
  • She cursed herself inwardly as the words left her and knew what was about to happen next.
  • Mature females have large, inwardly directed, platelike oostegites at the inner base of their anterior legs. Crustacea
  • Position piping with cord facing inwards and raw edges together; stitch piping ends together to fit. Collins Complete Books of Soft Furnishings
  • St. Ita was a holy nun, outwardly fierce but inwardly tender, especially towards her numerous fosterlings.
  • He was inwardly cringing at the slight crack in his voice.
  • He becomes all outer show and inward emptiness; dull, callous, and indifferent.
  • In The Moralists the steps of ascent are defined; from the admiration of beautiful objects we rise to the in - sight that it is art, the beautifying, which is beautiful; from the love of beautiful bodies we pass to the recog - nition that their beauty is founded not in the body qua body, but in a forming power (or inward form), in action and intelligence, i.e., in the mind. Dictionary of the History of Ideas
  • Ignacio particularly loved to imitate exactly the way María Elena walked, turning one foot inward, in adulation rather than any sort of mockery. Three Tamales for the Señor Part One
  • Inwardly, all creatures are drops from the same Ocean.
  • Reaching the eighth plank, he pushed, and it swung inwards, revealing a small crevice that he quickly squeezed into.
  • If there's a faultline, it's only that such fastidiousness can turn inward. Times, Sunday Times
  • The first step in detonating a thermonuclear weapon is to ignite the high explosive that causes a shock wave to travel inward and compress the nuclear material the explosive surrounds, known as the pit.
  • She was kneeling down in the chimney-corner, before two pieces of turf laid together with the heather inwards, blowing at the red-hot ashes with her breath till the turves flamed. Wessex Tales
  • She discovered only recently from watching video footage that her right foot had turned inwards as if to act as a rudder. Times, Sunday Times
  • I'’m bored" is a useless thing to say. I mean, you live in a great, big, vast world that you’ve seen none percent of. Even the inside of your own mind is endless; it goes on forever, inwardly, do you understand? The fact that you’re alive is amazing, so you don’t get to say "I’m bored.". Louis C.K. 
  • In front of spiritual homeland, your any thread of falter, could let you lose precious inwardness, and place yourself in the temptation of the secular world.
  • With a sigh she turned her attentions inward once again, back to her own daydream.
  • Justice and home affairs ministries were traditionally some of the most parochial and inward-looking of all national ministries before the European Union came along.
  • All the windows were blasted inwards with the force of the explosion.
  • While there were fewer portrayals of contemporary life than in Soviet art, not all western artists looked inwards.
  • He felt the body reel inwardly, weakening as his anger surfaced, stressing the spell that held the body in corporeal form.
  • The polypides of living stenolaemates grow inwardly from skeletal apertures.
  • Whatever turns the soul inward on itself, tends to concentre its forces, and to fit it for greater and stronger flights of science. On the Sublime and Beautiful
  • I am growling inwardly, and I keep finding non-existent excuses to disappear for coffee.
  • When once deceived, however, or undeceived about the character of a person, he became utterly incredulous, and he saluted this fine speech of my lord's with a sardonical, inward laughter, preserving his gravity, however, and scarce allowing any of his scorn to appear in his words. The Virginians
  • With a separatist impulse, fundamentalism turned inward; but the sectarian subculture that coalesced was resourceful and vibrant.
  • Japan, despite its post-war success, is still extraordinarily insular nation, even compared to China and Korea; this is partially a result of the inward-looking mentality fostered by a national policy whose external aspect is essentially dictated by the American protectorship. Matthew Yglesias » Bush and Asia
  • Such cynical micro-analysts of human behaviour must suffer when the ravenous critic inevitably turns inward.
  • Face and pectus slightly covered with cinereous tomentum, the latter bluish-green; antennæ black, arista much more than half the length of the body; metathorax green; abdomen blue, sutures black; legs and halteres black; wings grey, fore branch of the præbrachial vein much curved inward, discal transverse vein straight; length of the body 2-1/2 -- 2-3/4 lines; of the wings 5 lines. Journal of the Proceedings of the Linnean Society - Vol. 3 Zoology
  • In fact, little of the gas driven inward need ultimately fall into the nucleus of the Galaxy.
  • I cringed inwardly at the pathetic whine my voice had become.
  • Working by consensus decision making, the group generated a design that splays in both plan and section, inflecting the structure outward while focusing inward to the place of ceremony.
  • The loss of orbital energy by the satellite causes it to evolve slowly inward into a closer, shorter-period orbit.
  • Rabelaisianism was obviously the expression of that vital sap which, not having been permitted to inform his work, had been driven inward and left thereto ferment. 1601
  • This model had a retractable airbrake mounted well aft, almost underneath the exhaust nozzles, and the undercarriage folded backward and inward instead of forward and inward: there were also six underwing missile pylons, which had been adapted to sling centre-line fuel tanks to complement the wing pods. The Sinkiang Executive
  • Analogy does not depicture an inward struggle in his own mind, but as Essays and Reviews: The Education of the World, Bunsen's Biblical Researches, On the Study of the Evidences of Christianity; Seances Historiques de Gen��ve; On the Mosaic Cosmogony; Tendencies of Religious Thought in England, 1688-1750; On the Interpr
  • Their one consistent quality is their inwardness.
  • The call centre will handle ‘inward services’, manning the service centre and helplines.
  • It was as if the outward fear and trembling inherent in the century of mass death had taken inward hold within James's own family.
  • Face silvery; antennæ testaceous, black towards the tips, arista full as long as the thorax; thorax with three cupreous stripes; pectus silvery; abdomen with cupreous purple bands and with whitish spots along each side; legs testaceous, tarsi and hind tibiæ black; wings slightly greyish, blackish brown along the costa and about the transverse veins, veins black, fore branch of the præbrachial vein curved inward, discal transverse vein undulating; halteres testaceous. Journal of the Proceedings of the Linnean Society - Vol. 3 Zoology
  • I feared he was about to speak again and I raised my hand to signify forbiddal -- but he saw it not, and my inward protest yielded to his fiery purpose. St. Cuthbert's
  • Her calm expression hid her inward panic.
  • The conception of this landscape as ‘remote’ supports the common depiction of the Hoa Hao religion as one of inwardness or otherworldliness.
  • But, a red-tapist by nature, and hating innovations, owing to weakness of mind, he trembled inwardly and cried in agony: The French Immortals Series — Complete
  • The pallor is the pallor of hardship, often of the lack of the right kind of nourishment, but the stillness is not the result of inward personal calm and peace. A Circuit Rider's Wife
  • The active contacts may include several sheetlike metallic projections extending inwardly around a hole in the sheetlike element, on a first major surface of the sheetlike element.
  • Just as Friends is an inward-looking simulation of six distinct personalities in very limited number of locations (coffee shop, apartment, balcony). Suttree » Casual Games, Social Software » Duncan Gough
  • In a low-pressure cell, centrifugal force acts radially outward but the pressure gradient force radially inward.
  • Now it was, it is clear, that the sword of sorrow pierced her through and through, for the Queen of martyrs was fearfully and mortally wounded in that part which is impassible, that is, in her soul; and she bore the death of the Cross in that which could not die, suffering all the more her grievous inward death, as outward death departed farther from her. Meditations on the Life and Passion of Our Lord Jesus Christ.

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