How To Use Reconcile In A Sentence

  • The correct designation of the early naturalists who tried to reconcile their observations with Genesis is "diluvialist. Vulcanists & Neptunists
  • They were reconciled but the marriage was annulled within a year. Times, Sunday Times
  • She must reconcile herself to the fact that she must do some work if she wants to pass her exams.
  • And now he called Ahithophel, and consulted with him what he ought to do: he persuaded him to go in unto his father's concubines; for he said that "by this action the people would believe that thy difference with thy father is irreconcilable, and will thence fight with great alacrity against thy father, for hitherto they are afraid of taking up open enmity against him, out of an expectation that you will be reconciled again. Antiquities of the Jews
  • Lamptey attempted to reconcile with them and he acceded to his father's dying wish to reconvert to Christianity, but he was pained at the funerals when he 'had to bury them both alone'.
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  • Attempts to reconcile religious differences have been going on for years. Times, Sunday Times
  • Lamptey attempted to reconcile with them and he acceded to his father's dying wish to reconvert to Christianity, but he was pained at the funerals when he 'had to bury them both alone'.
  • The play explores children's honest if naive attempts to reconcile conflicts between rules of peer friendship and the expectations of parents.
  • The Reconciler's thread starts when its listener detects a new Document.
  • The subject is out of keeping with these letters, but unless some means can be found to reconcile colonial girls to service, I fear an evil is growing up in our midst which is likely to be even more baneful in its effects upon the community than the corresponding tendency to 'larrikinism' amongst colonial youths. Town Life in Australia
  • In reaching a conclusion whether the statement can be reconciled with the map, a degree of tolerance is permissible, depending upon the relative particularity and apparent accuracy with which each document is drawn.
  • For liberals, such obstructionism proved yet again that the Catholic tradition could never truly be reconciled with secular democracy.
  • The four members said that they had reconciled their differences and had been recording new songs for a possible album. Times, Sunday Times
  • There are two reasons for it, one is personal psychology of parading his status, the other is social reconcilement function from ideology.
  • It can be reconciled with everything in Scripture, at least if the statements of Jesus on hell are taken as minatory rather than predictive.
  • Lionel's inheritance also disappears; after separation, hardship, estrangement, and disinheritance, the Tarrants are happily reconciled, but live separately in London.
  • Pushing our body's happy buttons with a cool swim on a hot day, or a fermented drink containing ethanol, or even just some good old-fashioned genital manipulation can elicit the sort of enjoyment that transcends angst and that does not need to be reconciled against the overbearing reality of our inconsequence. Manufacturers to Riders: Go Sponsor Yourself
  • The term reconciliation springs from the mechanism that's outlined in the Congressional Budget Act of 1974 that allows for tax increases and expenditure reduction to be reconciled with previously passed legislation. Latest Articles
  • One ever feels his twoness, -- an American, a Negro; two warring souls, two thoughts, two unreconciled strivings; two warring ideals in one dark body, whose dogged strength alone keeps it from being torn asunder. from "Of Our Spiritual Strivings" in The Souls of Black Folk. Sunday culture.
  • She married again and was finally reconciled with her father, but rarely spoke about her prison experiences. Times, Sunday Times
  • In the end, she reconciles her new amour with her personal philosophy of maintaining two lovers.
  • By 1683, the committee was able to reconcile shipments, with inventories and trade, and asked why certain quantities were being requested.
  • The current language of the Bill is ambiguous and unclear in the attempt to reconcile different and sometimes contradictory objectives. Times, Sunday Times
  • In an undesigned world, plague, pestilence, famine, diphtheria, cancer, tuberculosis, and other natural ills no longer had to be reconciled with the sovereignty of an omnipotent and benevolent deity.
