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79 Sentences With "fathomed"

How to use fathomed in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "fathomed" and check conjugation/comparative form for "fathomed". Mastering all the usages of "fathomed" from sentence examples published by news publications.

That love goes far beyond anything I could've fathomed before.
"I could never have fathomed that," he told The Independent.
What it is now, I could not have fathomed five years ago.
We know that history can't be fathomed while it's still being lived.
I feel like you could never have fathomed all of the things.
The 2016 presidential election has given the phrase ramifications never even fathomed before.
" As DePaulo writes, "I don't believe John ever fathomed that he would die at 38.
BOSTON — They gathered here on Wednesday for a news conference they never could have fathomed four months ago.
Nor could he have fathomed that, a millennium after his death, the vast ice sheet would be in rapid retreat.
But I don't think any of us, even Deaver who was like a son to them, fully fathomed their relationship.
He imagined that his partner could not have fathomed what the parade had become and how the world had changed.
Prior to being diagnosed, Fairchild had never heard the word "metastatic" or even fathomed the concept of end-stage breast cancer.
A person's intimate life isn't readily fathomed, and on the inside tends not to look anything like it does on the outside.
Plus, if you ask only for things you know exist, how will you ever be delighted by something you couldn't have fathomed?
It was never the goal of the Berlin Painter to leave a legacy to edify and dignify a future he never fathomed.
The ritual of mass shootings must include instant questions about the killer's precise motive, as if his horrific deed can be truly fathomed.
Nor did I feel the world of the novel — though it is often full of great excitement and wonderful invention — was fully fathomed.
To view sex and connection and bodies as endless opportunities, endless oceans to be fathomed, endless ways to learn from each other and grow.
In the piece, Williams apologized for Twitter's possible role in Trump's win, and admitted he'd never fathomed that Twitter would be used for nefarious purposes.
After the first time, we started having cybersex frequently, both of us getting more comfortable and pushing the limits of fantasy to things I had never fathomed.
"I know that to be a cop's wife or a cop's husband is to prepare for the worst, but who could have fathomed such horror as this?"
Nor could he have fathomed that, a millennium after his death, the vast ice sheet that gave the lie to his inviting description would be in rapid retreat.
For this rotating pack of Costa Mesa miscreants, that meant slathering on clown makeup, putting on rainbow wigs and parodying some of the best punk tunes ever fathomed.
But the Trump amateurishness is really just the latest example of a massive sea change in Republican and Democrat voter attitudes that previous generations could never have fathomed.
No sooner have we fathomed their motivations and desires then the viewpoint shifts, leaving the viewer enthralled and off-balance, forced to reassess everything they were sure they knew.
Had Thursday's Republican debate at the University of Miami followed the tonal trajectory of the previous 11, who knows what depths of taste and egomania it might have fathomed.
The elite – people who had recovered handily from the devastating 2008 financial collapse, as well as most of the chattering classes – never fully fathomed the extent of Trump's support.
We certainly have not charted the breadth of microorganisms that will inspire the invention of future drugs, nor fathomed the full complexity of the inner workings of human cells.
Despite being generally regarded as the greatest player of all time, 20-times Grand Slam champion Federer has never fathomed a way of suppressing the marauding Mallorcan at Roland Garros.
But the fighting itself reveals a depth not yet fathomed by the rest of the brawler genre, with mix-ups, juggles, and ten-hit combos not just encouraged, but occasionally mandatory.
When the 17 friends began piling into the limousine and cramming into its tan leather seats under its mirrored roof, they never fathomed that the sunny afternoon would be their last.
This article originally appeared on VICE Sports UK. When Ricky Ponting walked to the wicket on the third day at Trent Bridge, he could not have fathomed what was about to happen.
I spent a semester abroad learning about covering conflict and terrorism but I couldn't have fathomed that a different kind of terror would continue to hit so often and so close to home.
I know that I can hop in the driver seat, hit the road, and find myself in a completely new place — one that I've never even fathomed visiting — after only a few hours.
