How To Use Subsume In A Sentence

  • However, the commission also subsumes the precautionary principle under a broader framework of risk analysis.
  • Like Misael in La Libertad, Vargas is a nonactor whose character carries his real-life name, but whose being is subsumed more intensely and intensively into Alonso's fiction. Artforum.com
  • The older I get, the less I want to subsume my entire life's work and hopes into some poor small person who would have done nothing to deserve the resentment I would surely feel. Tick Tock that Biological Clock - Feministing
  • Contemporary law classified married and under-aged women as non-persons, their identities being subsumed under that of their husband or father.
  • But now everything she had once seen as colourful, lyrical, dramatic, even, was subsumed into a vast, unquenchable litany of light. MR GOLIGHTLY'S HOLIDAY
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  • While has been completely subsumed by the with a whimper not a bang bowing out of Belle de Jour.
  • Infact, after controlling for regional heterogeneity, any one of these three variables is sufficient to subsume the impact of regime type on wars, militarized interstate disputes (MIDs), and fatal disputes. Moral and Mental Development, Arnold Kling | EconLog | Library of Economics and Liberty
  • After that the two alliances might be subsumed into a new European security system.
  • It is a kind of enveloping void that subsumes the senses into a kind of frozen present.
  • By the time you read this, the two days of riots I'm referring to might have swollen into a major crisis -- or they might have been subsumed and forgotten in the din and onrush of mayhem in Libya and Syria, radiation in Japan or whatever's next. Ethan Casey: Terry Jones' America Is A Dangerous Place To Be
  • There will be no more political lapdogs subsumed by the larger party, but a mutually beneficial arrangement that serves the nation's interests.
  • What she wants or does not want is subsumed in absolute indifference and the great overarching project of finding the perfect negation of ego.
  • Both very old and very new, the permanent diaconate dates to the New Testament, but later became subsumed as a stepping-stone to the priesthood. As Priests Decline, Deacons Step In
  • dwarfish", subsumed to their mode of transport, or scattered about - as are the backpackers outside Venice station in Vertigo - like corpses. The Guardian World News
  • 4. Council of Chalcedon (451); repudiated the Eutychian doctrine of monophysitism (the human nature subsumed in the one divine nature of Jesus) and delineated the two natures of Christ, human and divine. Notes from my CCU presentation
  • Race, gender, appearance, body language, rictal spouses and offspring, even bursts of tragic grandeur, are all subsumed by marketing and "image-making", now magnified by "virtual" technology. Archive 2008-06-01
  • For MG, his clash with the cosmopolitan forces of capitalism and Communism are merged--they are both the grinning face of the devil, and they are absorbed & subsumed in the person of some ancient deicidal tribe. Philocrites: That 14th-century religion.
  • A wide range of offences are usually subsumed under the category of robbery.
  • Clearly the aesthetic and technical problems of literary production had been conveniently neglected and subsumed within a strategically advantageous ideological reference system.
  • Technocratic bad ideas tend to co-opt and subsume the elites and those with money and power. What's Wrong With DeLong?, Bryan Caplan | EconLog | Library of Economics and Liberty
  • All three of these diagnoses were once subsumed under the now obsolete name hysteria. Trauma and Recovery
  • All the statistics have been subsumed under the general heading 'Facts and Figures'.
  • It subsumes both the movements of empathy and of repulsion toward an object implicit in pity and fear.
  • the application may subsume the role of the coordinator at which point it becomes less and less clear why the protocol is needed at all above and beyond the business logic itself.
  • This creature can be subsumed in the class of reptiles.
  • All these different phenomena can be subsumed under just two broad categories.
  • The name is half real, half invention - an old family surname, subsumed to a middle name, it ultimately became a forename.
  • All three of these diagnoses were once subsumed under the now obsolete name hysteria. Trauma and Recovery
  • Life itself is the adversary; the vagaries of history and politics are subsumed by the brute metaphysic of the real.
  • Often, these people subsume their own needs into looking after others, so contravening perhaps the central tenet of modern life - self-advancement.
  • Business leaders would lose no time in pointing out the obvious: that for business to succeed it has to be keenly attuned to a market place that subsumes myriad customer tastes, concerns and preferences.
  • Additionally, the grudging acceptance of the Welsh victory was subsumed beneath an avalanche of regurgitated nonsense on qualification from the previous week.
