107 adverbs to describe how to defines

An indefinite period passed, and it seemed that the arc of fire became less sharply defined.

Curiously enough, it was defined accurately, being exactly in shape like one of the rectangular tin air-shafts you see so often in city hotels.

That into which we next entered was so dark that its form and dimensions were scarcely defined to my eyes.

, be more strictly defined as a spiritual song, a religious lyric (v. Cath, Ency., art.

It was some lack of proportion somewhere, which she could not precisely define; it was something that was out of the common type of faces, but that was disquieting rather than interesting.

Because seriousness drew attention from the spies, the deepest thoughts were masked beneath an air of levity, and merrymaking hid such counsels as might come within the vaguely defined boundaries of treason.

The degree of authority, control, or administration to be exercised by the Mandatory shall, if not previously agreed upon by the Members of the League, be explicitly defined in each case by the Council.

And in the meantime, if it be possible, we must establish a peace that will justly define their place among the nations, remove all fear of their neighbors and of their former masters, and enable them to live in security and contentment when they have set their own affairs in order.

The Latin word glory is expressly defined by Cicero to mean the love, trust, and admiration of the multitude; and a consequent opinion that the man is worthy of honour.

Habit may be defined roughly as the tendency to act time after time in the same way.

Shelley here describes himself under a profusion of characteristics, briefly defined: it may be interesting to summarize them, apart from the other details with which they are interspersed.

It can never be said to end, but the relative amount of play to work gradually defines the life of the school: and so the transitional period merges into the school period.

Christianity, then, requires such slavery as Prof. Hodge so cunningly defines, to be abolished.

Law has been beautifully defined to be "benevolence acting by rule;" to the American slave it is malevolence torturing by system.

Every man of reflection is vaguely conscious of an imperfectly-defined circle which is drawn about his intellect.

Jacob Newell, with a strange look, as though he were gazing at some dimly defined object afar off, slowly spoke, "I have thought sometimes that I should like to know where he lies, if he is dead,or how he lives, if he be living.

Consequently, in a work which he significantly entitles De inventione dialectica, he defines logic as the art of speaking in a probable manner concerning any topic which can be treated in a speech.

In that message the President admitted the difficulty of bringing back the operations of the Government to the construction of the Constitution set up in 1798, and marked it as an admonitory proof of the necessity of guarding that instrument with sleepless vigilance against the authority of precedents which had not the sanction of its most plainly defined powers.

Metaphysically defined, Protection is the natural right, inherent in every American citizen, to obtain money in large quantities for goods of small qualities.

At the command GUARD each man comes to the position of guard, heretofore defined, bayonets crossed, each man's bayonet bearing lightly to the right against the corresponding portion of the opponent's bayonet.

As its breadth did not vary, and the edges were distinctly defined, it was no doubt the sulphureous vapor rising from a river of molten lava.

This great country has produced no administration comprising four greater men than President Washington, the general who had led its armies in a desperate war; Vice-President John Adams, the orator who most eloquently defined national rights; Jefferson, the diplomatist who managed foreign relations on the basis of perpetual peace; and Hamilton, the financier who "struck the rock from which flowed the abundant streams of national credit."

Badly defined with blotches of light; very incomplete.

The early centuries of the Christian era were centuries of keen discussion concerning the Person of our Lord; but the discussions sprang for the most part from the difficulty of rightly defining the true relations of the Divine and the human in the one Person, rather than from the denial of His Divinity; and, as Mr. Gladstone once pointed out, since the fourth century the Christian conception of Christ has remained practically unchanged.

"Matter then, may be defined, a Permanent Possibility of Sensation."John

107 adverbs to describe how to  defines  - Adverbs for  defines