11 Verbs to Use for the Word inceptions
About this time a tremendous impetus was given to the breed by the formation, in 1876, of the Fox-terrier Club, which owed its inception to Mr. Harding Cox and a party of enthusiasts seated round his dinner table at 36, Russell Square, among whom were Messrs. Bassett, Burbidge, Doyle, Allison, and Redmond, the last two named being still members of the club.
Now, however, I remark simply, that the gossip and strange stories and incidents and other et ceteras told of him proved to be ridiculous creations, with scarcely a shadow to rest on, having their inception in M-y's peculiarities,peculiarities which originated from an entire and absolute independence of thought and manner and conduct.
Those who do really great things along the lines of physical improvement, or concerning the inception of large enterprises are apt to startle the public and to surprise thoughtful people almost as though some impossible thing had been achieved.
The Adam and Eve of Paradise exhibit to us the first inception of our race; and neither then, nor after their first sad lesson, could they furnish those materials for representation, which their descendants have accumulated in the school of their incessant and many-coloured, but on the whole too gloomy, experience.
And she felt deep in her the inception of a tremendous feminine antagonism.
I began to seek the inception of the possible understanding between them.
One of his most popular lectures, "The Heroism of a Private Life," took its inception from the life of this Venetian statesman.
Indeed, to these prophetic words I trace the inception of an irresistible desire, of which this book is the first fruit.
What it was destined to become was, perhaps, far from the minds of those who aided its inception, but all the possibilities of the future lay in the germ that was thus planted, for it was formed by the marriage of two great elementsfreedom and unity.
We had watched its inception eight months before, with many hopes for its success, and with as many fears for the result.
Among them is the fable that it took twenty years to write, which would carry back its inception to days before the composition of the Aminta.