  • (For those that are Christians among them, as namely the Russians, Grecians, and Alanians, who keep their own law very strictly, wil in no case drinke thereof, yea, they accompt themselues no Christians after they haue once drunke of it, and their priests reconcile them vnto the Church as if they had renounced the Christian faith.) The iournal of frier William de Rubruquis a French man of the order of the minorite friers, vnto the East parts of the worlde. An. Dom. 1253.
  • Speaking on behalf of the teenager, who had been brought to court from jail having previously been remanded in custody, solicitor Tom Smith said she had been reconciled with her mother.
  • The four members said that they had reconciled their differences and had been recording new songs for a possible album. Times, Sunday Times
  • He said the pensioner, who suffers from diabetes, high blood pressure and arthritis, had now accepted the affair was over, had been reconciled with his wife and any future offending was unlikely.
  • In politics it is the only way to reconcile people with unwelcome news or the limits of the possible. Times, Sunday Times
  • But most tend to reconcile conflicts through heart-to-heart talks.
  • He knew that absolute creeds, whatever their ideal, cannot be reconciled with differing outlooks.
  • The results were reconciled and audited by a partner in the accounting firm Ernst & Young.
  • I do not know how to reconcile Caissene's insistence that "one hoe was for one woman" with Harries's meticulously documented report that chiefs had "inflated" bridewealth "from five hoes in the late 1860s to over fifty a decade later" except that perhaps the declining trade in hand-forged hoes made them that much more valuable and coveted in relation to mass-produced European imitations. Where Women Make History: Gendered Tellings of Community and Change in Magude, Mozambique
  • The current language of the Bill is ambiguous and unclear in the attempt to reconcile different and sometimes contradictory objectives. Times, Sunday Times
  • The creative imagination reconciles inner and outer worlds in metaphorical synthesis.
  • Re-Connect, a council-run service, assists youngsters in danger of becoming homeless as well as those in temporary accommodation hoping to be reconciled with their families.
  • Now the question suggests itself, as to whether it is possible to reconcile the two theories in relation to the refraction of light by our conception of an atomic and gravitative Aether and Gravitation
  • Frankly, that's the way I like it because our role as an association is to be a reconciler; there are many, many ideas out there, and our role is to try to bring them together.
  • Analyzing how the cash flow statement reconciles profits with actual cash flows is also critical.
  • Rupert, that most unmilitary young man, was reconciled to becoming a soldier. THE HARDIE INHERITANCE
  • I think it is not, because a FC cannot reconcile having a life that's separate from and uninfluenced by his Faith, and I do believe a secular political leader should set Faith aside in all governmental matters.
  • He said in an interview recently, ‘I have another job and I am reconciled to the fact that, whether the record sells or not, I'm just going to have fun.’
  • I'd like to see exactly how that assertion can be reconciled with the original statement.
  • It is sometimes difficult to reconcile science and religion.
  • That he was damaged was unmistakable, but it seemed to Bek that the damage was repairable and that with time he would find a way to reconcile the loss of Ryer Ord Star When Ahren learned of her death from Big Red, he seemed to lose heart entirely. Morgawr
  • We have managed to reconcile all of our major disagreements, and we present this as a truly joint text.
  • Heaven will enable me to be reconciled to the event, because I pursue the dictates of that judgment, against the biasses of my more partial heart Sir Charles Grandison
  • How do we put the needs of the church to operate its ministries before the members - and how do the members reconcile this need with God's call to them to tithe?
  • -- My sister says, * that had they thought me such a championess, they you not have engaged with me: and now, not knowing how to reconcile my supposed obstinacy with my general character and natural temper, they seem to hope to tire me out, and resolve to vary their measures accordingly. Clarissa Harlowe; or the history of a young lady — Volume 2
  • The same problem has also surfaced in England, where it has been said that the notion is finally self-destructing, since all decisions must be reconciled in attempting harmonious statements of law.
  • Britain will be told that these two goals are irreconcilable, but reconciled they must be. Times, Sunday Times
  • I have no idea how he reconciles these two diametrically opposed stances.
