How To Use Sanguine In A Sentence

  • Smaller than this Common Burnet is the Salad Burnet, _Poterium sanguisorba, quod sanguineos fluxus sistat_, a useful [431] styptic, which is also cordial, and promotes perspiration. Herbal Simples Approved for Modern Uses of Cure
  • To speak generally, if we take all animals which change their locality, some by swimming, others by flying, others by walking, we find in these the two sexes, not only in the sanguinea but also in some of the bloodless animals; and this applies in the case of the latter sometimes to the whole class, as the cephalopoda and crustacea, but in the class of insects only to the majority. On the Generation of Animals
  • After World War I they were less sanguine about progress and more inclined to the hereditarian pessimism of eugenics.
  • Ridet patiens si a sanguine, putat se videre choreas, musicam audire, ludos, &c. 2565. Anatomy of Melancholy
  • Fully recessive mutations are maintained in higher frequencies than partially recessive ones and thus cause greater declines in fitness under consanguineous matings.
Linguix Browser extension
Fix your writing
on millions of websites
Linguix writing coach
  • He stays on his feet and remains sanguine. Times, Sunday Times
  • The sanguine humour is the principal humour of the blood which embodies the other three humours: the choleric, melancholic and phlegmatic within it.
  • _Attico genere dicendi se gaudere dicunt; atqui utinam imitarentur nec ossa solum, sed etiam et sanguinem. A Dialogue Concerning Oratory, Or The Causes Of Corrupt Eloquence The Works Of Cornelius Tacitus, Volume 8 (of 8); With An Essay On His Life And Genius, Notes, Supplements
  • Op Ed: Proscriptions on who may marry, such as preventing consanguine marriages, can be easily understood by referring to the procreative potential of marriage. Why are only queer rights on the chopping block?
  • DATURA Family: Solanaceae Genus: Datura Species: Species: fastuosa: large shrub with white flowers inoxia (Don Juan's Datura): native to mexico metel: native to India. sanguinea (Eagle Datura, Tonga): Native to S.America. stramonium (Jimson Weed): Dangerous hallucinogen widespread in temperate regions. Natural Highs Frequently Asked Questions by Vince Cavasin
  • Wales, Prince of, calls Brother Jonathan _consanguineus noster_, but had not, apparently, consulted the Garter King at Arms. Walpole, Horace, classed, his letters praised. The Complete Poetical Works of James Russell Lowell
  • It was just the latest in a long arc of confrontations between the consanguine of the South Pacific mote, and floating weeds that forever wash onto these shores. Richard Bangs: Skullduggery on Easter Island (Part I of II)
  • Proscriptions on who may marry, such as preventing consanguine marriages, can be easily understood by referring to the procreative potential of marriage. Why are only queer rights on the chopping block?
  • This fall, many on Madison Avenue are feeling sanguine about the prospects for TV advertising, the default choice of big marketers.
  • The form of body peculiarly subject to phthisical complaints was the smooth, the whitish, that resembling the lentil; the reddish, the blue-eyed, the leucophlegmatic, and that with the scapulae having the appearance of wings: and women in like manner, with regard to the melancholic and subsanguineous, phrenitic and dysenteric affections principally attacked them. Of The Epidemics
  • Martis sanguineas quae cohibet manus, quae dat belligeris foedera gentibus et cornu retinet diuite copiam, 10 donetur tenera mitior hostia. et tu, qui facibus legitimis ades, noctem discutiens auspice dextera huc incede gradu marcidus ebrio, praecingens roseo tempora uinculo. Hymeneal
  • Concepts of fire and damnation have given way to more sanguine personal exhortations to love, service and devotion.
  • It is now known that royalty was not handed down by women, even though consanguine marriages strengthened the throne. Exhibit of Egyptian Queens
  • _Transactions Obstetrical Society London_, vol. xxxix, p. 115, etc. _Mittelschmerz_ is a condition of pain occurring about the middle of the intermenstrual period, either alone or accompanied by a slight sanguineous discharge, or, more frequently, a non-sanguineous discharge. Studies in the Psychology of Sex, Volume 1 The Evolution of Modesty; The Phenomena of Sexual Periodicity; Auto-Erotism
  • Facultative slave-making ants, like those in the sanguinea complex, represent an intermediate parasitic group, between freeliving species on the one hand, and obligatory dulotic species on the other.
  • So if you've got an excess of black bile, you're melancholy; if there's a lot of blood running through you, you're sanguine.
  • The first is pessimism, the conviction that social transformation is, contrary to the sanguine illusions of the optimists, profoundly difficult.
  • Thus, there also is no evidence for extensive consanguineous mating in the polygyne population of S. geminata that we studied.
