Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

11 Sentences With "particularizes"

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

The facility particularizes in redeveloping and manufacturing powdered, nutritional products.
The Christological inflection, however, particularizes these common nouns by the use of the definite article.
He not only boasts of his parentage as an Israelite, but particularizes his descent from Benjamin.
God particularizes, enfleshes, God's very self to an insignificant woman, in an insignificant place, through an insignificant religious tradition.
Then, in Article 6 and 6, it particularizes certain aspects of that right for those charged with a criminal offence.
Devoted to the portrayal of young people, Dawoud Bey increasingly particularizes the humanity of his subjects, a feat more easily said than done.
The judgment particularizes this case as one in which an absence of threats or application of force mitigates the seriousness of the offence.
" Another approach to the subjectlessness is to use the target language's passive voice; but this again particularizes the experience too much. Nouns have no number in Chinese. "If," writes Link, "you want to talk in Chinese about one rose, you may, but then you use a "measure word" to say "one blossom-of roseness." Chinese verbs are tense-less: there are several ways to specify when something happened or will happen, but verb tense is not one of them.
In semantics, and the more- general discourse analysis, discourse is a conceptual generalization of conversation within each modality and context of communication. In this sense, the term is studied in corpus linguistics, the study of language expressed in corpora (samples) of "real world" text. The study of semantics particularizes discourse as meaning the totality of codified language (i.e., vocabulary) used in a given field of intellectual enquiry and of social practice, such as legal discourse, medical discourse, religious discourse, etc.
345–364 and temporality, including Husserl's theory of retention and protention. Merleau-Ponty's description of 'motor intentionality' and sexuality, for example, retain the important structure of the noetic/noematic correlation of Ideen I, yet further concretize what it means for Husserl when consciousness particularizes itself into modes of intuition. Merleau-Ponty's most clearly Husserlian work is, perhaps, "the Philosopher and His Shadow." Depending on the interpretation of Husserl's accounts of eidetic intuition, given in Husserl's Phenomenological PsychologyLectures, Summer Semester, 1925 and Experience and Judgment, it may be that Merleau-Ponty did not accept the "eidetic reduction" nor the "pure essence" said to result.
The stated reason for the order was that hard times had caused "hoarding" of gold, stalling economic growth and worsened the depression. On April 6, 1933, The New York Times wrote, under the headline Hoarding of Gold, "The Executive Order issued by the President yesterday amplifies and particularizes his earlier warnings against hoarding. On March 6, taking advantage of a wartime statute that had not been repealed, he issued Presidential Proclamation 2039 that forbade the hoarding 'of gold or silver coin or bullion or currency', under penalty of $10,000 and/or up to five to ten years imprisonment." The main rationale behind the order was actually to remove the constraint on the Federal Reserve preventing it from increasing the money supply during the depression.

No results under this filter, show 11 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.