How To Use Peculiarity In A Sentence

  • However peculiarity is a characteristic of all things Royal, not to say outright barminess.
  • It is the peculiarity of knowledge that those who really thirst for it always get it. 
  • It is the peculiarity of knowledge that those who really thirst for it always get it. 
  • One reason has to do with what is a real American peculiarity.
  • For it is the peculiarity of linear extension that it alone allows its magnitudes to be placed in _absolute_ juxtaposition, or, rather, in coincident position; it alone can test the equality of two magnitudes by observing whether they will coalesce, as two equal mathematical lines do, when placed between the same points; it alone can test _equality_ by trying whether it will become _identity_. Essays on Education and Kindred Subjects Everyman's Library
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  • -- The distention of the surface veins of the legs, the condition known as varicose veins, is not a peculiarity of pregnancy. The Prospective Mother, a Handbook for Women During Pregnancy
  • I noticed a certain peculiarity about his appearance.
  • One peculiarity of this artist's pictures was that he used actual gold leaf to make the high lights upon hair, leaves, and draperies.
  • You couldn't help but be aware of the peculiarity of the situation.
  • A man must be strong enough to mould the peculiarity of his imperfections into the perfection of his peculiarities.
  • They say that the width between those long-lashed eyes is a common peculiarity of the artist's face; but she is no longer an artist; she is only the brave young yachtswoman who lives at Castle Dare. Macleod of Dare
  • These small spiced cakes are a peculiarity of the region.
  • The pennillion were sung by one voice to the harp, and followed a quaint air which was not only interesting, but owing to its peculiarity, it set forth in a striking manner the humour of the verse. The Poetry of Wales
  • ‘When you ask a Bulgarian a question it isn't the answer that matters, but the silence before the answer,’ Baker said, illustrating a peculiarity of Bulgarians.
  • Weather has also contributed to the seclusion and peculiarity of the Azores - stormy winter seas often prevent access to the smaller islands even by air for days at a time.
  • It is the peculiarity of knowledge that those who really thirst for it always get it. 
  • Happy the author whose earliest works are read and understood by the lustre thrown back upon them from his latest! for then we receive the impression of continuity and cumulation of power, of peculiarity deepening to individuality, of promise more than justified in the keeping: unhappy, whose autumn shows only the aftermath and rowen of an earlier harvest, whose would-be replenishments are but thin dilutions of his fame! The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 05, No. 30, April, 1860
  • And thanks to the brilliance and peculiarity of the films thus far - the final one, Cremaster 3, debuts later this year - Barney's little boys are the hottest nuts in the art world.
  • There's no accounting for the peculiarity of folks, and even less for our own peculiarities.
  • In that romantic history, the retreat of the Ten Thousand Greeks, this peculiarity is alluded to. Glimpses of Life and Manners in Persia
  • This peculiarity is not limited to the Philomycidae and Toxicodendron radicans. What do philomycid slugs and poison ivy have in common?
  • Another peculiarity of foods of this kind that makes decidedly against their digestibility lies in the fact that, being soft and containing a large proportion of water, they are scarcely ever properly chewed, and as a consequence they are swallowed in comparatively large masses without having been adequately insalivated. Health on the Farm A Manual of Rural Sanitation and Hygiene
  • She breathed the cold air with a tint of peculiarity.
  • As for the rest of the election menu, the lack of fundamental differences between the main contestants is not a British peculiarity.
  • I could find, indeed, but one vulnerable point, and that, lying in a personal peculiarity, arising, perhaps, from constitutional disease, would have been spared by any antagonist less at his wit's end than myself -- my rival had a weakness in the faucial or guttural organs, which precluded him from raising his voice at any time above a very low whisper. William Wilson
  • She was well aware of the peculiarity of her own situation.
  • It's a peculiarity of my nature that I often like to take less than the perfect tool and see what I can do with it.
  • Though it is an amusing anecdote, this detail touches on a small but potentially crucial peculiarity in the current international emergency.
  • This peculiarity is visible, not only when the Celebesian species are compared with their small-sized allies of Java and Borneo, but also, and in an almost equal degree, when the large forms of Amboyna and the Moluccas are the objects of comparison, showing that this is quite a distinct phenomenon from the difference of size which has just been pointed out. Contributions to the Theory of Natural Selection A Series of Essays
  • It is the peculiarity of knowledge that those who really thirst for it always get it. 
