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Example sentences for "heat and"

  • Those which subserve protopathic sensibility--that is, are capable of responding to painful cutaneous stimuli and to the extremes of heat and cold.

  • There is no redness or heat and no pain on movement.

  • Almost four years, in storm and in sunshine, in heat and in cold, in hope and in discouragement she had ceaselessly toiled on; and all along her path were strewed the blessings of thousands of grateful hearts.

  • A certain degree of heat and moisture, such as usually takes place in the spring, is likewise necessary.

  • The skin also judges, to a certain extent, of heat and cold.

  • It includes three things,--the sense of contact, the sense of pressure, and the sense of heat and cold.

  • They are produced from the amyloses and sucroses, as by the action of heat and acids of ferments, and are themselves decomposed by fermentation into alcohol and carbon dioxide.

  • Once brightest shined this child of heat and air.

  • To be seethed or cooked in a slow, gentle manner, or in heat and moisture.

  • As the summer wore on to its maximum of heat and discomfort in the city, Edith, who never forgot to measure the hardships of others by her own more fortunate circumstances, urged Dr.

  • Why is it that the masses of the human race live in the most disagreeable climates to be found on the globe, subject to extremes of heat and cold, sudden and unprovoked changes, frosts, fogs, malarias?

  • If an angel were to derive the least particle from natural heat and light he would perish; for it is totally discordant with his life.

  • Such being the difference between the heat and light of the two worlds, it is very evident why those who are in the one world cannot see those who are in the other world.

  • They make one in this way: when man reads, in the Word, of heat and light, the spirits and angels who are with the man perceive charity instead of heat, and faith instead of light.

  • All the energy of the sunshine which falls upon the cylinder, both as heat and as light, is absorbed in the form of heat, and the total amount of this energy can be calculated from the increase in the temperature of the water.

  • Not only liquids are affected by heat and cold, but solids also are subject to similar changes.

  • In fact, of the entire outflow of heat and light, the earth receives only one part in two thousand million, and this is a very small portion indeed.

  • It is difficult to tell how much of the energy of the sun is light and how much is heat, but it is easy to determine the combined effect of heat and light.

  • But by the apprehension of the human soul the human body is changed to heat and cold, as appears when a man is angry or afraid: indeed this change sometimes goes so far as to bring on sickness and death.

  • For an action is ascribed to two principles in one of these two ways; to a principal agent and to an instrument, as cutting to the workman and the saw; to a form and its subject, as heating to heat and fire.

  • Now it is to be observed that everything which is produced here below is produced through the action of heat and cold, moisture and dryness, and other such qualities, which do not exist in heavenly bodies.

  • But in things here below there is passive matter; and there are contrary agents--heat and cold, and the like.

  • Instead of five hours of heat and discomfort, I did not allow myself five minutes, if I could help it.

  • Heat and menstruation, with whatever difference of detail, are practically the same phenomenon.

  • Heat and Expansion [124] Take an electric light bulb from which the air has not been exhausted and immerse it in water and then break off the point.

  • It differs only from an ordinary watch in its delicate springs, in not being so much influenced by heat and cold, and consequently in its accuracy in giving the time.

  • La Place says that "at some point concentration took place in the homogeneous mass, this contraction produced radiation of heat and light, and through the differences in temperature, motion and dynamic reaction were produced.

  • Anaximander held that animals were begotten from the earth by means of heat and moisture; and that man was developed from other beings different in form.

  • But these differences in resistance to heat and in weight, are not haphazard, but are so regularly progressive that they can be arranged in a series of regularly progressive increasing intervals.

  • This condensation resulted in heat and light.

  • Flash" burns, caused directly by the almost instantaneous radiation of heat and light at the moment of the explosion.

  • FLASH BURN As already stated, a characteristic feature of the atomic bomb, which is quite foreign to ordinary explosives, is that a very appreciable fraction of the energy liberated goes into radiant heat and light.

  • All of a sudden, he became aware of the light, felt the wave of heat and a large blister formed on his hand.

  • For change of distance implies change of heat and temperature.

  • The latter was by far the simpler and less costly construction; but its enormous losses, both of heat and of power, mainly the former, however, made it an extravagant expenditure of money to buy and use it.

  • The defects of the Savery system were at once recognized; its great wastes of heat and of steam were noted, and the fact that they were inherent in the system itself was perceived.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "heat and" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.


    Some common collocations, pairs and triplets of words:
    backed gull; conspicuous feature; copied from; domestic science; father came; father himself; heat from; heat necessary; heat required; heat slowly; heat through; heat units; heated dish; heating surface; innate ideas; kept repeating; mingled with; most excellent; picture books; private dining; quite aware; secret passage; set forth; successive stages; taken together; that point