Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Philanthropy" ¶ 9
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

tendency and achieved
Other popular shows created during the 1960s that have achieved cult status included a tendency to look at the secret service for inspiration.
Few other Flemish artists achieved comparable international renown, and there was a tendency for Walloon artists to move to France.
The tendency to combine different elements also has a long presence in more classical music: the opera Ero s onoga svijeta, written by Jakov Gotovac in the 1930s, blended the traditional music of the Dinaric peoples into a scholarly form and achieved great success.
The IMT characterises the political situation in Bolivia as being similar to Venezuela, in that both countries are ruled by popular left-wing leaders ; the tendency argues that these leaders must carry out socialist policies including nationalisations in order to safeguard the reforms that have been achieved.
This is achieved by curbing the paper fibers ' tendency to absorb liquids by capillary action.
The layout has a tendency toward being heavier in the rear than the front, which allows for best balance to be achieved under braking.
This is because coverage of second base against a steal is best achieved by whichever fielder is closer to second base, the shortstop or the second baseman ; and such positioning is aimed at defending against the natural tendency of the hitter.
Othering via ideas of ethnocentricity — the belief that one's own ethnic group is superior to all others and the tendency to evaluate and assign meaning to other ethnicities using yours as a standard — is additionally achieved through processes as mundane as cartography.
) According to Aristotle, when we refer to the nature of a thing, we are referring to the form, shape or look of a thing, which was already present as a potential, an innate tendency to change, in that material before it achieved that form, but things show what they are more fully, as a real thing, when they are " fully at work ".

tendency and especially
The arithmetic mean has several properties that make it useful, especially as a measure of central tendency.
In BrE, both irregular and regular forms are current, but for some words ( such as smelt and leapt ) there is a strong tendency towards the irregular forms, especially by users of Received Pronunciation.
In this sense, habitus can be understood as the physical and constitutional characteristics of an individual, especially as related to the tendency to develop a certain disease.
* increased tendency for fractures ( easily broken bones ), especially greenstick fractures
Eventually, tourism increased this tendency even more, especially in the areas of Costa Smeralda, Santa Teresa di Gallura, and San Teodoro.
Given this natural tendency to glide forward, terza rima is especially well-suited to narration and description ".
This is especially common among inexperienced archaeologists who have a tendency to be timid.
Symptoms of SAD may consist of difficulty waking up in the morning, morning sickness, tendency to oversleep and over eat, especially a craving for carbohydrates, which leads to weight gain.
Older fabrics ( especially cotton and low budget synthetic ), have the tendency to stretch with wind pressure which results in distorted and consequently inefficient sail shapes.
In higher education especially, the increasing tendency is to create a Virtual Learning Environment ( VLE ) ( which is sometimes combined with a Management Information System ( MIS ) to create a Managed Learning Environment ) in which all aspects of a course are handled through a consistent user interface standard throughout the institution.
" Marlow, however, focused exclusively on the negative aspects of Gaveston's biography, portraying him – according to Hamilton – as " a sycophantic homosexual with a marked tendency towards avarice, nepotism, and especially overweening pride.
These genera are also outwardly similar in that they each have exceptionally long, delicate legs and toes and the tendency to frequent seasonally wet habitats to forage, especially during chick-rearing.
The language is characterized by a certain " Latinizing " influence in its syntax, especially the tendency to place the verb at the end of the sentence ; as well as other such details, such as the use of the present participle, which bring Amadís into line with the allegorical style of the 15th century.
# marked tendency to engage in quarrelsome behavior and to have conflicts with others, especially when impulsive acts are thwarted or criticized ;
The factors he proposed in his book Dimensions of Personality were Neuroticism ( N ) which was the tendency to experience negative emotions, and the second was Extraversion ( E ) which was the tendency to enjoy positive events, especially social ones.
Much of the criticism originates among Evangelical Christian groups, especially those of a fundamentalist tendency, who believe that witchcraft is a danger to children.
The critical and restraining tendency of Malherbe who preached greater technical perfection, and especially greater simplicity and purity in vocabulary and versification, was a sober correction to the luxuriant importation and innovation of Pierre de Ronsard and La Pléiade, but the lines of praise by Nicolas Boileau-Despréaux beginning Enfin Malherbe vint (" Finally Malherbe arrived ") are rendered only partially applicable by Boileau's ignorance of older French poetry.
In many critical contexts, consumerism is used to describe the tendency of people to identify strongly with products or services they consume, especially those with commercial brand names and perceived status-symbolism appeal, e. g. a luxury car, designer clothing, or expensive jewelry.
Because of osmotic imbalance, concentrated paint applied to a prewetted paper has a tendency to diffuse or expand into the pure water surrounding it, especially if the paint has been milled using a dispersant ( surfactant ).
It has some of the moralistic and didactic tendency of the later French dramatists, especially the younger Dumas, and all of their technical finesse.
The Bible records a struggle between the prophet's attempt to spread pure monotheism, and the tendency of some people, especially rulers such as Ahab, to accept or to encourage others into polytheistic or idolatrous beliefs.
Slight differences in the length or insertion position or strength of the same muscles in the two eyes can lead to a tendency for one eye to drift to a different position in its orbit from the other, especially when one is tired.
In his mayoralty he exhibited clearly his republican tendency and his hatred of the old monarchy, especially on 20 June 1792, when he allowed the mob to overrun the Tuileries and insult the royal family.

tendency and pure
Alexander composed several commentaries on the works of Aristotle, in which he sought to escape a syncretistic tendency and to recover the pure doctrines of Aristotle.
The phenomenon of osmotic pressure arises from the tendency of a pure solvent to move through a semi-permeable membrane and into a solution containing a solute to which the membrane is impermeable.
It differed also from the principles of the pure skeptic in the practical tendency of its doctrines: while the object of the one was the attainment of perfect equanimity, the other seems rather to have retired from the barren field of speculation to practical life, and to have acknowledged some vestiges of a moral law within, at best but a probable guide, the possession of which, however, formed the real distinction between the sage and the fool.
In the course of centuries hence the tendency is formed for literary language to be as much as pure and selective as possible.
The way and the extent to which that need could be satisfied is different in various periods, but the tendency for as pure and selective language can be noted even in Old Dubrovnik writers, and in Vitezović.
The ' tendency ' that I speak of involved extricating the pure life which is dormant in our bodies.
In spite of so much confusion, there exists a well-defined tendency toward simplicity of means, toward clear and solid architecture, toward the pure plastic sense that protects and accents abstract meanings of line, mass, and color, all within a complete liberty of subject and composition …
His, views are colored by strong religious and political prejudice, and by a moralizing tendency, and his historical work has little critical value and is for the most part pure book-making, although he collected a vast amount of material which has been of use to other writers.
There may also arise a tendency towards relativism if the Other, as pure alterity, leads to a notion that ignores the commonality of truth.
Jacob Adler describes it as being written in " pure, simple Yiddish ", avoiding the tendency of many Yiddish historical plays of its time to " Germanize " the Yiddish, especially for Gentile characters, a practice comparable to using many words of Latin origin in one's English.
Vogel is widely known in the scene not just for his efforts to keep Metalcore " pure " and " fun ," but for his love of stagedives, and for his tendency for bizarre and often hilarious on-stage banter, known colloquially as " Vogelisms ".

0.986 seconds.