The museum's curator, Tamsin Wimhurst, said she has not yet fathomed why Mr. Parr painted so determinedly as a hobby while working all day on sites as elite as St. James's Palace in London.
" Lonnell Saffold, the recording secretary for a local unit of the Service Employees International Union, said having two black women in the runoff shattered "a glass ceiling that Chicago probably would have never fathomed.
"Could these two ladies have possibly fathomed that 72 years after becoming part of the 'army at home' their signatures inside a P-47 would still exist as evidence of their contributions?" the website mused.
What happens next is a journey towards self-love and acceptance that she couldn't have fathomed before she was willing to let go of her tresses and the facade of perfection that came with them.
The rugby league media pack has never fathomed why Folau, or anyone, would turn his back on their game so he is linked to a return to the National Rugby League at every contract renegotiation.
When it comes to the medium of art that artists use to express themselves, the technology at hand is evolving to a point where capturing images now couldn't have been fathomed even 25 years ago.
Mary has, as her famous theme song says, made it, after all — all the way to 2019, five decades later, to streaming services that she and her creators could never have fathomed at the time.
Letter of Recommendation A couple of years ago I got it into my head — where all manner of half-fathomed bits of wisdom tend to gather — that taking cold showers would do something or other for me.
Limited Window If the UFC has ever fathomed the idea of putting McGregor and Rousey on the same card, they will be very aware that time might take the opportunity away based on Rousey's recent revelation on Ellen.
But if Brazil experiences normal - let alone fantastic -weather from now through March, the country may find itself in a similar situation as the United States at present - with a much bigger bean crop than it could have fathomed.
Ms. Hamlin, who had lost a game of rock, paper, scissors to Mr. Hodge earlier and had to read her handwritten vows second, said she never fathomed she would marry the boy she met in just that spot more than 20 years earlier.
The hearing will provide a forum to discuss legislation that has been proposed to deal with problems neither the Founders – or even Congress in the mid-1980s – could have fathomed: What happens when law enforcement seeks to look at electronic communications stored on servers outside the U.S.?
Mr. Putin, a former K.G.B. agent, seems not to have fathomed that few in the West are fooled by his propaganda antics or impressed by his power plays, and that his irresponsible cyberattacks serve only to further diminish his country's already dismal standing in the world.
"Never could I have fathomed a time where the only path forward would be to lay people off so they can receive unemployment, while this company fights to see another day when we can return to our full staffing levels," CEO Danny Meyer said in a statement.
"Never could I have fathomed a time where the only path forward would be to lay people off so they can receive unemployment, while this company fights to see another day when we can return to our full staffing levels," Meyer, the company's CEO, said in a statement.
After all, how could we have possibly fathomed his plan of finding and deporting 230 million illegal immigrants, or building a 230-foot wall (to be paid for by the Mexican government) to keep them from coming back—or that a person who makes dick jokes at a Republican debate on national TV could possibly have a shot at the Oval Office?
Nathan's wife Emily G. Nathan died in 1879.Staff report (Jan 21, 1879) MRS. NATHAN'S DEATH. Recalling a Murder Whose Mystery Has Not Been Fathomed.
Lockhart, according to Gilbert Burnet, became very uneasy when he fathomed the negotiations in which he was engaged. He then was reappointed to the embassy in France. He died on 20 March 1676.
Sounding lead. By James Mathews. Navy & Marine Living History Association. Water near the coast and not too deep to be fathomed by a hand sounding line was referred to as in soundings or on soundings.
The area offshore beyond the 100 fathom line, too deep to be fathomed by a hand sounding line, was referred to as out of soundings or off soundings.MarineWaypoints.com - Nautical Glossary. SandyBay.net - Marine Directory (MarineWaypoints.com) and Reference Directory (StarDots.com).
The best example of an isolated attitude is Momčilo Nastasijević, understood and admired only by those closest to him, whose mystifying poems and stories have yet to be fully fathomed, mostly because of their obscure language. He died in Belgrade in 1938.Momčilo Nastasijević: Serbo-Croatian poetry translation. Slavica Publishers. 2004.
