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Example sentences for "exclude"

Lexicographically close words:
exclaims; exclamation; exclamations; exclamatory; exclave; excluded; excludes; excludeth; excluding; exclusion
  1. As for your fifth view, we ask whether by being produced by the instrumental causes only which produced right knowledge, you mean to include or exclude the absence of a 'defect'?

  2. If it is thoroughly ascertained, why do you exclude it?

  3. This is intended to exclude the doubt anticipated.

  4. When, however, the upper plate is slid over the lower one gradually, so as to exclude the air, then the two may be lifted together, because cohesion has taken place.

  5. It is not on account of this doctrine that you are Pelagians, but because you exclude from free-will the co-operation of grace in the performance of good works.

  6. In search of something to stay my gasping, I mounted on to the roof of the house this morning, to take my walk there, instead of in my close garden, where there are low shrubs which give no shade, but exclude the breeze.

  7. Fawcett is vague, but he is disposed not only to include under capital food which is in the possession of consumers, but to exclude food which is in the possession of dealers.

  8. Chief and foremost among these errors is the framing of a definition of capital so as to exclude the clear separation of productive goods and machinery, the economic means, from consumptive goods, the economic end.

  9. France was slower in her development, in spite of the strong protective system by which she strove, though not very successfully, to exclude English cotton goods.

  10. Him from whom no bolts and no bars can exclude the voice of the human heart.

  11. The identity of substance or spirit, if it were absolute, would indeed prevent comparison, because it would exclude modifications, and it is the survival of past modifications within the present that makes comparisons possible.

  12. Where parliamentary government was established it became possible to subordinate or exclude the monarch and his court; but the government remains an involuntary institution, and the individual must adapt himself to its exigencies.

  13. A rational poetry would exclude much now thought poetical.

  14. Sidenote: A rational poetry would exclude much now thought poetical.

  15. It is clear, for instance, that timocracy would exclude the family or greatly weaken it.

  16. And if not, why utterly exclude French-speaking Switzerland, the Channel Islands, Belgium, or Quebec?

  17. The method by which knowledge of the past is preserved is so subject to imaginative influence that it cannot avail to exclude from history anything that the imagination may supply.

  18. Whatever beauty its lines may have will become a permanent possession and whatever beauties they exclude will be rejected by a faithful artist, no matter how sorely at first they may tempt him.

  19. Natural Selection: attributing so much weight to it does not exclude still more general laws, i.

  20. Yet his method does not permit him to exclude it.

  21. By avowing that he called himself King of the Jews he committed a very grave offence towards Rome, unless he explained the title in a mystic sense; and the records exclude any such explanation.

  22. It is impossible to express to you the devotion of my feelings to this single subject; and I will frankly confess that it has so occupied my mind as to exclude every thought respecting what is called my own settlement in life.

  23. These lamentations did not exclude suspicion, and matters were so represented to government that our Chieftain was deprived of his military command.

  24. We have taken measures to exclude all servants but Spontoon, who is as true as steel.

  25. But, if we take these two words in their usual acceptations, they surely do not exclude each other.

  26. The more intimate relation, therefore, between the history of language and the history of man is not sufficient to exclude the science of language from the circle of the physical sciences.

  27. It remains for me to add that the illustrations which I have used in the grammar course are intended merely to serve as specimens, and by no means to exclude the use of different illustrative matter which the teacher may find more suitable.

  28. My own view is that we should speak in the child's hearing only of those lesser forms of evil, physical or moral, with which it is already acquainted, but exclude all those forms of evil which lie beyond its present experience.

  29. The story of Hagar and her Child I should recast in such a way as to exclude what in it is repellent, and retain the touching picture of maternal affection.

  30. We exclude the discussion of them, be they philosophical or theological, from the school.

  31. I have done nothing so very wicked, I hope, as to exclude me from my Father's face forever--have you?

  32. Morton simply knew that I wanted, for purposes of my own, to exclude every one except himself from solitary possession of the dining-room as much as possible, Mr. Bainrothe especially.

  33. Her immediate preparations for war, the movements of her ships, and the attack of English high finance on the foremost German banking establishments, which took place at this crisis, exclude all doubt on the point.

  34. This fundamental standpoint does not exclude the possibility that in a national crisis the tax may be exceptionally applied to other important purposes, as for example to the completion of our armaments on land and sea.

  35. If we wish to regard it as such, we shall not only run counter to the ideas of our greatest German Prince, but we exclude from politics that independence of action which is the true motive force.

  36. The knowledge, therefore, that war depends on biological laws leads to the conclusion that every attempt to exclude it from international relations must be demonstrably untenable.

