15 Verbs to Use for the Word norm

Its little Perp. church is remarkable more for its unusual and picturesque situation (by the side of a delightful combe) and its diminutive size (35 ft. x 12 ft.) than for any great architectural interest, though it contains some Norm.

The church, which formerly belonged to Glastonbury Abbey, is small and plain, but possesses a Norm.

It retains a square Norm, font, a piscina, and a Jacobean pulpit.

School average and pupil norms for the Iowa every-pupil: tests of basic skills; advanced battery.

Alternatively, humanity can put its creative imagination to work; plan, organize, prepare and by a carefully designed, revolutionary technique take a great leap onto another culture level, establishing other norms beyond those currently accepted by civilized peoples.

Those general considerations, which form at the same time a norm for directing aims and actions, have a determinate purport; for such an abstraction as "good for its own sake," has no place in living reality.

It has a small church which is remarkable for having fine Norm.

Too often, it played to the gallery, fanned sectarian passions and threw norms to the wind.

The nave is quite modern (1834), but it preserves a Norm.

At the conclusion of the Killibrew interview Peter instinctively felt that he had just about touched the norm of Hooker's Bend.

The church is a not very inspiring example of modern Gothic (1830), and is said to have superseded a Norm, building.

What Hellas had achieved supplied no norm or method for the arts in this new service.

But just where is the great question; and the desire of one person, who thinks he has discovered the norm, to compel all other men to stop there, has led to war and strife untold.

But those who in this great reform Of face and feature are engrossed Agree that to enforce a norm In labial fabric matters most; The lips that help a race to win Unquestionably must be thin.

The N. porch encloses a Norm.

15 Verbs to Use for the Word  norm