  • And what Kamat calls "Prakrit" actually subsumes various Indo-Aryan languages all over the subcontinent, many of which must have been, by the time of Christ, less mutually intelligible with each other than Tamil was from Kannada at that time. Languagehat.com: HISTORY OF KANNADA.
  • Sociologists talk about 'deindividuation', the loss of self-awareness and personal identity that happens to someone subsumed in a crowd. Times, Sunday Times
  • Contemporary law classified married and under-aged women as non-persons, their identities being subsumed under that of their husband or father.
  • More than a century of proud history will soon come to an ignominious end when these mutually owned lenders are subsumed into larger rivals. Times, Sunday Times
  • After that the two alliances might be subsumed into a new European security system.
  • All three of these diagnoses were once subsumed under the now obsolete name hysteria. Trauma and Recovery
  • Thus, a sudden evolutionary spurt is always subsumed within the overall processes of evolution, which are for the most part gradual.
  • However, these utopian dreams were soon subsumed by the demands of the Party, which held a more totalizing conception of art.
  • Soldiers from many different countries have been subsumed into the United Nations peace-keeping force.
  • There's a danger that this stand in defence of reason could be subsumed by some of the other unreasonable trends of our time.
  • C.R.W. Nevinson is synonymous with a spiky, geometric English Futurism, but the three mezzotints in the British Museum of cityscapes have a gorgeous inky blackness out of which roofs in his typical style are all but subsumed.
  • At times of heightened threat perception, the assertion of values mounts and subsumes careful calculation of interests.
  • The method consists in extrapolating from concrete relations those properties which can be directly subsumed under these higher order abstractions.
  • But the Macanese — as this former Portuguese colony's mixed-race residents are called — are threatened by a demographic tide that could subsume their culture.
  • There's a danger that this stand in defence of reason could be subsumed by some of the other unreasonable trends of our time.
  • They preserve their heritage but subsume its display under the broader complexion of Singapore nationalism.
  • The method consists in extrapolating from concrete relations those properties which can be directly subsumed under these higher order abstractions.
  • Two subsumptively unified states will have what they call a conjoint phenomenology: a phenomenology of having both states at once that subsumes the phenomenology of the individual states: The Unity of Consciousness
  • Her orgasm, once again calibrated to her aesthetic sensitivity, subsumes the reader, transferring pleasure from body to sight to word and back again with seamless ease. How to Do the History of Pornography: Romantic Sexuality and its Field of Vision
  • Flat-out work subsumed normal existence to the extent that the cast barely believed they were living in the metropolis at all.
  • A wide range of offences are usually subsumed under the category of robbery.
  • Soldiers from many different countries have been subsumed into the United Nations peace-keeping force.
  • All three of these diagnoses were once subsumed under the now obsolete name hysteria. Trauma and Recovery
  • More than a century of proud history will soon come to an ignominious end when these mutually owned lenders are subsumed into larger rivals. Times, Sunday Times
  • This is one of the most complete overviews of what may be subsumed under the rubric of psychokinesis, the parapsychological term for the influence of mind over matter without using any sensory modalities.
  • After that the two alliances might be subsumed into a new European security system.
  • In this state of affairs one wonders why such a regime is subsumed under the heading of democracy and not domination?
  • After that the two alliances might be subsumed into a new European security system.
  • All subsequent war has been subsumed in a rite which we know to be unauthentic.
  • The truth about Custer --- which is to say one of the truths about him --- that Berger is getting at through Jack Crabb is that Custer was intensely charismatic and he had that ability charismatic leaders have of convincing other people to subsume their egos in his and to start seeing the world the way they do, as being all about and for them. A post that requires you to accept that I can do a passable impersonation of Dustin Hoffman in Little Big Man
  • Here the last vestiges of the figurative, a few delicately poised hands, flowers and shells, are subsumed into patterned and highly coloured surfaces of glazes, scumbles, impasto, sgraffito, stipples, dots and splodges of paint.
  • It subsumes mountain ranges, valleys and flatlands at an elevation range of more than 6,000 feet.
  • Note the capitalization of ‘Racial Groups’ --the categories of Otherness implied by this umbrella term are themselves subsumed by the exaltation of the metacategory.
  • Ms. Sussman, who was born in England in 1961 but lives and works in Brooklyn, has the ability to subsume viewers in opulence with images as thick and sweet as molasses. Taking Senses to the Extreme
  • This is one of the most complete overviews of what may be subsumed under the rubric of psychokinesis, the parapsychological term for the influence of mind over matter without using any sensory modalities.
