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Example sentences for "perspectives"

Lexicographically close words:
personnel; personnes; persons; perspective; perspectively; perspicacious; perspicacity; perspicuity; perspicuous; perspicuously
  1. The intarsia on the back showed ornament of fine style, drawings of sacred objects and perspectives of fine buildings drawn from various parts of the city.

  2. Monaca, and constructed some cupboards ornamented with inlaid work and perspectives for the Badia of Fiesole.

  3. The tarsie in the sacristy are in a later setting, and include nine panels of perspectives of landscapes, buildings, &c.

  4. In the early years of the 19th century 38 of these perspectives were moved to Siena and placed in the Cathedral, where they now are.

  5. Print Media and the Internet As shown all throughout this study, the Internet is opening new perspectives in all the sectors of the print media.

  6. The disruption of the print media by the Internet has led to new perspectives for intellectual property and regulations about cyberspace.

  7. And in the absence of stars, the earth itself seemed to gain in vastness and mystery, its own awfulness, as it sped round, unlessened by those endless perspectives of vaster planets.

  8. We well remember the solicitations, the refusals, the renewed appeals, and, finally, the reluctant and conditional assent to have a single gelatine print from one of his perspectives published.

  9. Perspectives are highly attractive specimens of progression, which, when made use of in the decorations of a theatre, produce delightful illusions.

  10. And yet the Greeks, with their unerring instinct, actually made use of false architectural perspectives to add to the effects of height and depth in their colonnaded buildings.

  11. But it was very like being alone in the world to go slowly, with tired feet, along the perspectives of the streets, to turn corners aimlessly, to wander on with no destination or purpose.

  12. The sun was strong upon the lawn, and the smell of the roses was heavy on the air; across the hedge, the land rolled away to clear perspectives of peace and beauty.

  13. There was notably a series of studies made from the first platform of the Eiffel Tower, an accumulation of wonders of perspectives framing scenes of such animation and caprice as to take away one's breath.

  14. Was it only the haze before her tear-worn eyes or did dim perspectives of worshippers stretch away boundlessly on all sides of the clearly seen area, which still retained the form of the room she knew so well?

  15. But they themselves had no wish to stand in such shoes; the dingy perspectives of Dalston villadom limited their ambition, already sufficiently gratified by migration from Whitechapel.

  16. This view transcends perspectives adopted in an earlier period of nursing science philosophy.

  17. Caring: Theoretical perspectives of relevance to nursing," 62 Boykin, A.

  18. How do these perspectives direct nursing practice?

  19. In an effort to transcend perspectives of advanced practice nursing based on the traditional reductionist medical science and nursing process models, processes of care are superimposed on a traditional medical model (Dunphy, 1998).

  20. But all such questions [Pg 89] are excluded when one understands that this philosophy is only a point of view: the world it describes is a vista not separable from the egotistical perspectives that frame it in.

  21. He also succeeded well in perspectives and in animals.

  22. The perspectives in the tribune of that church were by his hand; the figures by Tiarini; and in several other places the perspectives were by Dentone, the figures by Colonna.

  23. Nor must we omit Serafino Brizzi, who obtained equal reputation for his perspectives in oil interspersed both throughout foreign and native cities.

  24. In his perspectives he occasionally employed Gio.

  25. They both conjointly served, for nearly the space of twenty years, the various historical painters mentioned in this epoch, preparing for them the perspectives and ornaments, and whatever else the art required.

  26. They had been much employed at Rome under Canuti, their master in figures, and the former was chosen by Franceschini to paint the perspectives in the church of Corpus Domini.

  27. Epictetus as teacher anticipates very modern educational methods in his regard for the structure of situations and the changing perspectives in human relationships.

  28. When the face was ugly its foul breath was fouler, and when handsome the snoring was a nice inebriating gust that picked up Nawin's kite; but in both perspectives the brazen Laotian in his impoverished vulnerability reminded him of Jatupon.

  29. He sat up; embraced the mesa of his legs within the multifarious sands of the desert of his mind; admired those various shades of color in the sand, perspectives made so by the variations of mood; and looked down.

  30. The views they give us resemble the brief perspectives of a town which we obtain in looking at it from different angles on the surrounding hills.

  31. In vain we multiply our points of view, our perspectives and plane projections: no accumulation of this kind will reconstruct the concrete solid.

  32. We left each other under the vault where the Egyptian and Assyrian perspectives are situated: she entered by the right and I continued on my way.

  33. In all these matters one must ask the reader to enlarge his perspectives at least as far back as the last three centuries.

  34. By 1960 or so the alteration of perspectives will have gone so far that historians will be a little perplexed to explain the causes of the Great War.

  35. In case the similarity is very great, we say the points of view of the two perspectives are near together in space; but this space in which they are near together is totally different from the spaces inside the two perspectives.

  36. We can then form a whole series of perspectives containing a graduated series of circular aspects of varying sizes: for this purpose we only have to move (as we say) towards the penny or away from it.

  37. In this way the space which consists of relations between perspectives can be rendered continuous, and (if we choose) three-dimensional.

  38. But this raises no real difficulty, because the spatial order of perspectives is found empirically to be independent of the particular "things" chosen for defining the order.

  39. The aspects of a thing in different perspectives are to be conceived as spreading outwards from the place where the thing is, and undergoing various changes as they get further away from this place.

  40. The perspectives in which the penny looks circular will be said to lie on a straight line in perspective space, and their order on this line will be that of the sizes of the circular aspects.

  41. Moreover--though this statement must be noticed and subsequently examined--the perspectives in which the penny looks big will be said to be nearer to the penny than those in which it looks small.

  42. We formed a straight line of perspectives in which the penny looked circular, and we agreed that those in which it looked larger were to be considered as nearer to the penny.

  43. The correlation of the times of different perspectives raises certain complications, of the kind considered in the theory of relativity; but we may ignore these at present.

  44. It will be observed that, while each perspective contains its own space, there is only one space in which the perspectives themselves are the elements.

  45. We can form another straight line of perspectives in which the penny is seen end-on and looks like a straight line of a certain thickness.

  46. Between two perceived perspectives which are similar, we can imagine a whole series of other perspectives, some at least unperceived, and such that between any two, however similar, there are others still more similar.

  47. It studies the perspectives of knowledge as they radiate from the self; it is a plan of those avenues of inference by which our ideas of things must be reached, if they are to afford any systematic or distant vistas.

  48. The more concentration at this habitable point, with the more mental perspectives opening backwards and forwards through time, in a word, the more personal and historical the apparition, the better it would be.

  49. You have been a flash of light in my darkness, and you have illuminated many dark places in my soul; you have opened new perspectives in my life.

  50. But we must first amplify the definition of perspectives and biographies.

  51. Subjectivity is the characteristic of perspectives and biographies, the characteristic of giving the view of the world from a certain place.

  52. Thus classification by perspectives is relevant to psychology, and is essential in defining what we mean by one mind.

  53. Every step he takes up the ascent to riches gives him new perspectives and new points of view.


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