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48 Sentences With "inquiring mind"

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

He had a very inquiring mind but it was mostly about roses.
The High Court found the Seriti inquiry had failed to test witnesses with an open and inquiring mind.
I do every interview trying to concentrate on having clear eyes, an inquiring mind and an open heart.
He has a wide-ranging, inquiring mind, and he can and will talk about any subject under the sun.
Commenting on the reasons for his longevity, Nakasone cited a disciplined life, interest in nature - and an insatiably inquiring mind.
It was enough for him to exchange a few words with her to realize that she possessed a lively and inquiring mind.
It makes you wonder if the inquiring mind of Mr. Mueller would like to know more about The Enquirer than he has let on.
The current coronavirus pandemic has reunited the Hollywood exes, and inquiring mind want to know: now that they're self-isolating together, is there a chance that Jenner and Scott are back together?
With no formidable opponent left on the conference schedule, and victories over many of the top-ranked teams already recorded, an inquiring mind wants to wonder whether the Huskies might in a couple of years be on the doorstep of 200.
Roger Cohen Robert Silvers was an American, Chicago-educated, and he went at things as he had taught himself, free-style, to create, in The New York Review of Books, a literary journal unlike any other, his "paper," the repository for every marvel of his inquiring mind.
Uppermost on the reader's inquiring mind is how Ivana's intimate perspective might help us unlock how the slick wheeler-dealer who charmed and courted her when she arrived in Manhattan in the 1970s — "an all-American good guy," her instincts told her — mutated over the decades into a president so seething with ignorance, malice, prejudice and destruction.
An intelligent, inquiring mind. And that's just > the way consciousness is. It's not linear. It's just one thing piled on > another.
Jim Jardine, "Apparatus for the Inquiring Mind", in Jennison and Ogborn, eds., Wonder and Delight, pp. 169-80, on development and testing of physics apparatus under Eric Rogers. Distinct Nuffield 'O' and 'A' level examinations were instituted, although they were originally intended only as a temporary measure.
Porch pillars are Doric columns on stone piers. With . It was home for Other C. Wamsley, a contractor and carpenter, during 1908 to 1918. A 1987 inventory writeup notes: > The unusual architecture discloses the inquiring mind possessed by Mr. > Wamsley who was also unafraid to attempt the unusual.
Main Hall of Mahinda College, which was named after Colonel Henry Steel Olcott. Colonel Henry Steel Olcott, a retired United States army officer was in search of truth. He studied various philosophies and listened to the sermons of various religious dignitaries. But his inquiring mind did not find an answer.
He was a craftsman in wood, leather and metal. He never learnt to drive; he was not interested. He had a store of unusual knowledge, which he shared freely. He had a fertile and inquiring mind and strong opinions, and expected the highest of standards from both actors and academics.
He undertook his last major journey to Tuva in 1983. In these almost 25 years of hard work, Vainshtein with his distinctly developed inquiring mind was also able to expand his scientific studies towards the Tofalars, the Altai people, the Buryats and the Mongolians. Further research and study trips followed into the 1990s.
Everyone is aware of her designs on the sexually naive Blent except for him. She succeeds in convincing him that she has an intelligent, inquiring mind that he admires, although this is all done through deception. She eventually gets Blent to fall for her and propose marriage. However, they need several thousand dollars to set up a home.
Lasker's use of radio, particularly with his campaigns for Palmolive soap, Pepsodent toothpaste, Kotex products, and Lucky Strike cigarettes, not only revolutionized the advertising industry but also significantly changed popular culture.Arthur W. Schultz, "Albert Lasker's Advertising Revolution," Chicago History, Nov 2002, Vol. 31#2 pp. 36–53 Lasker had an inquiring mind about what advertising was and how it worked.
John L. Lewis, "Eric Rogers and the Nuffield Physics Project",, in Brenda Jennison and Jon Ogborn, eds., Wonder and Delight: Essays in Science Education in honour of the life and work of Eric Rogers 1902-1990, Bristol/Philadelphia: Institute of Physics Publishing, 1994, , pp. 153-62, p. 157; also see Jim Jardine, "Apparatus for the Inquiring Mind", pp. 169-80.
He wanted to know how everything that he saw in nature worked. In over 4,000 pages of notebooks, he drew detailed diagrams and wrote his observations. Leonardo made careful drawings of human skeletons and muscles, trying to learn how the body worked. Due to his inquiring mind, Leonardo has become a symbol of the Renaissance spirit of learning and intellectual curiosity.
Lasker had an inquiring mind about what advertising was and how it worked. In 1904 he met John E. Kennedy, a former Canadian mounted policeman who had entered advertising. Lasker believed that advertising was news, but Kennedy said, "[N]ews is a technique of presentation, but advertising is a very simple thing. I can give it to you in three words, it is 'salesmanship in print'".
