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Example sentences for "imparts"

Lexicographically close words:
impartial; impartiality; impartiall; impartially; imparting; impassable; impasse; impassibility; impassible; impassion
  1. It is his own vastness which shakes him and imparts to him strange and mighty oscillations.

  2. We must tell our tale as she imparts it to us, and go on or turn aside at her bidding.

  3. At the end of act first the Vicar, who has been apprised of the loss of his property, imparts this sad news to his family.

  4. To the majority of persons Nature imparts mediocrity, and it is from mediocrity that the derogatory denial emanates as to the superior men and women of our race.

  5. That blending of complexity with transparency always imparts to individual life a tinge of piquant interest, because it is one denotement of the temperament of genius.

  6. There have been few joys for me in life comparable to that of seeing the curtain rise on "Hamlet," and hearing the guards begin to talk about the ghost; and yet how fully this joy imparts itself without any material embodiment!

  7. A collection of weak evidences makes up a strong evidence; again, one strong argument imparts cogency to collateral arguments which are in themselves weak.

  8. This it is that imparts to the history both of states and of religions, its specially turbulent and polemical character.

  9. The particle suh, added to the complete forms of the disjunctive pronouns, imparts a verbal sense to them; and appears, in this instance, to be a succedaneum for the substantive verb.

  10. The Indian, with his plumes, and gay and easy costume, always imparts an oriental air to it.

  11. It removes all doubts raised by satanic influences, sanctifies the heart, imparts health to the soul, and produces union with the Lord of holiness.

  12. The animal, which imparts energy and impulsive strength to the whole character, mental and physical.

  13. The account of the surrender of his manhood, and the obliteration of every impulse parental feeling required to obtain his consent to butcher his son Isaac upon the altar, imparts a humiliating moral lesson (Gent.

  14. The Bible imparts to us the strange intelligence that "the Lord God brought all the beasts and birds to Adam to see what he would call them" (Gen.

  15. The present organization of the Department imparts to its operations great efficiency, but I concur fully in the propriety of a division of the Bureau of Construction, Equipment, Increase, and Repairs into two bureaus.

  16. Wigs of various kinds have been in use from very early periods, as the grace and ornament which the hair imparts to the human frame have always been generally recognised.

  17. The configuration of the cliff, which forms the major part of the inclosing wall of this chamber, imparts to it an irregular or roughly triangular form.

  18. He imparts full two shillings' worth of facts as we go, all with a fierce roll of r's, as becomes a man of war.

  19. Elusive, delicate, alluring--it is the actinic ray that imparts vitality.

  20. Let us now see the qualities which the Spirit imparts to the members of the Body, by virtue of their incorporation into it.

  21. Luther gives in a peculiar fashion his reasons for taking such a standpoint: “The Nature of God demands that He should first destroy and annihilate everything there is in us before He imparts His gifts.

  22. According to the teaching of all ascetics the reception of grace imparts peace and joy in God.

  23. Educative” grace which imparts “strength” is probably what we call actual grace, not sanctifying grace.

  24. In return, Don Gregorio imparts to the Chilian skipper some confidences hitherto withheld.

  25. Inez's speech imparts no information: for Carmen has been surmising in the same strain.

  26. There is another, more serious side to the question of food adulteration, where the foreign matter is added purposely, either because it is cheap, because it weighs heavily, imparts a pleasing colour or an agreeable aroma.

  27. It is this fungus, by the way, which imparts the colour and flavour to gorgonzola cheese.

  28. By means of this adjustment, which externally takes the form of a single milled screw, a considerable turn of the screw in either direction only imparts a very slight upward or downward movement to the microscope tube.

  29. This also shows us that man cannot be saved by his own work or merit, but alone by what God presents and imparts to him.

  30. It imparts to the reader an appropriative power, a force of affinity, by which he insensibly and unconsciously attracts to himself all that has a near or even a remote relation to the end for which he reads.

