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Example sentences for "individualised"

Lexicographically close words:
indium; individu; individual; individualisation; individualise; individualising; individualism; individualist; individualistic; individualists
  1. The bird in general is next individualised into an eagle or falcon—a strong, swift bird, that darts down with might and majesty.

  2. Essex is not a suburban county; it is a characteristic and individualised county which wins the heart.

  3. And this double refraction of his mind by which a concentrated and individualised Britling did but present a larger impersonal Britling beneath, carried with it a duplication of his conscience and sense of responsibility.

  4. He was not so completely individualised as people are supposed to be individualised--in our law, in our stories, in our moral judgments.

  5. A series of love-episodes ensue, each one being individualised with amazing subtlety.

  6. Did he not individualise Leonora in music as well as Mozart had individualised the much less exalted characters of Donna Anna and Zerlina?

  7. He finds himself representing some creature that is scarcely individualised at all, and taking part in the interplay of elemental forces rather than of human passions.

  8. I do not agree with Thode that we are indebted to the legend of St. Francis for the modern soulful and highly individualised art.

  9. Because individualised love was an unknown quantity to the ancients, they ornamented their sarcophagi with symbols of ecstatic life, with dancing and embracing fauns and maenads.

  10. Starting from an unconscious existence in complete harmony with nature, it had passed through individualised man to the loftiest spiritual conceptions in the impersonal world of ideas.

  11. If a complete unity is ever to be established, then doubtless it will be the privilege of the Germanic race to achieve it, for the Neo-Latin nations mean by love either the individualised instinct, or the rare, purely spiritual love.

  12. The style is more individualised than in the Goethe pieces, and the invention is, on the whole, of a superior order.

  13. Wells has said, "is the individualised correlation of salvation, like that it is a synthetic consequence of conflict and confusions.

  14. The men, on the other hand, not yet individualised as husbands and fathers, held no rights or position in the group of the women and their children.

  15. The Christians individualised the understanding, the heathens made it a universal essence.

  16. This memory may be defined as the faculty possessed by an individualised "centre of consciousness" voluntarily to reproduce the vibrations it has received or generated.

  17. This self-consciousness constitutes the human stage; it appears in the higher animals, but as it descends the scale of being, gradually disappears in non-individualised consciousness.

  18. A "centre of consciousness" is a form that serves, for the time being, as the instrument of an individualised ray of that indefinable principle called the soul.

  19. All the persons are vividly alive and convincing; and there is a whole range of them, each individualised and given a real personality.

  20. This expression is used in the Brahmanical philosophy to denote the relation between the world-fiction as a whole and its individualised parts.

  21. In the Bible this movement of individualised Spirit is called "prayer," and it is synonymous with Thought, formulated with the intention of producing this response.

  22. But the error we have to avoid is that of supposing volition to take the same form in Universal Spirit as in individualised Spirit.

  23. The fertilised ovum has only apparent simplicity; it has a complex individualised organisation--often visible.

  24. As in Greece, so among the Celts, the primitive corn-spirits had probably become more individualised goddesses with an elaborate cult, observed on an island or at other sacred spots.

  25. Thus the primitive Heaven personified recedes, and his place is taken by a more individualised god.

  26. It is not for them primarily that plays are written; and any one who has grown individualised through the theatre-going habit cannot help looking back regretfully upon those fresher days when he belonged, unthinking, to the crowd.

  27. Later on, when he became more versatile as an actor, he wrote for himself a wider range of parts and individualised them in name as well as in nature.

  28. Aphrodite is less individualised than any other deity, at any rate on the earlier vases, on which she is invariably draped in the ordinary manner.

  29. Some of the later examples have strongly individualised features, and seem to be genuine portraits; it is possible that they are actually from moulds taken from the faces of the dead.

  30. It may be a proper and utilitarian change, but one can hardly notice without regret what transformations the railway regime has wrought in customs and habits which once individualised a country and people.

  31. The modern fighting man is as individualised as a half back or a centre forward in a football team.

  32. Hitherto, the literature of the stage had represented the intelligence of the mass; it became individualised in Shakespeare, and this fact marks an entirely new era in the history of the drama.

  33. Love stands at the head, and is the fontal source of all separate individualised duties.

  34. The soul is further de-universalised into the individualised subject.

  35. But, in Hegel's use of them, these conventional designations are charged with a highly individualised meaning.

  36. But with the growth of the trading spirit his character changes: he becomes the mere capitalist, is denationalised, has no definite work and can claim no individualised function.

  37. The "anthropological process" has defined and settled the mere general sentiency of soul into an individualised shape, a localised and limited self, a bundle of habits.

  38. With a strong bent towards fully-differentiated and individualised experience Herbart conjoined a conviction of the need of logical analysis to prevent us being carried away by the first-come and inadequate generalities.

  39. There remain large regions of more specialised and individualised production that many Socialists nowadays are quite prepared to leave to the freer initiatives of private enterprise.

  40. Princess Bibesco's I Have Only Myself to Blame consisted of sixteen short stories the most nervously alive and most clearly individualised of feminine gestures.

  41. I remember saying and printing: "If this isn't individualised writing, extremely skilful writing and highly entertaining writing, we would like to know what is.

  42. As human beings we are individualised fragments of the great universal spirit.

  43. And this holds good in general of the skulls of the lower Vertebrates--they are individualised exemplars of a simple general type, not merely unmodified embryonic stages of the greatly differentiated skulls of the higher Vertebrates (p.

  44. Between the two layers other cells are formed belonging to the vessel layer, which is, however, in Schwann's opinion not a very definitely individualised layer.

  45. The skull of these lower fishes is itself a specialised one; it is an individualised modification of a simple type of skull.


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