  • I asked a question about what happens when one singularity in the antagonism is subsumed or occupied by those who are meant to represent the third singularity.
  • But Claude Cohn-Casson has been subsumed by their physical selves, right here in the room, as sexy as hell.
  • (Symposium III, 6), all use hyponoia to mean what is later subsumed under allegory (Pépin, pp. 85-86). Dictionary of the History of Ideas
  • These three mezzotints have a gorgeous inky blackness out of which roofs in his typical style are all but subsumed.
  • Liz did not think she would have minded her investigation into Crossland's whereabouts being subsumed into the wider Carver enquiry. DEATH AND TRANSFIGURATION
  • Fake It So Real" captures a week in the life of this rough-and-tumble fraternity of small-town head crushers, allowing generous elbow room for sometimes ridiculous, sometimes heart-tugging swerves of eccentricity as individual struggles are subsumed by the communal glory of the big match. Repertory Film: No-Holds-Barred Cinema
  • The opposite of secret laws is openly specified, written down laws, and a strong form of that, which subsumes e.g. the rule of lenity and the prohibition on ambiguous criminal laws, is something like: nobody should be convicted of a crime unless it was unambiguously written in a law, which they could (at least in theory) read, that their behavior was criminal. The Volokh Conspiracy » Debating Textualism
  • Soldiers from many different countries have been subsumed into the United Nations peace-keeping force.
  • As so often is the case in musical biopics, the available historical facts are subsumed by the narrative exigencies of the genre.
  • A statement which so mischaracterised the nature of the relationship between any supporters and their national side that it threatened to subsume all legitimate definitions of trust into its black hole of idiocy. Why John Terry has done his 'fronting up' for the last time | Marina Hyde
  • Having transformed vagabondage into an adventure of capitalism and empire, the men go on to subsume other ‘primitive’ practices within the collective capacity of modern white culture.
  • What she wants or does not want is subsumed in absolute indifference and the great overarching project of finding the perfect negation of ego.
  • The sculptor subsumes his own artistic personality into this collective whole.
  • These sensor contracts were subsumed as subcontracts by the A&O contract with a single prime contractor having overall system performance responsibility.
  • It's at the coast that the tensions of small-town life are subsumed by the thrill and excitement of surging surf.
  • Informed sources, however, say it appears clear that the Commonwealth does have the power to subsume the state industrial relation systems.
  • A wide range of offences are usually subsumed under the category of robbery.
  • The key message is the futility of trying to cod us that our various national identities can somehow be subsumed into something called the European Union.
  • And finally, "A few collections of essays on novelists or various aspects of fiction have been especially valuable because of the attitudes torwards fiction that subsume them: 2009 August 10 | NIGEL BEALE NOTA BENE BOOKS
  • He spent the second half of his career trying to poke holes in the theory and to subsume it in a unified theory that would restore certainty and determinism to physics.
  • The pain of his struggles to remain true to his vows slowly subsides, and he and Margaret achieve a peace in which passion is subsumed in the love of God.
  • After that the two alliances might be subsumed into a new European security system.
  • Three important elements are subsumed under the first branch of the test.
  • From the standpoint of a diversified portfolio, the individual component instruments subsume into the overall performance.
  • Funk, reggae, hip hop, electro, acoustic drum 'n' bass and the rhythms of música nordestina are all subsumed into an unclassifiable but very soulful whole.
  • This is yet another step along the way to the ultimate goal of the European Union where nation states are subsumed into a federal European super state.
  • The thriller plot is fragmented, subsumed in absurdist detail and consistently mapped onto the struggle between body and landscape.
  • In this light, the final series of kilims stands as a summa, dense and comprehensive in its references but, perhaps unavoidably, less agile, less beguiling than the individual works whose many themes it subsumes.
  • Technocratic bad ideas tend to co-opt and subsume the elites and those with money and power. What's Wrong With DeLong?, Bryan Caplan | EconLog | Library of Economics and Liberty
  • His larger vision is often subsumed in the interconnected, disconnected families whose lives he's chronicling.
  • The duties of a Buddhist monk are subsumed, and, by extension, so is his connection to the master monk.
  • He's yin to the yang of DLH's narrator, whose personality subsumes the world into bit players in the movie of his life.
  • In the post-war world the fireside has been split apart, indeed subsumed to the kitchen.
