145 examples of transposed in sentences

Carnal relationship and carnal love are transposed into spiritual relationship and spiritual love.

With these words begins a passage of some length, which is closely modelled upon the passage of Bion (p. 64), 'And around him the Loves are weeping,' &c.: modelled upon it, and also systematically transposed from it.

They were transposed in 1840.]

When Logotheti reached the door of the drawing-room, Margaret was finishing Rosina's Cavatina from the Barbiere di Siviglia in a perfect storm of fireworks, having transposed the whole piece two notes higher to suit her own voice, for it was originally written for a mezzo-soprano.

Thus do those votive offerings mysteriously convey admiration for the constancy and sympathy with the posthumous union of two hearts who transposed conjugal tenderness from the senses to the soul, who spiritualized the most ardent of human passions, and changed love itself into a holocaust, a martyrdom, and a holy sacrifice.

These measures are incorrigibly erroneous, or must have been transposed from some other place, having no possible reference to Corsica.

[Footnote 6: In the Quarto this and the next line are transposed.]

And so a theory which will be generally objected to as much too physical is transposed by a single syllogism to metaphysics.

Generally the parts taken up by the congregation are sung in a three-part harmony, the women singing the soprano and a transposed tenor, the men with high voices singing the melody, and those with low voices a thundering bass.

Transposed and expanded, the invitation would read thus: "Come up into the house for shelter, since there are many showers in my town.

If poetic diction be different in species from plain English, then let us have it as poetical as possible, as unlike English: as ungrammatical, abrupt, insolved, transposed, as the clumsiness, carelessness, or caprice of man can make it.

The word is simply de-ca-nus ("a dean"), with the first two syllables transposed (ca-de-nus).

In Eardweard, we have dropped the a; in Ealdredesgate, the e. In Aedwini, we have dropped the first letter (or have sometimes transposed it), although, I think, we are wrong; for the given name Adwin has existed in my own family for several centuries.

But in old books the forms of these two letters are continually confounded or transposed.

In many instances, however, he may conveniently abbreviate his explanation, by parsing the conjunction as connecting "what precedes and what follows;" or, if the terms are transposed, as connecting its own clause to the second, to the third, or to some other clause in the context.

Or the words may be transposed, and the comma set before with; thus, "Pronouns agree in gender, number, and person, with the nouns for which they stand.

The transposed heads.

The transposed heads.

The transposed heads; a legend of India.

It may be easily transposed to vary enclosures.

There is no tavern in London better known than The Elephant and Castle, a designation that would sound equally well if the two substantives were transposed.

Whole sentences were erased, others transposed, everything modified.

The text of 1827 returns to that of 1800.] * * * * * FOOTNOTE ON THE TEXT [Footnote A: In the editions of 1800 to 1832 stanzas 4 and 5 were transposed.

"All these works," he wrote in his announcement of the work, "faithfully copied, arranged for the piano and transposed for concert performance, will finally be arranged and classified in separate volumes, to suit various voices, ages, styles, schools, etc., thus affording subject matter for a complete course of vocal studies.

Turner's "Carthage" is Nature transposed and wonderfully modified.

145 examples of  transposed  in sentences