Hence, in his accounts of new and unknown countries, he is consistent and rational; he is betrayed into no exaggeration, nor does he exhibit any traces of credulity or enthusiasm.
Nor does it seem to me that any misery befell the Jews that was more terrible than this, since in one night's time about two thousand of these deserters were thus dissected.
I suppose the month they there intended was June, and not July, as the copies now have it; nor does Tacitus's coherence imply less.
Nor does it reveal, so far as I know, the spiritual possibilities that Christianity does.
It does not grow on ancestral trees or on college campuses, nor does it come out of laboratories or hospitals, tho' it is sometimes found in all these places.
The compassion of the rude state is neither ostentatious nor dilating: nor does it insult its object by the exaction of impossible conditions.
Smith's name does not appear in it, nor does that of Gosnold nor of Captain Newport.
Nor does it seem probable that Smith himself would have omitted to mention the dramatic scene of the prevented execution if it had occurred to him.
Nor does he only see all that is; but he also images all that is not.
Nor does he use circumlocutions, and beat about the bush, but excels in forcible statements and quick rejoinders.
Then, he does not marry her as a coward, but merely because he has no choice; nor does he yield till he has shown all the courage that were compatible with discretion.
Nor does it much matter whether her passion were the motive or the consequence of her disguise, since in either case such a man as Olivia describes him to be might well find his way to tougher hearts than Viola's.
I can hardly believe it his; certainly the style and versification are much better than in any other of his plays; nor does it show any thing of that incontinence of learning which he seems to have been unable to restrain.
These are my politics; I do not know with whose they coincide or disagree, nor does it signify a straw.
Nor does he ever seem inclined to break with intuitionism completely.
Nor does he leave all difficulties behind him, who abandons Dogmatic Intuitionism and takes refuge in Philosophical.
Nor does it take the child long to discover that the law of its own home is not identical with that of the house next door.
Nor does it seem inconceivable that one should do this for the sake of another's good.
That the measures taken should sometimes prove inadequate does not alter the fact of the choice of an end, nor does it obscure the revelation of the trend of the social will.
The power which resides in him is new in nature, and none but he knows what that is which he can do, nor does he know until he has tried.
Amid so much that is distracting, he never loses command over his subject; nor does he degenerate into fulsome rhetoric.
The charm of his work is never impaired by scientific mannerism--that stumbling-block to critics like De Stendhal in the art of Florence; nor does it suffer from the picturesqueness of a sentimental style.
Nor does he speak with any shame of the savage cruelty with which he punished a woman who was sitting to him as a model, and whom he hauled up and down his room by the hair of her head, kicking and beating her till he was tired.
Akasa is not, properly speaking, the crown of the astral light, nor does it by itself constitute any of the six primary forces.
Nor does it much more concern us that the Scientists deny the existence of such an arrangement, because their instruments are inadequate to make their senses perceive it.
Then neither is my mind firm, nor does my color maintain a certain situation: and the involuntary tears glide down my cheek, proving with what lingering flames I am inwardly consumed.
Now neither the infamous guest of the Lacedaemonian adulteress shines; nor does Priam's perjured family repel the warlike Grecians by the aid of Hector, and that war, spun out to such a length by our factions, has sunk to peace.
Consuming care boards even brazen-beaked ships: nor does it quit the troops of horsemen, for it is more fleet than the stags, more fleet than the storm-driving east wind.
It is sweet and glorious to die for one's country; death even pursues the man that flies from him; nor does he spare the trembling knees of effeminate youth, nor the coward back.
And, in consequence, Emerson can only convince the converted; and his song is not heard in the dark, nor does it cheer the wayfarer on the muddy highway, along which burthened humanity meanly toils.
Nor does he assert in the Republic the involuntariness of vice, which is maintained by him in the Timaeus, Sophist, and Laws (Protag.
The philosopher is no longer living in the unseen, nor is he sent by an oracle to convince mankind of ignorance; nor does he regard knowledge as a system of ideas leading upwards by regular stages to the idea of good.
Nothing actually existing in the world at all resembles Plato's ideal State; nor does he himself imagine that such a State is possible.
Nor does he explain how the lots could be so manipulated by the legislature as to bring together the fairest and best.
Nor does he dance, but he would walk Long miles to serve a friend, And though he cares not crack a joke, He will the truth defend.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "nor does" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.