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Example sentences for "originate"

Lexicographically close words:
originale; originality; originall; originally; originals; originated; originates; originating; origination; originative
  1. There are many pains which originate from a want of due motion in the part, as those occasioned by cold; and all those pains which are attended with cold extremities, and are generally termed nervous.

  2. Hence these tremors evidently originate from the too quick exhaustion of the lessened quantity of the spirit of animation.

  3. When these tumours of the tonsils frequently return I have sometimes suspected them to originate from the absorption of putrid matter from decaying teeth.

  4. It is supposed to originate from universal pressure on the brain, and is said to be produced by compressing the spinal marrow, where there is a deficiency of the bone in the spina bifida.

  5. These violent exertions are most frequently excited in consequence of those pains, which originate from defect of the action of the part.

  6. Some convulsions may originate in the want of the absorption of some acrid secretion, which occasions pain; hence these diseases are so much more certainly relieved by opium after venesection or other evacuations.

  7. These promote both the secretions and absorptions, increase the natural heat, and remove those pains, which originate from the defect of irritative motions, termed nervous pains; and prevent the convulsions consequent to them.

  8. Upon the whole it is plain that this Servian institution did not originate in a conflict between the orders.

  9. Nothing is more certain than that this earliest constitutional scheme did not originate in Rome; it was a primitive institution common to all the Latins, and perhaps reached back to a period anterior to the separation of the stocks.

  10. Under a conviction that the demonstrations of respect and affection which have been made to the President originate from that source, I cannot deny that I have taken some interest and pleasure in them.

  11. Objection 1: It would seem that penance does not originate from fear.

  12. But the Divine Nature did not first originate from the Virgin.

  13. As a rule, light waves originate in bodies that are highly heated, being started by the vibrations of the minute particles of matter.

  14. In what general ways may disease originate in the body?

  15. The sound waves which originate in vibrating bodies are transmitted by the air to the external ear.

  16. They consist of progressive vibratory movements of the air that originate in vibrating bodies.

  17. Such impulses originate at the fiber terminations which are found in both the muscles and their tendons.

  18. Many earthquakes originate beneath the sea, and in a number of examples they seem to have been accompanied, as soundings indicate, by local subsidences of the ocean bottom.

  19. Six cases in less than a fortnight, seeming to originate in a case of erysipelas.

  20. It recognizes and supports the belief that a series of cases may originate from a single primitive source which affects each new patient in turn; and especially from cases of Erysipelas.

  21. Cases of puerperal fever seeming to originate in erysipelas.

  22. Collins refers to several instances in which puerperal fever has appeared to originate from a continued proximity to patients suffering with typhus.

  23. This scene, which is enacted in a thousand ways and which may originate in a thousand different incidents, has a sequel in that other situation which, while it is less pleasant, is far more terrible.

  24. For it has been established after many long discussions that in the nerves originate the most fearful torture.

  25. But, speaking generally, these fluctuating or environmental variants are merely forms of the species, and, other things being equal, they will not actually originate new species.

  26. Nor have scientists ever been able to decide what the combination of physical and chemical forces must have been to originate it.

  27. These objections, he was satisfied, neither did nor could originate with the country gentlemen; but they were brought forward; for purposes not now to be concealed, by the avowed enemies of this noble cause.

  28. For this did not originate in views of selfishness, or of party or of popular applause, but in an awful sense of his duty as a Christian.

  29. For as the latter languages originated from the Roman, just so do these originate from the Malay.

  30. But can a finite and imperfect cause--like the human mind or the outward world--be reasonably supposed to originate the idea of an infinite and perfect being?

  31. Infinite power and wisdom must necessarily work "under limitations" when they originate and control finite things; but the limitations are not in the infinite power and wisdom themselves--they are in their operations and effects.

  32. We know ourselves as intelligences, as beings that foresee and contrive, that can discover and apply principles, that can originate order and adjustment.

  33. The question, Did the earth and the solar system originate with intelligence?

  34. On what grounds can it be shown that a mind possessed of sufficient power to originate the universe, the ultimate elements of matter being given, could not also have created these elements?

  35. And these universals or ideas which underlie all the knowledge of all men, which originate it and do not originate in it, have existed eternally in the only mode in which truths can be said to be eternal, in an eternal mind.

  36. His titles Curiatius, Patricius, Quirinus originate in his worship in the gentes, the curiae and the state, and have no reference to any special functions or characteristics.

  37. The system did not originate with the Arabs.

  38. But in virtue of those forces which seem to originate in the sun, “the soul of the great earth,” a succession of new forms has been produced, as the old things have passed away.

  39. Is it not conceivable that magnetic force may likewise originate in a similar manner?

  40. Did man, whom God created with a word, originate in an egg?

  41. The material senses originate and support all that is material, untrue, selfish, or debased.

  42. Sickness, sin, and death, being inharmonious, do not originate in God nor belong to His government.

  43. Intelli- gence does not originate in numbers, but is manifested through them.

  44. This shows that matter did not originate in God, Spirit, and is not eternal.

  45. If seed is necessary to produce wheat, and wheat to 90:1 produce flour, or if one animal can originate another, how then can we account for their primal origin?

  46. The marks in the barrel originate during manufacture.

  47. They originate through use of the gun, through accidental marks resulting from cleaning, excessive cleaning, of the weapon, or faulty cleaning.

  48. Self-consciousness and sympathy, coming into conflict with brute emotions, originate the sense of sin.

  49. Theism: "An immoral act must originate in the immoral agent; a physical effect is not known to originate in its physical cause.

  50. The answer is in part: Persecution did not originate with the official classes; it proceeded really from the people at large.

  51. It seems probable, therefore, that the worship of this Great Spirit did not originate with the Peruvians.

  52. This philosopher did not originate any religious creed: he was simply a teacher of morality.

  53. This regular visitation of certain food bases, being of the greatest importance to birds which have a long period of travel or wandering before them, tends to originate the so-called route by which they travel.


  54. The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "originate" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.