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"rarefy" Definitions
  1. to make rare, thin, porous, or less dense : to expand without the addition of matter
  2. to make more spiritual, refined, or abstruse
  3. to become less dense

20 Sentences With "rarefy"

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

Of course it's serious, and art is serious, but I'm not going to rarefy it.
Almost everyone fails on them: supersede, naphtha, tranquillity, liquefy, sacrilegious, kimono, paraffin, rarefy, picnicking, battalion.
Would an atmosphere perfumed by these Eastern woods clarify and rarefy our denser Occidental minds?
The air consequently was damp and gross, for want of stronger rays to open and rarefy it.
In this panorama, not only that the sense of universality does not rarefy, it is, indeed, drawn by deeper breaths.
A completely pure race doesn't exist: there are always some recessive genes which the selection can rarefy but never totally eliminate.
The echoes shrieked and barked, the hissing balls seemed actually to rarefy the air, and then opaque smoke filled the vault.
But if warm dry winds blow upon the clouds, they rarefy the vapour to a greater degree, and temporarily disperse the clouds.
The rarefy of the atmosphere continued to affect the wood-work of the wagons, and the wheels were incessantly falling to pieces.
Their progress in a scientific career is slower than that of men and their numbers start to rarefy as we climb the ladder of responsibilities.
But as such means are not at disposal, it becomes necessary to place the terminal in a bulb and rarefy the air in the same.
But as such means are not at disposal, it becomes necessary to place the terminal in the bulb and rarefy the air in the same.
The primary activity of warmth is to move fast and to dilate and rarefy matter, whereas that of cold is to hinder movement and to condense matter.
Aræotics, in pre-modern medicine, were remedies believed to open up the sweat pores of the skin. Such treatments were also believed to rarefy the humours, rendering them easy to be carried off by the pores. To the class of aræotics belonged diaphoretics, sudorifics, etc.
Hotaka-Roth, J. (2002) Brokered Homeland: Japanese Brazilian Migrants in Japan. Cornell University Press. p. 127 Popular television dramas, comedy and documentary now "rarefy an often idealised notion of the Edokko, with the same intensity and nostalgia afforded an endangered species".Buckley, S. (2002) "Shitamachi", in Encyclopedia of contemporary Japanese culture.
The profession of the Konditor developed from that of the baker. Once the bakers of medieval times (15th century) mastered the art of baking bread, some started to rarefy the dough with honey, dried fruits and spices. These specialists called themselves Lebküchler, Lebküchner or Lebzelter. They founded a guild in 1643 in the area in and around Nürnberg, Germany.
These holds may be voiceless, voiced, or nasalized. Then lower the body of the tongue to rarefy the air above it. The closure at the front of the tongue is opened first, as the click "release"; then the closure at the back is released for the pulmonic or glottalic click "accompaniment" or "efflux". This may be aspirated, affricated, or even ejective.
"Being moist, shapes can be readily fashioned (with it), and as easily lost (and resolved)." #The Air The position of Air above Water and beneath Fire is "due to its relative lightness". It is "hot and moist", and its effect is to "rarefy" and make things "softer". #The (sphere of the) Fire Fire is higher than the other elements, "for it reaches to the world of the heavens".
This > being placed against the sun, causes its rays to converge in the centre, > which, by reflection, acquiring the force and activity of fire, rarefy the > air, and immediately kindle such light and dry matter as they think fit to > apply. (tr. Langhorne 1821 1: 195) Allowing the sacred fire to die out was a serious dereliction of duty: it suggested that the goddess had withdrawn her protection from the city. Vestals guilty of this offence were punished by a scourging or beating. The sacred fire burned in Vesta's circular temple, built in the Roman Forum below the Palatine Hill in pre-republican times.
This > being placed against the sun, causes its rays to converge in the centre, > which, by reflection, acquiring the force and activity of fire, rarefy the > air, and immediately kindle such light and dry matter as they think fit to > apply. (tr. Langhorne 1821 1: 195) The striking contemporaneity of the first burning-mirror references in Chinese and European literature, probably indicates the spread in both directions of a technique originally Mesopotamian or Egyptian (Needham and Wang 1962: 88). In ancient India, the physician Vagbhata's Ashtānga hridayasamhitā mentions using burning-mirrors twice, to grind certain drugs on it, and to cauterize a rat bite wound (Laufer 1915: 220). Abu'l-Fazl ibn Mubarak's history of the Mughal emperor Akbar (r.

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