She was a child of strong mental powers and inquiring mind. Her poetic trend was apparent in childhood, and in her youth she wrote poems of much merit. She married, in February, 1853, John R. Olmsted, of Le Roy, New York, and she resided in that town thereafter. The Olmsleds descended from the first settlers of Hartford, Connecticut, and pioneers of the Genesee valley.
Eric M. Rogers (15 August 1902 – 1 July 1990) was a British author and physics educator. He is perhaps best known for his 1960 textbook Physics for the Inquiring Mind. The book, subtitled The Methods, Nature, and Philosophy of Physical Science, was based on courses he gave at Princeton University, where he taught from 1942 to 1971. Rogers also headed the Nuffield Science Teaching Project program in physics education in the 1960s.
According to his biographer, James H. Madison, "Lilly was modest, unassuming, and quiet, yet under his placid exterior was an inquiring mind and abundant physical energy" and a man who "believed in hard work, all his life."Madison, Eli Lilly, p. 238. As a boy, Lilly worked during school vacations at the family's pharmaceutical plant on McCarty Street in Indianapolis, where he washed bottles and did other tasks. He never thought of working anywhere else.
In 2006, Blyth became a Fellow in the RSA. In October 2007, Blyth was named a Fellow of the AES. Blyth reported that he was "surprised and delighted" upon learning that he was to be so honoured, especially considering that he had "never presented any papers on my subject". He said his success in designing mixing consoles stemmed more from "having green fingers and a very inquiring mind than any structured research process".
New York Gazette or Weekly Post Boy, March 14, 1768 According to Patricia Bonomi, 'John Adams would later claim that "the apprehension of Episcopacy" contributed as much as any other cause to the American Revolution, capturing the attention "not only of the inquiring mind, but of the common people... . The objection was not merely to the office of a bishop, though even that was dreaded, but to the authority of parliament, on which it must be founded"'.
La Motte carried on a correspondence with the duchesse du Maine, and was the friend of Fontenelle. He had the same freedom from prejudice and the same inquiring mind as the latter, and it is on the excellent prose in which his views are expressed that his reputation rests. His Œuvres du theâtre (2 vols.) appeared in 1730, and his Œuvres (10 vols.) in 1754. See Hippolyte Rigault, Histoire de la querelle des anciens et des modernes (1859).
Blue Cow wonders what goes on in the outside world beyond her field. In each episode she wonders about something different. The other (black and white) cows in the field don't appear to have the same inquiring mind as Blue Cow as whenever she starts wondering they say, "she's off again." Blue Cow then boards a red double decker bus which takes her to an appropriate destination where she will find out the answer to what she was wondering about.
Arlott's birthplace John Arlott was born in 1914 at Cemetery Lodge, Chapel Hill, Basingstoke in Hampshire, the son of cemetery registrar William John Arlott and Nellie (née Jenvey-Clarke). He attended Fairfields Primary School in Basingstoke before winning a scholarship to Queen Mary's Grammar School. Once at the school, however, he became embroiled in a feud with the headmaster, as the school "had not been wholly receptive to his young, independent, inquiring mind." Arlott eventually left the school of his own accord.
Lukšienė defended two dissertations: of humanitarian science and doctor habilitatus in social science (sphere of education science). A home of Meilė Lukšienė was full of great respect for the human idea, perception, consciousness and inquiring mind. Her husband Kazimieras Lukša (1906–1983) in the independent Republic of Lithuania was a high economic relations officer, high-level Lithuanian bank employee. From 1940 to 1970 Kazimieras Lukša had been teaching the science of balance, economic analysis and international trade courses at Vilnius University.
Cohen was born in Maišiagala, near Vilna (in modern Lithuania), the scion of a distinguished rabbinic family. In his youth he studied at the Raduń Yeshiva under Rabbi Yisrael Meir Kagan, at the Volozhin yeshiva, and at the yeshiva in Slabodka. Even at that time, his restless and inquiring mind led him to extend his studies beyond the traditional subjects taught in the yeshivot. Thus he turned to Rabbi Samson Raphael Hirsch and the early writings of Rabbi Abraham Isaac Kook.
While a little mischievous, he was also known for his inquiring mind and flair for the news. After 1910 with the closure of the paper, and marrying in Proserpine, Vennard moved and became a reporter for the Sydney Morning Herald newspaper. Leaving his wife of a couple of years, he then became a swagman around Castlereagh, New South Wales, whilst still contributing newspaper articles. Part of this break was to be done with poet Henry Lawson, in 'Ogilvie country' heading towards Coonamble, New South Wales.
