How To Use Manifestly In A Sentence

  • The crime is manifestly a fiction, a movie-inspired fantasy.
  • Women manifestly have the ability to detect rivals and to employ a variety of tactics to place themselves at an advantage over them.
  • One thing that is manifestly true is that it is only in caffs that you can find a decent cup of tea or a cappuccino.
  • Their main bone of contention is the qualification process, which they consider manifestly unfair and skewed against them. Times, Sunday Times
  • What it manifestly fails to realise is that the Internet is a huge marketing tool.
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  • These do have the advantage of being falsifiable, since they are manifestly false. The Times Literary Supplement
  • It is manifestly not what public servants and military careerists are used to.
  • The energy conveyed by those people is manifestly beneficial to the society that absorbs it.
  • Seville cathedral, did his share as editor by writing two prefaces, one addressed to Sarmiento de Mendoza, and the other to Olivares who was manifestly expected to pronounce against Gongorism. Fray Luis de León A Biographical Fragment
  • And first, we are to consider that of conceptions there are three sorts, whereof one is of that which is present, which is sense; another, of that which is past, which is remembrance; and the third, of that which is future, which we call expectation: all which have been manifestly declared in the second and the third chapter. The Elements of Law Natural and Politic
  • To be consistent, a tutor should take the same proleptical course with regard to the prosody of the Latin language: every Latin hyperdissyllable is manifestly accentuated according to the following law: if the penultimate be long, that syllable inevitably claims the accent; if short, inevitably it rejects it -- _i.e. _ gives it to the ante-penultimate. The Uncollected Writings of Thomas de Quincey—Vol. 1 With a Preface and Annotations by James Hogg
  • One only, manifestly the latest in date, and also in poorest preservation (being carved in clunch), has the mitre; this is now temporarily placed in the New Building; there is little doubt that it represents John Chambers, the last Abbot and first The Cathedral Church of Peterborough A Description Of Its Fabric And A Brief History Of The Episcopal See
  • This era of child labour in the factories was the most manifestly exploitative.
  • If it be said that it is manifestly unfair to compare a mystical writer like Emerson with a polemical or historical one, I am not concerned to answer the objection, for let the comparison be made with whom you will, the unparalleled non-sequaciousness of Emerson is as certain as the Obiter Dicta Second Series
  • As it is manifestly impossible to derive the word "cowry" from the Greek word for "pig," the only explanation that will stand examination is that the two meanings must have been acquired from the identification of both the cowry and the pig with the Great The Evolution of the Dragon
  • It lies close beneath the surface, and follows for a length of one hundred and fifty miles the margin of a grand basin or plain; this, from its outline, manifestly must once have been a lake, or more probably an inland arm of the sea, as may be inferred from the presence of iodic salts in the saline stratum. Journal of researches into the geology and natural history of the various countries visited by H.M.S. Beagle
  • Your argument basically boils down to saying that God cant do what is not and therefore is not omnipotent, which is, of course, manifestly absurd. THE HALLS OF PENTHEUS -- PART FOUR
  • You still hear typewriters in back offices and this is manifestly the city where jalopies come to die. Times, Sunday Times
  • The term employee also includes an officer of a corporation.www. law.cornell.edu (a) When used in this title, where not otherwise distinctly expressed or manifestly incompatible with the intent thereof - (1) Person The term person shall be construed to mean and include an individual, a trust, estate, partnership, association, company or corporation. WN.com - Financial News
  • And when he changed a teston, cardecu, or any other piece of money, the changer had been more subtle than a fox if Panurge had not at every time made five or six sols (that is, some six or seven pence,) vanish away invisibly, openly, and manifestly, without making any hurt or lesion, whereof the changer should have felt nothing but the wind. Five books of the lives, heroic deeds and sayings of Gargantua and his son Pantagruel
  • When and where such a puncture occurs is manifestly incalculable, which is precisely what makes the object capable of such disruption.
  • All whiche their doynges, dooe manifestly make, that thei came of the Aethiopes, who (as Diodore the Sicilian saieth) ware the firste inuentours of all these. The Fardle of Facions, conteining the aunciente maners, customes and lawes, of the peoples enhabiting the two partes of the earth, called Affricke and Asie
  • It is therefore the only manifestly hypogean japygid species in the Iberian Peninsula, where only Metajapyx moroderi Silvestri, was known in certain caves of the eastern reaches of the Prebetic range. Archive 2007-01-01
  • To apply the term instinct to the regular and involuntary movements of the bodily organs, such as the beating of the heart and the action of the organs of respiration, is manifestly an extension of the ordinary acceptation of the term. The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 05, No. 31, May, 1860
  • With this holding the King is manifestly most advantageous, as if the Declarer hold Ace, Knave, it will either force the Ace and hold the tenace over the Knave or win the trick. Auction of To-day
  • A cultural practice that is manifestly wrong on humanist grounds becomes the excuse for a colonizing mission whose tactics are in turn violent and unjust.
