Moreover, it was and is through necessity that, determined by external needs and occasions, this activity engenders an experience and a development of internal and external organs.
The economic system is not a tissue of reasonings but it is a sum and a complexus of facts which engenders a complex tissue of relations.
The sort of belief that religious experience of this type naturally engenders in those who have it is fully in accord with Fechner's theories.
The feeling of protection which is extended to small objectsengenders the notion of endearment.
This orthography engenders the false notion that [theta] differed from [tau] by the addition of the aspirate h.
Your stomachs are too young, And abstinenceengenders maladies.
Now will it best avail your Majesty To cross the seas and to be crown'd in France: The presence of a king engenders love Amongst his subjects and his loyal friends, As it disanimates his enemies.
A little gale will soon disperse that cloud And blow it to the source from whence it came; Thy very beams will dry those vapours up, For every cloud engenders not a storm.
Abstemiousness shortens the length of respiration, diminishes the waste of the body, promotes longevity, and engenders purity of heart.
From the suspension of breath originates tranquillity of mind, which engenders supersensuous knowledge.
The morbid craving which the drug inevitably engenders at last demanded a daily supply.
Humility is the foundation of the whole building, and it is exercised chiefly in obedience, which engenders the abdication of our own will, and patience, or submission in all things to the holy will of God.
God, dear pastor is a glorious Unit who has nothing in common with His creations but who, nevertheless, engenders them.
The existence of Number depends on the Unit, which without being a number engenders Number.
In-door life perfects social order: the heat that permits people to live thus in public engenders many savage habits.
A Gothic building engenders true religion: it has been said that the popes have consecrated more wealth to the building of modern temples than devotion to the memory of old churches.
Lack of appropriate clothing, fitted for the constitution and the seasons, engenders disease and death; and an excess of the same article, fashioned as stupendous folly only can fashion it, engenders vastly more disease and death.
It never decides upon them in advance, and almost always engenders regrets.
It is the inception of the idea which it engendersby a series of results.
Moreover, all democratic communities are agitated by an ill-defined excitement, and by a kind of feverish impatience, that engenders a multitude of innovations, almost all of which are attended with expense.
Freedom, on the contrary, engenders far more benefits than it destroys; and the nations which are favored by free institutions, invariably find that their resources increase even more rapidly than their taxes.
Work forcibly engenders good habits, sobriety and chastity, consequently health, wealth, successive and progressive genius, and charity.
And I went forth with a great thirst, for the impassioned taste of poor reading engenders a proportionate need of open air and of refreshment.
The moral temper which Le Sage exhibits and which he engenders is not the "enthusiasm of humanity.
War, after it has destroyed all modes of speculation, becomes itself the great and sole speculation, to which all the ardent and ambitious desires which equality engendersare exclusively directed.
Since we are obliged to delay it, I won't marry without their consent!
Later in the day she re-entered and broke a silence by saying bitterly: 'I showed temper just now, as you told me.
The ideal of human personality which the hero engenders in the folk consciousness conditions all further development, and especially the origin of the god.
But it is no less noteworthy that in this case also the separation of itself engenders the motives for the reunion.
Hence the imagination is forced; it becomes subservient to reflection, which engenders an accumulation of apocalyptic imagery that completely defies envisagement.
In the first place, the labour whose performance in common engenders the cults of the soil is always connected with hoe-culture, the initial stage of agriculture.
It engenders moods and arouses interests and powers that lead to wars and revolutions.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "engenders" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.