"The Bhikkhu and the Butterfly: A Conversation between Ajahn Pasanno and Julia Butterfly Hill", Inquiring Mind, Fall 2005 issue. Retrieved on October 16, 2014. After Ven. Ajahn Chah became ill and died, Ajahn Pasanno was part of the steering committee for administering to the needs of Wat Nong Pah Pong and its branch monasteries, which at the time numbered over 200. In 1992 and 1993, Ajahn Pasanno was directly involved in helping the preparation and organization of the royal funeral of Ajahn Chah (Phra Bodhinyanathera) at Wat Nong Pah Pong, Ampher Warin, Ubon Ratchathani Province.
Wang was born in the foreign legation quarter of Beijing in 1900 while it was under siege of the Boxers. His early life was one of extreme poverty and repeated illness; but he had an inquiring mind and did well at a London Missionary Society school. He later said his poverty had been something of a spiritual advantage because there were many sins that took money to commit. At first Wang hoped to become a great political leader, and he put a picture of Abraham Lincoln on his wall to remind himself of his goal.
PW Talks with Harold McGee It is published by Hodder & Stoughton in Britain under the title McGee on Food and Cooking: An Encyclopedia of Kitchen Science, History and Culture. The book provides a reference to the scientific understanding and preparation of food. It has been described by Alton Brown as "the Rosetta stone of the culinary world", Daniel Boulud has called the book a "must for every cook who possesses an inquiring mind",Saekel, Karola, San Francisco Chronicle (December 1, 2004). Good reads for the cooks on your list while Heston Blumenthal has stated it is "the book that has had the greatest single impact on my cooking".
A new unit, Enchanted Forest, was established, with its own base a mile hike from the camp. There were 397 campers that year. In 1941 the state granted the Peck Lumber Company access to the forests; this company logged 200 acres (the lumbering continued until 1962). Eleanor Roosevelt came and toured the camp this season, telling girls to “develop a seeing eye and an inquiring mind”, and she placed the camp on the International Girl Scout Camp list. During the 2nd Western Hemisphere Encampment in the same year, scouts from across the United States and more than 14 other countries exchanged recipes, camping ideas, customs and costumes.
Fong Chung-Ray's passion for art and inquiring mind led him to take an interest in Western abstract art, which he discovered through reading journals and books, available in the American Library in Taipei. In 1957, he founded the Four Seas Artists Association with his friend, Hu Chi-Chung. During this period, he experimented with abstraction and used new Western techniques, such as painting with oil on canvas. In 1961, he became a member of the Wuyue Group (Fifth Moon Group) and participated in many exhibitions. in 1963, on the advice of Liu Guosong, a painter and the Group’s theorist, he abandoned painting with oil on canvas and returned to the traditional Chinese technique of ink painting.
Bradstreet let her homesick imagination marshall her store of learning, for the glory of God and for the expression of an inquiring mind and sensitive, philosophical spirit.White, Elixabth Wade 'The Tenth Muse:An Appraisal of Anne Bradstreet' William & Mary Quarterly Review V111 July 1951 We see examples of this homesick imagination in her poem "Dialogue Between Old England and New" which emphasizes the relationship between the motherland and the colonies as parental; and gives assurance that the bond between the two countries will continue. It also implies that whatever happens to England will also affect America. The poem often refers to England as "mother" and America as "Daughter", which emphasizes the bond Bradstreet feels herself to her home country.
He had a speculative and inquiring mind, and as appears readily accepted the views of the opposers of orthodoxy of the day in general, although on special points of doctrine he held views peculiar to himself. He was nominally a Baptist, and retained his connection with that denomination until after his removal to Warwick at about twenty-one years of age. There his peculiar notions became so offensive that he and also his brother Nathaniel were brought before the church "for errors in doctrine," and on the charge, were set aside. Soon after, in 1773, these brothers with one or two associates formed the new society at Warwick, and Caleb became the minister.
This would indicate that the wall had been abandoned at least that long if not longer. The mystery to be solved is who were the builders of this wall and why was it constructed. William Morris the first permanent settler of the county located in the vicinity of this wall in 1774 and his descendants claim that he was told by the Indians that the wall was there when the latter came into the Valley. It is quite clear to every inquiring mind that the Indians were not its builders but that it was no doubt constructed by the same race that built the mounds and inhabited the territory of the United States for centuries prior to its settlement by the Indians.
Bullock of the APA addresses the opportunities of incorporating Western psychological ideals with ingenious psychologies when she writes: "Globalization offers a tremendous opportunity for psychology to enrich its content, methods and scope. Like all opportunities, however, this must be nurtured, and it must be addressed by open discussion about how to do it. Although we might all agree that it is important to keep an inquiring mind, to share and learn as well as to inform and teach, we also know that our cognitive and social systems make this difficult to implement. To do so, we need strategic and open discussion about assumptions and biases, and we need collaborative interaction to seek a common set of psychological principles" (p. 9).