  • Joe's other peculiarity was that he was constantly munching hard candy.
  • This peculiarity of the power supply in the village has become the butt of everybody's jokes.
  • This peculiarity has been remarked of other plants, besides the species of banksia. Journals of Two Expeditions into the Interior of New South Wales
  • All sights, all things which are Lhasa's own beauty and peculiarity, would have to be seen by the lone woman explorer who had had the nerve to come to them from afar, the first of her sex.
  • The peculiarity is also called water and grain, which gives rise to a host of double-entendres, puns, paronomasias and conceits more or less frigid. The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • They may become aspirated to bh, dh, gh or spirantized or nasalized or they may develop any other peculiarity that keeps them intact as a series and serves to differentiate them from other series. Chapter 8. Language as a Historical Product: Phonetic Law
  • Another peculiarity of these plants is that they are acanaceous; covered all over with sharp thorns and needles. Arizona Sketches
  • That the lines form a system; that, instead of running anywhither, they join certain points to certain others, making thus, not a simple network, but one whose meshes connect centres directly with one another,–is striking at first sight, and loses none of its peculiarity on second thought. Life on Mars? The real lesson from Lowell - The Panda's Thumb
  • The great peculiarity in one of these birds was that he, as the seasons succeeded each other, was not always a hen-cock, and not always of the colour called the polecat, which is black. The Variation of Animals and Plants Under Domestication, Vol. I.
  • The mystery of the mongoos and its antidote has been referred to the supposition that there may be some peculiarity in its organisation which renders it _proof against_ the poison of the serpent. Ceylon; an Account of the Island Physical, Historical, and Topographical with Notices of Its Natural History, Antiquities and Productions, Volume 1 (of 2)
  • Other servants didn't seem to notice any peculiarity from them as they walked by casually.
  • There is one peculiarity to be noted in the glyptography of the Scarabs The History, Manufacture and Symbolism of the Scarabæus in Ancient Egypt, Phoenicia, Sardinia, Etruria, etc.
  • The lack of a written constitution is a peculiarity of the British political system.
  • He said: ‘Everything that has an old history, or an old ornament, or an old peculiarity, if it can be preserved, ought to be preserved.’
  • It's likely to be a peculiarity of my own character but I've found it a pretty symbiotic combination, with each side supporting the other.
  • Each song seemed agonizingly slow; the lyrics disappeared behind both the tempo and stylistic peculiarity.
  • But the chief peculiarity of his speech was its directness and appositeness. War and Peace
  • The peculiarity of this hernia, as distinguished from the congenital form, is owing to the scrotum containing two sacs, -- the tunica vaginalis and the proper sac of the hernia; whereas, in the congenital variety, the tunica vaginalis itself becomes the hernial sac by a direct reception of the naked intestine. Surgical Anatomy
  • I could find, indeed, but one vulnerable point, and that, lying in a personal peculiarity, arising, perhaps, from constitutional disease, would have been spared by any antagonist less at his wit's end than myself — my rival had a weakness in the faucial or guttural organs, which precluded him from raising his voice at any time above a very low whisper. Tales of the Grotesque and Arabesque. In Two Volumes. Vol. I
  • Temperate men are not governed in their religious researches by the pride of peculiarity nor the influence of party views, and a faithful trial ought to have been made in order to convince of error before the charge of _pride of peculiarity_, or the influence of party views, could with propriety have been made. A Series of Letters in Defence of Divine Revelation
  • From the description of the peculiarity in their mode of utterance, which the journal of the voyage calls sighing, and from the circumstance that the same people were found in the bay of St. Blas, 60 leagues beyond the Cape, there can be no doubt that they were Hottentots. A General History and Collection of Voyages and Travels - Volume 18 Historical Sketch of the Progress of Discovery, Navigation, and Commerce, from the Earliest Records to the Beginning of the Nineteenth Century, By William Stevenson
  • That brings me to the peculiarity of the present case, or rather to two peculiarities.
  • Another peculiarity of headlinese is that it is almost always in the present tense.
  • Particle system and physical peculiarity of ripple is introduced. The theory of simulative fountain, ripple, wave, spray, and spume is studied.
  • The peculiarity of this movie is that all the three characters are Indians but live in USA.
  • To compare it in this respect with the work of any other poet in English throws this peculiarity into relief.
  • And Russia has the peculiarity of being the world's Eurasian nation.
