This he pronounces to be the perfect, regular, movement appertaining and congenial to Reason and the good variety of soul.
Galen applies an analogous principle of reasoning to explain the structure of apes, whom he pronounces to be a caricature of man.
He pronounces them the best and most suitable compositions for the teaching of youth, and therefore prescribes that teachers shall cause the youth to recite and learn them, instead of the poetical and rhetorical works usually employed.
He pronounces many of the tales in Homer and Hesiod to be not merely fictions, but mischievous fictions: not fit to be circulated, even if they had been true.
But those who copy the disparaging judgment which he pronouncesagainst Athenian manners, ought in fairness to take account of the point of view from which that judgment is delivered.
Who is to believe that the people, upon whose virtue he pronounces these encomiums, had thrown off all reverence for good faith, obligation, and social authority?
Upon this assumption, Plato pronounces that the community will be happy.
As judge: when she pronounces final judgment on controversies and disputes which arise in relation to revealed doctrines.
He accordingly contrasts a scene in the Plocius (or Necklace,) of Caecilius, with the corresponding scene in Menander, andpronounces them to be as different in brightness and value as the arms of Diomed and Glaucus.
He pronounces the name with the stress on the second syllable--Sarah-noff.
After due deliberation, the Lama pronounces his opinion as to the particular nature of the malady.
Traditions from the dead church assign authors to all the books of the Bible, but higher criticism pronounces these traditions fallacies and follies.
Historical criticism again pronounces that there are errors in the Bible, but they are in circumstantials, not in essentials.
As he pronounces this oracular utterance, he falls in a sort of swoon, and everyone, excepting only the priests and temple servants, leaves the place as quickly as possible.
The Smarta then recounts the details of the enquiry, and ultimately pronounces his verdict.
My judgment pronounces in favour of the utility of that thing, and .
Having thus heard both culprits, the judge pronounces sentence upon the serpent in veiled terms, for, as yet, man is not to understand what is divinely planned.
The powers which the Apostle, in the text most familiar to the Anglican divines of that age, pronounces to be ordained of God, are not the powers that can be traced back to a legitimate origin, but the powers that be.
Harnack pronouncesno opinion upon the soundness of it: but the impression left upon the mind after reading his article is that he is unable to accept it.
Bishop of Hippo terms the "Itala," and pronounces to be the best of the Latin Versions.
She sings very well, but pronounces Italian very Americanly, which is a pity.
She pronounces the last three words slowly and with marked emphasis, pausing after she has spoken them, and looking fixedly in his face, as if to note their effect.
Whatever the emotion, he conceals it; and in calm voice pronounces the prayer, with all its formalities and gestures.
Another time the teacher pronounces a sound or a succession of sounds.
The teacher pronounces a sound or a succession of sounds (a word, a word-group, or a sentence).
He was a colleague in Congress of the lamented Prentiss, whom he pronounces the most brilliant orator that ever addressed a Mississippi audience.
Psalter: "A good judge does nothing according to his private opinion but pronounces sentence according to the law and the right.
One is that he has to judge between accuser and defendant, while the other is that he pronounces the judicial sentence, in virtue of his power, not as a private individual but as a public person.
The first is the virtue itself that pronounces judgment: and in this way, judgment is an act of reason, because it belongs to the reason to pronounce or define.
But seemingly epikeia pronounces judgment on the law, when it deems that the law should not be observed in some particular case.
Therefore a judge sins if he pronounces sentence according to the evidence but against his conscience of the truth.
The Guru, or teacher, pronounces a group of words, and the pupils repeat after him.
It is so difficult to say who these were, that Mr. Grote, in despair, pronouncesthem unknowable, and relinquishes the problem.
The court awards sentence of transportation; and, on a writ of error being brought, the court above pronounces count A to be bad.
Our Lord pronounces this unbelief to be its own all-sufficing punishment.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "pronounces" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.