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Example sentences for "humanised"

Lexicographically close words:
humaneness; humaner; humani; humanis; humanise; humanising; humanism; humanist; humanistic; humanists
  1. Although Luther's courage certainly appears in this, it is plain that his Devil was much humanised as compared with the fearful phantoms of an earlier time.

  2. They were animals, humanised animals,--triumphs of vivisection.

  3. So that I prefer to make no chronicle for that gap of time, to tell only one cardinal incident of the ten months I spent as an intimate of these half-humanised brutes.

  4. The first Christian settlement formed here was in 1561, when the Jesuits founded an Aldea, and collected and humanised some of the natives.

  5. The Legislation of Barbarism humanised by Christianity.

  6. Ten weary years have I sojourned alone on these naked plains, waiting for my hour, and not a blow have I struck ag'in an enemy more humanised than the grizzly bear.

  7. Lady Maxwell's fine eyes and stately ways were humanised after all by a quick responsiveness, which for most people, however critical, made conversation with her draw like a magnet.

  8. Make it penal to practise certain trades in the houses of the people--drive them all into factories of a certain size, where alone these degraded industries can be humanised and controlled.

  9. For Christ the humanised divine, he substitutes an abstract deified humanity.

  10. Humanised at least for these moments, she could understand enough to declare that she didn't.

  11. For the passions are humanised only by being juxtaposed and forced to live together.

  12. If the impulse that has thus left its indelible mark on things is constant in our own bosom, the world will have been permanently improved and humanised by our action.

  13. In the Christian legend the God was humanised in the most literal way; and for the multitude the concrete deity must needs replace the abstract.

  14. While the burdened peasants and labourers were thus ostensibly given a new economic outlook on life, they were further humanised by being given a share in the common polity.

  15. The later phases are gradually humanised and intelligised, till at length the science of the past process builds up a new phase of consciousness, which evolves a conscious progressive art.

  16. In these broad lands, which Rome had humanised during four hundred years, and of which the Church had been in full possession, Pope Simplicius could now find only the old provincial nobility and the common people still Catholic.

  17. It may be that the Gael's conception of humanised spirits may not have been uninfluenced by the traditions of that earlier diminutive race whose arrow-heads of flint were so long regarded as "elf-bolts.

  18. The gods who came to be regarded as culture-deities appear from their names to be of various origins: some are humanised totems, others are in origin deities of vegetation or local natural phenomena.

  19. By choosing incidents like these from real home-life, Giotto, through his painting, humanised the mysteries of faith, and brought them close to common feeling.

  20. He is said to have collected people together, humanised mankind, enacted laws, and first established civil polity.

  21. Moreau explains to Pendrick his method of making humanised animals.

  22. Chanticleer is the name of the cock in the great beast epic of the Middle Ages, Reynard the Fox, and Chanticleer, as everyone knows, has been humanised and immortalised in recent years by the famous French dramatist, Rostand.

  23. For the higher side of the Greek religion, thus humanised and refined by art, and elevated by it to the sense of beauty, is here also.


  24. The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "humanised" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.