If this view be correct, we must believe that a vast number of characters, capable of evolution, lie hidden in every organic being.
This view seems at first sight extremely probable, and has been accepted by various authors (17/61.
This view is confirmed by the fact that the root of the word by which the Celts, the Greeks, and the Romans designated gold was the Sanscrit word karat, which means, "the color of the sun.
And in this view we are confirmed by the Aramæan legend of the Deluge, probably derived at an earlier age from the Chaldean tradition.
There is, however, a great difficulty on this view, for the resultant salts should be carbonate of soda and muriate of lime; the latter is present, but not the carbonate of soda.
If this view is well-founded the ancestor of the Earls of Ross was chief in Kintail as early as the beginning of the tenth century.
This view of the attorney's position in the matter has not hitherto commanded the assent of attorneys, no one having offered them a fee for assenting.
Moreover, on this view, many species of distinct genera and families are supposed to combine for one end; and of such a combination, not a single instance can be found in the whole of nature.
The colossal breadth and weight of their hinder quarters, which can hardly be imagined without having been seen, become on this view, of obvious service, instead of being an incumbrance: their apparent clumsiness disappears.
At the first glance of this view, it was quite evident that the plain represented the extent of a former inland sea.
A multitude of facts in the structure of the Cordillera, on this viewreceive a simple explanation.
This view of the case is by no means so extravagant as Mr. Rogers would have us suppose.
This view, somewhat softened, we find also in Leigh Hunt, whose whole account of Dante is an excellent specimen of this sort of criticism.
The testimony of Paul may also be cited in favour of this view, since he always alludes to earlier Christophanies in just the same language which he uses in describing his own vision on the road to Damascus.
On this account, and in this view it is, that well disposed parents sometimes employ their children in a way not absolutely, or in itself, useful to them, for the sake of the general habit.
I hope I shall not be considered arrogant when I say that I am sure that in the maintenance of this view I shall find myself with the majority both in England and in America.
This view may at first sight seem the presumptuous claim of a journalist for his trade.
In this view I soon had the good fortune to obtain the support and encouragement of Lord Cromer.
We would add to what we have written only a few words in explanation of what may seem to be a difficulty in the way of this view.
Some confirmation of this view may be drawn from the ceremonies observed by fishermen of Annam when the carcase of a whale is washed ashore.
This view is strengthened by a consideration of the word janua itself.
This view of the original nature of Demeter has indeed been taken by some writers, both ancient and modern, and it is one which can be reasonably maintained.
Yet, if in this view it was needful to have a man of talent, on the other hand there was reason to dread a man of talents too adventurous, too aspiring, or too intriguing.
To this view of the imperial character and relations must be added one single circumstance, which in some measure altered the whole for the individual who happened to fill the office.
This view is of the first importance for the object he has before him, which is the true criticism of these books; and for the moment other considerations must necessarily yield to it.
This view is the axiom that underlies the whole ritual legislation of the middle part of the Pentateuch.
This view also is not exactly a late one, as we see from the vision of Micaiah (t Kings xxii.
According to this view, they are remnants of the literature of ancient Israel which the Jews rescued as a heritage from the past, and on which they continued to subsist in the decay of independent intellectual life.
This view of nature presupposes that man places himself as a person over and outside of nature, which he regards as simply a thing.
The extent of this view is therefore upwards of 340 miles in one direction, and the visible horizon of the observer encircles an area of fully thirty thousand square miles, which is greater than that of Ireland!
In support of this view we find every river rising far beyond the snowy peaks, which are separated by continuously unsnowed ranges placed between the great white masses that these spurs present to the observer from the south.
Reference to Mr. Darwin's Development of this View PART II.
Varieties, on this view, are incipient or possible species: species are varieties of a larger growth and a wider and earlier divergence from the parent stock; the difference is one of degree, not of kind.
The supposed establishment of this view is reckoned as one of the greatest scientific triumphs of this century.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "this view" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.