permeative

ADJECTIVE
  1. spreading or spread throughout
    an error is pervasive if it is material to more than one conclusion
    armed with permeative irony...he punctures affectations
    the pervasive odor of garlic
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How To Use permeative In A Sentence

  • His touch had not been precisely permeative when it came to the world, Ian Rullock. Foes
  • I, being then a permeative Fabian on the executive of the The History of the Fabian Society
  • Method Using the analytical comparison to find out the similarities between inspection of public health and the permeative marketing.
  • But she came in the authority and integrity of herself, that was also, most dearly, most marvelously, himself as well -- permeative, penetrative, real, a subtle breath named Foes
  • armed with permeative irony...he punctures affectations
  • {xiv} indwelling and permeative Life of the human spirit, but as foreign and remote, and He was thought of as "coming" in sporadic visitations to whom He would, His coming being indicated in extraordinary and charismatic manifestations. Spiritual Reformers in the 16th & 17th Centuries
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