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preordain การใช้

"preordain" แปล  
ประโยคมือถือ
  • At the 1998 Winter Games in Nagano, Japan, a judge in the dance event tape-recorded another judge trying to preordain the results.
  • The last thing we wanted to do was preordain where they would be out on the floor and try to fit them in some preconceived notion of what should happen,
  • "That doesn't preordain any particular outcome in regards to bringing a lawsuit, but it gives us the opportunity to do so if we choose ."
  • And Lott said, " Our conference is hesitant to sort of preordain that there will be witnesses or that there won't or who they might be ."
  • Now it is clear that his mastery exists only in scripting the crude soap operas in his World Wrestling Federation parallel universe, not in building a legitimate sport whose outcomes he cannot preordain.
  • Sufi sheikhs often initiated disciples by conferring on them the name Zahed, which is popular with pious muslims, who wish to symbolically preordain their offspring to a life of virtues, similar to an ascetic's.
  • :" The third degree is of those who limit and restrain the former opinion to human actions only, which partake of sin : which actions they suppose to depend substantively and without any chain of causes upon the inward will and choice of man; and who give a wider range to the knowledge of God than to his power; or rather to that part of God s power ( for knowledge itself is power ) whereby he knows, than to that whereby he works and acts; suffering him to fore know some things as an unconcerned looker on, which he does not predestine and preordain : a notion not unlike the figment which Epicurus introduced into the philosophy of Democritus, to get rid of fate and make room for fortune; namely the sidelong motion of the Atom; which has ever by the wiser sort been accounted a very Vol XIV, Boston; Brown and Taggard, 1861)
  • The philosopher Marsilio Ficino wrote that the artist " thinks up " ( " " excogitatio " " ) his works; the theoretician of architecture and painting, Leon Battista Alberti, that he " preordains " ( " " preordinazione " " ); Raphael, that he shapes a painting according to his idea; Leonardo da Vinci, that he employs " shapes that do not exist in nature "; Michelangelo, that the artist realizes his vision rather than imitating nature; Giorgio Vasari, that " nature is conquered by art "; the Venetian art theoretician, Paolo Pino, that painting is " inventing what is not "; Paolo Veronese, that painters avail themselves of the same liberties as do poets and madmen; Federico Zuccari ( 1542 1609 ), that the artist shapes " a new world, new paradises "; Cesare Cesariano ( 1483 1541 ), that architects are " demi-gods . " Among musicians, the Flemish composer and musicologist Johannes Tinctoris ( 1446 1511 ) demanded novelty in what a composer did, and defined a composer as " one who produces " new " songs ."