  • His still-life images manifestly bear an overwhelming weight of meaning.
  • The term employee also includes an officer of a corporation.www. law.cornell.edu (a) When used in this title, where not otherwise distinctly expressed or manifestly incompatible with the intent thereof - (1) WN.com - Financial News
  • Their neighbours, the Egyptians, included them all under a single ethnic name, speaking of them as Kashi or Kushi -- a term manifestly identical with the Cush or Cushi of the Hebrews. Ancient Egypt
  • The ornament is manifestly in the same tradition, and the filiation might be imagined to be closer, yet I doubt that many scholars, faced with the two photographs free of any context, would conclude that they came from the same manuscript.
  • This, in our judgment, they have manifestly failed to do, contenting themselves instead with deciding the case solely on the credibility of the witnesses.
  • It isn't a nice day ... it manifestly is not a good morning so clearly he is trying to put me off guard and ... MIND MELD: Books We Love That Everyone Else Hates (and Vice Versa)
  • It is manifestly not just an "'equalizing'" ideal in disguise. YubaNet.com
  • The deduced order of differentiation is manifestly driven by the reduction of translation errors. A Disclaimer for Behe?
  • That is fair, just and manifestly necessary. Times, Sunday Times
  • Manifestly, it was going to be anathema to an ultramontane like him, who had seen over the previous five years the government install what he saw as a deplorable new godless and materialist proletarian state.
  • For the CIA to try to pull this off - and to claim that there was nothing in the cables to exculpate my client - was manifestly untrue.
  • That is fair, just and manifestly necessary. Times, Sunday Times
  • It would be manifestly an utter impossibility to skiagraph the many fractures which are seen there daily, considering that it would take from half an hour to an hour of the time of not less than two or three assistants skilled not only in surgery, but also in electricity, to skiagraph a single fracture. McClure's Magazine, Vol. 6, No. 6, May, 1896
  • The government has manifestly failed to raise educational standards, despite its commitment to do so.
  • I accept that in such a case, the Court should only find an infringement of Community law, where the Member State's administrative action is manifestly inappropriate.
  • On the 40th day the cavity now grown larger was quite filled with the body, which was covered with a thin membrane; after this membrane was removed the body appeared of a bright green, and was easily divided by the point of a needle into two portions, which manifestly formed the two lobes, and within these attached to the lower part the exceedingly small plantule was easily perceived. The Botanic Garden A Poem in Two Parts. Part 1: the Economy of Vegetation
  • Serious readers might dismiss these questions as fanciful, but concern about flesh-eating ghouls is manifestly evident in today's popular culture.
  • Instead of concocting tunes for the other guy to chase, why not let him go first, as Hammerstein manifestly preferred, and see what that brings out in me? Keeping up Appearances
  • He is the thinker of the gang, manifestly sucking his wisdom out of his thumb.
  • Likewise in the Eclipse being darkened it is manifestly prooued that it is not god, for God is altogether goodnesse and brightnesse, which can neither be darkened nor receiue detriment or hurt: but the Sunne receiueth both in the The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques and Discoveries of the English Nation
  • Greek piece of fifty lepta very manifestly of lead. The Path to Rome
  • What now if another should say that “this same formlessness and confusedness of matter, was for this reason first conveyed under the name of heaven and earth, because out of it was this visible world with all those natures which most manifestly appear in it, which is ofttimes called by the name of heaven and earth, created and perfected?” The Confessions
  • Then move the middle or centre of the wire to another spot, and so to a third and fourth, always marking the stone along the length of the wire where it stands still; the lines so marked will exhibit meridian circles, or circles like meridians, on the stone or terrella; and manifestly they will all come together at the poles of the stone. A History of Science: in Five Volumes. Volume II: The Beginnings of Modern Science
  • The government has manifestly failed to raise educational standards, despite its commitment to do so.
  • For example, remedies were sought for the by now manifestly apparent shortcomings of an overburdened legal system. The Politics of Redress - crime, punishment and penal abolition
  • As the value of the label manifestly depends upon the trade it entices, the unions are careful to emphasize the sanitary conditions and good workmanship which a label represents. The Armies of Labor A chronicle of the organized wage-earners
  • It is impossibly complex, outrageously expensive, overly intrusive, economically destructive and manifestly unfair.
  • he was manifestly too important to leave off the guest list
  • In asserting that the problem of demarcation between science and nonscience is a pseudo-problem (at least as far as philosophy is concerned), I am manifestly not denying that there are crucial epistemic and methodological questions to be raised about knowledge claims, whether we classify them as scientific or not.p. 221. and Demarcation, Credentials, and Science Education
  • It follows that this part of the application is inadmissible as being manifestly ill-founded…
  • Cabinet government of the traditional model has manifestly atrophied over the past seven years, by deliberate neglect, not accident.