  • They are like wives midway through marriage therapy designed to reconcile and foster a new beginning with a feckless husband who has perpetually let them down.
  • It's difficult to reconcile the demands of my job and the desire to be a good father.
  • How does Mr Chre tien reconcile his role as accomplice to President Bush's short-sighted and irresponsible energy agenda?
  • The most successful modern reconciler of faith and the imperatives of modern life, King Hussein of Jordan, lamentably died not long ago.
  • My husband invited me to a marriage ministry at our church as a last-ditch effort to reconcile our relationship. Christianity Today
  • Stoicism indeed seems to fall back into the materialism that I prevailed before Plato and Aristotle; but the ethical dualism which dominated the mood of the Stoic philosophers, did not in the long run tolerate the materialistic physics; it sought and found help in the metaphysical dualism of the Platonists, and at the same time reconciled itself to the popular religion by means of allegorism, that is, it formed a new theology. History of Dogma, Volume 1 (of 7)
  • The problem of any classically educated writer's falling in love with Greece was how to reconcile the provincial reality with the idealized images.
  • But the good news is that the two men have apparently reconciled, so much so that Mokoena is no longer requesting the return of the lobola he paid for Herbie.
  • To heal the multi-cultural team hernia is to reconcile the nations. The Multi-Cultural Team Hernia
  • The impossibility, however, to find any one of equal excellence as a performer (that is to say, in his more lucid and orderly moments) had forced his reinstalment, and he had now, for the most part, reconciled himself to the narrow sphere of his appointed adagios or allegros. Zanoni
  • Theravada, which I practice, is what I know best, and it seems to me that two fundamental concepts within Theravada that really couldn’t be smoothly reconciled with Hinduism without just sort of practicing two different things at the same time are anatta, or not-self, and anicca, impermanence. Another religious assault on education - The Panda's Thumb
  • The ancestors of modern professors, humanists tried to reconcile (intellectual) labor with the cultivation of idleness based on classical paradigms.
  • Following Cupid's arrows is akin to losing one's moral compass, and, in this sense, the affair brings about an identity crisis: how to reconcile the enchantment of an experience with the feeling that it's fundamentally wrong. Esther Perel: An Affair To Remember: What Happens In Couples After Someone Cheats? Part Two
  • For want of something to distract her mind, she had been engaged, when Maidie returned with her abigail in tow, in collecting together those of Maidie's belongings that were scattered about the bedchamber they had shared at her insistence, for she could not reconcile it with her duty to allow her charge to sleep alone in the chamber of a public inn in the heart of the capital. Gatlinburg
  • The high salary reconciled me to living abroad.
  • I was afraid that I would have to go to war just to protect her, and I couldn't reconcile the safety and freedom of one misborn with compromising the safety of all those who depend on me. The Black Gryphon
  • The cultivation of flax supposes property, commerce, agriculture, and manufactures] 10 I have used, without undertaking to reconcile, the facts in Procopius, (Goth.l. ii. c. The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire
  • Both are attempting to defy logic and, indeed, extinction by trying to reconcile two irreconcilable cultures. Times, Sunday Times
  • More to the point, Christians of many persuasions and nuances try to reconcile Jesus, friend of sinners, to Jesus, sinless Son of God.
  • Chapter Two, ‘Pressures from the Bottom,’ focuses on how evidence contrary to exceptionalism was to be reconciled.
  • One mom who can't quite reconcile Connie's brown skin and black hair with my green-eyed blonde complexion asks indiscreetly, “Peruvian adoption?” to which I simply nod instead of asking, “Fertility treatments?” about the squalling brood in her triple-wide stroller. The Uninvited Guest
  • He is reconciled to pre-qualifying for the US Open, dismissing suggestions that victory in Germany could change the situation for the better.
  • At first glance, the grace and poise of a ballerina seem difficult to reconcile with the combative and confrontational nature of the game of rugby. Times, Sunday Times
  • It was hard to reconcile his career ambitions with the needs of his children.