  • But a high nose, a full, decided, well-opened, quick grey eye, and a sanguine complexion, made amends for some coarseness and irregularity in the subordinate parts of the face; so that, altogether, Montrose might be termed rather a handsome, than a hard-featured man. A Legend of Montrose
  • Sara was not sanguine about the prospects, for all of Midgarde had been held too long in thrall.
  • Concepts of fire and damnation have given way to more sanguine personal exhortations to love, service, and devotion.
  • Yet all of its military uses, from scouting to strategic bombing, had already been foreseen by an eager, if overly sanguine, public.
  • But his great abstinence of all was from Sleep, and strange it was that one of such a Fleshly and sanguine composition, could overwatch so many heavy propense inclinations to Rest. Characters from 17th Century Histories and Chronicles
  • At first I was sanguine enough to hope that, seeing how we slipped away from her, the lateener would 'bout ship, and return to her moorings; but nothing of the kind: she held on like grim death, her skipper, no doubt, being seaman enough to read in the increasingly-threatening aspect of the heavens a promise that his turn should come by-and-by. Under the Meteor Flag Log of a Midshipman during the French Revolutionary War
  • On the fixed-income side, it is now a much less sanguine case of studying balance sheets and deteriorating cash flow positions.
  • They go far, _far_ beyond my most sanguine expectations, and indeed are expressed with such peculiar warmth and kindness as to affect me in the tenderest manner. Washington Irving
  • I'm intrigued by everything you are saying, because it would sound like you have a generally more sanguine view of the situation than the auditor general did or than the Senate committee did that studied security in Canada.
  • Some lawyers take a less sanguine view. Times, Sunday Times
  • For the most part the letter writers seem sanguine. Times, Sunday Times
  • Forty years of sanguine, sorry history have confirmed this truth in Algeria.
  • Meantime the _figurant_ cherishes sanguine hopes that he may one day rise to a prominent position in the ballet, or that he may become an _accessoire_; and the _accessoire_ looks forward fervently to ranking in the future among the regular actors or A Book of the Play Studies and Illustrations of Histrionic Story, Life, and Character
  • France has appeared more sanguine about striking a deal that excluded Britain. Times, Sunday Times
  • His hair was very fair, his face naturally sanguine, his skin roughened by coarse soap and blunt razor blades and the cold of the winter that had just ended. Nineteen Eighty-Four
  • Is constant time occurrence dizziness feels exsanguine shape how?
  • Through the black horrors of the ensanguined plain, The Iliad of Homer
  • To the poetic vision of early seers the crimson West seemed ensanguined by some great massacre that had been perpetrated there. The light that draws the flower
  • DESPITE THIS GOOD NEWS, it is hard to be sanguine about manufacturing's prospects over the long haul.
  • Qui melancholicus factus plane desipiebat, multaque stulte loquebaturr, huic exhibitum 12.gr. stibium, quod paulo post atram bilem ex alvo eduxit (ut ego vidi, qui vocatus tanquam ad miraculum adfui testari possum,) et ramenta tunquam carnis dissecta in partes totum excrementum tanquam sanguinem nigerrimum repraesentabat. Anatomy of Melancholy
  • ‘There might be certain issues that will be sorted out,’ he says sanguinely.
  • His French counterpart was less sanguine. Times, Sunday Times
  • I'm not very sanguine about good fortune for myself.
  • Despite the precarious position of the oil market, financial markets remain extraordinarily sanguine in regard to the prospects of another major oil shock.
  • But in the attempt to incarnate and ensanguine it I failed wretchedly. Seven Men
  • Chrysophyllum perpulchrum (Q) and Chidlowia sanguinea; and the 'Sassandrian' forest in the south-west, dominated by water-demanding species such as ebony Diospyros spp. and Mapania spp. with numerous endemic species, especially in the lower Cavally Valley and the Meno and Hana depressions near Mont Niénokoué. Taï National Park, Côte d'Ivoire
  • Or, to put it as some aspiring writers might: without embroiling us in superfluous polysemousness, it must be averred that the aesthetic propensities of a vainglorious tome toward prolixity or indeed even the pseudo-pragmatic co-optation — as by droit du seigneur — of an antiquitarian lexis, whilst purportedly an amendment to the erudition of said opuscule and arguably consanguinean (metaphorically speaking) and perhaps even existentially bound up with its literary apprizal, can all too facilely directionize in the azimuth of fustian grandiloquence or unmanacle unpurposed (or even dystelelogical) consequences on a pith and/or douceur de vivre level vis-à-vis even the most pansophic reader. Author! Author! » 2010 » August
  • A more sanguine tone may prevail after the elections. Times, Sunday Times
  • The former is incorrectly termed ovum, for it merely corresponds to what in well-fed sanguineous animals is fat; and thus it is that it makes its appearance in Testacea at those seasons of the year when they are in good condition, namely, spring and autumn. On the Parts of Animals
  • The patients and spouses were not consanguineous with each other.