  • What few complaints there are in this area come from writers who are evidently, manifestly ignorant of the subject.
  • Further, this third genus is manifestly different and distinct from the second.
  • What neither you nor your New York Times enablers divulge is that the CIA manifestly didn’t agree with the DIA’s assessment. Think Progress » Winning The War On Talking Points
  • It manifestly is free, and whether it is “appropriate” is going to be a hard fought question. Satisfaction Guaranteed
  • It is manifestly in the nature of a _lenticularly-formed envelope surrounding the sun_, and extending beyond the orbits of Aether and Gravitation
  • It was a manifestly reformist practice carried on in the name of an illusory revolutionism. The Society of the Spectacle-by Guy Debord (translated by Ken Knabb)
  • Manifestly a glory that once was had varished away in these twenty - one years.
  • From what I have seen I can be expected to conclude, contrary to what I am fortunate to know from other sources, that a proabortion rights stance publicly maintained by an internationally prominent Catholic is not manifestly gravely sinful. Sen. Ted Kennedy's right to a Catholic funeral
  • All the usual devices are employed, from female guest vocalists to mildly priapic strutting on the "urban" City is Ours, but originality is manifestly lacking. Big Time Rush: BTR – review
  • In addition to the manifestly barbaric practice of home demolitions, the Israelis really 'excelled' in the widespread practice of physical and psychological torture, especially in the first few years of the Occupation. Palestine Blogs aggregator
  • The judge held that the development manifestly conflicted with the allocation of land in the development plan.
  • One of her jobs was to pull together party headquarters in Glasgow at a time when it was in woeful disarray - a task at which she manifestly failed and was then sidelined.
  • Quevedo, who had obtained his copies of Luis de Leon's verses from Manuel Sarmiento de Mendoza, a canon of Seville cathedral, did his share as editor by writing two prefaces, one addressed to Sarmiento de Mendoza, and the other to Olivares who was manifestly expected to pronounce against Gongorism. Fray Luis de Leon
  • But the legal uncertainty over the term manifestly intended makes the bill's coverage so broad that it could even cover the open-source Web server Apache, which hosts over 60% of Web sites, opponents of the bill say. Archive 2006-04-01
  • This may be seen as a rationalization of the appellate courts' tendency to stretch the interpretation of statutes so as to criminalize people who, they think, have manifestly committed a serious wrong.
  • The argument is manifestly invalid as there is no way that can be derived from (a).
  • That is fair, just and manifestly necessary. Times, Sunday Times
  • What this director does not have mixed feelings about is his country or, better, his country's people, whom he manifestly loves.
  • The curved steps of the rostra, rising like the seats of an amphitheater, had been cordoned off to form the court, and a large crowd was already clustered around it, eager to see what possible defense the famous orator could come up with for a client who was so manifestly guilty. CONSPIRATA
  • Hence, when sufficient energy to account for any effect cannot be found in the inciting power, or manifestly active condition, we must look for it in the collocation which is often supposed to be passive. Logic Deductive and Inductive
  • The theory of "panspermism," originating with the Abbé Spallanzani in modern times, and still stoutly advocated by M. Pasteur and some few others, is manifestly defective in this, -- that it goes beyond the inorganic limit in assigning vital units to all matter, even to its elemental principles. Life: Its True Genesis
  • He was won over by the manifestly serious intent of Grazer and Samuel Baum, the show's writer, and decided the role they held out to him as scientific advisor should be a hands-on one.
  • Some animals manifestly emit semen, as all the sanguinea, but whether the insects and cephalopoda do so is uncertain. On the Generation of Animals
  • Help was never more truly needed, for our poverty was never greater; nor did the help of the Lord ever come more manifestly from himself; for _the brother was gone on a good distance_, it was _between seven and eight o'clock in the morning_, and it was _so short a time before money would have been needed_. The Life of Trust: Being a Narrative of the Lord's Dealings With George Müller
  • In my opinion, people who opine about the "merely aesthetic," who find aesthetic values "nugatory" unless they are subservient to a higher principle of judgment, manifestly disdain art except as an illustrative aid, a utilitarian convenience. Art and Culture
  • A delusion is a fixed belief in something manifestly absurd or untrue, and that can't be overcome by reason.
  • The sheer quantity of practice cannot finally explain the manifestly apparent differences between elite performers. Times, Sunday Times
  • Again, it is imperfect when the chilliness, flatness, the essential oils, the taste of earth and of cask, and above all, an excess of froe spirit, are manifestly noticed at the base of that organ. The Art of Living in Australia
  • Manifestly, America's bubble economy of the late 1990s had its center in the most profligate consumer borrowing and spending binge in history.