  • Correlated with this peculiarity the maxilla usually has the tomia sinuated, and is generally concave, and smaller and narrower than the mandible, which is also concave to receive the palatal knob. Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 4, Part 4 "Bulgaria" to "Calgary"
  • It is the peculiarity of knowledge that those who really thirst for it always get it. 
  • He had the personal peculiarity of being ambidexter, or able to wield his claymore with his left hand as well as with his right; and hence his Gaelic name of Coll Kittoch, or Coll the The Life of John Milton Volume 3 1643-1649
  • The favorable peculiarity of this method is that it can demonstrate the absence of the target gene by the production of white precipitate of magnesium pyrophosphate .
  • Though unusual, it made her look stunningly beautiful in her peculiarity.
  • I just kind of conjured them up out of my subconscious and put them in order of ascending peculiarity.
  • The peculiarity continued into the second half.
  • Its peculiarity is the likeness to a seaport the Desert which rolls up almost to its doors being the sea and its ships being the camels. The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • In the short history of opinion polling in this country, one feature - or peculiarity if you like - is impossible to miss.
  • She breathed the cold air with a tint of peculiarity.
  • This stigma of disease has been placed upon him and repeatedly emphasized, but despite the fact that the effort has been made for years, by men learned in anthropology to find and prove the inherent inferiority of the Negro, based upon anatomical, physiological and biostatic peculiarity, to-day the bare statistical fact of his high mortality alone supports the calumnious fabrication. Twentieth Century Negro Literature Or, A Cyclopedia of Thought on the Vital Topics Relating to the American Negro
  • – There are a few more phrases that I think could maybe be toned down: “pleading ritualism,” “unfathomable impossibility,” “illusory biology,” “contradictive peculiarity …” Superhero Nation: how to write superhero novels and comic books » Frank Murdock’s Review Forum
  • The term perichoresis, circumincessio, immanentia, was meant to express the peculiarity of the relations of the Three Divine Persons or Subsistences -- their Indwelling in each other, the fact that, while they are distinct they yet are in one another, the Coinherence which implies their equal and identical NPNF2-09. Hilary of Poitiers, John of Damascus
  • He preserves the peculiarity of the Ionians for the preterite tenses of verbs the aphaeresis, as where he says [Greek omitted] for [Greek omitted]. Essays and Miscellanies
  • A truly cohesive and modern society recognises that difference is not just a peculiarity to be ironed out, or an inadequacy that must be compensated for.
  • Temperate men are not governed in their religious researches by the pride of peculiarity nor the influence of party views, and a faithful trial ought to have been made in order to convince of error before the charge of _pride of peculiarity_, or the influence of party views, could with propriety have been made. A Series of Letters in Defence of Divine Revelation
  • The result was that in the end the Valiant Soldier, of the Christian army, was distinguished by no peculiarity of accoutrement from the Turkish Knight; and what was worse, on a casual view Saint George himself might be mistaken for his deadly enemy, the Saracen. The Return of the Native
  • Weather has also contributed to the seclusion and peculiarity of the Azores - stormy winter seas often prevent access to the smaller islands even by air for days at a time.
  • The Hawaiians are a handsome people, scornful and sarcastic-looking even with their mirthfulness; and those who know them say that they are always quizzing and mimicking the haoles, and that they give everyone a nickname, founded on some personal peculiarity. The Hawaiian Archipelago
  • It is the peculiarity of knowledge that those who really thirst for it always get it. 
  • Opinions differ according to the relative value critics place upon cultural peculiarity.
  • Along the centre of three of the interior walls of the pronaos is a compartment of sculpture, the other parts of the walls being quite bare; a peculiarity I saw no where else. Travels in Nubia
  • In this lay the historical peculiarity of the capitalist mode of production.
  • A peculiarity of this extended series of sacred buildings is that the greater the distance from the entrance the narrower and lower the structure, so that the sekos is only a small dark chamber. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 14: Simony-Tournon
  • Hair has uncanny properties; it is a peculiarity that hair and nails continue to grow for a short time after death.
  • The lack of a written constitution is a peculiarity of the British political system.
