They are simple deists, knowing nothing of Christianity; and the author makes them the mouthpieces of criticisms upon Christian prayers, Te Deums, and hymn-singing in general.
They are not alive, they only are mouthpieces for the author's rather old-time ideas.
It is true that in dialogue he has had few superiors; his men and women talk as they would talk in life and only in special instances are mouthpieces for the author's ideas--in this quite different from so many of Tolstoy's characters.
With convergent mouthpieces there is a contraction within the mouthpiece causing a loss of head, and a diminution of the velocity of discharge, as with cylindrical mouthpieces.
Omega] = 1/2 = cc; a result confirmed by experiment with mouthpieces of this kind.
Hence, formouthpieces of this kind, and for the section at GH, cv = 0.
The mouthpieces and the orifices are variously placed, to suit the fancy of the modeler, but the construction and the powers are pretty uniform throughout.
The two mouthpiecesare so close together that both are necessarily blown at once.
They work in mouthpieces of business interests masquerading as newspapers or electronic media.
A peculiar bagpipe is used in Sardinia, called the 'Lanedda,' in which the unfortunate player is obliged to make use of three mouthpieces at the same time.
Musettes were often of most elaborate construction, the covers of the windbags being of plush or velvet, richly embroidered in needlework, whilst the pipes and mouthpieces are inlaid with ivory, ebony, and silver.
The first are, for the most part, mouthpiecesof the theories dear to the poet.
The trick is evident: to make the conception of the necessary subordination of the individual ridiculous and contemptible, Ibsen appoints as its mouthpieces ridiculous and contemptible beings.
Sidenote: Enslavement of the Clergy] The secular clergy alone remained; and injunction after injunction from the Vicar-General taught rector and vicar that they must learn to regard themselves as mere mouthpieces of the royal will.
The boys removed their snorkel mouthpieces and faced each other upright in the water, holding position with easy flipper movements.
Aqualung mouthpieces replaced the snorkels, and each boy tested his flow of air, checked to be sure his mask was connected to the lung by a safety line, charged his gun, and set his watch.
They launched floats, placed aqualung mouthpieces on top of their masks, and swam parallel to the beach.
Yet we find the Journal, like all the vehicles and mouthpieces of radicalism, other than those of the Socialists, unready to take the first step necessary in any conflict; namely, to decide who is the enemy.
The friends and mouthpieces of some of the present leaders have been mean enough to charge that I bought the senatorship from Lorenzo Snow, President of their own Church.
The friends and mouthpieces of some of the present leaders have been base enough to charge that I bought the Senatorship from Lorenzo Snow, president of their own church.
This is no place to examine the origin or antiquity of the custom of making animals the mouthpieces of moral and satirical utterance on human affairs.
Eloy d'Amerval, a Picard priest, also fell into mediaeval lines in his Livre de la Deablerie, in which the personages of Lucifer and Satan are made the mouthpieces of much social satire.
Auguste Ehrhard, Ibsen's French admirer, has pointed out that in his subsidiary figures the dramatist is very lifelike and his chief characters are usually the mouthpieces of his theories.
These mouthpieces of the deity are consulted in almost every concern of life and are handsomely paid for their services.
At his signal, the four waded out into the cold water, splashed around a little to get accustomed to it, then put mouthpieces in place and prepared to don masks.
The figures that occupy the stage of the old Morality are for the most part, like the two Angels, mere mouthpieces for pious or wicked counsels.
It is no conventional canon, but a maxim of mere common sense, that the dramatist should be chary of introducing characters who have no personal share in the drama, and are mere mouthpieces for the conveyance of information.
His leading figures are, as a rule, either his mouthpieces or his butts.
In Mangaia they were the priests or mouthpieces of the great god Rongo.
One of the most important functions of the priests was to act as mouthpieces of the gods.
The kings were sacred men, being regarded as priests and mouthpieces of the great tutelary divinities.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "mouthpieces" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.