It is smooth and downy; its parts are (to use that expression) melted into one another; you are presented with no sudden protuberance through the whole, and yet the whole is continually changing.
Icicle, however, is not a derivative but a compound; its parts being is and gicel, both Anglo-Saxon words.
The true notion is that the idea of being or existing is expressed by four different verbs, each of which is defective in some of its parts.
A word may be {387} adapted to a secondary meaning by a change in its parts in the way of omission, as well as by a change in the way of addition.
If the body is compact, and bends or yields inward to pressure without any sliding of its parts, it is hard and elastic, returning to its figure with a force arising from the mutual attraction of its parts.
And as there is nothing more in the form of the whole than the arrangement of its parts, the future forms of the system are theoretically visible in its present configuration.
Now, we say that a composite object changes by the displacement of its parts.
There is no durable system that is not, at least in some of its parts, vivified by intuition.
Seventhly, that nature is unique, although its elements or its parts may be varied to infinity, indued with properties extremely opposite; with qualities essentially different.
Indeed, according to thine own ideas, if thou wast to examine them with care, dost thou not admit that thy gods are the universal cause of all; that they maintain the whole by the destruction of its parts.
For any one thing merely spoken of, is of the third person singular, whatever may be the nature of its parts.
To render the composition distinct in its parts, and striking on the whole,"--Ib.
Everything composite is a possible existent, because its existence depends upon the existence of its parts.
The rational cause forms a conception of the world order and of himself as giving existence to this world order as a whole and in its parts.
It becomes our duty, therefore, to study nature, as a whole and in its parts, conscientiously and minutely, in order to realize clearly the goodness and wisdom of God as exhibited therein.
How to estimate the solidity of the Body of Ice, or how strong is the mutual adhesion of its parts?
Footnote: We may consider an undetermined quantity as a whole, when it is enclosed within limits, although we cannot construct or ascertain its totality by measurement, that is, by the successive synthesis of its parts.
The principle of Correggio vanished with its author, though it found numerous imitators of its parts.
If it is essential, then how explain the fact that its parts do not fall outside one another in time?
In its parts and as a whole each instrument is intelligently constructed and tested so that its make-up and function are exactly known.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "its parts" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.