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Example sentences for "stigmata"

Lexicographically close words:
stifling; stifly; stigiis; stigma; stigmas; stigmatic; stigmatise; stigmatised; stigmatising; stigmatization
  1. Louise Lateau is a girl of 21, who carries the sacred stigmata of the Passion, and every week on Friday is in a state of profound ecstacy.

  2. His great point, however, in this fresco, is the assertion of the reality of the stigmata against all question.

  3. Crocus vernus, the True Saffron, grows wild about Halifax, and in the neighbourhood of Derby; but for commercial uses the supply of stigmata is had from Greece, and Asia Minor.

  4. The stigmata are picked out, then dried in a kiln, over a hair cloth, and pressed afterwards into cakes, of which the aromatic quality is very volatile.

  5. Frequently Marigold stigmata are cheaply used for adulterating the true Saffron.

  6. On one of these occasions the stigmata remained unchanged, but on the other the usual vesicle formed, yielding a serous discharge of a delicate rose tint, but no blood.

  7. On the following day--Saturday--the stigmata were quite dry, with little scales of dried blood here and there on their surface.

  8. The stigmata are manifestly painful; for, although the girl was extremely reluctant to speak of it, Dr.

  9. On Friday morning, they were taken off before a new set of witnesses, when the stigmata of both hands were found bleeding freely as usual.

  10. Most commonly the flow begins from the side of the chest, then in succession from the stigmata on the hands, feet, and forehead.

  11. Lefebvre that the hypothesis of fraud in the production of the stigmata was untenable.

  12. When any one of the stigmata has not bled for a week or two, the reddish discoloration disappears, and the papillæ resume their normal appearance.

  13. The quantity of blood that flows through the stigmata each Friday is variable.

  14. Well-marked ecstasy and the stigmata have but seldom been united in the same individual, and still more rarely have these extraordinary manifestations been subjected to the searching tests of science.

  15. Friday, and it does not occur in all the stigmata at once, but in each successively and in no regular order.

  16. Among these stigmata were enumerated every conceivable extreme variation of every identifiable part of the human anatomy.

  17. The multicavernous ethmoid bone is the lung in the nose, the two nostrils being the stigmata or foremost openings of the trachea.

  18. If a plant had the ovules erect, the stigmata divided, possessed the albumen, and was without stipules, it possibly would not be classed among the Rosaceae.

  19. Thus in the family of the rose-tree, we are told that the ovules are very rarely erect, the stigmata usually simple.

  20. Näcke, who attached significance to the stigmata of degeneration when numerous, was especially active in pointing out that inverts are not degenerate, and frequently returned to this point.

  21. I was called in to treat the widow of a wealthy Mohammedan; I had occasion to examine the pudenda, and found what Martineau would have called the indelible stigmata of early masturbation and later sapphism.

  22. It is undesirable to call these modifications "stigmata of degeneration," a term which threatens to disappear from scientific terminology, to become a mere term of literary and journalistic abuse.

  23. In France especially, since the days of Morel, the stigmata of degeneration are much spoken of.

  24. He saw the stigmata on her hands, which we did not, as her sleeves covered them.

  25. The medico drew aside the curtain, and we saw plainly the stigmata on the back of the hand, and the marks round the forehead in a straight line, about an inch below the hair in the middle.

  26. All three were profoundly convinced of the truth of the stigmata and of the miracle.

  27. He had seen the stigmata on her hands, and she had rendered him, as her superior, the same obedience which she gives to her confessor.

  28. The sleeves she wore round her wrists prevented our being able to see whether the stigmata were visible, which she bears on her hands and on her feet.

  29. Slits of the posterior stigmata sinuous; mouth hooks usually consolidated into one.

  30. Posterior stigmata of various forms, if the slits are narrowly oval (fig.

  31. The posterior stigmata of dipterous larvae as a diagnostic character.

  32. Slits of the posterior stigmata bent; usually two mouth hooks.

  33. Slits of the posterior stigmata sinuous or bent.

  34. The females possess stigmata at the anterior part of the body, at the base of the rostrum, and differ from all other mites in having on each side, a prominent clavate organ between the first and second legs.

  35. Left hand stigmata of the larvae of muscoidea.

  36. Body depressed; a pair of stigmata on the mesothorax, and abdominal segments three to eight; antennae three to five-segmented.

  37. In the larvae of Lepidoptera as well as those of many Hymenoptera, Coleoptera and Diptera, stigmata are present on all the postcephalic segments except the 2nd and 3rd thoracic and the two last abdominal.

  38. Fruit dicarpillary, stigmata four, hence they are placentary not costoid.

  39. This is worthy of examination, as it shows very plainly the origin of the stigmata from the placentae.

  40. Lindley's view seems to be questionable, because as in all cases the styles and stigmata are more permanent than ovaries, there should be as many styles, etc.