  31. The distinct consciousness of some object at present before us, imparts a manifold greater interest to the contents of any volume.

  32. A volcanic product resembling puzzolano, that imparts to mortar the property of hardening under water.

  33. When taken internally, even in very minute quantities, tellurium imparts to the breath an offensively powerful odour of garlic.

  34. The Canadian petroleum contains sulphuretted hydrogen, which imparts to it a very disagreeable smell, and is difficult of removal.

  35. The addition of a single bud of the black currant to the infusion of ordinary black tea imparts to it a flavour closely resembling that of green tea.

  36. One gram of this compound imparts the sweet taste of the root to two litres of water.

  37. A solution of the crude acid mixed with a little spirit is used to dye the hair, to which it imparts a fine brown colour, but has the disadvantage of also staining the skin when applied to it.

  38. Verdigris imparts a pale green; sulphate of copper and sal ammoniac gives a palm-tree green.

  39. In England the composition contains a considerable quantity of chlorate of potassa, which imparts a snapping and flaming quality to the matches tipped with it, and but little phosphorus, on account of the moisture of the climate.

  40. If applied to the skin, this oxide becomes partially reduced, and imparts a permanent black colour to the skin, due to the deposition of metallic osmium.

  41. The soft soap of commerce imparts to the liniment an unpleasant smell.

  42. It is the last substance which imparts to this leather its peculiar odour and power of resisting mould and damp.

  43. They may be prepared from any substances which imparts its fragrance to water by distillation.

  44. It imparts a deep purple colour to cold water, though dissolving sparingly in that liquid; it is more soluble in hot water, and very soluble in alcohol.

  45. From the best bliss that earth imparts We turn, unfilled, to thee again.

  46. Follow it unto the sea, where it gives prismatic tints to the anemone, and imparts the richest colours to the various algae.

  47. It imparts Practical Information on the Subject of Practical Facts.

  48. Because it imparts to the light that falls upon it that change in its vibratory condition, which produces on our eyes the sensation of redness.

  49. Because, in the formation of juices, a considerable amount of oxygen is absorbed, and the oxygen imparts acidity to the taste.

  50. How signally the Almighty displeasure at intemperance is expressed, when the very drink which imparts the mad pleasure of intoxication is made the direct instrument by which the drunkard is destroyed!

  51. Because the pressure upon the muscles of the leg retards the progress of the blood until it forces itself through the compressed vessels, and thereby imparts a pulsation which moves the leg and foot.

  52. It imparts heat, which has the effect of expanding both fluids and solids.

  53. A hair lying on the tongue will be plainly perceptible to the touch of the tongue; and the surface of a broken tooth will often cause the tongue great annoyance, by the acute perception it imparts of the roughness of its surface.

  54. Because the hydrogen which they contain is combined with some proportion of carbon, which imparts a bright yellow colour to the flames.

  55. Doctor+ means the teacher, as far as he imparts theory, with reference to the student, in opp.

  56. For space, which is our form of perception, imparts extension to matter, and corporeal existence consists in acting, which depends upon causality, and consequently upon the form of our understanding.

  57. According to this measure, therefore, it imparts to each the most important of those organs concerned with what is without, the brain, with its function the intellect.

  58. To the will that does not deny itself every birth imparts a new and different intellect,--till it has learned the true nature of life, and in consequence of this wills it no more.

  59. Yet, taken generally, this is not required for their comprehension or enjoyment, but rather imparts to them a foreign and arbitrary addition: therefore it is better to apprehend them in their immediacy and purity.

  60. The magnificence of Pelops imparts lustre even to the brilliant dreams of the mythologist.

  61. In some cases a multiplicity of lesions in the bones and joints imparts to the disease the features of pyæmia.

  62. Caries of the articular surface imparts a woolly appearance or irregular contour in place of the well-defined outline of the articular end of the bone.

  63. The needles are made to touch the opposite wall of the sac, and the pulsation of the aneurysm imparts a movement to them which causes them to scarify the inner surface of the sac.


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