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uncompounded การใช้

ประโยคมือถือ
  • I still remember the thrill I felt as a boy the first time I beheld sodium in its uncompounded form.
  • Uncompounded thallium is used in low-melting glasses, photoelectric cells, switches, mercury alloys for low-range glass thermometers, and thallium salts.
  • "Miss O'Connor's style is tight to choking and as direct and uncompounded as the order to a firing squad to shoot a man against a wall.
  • John Milton in Paradise Lost, specifies that although demons may seem masculine or feminine, spirits " Can either Sex assume, or both; so soft And uncompounded is thir Essence pure ".
  • In this rhetorical device, one contrasts a compounded or modified form of some word with the uncompounded version, and the latter is repeated twice as though modifying itself, to indicate that it's a more authentic version of whatever's being discussed.
  • Although the " Theorica " was translated in its entirety, extant manuscripts from the 12th century show only a three-book " Practica ", consisting of Book I on regimen, Book II on simple ( uncompounded ) medicinal substances, and Book III on surgery.
  • In some cases, these are largely matters of UK versus US usage, and should be Examples of postmodernisms " section, above ) " in that they are commonly found in professionally edited publications, as are their uncompounded and sometimes their hyphenated counterparts ( i . e . disparate views on what is standard usage ), while the neologistic variety are common only on blogs, Web pages and other media without editorial oversight ( i . e . non-standard usage by most accounts, even if consensus on that may be shifting ).
  • Tomkinson tries to explain why his notion of a'spiritual body'does not conjure up a phantom . " The form of the uncreated Majesty, before he became flesh did not consist of any elementary matter, but it was a bright shiny glory of uncompounded purities of so unutterable a nature in virtue, as that it was swifter than thought, clearer than crystal, sweeter than roses, more purer than the purest gold, yea, and more infinitely glorious than the sun . " The'swifter than thought'quote is to contradict Quakers who had fun ridiculing an embodied God lumbering round the universe trying to keep up with events.
  • But if the poet intends to affirm this, do you not perceive that he frustrates his own aim ? " He continued by explaining why he felt that Wordsworth's concept fell short of any useful purpose : " For if we are of God's indivisible essence, and receive our separate consciousness from the wall of flesh which, at our birth, was raised between us and the Found of Being, we must, on the dissolution of the body . . . be again merged in the simple and uncompounded Godhead, lose our individual consciousness . . . in another sense, become as though we had never been . " He concluded his analysis with a critique of the poem as a whole : " I should say that Wordsworth does not display in it any great clearness of thought, or felicity of language . . . the ode in question is not so much abstruse in idea as crabbed in expression.