  • But the two were reconciled, and resumed one of the most fruitful partnerships in modern British theatre. Times, Sunday Times
  • 'As for amusement, I could kill rats as I used to do; or slaughter a hecatomb of pheasants at Babington,' -- here the old man winced, though the word hecatomb reconciled him a little to the disagreeable allusion. John Caldigate
  • It is sometimes difficult to reconcile science and religion.
  • Written in richly described flashbacks that slowly reveal the characters 'almost surreal connections, this deceptively understated novel asks crucial questions about how to live and reconcile history in an atomic age. The Ash Garden: Summary and book reviews of The Ash Garden by Dennis Bock.
  • He and the girls, in common with the other members of the Comet Film Company, had to portray many different scenes in the course of a season's work, and though some of it was distasteful, it was seldom objected to by anyone, unless perhaps by Pepper Sneed, the "grouch," or perhaps by Mr. Wellington Bunn, an actor of the old school, who could not reconcile himself to the silent drama. The Moving Picture Girls at Sea or, A Pictured Shipwreck That Became Real
  • The closing story in this collection, "Pride and Prometheus," recently published in F&SF, is a splendid exercise in Jane Austen pastiche, a younger Bennet sister meeting Victor Frankenstein and striving to reconcile his cruel Gothicism with scientific ideals. Financial independence via munchkinland
  • But, this time, he was unable to reconcile internecine squabbles.
  • They can seemingly either reconcile the uttered contradictions of "their" candidates' positions we don't need constitutional protections for those accused of terrorism cause they're accused of *terrorism* and are therefor actaul *terrorists*! whle at the same time touting their National Guard service, which requires an oath to uphold and defend the Constitution or just refuse to see that there *is* a contradiction. Making Light: Open thread 134
  • Ferraro does not buy the notion of Obama as the great reconciler. Hillary's New Mississippi Ad: She's A Comeback Kid
  • The attraction of political power is said to have reconciled his alienated parental family.
  • The problem is that "not guiding" implies that "guiding" is the only way that God and evolution can be reconciled, which is simplistic and fails to reflect what many thoughtful Christians actually think. Pete Enns, Ph.D.: Evolution and Religion: Why Religion Pollsters Should Go to Seminary First
  • How can that be reconciled with the manifest variation in the theological beliefs recorded during the long history of the Church? The Times Literary Supplement
  • The investigators go to Albany and Atlanta to find their perp, run into endless roadblocks, combat fatigue, and must reconcile with the angry community.
  • The misanthrope was the supreme failure of life because he had not the intelligence to realize, or could not reconcile himself to, the incomplete condition of human nature. Rezánov
  • Negotiators must now work out how to reconcile these demands with American demands for access.
  • It had its intellectual trouble too -- the impossibility of bringing together the long-cherished idea of Lufa, and the reality of Lufa revealed by herself; the two stared at each other in mortal irreconcilement. Home Again
  • I wonder how he can reconcile this with his own proposals to zone large tracts of land at the same meeting for residential development, based on no professional opinion.
  • The disbursement of funds from this account would be reconciled on a quarterly basis.
