17 adverbs to describe how to vital

It is essentially vital, even as all objects are essentially fixed and dead.

He followed her, his face uplifted to the scattering drops, moving with a free and faun-like spring that seemed to mark him as a being closely allied to Nature, curiously vital yet also curiously self-restrained.

It must reluctantly be confessed that one of the most fascinatingly vital of them all, Alexandre Dumas, is one of the exceptions, born improvisator as he was; yet immense research, it needs hardly be said, went to the making of his enormous library of romanceeven though, it be allowed, that much of that work was done for him by his "disciples.

He turned behind her, slim, upright, intensely vital, in the morning light.

The peculiarity of transcendental philosophy is its sovereign contempt for merely vital functions like enthusiasm, and its pretension to turn our simple and immediate trusts and faiths into the form of logically mediated certainties, to question which would be absurd.

The railroad was the form of corporation next in point of time to become a great problem; this because of the peculiarly vital and far-reaching effects that such railroad transportation has upon all other kinds of business in the community, as appears in what follows. § 4.

How could one so physically vital, so humanly and divinely full of love, escape the conflict?

In Naples, there is a fashionable new quarter, swept, watered, and garnished with plants and trees, but many of the great palaces stand in old and narrow streets, rising up, grim and solemn and proud, out of the recklessly vital life of one of the worst populaces in the world.

Instead of being able to see only that one type of beauty which first appealed to us, our eyes have become so instructed that we now see the beauty of all the other types as well; and we no longer scorn as Philistine the taste of the man in the street for the beauty that is robustly vital and flamboyantly contoured.

'Water and blood' has, therefore, two meanings in St. John, but which 'in idem coincidunt': 1. true animal human blood, and no celestial ichor or phantom: 2. the whole sentiently vital body, fixed or flowing, the pipe and the stream.

For he was man, and his physical manhood was splendidly, vigorously vital.

What is it that you have gained, I wonder?a sense of atmosphere, breadth, something strangely vital.

During the period covered by the epic, he undergoes an eighth incarnation and it is in connection with this supremely vital intervention that Krishna appears.

The picket fence which set off the back yard of the hotel gave the man an instant of delaya terribly vital instant, indeed, that seemed to Marianne to contain long, long minutes.

Never before has the need for clear ideas, widely understood and consistently sustained, been so commandingly vital.

For he was man, and his physical manhood was splendidly, vigorously vital.

Thus Theophilus Londonderry was partly his father licked into shape and partly something bigger and more effectively vital.

17 adverbs to describe how to  vital  - Adverbs for  vital