เข้าสู่ระบบ สมัครสมาชิก

impeccability การใช้

ประโยคมือถือ
  • Those were the sense of invulnerability, the feeling of grandeur, impeccability.
  • The reason why it costs so much lies in the impeccability of its making.
  • The entire sounds and lyrical composition fuse in seamless beauty that oozes impeccability and style.
  • To the end he practised all these with a lightness and impeccability of style entirely his own ."
  • They also believe that all the imams chosen are free from committing any sin, impeccability which is called " ismah ".
  • Some believe that physical descent from the Prophet has never been enough to make an Imam but the Imam does need Ismah and impeccability.
  • Infallibility ( NOT impeccability ) belongs to the Pope as head of the bishops, and is based ultimately on Christ's mandate.
  • During her a wildly successful 16-year career, this Nigerian-born, London-reared chanteuse has refined an aesthetic of impeccability.
  • For al-Shahrastani, the proof of veracity ( " sidq " ) of the Prophet is intrinsic to his nature and is related to his Impeccability.
  • Even in the small hours of the morning he can be found " dressed with an impeccability worthy of Inigo Jones " . ( " Busman's Honeymoon " ).
  • That one word is enough to convey the entire sense of the song and leave the lay singer marveling at the impeccability of Cooke's diction and the sweet resonance of his singing.
  • Among these is Jennifer Tipton, characterized most often for the impeccability of her taste and a certain precision and cerebral quality to her work-- which have earned her two Tony awards, among other prizes during her 25 years in the theater ."
  • The conception of Prophecy developed in the " Nihaya " is closer to that of Isma ` ilis and Falasifa ( Islamic philosophers ) than to Ash ` arites, because al-Shahrastani establishes a logical link between miracles and Prophetic Impeccability ( " ` Isma " ).
  • Some theologians have asserted this special grace extended to impeccability ( understood in this context as the inability to sin ); others argue this could not be so : as a natural human being, she would have had free will, and therefore the " ability " to sin, but through her cooperation avoided it.
  • He has been described as " one of the most vigorous and vociferous believers in the impeccability of the English jury system of this or any other century " However, in 1931, Hewart made legal history, when ( sitting with Mr Justice Branson and Mr Justice Hawke ) he quashed the conviction for murder of William Herbert Wallace, on the grounds that the conviction was not supported by the weight of the evidence.