  • Companion delivers the treatment of obstacle of second birth of pure red blood cell of thymus tumour acquired character, often need give aid and support, will improve exsanguine condition.
  • While the Spanish government is openly optimistic that the worst has passed, residents and environmentalists were not so sanguine.
  • Pero señor, ¿sabe acaso usted que tener 5 gramos de plomo por decilitro en la sangre es altamente peligroso y que, según el estudio “Niveles de plomo sanguíneo en recién nacidos de La Oroya” [1], el 75,3% de los niños recién nacidos en la ciudad tienen entre 6 y 10 gramos de plomo en cada decilitro de sangre. Global Voices in English » Peru: Contamination in Mining Town La Oroya
  • It was also sanguine about the economy's prospects in light of strong productivity growth and the stimulus provided by the current accommodative policy stance.
  • It also found that these consanguineous relationships led to deaths from 'genetic and congenital abnormalities'. Times, Sunday Times
  • Tunc domino Cane in suo throno sedente, accedunt Barones cum circulis et coronis in capite, vestiti vario modo, quia aliqui de viridi, scilicet primi, secundi de sanguineo, et tertij de croceo, et tenent in manibus vnam tabulam eburneam de dentibus Elephantum, et cinguntur cingulis aureis vno semisse latis, et stant pedibus silentium tenentes. The Journal of Friar Odoric
  • With three consanguineous marriages of monarchs in only five generations, it could be said that the royal blood was running a bit thin in Britain.
  • Among the shrubs are Crataegus monogyna, Euonimus europea, Cornus mas, C. sanguinea, Rhamnus frangula, R. catharctica, Viburnum opulus, Berberis vulgaris, Hippophae rhamnoides, Tamarix spp. and occasional Corylus avellana. Danube Delta Biosphere Reserve, Romania
  • And she's just encountered the old blood groupings, the four humours: sanguine, choler, phlegm, melancholy.
  • Gorgoneo tinctum defigens sanguine ferrum. illa subit contra uersamque a gurgite frontem erigit et tortis innitens oribus alte60 emicat ac toto sublimis corpore fertur. sed quantum illa subit semet iaculata profundo, in tantum reuolat laxumque per aethera ludit Andromeda
  • The parents and another couple in this family were consanguine.
  • As a matter of course, we left the servant problem to work out its own solution, and, also as a matter of course, the Sanguine Scot was full of plans for the future but particularly bubbling over with the news that he had secured Tam-o'-Shanter for a partner in the brumby venture. We of the Never-Never
  • Hic ad iactum lapidis in meridie orauit [‘oraiit’ in source text — KTH] ad suum patrem, et pro vehementi orationis intentione sanguineum exudauit sudorem: atque ibi non remotè videtur tumba regis Iudeæ Iosaphat, á quo et vallis sibi nomen assumpsit: et credimus in hanc vallem Christum venturum ad nouissimum, et generalissimum iudicium, vbi (Iohele propheta testante) disceptabit de omni actione mortalium. The Voyages and Travels of Sir John Mandeville
  • Sir Walter certainly left his “name unstained,” unless the serious mistakes natural to a sanguine temperament such as his, are to be counted as stains upon his name; and if they are, where among the sons of men would you find many unstained names as noble as his with such a stain upon it? Sir Walter Scott
  • A white female fetus was the product of the third pregnancy of consanguineous (first cousins) parents; the mother was 25 years old and the father 34.
  • Funebri,” p. 527 (Poeseos Asiaticæ Commentarii), gravely noting, “Hæc Elegia non admodum dissimilis esse videtur pulcherrimi illius carminis de Sauli et Jonathani obitu; at que adeò versus iste ‘ubi provocant adversarios nunquam rediit a pugnæ contentione sine spiculo sanguine imbuto, ‘ex The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • As our political judgments often turn on similar criteria, I’m not as sanguine as KA that the two can be so easily disentwined, which doesn’t mean that attempting to do so would be any less valuable, especially if it leads us to compelling critiques of presents practice such as the one KA makes. The Volokh Conspiracy » Voting, Religion, and Public Officials:
  • I have never seen farce more keenly orchestrated and sanguinely enacted, the blatantly laughable always tinged with the bitingly caricatural, the fantastic, and the outrageous, without the slightest loss in basic humanity.
  • On the other hand, his holdings were reckoned as worth millions, and there were men so sanguine that they held the man a fool who coppered [6] any bet Daylight laid. Chapter XI
  • Jupiter, ruling the sanguine humour from its seat in the liver, is responsible for maintaining the even temper of the humours, thereby facilitating the harmonious flow of Vital Force.
