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unapprehended การใช้

ประโยคมือถือ
  • We're not going to let a cop shooter go unapprehended ."
  • International officials have frequently said a real peace can not be achieved in Bosnia with war criminals unapprehended.
  • He is also the sole enemy of the Teen Titans to go unapprehended by the series'end.
  • Interestingly, I have never received a complaint about not stating the race of unapprehended criminals when they are white.
  • It is also a country in which I have become little more than an unapprehended criminal because of whom I love.
  • At the climax of the book, she has been revealed to have travelled to the current time, and was defeated but unapprehended.
  • But it misfires; Bennie and his associates vanish and remain unidentified and unapprehended, although Kyle thinks he's working for some other branch of the government.
  • Information about his crimes were restricted because many thought news about his crimes would cause excessive trouble during the already tense war time, so Nakamura went unapprehended for longer than he might have otherwise.
  • In 2008, Hunt appeared in a short film noir, " The Grand Inquisitor ", as Hazel Reedy, the could-be widow of one of America's most infamous unapprehended serial killers.
  • Shelley maintained that, through their powers of imaginative understanding, poets ( in the widest sense ) were able to identify and formulate emerging socio-cultural trends; and were as a result " the hierophants of an unapprehended inspiration . . . the unacknowledged legislators of the world ".
  • Shelley writes in " Defence " that while " ethical science arranges the elements which poetry has created, " and leads to a moral civil life, poetry acts in a way that " awakens and enlarges the mind itself by rendering it the receptacle of a thousand unapprehended combinations of thought ".
  • Referring frequently to an influential article written by Edwin Cameron, then a professor and now himself a Constitutional Court judge, it observed that the sodomy laws " [ reinforce ] already existing societal prejudices " and worsen the effects of those prejudices, reducing gay men to " unapprehended felons " and thereby encouraging discrimination against them.
  • Shelley's " A Defence of Poetry " ( 1840 ), with its emphasis on the ability of genuine poetic impulse to stimulate " unapprehended combinations of thought " that led to the " moral improvement of man, " prompted Corso to develop a theory of poetry roughly consistent with that of the developing principles of the Beat poets.
  • For Shelley, " poets . . . are not only the authors of language and of music, of the dance, and architecture, and statuary, and painting; they are the institutors of laws, and the founders of civil society . . . " Social and linguistic order are not the sole products of the rational faculty, as language is " arbitrarily produced by the imagination " and reveals " the before unapprehended relations of things and perpetuates their apprehension " of a higher beauty and truth.