  • The one on this list that I can’t reconcile is The Wrestler. Top 10 Movies of the Decade » Scene-Stealers
  • In politics it is the only way to reconcile people with unwelcome news or the limits of the possible. Times, Sunday Times
  • After this outburst the man slept gently on, while the little girl still held the parasol aloft and looked down with a great wonder at the frowsy, unkempt creature, trying to reconcile it with the little part of life that she knew. THE HOBO AND THE FAIRY
  • Attempts to reconcile religious differences have been going on for years. Times, Sunday Times
  • Hedonistic accommodation sunshine coast that as unreconciled questioner strongbox sulkily and neglectfully unmanful, our overhead with the grossulariaceae is callipygous. Rational Review
  • He acknowledged that for the notion of peoplehood to catch on, it will need to be adapted for modern realities and be reconciled with opposing notions like individual identity and ideology. Articles
  • The costume of an Amazonian crest and plume, a tucked-up vest, and a tight buskin of sky-blue silk, buckled with diamonds, reconciled Lady Binks to the part of Hippolyta. Saint Ronan's Well
  • So, if a son that is by his father sent about merchandise do sinfully miscarry upon the sea, the imputation of his wickedness by your rule, should be imposed upon his father that sent him: or if a servant, under his master's command transporting a sum of money, be assailed by robbers and die in many irreconciled iniquities, you may call the business of the master the author of the servant's damnation: but this is not so: the king is not bound to answer the particular endings of his soldiers, the father of his son, nor the master of his servant; for they purpose not their death, when they purpose their services. The Life of King Henry V
  • Your diplomatic skills will be stretched but you will find a way to reconcile two stubborn relatives. The Sun
  • I aim to go to sleep with a clear mind, the conflicts of the day resolved and my soul reconciled.
  • How do we reconcile these two divergent sides of the story? Christianity Today
  • Not very confident of India accepting accession, he was reconciled to a state of permanent political exile in India.
  • We have reconciled and are probably going to remarry.
  • Those that knew Levis as a friend, colleague, or teacher sometimes found it puzzling to try to reconcile the good humor, whimsy, and carelessness of the man with the artfulness, erudition, cunning, and darkness of his poetry.
  • The reform of society must be reconciled with the demands of ordinary people.
  • Custom reconciles us to everything.
  • It was hard to reconcile his career ambitions with the needs of his children.
  • There are huge mistakes and a large amount of what goes on is truly irreconcileable with the other Dune books. Reader reviews of Dune: House Atreides by Brian Herbert and .
  • Apart from tears, only time could wear everything away. While feeling is being processed by time, conflicts would be reconciled as time goes by, just like a cup of tea that is being continuously diluted.
  • In each case there is more or less seeming irreconcilement between the two phases found in combination; but the opposition is rather more distinct in Hawthorne, and the grasp with which it is controlled by him is stronger than that of either Poe or Irving, ” again a result pronouncing him the master. A Study Of Hawthorne
  • It is difficult to reconcile their opposition to gagging, say, someone who believes adulterers should be killed, with their own representatives' willingness to no-platform allegedly otherwise discriminatory speakers.
  • New Testaments, and the idea that shall reconcile all as so many several forms, and as it were perspectives, of one and the same truth -- this is still a 'desideratum' in Christian theology. The Literary Remains of Samuel Taylor Coleridge
  • By looking to the Bible and seeking spiritual guidance, he is taking steps to reconcile our differences.
  • Walpole inaugurated the tradition in the hope that the lifelike solidity of realism might be reconciled with the imaginative range of romance.
  • Yesterday's great reconciler would have become today's great compromiser -- if there had been anyone to compromise with. Adam Neiman: The Blame Game
  • The diocese prays that all those involved in this attempt to 'ordain' ` Roman Catholic Womenpriests will be reconciled with the church, and that the harm and division caused will be healed," the Diocese of Venice, Fla., said in a statement. Clerical Whispers
  • Thus, from the Assyrian researches as well as from other sources, it has come to be acknowledged by the most eminent scholars at the leading seats of Christian learning that the accounts of creation with which for nearly two thousand years all scientific discoveries have had to be "reconciled" -- the accounts which blocked the way of Copernicus, and Galileo, and Newton, and Laplace -- were simply transcribed or evolved from a mass of myths and legends largely derived by the Hebrews from their ancient relations with Chaldea, rewrought in a monotheistic sense, imperfectly welded together, and then thrown into poetic forms in the sacred books which we have inherited. A History of the warfare of Science with Theology in Christendom
  • And when his first wife Patricia died of cancer, aged 47, Carter was also reconciled with his daughter.
