We are in no want of words todenominate adequately every mode of representation, without the necessity of encroaching upon terms which are proper to others.
For these reasons we have chosen to denominate this part of logic dialectic, in the sense of a critique of dialectical illusion, and we wish the term to be so understood in this place.
That which is never to be found in the object itself, but always in the relation of the object to the subject, and which moreover is inseparable from our representation of the object, we denominate phenomenon.
We call our megrims the melancholy of a sublime soul, the yearnings of an indigestion we denominate yearnings after immortality, nay, sometimes 'a proof of the nature of the soul!
No: they merely recognize, as they think, some likeness, more or less vague and loose, between these and some other things which they have been accustomed to denominate or to hear denominated by those appellations.
The attribute, or attributes, may therefore be said todenominate those objects, or to give them a common name.
They are not indeed, like proper names, unmeaning; for the words sensation of white signify, that the sensation which I so denominate resembles other sensations which I remember to have had before, and to have called by that name.
In spite of these and other advantages, not one textbook in ten up to 1900 made early use of these exercises with denominate numbers.
To denominate him one person, one being, and yet to suppose him made up of two minds infinitely different from each other, is to abuse and confound language, and to throw darkness over all our conceptions of intelligent natures.
It is a great error to denominate those idolaters who worship the sun and the stars.
Were a silkworm to denominate the small quantity of downy substance surrounding its ball, heaven, it would reason just as correctly as all the ancients, when they applied that term to the atmosphere; which, as M.
A main cause of the disadvantageous appearance exhibited by the ordinary schoolboy, lies in what we denominate sheepishness.
Few things can appear more singular, when duly analysed, than that articulated air, which we denominate speech.
The rigour of self-denial in a true Roman approached to a temper which moderns are inclined to denominate savage.
Swaddler" is also a phrase by which the low Irish Roman Catholics denominate those of their body who in winter become Protestants, pro tem.
The same disobedience which in the church member we should denominate disorderly walking must a fortiori destroy all right to the Lord's Supper on the part of those who are not members of the church.
The former or negative element in conversion, namely, the turning from sin, we denominate repentance.
The latter or positive element in conversion, namely, the turning to Christ, we denominate faith.
The Baron of Bradwardine, for he was generally so called in Scotland (although his intimates, from his place of residence, used to denominate him.
These moral distinctions arise from the natural distinctions of pain and pleasure; and when we receive those feelings from the general consideration of any quality or character, we denominate it vicious or virtuous.
Here neither the form nor materials are the same, nor is there any thing common to the two objects, but their relation to the inhabitants of the parish; and yet this alone is sufficient to make us denominate them the same.
This is what Christians denominate the mystery of the redemption of the human race.
Their creatures have been the guardians of orthodoxy, and were commissioned to exterminate all whom they chose to denominate heretics and rebels.
They denominate them satyrs, men with tails, sea monsters, and whatever else of the fabulous, is calculated to raise wonder in the human mind.
For, to denominate a body moved it is requisite, first, that it change its distance or situation with regard to some other body; and secondly, that the force occasioning that change be applied to it.
This making and unmaking of ideas doth very properly denominate the mind active.
Aiasaluk is a corruption of Ayas Theologos,[11] the name by which the Greeks denominate St. John, to whom the neighbouring church was dedicated.
That Shakespeare possessed that aroma of humour which we denominate wit, beyond any of his contemporaries or successors, is a matter about which, I think, there cannot be two opinions.
These I denominate Printer-worshipers; for it is in reality to the authority of the printer, not of the poet, that they bow.
The following tale addresses itself plainly to girls; to whom it teaches the danger of what we denominate coquetry.
This theory is what I denominate the hypothesis of creation by law.
Hence it is, that we meet in the Bible with so many descriptions of the Deity, which theologians and philosophers denominate anthropopathic and anthropomorphic.
In the first place, it is true that the "loadstone power of attraction" is there: but it is within what all denominate the SUN, and by this the surrounding planets are controlled.
Now we have seen that the Sun is the source of all light and heat; the source--when the element is concentrated--of that which we denominate fire.
For what all denominate the Sun, is that which gives out light and heat.
We now propose to consider more definitely the nature of that volume of flame, or intense heat, which we denominate the Sun.
And yet, although far distant regions have been penetrated and partially surveyed, still, nowhere within the trackless and boundless domain of illimitable space have Astronomers descried an object which they could denominate "Heaven.
Passing this general and obvious distinction, we find among our sensibilities a large class which we may denominate simple emotions.
Such are the mental states which we denominate as consciousness and attention.