Do we say unbelievably or absolutely

unbelievably 33 occurrences

And so I saw the earth again, blue and unbelievably minute.

You felt, for the most part of your stay in this country, flushed and hot and uncomfortable and unbelievably awkward, and you were mercilessly bedeviled there; but not for all the accumulated wealth of Samarkand and Ind and Ophir would you have had it otherwise.

And Constance Howard was told she must add up an unbelievably long column of figures and present the correct answer within half an hour.

" It seemed unbelievably stupid and childish, what he imagined was behind the gratuitous intermeddling of Mr. Mussey; but then, he reminded himself, if there is anything more stupid than to plot a criminal act, it is to permit oneself to be influenced by that criminal stupidity whose other name is jealousy.

It remains to say, all the same, that this little volume is in the main a sincere and obviously well-informed account of the doings of the men of our air services, full of incident and achievement utterly beyond belief an unbelievably short time ago.

The bowling had now become almost unbelievably bad.

And kind Hypnos loosed a dream through the gates of ivory that lifted him to a delectable land where Peggy was nineteen, and had never heard of Kennaston, and was unbelievably sweet and dear and beautiful.

And though in my thoughts it was sternly denied existence, the great black reason for the fact afflicted me unbelievably.

The first few days had been unbelievably bad, what with typhoid inoculations, smallpox vaccinations, and loneliness.

The figure, never very large, was thin and shrunken unbelievably.

It was not yet ten when, silent as they had come, unbelievably impassive when but an hour before they had been irresponsible madmen, temporarily cruelty-surfeited, they resumed their journey.

Very soon, almost unbelievably soon, they began to trickle back.

Swifter than any human being would have thought possible, unbelievably ferocious even in this land of licence, something took place, something which the staring onlookers did not realise until it was done.

As he looked his face altered, softened almost unbelievably.

He had ere this drawn unbelievably near.

Unbelievably unsophisticated, unbelievably innocent and helpless, was Elizabeth Landor at this time.

Unbelievably unsophisticated, unbelievably innocent and helpless, was Elizabeth Landor at this time.

Her usually brown face was very pale and her eyes were unnaturally bright; but withal she was unbelievably calmcalm as a child with its hand in its father's hand.

His eyeseyes unbelievably soft and innocent for a mature manwere upon her.

She knew not from whence had come the change, nor why; but that in the last weeks she had altered fundamentally, unbelievably, she could not question.

His voice, unbelievably low in contrast to that of the other, when he spoke was even as before.

Miss ANNIE ESMOND gave a depressingly clever rendering of a quite unbelievably appalling landlady.

Her mien, he saw, first softened astonishingly, then grew firm with an aspect of dignity that was unbelievably beautiful.

This, however, only dawned upon him later, when the experiment was complete and he had time to reflect upon it all next day; for, meanwhile, to see the proportions he had known since childhood alter thus before his eyes was unbelievably dreadful.

Spinrobin remained confused and bewildered; but also unbelievably happy.

absolutely 6253 occurrences

The senses absolutely give and take reciprocally.

I used to wonder at the strange power which his Way of the World in particular possesses of interesting you all along in the pursuits of characters, for whom you absolutely care nothingfor you neither hate nor love his personagesand I think it is owing to this very indifference for any, that you endure the whole.

How can we appease the discontents of our constituents, or discharge the trust reposed in us, without a very minute and attentive inquiry into questions thus obscure and thus important? Are we to tell our constituents, that we absolutely rely upon the prudence and fidelity of the ministry and admirals, and recommend to them the same implicit dependence?

Nothing is more common, my lords, in all naval wars, than sudden changes of fortune; for on many occasions an accidental gust of wind, or unexpected darkness of the weather, may destroy or preserve a fleet from destruction, or may make the most formidable armaments absolutely useless; and in the present disposition of some people towards the ministry, I should not wonder to hear an alteration of wind charged upon them.

Nor are their officers, my lords, extremely well qualified to supply those defects, and establish discipline and order in a body of new-raised forces; for they are absolutely strangers to service, and taken from school to receive a commission, or if transplanted from other regiments, have had time only to learn the art of dress.

That the right honourable gentleman is the only disposer of honours, has never yet appeared; it is not pretended, my lords, that he distributes them without the consent of his majesty, nor even that his recommendation is absolutely necessary to the success of any man's applications.

Sir Robert WALPOLE replied to this effect:Whether the merchants are satisfied with the present methods of insuring, or what is the opinion of any separate body of men, I think it absolutely unnecessary to inquire.

Lady Moseley had given up her youngest child so absolutely to the government of her aunt, that she seldom thought of her future establishment.

God and his creatures are toto genere distinct in the scholastic theology, they have absolutely nothing in common; nay, it degrades God to attribute to him any generic nature whatever; he can be classed with nothing.

It is not as if the world came to know itself, or God came to know himself, partly through us, as pantheistic idealists have maintained, but truth exists per se and absolutely, by God's grace and decree, no matter who of us knows it or is ignorant, and it would continue to exist unaltered, even though we finite knowers were all annihilated.

Naming the disjunction doesn't debar us from also naming the conjunction in a later modifying statement, for the two are absolutely co-ordinate elements in the finite tissue of experience.

It must be the minimum that can existeither that absolute whole is there, or there is absolutely nothing.

Mr. McTaggart writes, in discussing the notion of a mixture: 'The two principles, of rationality and irrationality, to which the universe is then referred, will have to be absolutely separate and independent.

Possibly you will yourselves think after hearing my remaining lectures that the alternative of an universe absolutely rational or absolutely irrational is forced and strained, and that a via media exists which some of you may agree with me is to be preferred.

Possibly you will yourselves think after hearing my remaining lectures that the alternative of an universe absolutely rational or absolutely irrational is forced and strained, and that a via media exists which some of you may agree with me is to be preferred.

We long for the absolute only in so far as in us the absolute also longs, and seeks through our very temporal striving, the peace that is nowhere in time, but only, and yet absolutely, in eternity.

We are but syllables in the mouth of the Lord; if the whole sentence is divine, each syllable is absolutely what it should be, in spite of all appearances.

Observe that all the irrationalities and puzzles which the absolute gives rise to, and from which the finite God remains free, are due to the fact that the absolute has nothing, absolutely nothing, outside of itself.

So has the entire starry system as such its consciousness; and if that starry system be not the sum of all that is, materially considered, then that whole system, along with whatever else may be, is the body of that absolutely totalized consciousness of the universe to which men give the name of God.

This combines in the soul of the earth with the consciousness of the vegetable kingdom, which in turn contributes its share of experience to that of the whole solar system, and so on from synthesis to synthesis and height to height, till an absolutely universal consciousness is reached.

Whatever motion really may be, it surely is not static; but the definition we have gained is of the absolutely static.

Professor Bergson thus inverts the traditional platonic doctrine absolutely.

Even oven-dried wood retains a small percentage of moisture, but for all except chemical purposes, may be considered absolutely dry.

If absolutely dry wood is heated in absolutely dry air the wood expands.

If absolutely dry wood is heated in absolutely dry air the wood expands.

Do we say   unbelievably   or  absolutely