249 collocations for embodying

Then the judiciary article was taken up, and there was much earnest discussion as to whether the new Constitution should embody the French idea of giving to the judiciary, in conjunction with the Executive, a revisory power over legislation.

* * which I dedicate to the late Political Convention, as embodying the principles there adopted, with this difference, that, while their Resolutions have no point, my resolution enables me to make two points in every line.

" The following remarks, extracted from the Report to the Visitors, with respect to the instrumental equipment of the Observatory, embody the views of the Astronomer Royal at this time: "The utmost change, which I contemplate as likely to occur in many years, in regard to our meridional instruments, is the substitution of instruments of the same class carrying telescopes of larger aperture.

The count was an admirer of Spenser, and appeared to desire to embody the spirit of that poet of the ancient chivalry in the scene which he presented to the view of his illustrious guest when she entered his grounds.

And when the mind is more vigorous and the passion for utterance more intense, he will not be at rest while there is any other medium in which he can embody his conception, be it stone, or metal, or line, or colour, or sound, or measure, or imagery, which under his skilled hand can be made to shadow out his hidden thought and emotion.

Much has been said of the reverence of children for their parents in the East, and tribes of people migrating therefrom, and the fifth commandment embodies the sentiment of the Eastern world.

But the next generation will inherit all that has gone before; and its elect, if they be themselves pure in heart, and individual, that is original, in mind, will, more or less thoroughly, embody the result, in subservience to some new development, essential in its turn to further progress.

To seek for the approval of others, even though they embody our highest ideals, is truly not the loftiest form of aspiration; but it is one round in the ladder which leads to that higher feeling, the desire for the benediction of the spirit-principle within us.

Ideas catch on, however, because of the truth that is in them, not because of the error which is likely to be mixed with it, and even the weakest effort after connection embodies an important truth.

It is a striking feature of these reform agitations, perhaps of every revolutionary movement that has ever been undertaken and accomplished, that they are headed and lead by men whose personal influence embodies the whole power of the organizations, and whose word and command are their supreme law.

But the first and most natural use of speech is simply to express and embody the thought that is in us, not to assert, or affirm, or to instruct others.

These citations embody Mr. Laing's opinions on this point, and show very clearly his utter incapacity for elementary philosophic thought.

It was as we would have had itoffered by a southern senator, advocated by southern senators, and on the ground that it "was no compromise"that it embodied the true southern principlethat "this resolution stood on as high ground as Mr. Calhoun's.

On the present occasion, after uttering a number of these "hums!" Fanny embodied her feelings in words, and replied: "I think, Ralph, you are the most impudent gentleman I have ever known, and you wrong me.

It embodied the best elements and the best ideals of the country and from the first was the one of which the Diaz regime was most afraid.

He burst into tears, and a wild shriek of "O my mothermy poor mother," embodied in speech a portion of the agony which raged in his bosom.

Hamilton's measures as secretary of the treasury embodied an entire system of public policy, and the opposition to them resulted in the formation of the two political parties into which, under one name or another, the American people have at most times been divided.

When I parted at Paris with my New York friend, he bound for Rome, I for the north, we still had our school-boy ideas of Germany, Switzerland and Italy; and I shall never forget the remark which he then made, and which embodied my notions and anticipations perhaps as well as his own.

As a result of this study, he had produced as early as 1854 a design embodying all the essential features of the "Monitor," and this design, shown by a model, was in that year sent to Napoleon III., who was then at war with Russia.

The work embodies a general history of each place of worship in Prestonfuller and more reliable than any yet published; and for reference it will be found valuable, whilst for general reading it will be instructive.

Our ideal is that of the free man, trained in the exercise of his powers and in the command and control of his faculties, who, like Wordsworth's "Happy Warrior" (a poem which embodies the best British educational tradition): ...

For Italy, as a nation and a whole, while imitating other nations in many respects, has again and again refused to listen to any suggestion embodying a law of divorce.

In it he has embodied his philosophy of life,a philosophy far enough removed from the epicurean views which ignorance has ascribed to him,a philosophy which is best described by the term ascetic.

I think you will be willing to hear some lines which embody the subdued and limited desires of my maturity.

But, without enumerating further instances, for they are familiar to most readers, it may be noticed that plants which embody the names of animals are very numerous indeed.

249 collocations for  embodying