Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

18 Sentences With "enunciations"

How to use enunciations in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "enunciations" and check conjugation/comparative form for "enunciations". Mastering all the usages of "enunciations" from sentence examples published by news publications.

His own manner, with its proper enunciations, can't be placed.
The orchestra's cacophonous use of bass clarinet and horns perfectly matches the performers' enunciations, who move amidst Dion's cabinet of specimens and medical tools like the needle, bone saw, and sponge (which get their own listing song).
By their unprincipled control of the offices of the state and the media, political parties have poisoned the well of representative democratic government to such a point that trust in politicians and the political system is non-existent and their enunciations patently implausible.
In one of the clearest enunciations of this ghostly landscape, the collaged skeleton of an old cash register — which usually sits at the base of an aisle but now forms part of a Back Room installation of Kong's work, selected by artist Jason Lazarus — is a potent container of money and art, use and reuse.
"Cautious as he might be, his enunciations are often quite liberal and are of a Hertzen-like nature," the Russian secret police report maintained.Literaturnoye nasledstvo // The Literary Heritage. - Vols. 51–52, p.
The original songs and film score are composed by Vishal Bhardwaj. The song, "Roshe Valle" was sung live at the shooting spot by actress Tabu as it was a part of her act.Tabu turns singer for Haider Mumbai Mirror Retrieved. 21 August 2014 Actor Sumit Kaul helped actress Tabu get the right enunciations when she sang the folk song.
None of Madhava's works, containing any of the series expressions attributed to him, have survived. These series expressions are found in the writings of the followers of Madhava in the Kerala school. At many places these authors have clearly stated that these are "as told by Madhava". Thus the enunciations of the various series found in Tantrasamgraha and its commentaries can be safely assumed to be in "Madhava's own words".
This sets Foucauldian problematization apart from many other approaches in that it invites researchers to view opposing scientific theories or political views, and indeed contradictory enunciations in general as responses to the same problematization rather than as the manifestations of mutually excluding discourses. It is this level of problematizations and discourses that Foucault refers to when establishing that Foucault's “history of thought” seeks to answer the question of "how [...] a particular body of knowledge [is] able to be constituted?".
W. Rouse Ball (1908) A Short History of Mathematics, fourth editionD. R. Wilkins transcription The book also contains series expansions of sin(x), cos(x), arcsin(x) and arccos(x). Gregory was probably unaware that the earliest enunciations of these expansions were made by Madhava in India in the 14th century. The book was reprinted in 1668 with an appendix, Geometriae Pars, in which Gregory explained how the volumes of solids of revolution could be determined.
Hypoarticulation is one of the interactional-communicative factors in connected speech, and it has long been noted and widely studied as "a reduction of less important tokens in relation to the more important ones." Some features of hypoarticulation include more pronounced enunciations, as well as diminished lip protrusions. Many believe that infant-directed speech contains different characteristics which facilitate learning. However, it is not known for sure whether if the actual speech registers used when communicating when infants and adults differ.
Ayegunle Market(Ohon) is a trade centre for diverse cash crops and staples including coffee, cocoa, yams, cassava, corn (maize), sorghum, shea nuts, peanuts (groundnuts), beans, cotton, and woven cloth produced by the Yoruba, Igbira, Igala, and other peoples of the surrounding area. The natives of Ayegunle Gbedde town, speak a dialect called 'Gbedde' or 'Okun', which is a sub group of the Yoruba. Many easily speak and understand the Yoruba, as the Okun language shares vowels and enunciations with it. Ayegunle Gbede is the second largest community in Gbede land after Ayetoro Gbede.
