Hence to Brahman also, whose nature is intelligence, the term 'light' may be applied; for it gives light to the entire world.
But, a Nescience which is a positive entity, contradicts the witnessing consciousness, whose natureconsists in the lighting up of the truth of things!
Both of them therefore fix their gaze on Uranus, both the mother and the fair child, whose nature it is to be a hypostasis ever turned towards another beauty, an intermediary essence between the lover and the beloved object.
Poverty has been described as the need or lack of objects necessary to life as a result of our union with matter, whose nature is (the Heraclitian and Stoic) "indigence.
Now the principle of generation is matter, whose nature is so bad that matter communicates it to the beings which, even without being united thereto, merely look at it.
Indeed, since circular motion is against the nature of these four elements, there must be some other different body to whose nature it is conformable.
The Heaven is a divine body and has for that reason the encyclical body, whose nature it is to be moved for ever in a circle.
There must thus be some simple and primary body, whose nature it is to be carried round in a circle, as earth is carried downwards and fire upwards.
We shall first enquire whether the First Body, whose nature it is to move in a circle, can be infinite in magnitude.
Wicked men are like wolves, whose nature it is to destroy and devour sheep; they are of a diabolical disposition towards the ministers of the Gospel.
Let us assign incorporeity to God alone even as we do immortality, whose nature alone, neither for its own sake nor on account of anything else, needs the help of any corporeal organ.
You say there's a Being all-loving, Whose nature is justice and pity: Could you say where you think he is roving?
You say there's a Being all-loving, Whose nature is justice and pity; Could you say where you think he is roving?
But there is little to wonder at in this, seeing that even when valued by men themselves (whose nature is certainly of the highest dignity), more is often given for a horse than for a slave, for a jewel than for a maid.
In this respect, speech is a quantity, but not in so far as it is speech, whose nature is to be significant, as the noun, or the verb.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "whose nature" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.