Definition & Betydelse | Engelska ordet ADMIRABLE


ADMIRABLE

Definition av ADMIRABLE

  1. beundransvärd, admirabel

Antal bokstäver

9

Är palindrom

Nej

18
AB
AD
ADM
BL
BLE
DM
DMI

5

3

8

AA
AAB
AAD


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Exempel på hur man kan använda ADMIRABLE i en mening

  • An obituary notice, however, which appeared in the Daily Courant for 5 October 1727, says: "He was not above twenty-two when he undertook of himself his admirable treatise on the Truth of the Christian Religion".
  • The books generally describe the effects of science and technology as wholly beneficial, and the role of the inventor in society as admirable and heroic.
  • There is absolutely no waste of land, and scarce a quarter of a section not affording an admirable building site.
  • This book displayed a vigorous scientific imagination, controlled by a logical sense that rigidly distinguished between fact and hypothesis, and it quickly won wide recognition, both as an admirable digest of the numberless observations made with regard to the development of animals during the quarter of a century preceding its publication, and as a work of original research.
  • " Lady Jessica calls him "the admirable fighting man whose abilities at guarding and surveillance are so esteemed.
  • The Morning Post said of that piece, "The writing is admirable throughout – neat, natural and epigrammatic".
  • Unlike her father, who is depicted as a showboating yet cowardly comic relief character, Videl is characterized with more heroic traits and displays an admirable fighting potential.
  • These magical stories were far from slander: in the 13th century, the witch trials were hundreds of years in the future, magic was not illegal and the ability to master magic was considered a great and admirable skill; there was a clear separation between white and black magic; and not even black magic was yet connected to the Devil or punishable by death, as it would become later.
  • For this, he was remembered either as an admirable model of Roman self-confidence or as an example of Roman rashness.
  • His judgment was unusually clear, his principles solid and well founded, his sincerity and honesty beyond question; and to these qualities, he united an admirable style, lucid, precise and well-balanced.
  • These volumes gave the first clear, systematic survey of English plants, and with their admirable woodcuts (mainly copied from Leonhart Fuchs's 1542 De Historia Stirpium Commentarii Insignes) and detailed observations based on Turner's own field studies put the herbal on an altogether higher footing than in earlier works.
  • About this time his dramatic talent was at its height, and he produced one admirable tragedy after another; among these may be mentioned Svend Grathe (1841); The Sisters at Kinnekullen (1849); Marshal Sag (1850); Honour Lost and Won (1851) and Tycho Brahe's Youth (1852).
  • One of the few public awards she accepted was the University of California, Berkeley, honorary Doctor of Laws degree, its highest award, conferred upon her on May 15, 1929, with the following personal tribute: “distinguished alumna of the University of California, artist and engineer; designer of simple dwellings and of stately homes, of great buildings nobly planned to further the centralized activities of her fellow citizens; architect in whose works harmony and admirable proportions bring pleasure to the eye and peace to the mind.
  • The journalist Ann Lackey Landini believes that Boudinot emphasized English in the newspaper because the Cherokee Nation intended it to be a means to explain their people to European Americans and prove they had an admirable civilization.
  • 606 = 2 × 3 × 101, sphenic number, sum of six consecutive primes (89 + 97 + 101 + 103 + 107 + 109), admirable number, One of the numbers associated with Christ - ΧϚʹ - see the Greek numerals Isopsephy and the reason why other numbers siblings with this one are Beast's numbers.
  • Principia of Newton; An Institution of Fluxions, containing the First Principles, Operations, and Applications of that admirable Method, as invented by Sir Isaac Newton (1706).
  • Especially admirable is the skill with which he reproduces in Hebrew the abstract ideas of Maimonides, as Hebrew is essentially a language of a people expressing concrete ideas.
  • The Sydney Morning Herald found the work original, musicianly and an admirable addition to the cello repertoire, but "without the qualities that kindle the imagination of the listener".
  • Certain toes will never uncurl after this experience, but it is almost admirable how unaltered de Burgh has remained by the flow of time.
  • The mass of admirable work left by Barye entitles him to be regarded as one of the great animal life artists of the French animalier school, and the refiner of a class of art which has attracted such men as Emmanuel Frémiet, Paul-Édouard Delabrièrre, Auguste Cain, and Georges Gardet.


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