The Chungcheong dialects of the Korean language are spoken in the Chungcheong (Hoseo) region of South Korea, including the metropolitan city of Daejeon. Chungcheong dialect can be divided into two categories: the Northern Chungcheong dialect, notable for its similarity capital Gyeonggi region speech, and the Southern dialect, which is similar to the Jeolla dialect. This dialect is notable for its slow enunciations, vowel changes, and unique jargon. However, due to the proliferation of Seoul standardization in cities such as Daejon, Chungcheong dialect is difficult to hear outside of the rural regions of the province.
More mixed reviews were critical of Diamandis' vocal delivery. Lou Thomas from BBC Music commented that "over 13 songs of Sparks-voice and many similar staccato piano riffs listeners may feel bludgeoned", and Sean O'Neal of The A.V. Club wrote that after "dozens of squeaky Regina Spektor-ish enunciations" and "Kate Bush trills", the "overbearing need to prove herself just ends up being exhausting". Joe Rivers of No Ripcord praised "Are You Satisfied?", "Hollywood" and "Oh No!" but was put off by sudden "howling" in "Hermit the Frog" and a "throaty growl" in "The Outsider".
During this nearly 6 months period of stay in California he delivered 62 lectures, gave 12 formal and informal talks and also held 8 lecture classes to disciples at his place of stay. His first lecture in this series was on 8 December at Blachard Hall, 233 S Broadway, LA, in which he discussed on "Vedanta Philosophy" or "Hinduism as a religion". He gave lectures on the concept of “The way to the Realization of the Universalization of a Universal Religion” and on “Christ, the Messenger”. Vivekananda interpreted Jesus from the point of view of Vedantic enunciations.
What was preserved of the Ancient Word, according to Swedenborg, are the first eleven chapters of Genesis.Sacred Scripture #103Arcana Coelestia #1403, 1540 The first seven of these chapters were copied verbatim.Sacred Scripture #103 The Bible also refers to various books of the Ancient Church now lost, including the “Wars of Jehovah” (Numbers 21:14-15), “Enunciators” or “Prophetic Enunciations” (Numbers 21:27-30) and the “Book of Jashar” or “Book of the Upright” (Jeremiah 48: 45, 46; 2 Samuel 1:17, 18; Joshua 10: 12, 13).Sacred Scripture #103Arcana Coelestia #2897 Of note is that the stories from the Ancient Word were all made-up history, written in correspondences.
Notwithstanding, the actual existence of this famous praise dates back to a much earlier time and which, according to Dhahiri, Z. (1991), vol. 2, p. 28 [14b]), "fell down from heaven inscribed on a slip of parchment", and which praise contained in it the word "Baruch" ten times, representative of the "ten enunciations" (Heb. ma'amarot) with which God created the universe. See also Saleh, Y. (1993), vol. 1, p. 113. Rabbi David Abudirham, in his seminal work Sefer Abudirham, writes in the name of Rav Amram Gaon that the word "Baruch" should be said fifteen times, signifying the fifteen words in the Birkath Cohenim (Sefer Abudirham, Warsaw 1877, p. 37 [19a]).
The reverse divisor properties of the first two of these numbers, 1089 and 2178, were mentioned by W. W. Rouse Ball in his Mathematical Recreations.. In A Mathematician's Apology, G. H. Hardy criticized Rouse Ball for including this problem, writing: :"These are odd facts, very suitable for puzzle columns and likely to amuse amateurs, but there is nothing in them which appeals to a mathematician. The proofs are neither difficult nor interesting—merely tiresome. The theorems are not serious; and it is plain that one reason (though perhaps not the most important) is the extreme speciality of both the enunciations and proofs, which are not capable of any significant generalization.".
The treatise which has given rise to this subject is the Porisms of Euclid, the author of the Elements. As much as is known of this lost treatise is due to the Collection of Pappus of Alexandria, who mentions it along with other geometrical treatises, and gives a number of lemmas necessary for understanding it. Pappus states: :The porisms of all classes are neither theorems nor problems, but occupy a position intermediate between the two, so that their enunciations can be stated either as theorems or problems, and consequently some geometers think that they are really theorems, and others that they are problems, being guided solely by the form of the enunciation. But it is clear from the definitions that the old geometers understood better the difference between the three classes.

No results under this filter, show 18 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.