812 examples of criticises in sentences

or is it the stern preacher, who criticises all, high and low; priest, dervish, and Mysticyea, even God himself?

He shows the real meaning and end of education, the value of labor and of a purpose in life; he treats of nature, science, art, literature, religion; he defines the purpose of government, showing that soul-life, not money or trade, is the measure of national greatness; and he criticises the general injustice of his age, quoting a heartrending story of toil and suffering from the newspapers to show how close his theory is to daily needs.

He rejects, however, the autonomy of the will and the spontaneity of thought; and though he criticises the Cartesian separation between the thought of the creator and that of the creature, he as little approves the pantheistic identification of the twohuman cognition participates in the divine, without constituting a part of it.

* Alexander Smith (1830-1867) was a poet and essayist of some distinction; though A. H. Clough also criticises his exclusive devotion to the "writers of his own immediate time"; and calls him "the latest disciple of the school of Keats."

In her Westminster Review article on "Evangelical Teaching" as presented in Young's Night Thoughts, she criticises the following declaration: "Who tells me he denies his soul immortal, What'er his boast, has told me he's a knave.

387; changes in it, iii. 172, n. 2; criticises it himself, iii. 257, n. 3; easier in his poems than his prose, v. 17; female writing, ill-suited for, i. 223; formed on Temple and Chambers, i. 218; on writers of the seventeenth century, i. 219; Gallicisms, dislikes, iii. 343, n. 3; imitations of it, by Barbauld, Mrs., iii. 172; Burney, Miss, iv.

280; Prologue, criticises, iv.

57; Goldsmith's History of England, supposed to have written, i. 412, n. 2; History of Henry II, Johnson criticises it to the King, ii. 38; thirty years spent on it, iii. 32; punctuation, ib.; kept back for fear of Smollett, iii. 33; its whiggism, ii. 221; Hume's Scotticisms, ii. 72, n. 2; Johnson, Life by, iv.

142; witticism, fathers on Foote, ii. 410, n. 1; Johnsonianissimus, i. 7, n. 2; Literary Club, a member of the, i. 479; iv. 326; Milton's imagination of cheerful sensations, iv. 42, n. 6; 'one of the best critics of our age,' i. 180, n. 1; v. 78, n. 5, 361, n. 1, 399, n. 4; Parnell's Hermit, explains a passage in, iii. 393, n. 1; Piozzi's, Mrs., Anecdotes, criticises, iv.

41-2; admiration of his blank verse, iv. 42, n. 7; blazon of his excellence, iv. 40; does him 'illustrious justice,' i. 227, 230-1; criticises minor poems, iv. 99, n. i, 305; Samson Agonistes, i. 231, n. 2; earlier and later estimates of him, ii. 239; supposed enmity to him, i. 230; ii. 239, n. 2; iv.

49; imitations, fondness for, i. 118, n. 5; intimidated by prosecution of P. Whitehead, i. 125, n. 3; Johnson criticises his Ode on St. Cecilia's Day, iv.

312, n. 5; formal endings of letters, criticises, v. 239; good, but a liar, iv.

SOUTH, Dr. Robert, Johnson criticises his Sermons, iii. 248; recommends his Sermons on Prayer, ii. 104.

TALBOT, Miss Catharine, correspondence with Mrs. Carter, i. 232, n. 1; Greenwich Park, describes, i. 106, n. 2; Rambler, contributes to the, i. 203; criticises it, i. 208, nn. 2 and 3; Williams, Mrs., account of, i. 232, n. 1.

THICKNESSE, Philip, criticises Smollett, iii. 235-6.

TOWNSHEND, fourth Viscount (afterwards first Marquis), i. 437, n. 2. TOWNSHEND, Right Hon. Charles, Akenside, friendship with, iii. 3; 'Champagne Speech,' ii. 222, n. 3; jokes and wit, ii. 222; ib., n. 3; Kames, Lord, criticises, ii. 90, n. 1.

The reformed system which has taken its place at Oxford criticises, not without some justice, the limitations of the older one; the narrow range of its interests, the few books which men read, and the minuteness with which they were "got up."

I have never, even by implication, put such a problem, and there is nothing in the article which he criticises, nor in any other statement of my own, that justifies it.

Nothing has astonished me more than the fact that the "practical" man who despises "theories" nearly always criticises Pacifism because it is not an absolute dogma with all its thirty-nine articles water-tight.

He compares, weighs, criticises, and endeavours to get at the truth of the thing, and in this way resembles the critical historian.

xx. of the Asiatic Journal wherein he criticises the religion and philosophy of the Chinese.

The one who criticises conditions is a disturber and a traitor.

I mean that there is something which criticises even the conscience.

She will then forget her imaginary losses, and will listen with amusement and interest while a smooth-faced lad criticises with as much severity as he can command in the intervals of his cigarettes the dress, appearance, and general character of a lady whom she happens to dislike.

For some reason his book is so arranged that he criticises 'Spiritualism' long before he puts forward his doctrine of the origin and development of the belief in spirits.

812 examples of  criticises  in sentences