74 Verbs to Use for the Word scope

It rouses the moral emotions and affections, and gives scope for contrition, adoration, and thanksgiving,the Trisagion of the heart.

Life will be so full of drive and interest, that the woman who has given no hostages to fortune will find ample scope for her powers outside of motherhood.

"At any rate she will afford scope for your powers of training, Isabelle.

Then he enlarged the scope of his survey and search.

There is reason to doubt the truth of this story, and Shakespeare may have sought the metropolis merely because it offered him more scope to provide for his rapidly increasing family.

"The sane man is the man who (however limited the scope of his behaviour) has no such suppression incorporated in him.

She is excitable,even passionate; but her formal training has allowed no scope for either trait, and suppression has but concentrated them.

Appreciating the impossibility of comprehending the full scope of the disaster which here had befallen, or of putting it concretely into words if I did comprehend it, I sought to pick out small individual details, which was hard to do, too, seeing that all things were jumbled together so.

That mode admitting of no utterance personal to the author, and requiring the scope of a play to bring out the intended truth, it is no wonder that, even in the dramas of Shakspere, profound as is the teaching they contain, we should find nothing immediately suitable to our purpose; while neither has he left anything in other form approaching in kind what we seek.

They have extended their scope, and in addition to the material already taken from workman and shop, from garden and farm, have also with much profit to older children used his suggestions about primitive industries.

However restricted the scope of other forest influences, that of the winds is universal.

At whatever point we may stop, whether it be at a single range of States beyond the Mississippi or by taking a greater scope, the advantage of such improvements is deemed of the highest importance.

One who wishes to understand the whole scope of Byron's genius and poetry will do well to begin with his first work, Hours of Idleness, written when he was a young man at the university.

To answer these questions we must widen the scope of our inquiry.

Had the original plan been adhered to, it would have embraced a much wider scope.

Key number classification, comprising the complete scope and arrangement of topics, subdivisions and key numbers as used in the decennials and other key number digests of the American digest system as well as all units of the National reporter system.

After the poet's death it was purchased by Sir William Stanhope who enlarged both the house and garden.[012] A bust of Pope, in white marble, has been placed over an arched way with the following inscription from the pen of Lord Nugent: The humble roof, the garden's scanty line, Ill suit the genius of the bard divine; But fancy now displays a fairer scope And Stanhope's plans unfold the soul of Pope.

He might, however, still have reached it by swimming; but, unfortunately, the painter, by which it was attached to the rock, not having sufficient scope, the boat, on the rising of the tide, was drawn, stern down, to a level with the water; and Frank, as he beheld her slowly fill and disappear beneath the waves, felt as if the last link between the living world and himself had been broken.

Northward opened a broad scope of lake level, girt about with tremendous peaks whose lower slopes were banked with thick forest.

With the donation of Anthony Benezet the Quakers were able to enlarge their building and increase the scope of the work.

These, therefore, constitute the basic laws of the underlying universal mentality which sets the Standard of Normal Personalitya standard which, when seen in this light, transcends the utmost scope of our thought, for it is nothing else than the Spirit of the Infinite Affirmative conceived in Human Personality.

It would seem to me that an honest application of the conceded powers of the General Government to the advancement of the common weal present a sufficient scope to satisfy a reasonable ambition.

Observe the critical period at which he has chosen to impute the calumny!on the very eve of the publication of our last numberaffording no scope for explanation for a full monthduring which time, I must needs lie writhing and tossing, under the cruel imputation of nonentity.

Be our psychology what it may, however deep and irrepressible our taste for derring-do, however inadequate the scope which the dull routine of modern life affords for our adventurous impulses, we are most of us anxious to avoid the risk of great financial loss.

An evening's address would not more than suffice to indicate the scope and appraise the value of this work, which is a mine wherein, the ore ready dressed to his hand, the politico-economic or industrial essayist might work for years without exhausting its riches.

74 Verbs to Use for the Word  scope