  • The peculiarity had afflicted them from the age of eleven and twelve; since then, it had been a constant in their lives. WHOLE SECRET LOVE
  • I could find, indeed, but one vulnerable point, and that lying in a personal peculiarity arising, perhaps, from constitutional disease, would have been spared by any antagonist less at his wit's end than myself: -- my rival had a weakness in the faucial or guttural organs, which precluded him from raising his voice at any time _above a very low whisper_. Selections from Poe
  • That peculiarity is their own; it is their mode of expression. CHAPTER 12
  • Or can narrowness and peculiarity become a strength, at least in the hands of a great writer?
  • He who, she had been persuaded, would avoid her as his greatest enemy, seemed, on this accidental meeting, most eager to preserve the acquaintance, and without any indelicate display of regard, or any peculiarity of manner, where their two selves only were concerned, was soliciting the good opinion of her friends, and bent on making her known to his sister…
  • Yes, and the peculiarity of the age is that while such luxuries as the phonograph and the kinetograph multiply day by day, important necessities remain unsupplied. Tales from Bohemia
  • This is a peculiarity common to all cetaceans, who have thence received the name of "blowers," alluding to the powerful blast which is necessary to send those majestic columns of water into the air; but it takes a much milder form with the lesser cetaceans, such as dolphins and porpoises. The History of a Mouthful of Bread And its effect on the organization of men and animals
  • But there is another peculiarity of this family of trees which is not so innocent, and that is that in the fruit-kernel, and also in the leaves, there is a deadly poison called prussic acid. Among the Trees at Elmridge
  • But there is one peculiarity about his power of sight.
  • The ioduret of Daguerre's plate, and some other iodides, exhibit the same peculiarity -- This leads us to the striking fact, that bodies which have undergone a change of estate under the influence of day-light have some latent power by which they can renovate themselves. History and Practice of the Art of Photography
  • There was some peculiarity to the kick, though, as Hartson later intimated that his illustrious partner Henrik Larsson, Celtic's usual penalty taker, had been reluctant to become involved.
  • And today, in Provincetown, three hours away by car from Boston, these dollhouses, these inexpensive art galleries, these fishing shacks with painted clapboard façades gnawed by salt and snow — this typically middle-class seaside resort whose other peculiarity is to have become, over time, a gay town. In the Footsteps of Tocqueville (Part V)
  • A most remarkable peculiarity is at once obvious in the extraordinary development of the frontal sinuses, owing to which the superciliary ridges, which coalesce completely in the middle, are rendered so prominent, that the frontal bone exhibits a considerable hollow or depression above, or rather behind them, whilst a deep depression is also formed in the situation of the root of the nose. Essays
  • Inevitably, the pace and peculiarity of urban growth was a major theme for Chinese video artists.
  • The cries of a dog when beaten often exhibit the same peculiarity; so, too, the puppy, before he has attained skill in barking, will often prolong each utterance in a way which makes its relation to the ancient mode of expression tolerably clear. Domesticated Animals Their Relation to Man and to his Advancement in Civilization
  • It is the peculiarity of knowledge that those who really thirst for it always get it. 
  • A few members of this group have the peculiarity of reflecting rather perfectly in the markings of their brachial valve the surface of the host shell to which the craniacean is attached.
  • In cases where self-interest and ambition are the basis of this peculiarity of temperament, and in an age when the conjuror and the alchemist were the companions and even the idols of princes, it is easy to trace the steps by which a gifted sage retains his ascendancy among the ignorant. The Martyrs of Science, or, The lives of Galileo, Tycho Brahe, and Kepler
  • Their most striking peculiarity was, as Mrs. Malaprop would say, "his numerousness. Janey Canuck in the West
  • The lack of a written constitution is a peculiarity of the British political system.
  • A Nazis poke to peculiarity this bargain to their prerogative along with inside recklessness, Toulon commits self-murder .
  • However, the petrophysical analysis shows similar porosity changes approaching a shear zone, suggesting that this is characteristic of the Boom clay, and not a peculiarity of the Kruibeke Fault Zone or methodological bias.
  • It is certain, more words would have been uttered in this little lugger in one hour, had her crew been indulged to the top of their bent, than would have been uttered in an English first-rate in two; but the danger of using their own language, and the English peculiarity of grumness, had been so thoroughly taught them, that her people rather caricatured, than otherwise, _ce grand talent pour le silence_ that was thought to distinguish their enemies. The Wing-and-Wing Le Feu-Follet
  • The police have a lot of problems with people on holidays who do not know this peculiarity of the Basque coast.
  • Why does the Supreme Court persist in this peculiarity?
