The evolutionist, however, having substituted what he imaginesto be a universal law for separate acts of creation must explain everything.
This one imagines that the primitive state is violence, and he sets out from that in order to authorize the right of the strongest, and to consecrate despotism.
Rousseau imagines at first a primitive state in which man being no longer savage without being yet civilized, lived happy and free under the dominion of the laws of nature.
Though carefully and successfully avoiding it, he imagines of a sudden that the blow is imminent.
Man is neither the vile nor the excellent being which he sometimes imagines himself to be.
The rouge-et-noir player imagines that chance is not capricious.
He imagines that if he does not earn thirteen hundred francs in his day's work, to pay a debt contracted with a notary named Jacques Ferrand, Louise will die on the scaffold for the crime of infanticide.
He imagines that he has absorbed all human knowledge, and that, by retaining him here, humanity is thrown back into the darkness of the most profound ignorance.
The duke, who thinks and believes and imagines that Cliges will not be able to defend himself against him, but that he will soon have slain or conquered him, quickly has himself armed.
On the other side of that border spread such a blackness as the mind imagines for the sea a mile down, yet here and there it was relieved by the gray of stone; everywhere, also, a coldness.
A jewel that he imagines glorious, a jewel of blood, a jewel of smoke.
He replied: "If this rascal of his own accord chose a weapon so out of the way, it is because he imagines he can defend his life with it.
They fall before the thinker into irretrievable ruin, and therefore the freethinker imagines he has destroyed religion.
He imagines that he is guided by his reason, that it is his logical faculty that is satisfied, and his religion can be proved irrefragably.
How is the heaven held up, the great heavy dome as he imagines it?
One imagines that to take up a glass of it would be to dip up pure ultra-marine.
The air is fresh enough, but it is soft and gratifying, and one almost imagines that he can smell flowers in it.
In any other point of view, we cannot possibly conceive how Sir Walter imagines "he has done something to revive the declining spirit of loyalty" by these novels.
Who imagines that when the third of a century during which we have already held Alaska is rounded out to a full century, that unorganized Territory will even then have any greater prospect than at present of admission as a State?
Who imagines that we can take in Porto Rico and keep out nearer islands when they come?
This Government has bared all this vast skeleton to me; but I fear that Washington imagines that part of it is a deliberate scare.
She imagines she has such a reason; imagines it in all sincerity.
Hawthorne could not have found a more fascinating subject, and he imagines it for us as a great carbuncle located in the upper recesses of the mountains.
Even worse, heimagines the lines of pages carrying dishes that breathe out the tempting vapour and accompanies them to the great hall already prepared for the great feast.
Not otherwise, surely, thinks the sheep, which following the herd imagines that she is directing it.
His own brother imagines himself a monkey, and drinks with dissectors.
These Imagineswere carried in procession at funerals.
These Imagines were busts of wax, marble, or metal, which the Romans of family placed in the entrance of their houses.
Hence he imagines various discrepancies in our home life, and in many ways mixes unbidden with our circle.
He imagines a society or a process of evolution, and in this imaginary framework he disposes the elements furnished by the documents.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "imagines" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.