  37. Since then there lives in the hearts of all (I would not exclude even the supporters of the anti-national party) a proud consciousness of strength, of regained national unity, and of increased political power.

  38. It is thus brought before his mind that his natural heirs are his relations, his kin, and that he must make a will if he wishes to exclude his legal heirs.

  39. In this case, matter, or the universe, must exclude every other being who is not matter, from that place which the material beings occupy in space.

  40. The same prudence that had led Kloot to exclude authors, saved him from magnifying their importance by police squabbles.

  41. Indeed, he must exclude some persons who apply, notably thieves.

  42. They cannot exclude any portion of the stockholders from an equal participation of the profits of the company.

  43. Many of the acts exclude from their protection casual employees.

  44. There is no authority or power in the state to exclude non-resident motorists from the public ways, nor have the states power to place greater restrictions or burdens on non-resident automobilists than those imposed on their own citizens.

  45. A municipality may forbid the use of some kinds of motor vehicles on certain streets, but it cannot broadly exclude all of them from all the streets.

  46. He can refuse to admit all whom he has reason to believe will disturb the peace and safety of his guests; and can afterward exclude all who, though admitted, prove to be noisy and disturbers of the comfort and safety of others.

  47. With respect to future additions these are covered by the policy unless it is so drawn as to show a clear intent to exclude them.

  48. This judgment does not exclude the fact that some of Gluck's performances as an artist are not only grand and striking, but surpass kindred works by Mozart.

  49. La Harpe remarks that want of success in this respect was in Gluck's favour, for that his system, consistently carried out, would exclude ballet.

  50. Bravura was not considered by any means out of place in church music, and even the classical masters of the last century--such as Handel and Bach--did not exclude it from their sacred works.

  51. Would he exclude from the domain of tragedy the entire episode in Hardy's Return of the Native, of the death of Eustace's mother?

  52. Plato himself was one of the finest of ancient poets, in spite of the fact that he wanted to exclude poets from his ideal commonwealth.

  53. Balzac and Ibsen are poets and any definition of poetry that would exclude them as such is faulty.

  54. The deeper tendency of the present age is not, I think, to exclude religion from any vital process, but rather to widen the content of the idea of religion until it embrace the whole life of man.

  55. What more natural than that they should be disposed to exclude from the lists such dangerous competitors?

  56. The essence is one everywhere; but its unity does not exclude the existence of other (beings), which may be said to conform thereto.

  57. The works of nature exclude all ideas of mechanical operation; not by any impelling force, nor by using levers nor machines does it produce varied colors, nor draw the outlines of objects.

  58. Thus, the unity of the Soul does not exclude the plurality of souls, any more than the unity of essence excludes the plurality of (beings), or that the plurality of intelligibles does not disagree with the existence of the One.

  59. Consequently there are some parts at which an enemy may be expected to be more active than elsewhere, and it is from those very parts that it is most desirable to exclude him.

  60. Failure to exclude him from them can only be regarded as, at the very least, yielding to him an important point in the great game of war.

  61. The sole foundation for this lay in his deference to her total abstinence principles, which she held so strongly as to exclude wine from the White House table except, I believe, at one official dinner, that to the Russian Grand Dukes.


  62. The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "exclude" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.
    Other words:
    abjure; amputate; annihilate; anticipate; avert; avoid; ban; banish; bar; blackball; block; blockade; bounce; cashier; cast; chuck; clip; contemn; contradict; contravene; crop; cull; cut; debar; decline; deflect; delete; deny; deport; despise; deter; disallow; disapprove; discard; discharge; disclaim; discount; discourage; disdain; disfavor; dishearten; dismiss; disown; disqualify; disregard; dissent; dock; drop; efface; eject; eliminate; embargo; enjoin; eradicate; except; excise; exclude; excommunicate; exile; expatriate; expel; expunge; extinguish; extirpate; fend; filter; forbid; foreclose; forestall; forswear; freeze; frown; help; ignore; inhibit; interdict; isolate; jettison; junk; leave; lock; mutilate; nip; object; obtrude; obviate; omit; oppose; oust; outlaw; pare; peel; preclude; prevent; prohibit; proscribe; protest; prune; purge; rebuff; recant; refuse; reject; relegate; remove; renounce; repel; repress; repudiate; repulse; rule; save; scout; scratch; shave; shear; shoulder; shut; snub; spurn; strip; suppress; suspend; taboo; transport; truncate; waive


    Some related collocations, pairs and triplets of words:
    exclude slavery; excluded from; excluded middle