The bridge is in all probability of Roman construction, though the Turkish habit of erasing all inscriptions, and substituting others in Turkish in their place, renders it impossible to fix precise dates.
With her he must stand or fall; therefore, setting aside more patriotic motives, self-interest renders it imperative on him to apply himself zealously to her regeneration.
Her own internal reorganisation, moreover, occupies her sufficiently, andrenders any active interference for the moment impracticable.
At the same time, it is fair to add that special attention has been paid to this arm, and the naturally keen eye of the Turkish soldiers renders their education a matter of comparative facility.
As a source of communication it might be invaluable to the province, but in its present state it is perfectly useless, since the hardness of its waters renders it unfit for irrigation.
The internal state of the Ottoman empire, unfortunately, renders it impossible that these conditions should in all cases be adhered to, and without doubt the tenants are often compelled to pay from 10 to 20 per cent.
The banks of the river here begin to lose their rocky and precipitous appearance, assuming a more marshy character, which renders it unhealthy in the summer.
Breakfasting at twelve, they do not touch food again till dinner-time, and even then their repeated nips of rakee taken in the hour previous to the repast renders them little disposed for eating.
This renders men no perfecter judges of their own writings, than fathers are of their own children: who find out that wit in them, which another discerns not; and see not those errors, which are evident to the unconcerned.
This, instead of making a Play delightful, renders it ridiculous.
The great easiness of Blank Verse renders the Poet too luxuriant.
There is a fulness in Christ which renders all appeal to nature utterly superfluous and vain.
It is this that renders the study of Jacob's history so profoundly interesting and eminently useful.
Our connexion with the West Indies, rendersit proper to lay that trade as open to us as possible.
But I must admit that this utter disregard of cleanliness makes me suspicious of the monasteries and renders your beloved Middle Ages odious to me.
He has his hobby, which renders life possible for him, as hobbies do.
Their familiarity with the game and the prairies, over which the hunter must ride at full speed, renders these horses quite safe.
Their experience renders them capable of giving good advice, and attending to the less active affairs of the nation.
The necessity of traveling on, at any rate, renders it an impossibility to undertake the cure, when it might be practicable under other circumstances.
On this event occurring, he is almost certain to be seized with that terrible, and we might as well add incurable disease, hydrophobia, which rendershim a most pitiful object to behold.
She first uses a red berry which stains her face almost to the color of brick and renders her excessively ugly; this she leaves on several hours, when it is washed off and chalk is applied so freely as to render it easily perceptible.
Often a drop of irony into an indifferent situationrenders the whole piquant.
These differences, now only alluded to, cause a great number of others, and produce a general difference of the two poems, which renders the opinion of a nearer connection between them altogether illusory.
Its great price renders it very scarce, and not more than a few copies are to be met with in Great Britain; but a cheap edition, without the great plates, was published at Paris in 1817.
Seeing, therefore, that the moderately tight ligature renders the veins turgid and distended, and the whole hand full of blood, I ask, whence is this?
His name renders it unnecessary to refer more particularly to these gentlemen, who on their part have manifested the most perfect freedom and courtesy in affording these accounts of their painful experience.
It is singular to observe that the cow--pox virus, although it renders the constitution unsusceptible of the variolous, should nevertheless, leave it unchanged with respect to its own action.
The following case, which has very lately occurred, renders it highly probable that not only the heels of the horse, but other parts of the body of that animal, are capable of generating the virus which produces the cow-pox.
The great work of ministering to them is in supplanting the preacher, who renders but a fractional service to the people, by a pastor whose preaching is an announcement of the varied ministry in which he serves as the curé of souls.
But the districts in which the "Group System" is used have grown beyond this religious satisfaction and the "Group System" no longer renders adequate religious service.
They can be just as good if they never think about them, though thinking about ethical matters renders a service to the community as a whole.
And what renders it more wonderful,” replied the vicar, “is its being all true.
But you have not yet told us what renders a body sonorous,” observed Tom.
The greater velocity with which your little brother moves, renders his momentum equal to yours.
He who invents is master of his thoughts and words: he can turn and vary them as he pleases, till he renders them harmonious.
Religion, from the Latin religio, religio, renders with equal distinctness the things signified.
From Hartford station to Acton station the evenness of the groundrenders a train visible to a spectator, at either place, the entire distance.
Tremellius and our marginrenders it, whose fishy part only remained, when the hands and upper part fell before the Ark.
The artlessness of these verses renders them none the less significant.
She is not the best paved city in the world, or even in America, but neither is she by any means the worst; and her splendid system of electric and elevated railroads renders her more independent of paving than any European city.
It is the studiously hostile turn of the phraseology that renders the speech significant.
This peculiarity rendersit probably the most convenient place in the world for the establishment of a Suicide Club on the Stevensonian model.
This favourable Disposition renders it so fruitful, [Fertility, Air, Populousness.
This Fruitfulness lasts all the Night, till the Appearing of the Sun renders it barren, and causes all the Flowers and Leaves to drop off, the Boughs remaining wither'd.
Both, however, are so far agreed as that we know not where to draw the line between the two, and this renders nugatory any system which is founded upon a distinction between them.
Organisation, as a general rule, only renders the bird capable of singing, as giving it an apparatus with which to sing at all, but it has nothing to do with the specific character of the execution .
Danneil renders garatus with lasaratus, which is clearly out of place.
Baking the fruit reduces the water contents, renders the purée more substantial.
Truly, Paul speaks in a way worthy of an apostle--saying he renders praise and prayer with keenest pleasure.
He soon renders helpless all our skill, and slays us with our own sword.
A feature of John's Gospel patent to all is the sublime beginning of his Gospel which renders it distinct from the others.
The first duty of an English Minister should be to consolidate that co-operation which rendersirresistible a community educated, as our own, in an equal love of liberty and law.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "renders" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.