502 collocations for combining

To excel in any work is to combine in that work the most enduring qualities of human labor; to excel in any place is to shine forth with the great qualities of the race.

My aunt presided over her father's household, and the admirable order and good taste which pervaded every department bore witness how well she understood combining the elements of a home.

To keep him at home, and yet to send him to school,to combine the advantages of the two systems,seemed to be everything that could be desired.

" As already mentioned, numerous legendary stories have become interwoven with the myth of the Yggdrasil, the following sacred one combining the idea of tree-descent.

For a light recreation, combining a little business, I recommend his funeral.

It combines the force of the greatest orators with the graces of the first of poets; and in short; is a river to which those justly celebrated lines of Denham may be most pertinently applied: Tho' deep, yet clear; tho' gentle, yet not dull; Strong without rage, without o'erfowing full.

The chief magistrate was not the ealdorman of early English history, but the rex or basileus who combined in himself the functions of king, general, and priest.

His whole structure and appearance, combining beauty and extreme agility with prodigious strength, his ferocity, and his cunning, mark him out as the very type of a beast of prey.

He had combined the two offices of train-boy and conductor.

It is a work which none but a soldier who had served through the war as he had done, and who, moreover, combined with practical experience a thorough knowledge of the science of war, could have written.

Probably a large and pleasantly impecunious family, with one special daughter who combines great practical sense with rare personal charm.

He combined religious feeling with lofty moral sentiment, and had unrivalled power over the realm of astonishment and terror.

In a word, both are deficient in techniquethe concealed art which, when it has combined its materials so that they may accomplish their most impressive effect, causes the total result to command our credulity because it seems typical of human experience.

In our own times, and among civilized peoples, bread has become an article of food of the first necessity; and properly so, for it constitutes of itself a complete life-sustainer, the gluten, starch, and sugar, which it contains, representing azotized and hydro-carbonated nutrients, and combining the sustaining powers of the animal and vegetable kingdoms in one product.

This extremely unsatisfactory condition of telegraph rivalry drifted on from bad to worse until 1854, when, from dire necessity of self-preservation, a few of the more prudent and far-sighted proprietors of telegraph property were induced to combine their interests with some of their competitors and thus avoid the ruinous policy which had been so rapidly exhausting their vitality.

[Footnote 98: Was born in Connecticut but has long resided in New York, where he has combined an active business life with literary pursuitsa favorite contributor to that magazines.

Poetry, to live, must have a soul, and it must combine rare things,art, music, genius, original thought, wisdom made still richer by learning, and, above all, a power of appealing to inner sentiments, which all feel, yet are reluctant to express.

Stanley Hall holds that it is best to combine methods, and probably most of us do this.

If there is a child in the house, it is sure to spot the playful innocent; and by means of an ingenious contrivance combining the principles of the gimlet and the air-pump, it soon relieves the little human bud of its superfluous juices.

Slaves are recognized not merely as property, but also as personsas having a mixed characteras combining the human with the brutal.

which here for the first time combined the arts of architecture, sculpture, and painting in a single organism

The women wear a costume partly Turkish and partly European, combining the graces of both; it is, in my eyes, the most beautiful dress in the world.

The PENTORRENS' are related, by old cavalier stock, to the Dukes of Mandeville, whose present ducal descendant combines the elegance of an Esterhazy with the intellect of an Argyle.

And as kings became proud and secular, probably their palaces became grander and larger,like the palaces of Nebuchadnezzar and Rameses the Great and the Persian monarchs at Susa, combining labor, skill, expenditure, dazzling the eye by the number of columns and statues and vast apartments, yet still deficient in beauty and grace.

They were succeded by Ole Olsen, who combined the talents of orchestral leader with those of composer, chorister, and band leader.

502 collocations for  combining