297 examples of adjunct in sentences

<Junct> (join): (1) junction, juncture, injunction, disjunctive, conjugal, adjust; (2) adjunct, conjunction, subjunctive, conjugate.

Its young leaves and flowers are of a slightly hot nature, and many consider them a good adjunct to salads, to which they certainly add a pretty appearance.

A more economical sauce may be made by using a smaller quantity of oysters, and not bearding them before they are added to the sauce: this may answer the purpose, but we cannot undertake to recommend it as a mode of making this delicious adjunct to fish, &c. PARSLEY AND BUTTER, to serve with Calf's Head.

HOT SPICE, a Delicious Adjunct to Chops, Steaks, Gravies, &c. 524.

So we find ourselves on the following evening in the only theatre in the country where that rather important adjunct of a theatrea companyis to be found, There are quantities of elegant dresses in the house,the ladies having an idea that an old comedy is one of those things which every fashionable person ought to see.

I said that a town was a useful adjunct for a farm; but I laid it down as a principle that no town should be too near a farm.

I subsequently donned one myself, and found it an admirable adjunct to easy travelling.

Accompaniment N. accompaniment; adjunct &c 39; context; appendage, appurtenance.

"Canarie-wine, which beareth the name of the islands from whence it is brought, is of some termed a sacke, with this adjunct, sweete; but yet very improperly, for it differeth not only from sacke in sweetness and pleasantness of taste, but also in colour and consistence, for it is not so white in colour as sack, nor so thin in substance; wherefore it is more nutritive than sack, and less penetrative.

But here, though that "adjunct of civilization" was directly across the way, most likely it had never had a stove in it.

As an adjunct to the carriage he is peculiarly suitable, for in fine weather he will follow between the wheels for long distances without showing fatigue, keeping easy pace with the best horses.

It is not proposed to describe under this heading examples of those athletic and gymnastic performances following the death of a person which have been described by Lafitau, but simply to call attention to a practice as a secondary or adjunct part of the funeral rites, which consists in gambling for the possession of the property of the defunct.

A small garden, an adjunct of the hotel, shows what the soil and climate of Del Mar is capable of producing.

The adjective is an adjunct to the noun or pronoun.

For the leading word in sense, should not be made the adjunct in construction.

An adjunct is "something added to another, but not essentially a part of it.

Nor does the uncouthness of an objective pronoun with the leading word in sense improperly taken as an adjunct, prove that a participle may properly take to itself a possessive adjunct, and still retain the active nature of a participle.

Nor does the uncouthness of an objective pronoun with the leading word in sense improperly taken as an adjunct, prove that a participle may properly take to itself a possessive adjunct, and still retain the active nature of a participle.

In W. Day's "Punctuation Reduced to a System," a work of no inconsiderable merit, this principle is disallowed; and even when the adjunct of the nominative is a relative clause, which, by Rule 2d below and its first exception, requires a comma after it but none before it, this author excludes both, putting no comma before the principal verb.

We spend all our energies in heaping up the means of life, and never really begin to live; our strength is wasted, our health is broken, our intellects are impoverished, our affections are withered, our peace is destroyed in our mad devotion to that which is only an adjunct or appendage of life.

Now the cardinal is of a character the very opposite to that of this adjunct of his.

But, oh, I do believe that if people did but accustom themselves to view small things as parts of large, moments as parts of life, intellects as parts of men, lives as parts of eternity, religion would cease to be the mere adjunct which it now is to many.

This led to the marked differences in rank and importance which existed between the various bishoprics, and in the tenth century, when the temporal power became in many cases an adjunct to the spiritual, caused some bishops to become powerful temporal princes, while others, unable to gain this pre-eminence, remained simply spiritual heads of their respective dioceses.

You can't get a Midway any too near the anthropological and ethnological sections; a cinematograph might be operated as an adjunct to the Fine Arts building; a hula-hula dancer would relieve the monotony of a succession of big pumpkins and prize squashes.

If this adjunct be lost or mislaid the stone is less amenable to transit and almost useless for its original purpose.

297 examples of  adjunct  in sentences