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Example sentences for "rearrangement"

Lexicographically close words:
rearing; rearmament; rearmost; rearrange; rearranged; rearrangements; rearranging; rearrest; rearrested; rears
  1. This rearrangement was hastened by the passing of the Compensation Act.

  2. A reaction of rearrangement may in certain cases take place with one substance only; that is to say, a substance may by itself change into a new isomeric form.

  3. This rearrangement of army relations was not accomplished without some heart-burning and many adverse remarks.

  4. To the Regiment, however, the most important event of the day was the rearrangement of the several corps constituting the Army of the Potomac, though this act had no immediate effect upon the regular life of the Thirty-ninth.

  5. He must never transcend the "practical," that is to say, the infinitesimal rearrangement of the preexisting.

  6. But I also hold that no mere rearrangement does any permanent good unless it calls forth a corresponding moral change, and, moreover, that the moral change, however slow and imperceptible, does incomparably more than any external change.

  7. A rearrangement of the employment of male and female labour.

  8. Restriction is met by adaptation of manufacture or rearrangement of numbers employed and time at which work is done, women being still employed at the work" (p.

  9. This rearrangement or shifting I called "re-shuffling.

  10. Hence their only chance for power was in some new rearrangement under which they would not be so prominent in affairs.

  11. In putting these volumes through the press, in the preparation of the reference lists for volumes three and four, and in the rearrangement of the bibliography I have had the assistance of Dr.

  12. But much more rapid cooling might entail a shifting and rearrangement of the parts of the crust of the earth on a scale of unprecedented magnitude, and bring about "catastrophes" to which the earthquake of Lisbon is but a trifle.

  13. Restatement and rearrangement of antique matter the work of, i.

  14. Hence his endeavours, primarily to uplift the Faith, brought a revival of learning and a literary productivity, consisting mostly in reproduction or rearrangement of old material, doctrinal or profane.

  15. This (Carolingian) period of rearrangement and painful learning, as it was unoriginative intellectually, was likewise unproductive of Christian emotion.

  16. Rearrangement of, undertaken in Carolingian period, i.

  17. Nor does mere chronological rearrangement of the material do justice to the progress; there was loss as well as gain.

  18. In the game of give and take which goes on between the human consciousness and the external world, both have learned to put the emphasis upon the message from without, rather than on their own reaction to and rearrangement of it.

  19. Cornill quotes a rearrangement of chaps, i.

  20. In that familiar place, where they had begun the rearrangement of the store, everything spoke of him.

  21. It is very fortunate that we nearly finished the rearrangement of the pictures before all this occurred, for I could not order him about now as I have done.

  22. I shall then briefly examine present conditions, trying to discover if any changes have taken place in the general educational situation of sufficient moment to make necessary a rearrangement or readjustment.

  23. I realize fully that the change suggested would involve quite a decided rearrangement of the ordinary high school program.

  24. But when it is laid horizontal a complete rearrangement of the statoliths will take place, and the differential effects on the upper and lower sides will thus induce geotropic reaction.

  25. The time required for the complete rearrangement of the statoliths may be termed the period of migration; its average length varies from five to twenty minutes in different organs.

  26. When this material is volcanic it is almost invariably magnetic, and we perceive in its sudden rearrangement causes which should produce magnetic effects within an epifocal district.

  27. They include an extensive rearrangement of the dioceses, equalization of episcopal income, providing residences, &c.

  28. Several objects may be made to balance without rearrangement though the marginal proportions of the picture are altered.

  29. The curved peristyle of kneeling disciples offers a temptation to push the end man and await the result on the others, more to witness a rearrangement than create any further commotion in the infant church.

  30. Haupt gives valuable notes, with a translation and rearrangement of the separate songs.

  31. Further, we must ask whether the task has been complicated by any editorial rearrangement or interpolation; the collector of these songs has certainly not reproduced them in the order of their use at Syrian weddings.

  32. Human nature is a ruin, not to be restored by a rearrangement of its fragments.

  33. I should have returned these two recent letters before now, but have been looking for the earlier letters which have got mislaid in a general rearrangement of all things by a new secretary.


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