Here terminates the adhikarana of 'what belongs to this world.
What belongs to this world, there being no obstruction at hand; as this is seen.
Impoverished in course of time, he regards the appropriation of what belongs to others as even laudable.
Of just two things in this world I wot, What belongs to the army and what does not, To the banner alone is my service brought.
I would indite my will and make disposal Of what belongs tome.
Thus, theft is the taking away of what belongs to another against the reasonable will of the owner.
It is impossible to maintain, as he here does, that "no empirical laws of bodily appearances [can] intervene in the explanation of what belongs exclusively to inner sense.
For no empirical laws of bodily appearances, which are of a totally different kind, will then intervene in the explanation of what belongs exclusively to inner sense.
In the middle of the second sentence, and in the last sentence, illusion is defined as the attribution to the thing in itself of what belongs to it only in its relation to the senses.
The master, however, remonstrated with me, saying that I considered only convenience, whereas justice ought to have been the first concern, and justice teaches that no one should suffer forcible interference with what belongs to him.
Of What Belongs to the Unity or Plurality in God 32.
The three acts that are done with the body and should be wholly avoided are the destruction of the lives of other creatures, theft or appropriation of what belongs to other persons, and the enjoyment of other people's wives.
The measure of merit that attaches to the gift of kine unto a deserving person is exactly the measure of the sin that attaches to the act of robbing a Brahmana of what belongs to him.
Under all circumstances should the spoliation of what belongs to a Brahmana be avoided, and his spouses kept at a distance.
Hence it is clear that one possessed of intelligence and learning should never appropriatewhat belongs to Brahmanas.
I declare everywhere, that I know nothing whatever except one small matter--what belongs to love.
Defn: A description of an army, or of what belongs to an army.
This only I know, that by the law of charity every Christian ought to have the just use of what belongs to his neighbour.
Man may hold and dispose of what belongs to him, may have private property, and in no way offend against the principles of justice, whether natural or divine.
But it will be objected that they ask for only what belongs to them, nay, only a part of what belongs to them.
What belongs to us belongs to you also, and what is wonderful is that we as well as you will become richer in proportion as each of us is obliged to allow all the others to share quickly, easily, and fully our own wealth.
We expect, indeed, what belongs objectively to the development of a melody, but only that particular variety of progression to which we have become accustomed.
What we now call romantic or expressive art can certainly be made the more fruitful in moral suggestions; but this fact bears not at all on the question of what belongs fundamentally to the nature of beauty.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "what belongs" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.