147 collocations for evolving

"The little black rascal has providently prevented you from evolving another idea.

In the meanwhile, Italian Socialism, which had found a suitable field for action in the unsatisfactory condition of the working class, had evolved a theory of government which, although common to some extent to the Socialists of other countries, was nowhere carried to such lengths as in Italy.

Similarly parents should withdraw their children from the public schools and they must evolve a system of national education or private education totally independent of the Government.

However, as to my first purpose in this adventure I had evolved another plan, and therefore was content.

From what part of the epistle could the expositor have evolved a thought so soothing to tyrantsso revolting to every man who loves his own nature?

'Each nation evolves its own conception of Right (Recht): none can say that one nation has a better conception than another.'

The process would be long, tedious, and unhelpful; for no one could hope to employ a method of such complexity without something of Ibsen's genius; and genius will evolve its methods for itself.

But he had evolved a scheme by which he thought he would succeed in putting Peggy and Roy out of the race altogether.

The intensity of this faith, swaying an energetic race naturally fitted to respond to the great moral forces of the universe, has enabled the Anglo-Saxon to produce the world's greatest literature, to evolve the best government for developing human capabilities, and to make the whole world feel the effect of his ideals and force of character.

Wonderful is the dexterity of Jishnu in evolving this celestial weapon!

But the business of this paper is to discuss things that may happen, and not to evolve dreams of loveliness.

If the disease be present in the fetus, taking hold before birth, and so brought into the world with the child, there evolves the condition of pseudo-hermaphroditism.

I am resorting to non-co-operation in progressive stages because I want to evolve true order out of untrue order.

Its heat, however, was not in proportion to its brightness; for we found that after we had ascended a few miles from the earth, it was becoming much colder, and the Brahmin had recourse to a chemical process for evolving heat, which soon made us comfortable: but after we were fairly in the great aerial void, the temperature of our machine showed no tendency to change.

From this were evolved gradually two distinct forms, one resembling very much some of the simplest of those transparent creatures which the microscope exhibits to us in the water drop, active, fierce, destructive in their scale of size and life as the most powerful animals of the sea and land.

The Decameron fully revealed his genius, his ability to weave the tales of all lands and all ages into one harmonious whole; from the confused mass of legends of the Middle Ages, he evolved a world of human interest and dazzling beauty, fixed the kaleidoscopic picture of Italian society, and set it in the richest frame of romance.

It lasted long enough for Seyavi to have evolved the philosophy of life which I have set down at the beginning.

As a plain matter of cause and effect, what kind of a moral situation would you expect to evolve out of these materials?

They arise in an age that knew not death, and had not reflected on phantasms nor evolved ghosts.

Sir Roderick Murchison, President of the Royal Geographical Society, in 1852, deducing his conclusions from the very fragmentary and imperfect knowledge of Africa then extant, evolved his striking hypothesis as to the physical conformation of the continent, which has been briefly mentioned above and is the accepted fact of to-day.

Our present system cannot be said to have evolved satisfactory principles for the solution of this question; and the socialist commonwealth would have to work out its own solution.

If the English had been on the German side, the German professors would have noted what irresistible energies had evolved the Teutons.

Out of the welter of classes and interests that are not those of the common folk is evolved the thing called Japanese policy that has the proportion and the perspective of a Japanese picture.

"But I do believe that if a person thinks sufficiently hard about it, he or she can almost evolve the figure of a ghost.

But the conference evolved the fact, according to Wampus, that the best and safest roads were for a time along the line of the Santa Fe, directly west; and this would enable them to visit most of the scenes the girls were eager to see.

147 collocations for  evolving