  • War was manifestly drawing nearer, in Eastern Asia, in Eastern Europe; it loitered, it advanced, it halted, and no one displayed the vigour or capacity needed to avert its intermittent, unhurrying approach. The Shape of Things to Come
  • I revile her Party's views and racist policies wholeheartedly yet I believe that three years in a maximum security is a manifestly unjust sentence for her.
  • The party has manifestly failed to achieve its goal.
  • As Justice Harlan observed in Poe, The right of privacy most manifestly is not an absolute. 'Trivial Complaints:' The Role of Privacy in Domestic Violence Law and Activism in the U.S.
  • The esophagus is the part through which nourishment proceeds to the gut; so that animals without necks manifestly do not have an esophagus. Aristotle's Biology
  • The government has manifestly failed to raise educational standards, despite its commitment to do so.
  • The decision that an application is manifestly ill-founded can necessarily be taken only in relation to rights set forth in the European Convention.
  • You have manifestly disrelished it, but you have valiantly stomached it for my sake. Andivius Hedulio Adventures of a Roman Nobleman in the Days of the Empire
  • For example, remedies were sought for the by now manifestly apparent shortcomings of an overburdened legal system. The Politics of Redress - crime, punishment and penal abolition
  • On practically every issue the Comintern found itself in the role of an infallible body which had adopted a manifestly fallible policy.
  • He restricts himself to poetic echoes that are manifestly conscious.
  • The topic Grasses is manifestly unfit for children, since grasses are difficult to study, and the description of them in encyclopedias and botanies is too technical. Library Work with Children
  • Feature filmmaking there remains a manifestly male-dominated domain.
  • They pass themselves off as otherwise ordinary middle-class people, when they're manifestly not.
  • His own mouth condemns him," exclaimed the impostor; "he confesses that his intention was to seduce from the way of salvation our well-beloved sister in God; away with him to the dungeon; to-morrow he dies the death; we are manifestly called upon to make an example, tremendous and appalling, to scare the children of sin from our asylum of the saved. III.5
  • The charge that its review process is biased against right-wing nominees is manifestly false.
  • Manifestly a glory that once was had varished away in these twenty - one years.
  • This is manifestly not the action of a mere eccentric.
  • However, it's important to point out that the great majority of reputable religious people and theologians do believe in evolution so there manifestly is not, as a matter of fact, a contradiction if you look at people's opinions … Atheists Speak Out
  • And when he changed a teston, cardecu, or any other piece of money, the changer had been more subtle than a fox if Panurge had not at every time made five or six sols (that is, some six or seven pence,) vanish away invisibly, openly, and manifestly, without making any hurt or lesion, whereof the changer should have felt nothing but the wind. Five books of the lives, heroic deeds and sayings of Gargantua and his son Pantagruel
  • This was so manifestly unjust that Pascoe untypically allowed himself to be provoked. CASCADES - THE DAY OF THE DEAD
  • The word aesthetic, which means "being responsive to or appreciative of what is beautiful or pleasurable to the senses," is derived from the Sanskrit word avis, which means "before the eyes, openly, manifestly, evidently. Undefined
  • In the context of embryos in the womb, this is manifestly untrue.
  • Creative genius often seems to be ladled out to those who are manifestly unworthy of it.
  • That is fair, just and manifestly necessary. Times, Sunday Times
  • Perhaps the most literate and intelligent man of his time, Shakespeare was also manifestly a man of the theater.
  • The charge to the property was obtained by the son's exploiting the weaknesses of his father's position in order to benefit from a transaction which was manifestly disadvantageous to the father.
  • That is fair, just and manifestly necessary. Times, Sunday Times
  • They laughed at him, they called him a loser, they sneered at his grotty little band of physical misfits, they ridiculed his manifestly hypocritical ideas, sought to diminish him publicly at every opportunity they could.
  • Now when the man saw these mouldering ruins and witnessed what the hand of time had manifestly done with the place, leaving but traces of the substantial-things that erewhiles had been, a little reflection made it needless for him to enquire of the case; so he turned away. The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • Unless manifestly without reasonable foundation, their assessment had to be respected. Times, Sunday Times
  • Not wide open, but what is called ajar -- manifestly not locked or barred, but not sufficiently open for one to look in. The Lady of the Shroud
  • If he was wanting in the dignity, the measured solemnity, which was fitting to such an exposition of the feelings of the House and of the nation, he was abundantly earnest, emotional, and almost impassioned; so that though his speech was here and there faulty, and as a whole not particularly well constructed or conceived, he was manifestly real, and what he said came direct from his feeling; and even in such an assembly as the House of Commons genuineness is not always unacceptable. Sketches in Parliament
  • It is not necessary to say more about the special leave application than that it is not manifestly unarguable.

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