  • But this is by no means an Australian peculiarity.
  • This peculiarity is a convexity, or _entasis_, as it is called, on the inner faces. Roman Mosaics Or, Studies in Rome and Its Neighbourhood
  • These regulations helped to keep the people of England the most backward in Europe; for though the division into shires and hundreds and tithings was common to them with the neighboring nations, yet the _frankpledge_ seems to be a peculiarity in the English Constitution; and for good reasons they have fallen into disuse, though still some traces of them are to be found in our laws. The Works of the Right Honourable Edmund Burke, Vol. 07 (of 12)
  • This attractive peculiarity was more apparent than ever to-day, the frizette having been caught by a bough in the woods. Bluebell A Novel
  • It will be sufficient here to refer to the forms, achorion, trichophyton, oïdium, aspergillus, and the diseases produced by them, favus, ringworm, and thrush, to show this peculiarity. Scientific American Supplement, No. 303, October 22, 1881
  • The favorable peculiarity of this method is that it can demonstrate the absence of the target gene by the production of white precipitate of magnesium pyrophosphate .
  • The lack of a written constitution is a peculiarity of the British political system.
  • It is the peculiarity of most of these German laws, in the only shape in which we know them, that, besides the _allod_ or domain of each household, they recognise several subordinate kinds or orders of property, each of which probably represents a separate transfusion of Roman principles into the primitive body of Teutonic usage. Ancient Law Its Connection to the History of Early Society
  • It is the peculiarity of knowledge that those who really thirst for it always get it. 
  • The maps aren't as big and skiing has been added as a key you can hold and not just a peculiarity of the maps.
  • This is a family peculiarity-a reticence in expressing sentiment or deep feeling.
  • Then Mr. Mill's life as disclosed to us in these pages has been called joyless, by that sect of religious partisans whose peculiarity is to mistake boisterousness for unction. Critical Miscellanies, Vol. 3 (of 3) Essay 2: The Death of Mr Mill - Essay 3: Mr Mill's Autobiography
  • When one thinks of Micawber always presenting himself in the same situation, moved with the same springs and uttering the same sounds, always confident of something turning up, always crushed and rebounding, always making punch -- and his wife always declaring she will never part from him, always referring to his talents and her family -- when one thinks of the 'catchwords' personified as characters, one is reminded of the frogs whose brains have been taken out for physiological purposes, and whose actions henceforth want the distinctive peculiarity of organic action, that of fluctuating spontaneity. The Life of Charles Dickens, Vol. I-III, Complete
  • The lack of a written constitution is a peculiarity of the British political system.
  • The four were swarthy men, and, unlike the Greeks they were seeking to oppose, their swart was a peculiarity of birth, a racial sign. The Prince of India — Volume 02
  • Now, there is a peculiarity in Rubens 'method, and which strictly belongs to his colouring, from which arises what may be not improperly designated flimsiness, that is, the leaving too much of the first getting in of his picture, the first transparent sketchy brown. Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 62, Number 385. November, 1847.
  • A fusion of sand, soda, and potash, its peculiarity resides in how these elements are not perceived but effaced.