  • Combining streamlined efficiency with abstract decadence, American Art Deco reconciled these societal dualisms.
  • For more than two millennia after the writing of the Torah, discussions of evil focussed on the question of theodicy: how can bad events be reconciled with the omnipotence of a good God?
  • There is no contradiction between faith and modernity and the two can, and indeed must, be reconciled.
  • His wife was apparently reconciled to his going away to an unknown destination for an indefinite period. The Friendship: Wordsworth and Coleridge
  • I think within the ECB's framework, you can reconcile the code words and the long-term strategy. 'The ECB Has Done a Perfect Job'
  • If Faisal Abdul Rauf is really interested in being a reconciler, perhaps he could start small by offering to mediate this dispute. 'A Call to Prayer From the Rubble of the WTC'
  • : 00AM 'Twas the fifth day 'fore Christmas and all through the towns Recalling the past year brought smiles and frowns The readers were anxious, and so we will show 'em It's time once again for the Action Line poem Recession, economy, job loss and more Were issues that really should come to the fore Reality's something we don't reconcile When everyone lives in a state of denial For instance, the Realtors push ritzy condos On people with pickups all covered with Bondo The city spends fortunes to make Chapman snow While staffers and programs are told they must go And what's the surprise of a fierce winter storm We live in the mountains and it's just the norm You'd think that the city would figure by now When flakes are a'falling, you go out and plow The county commission, its head in the sand, Can't seem to come up with the zones for the land With gas money dwindling and going away The budgeting process will lead us astray Joelle switches parties, the Dems she did ditch Progressives were angry and cried "bait and switch Durangoherald.com
  • `It's hard to reconcile the femme fatale image with Carrie's sainted benefactor. PRETTY MAIDS ALL IN A ROW
  • To break the cycle of homelessness, the focus is on encouraging young people to reconcile with their families, to re-engage in community life, and to take up education, training, or employment.
  • Time spent attempting to reconcile with an irreconcilable critic is time that could have been invested in something else. Christianity Today
  • St. Thomas Aquinas, a medieval theologian , tried to reconcile Aristotle's philosophy of natural law with Christianity.
  • To his rear a revolt of Pueblo Indians and unreconciled Mexicans was crushed by Price in January 1847, while Doniphan with 600-700 Missouri volunteers overawed the powerful Navajo.
  • I think that he had never been entirely reconciled to the heathenish invention which I called a sail, and that down in the bottom of his heart he believed that the paddlers would eventually overhaul us; but now he couldn't praise it enough. Pellucidar
  • In these the new unity can already be experienced and old animosities and misunderstandings be reconciled.
  • On one side progress was threatened by the old aristocratic and clerical elites, which remained unreconciled to the Revolution and conducted a desperate rearguard action to reverse it.
  • It is incumbent upon all the peoples of the world to reconcile their differences, and, with perfect unity and peace, abide beneath the shadow of the Tree of His care and loving-kindness .
  • What's important for us to understand about these unreconciled , denied impulses is how they affect our ability to stay focused and take a disciplined, consistent approach to our trading.
  • The school district says it seriously considered the feasibility of the conservancy's proposals and drafted a plan that aimed to reconcile everyone's needs.
  • He asked a thousand questions could scarcely be persuaded but some sinister design was again practised against her, and it was with much difficulty he at length grew more reconciled and satisfied with the account he received. The Castle of Wolfenbach
  • The cash flow statement differs from these other financial statements because it acts as a kind of corporate checkbook that reconciles the other two statements.
  • He rejects the ideas that hell will be emptied at the end of time and that the damned souls and demons will be reconciled with God.
  • It would be useful to learn how he reconciles his vision on these matters with his work as a songwriter and performer.
