375 examples of recipient in sentences

It was necessary for the recipient of the money to be identified, and this Betty's cousin, who knew the operator, agreed to look after.

"It's all your fault, sor!" declared Major Doyle, selecting the little millionaire as the safest recipient of his displeasure.

Louise was the recipient of innumerable merry "showers" from her girl associates, and her cousins, Patsy and Beth, followed in line with "glass showers" and "china showers" until the prospective bride was stocked with enough wares to establish a "house-furnishing emporium," as Uncle John proudly declared.

It doesn't seem to deprive the giver of much, or to strain the pride of the recipient unduly.

"Giving depends upon the recipient, you know.

The other falls, after a while, into a passive state, becomes the mere recipient of love, and finds his or her happiness in something else, or perhaps does not find it at all.

Is there not in this some suggestion of what may again be established as an incentive and a reward, and as well, as a vital agency for the reorganization of society? Knighthood is personal, and is for the lifetime of the recipient.

God offers the free gift of religion and of faith to every child of man, but the recipient must cooperate if the gift is to be accepted.

Besides these, he was the recipient of numbers of memorials and mementoes, and of such praise in every form as might well have disturbed the equilibrium of a mind less well balanced.

who understands the kingly art of showing the recipient that all merit is powerless and unavailing against the royal grace and favor.

This then is the true mystery, because the true unique; that the Son of God has origination without passion, that is, without ceasing to be a pure act: while a created entity is, as far as it is merely creaturely and distinguishable from the Creator, a mere 'passio' or recipient.

Many, therefore, of the physical sciences may be treated of without any reference to mind, and as if the mind existed as a recipient of knowledge only, not as a cause producing effects.

How the thought-waves flow along the nerves of the projector and recipient.

* * * If telepathy takes place, we have two physical factsthe physical change in the brain of A, the suggestor, and the analogous physical change in the brain of B, the recipient of the suggestion.

The investigators recognized the possibility that in the first of the above-mentioned two classes of experiments there is a possibility of suspicion of collusion, fraud, or unconscious suggestion, in the matter of the motion of the eyes of the party, or some member of it, which might be seized upon, perhaps unconsciously, by the recipient, and used to guide him to the object which was being thought of by the projector or the party.

But, finally, they came to the conclusion that even these precautions might not prove sufficient; and, accordingly, they devoted their attention to the second class of experiments, in which all ordinary means of communication between projector and recipient were impossible.

Later on, you may play the part of projector, if you so desire, but the real "fine work" is done by the recipient, and, for that reason that is the part you should learn to play by frequent rehearsals.

The student, having perfected himself in the experiments along the lines of the first class of mind-reading, viz., where there is no actual physical contact between the projector and recipient, but where there is a close relation in space between the two.

Now, the thoughtful student will naturally wish to ask a question here, something like this: "You have told us that there is no real difference between telepathy at a great distance, and that in which there is only the slightest difference in the position of the projector and recipient, providing, always, that there is no actual physical contact.

And, likewise, the recipient finds himself more confident and at ease when in the actual physical of the person sending the thoughts and will power.

The audience should be taught to not only to think but also to actively "will" the progress of the recipient from the start to the finish of the hunt.

In the Willing Game, you must remember that there is no taking hold of hands or any other form of physical contact between projector and recipient.

There is the same "willing" toward the object on the part of the projectors, and the same passive obedience of the recipient.

In long distance experiments, it is well for the projector to write down the word or thought he wishes to transmit, and for the recipient to write down the impressions he receives.

In these cases the recipient sits passively at the hour agreed upon for the experiment, and the projector concentrates intently upon a sentence, or several sentences, one word at a timeat the same time "willing" the other person to write the word.

375 examples of  recipient  in sentences