And how this idea of partial self-activity comports with the absoluteness of Deity we can not clearly understand.
How thiscomports with the absoluteness of God we can not understand, any more than we can understand how it comports with invariable law in Nature.
In cases of doubtful construction, especially of such vital interest, it comports with the nature and origin of our institutions, and will contribute much to preserve them, to apply to our constituents for an explicit grant of the power.
The true questions, then, are, Have these objects been unnecessarily multiplied, or has the amount expended upon any or all of them been larger than comports with due economy?
Undoubtedly I rejoice That the air comportsso well With a creature which had the choice Of the land once.
But, once cure madness, howcomports himself Your sane exemplar, what 's our gain thereby?
All this comports little with the fact that the ancient tunnelled road along here was one of the marvels of engineering in the time of Augustus and that it led to Virgil's tomb.
That she should suddenly lose her head and throw herself away in a voluptuous frenzy hardly comports with the type.
He determines the properties of the straight man; describes how the straight man comports himself; shows in what relationship he stands to other straight men; shows how a community of straight men is constituted.
The moon comports itself as a heavy body does with respect to the earth; light like a wave-motion or an electric vibration; a magnet, as if it were laden with gravitating fluids, and so on.
What a simplification it involves if we can say, the fact A now considered comports itself, not in one, but in many or in all its features, like an old and well-known fact B.
While the latter comports himself as carelessly as though a White House is an edifice of every day, the Man of Monticello goes as far the other way, and feels all the uneasy anger of him who is on the brink of being robbed.
Established in Montreal he comports himself as becomes a conqueror, expanding into pomp and license, living on the fat, drinking of the strong.
This rendering comports with the official agency of the delegated Person, as the creator, upholder, lawgiver, and ruler of all creatures.
It comports with the designation by which, when he became incarnate, he was familiarly known, and which is translated Lord, as the equivalent of the name Jehovah in Hebrew.
It comports with our system to look to the service rendered and to the intention with which it was rendered, and to award the compensation accordingly, especially as it may now be done without the sacrifice of principle.
We have no evidence whatever, of an official nature, that this bill comports with the Executive views.
As we have no such information, we are to examine whether this bill comports with the arrangement made with Great Britain.
Ask yourselves how this gracious reception of our petition comports with those warlike preparations which cover our waters and darken our land.
But all that the analogy comports is a body--the particular features of our body are adaptations to a habitat so different from God's that if God have a physical body at all, it must be utterly different from ours in structure.
The outlines of the superhuman consciousness thus made probable must remain, however, very vague, and the number of functionally distinct 'selves' it comports and carries has to be left entirely problematic.
It comports with the name and design of this work, which is a broad synopsis of grammatical criticism, to notice here one other absurdity; namely, the doctrine of "sentential nouns.
It gives us such punctuation as comports neither with the sense of three or more words in the same construction, nor with the pauses which they require in reading.
But against lesser as an adjective, some grammarians have spoken with more severity, than comports with a proper respect for authority.
Now, it is plain, that not one of these twenty-five definitions comports with the idea that the singular is one number and the plural an other!
It is folly to call this by terms as sounding as republicanism or democracy, which inculcate the doctrine of as much personal freedom as at all comports with the public good.
Bethink thee of this little fact, O man, when next thy lady comports herself thee wards ultra-graciously.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "comports" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.