This would indicate that the wall had been abandoned at least that long if not longer. The mystery to be solved is who were the builders of this wall and why was it constructed. William Morris the first permanent settler of the county located in the vicinity of this wall in 1774 and his descendants claim that he was told by the Indians that the wall was there when the latter came into the Valley. It is quite clear to every inquiring mind that the Indians were not its builders but that it was no doubt constructed by the same race that built the mounds and inhabited the territory of the United States for centuries prior to its settlement by the Indians.
Title page from the first edition of the Observations In the 18th century, “Observations” appears in the titles of scientific works — compare Benjamin Franklin’s Experiments and Observations on Electricity (1751) and Joseph Priestley's Experiments and Observations of Different Kinds of Air (1774). Priestley, Hartley’s champion, would declare that Hartley’s work “contains a new and most extensive science. … [T]he study of it will be like entering upon a new world. …” The science is the science of “man,” and the “new world” is the one embodied in the human “frame” itself. The result, on the one hand, is a “vast haystack of a book.” As one would expect from a physician with an inquiring mind and active medical practice, Hartley draws together a wide range of observations — to name a few, on phantom limbs, savant syndrome, and the experiences and mental development of the blind and the deaf (OM 1, props.
On the > same building lived families of all grades and classes, each in its flat in > the same stair—the sweep and caddie in the cellars, poor mechanics in the > garrets, while in the intermediate stories might live a noble, a lord of > session, a doctor or city minister, a dowager countess, or writer; higher > up, over their heads, lived shopkeepers, dancing masters or clerks. James Drummond in 1850 One historian has ventured to suggest that Edinburgh's living arrangements may themselves have played a part in engendering the spirit of social inquiry associated with the thinkers of the Scottish Enlightenment: "Its tall lands (tenements) housed a cross-section of the entire society, nobles, judges and caddies rubbing shoulders with each other on the common stair. A man of inquiring mind could not live in old Edinburgh without becoming a sociologist of sorts." During the Jacobite rising of 1745, Edinburgh was briefly occupied by the Jacobite "Highland Army" before its march into England.
"An Interview With Ajahn Pasanno", Fearless Mountain Magazine. Retrieved on September 19, 2013. In addition to leading the community at Abhayagiri, his spiritual activities shortly after arriving in California ranged from traveling to San Quentin Prison in order to provide spiritual counseling for Jaturun "Jay" Siripongs, who was executed on February 9, 1999,"Preparing for Death: The Final Days of Death Row Inmate Jaturun "Jay" Siripongs", UrbanDharma.org. Retrieved on October 17, 2014. to leading monks from Abhayagiri to visit, make offerings, and chant for Julia Butterfly Hill, who was living in a 1500-year-old California Redwood tree in order to protect it from Pacific Lumber Company loggers."The Bhikkhu and the Butterfly: A Conversation between Ajahn Pasanno and Julia Butterfly Hill", Inquiring Mind, Fall 2005 issue. Retrieved on October 16, 2014. With Ajahn Pasanno's help, support, and spiritual guidance, three lay followers, Sakula (Mary Reinard), Barbara Backstrand, and Chris Robson, founded Portland Friends of the Dhamma in 2000.
His long familiarity with bio-electric phenomena, his keen and inquiring mind and his ability to use mathematics enabled him to devise the central terminal arrangement and one of the most ingenious and basic conceptions in the field of electrocardiography, the ventricular gradient. Important though Dr. Wilson's papers and tangible contributions have been, his influence as a teacher and as an exponent of the interpretation of electrocardiograms has been of lasting value. His profound knowledge of the electrical phenomena underlying the electrocardiogram made him acutely aware of the many things apart from heart disease that may alter the records, and he often commented that the more a physician knows about electrocardiography the more conservative his interpretation of the records will be. Much of Dr. Wilson's time in the last years of his active service was devoted to informal teaching of electrocardiography to doctors who came from all over the world to study in Ann Arbor under him.
Fascinated, and still insisting to himself that his motivation is righteous and research-based, Tono follows Bebb down to Armadillo, Florida. Though he has not informed anyone there of his decision to travel, Tono’s arrival in Armadillo is unsettling. Bebb is not there, having flown to Texas on “the Lord’s business”; Tono is greeted by Laverne Brown, his assistant pastor, but is surprised and not a little unnerved to learn that Brown is expecting him, having been informed by Bebb that he would come. Despite refusing Brown’s offer of a room at the manse, claiming to have already paid for a room in a local motel, Tono cannot refuse an invitation to spend the evening with Brown and Bebb’s wife, who, he discovers, is an alcoholic. Tono’s attempt to investigate The Church of Holy Love, Inc. is thwarted by Bebb himself, who lifts the inquiring mind of the would-be journalist away from his apparently shady dealings and his wife’s dark past, and fixes it upon the fair frame of his adopted daughter, Sharon.

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