The words of Pindar are here much to the purpose: #chren men kata kairon eroton drepesthai, thyme, syn halikiai.
A second work of Hippolytus [Greek: Kata pason haipeseov elegchos] is preserved in the so-called Philosophumena which survives under the name of Origen.
Tenju-in-Den lived to over eighty years; the Takata no Kata died, aged seventy-two years.
Perhaps this fact, together with his youth, and the more entertaining expenditure of the income at an Edo yashiki, rather than in a mountain castle town, brought the Takata no Kata to the capital.
Hence the body which, touching all solid bodies by every point in them, and supports them extending itself in the kata direction—this body is not thick in this direction, but thin.
Now this body which extends thus, bearing all solid portions of matter in contact with its surface by every point of them, may be thick in the kata direction or thin.
This is a good Pauline idea, but it is doubtful whether [Greek: ta kata prosopon] can yield it.
The attempt to do so is due in part, I believe, to a misinterpretation of [Greek: kata sarka].
Greek: ta kata prosopon blepete]--are no doubt directed to this situation, but they have been very variously rendered.
Greek: kata to legomenon] of the author that he was illustrating?
He quotes the following interesting passage from the Philopseudes of Lucian, Synen achri de alektryonon ekousamen adonton tote de he te Selene aneptato eis ton ouranon kai he Hekate edy kata tes ges, kai ta alla phasmata ephanisthe, &c.
Greek: Christos menkata to kechristhai kai kosmêsai ta panta di autou ton theon legetai] and therefore (see Dial.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "kata" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.