  • Sanguinem inficiunt, saith Villanovanus, they infect the blood, and putrefy it, Magninus holds, and must not therefore be taken via cibi, aut quantitate magna, not to make a meal of, or in any great quantity. Anatomy of Melancholy
  • Qui melancholicus factus plane desipiebat, multaque stulte loquebaturr, huic exhibitum 12.gr. stibium, quod paulo post atram bilem ex alvo eduxit (ut ego vidi, qui vocatus tanquam ad miraculum adfui testari possum,) et ramenta tunquam carnis dissecta in partes totum excrementum tanquam sanguinem nigerrimum repraesentabat. Anatomy of Melancholy
  • Horizontal lines represent crosses, thick horizontal lines are consanguineous crosses, and vertical lines represent descendants from such matings.
  • Whether it be the boudoir of a strumpet or the death-bed of a monarch -- the strong character of a statesman-warrior abounding in contrasts and rich in mystery, or the personal history of a judge trained in the Old Bailey to vulgarize and ensanguine the King's Bench -- he luxuriates with a vigour and variety of language and illustration which renders his "History" an attractive and absorbing story-book. Famous Reviews
  • This temperament the Elizabethans would have called melancholic; and Hamlet seems to be an example of it, as Lear is of a temperament mixedly choleric and sanguine. Shakespearean Tragedy Lectures on Hamlet, Othello, King Lear, Macbeth
  • There is no theory which would suggest that the men who are proximate to these children would be other than consanguine kin.
  • Christi sponsam esse tenemus, quam Christus sanguine suo lavet et purificet, et tandem Patri suo eam sine macula et ruga statuat et tradat. The Creeds of the Evangelical Protestant Churches.
  • So instead of "The nature of youth is thoughtless and sanguine, and therefore &c.," we can write, "The danger of the voyage was depreciated and the beauty of the island exaggerated by _the thoughtless nature of youth_. How to Write Clearly Rules and Exercises on English Composition
  • Surely, the sanguine tone seemed out of place; maybe it was meant to mask deep discouragement.
  • He goes on to sum up Medea's fate in a sanguine little couplet, made even more mischievously dramatic by caesura and dash: "Else had we seen a parent's hand embrued,/Suffice the horrid thought, in filial blood --" The effect here, whether the poet intends it or not, is firmly to separate the temporal elements of his narrative from the static ones in the picture. Shelley, Medusa, and the Perils of Ekphrasis
  • Non his juventus orta parentibus infecit aequor sanguine The Message
  • Chinamen (cited by Mr Candidate Mulligan) in consequence of defective reunion of the maxillary knobs along the medial line so that (as he said) one ear could hear what the other spoke, the benefits of anesthesia or twilight sleep, the prolongation of labour pains in advanced gravidancy by reason of pressure on the vein, the premature relentment of the amniotic fluid (as exemplified in the actual case) with consequent peril of sepsis to the matrix, artificial insemination by means of syringes, involution of the womb consequent upon the menopause, the problem of the perpetration of the species in the case of females impregnated by delinquent rape, that distressing manner of delivery called by the Brandenburghers STURZGEBURT, the recorded instances of multiseminal, twikindled and monstrous births conceived during the catamenic period or of consanguineous parents — in a word all the cases of human nativity which Aristotle has classified in his masterpiece with chromolithographic illustrations. Ulysses
  • It is impossible to be sanguine about the state of international tension that hangs so threateningly over us.
  • One should not, however, be sanguine about the prospects for such international behavior modification.
  • Consanguineal relatives are considered more important than are affinal relatives.
  • Moins que maintenant bien sur mais je pense que ce sera possible ya pas d'raison et ... pis ... heu ben bien entendu je m'arme de sketchbook de fusain de crayon de bois de sanguine enfin! Pinku-tk Diary Entry
  • The rising sun ensanguined the east sky.
  • Yet most of the real estate commentariat are more sanguine. Times, Sunday Times
  • But at the same time, Sire, the chamber of representatives will not show itself less eager, to proclaim its sentiments and its principles with regard to the terrible conflict, that threatens to ensanguine the fields of Europe. Memoirs of the Private Life, Return, and Reign of Napoleon in 1815, Vol. II
  • But, if one approached them closely so as to talk to them, the face with its smooth skin and delicate contours appeared different and as happens when one examines a vegetable body under a microscope, watery or ensanguined spots exuded. Time Regained
  • It makes feasible the analysis of multilocus data observed on general pedigrees containing possibly consanguineous marriages and missing information.
  • Relatives were consanguine parents and siblings, as ascertained by history.
  • She is equally sanguine about the trajectory and acceleration of her band's career, although she understands that it's remarkable that they've gotten this far with so little struggle.
