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Example sentences for "substrate"

Lexicographically close words:
substitution; substitutional; substitutionary; substitutions; substrata; substratum; substruction; substructions; substructure; substructures
  1. If then evil consist in privation, it is the attribute of the substrate deprived of form; and on that account it could not exist by itself.

  2. Substrate needed by composition of the body, ii.

  3. Substrate not common to all elements, being indeterminate, ii.

  4. Substrate and residence of forms, is matter, ii.

  5. Intelligence itself is the substrate of the intelligible world, ii.

  6. Plotinos goes on[396] to argue for the necessity of an intelligible, as well as a physical substrate (hypokeimenon).

  7. Residence and substrate of forms to matter, ii.

  8. It is an image and a phantom of extension, because it is the primary substrate of extension.

  9. Mapping vegetation substrate as it relates to seabird populations on selected islands in the Province.

  10. Sea Ice Provides Roosting Sites Ice provides a hard substrate that allows seabirds to leave the water to roost.

  11. Edmunds (1954) noted that Prosevania punctata showed more interest in oothecae that had been cemented to the substrate than in clean oothecae that had simply been dropped.

  12. Hafez and Afifi (1956) reported that in Egypt Supella supellectilium attaches its ootheca to a suitable substrate with a gummy oral secretion but leaves the egg capsule otherwise exposed.

  13. As well as excavating holes in the substrate in which to deposit its oothecae, P.

  14. Possibly he will now argue that as an error is never seen to exist where the substrate is unreal, the reality of pure Being (as furnishing the required basis for error) must necessarily be admitted.

  15. Nor, in the third place, is the effect originated by the gold in so far as being the substrate of the coin; for the gold in so far as forming the substrate of the coin is not perceived in the svastika.

  16. The urine is important for the content of fixed nitrogen and other products of man's metabolism and serves as a very effective substrate for cultivation of hydrogen bacteria.

  17. This steady state of growth is temporary and ceases when nutrient substrate or gas concentrations drop to limiting values.

  18. Eternity is the substrate in which this property manifests.

  19. There must be found in the objects of perception some abiding substrate or substance which will represent the permanence of time in consciousness, and through relation to which coexistence and succession of events may be perceived.

  20. The self, so far as it enters into consciousness, is a merely logical subject; the underlying substrate is that to which this self-consciousness and all other thoughts are due.

  21. And since only in relation to this substrate can time relations be apprehended, it must be altogether unchangeable, and may therefore[1174] be called substance.

  22. Many a trace of this ancient conception we can find in Homeric Fableland, which has a strong elemental substrate in the wrath of Neptune, in the tempests, in the winds of Æolus, in the Oxen of the Sun.

  23. If we deny that the jar exists in the clay even before it is actually originated, we lose the substrate for the action of origination, i.

  24. The words 'of this' denote that substrate of qualities which is presented to us by perception and the other means of right knowledge; the genitive case indicates it to be connected with origin, &c.

  25. And with regard to the second reason stated, it is known that a substrate of qualities can subsist and be dissolved only after it has entered, through origination, on the state of existence.

  26. The ground of union is “the supersensible substrate of nature of which we can determine nothing positively, except that it is the being in itself of which we merely know the phenomenon.

  27. It is at least possible to consider the material world as mere phenomenon, and to think as its substrate something like a thing in itself (which is not phenomenon), and to attach to this a corresponding intellectual intuition.

  28. It lies in the supersensible substrate of nature, of which we can determine nothing positively, except that it is the being in itself of which we merely know the phenomenon.

  29. Even this he was not able to accomplish, because the mere representation of the unity of the substrate cannot bring about the Idea of a purposiveness, even that which is only undesigned.

  30. The connexion of nature and freedom is suggested by, nay is involved in, the notion of natural adaptation; and although we can arrive at no knowledge of the supersensible substrate of both, yet such a common ground there must be.

  31. He had already hinted in that work that the supersensible substrate of the ego and the non-ego might be identical.

  32. It hence follows that the rational concept of the supersensible substrate of all phenomena in general, or even of that which must be placed at the basis of our arbitrary will in respect of the moral law, viz.

  33. This conception leads to the result that the rate of fermentation will increase with the concentration of the substrate up to a certain limit and will then remain [p122] constant, unless interfered with by secondary actions.