This describes Brouwer's version 1.0.3, which is the most canonical version, being the one installed by package managers on Linux systems. Being developed by one man means the game is more balanced. Even when you have discovered all properties of monsters, wands, potions, and have fathomed the role of "luck", the game remains as playable as ever.
Rachmaninoff himself may simply have not fathomed the true nature of this composition, especially when it was first performed.Harrison, 256–257. Musicologist Geoffrey Norris, in contrast, argued that Rachmaninoff did not go far enough in his revisions. He claimed that had Rachmaninoff tackled the basic structural deficiencies of the work, it might have been received more sympathetically than it actually was.
GeoEcoMar is involved in European research programs of hydrological river-delta-sea macro-systems. It has fathomed the study of coastal erosion and its correction and participates in European programs to monitor potential hazards in the Black Sea."Avertizare în caz de tsunami. Sistemul dă alerta cu circa 20 de minute înainte de catastrofă", Digi 24, Accessed 4 September 2015.
Pincus says it was not a placid turn of events. In diplomacy and economics William III transformed the English state's ideology and policies. This occurred not because William III was an outsider who inflicted foreign notions on England but because foreign affairs and political economy were at the core of the English revolutionaries' agenda. The revolution of 1688–89 cannot be fathomed in isolation.
Once the unit unwrapped and the extras disappeared, the crew discovered to their amusement that the boxes weren't empty but filled with real presents, from china to silverware. "Who got to keep all these wonderful offerings," wrote Deeley "is a mystery I never quite fathomed." Cimino originally claimed that the wedding scene would take up 21 minutes of screen time. In the end, it took 51 minutes.
In some > ways he fathomed my potential more accurately than I could at the time. > Although I have often disagreed with him on matters of taste and style, I > can't dispute that he is something of a genius.Rainer, Yvonne. Work 1961-73 > quoted in Chin (2010) Leslie Satin writes: > In making dance, in teaching technique and composition, in writing and > conversation, James Waring asked many questions.
It was to Rinder ("EWR") he attributed the inspiration for his writings as Fiona Macleod thereafter, and to whom he dedicated his first Macleod novel ("Pharais") in 1894. Sharp had a complex and ambivalent relationship with W. B. Yeats during the 1890s, as a central tension in the Celtic Revival. Yeats initially found Macleod acceptable and Sharp not, and later fathomed their identity. Sharp found the dual personality an increasing strain.
Maimonides' thirteen principles of faith includes the concept that God has no body and that physical concepts do not apply to him. In the "Yigdal" prayer, found towards the beginning of the Jewish prayer books used in synagogues around the world, it states "He has no semblance of a body nor is He corporeal". It is a central tenet of Judaism that God does not have any physical characteristics; that God's essence cannot be fathomed.
When we > have fathomed the history of these unknown vibrations emanating from reality > – past reality, present reality, and even future reality – we shall > doubtless have given them an unwonted degree of importance. The history of > the Hertzian waves shows us the ubiquity of these vibrations in the external > world, imperceptible to our senses. He hypothesized a "sixth sense", an ability to perceive hypothetical vibrations, which he discussed in his 1928 book Our Sixth Sense.Richet, Charles.
The latter, however, fathomed the designs of Pompey, and assembled his armies. Pompey defeated him multiple times however and captured his cities. Aristobulus II entrenched himself in the fortress of Alexandrium; but, soon realising the uselessness of resistance, surrendered at the first summons of the Romans, and undertook to deliver Jerusalem to them. The patriots, however, were not willing to open their gates to the Romans, and a siege ensued which ended with the capture of the city.
IBM Global Services (now split to Business Services & Technical Services) was called the "jewel in the IBM crown" by the Aberdeen group in 2003. For worldwide IBM, this is the group that contributes to more than half its global revenues ($54 billion in 2005) presently and growing at a healthy rate (8% in 2005). With half of global service employees to be located in India, IBM India's importance for the global corporation can be easily fathomed.
