The term create is here used in a somewhat loose sense and does not imply that the man originates matter or even that he always transforms it without calling in, as an aid, the forces of nature.
Prices, wages, and interest everywhere respond at once to an influence that originates in any part of the extended area.
Since irritability originates from the antagonism of the animal with the world; so is it parallel to an antagonism of the heavenly bodies, or to that of sun and planets.
This, therefore, originates also directly with the positing of the Eternal.
As the animal ramifies, so also do the stony tubes increase, and there originates a phytoidal or plant-like stem, but one consisting of a stony mass.
What is male originates through an organic process of decomposition or putrefaction of the ova.
In the Mussel a structure originates for the first time, which can be compared with a thoracic or pectoral cavity.
The number two originates most usually and in the simplest manner from the arrest of the number three.
With too high a degree of fibrous tension, which also originates through too long a continuance of the tension, the fibre is placed in a state of activity, which consists in the antagonism being balanced by approximation of the ends.
Anterior and posterior to the vertebral column there consequently originates a long canal formed by the bony rings.
Centrifugality originates only in a constrained manner or with reluctance, for the primary act always seeks the centre, and only moves towards the periphery, because it has no longer any place there.
Through this zone or ring of wood first originates the perfect separation into wood, liber and bark, whereof each formerly occupied the whole stalk or stem.
In this manner there of necessity originates an equiponderance in the number of both sexes.
This spiral conditionoriginates without doubt from the spiral-shaped motion of the granules in cell-sap.
It originates as vesicle, and its growth is a constant origination of vesicles; from the Indifferent, which is the water.
The light-organ excites the heat-organ by polarization unto motion and thereby originates the organ of gravity.
It certainly originates in that species of fear which we denominate cowardice, (poltronnerie.
It has been questioned whether physical suffering often originates the desire for suicide.
Excessive devotion of the attention to any particular branch of study, or to business, often originates cerebral disease and suicidal mania.
I say only that what does not originate in matter or ether originates =there=; but I well believe that beyond the ether there must be not one stage only, but countless stages in the infinity of things.
Valuable information concerning the later stages in the development of the marriage by capture which originates during a state of tribal peace, is again furnished by Australian ethnology.
Siegfried of the Niebelungen saga originates purely as a maerchen-hero; Dietrich of Bern is an historical personage.
The highest form of sanctification, moreover, originates in sacrifice itself.
At first this polyandry, which originates in capture, was probably only temporary in character.
There thus originates an officialdom, organized on fixed principles and possessing carefully defined public privileges.
But when a government originates with, and derives its authority from the whole community, there is no reason why the community, if it withdraw that authority, should seek to injure any except the prince from whom it withdraws it.
But this third mode of judging, which originates in and rests upon his actions, at once gives him a name which can only be destroyed by his afterwards doing many actions of a contrary nature.
From what we could learn, it generally terminates fatally in ten or twelve months; but I am led to believe, that in many cases it originates from the venereal disease.
There is not an instance on record to show that the mind ever originates unconscious action, or that any of its remote stores or powers ever spring into activity without being aroused by sensation or conscious thought.
Whether the word "cynic" originates from a similar source I will not undertake to say; but I have more than half a suspicion that such talk proceeds rather from a prejudice against men than a genuine enthusiasm for dogs.
And this evil state of societyoriginates in bad education and bad government.
I say that our way of looking at it must be the latest, but in saying so I do not mean to imply that this way of looking at it originates only at a late stage in the history of mankind.
Further, though it is in the heart of a person and an individual that desire must originate, it does not follow that prayeroriginates in individual desire.
The belief originates in desire, in longing for one loved and lost; and dreams are not the cause of that desire, though they are one region in which it manifests itself, or rather one mode of its manifestation.
Now madness is of various kinds; in addition to that which arises from disease there is the madness which originates in a passionate temperament, and makes men when engaged in a quarrel use foul and abusive language against each other.
The wrong which began a thousand years ago, is as much a wrong as if it began to-day; and the right which originates to-day, is as much a right as if it had the sanction of a thousand years.
We have now to consider the civil rights of man, and to show how the one originates from the other.
If any two nations are so, then must all nations be so, otherwise it is not nature but custom, and the offence frequently originates with the accuser.
Thomas, on the other hand, originates nothing, but most skillfully directs his army on well-defined principles of the art.
It appears relevant, therefore, to inquire, whence originates this impeded intercourse?
This deficiency originates in the inaccuracy of the application of the guttural and synonymous letters.
I should say it originates in a spirit of medical socialism; for it compels sufferers to exhibit their wounds to each other during the doctor's visit.
Velocity is an accident; it is therefore neither created nor annihilated, but originates in a determination produced by an agent, and ends by exhaustion or neutralization under the influence of an antagonistic agency.
Because by and by in one of our talks, I wish to further impress upon you that neither you, nor I, nor any man ever originates a thought in his own head.
Your dreaming mind originates the scheme, consistently and artistically develops it, and carries the little drama creditably through--all without help or suggestion from you?
Another great school of creation-myths originates in the widespread institution of the totem.
In other words these jacks are for the purpose of enabling each operator to have within her reach any line that may be called for regardless of what line originates the call.
These, as their name indicates, may be used for completing connections between offices in either direction, that is, whether the calloriginates at one end or the other.
The reason of my journey originates in the doubts I mentioned.
Do not call me romantic: if romance it be, it originates in the supreme satisfaction I have taken in contemplating the powers and beauties of my Louisa's mind.
Suspicion originates in a consciousness of self defect.
All were in a quiver of expectation; and knowing that, Jesus Christ originates this scene by His act of sending the two disciples into the village over against them, to 'bring the ass, and the colt the foal of an ass.
But the controversy between hedonists and anti-hedonists originates as soon as men reflect that a good which is not in some sense "my" good is not good at all, or that no act can be said to be moral which does not satisfy "me.
It may be that criticism of morality firstoriginates with a criticism of existing moral institutions or codes of ethics; such a criticism may be due to the spontaneous activity of the moral consciousness itself.
None of these originates out of conflicting statements of the moral consciousness, i.
Where, as in a volcanic eruption, the shock originates with an explosion, these waves go off in circles.
Where, however, as is generally the case, the shock originates in a fault plane, which may have a length and depth of many miles, the movement has an elliptical form.
For convenience we shall term the original embedded fluid rock water, and that which originates from the rain crevice water, the two forming the mass of the earth water.
When, as elsewhere noted, a shock originates beneath the sea, the effect is suddenly to elevate the water over the seat of the jarring and the regions thereabouts to the height of some feet.
Contemplate a brain cell, whence originates a certain nerve-process whereby energy is liberated with some resultant effect; what pulled the detent in that cell which started the impulse?
By a spiritual union we mean a union not of body but of spirit,--a union, therefore, which only the Holy Spirit originatesand maintains.
And any attention to the truth of God which originates in these motives has no absolute moral value, and cannot be regarded as even a beginning of salvation.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "originates" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.