  • Sanguine relates to air, choleric to fire, melancholy to earth and phlegmatic to water.
  • In this age of computer design, stadium mood and atmosphere can be engineered to give an aura of menace to the most sanguine opponents.
  • Vile intrigues, unnatural crimes, and every vice that degrades our nature, have been the steps to this distinguished eminence; yet millions of men have supinely allowed the nerveless limbs of the posterity of such rapacious prowlers to rest quietly on their ensanguined thrones. 5 5 A Vindication of the Rights of Woman
  • She can be seen beside the sovereign for the purpose of performing rites: sister or daughter of the king problem of incest and of consanguine marriages. Exhibit of Egyptian Queens
  • The parents were consanguine, second degree relatives.
  • My sanguine imagination paints, in alluring colors, the charms of youth and freedom, regulated by virtue and innocence. The Coquette, or, The History of Eliza Wharton: A Novel Founded on Fact
  • Other economists are more sanguine about the possibility of inflation.
  • Bacchides non Bacchides, sed bacchae sunt acerrumae. apage istas a me sorores, quae hominum sorbent sanguinem. omnis ad perniciem instructa domus opime atque opipare -- quae ut aspexi, me continuo contuli protinam in pedes. Amphitryo, Asinaria, Aulularia, Bacchides, Captivi Amphitryon, The Comedy of Asses, The Pot of Gold, The Two Bacchises, The Captives
  • It was by virtue of this power that English John, that great landlord, surnamed Lackland, by declaring himself the liegeman of Pope Innocent III., and placing his kingdom under submission, delivered the souls of his parents, who had been excommunicated: “Pro mortuo excommunico, pro quo supplicant consanguinei.” A Philosophical Dictionary
  • Thus deleterious recessives had not been eliminated from the population to the extent that consanguineous matings were harmless in terms of offspring viability.
  • Besides consanguineous marriages, there are other reasons for a baby to be born with a defective heart.
  • In the following 3 h, the drainage of sanguineous effusion persisted up to the total amount of 1,200 mL, systolic BP declined again, and transfusion of two units of blood was necessary.
  • None of these essays is sanguine about the current situation, but all three offer positive views of the future.
  • Ob spirituum distractionem hepar officio suo non fungitur, nec vertit alimentum in sanguinem, ut debeat. Anatomy of Melancholy
  • He's remarkably sanguine about the problems involved.
  • [_Sanguine_ lifts _Eugenia_ into the boat, and the masque receives her.] _Eug. _ (_from the boat_) Great nature! speed my dying words! The Mirror of Taste, and Dramatic Censor Volume I, Number 1
  • So any two sanguineous groups must have some difference in their blood, if their blood is part of their essence.
  • By soft degrees it grew and mounted to his brain, there his fancy caught it; there formed it so beautiful, and dressed it up in such gay, pleasing colours, that his transported appetite seized the fair idea, and straight conveyed it to his heart That hospitable seat of life sent all its sanguine spirits forth to meet, and opened all its sluicy gates to take the stranger in. The Beaux-Stratagem
  • But because the blind boy's shaft, designed to work inward ever deeper and deeper until it reached the heart's core, did now but ensanguine itself, he made no cry nor any sign of that sweet hurt. Sir Mortimer
  • a fresh and sanguine complexion
  • This is not to say that Brownmiller has written a sanguine portrait of sisters locking arms in struggle.
  • We believe, teach, and confess that the words of the Testament of Christ are not to be otherwise received than as the words themselves literally sound, so that the bread does not signify the absent absentem Christi sanguinem significent, sed ut propter sacramentalem unionem, panis et vinum vere sint corpus et sanguis Christi. body of The Creeds of the Evangelical Protestant Churches.
  • Imbalance of the humours resulted in various temperaments, thus the dominance of black bile causes melancholy; blood, sanguine temperament; phlegm, a phlegmatic temperament; or yellow bile, a choleric temperament.
  • Individuals who belong to high risk ethnic groups or who are in a consanguineous relationship might also benefit from a genetic evaluation and counseling.
  • All who went out, returned back dispirited from the vain and weary search, and even the most sanguine began to grow sick at heart. Parables From Nature
  • Other important birds are lesser seed-finch (Oryzoborus angolensis), ruddy-breasted seedeater (Sporaphila minuta), slate-colored seedeater (Sporophila schistacea), Guianan piculet (Picumnus minutissimus), blood-coloured woodpecker (Veniliornis sanguineus), and the crimson-hooded manakin (Pipra aureola). Paramaribo swamp forests
  • This, however, is to be observed: that in winter and the colder season, exsanguine animals, such as the snail, show no pulsation; they seem rather to live after the manner of vegetables, or of those other productions which are therefore designated plant - animals. The Harvard Classics Volume 38 Scientific Papers (Physiology, Medicine, Surgery, Geology)
  • Generally, pruning should be done on shrubs which flower before mid-summer as soon as flowering is over, including winter-flowering viburnums and mahonias, Ribes sanguineum, weigela and Spiraea ‘Arguta’.