  • Yet there was something of majesty, depressed indeed and overclouded, but still grand and imposing, in the manner and words of Father Buonaventure, which it was difficult to reconcile with those preconceived opinions which imputed subtlety and fraud to his sect and order. Redgauntlet
  • I recognized the face, which was a bit scraggy, but I couldn't reconcile with my memory as to how I knew her.
  • In dismissing the idea of a "truth and reconciliation commission," Obama also recognizes that the Republicans would show no remorse for the Bush administration's actions; that they would insist that there is nothing to "reconcile" -; and that they would stay on the attack, pummeling the Democrats as weak, overly sympathetic to terrorists, and endangering national security. Printing: Democrats' 'Battered Wife Syndrome'
  • All efforts to reconcile her with her husband were in vain.
  • Madge, infirm of purpose, and easily reconciled to the present scene, whatever it was, began soon to talk with her usual diffuseness of ideas. The Heart of Mid-Lothian
  • You will be at no loss to form a judgment of the mode in which he proposed to reconcile us, by what he called a conciliatory line. The Diplomatic Correspondence of the American Revolution, Vol. VIII
  • Not only does he not mention the possibility of intervention in mnemonic and sensory structures; it's hard to reconcile such a possibility with his assertion that the linguistic structure that, he finds, disarticulates the Third Seeing Is Reading
  • In politics it is the only way to reconcile people with unwelcome news or the limits of the possible. Times, Sunday Times
  • Apart from tears, only time could wear everything away. While feeling is being processed by time, conflicts would be reconciled as time goes by, just like a cup of tea that is being continuously diluted.
  • But who knows, maybe someday down the line we could have reconciled. The Sun
  • Although the main parties might remain irreconciled, the Palestinian people most certainly are not. The Guardian World News
  • He has recently been reconciled with his wife.
  • It is possible to reconcile the two sets of figures. Times, Sunday Times
  • Surely they can reconcile their differences without resorting to legal action? The Sun
  • But who knows, maybe someday down the line we could have reconciled. The Sun
  • I am perspicacious enough to reconcile the fact that not all of you fine people share my perspective.
  • For the most part, Prime Ministers have been political reconcilers, representing and responding to the different interests in the party, and being prepared to sacrifice policy goals in the interest of party unity.
  • None of them envisaged that they would have to reconcile their differences so quickly. Times, Sunday Times
  • Can Barclaycard reconcile this with the advice not to divulge information to unknown callers? Times, Sunday Times
  • Harrison died in 1776, unreconciled with Maskelyne to the end.
  • You must do troubleshooting and reconcile within yourself what you want to do.
  • Through a clever temporal disjuncture that posits a radical and unmediated cultural dislocation between past and present, she is able to reconcile this orientalized image of modern Greece with a concomitant The Ruins of Empire: Nationalism, Art, and Empire in Hemans's Modern Greece
  • With the climate bill in limbo, EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson is playing enforcer and reconciler at the same time. Frank Sesno: Lisa Jackson and the "Headline People Don't Want to Discuss"
  • Ultimately he is a universalist who believes that all souls will be reconciled to God, including the souls of Satan and his minions.
  • Christ crucified is the power of God (1 Cor.i. 24); let him by a lively faith take hold of him, as a man that is sinking catches hold of a bough, or cord, or plank, that is within his reach, or as the malefactor took hold of the horns of the altar, believing that there is no other name by which he can be saved, by which he can be reconciled. Commentary on the Whole Bible Volume IV (Isaiah to Malachi)
  • The tribe watched what he took with him as he ran out, and if it was the basketry materials they reconciled themselves to his being a 'berdache'. Two Spirits
  • Apart from tears, only time could wear everything away. While feeling is being processed by time, conflicts would be reconciled as time goes by, just like a cup of tea that is being continuously diluted.
  • One thing I’ve been trying to reconcile is how to equate “this” with “that”. Jenni's life at the moment
  • It had only been delayed in order to allow Lady Hermione time to reconcile herself to the match. WEEKEND FOR MURDER
  • As You Like It is perhaps ideal for such treatment, since in that play the attempt to marry wilfulness and futurity is the outcome of a comic action of forced reconcilement.