  • “Fi zaman-hi,” alluding to a peculiarity highly prized by The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • Its most striking peculiarity was that it committed the trial of heretics to the newly appointed "presidial" judges, whose sentence, when ten counsellors had been associated with them, was to be final. [ The Rise of the Hugenots, Vol. 1 (of 2)
  • Coleridge, the profoundest of critics, calls him "an oceanic mind," and this language, as expressing the idea of multitudinous unity, is none too big for him; Hallam, the severest of critics, describes him as "thousand-souled," and this has grown into common use as no more than just; another writer makes his peculiarity to consist in "an infinite delicacy of mind"; and whatsoever of truth and fitness there may be in any or all of these expression's has a just exponent in his style. Shakespeare: His Life, Art, And Characters, Volume I. With An Historical Sketch Of The Origin And Growth Of The Drama In England
  • In a connotation that now seems to be everything but original, I have paired notes of carnation (chosen for the association of Spain, Flamenco and carnations) with sweet animalic base notes dominated by costus, which turned out fantastic even though a bit quirky and peculiar (costus will add peculiarity to any perfume with its animalic sensuality). Archive 2008-02-01
  • It was a peculiarity of this period that for much of the time, there were two emperors: one of the Macedonian house, who inherited the title and was ruler de jure; the other, a successful general, who acted as ruler de facto. Superversive: Gondor, Byzantium, and Feudalism
  • The peculiar "cowy" or "animal odor" of fresh milk is an inherent peculiarity that is due to the direct absorption of volatile elements from the animal herself. Outlines of Dairy Bacteriology, 8th edition A Concise Manual for the Use of Students in Dairying
  • The American controversy over science teaching stems from the interaction of a constitutional peculiarity, namely, the First Amendment, with the seeming absence of metaphysical or theological content in naturalistic theories of evolution. A New Movie That Will Scare the Pants off the Critics
  • Again of horned cattle, which give the same quality of beef, irrespective of colour; farmers will tell you of them that coloured cattle are among the best for farming and other purposes, while white bullocks are subject to sore eyes, and white cows continually suffer from erythema of the nipples (Garget-mammitis); yet we have not heard that this peculiarity had any influence on the quality of their beef or the quality of the milk they give. Chapter XVIII
  • The proportion of gold in the quartz is not particularly high, nor are the veins of a remarkable thickness, but the peculiarity of the Rand mines lies in the fact that throughout this 'banket' formation the metal is so uniformly distributed that the enterprise can claim a certainty which is not usually associated with the industry. The War in South Africa Its Cause and Conduct
  • Look carefully at the contorted face in front of you and pick a peculiarity, say an unusual muscle twitch, poor dentition, bad skin, etc.
  • You couldn't help but be aware of the peculiarity of the situation.
  • Liz stepped nearer and studied it, trying to decide if its peculiarity was Barry alone, or Barry in the New World. AN OLDER WOMAN
  • A more appropriate title would be the _direct style, _ as contrasted with the other, or _indirect style_: the peculiarity of the one being, that it conveys each thought into the mind step by step with little liability to error; and of the other, that it gets the right thought conceived by a series of approximations. The Philosophy of Style
  • The lack of a written constitution is a peculiarity of the British political system.
  • But it is the peculiarity of the Nile, unlike other rivers, which, in overflowing lands, wash away and exhaust their vivific moisture, that its waters serve to fatten and enrich the soil. The Boy Crusaders A Story of the Days of Louis IX.
  • No, he thought, with a new idea repudiating the old, the only peculiarity was that as a casualty on the battle ground of family he should live so well and so long without having to continually purge himself of memory that could continually discomfit the present with its stench, rubbing its foul wounded body in recidivistic and wanton desire. An Apostate: Nawin of Thais
  • It has a peculiarity in the fact that the hymenial cells, or the layer of mother cells, contained in the gills, change into a waxy mass, at length removable from the trama. Among the Mushrooms A Guide For Beginners
  • Tract, addressed to Dr. Jelf, I say: "The only peculiarity of the view I advocate, if I must so call it, is this -- that whereas it is usual at this day to make the _particular belief of their writers_ their true interpretation, I would make the _belief of the Catholic Apologia pro Vita Sua
  • The term congenital peculiarity, I may remark, is a loose expression and can only mean a peculiarity apparent when the part affected is nearly or fully developed: in the Second Part, I shall have to discuss at what period of the embryonic life connatal peculiarities probably first appear; and I shall then be able to show from some evidence, that at whatever period of life a new peculiarity first appears, it tends hereditarily to appear at a corresponding period {192}. The Foundations of the Origin of Species Two Essays written in 1842 and 1844
  • Particle system and physical peculiarity of ripple is introduced. The theory of simulative fountain, ripple, wave, spray, and spume is studied.
  • This head-in-the-sand attitude is not a harmless peculiarity - it is catastrophic for architecture and for urbanism.
  • I hope the council's suggestion doesn't contribute to the death of the local dialect or regional linguistic peculiarity in general.
  • Again, the italicization of the word highlights its peculiarity.
  • The auto - correlation distance of soil parameter has the peculiarity of cross isotropy.
  • Joe's other peculiarity was that he was constantly munching hard candy.
  • A fundamental peculiarity is that the image elements do not influence each other while the image is being reconstructed. Physiology or Medicine 1979 - Press Release
  • This albumen, which is also the chief component of the white of eggs, possesses the peculiarity of coagulating or hardening at a certain temperature, like the white of a boiled egg, into a soft, white fluid, no longer soluble, or capable of being dissolved in water. The Book of Household Management

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