  • The Mexican press has been more sanguine about the prospects for the Zapatistas.
  • Or, to put it as some aspiring writers might: without embroiling us in superfluous polysemousness, it must be averred that the aesthetic propensities of a vainglorious tome toward prolixity or indeed even the pseudo-pragmatic co-optation — as by droit du seigneur — of an antiquitarian lexis, whilst purportedly an amendment to the erudition of said opuscule and arguably consanguinean (metaphorically speaking) and perhaps even existentially bound up with its literary apprizal, can all too facilely directionize in the azimuth of fustian grandiloquence or unmanacle unpurposed (or even dystelelogical) consequences on a pith and/or douceur de vivre level vis-à-vis even the most pansophic reader. Author! Author! » 2010 » August
  • Quos Sweno, paterni illorum menti oblitus consanguine� pietatis more accepit, puellamque Ruthenorum regi Waldemaro, (qui & ipse Iarislaus a suis est appellatus) nuptum dedit. The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques and Discoveries of the English Nation
  • The difference between what we would have had in cash in 2008 and the buyback was the difference between going through the downturn fairly sanguine and unfortunately having to raise equity. CBRE's Chief Talks Property
  • They are less sanguine about the company's long-term prospects.
  • But a landscape designer's client may be less sanguine about a plant that doesn't do its job for the full twelve months of the year. A Patchwork Garden: Unexpected Pleasures from a Country Garden
  • We are not sanguine that all the conditions can be fulfilled in a timely manner.
  • Crato therefore forbids all spice, in a consultation of his, for a melancholy schoolmaster, Omnia aromatica et quicquid sanguinem adurit: so doth Fernelius, consil. Anatomy of Melancholy
  • * absentem Christi sanguinem significent, sed ut propter sacramentalem unionem, panis et vinum vere sint corpus et sanguis The Creeds of the Evangelical Protestant Churches.
  • It examined the growth of ‘intelligence’ through inventions and discoveries, the development of government from the gens, the development of the family from consanguine to monogamous, and the growth of concepts of property.
  • This would not cut his hat or ensanguine his band. Historical Mysteries
  • Other forces are less sanguine. Times, Sunday Times
  • Utile imprimis noctu faciem illinire sanguine leporino, et mane aqua fragrorum vel aqua floribus verbasci cum succo limonum distillato abluere. Anatomy of Melancholy
  • Hence it is most apt to occur precisely at, and immediately following, that period of life known as matureness, when the sanguineous system becomes fully developed and gains the mastery, so to speak, over the lymphatic and nervous systems. Cotton is King, and Pro-Slavery Arguments Comprising the Writings of Hammond, Harper, Christy, Stringfellow, Hodge, Bledsoe, and Cartrwright on This Important Subject
  • such women carry in their heads kinship knowledge of six generations depth and extending laterally among consanguineal kin as far as the grandchildren of second cousin
  • That this in no way reduces his sanguine view of future economic prospects is as unbelievable as it is disconcerting.
  • Investors were less sanguine in advance of 2013 results today. Times, Sunday Times
  • Impressio tam fortis in spiritibus humoribusque cerebri, ut extracta tota sanguinea massa, aegre exprimatur, et haec horrenda species melancholiae frequenter oblata mihi, omnes exercens, viros, juvenes, senes. Anatomy of Melancholy
  • They, with the sanguine dreams of youth, hoped that the Fronde was the beginning of a better state of things, when all offices should be obtained by merit, never bought and sold, and many of them were inventions of the Court for the express purpose of sale. Stray Pearls
  • Generally, pruning should be done on shrubs which flower before mid-summer as soon as flowering is over, including winter-flowering viburnums and mahonias, Ribes sanguineum, weigela and Spiraea ‘Arguta’.
  • It also found that these consanguineous relationships led to deaths from 'genetic and congenital abnormalities'. Times, Sunday Times
  • Some animals manifestly emit semen, as all the sanguinea, but whether the insects and cephalopoda do so is uncertain. On the Generation of Animals
  • Qui melancholicus factus plane desipiebat, multaque stulte loquebaturr, huic exhibitum 12.gr. stibium, quod paulo post atram bilem ex alvo eduxit (ut ego vidi, qui vocatus tanquam ad miraculum adfui testari possum,) et ramenta tunquam carnis dissecta in partes totum excrementum tanquam sanguinem nigerrimum repraesentabat. Anatomy of Melancholy
  • Buddhism is the pursuit of inner-peace through meditation - through his own, diligent efforts, the Buddhist hopes to arrive at this imperturbable, sanguine state of being.