  • Many centuries later, religious scholars had found that some of the dates of Roman history in the early Christian era cannot be reconciled with what has been recorded in New Testament writings.
  • Not that any amount of designer labels would or could reconcile her to the prospect of meeting Antoinette again.
  • But is there so irreconcileable a difference between the two religions Sir Charles Grandison
  • This experience cuts through a lot of the abstract theologising I do on interfaith relations and seems to communicate to me at a deeper level; it's an experience I have yet to fully reconcile with my thinking about my faith.
  • Weizhi will Garlic Puree sauce, ginger Weizhi, green peppers or shamisen formed to reconcile the green.
  • While molecular genetics has taught us the proper way to reconcile the characteristics of the living world, generation, development towards a goal, and decay, with the contrasting incorruptibility and planlessness of the physical world, it has not resolved our uncertainty about the proper way to relate this language to the notions of 'consciousness', 'mind', 'cognition', Max Delbrück - Nobel Lecture
  • They have announced a precautionary principle with regard to genetically modified foods, which is very difficult to reconcile with the WTO's sanitary and phytosanitary rules.
  • I try to reconcile my beliefs Re: women's rights with my fashion sense. Nessus Diary Entry
  • The little boy does not readily reconcile with his sister.
  • I. Packer seeks to reconcile the paradox by appealing to the notion of antinomy! ExChristian.Net -- encouraging ex-Christians
  • If it's a bank or credit card statement, reconcile it against your receipts, payments and deposits to ensure that it is spot-on.
  • She has failed to reconcile the nation; reconciliation is a word Ellen does not use anymore," said Charles Brumskine, a former senator and presidential candidate for the opposition Liberty Party. SFGate: Don Asmussen: Bad Reporter
  • Still, it's getting easier all the time to reconcile the waitress with the songstress.
  • He spent much of his career trying to find a'a grand unified theory' that would reconcile the two. Times, Sunday Times
  • The two most famous antipopes of the Orthodox period (both eventually reconciled to the canonical church) were St. Hippolytus of Rome and the scholar Anastasius Bibliothecarius.
  • His wife was apparently reconciled to his going away to an unknown destination for an indefinite period. The Friendship: Wordsworth and Coleridge
  • During the days and affrightful nights of my disease, when my limbs were swollen, and my stomach refused to retain the food -- taken in in sorrow, then I looked with pleasure on the scheme: but as soon as dry frosty weather came, or the rains and damps passed off, and I was filled with elastic health, from crown to sole, then the thought of the weight of pecuniary obligation from so many people reconciled me; but I have broken off my story. Reminiscences of Samuel Taylor Coleridge and Robert Southey
  • How can this be reconciled with the market-driven, high-octane, modernising spirit of the new millennium?
  • The sinister imagery is hard to reconcile with the contemporary city, with its multiracial population and beery, welcoming atmosphere.
  • In serious moments he was a list make, codifier and reconciler. The New Monks Of Europe
  • They believed that their strategy not only reconciled rapid growth with equitable distribution but made these two apparently contradictory social aims mutually supporting.
  • Jones has reconciled himself to being sledged a lot by the Aussies.
  • That explains the bullyboy tactics and the arbitrary, unilateral narrowing of just what can be reconciled and what can't, as defined by the scandalously leading and biased questions on which British Columbians were asked to vote.
  • But Hart was reconciled with his wife after the crash and the couple are now said to be ‘stronger than ever’.
  • One ever feels his twoness, -- an American, a Negro; two warring souls, two thoughts, two unreconciled strivings; two warring ideals in one dark body, whose dogged strength alone keeps it from being torn asunder. from "Of Our Spiritual Strivings" in The Souls of Black Folk. Sunday culture.
  • How can this fact be reconciled with the high ticket price?

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