Comics historian Don Markstein wrote that the character's racial stereotype "led to [the series'] unpopularity with program directors and thence to its present-day obscurity." He noted that, "The Minah Bird, which appears immensely powerful, [is] an accomplished trickster; and yet acts, when it acts at all, from motives which simply can not be fathomed". The series' director, Chuck Jones, said that these cartoons were baffling to everyone, including himself. He had no understanding of what the bird was supposed to do other than walk around.
The tiger, after much pestering from Miles, reveals that the Circus Oscuro did have a tiger once: the tiger, Varippuli, was originally part of the circus of a great man called Barty Fumble, and showed him more loyalty than could ever be fathomed. The circus was always a success, until the year the Circus Oscuro appeared and began stealing the crowds. Barty was expecting his first child and knew he could not afford failure. He made a deal with the Great Cortado to combine the two circuses for the summer and then part ways.
" Dillon wrote that referring to God may have also been viewed as "a square move" due to the nascent decline of traditional religion in the United States. The words are expressed from the perspective of a narrator who anticipates the dissolution of their romantic relationship, and asserts that life without their lover could only be fathomed by God. The deceptive opening line, "I may not always love you" was the subject of another argument between the songwriters. According to Asher, "i liked that twist, and fought to start the song that way.
In other folk stories, the Ratu left Totoya, and made his way to now known Verata, which upon his deathbed render the race on the "nukukatudrau" (hundred fathomed beach) of all his eldest sons' to appoint his successor. This resulted in treachery that shook the Fijian historical narrative and culture to its core. Other popular, now, legends have it that Kubunavanua came to Moala from Tonga, upon returning on the Kaunitera. Kaunitera is his way of taking over the Kaunitoni, by way of changing its name and made his voyage to Tonga.
Things inspiring awe or wonder because they can't be fathomed as either yin or yang, because they cross or disrupt the polarity and therefore can't be conceptualised, are regarded as numinous. Entities possessing unusual spiritual characteristics, such as albino members of a species, beings that are part-animal part-human, or people who die in unusual ways such as suicide or on battlefields, are considered numinous. The notion of xian ling (), variously translated as "divine efficacy, virtue" or simply the "numen", is important for the relationship between men and gods.Zavidovskaya, 2012. p.
The Yorkshireman was saddled with the heavy burden of knowing that England depended on his skill and was the prime target of the Australian fast bowlers Keith Miller and Ray Lindwall. Of Jack Iverson Hutton told Miller "Ah'll show thee how to play 'im", but never quite fathomed his mystery spin.p84, Keith Miller, Cricket Crossfire, Olbourne Press, 1956 England had one other great batsmen, the 'golden boy' Denis Compton whose heroic strokeplay had enthralled the crowds in 1946-47 and 1948. Unlike Hutton he had no inhibition about playing his shots, but had spent much of 1950 suffering from the knee injury that would plague his career.
Variety ran a mixed review by film critic Dennis Harvey, who argued that the men interviewed "are there more to be tallied than truly fathomed." He stated that the film's creators "deliver a slick, fussily stylized package that leaves no room for boredom" but should have delved more into the lives of the interviewees, with less hustlers being involved. However, Harvey considered several moments rather "memorable", citing for example a prostitute's description of a parent dying of a heroin overdose that went into detail about "feeling my soul float away" as a result. A brief mentioning of the film by the Chicago Reader described it as "gritty" and remarked on the frankness of the comments made by the hustlers.
Amethyst specimen from the Reel Mine, Iron Station Denver remained largely a farming community, with cotton as the primary cash crop supplemented by "truck farming" vegetables to area towns (with tomatoes and strawberries being among the most often marketed vegetable crops). Members of local families began commuting to work in textile mills in the surrounding communities of Mooresville, Lincolnton, Cornelius, Maiden, and Mount Holly just before World War II and continued up until the early 1970s. Having failed to elect a local government for many years, Denver lost its official incorporated status in 1971 by vote of the state legislature. It was the filling of a much larger pond, Lake Norman, that led Denver to grow in ways that its early boosters probably could have never fathomed.