  • This, however, is to be observed: that in winter and the colder season, exsanguine animals, such as the snail, show no pulsation; they seem rather to live after the manner of vegetables, or of those other productions which are therefore designated plant-animals. On the Motion of the Heart and Blood in Animals
  • Yet Sweeney remains sanguine in the face of such universal naysaying.
  • A growing group of senior lawyers and clients is less sanguine. Times, Sunday Times
  • A less sanguine tone marks the close of the apologue in which Reason and Truth, her daughter, take a triumphant journey in France and elsewhere, about the time of the accession of Turgot. Voltaire
  • On the same principle they cannot be held to be consanguinei of one another, for consanguinei are in a way agnatically related: consequently, they are connected with one another only as cognates, and in the same way too with the cognates of their mother. The Institutes of Justinian
  • Yet despite its high P / E, brokers were sanguine enough about Autonomy's prospects on Friday, and happy to upgrade the software company.
  • Now Brightwell was with her once again, his ensanguined fingers clutching at her head, his lips locked against her lips, the redness of her: red within, red without. The Black Angel
  • That may be too sanguine a view. Times, Sunday Times
  • Some analysts are also more sanguine on the outcome of the case than the pessimists are.
  • Thus deleterious recessives had not been eliminated from the population to the extent that consanguineous matings were harmless in terms of offspring viability.
  • Under less sanguine circumstances, loans are advanced more cautiously.
  • For the most part the letter writers seem sanguine. Times, Sunday Times
  • His eyelids were inflamed, and but served to ensanguine the bitter and cold-blazing intensity of the pupils. CHAPTER XIV
  • A consanguineous sample of 410 Taiwanese mothers and adolescents was drawn from urban schools serving middle-income areas of Taiwan.
  • But Pat Butler, a school governor and a Conservative county councillor, is less sanguine.
  • If you view competition as bad for consumers, you can't have a very sanguine view of their ability to resist corporate come-ons.
  • This does not mean that we can be sanguine about the crisis gripping the eurozone. Times, Sunday Times
  • He and his party have been felled, but he is puzzlingly sanguine. Times, Sunday Times
  • Sir Walter certainly left his "name unstained," unless the serious mistakes natural to a sanguine temperament such as his, are to be counted as stains upon his name; and if they are, where among the sons of men would you find many unstained names as noble as his with such a stain upon it? Sir Walter Scott (English Men of Letters Series)
  • Other economists are more sanguine about the possibility of inflation.
  • Shrub layer include Rosa majalis, Crataegus sanguinea, Sorbus sibirica, Salix caprea, Viburnum opulus, Spiraea media and some others. West Siberian broadleaf and mixed forests
  • In law, the term consanguine is used in place of agnate. Yahoo! Answers: Latest Questions
  • Buffaloes, preferably full-grown bulls, are involved in funerals in two ways: some are contributed by consanguineal relatives and others are lent by affinal kin or even friends.
  • You ask, what if I had slipped from those Marseilles roofs, and been dashed to pieces on the cruel cobbles, or torn asunder by those ensanguined terrorists?" cries he,, swigging champagne and waving a pudgy finger. Watershed
  • Off on pressing business," cried the sanguine youth, as he dashed through the kitchen, frightening Alice, and throwing Toozle into convulsions of delight -- "horribly important business that ` won't brook delay; 'but what _brook_ means is more than I can guess. Gascoyne, the Sandal-Wood Trader
  • People of his “uncongealable sanguine personality,” Sam explained, falling back on his old phrenological diagnosis, were “very apt to go to extremes, and exaggerate.” LIGHTING OUT FOR THE TERRITORY
  • Don't use mixed metaphors, that is, different metaphors in relation to the same subject: "Since it was launched our project has met with much opposition, but while its flight has not reached the heights ambitioned, we are yet sanguine we shall drive it to success. How to Speak and Write Correctly
  • See 24, 31 for the statement on women and children as imperfect men: "Videtur autem femina quasi puer siue mas imperfectus et eius menstrua quasi sperma indigestum, sanguineam formam retinens propter debilitatem caloris. A Tender Age: Cultural Anxieties over the Child in the Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries
  • Aliis apertio haec in hoc morbo videtur utilissima; mihi non admodum probatur, quia sanguinem tenuem attrahit et crassum relinquit. Anatomy of Melancholy
  • The form of body peculiarly subject to phthisical complaints was the smooth, the whitish, that resembling the lentil; the reddish, the blue-eyed, the leucophlegmatic, and that with the scapulae having the appearance of wings: and women in like manner, with regard to the melancholic and subsanguineous, phrenitic and dysenteric affections principally attacked them. Of The Epidemics
  • Conclusions Elderly people with hemafecia and mucosanguineous stools should be examined by coloscopy to find polyps and eliminate malignancy early.