  • Liz did not think she would have minded her investigation into Crossland's whereabouts being subsumed into the wider Carver enquiry. DEATH AND TRANSFIGURATION
  • All the statistics have been subsumed under the general heading 'Facts and Figures'.
  • So how about we subsume “states rights” within the general concept of “subsidiarity”? Coyote Blog » Blog Archive » Post-War Devastation
  • This perceived omnivorousness aggravates specialists such as Williams who have painstakingly developed unique disciplines only to see them apparently subsumed under ‘permaculture.’
  • The opposite of secret laws is openly specified, written down laws, and a strong form of that, which subsumes e.g. the rule of lenity and the prohibition on ambiguous criminal laws, is something like: nobody should be convicted of a crime unless it was unambiguously written in a law, which they could at least in theory read, that their behavior was criminal. The Volokh Conspiracy » Debating Textualism
  • subsume" the least of individual things except in so far as the material element which is its body would surround all living things and bring them into contact with one another. The Complex Vision
  • Even the taking of the Eucharist is an alchemical ritual, in which the divine body is subsumed into the individual body in order to bring the individual into closer contact with the divine. Josh Schrei: The Crucible Gone Cold: Modern Yoga, Christianity, and the Practice of Individual Transformation
  • Profits from a trade of operating a quarry (selling stone, shale etc) should not be subsumed into general farming profits.
  • This new system subsumes the old one
  • This trajectory was clear, but complex visual practices oftentimes were subsumed by conceptual discussions or uncritical formal analyses.
  • All three of these diagnoses were once subsumed under the now obsolete name hysteria. Trauma and Recovery
  • The challenge for the poet, of course, is to rethink these pressures, through poems and a poetics that reassess the potency of the dominant lyric mode, and go beyond a simplistic view of the political as extricable from art, or art as totally subsumed by politics. YOU ARE HERE by MABI DAVID
  • The method consists in extrapolating from concrete relations those properties which can be directly subsumed under these higher order abstractions.
  • People from more than a hundred different nationalities and as many cultural and ethnic origins were subsumed under a single national identity in Israel.
  • After that the two alliances might be subsumed into a new European security system.
  • White suggested that causal beliefs subsume the notion of causal mechanism, but also include other concepts such as causal power, releasing condition, and liability.
  • All three of these diagnoses were once subsumed under the now obsolete name hysteria. Trauma and Recovery
  • For me, at least, and surely for many others, perhaps more than is realized offhand, the entirety of the song is needed, and the entirety subsumes the particulars.
  • Disparities between the haves and the have-nots are subsumed in false responses.
  • But in the world of professional cooking, learning requires you to subsume yourself and your ego in the undifferentiated mass that labors at the bottom of the kitchen hierarchy. The Sorcerer’s Apprentices
  • Beast, 2005, a snouty, projecting recent wall-piece, was among the most sculptural works on view, with the laboriously reconfigured branches completely subsumed by a singular, arresting form.
  • It is even unclear whether the individual contributors see their particular expertise being subsumed into this new academic category.
  • He talks at great length about how the right-wing evangelical movement has completely subsumed the progressive/liberal wing of evangelicism. The casual assumption of privilege - The Panda's Thumb
  • It is even unclear whether the individual contributors see their particular expertise being subsumed into this new academic category.
  • Conflicting class and ethnic interests could only be successfully negotiated and subsumed within a constructed British sodality by their hostile alterity to various others defined in national, religious, or racial terms. The Ruins of Empire: Nationalism, Art, and Empire in Hemans's Modern Greece
  • It was a nightmare world in which human individuality was subsumed under the might of totalitarian collectivism.
  • This process of reasoning is "deontological" -- that is, it cannot be subsumed under a simple model of maximizing rationality. Social agency and rational choice
  • Failure to support the hypothesis cannot be construed as disproof, but it docs indicate that the hypothesis subsumes significant underlying variations in the structures it homologizes.
  • Many of the old cases could indeed be subsumed within the new doctrine, but it does not cover them all.
  • Directed toward a communally valorized symbol, however, Herbert's private grief is externalized and subsumed by the broader tradition of which it is but a part.
  • The recent ruling disingenuously uses the fact that the two roles are played by the same person to say that the roles are no different, that the one subsumes the other.
  • It subsumes mountain ranges, valleys and flatlands at an elevation range of more than 6,000 feet.
  • If your later needs exceed the abilities that these components expose, then you can create specialized components that subsume the functionality in these.

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