Modification has come to the average home tradition through two distinct, though no doubt finally interdependent channels.
There are in Great Britain three main interdependent systems of home tradition undergoing modification and readjustment.
There is no one cause of the evils in society, but all existing things are interdependent conditions.
The author also shows that international finance has become so interdependent and so interwoven with trade and industry that the intangibility of an enemy's property extends to his trade.
We do not forget, of course, that our nation's progress and fiscal integrity are interdependent and inseparable.
In this war, we have been compelled to learn how interdependent upon each other are all groups and sections of the population of America.
In our complex and interdependent modern life transportation is essential to our very existence.
Civilization is not only complex and interdependent in form, it is avowedly competitive in its functioning.
Classes and castes are functioning parts of an interdependent social whole which can maintain balanced order only so long as each segment recognizes its obligations and performs its duties.
These four elements are so interdependent that one cannot be perfected without the other.
Correct pronunciation and beautiful tone are so interdependent as to be inseparable.
Why may not an attribute as a complete domain of interdependent events, itself be independent or substantial?
The various sciences already regard the one nature as their common object, and the one system of interdependent laws as their common achievement.
And all logical categories, inevitably used in describing and explaining our world, form one system of interdependent and organically related parts.
The complete sonata-form, like the Trilogies or Tetralogies of the classical drama, is a complex organism of which each part is itself organic, a corporate body composed of separate but interdependent members.
More especially is this the case with that particular form of unification which we call organic; that in which the details are absolutely diverse in character, but all play interdependent parts in one single economy.
Every function which one individual exercises is invariably dependent upon functions exercised by others and forms with them a system of interdependent parts.
Instead of developing separately, they concert their efforts; they are interdependent parts of a unity which is effective not only in the brief moments during which there is an interchange of services but afterward indefinitely.
My theory is that the whole universe is interdependent and that there can be no separation of its component parts.
This book shows how all the conditions of crime react upon us, that physiology and rectitude are interdependent and although you do not go to hell, yet hell will come to you if you transgress the laws of God and Nature.
The social groups overlap one another, and are interdependent in all their relations.
This interdependent relation renders it impossible to improve one group without improving the others, or to work a great detriment to one group without injuring the others.
It is a similar attempt to scrutinize and evaluate the significant aspects of the interdependent thought and conduct of our day from the standpoint of religion which is here attempted.
Of course, this naturalism in letters has its accompanying and interdependent philosophic theory, its intellectual interpretation and defense.
It was the one last improvement that enabled interdependent nations to handle themselves and to hold together.
A new interdependent form of civilization was about to be developed, and the telephone arrived in the nick of time to make this new civilization workable and convenient.
And as the telephone is essentially the instrument of co-working and interdependent people, it found itself suddenly welcomed as the most popular and indispensable of all the agencies that put men in touch with each other.
There are wheels within wheels in our economic organization--the machinery is so complex and interdependent that no one part can be modified without disturbing the whole.
All is interdependentin a civilized society; it is impossible to reform any one thing without altering the whole.
Although these are the chief functions devolving on the above mentioned food elements, yet they are mutually interdependent on each other for the proper performance of their several offices.
It is all due to the fact that we are homogeneous beings, whose powers are interdependent upon one another.
We are dependent and interdependent upon one another.
Thus there would be two complete series of phenomena, which are interdependent and interacting at all times, although each would be in itself a complete chain of elements.
Therefore the cells which make up an insect and a man are more diverse, they have more varied interrelationships, and they are far more interdependent then in the case of the components of Hydra.
Obviously, Matter is the reciprocal interdependent externalization of what used at one time to be called Forces, but which are now almost universally recognized to be merely modes of motion.
He was only aware that Mr. Tomes was still at work on the Reciprocal Interdependent Taxation of Imports, and that Miss Arkroyd was going to play Halma with him if he came up soon enough after dinner.
I gathered that he was giving details of his great scheme of Reciprocal Interdependent Taxation of Imports--what he touched upon at dinner last night.
The very nature of our interdependent life makes it necessary for each worker to do one thing and to do it exceedingly well.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "interdependent" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word. Other words: interlinked; interlocked; interrelated; related