  • I am just indicating to you that you may not be justified in taking an entirely sanguine approach that your client's position is entirely separate.
  • Consanguineous marriages are not new; ask our own royal family. Times, Sunday Times
  • 'Non quia te superi patrio privare sepulchro maluerint, Phariae busto damnantur harenae: parcitur Hesperiae; procul hoc et in orbe remoto abscondat fortuna nefas, Romanaque tellus inmaculata sui servetur sanguine Magni.' The Student's Companion to Latin Authors
  • We have now done with such sanguineous animals as are quadrupedous and also such as are apodous, and have stated with sufficient completeness what external parts they possess, and for what reason they have them. On the Parts of Animals
  • While I do not condone some of the more rapacious acts of Australian companies, I am not so sanguine about local small scale operators either.
  • If your constitution be a salt or sugar one, he will melt you away with damp sheets and duckings; if you are as exsanguine as a turnip, his scientific delight in getting blood out of you will be only heightened. The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 05, No. 32, June, 1860
  • Note 55: Dinant, p. 23: "Dicit autem ARISTOTELES feminam quodammodo esse marem imperfectum et eius menstruum sanguinem esse indigestum sperma; similem superfluitatem esse sperma viri et menstruum sanguinem mulieris excepto quod superfluitas hec maior in femina est et colorem retinet sanguineum propter defectum caloris digerentis." back A Tender Age: Cultural Anxieties over the Child in the Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries
  • Thy milder terrors, Night, I frequent woo, Thy silent lightnings, and thy meteor’s glare, Thy northern fires, bright with ensanguine hue, That light in heaven’s high vault the fervid air. The Romance of the Forest
  • Blood predominated in spring, and a person with a natural excess of blood would have a sanguine physical and psychological humoral constitution, or temperament.
  • Conté sticks and pencils are available in a wide range of colours including the traditional black, white, sepia, bistre and sanguine.
  • Helen Pendennis was a member, bears for a crest, a nest full of little pelicans pecking at the ensanguined bosom of a big maternal bird, which plentifully supplies the little wretches with the nutriment on which, according to the heraldic legend, they are supposed to be brought up. The History of Pendennis
  • When "Southern Chivalry" and the _purity_ of southern society are spoken of now, it is at once replied, that a large number of the slaves show, by their _color_, their indisputable claim to white paternity; and that, notwithstanding their near consanguineous relation to the whites, they are still held and treated, in all respects, _as slaves_. The Anti-Slavery Examiner, Omnibus
  • He declaimed — “This is no longer the time, gentlemen, when civil discord ensanguined our public places, when the landlord, the business-man, the working-man himself, falling asleep at night, lying down to peaceful sleep, trembled lest he should be awakened suddenly by the noise of incendiary tocsins, when the most subversive doctrines audaciously sapped foundations.” Madame Bovary
  • Hic ad iactum lapidis in meridie orauit [‘oraiit’ in source text — KTH] ad suum patrem, et pro vehementi orationis intentione sanguineum exudauit sudorem: atque ibi non remot� videtur tumba regis Iude� Iosaphat, � quo et vallis sibi nomen assumpsit: et credimus in hanc vallem Christum venturum ad nouissimum, et generalissimum iudicium, vbi (Iohele propheta testante) disceptabit de omni actione mortalium. The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques and Discoveries of the English Nation
  • The most obvious is the mating system, which generates ‘short-term’ inbreeding, i.e., inbreeding caused by one or a few generations of consanguineous matings.
  • La vara contiene osteoblast, céllulas que forman huesos del marrón rojo y vasos sanguíneos que llevan nutrimentos al hueso. Al Nacer, Tenemos Como 270 huesos. como adultos tienen 206 huesos
  • Well, she seems pretty sanguine to me. Times, Sunday Times
  • I managed to spit out a stream of the sanguine liquid before dodging just in time to miss her foot.
  • Freudo, on the other hand, is determined to be a more serious, sensual escape behind the seemingly sanguine outer layer of society and into its reprobate nether regions.
  • H. sanguinea ‘Splish-Splash’ is one with showy foliage and bright, showy rose flowers.
  • They would, moreover, have had the supreme satisfaction of knowing that they had not only exceeded the most sanguine anticipations of the devisor of this trust, but, in having solved the problem of dealing with illiterate and indigent masses, they had furnished an object-lesson in political economy of inestimable value to the world. The American Negro: What He Was, What He Is, and What He May Become: A Critical and Practical Discussion

Report a problem

Please indicate a type of error

Additional information (optional):

This website uses cookies to make Linguix work for you. By using this site, you agree to our cookie policy