"(初,文懿聞魏師之出也,請救於孫權。權亦出兵遙為之聲援,遺文懿書曰:「司馬公善用兵,變化若神,所向無前,深為弟憂之。」) Jin Shu vol. 1. In 249, Wang Guang, the son of Wang Ling, allegedly commented: "Now Sima Yi cannot be fathomed, but what he does never runs contrary to the situation. He gives his assignments to the worthy and capable, and liberally credits those who are better than he; he practices the laws of the former rulers and satisfies the people's desire. Of whatever Cao Shuang did wrong, he has left nothing uncorrected.
If the base form ends in a single vowel followed by a single consonant (except h, silent t, w, x or y), then unless the final syllable is completely unstressed the consonant is doubled before adding the -ed (ship → shipped, but fathom → fathomed). For most base forms ending in c, the doubled form used is ck, used regardless of stress (panic → panicked; exceptions include zinc → zincked or zinced, arc → usually arced, spec → specced or spec'ed, sync → sometimes synched). In British English, the doubling of l occurs regardless of stress (travel → travelled; but paralleled is an exception), and when two separately pronounced vowels precede the l (dial → dialled, fuel → fuelled). If the final syllable has some partial stress, especially for compound words, the consonant is usually doubled: backflip → backflipped, hobnob → hobnobbed, kidnap → kidnapped etc.
"God Only Knows" is a song by the American rock band the Beach Boys from their 1966 album Pet Sounds. Written by Brian Wilson and Tony Asher, it is a Baroque-style love song distinguished for its harmonic innovation and its subversion of typical pop music formula. It is often praised as one of the greatest songs ever written and as the Beach Boys' finest record. The song's musical sophistication is demonstrated by its multiple contrapuntal vocal parts and weak tonal center (competing between the keys of E and A). Lyrically, the words are expressed from the perspective of a narrator who asserts that life without their lover could only be fathomed by God—an entity that had been considered taboo to name in the title or lyric of a pop song.
While at Union, Buechner studied under such renowned theologians as Reinhold Niebuhr, Paul Tillich, and James Muilenberg, who helped Buechner in his search for understanding: :"I wanted to learn about Christ – about the Old Testament, which had been his Bible, and the New Testament, which was the Bible about him; about the history of the church, which had been founded on the faith that through him God had not only revealed his innermost nature and his purpose for the world, but had released into the world a fierce power to draw people into that nature and adapt them to that purpose... No intellectual pursuit had ever aroused in me such intense curiosity, and much more than my intellect was involved, much more than my curiosity aroused. In the unfamiliar setting of a Presbyterian church, of all places, I had been moved to astonished tears which came from so deep inside me that to this day I have never fathomed them, I wanted to learn more about the source of those tears and the object of that astonishment."Buechner, Frederick (1983). Now and Then: A Memoir of Vocation. HarperSanFrancisco. p. 10.
The cuneiform inscription of the Ishtar Gate in the Pergamon Museum in Berlin The inscription of the Ishtar Gate is written in Akkadian cuneiform in white and blue glazed bricks and was a dedication by Nebuchadnezzar to explain the gate's purpose. On the wall of the Ishtar Gate, the inscription is 15 meters tall by 10 meters wide and includes 60 lines of writing. The inscription was created around the same time as the gate's construction, around 605–562 BCE. Inscription: > Nebuchadnezzar, King of Babylon, the pious prince appointed by the will of > Marduk, the highest priestly prince, beloved of Nabu, of prudent > deliberation, who has learnt to embrace wisdom, who fathomed Their (Marduk > and Nabu) godly being and pays reverence to their Majesty, the untiring > Governor, who always has at heart the care of the cult of Esagila and Ezida > and is constantly concerned with the well being of Babylon and Borsippa, the > wise, the humble, the caretaker of Esagila and Ezida, the first born son of > Nabopolassar, the King of Babylon, am I.'' Both gate entrances of the (city > walls) Imgur-Ellil and Nemetti-Ellil following the filling of the street > from Babylon had become increasingly lower.

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