I had experience in organizing and conducting schools among the conquistas, and it has been my experience that ceteris paribus, they advance as rapidly as Bisáyas.
The longer the period of fermentation, the liner the quality of the resulting liquor, ceteris paribus.
Any force that causes gases to contract will do the same thing, of course--for example, cold; and ceteris paribus removal of pressure and expansion by heat will act so as to gasify liquids.
Footnote 34: The immediately preceding sentence in Quintilian is “venio nunc ad ornatum, in quo sine dubio plus quam in ceterisdicendi partibus sibi indulget orator.
This was not Cicero's first appearance as an advocate: § 4, 'quod mihi consuevit in ceteris causis esse adiumento.
But even this virtue of {148} resisting seductive impulses is not greater, ceteris paribus, in proportion as the victory is more difficult.
So, also, their resentment towards the criminal will, ceteris paribus, be more intense if he is a person of low rank than if he is one of themselves.
The suit of hearts, ceteris paribus, takes precedence of other suits.
The reason why towns exist, is that ceteris paribus it is convenient, in order to save cost of carriage, that the production of commodities should take place as far as practicable in the immediate vicinity of the consumer.
The signification "cakes" deserves, ceteris paribus, a decided preference, because it is established by the other passages.
That these must be costly stands to reason, for the waste of our own military forces must, ceteris paribus, always be greater the more our aim is directed upon the destruction of the enemy's power.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "ceteris" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.