The former, as being more accessible to the exercise of thought, appertains to mathematics; the latter, from the apparent mysteries and greater difficulties, falls under the domain of the chemical sciences.
It is within these limits alone that the work, which I now venture to undertake, appertains to the sphere of labor to which I have devoted myself throughout the course of my long scientific career.
Here, as in the sphere of organic life, all that appertains to the history of development remains hidden in obscurity.
All that exceeds this goes beyond the province of the physical description of the universe, and appertains to a range of higher speculative views.
I inserted those matters into my discourse here, that I might hereafter confine myself to all that appertains to the right education of the young.
There are few girls of fourteen who are women enough to comport themselves with the inbred dignity that appertains to woman in her highest development, and there are few women who retain the perfume and essence of infancy.
But the command is not, Be ye equal to your Heavenly Father in perfection, but, Be ye perfect with the same kind of perfection which appertains to Him.
It is to be feared that not all Protestants are entirely clear of this same idea of the priesthood of the ministry, and that, in thought, at least, many substitute this for the true priesthood, which appertains to all believers.
This latter appertains to all Christians, and is technically so used in the New Testament.
I suppose it is," I answered reflectively, "that a churchyard monument is a peculiarly personal thing and appertains in a peculiar way to a particular time.
Anatomically speaking, the knee-cap appertains to the thigh rather than to the shank.
In the ordinary world of the physical senses man develops his ego, his self-consciousness, and this ego then acts as a point of attraction for all that appertains to man.
To be like a teacher in what appertains to material welfare, is father to a wish to be like him or her in what appertains to spiritual welfare.
In the latter you will find all that appertains to music, to the dance, to the study of books, to the flash of the needle.
So by virtue of these democratic names they are clothed in all the strength of the government and have all that appertains to kings except the vulgar title.
That always was and always will be the case; it appertains to the self-regulation of mental progress.
The series of apparently meaningless events, the so-called madness, have now a meaning; a significance appertains to the delusions, making the patient more human to us.
Government ought to be as much open to improvement as anything which appertains to man, instead of which it has been monopolised from age to age, by the most ignorant and vicious of the human race.
It takes ground on every character and condition that appertains to man, and blends the individual, the nation, and the world.
If it ever existed it must now exist, for whatever appertainsto the nature of man cannot be annihilated by man.
Being the cause of trembling, moreover, is a quality which properly appertains to the highest Self only, not to mere air.
Footnote 204: Which circumstance proves that exalted knowledgeappertains not only to Hira/n/yagarbha, but to many beings.
It clearly appertains not to the table of human knowledge, for it treats not of objects discoverable within the field of human observation.
It is to you that belong the praises of the human race; to you appertains the homage of the earth.
After the Timavum[1635] comes the sea-coast of Istria as far as Pola, which appertains to Italy.
It is only necessary that he devote a little time to study, in order to give his mind a right direction in all that appertains to this department.
All these circumstances are to be considered, and the estimates should be made by practical and experienced builders, who are competent judges in whatever appertains to it.
And who are these on whom, and on all that appertains to them, the dust of earth seems never to have settled?
Because the sovereign authority has power to establish an army, and the power to create a military school is inseparably connected with and necessarily appertains to it.
That there is room for improvements which will materially promote both economy and success, in what appertains to the army and the war, is equally inculcated by the examples of other countries, and by the experience of our own.
Thou hast assumed More perfect innocence than appertains To erring man, and eager to refute False accusation hast contemn'd the course Of the All-Merciful.
For my part, I may claim a little indulgence for some hobby of my own, possibly; and I trust you will bear in mind how completely I give in to you on all that appertains to the laws of health.
For consistent Jansenists, science in the natural order, especially in what appertainsto man, is impossible.
Marshall had said that "'the creation of a corporation appertains to sovereignty.
The good sense of the public has pronounced, without hesitation, that the power of punishment appertains to sovereignty, and may be exercised whenever the sovereign has a right to act, as incidental to his constitutional powers.
The imagery in those books called the Prophets appertains altogether to poetry.
It appertains to him in right of his existence, and his person is the title deed.
The right, and the exercise of that right, appertains to the nation only, and the proper means is by a national convention, elected for the purpose, by all the people.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "appertains" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.