  41. Strong pressure made upon the parts in the vicinity of the stigmata caused no sensation of pain, although a few moments before they were exquisitely tender.

  42. If a plant had the ovules erect, the stigmata divided, possessed the albumen, and was without stipules, it possibly would not be classed among the Rosaceæ.

  43. The reniform and orbicular stigmata are often only outlined in paler brown, but they may be whitish and very distinct.

  44. The cross lines and occasionally the stigmata and shades may disappear, but the yellow submarginal line always remains, at least in part.

  45. Kane mentions dull black specimens, from the Blasket Islands, in which only vestiges of the stigmata and submarginal line remained clear.

  46. The dark brown or blackish stigmata are generally distinct.

  47. The black outlined reniform and orbicular stigmata are sometimes obscured by a blackish cloud; the pale-centred, club-like mark below them varies in length, and is occasionally reduced to a small spot.

  48. The wings are rather more ample; the reniform and orbicular stigmata are reddish, with a blackish cloud under them, and the space between the second and submarginal lines towards the inner margin is also reddish.

  49. In most British specimens of the greyish form this is white throughout its length, and it has three branches; the stigmata are whitish, and there is often a whitish bar below the central streak.

  50. Haworth, the stigmata are black and conspicuous: var.

  51. The {282} stigmata are outlined in black, but are rarely paler than the ground colour.

  52. Very frequently these wings are pale, or dark, brown marbled with darker brown, and with the stigmata and cross lines distinct, faint, or absent.

  53. Tracheae typically opening by stigmata situated in the articular sockets (acetabula) of the 3rd, 4th, 5th and 6th pairs of appendages.

  54. The tergal stigmata of the tergo-sternal muscles.

  55. Tracheae opening by a pair of stigmata situated above and behind the base of the 4th or 5th or 6th pair of appendages.

  56. No distinct respiratory stigmata behind the sterna of the 1st and 2nd somites of the opisthosoma.

  57. Respiratory organs in the form of tracheal tubes opening by a pair of stigmata in the 2nd and 3rd somites of the opisthosoma.

  58. The meeting of the coxae of all the prosomatic limbs in front of the pentagonal sternum; the space for a genital operculum; the pair of pectens, and the absence of any evidence of pulmonary stigmata are noticeable in this specimen.

  59. Tracheae, except in the aquatic species in which they are atrophied, opening by a pair of stigmata situated close to or above the base of the appendages of the 1st pair (mandibles).

  60. It is not necessary to find stigmata in the prisoner to know that he was born the way he is.

  61. Upon her hands and feet appear the stigmata of His wounds, never to fade away, and to be borne by her descendants in every third generation.

  62. The Jew here is shown to be very old and feeble, clad in antique raiment, with stigmata of the wounds on hands and feet.

  63. About this question three kinds of facts may be considered: those pertaining to anthropometry, the stigmata of degeneration, and physiognomy.

  64. We therefore find stigmata amongst children at the average school level.

  65. Other stigmata are less apparent, such as abnormal shapes of the ear, irregular growth of hair, of the teeth, alterations in the eye, etc.

  66. But they would expose themselves to grave risks of erroneous interpretations owing to their ignorance of the manner in which stigmata are produced, and the ignorance of doctors on this subject is still great.

  67. With regard to the stigmata our knowledge of their significance is still very slight.

  68. Everyone has heard of the physical malformations which are called the stigmata of degeneration.

  69. Children with stigmata few in number, and little marked (though as a rule we note the presence of stigmata without measuring them), may therefore not be of normal intelligence.

  70. We may therefore conclude that stigmata may be taken into account when we are making an examination, but they should never be regarded as of fundamental importance in diagnosis.

  71. It seems to us, and the facts mentioned support us, that stigmata are only one part of the complicated whole which constitutes a physiognomy.

  72. The stigmata are usually more numerous when the children are mentally defective.

  73. Physicians would call it natural, an effect of autohypnosis, but there is no reason why it may not have been just as miraculous as the stigmata of the saints.

  74. Hypnotic or autohypnotic stigmata, and by stigmata here is meant bleeding from the hands, feet, and side, would be degeneracy of the mind and body in the natural order.

  75. When these signs are positive, that is, when there is a change in disposition and then the physical stigmata that we have gone over appear, the diagnosis of the disease is almost certain.

  76. Many of these early suicides have distinct tendencies to and stigmata of hebephrenic melancholia.

  77. To prove, in general, that stigmata are miraculous requires commonly heroic sanctity as a background, and even then in all cases the proof is not necessarily absolute.

  78. The mental stigmata of the disease at the beginning are not alarming at all.

  79. Professor Lefevre of the University of Louvain, a physician, said her stigmata were miraculous.

  80. Therefore, what of the stigmata of the saints from a scientific point of view?

  81. The weekly bleeding, through the unbroken skin, of the hands and feet of Louise Lateau is an example of stigmata in our own day, which may have been supernatural or natural.


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