Home
Idioms
Top 1000 Words
Top 5000 Words


Example sentences for "these principles"

  • These principles related to the persons who were to exercise its functions, and to the jurisdiction or authority which they were to possess.

  • The first of these principles, he said, is an active and constant interest in the support of a government.

  • In order, therefore, to establish a general and national government, with any hope of its duration, they must avail themselves of these principles.

  • Any one who had quitted Marseilles a few years previously, well acquainted with the interior of Morrel's warehouse, and had returned at this date, would have found a great change.

  • Madame de Villefort made no further reply; her mind was utterly absorbed in the contemplation of the person who, from the first instant she saw him, had made so powerful an impression on her.

  • This remarkable Personage was able by these principles to establish a bond of unity among the differing sects and divergent people of Persia.

  • Briefly, by the promulgation of these principles Bahá’u’lláh has caused the prejudices which afflicted the people of the Orient to disappear.

  • All the Prophets have been the promoters of these principles; none of Them has been the promoter of corruption, vice or evil.

  • These principles open to criticism both on practical and theoretical grounds.

  • These principles, separately taken, cover most of the problems presented by wage disputes.

  • What results might be expected from the adoption of these principles as a policy?

  • These principles on which we have built all, are they about to crumble away in their turn?

  • It is the aggregate of these principles that is called geometry.

  • Astronomic observations and the most ordinary physical phenomena seem to have given of these principles a confirmation complete, constant and very precise.

  • The scientist conforms to them instinctively, and one can, reflecting on these principles, foretell the future of mathematics.

  • These principles have a very high value; they were obtained in seeking what there was in common in the enunciation of numerous physical laws; they represent therefore, as it were, the quintessence of innumerable observations.

  • These principles constitute what Mr. Spencer distinguishes as absolute Morality; and the absolutely moral man is the man who conforms to these principles, not by external coercion nor self-coercion, but who acts them out spontaneously.

  • Now, to each of these principles, there is a corresponding subjective state in the inner life of man.

  • They generally get taught by experience--that is, by the rough treatment and hard knocks which they bring upon themselves by their violation of these principles.

  • The first of these principles is the foundation of all the others.

  • Used thus, these principles give us a theoretically correct ground for criticism.

  • These great principles are everything in war, and "due regard being paid to these principles, the form (i.

  • If the apartment of your wife can be arranged on these principles, you will be in perfect safety, even if there are niches enough there to contain all the saints of Paradise.

  • By the application of these principles even a man from Ardeche can resolve all the difficulties which our subject presents.

  • If strangers are the subject of these principles of observation, you have a still stronger reason for submitting your wife to the formal safeguards which we have outlined.

  • But on the other hand, it is urged that, in explaining the course of history, these principles do not take us very far, and that it is chiefly for the primitive ultra-prehistoric period that they can account for human development.

  • The operation of these principles cannot be denied.

  • Reason as being that faculty of ours which discovers to us these principles.

  • The peculiarity of these principles is, that each one of us in reflection recognizes that he possesses them, but that he is not their author.

  • France possesses, equally with ourselves, a record of these principles in its famous "Declaration of the Rights of Man," born also in a period of great national tribulation.

  • How far has South Africa been governed on these principles?

  • A long and deep study of these principles, and some experience of the grief and disaster caused by any grave departure from them, have convinced me that these principles are founded on the highest ethics,--the ethics of Christ.

  • They have not been brought to bear upon those Englishmen, traders, speculators, company-makers, and others whose interests may have been in opposition to these principles.

  • The course of events when platina acts upon, and combines oxygen and hydrogen, may be stated, according to these principles, as follows.

  • Judging on these principles, velocity of discharge through the same wire may be varied greatly by attending to the circumstances which cause variations of discharge through spermaceti or sulphur.

  • Nature has made him healthy according to these principles, and he simply does not recognize his debt to them.

  • One of these principles is external, that is, it relates to the environment of life rather than to its internal economy; and to this I shall turn first.

  • But you will say that there is the public good to be considered, and that on that account one must not and ought not to conform to these principles; for the public good one may commit acts of violence and murder.

  • These principles, on the contrary, are the only ones that make true life possible.

  • Therefore it remains for those who deny Lamarckian principles, either to accept some such estimate, or else to acknowledge the incompatibility of any lower one with the opinion that there is no evidence in favour of these principles.

  • That he attributed no small importance to the operation of these principles is evident from the last edition of the Origin of Species.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "these principles" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.


    Some common collocations, pairs and triplets of words:
    agricultural produce; broad daylight; good gravy; larger share; learned brother; nitrous acid; rock crystal; speaking broadly; these birds; these countries; these days; these facts; these latter; these little; these may; these means; these men; these mountains; these people; these places; these principles; these the; these things; these two; these words; water resources