  34. Taking fructose as the substrate in each case, yeast does not respond to phosphate at all (Slator), the rate of fermentation by zymin is approximately doubled (p.

  35. Heat and cold occur in it without warming or cooling it; for heating and cooling consist in that one quality of the substrate gives place to another.

  36. The only sure way of avoiding a misunderstanding in expression is to say that the substrate possesses nothing in the manner it is usually supposed to possess it.

  37. The attribute of being a substrate is a mere affection, like a color, or a figure; but the soul is separable from the body.

  38. Almost any other kind of illustration would fail to explain how the substrate can remain the same in the presence of forms.

  39. If such be the nature of existence, it could be neither body, nor the substrate of bodies; for their existence is nonentity.

  40. If we remove form from matter, the substrate that then remains neither seems nor is large (since magnitude is part of form).

  41. This single, yet varied substrate conceives of itself as shapeless, before conceiving of itself as varied.

  42. As the shape (of sense-objects) is only an image, their substrate also is only an image.

  43. They must therefore be composites of form and matter; form constituting their shape and quality, and matter a substrate that is indeterminate, because it is not a form.

  44. The "pair" is indeterminate so far as it plays the part of substrate (in respect to unity).

  45. But as the shape (of intelligible entities) possesses veritable (reality), their substrate is of the same nature.

  46. Therefore, in the sense-world, the multiplicity of forms must have a single substrate which has received extension, and therefore must be other than extension.

  47. This substrate is not a mass; for in this case, it would be an extension.

  48. These forms produce themselves not in extension (which is a form), but in the substrate that has received extension.

  49. The texture of the substrate is the most important factor limiting vertical distribution.

  50. All contained ravines and rocky slopes that provided many places of concealment (dens, burrows of larger animals, and suitable substrate for the excavation of earthen forms).

  51. Small box turtles are not so rare as these samples indicate; they are infrequently obtained because their smallness and ability to blend with the substrate make them difficult to see.

  52. Raising the body from an uncomfortably cold or hot substrate is a well known phenomenon in many lizards and in crocodilians, but to my knowledge has not been reported for turtles.

  53. Kansas that I observed in captivity, kept their plastra raised well above the smooth, hard substrate over which they walked.

  54. The nesting site is selected after a period of wandering, in which the female tests the substrate at a number of places; some females search for a nest site for more than a week.

  55. Most juveniles were covered with cow dung or mud and blended so well with the substrate that they were detected only when they moved.

  56. When exposed their activity was directed almost entirely toward burrowing into the substrate or searching for objects beneath which to hide.

  57. This expectation was based on the idea that the enzyme did not alter the equilibrium between the hydrolyzed and non-hydrolyzed part of the substrate but only accelerated the rate with which the equilibrium was reached.

  58. But the spiritual and the corporeal worlds, also, as distinguished from one another, imply a common "subject" or substrate in which they are one or identical.

  59. Sidenote: Matter or substrate of the spiritual world.

  60. The latter may be done by measuring either the time required to carry a unit quantity of the substrate material through any determined stage of chemical change, or the quantity of the substrate which is changed in a unit period of time.

  61. This view supported the idea of a chemical union of the enzyme with the substrate which, when it breaks down, breaks the molecule of the substrate material into some simpler form, or forms.

  62. As to the nature of this supposed combination of substrate and enzyme, two theories are held.

  63. Certain activities of softshells such as burying themselves in soft sand in shallow water or seeking crawfish and other food over a gravel-rock substrate or one that is debris-laden, are best carried on in different habitats.

  64. The underlying gypsum substrate of the valley has been subjected to considerable erosion; the ponds observed have deep holes, and small caverns and grottos.

  65. Seemingly there is little difference between species in preference of nesting sites; a sandy substrate is probably preferred.

  66. The hind feet are used alternately; cloacal water may be used to facilitate digging or to provide a suitable substrate for the eggs.

  67. Note gravelly substrate (in foreground) and symmetrical arrangement of eggs.

  68. The third clutch of eggs was deposited in a sand-gravel substrate at the brim of the incline from the shore (approximately 30 degrees and about five feet above the water); the eggs of this clutch were arranged rather symmetrically (Pl.

  69. Two nests were dug in a sand substrate on the level portion of the bar (Pl.

  70. Depending on the condition of the substrate and wariness of the female, nest construction may begin immediately, or several holes may be dug and then abandoned.


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