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"insensibly" Definitions
  1. without feeling or being aware of something
  2. in an unconscious state
"insensibly" Synonyms
gradually imperceptibly slightly invisibly unnoticeably by degrees little by little inappreciably indistinguishably impalpably indiscernibly undetectably indistinctly subtly minutely finely inaudibly microscopically inconspicuously infinitesimally unconsciously senselessly inertly comatosely numbly coldly torpidly insensately insensitively deadly unfeelingly dazedly frozenly impassively unimpressionably impassibly semiconsciously catatonically inanimately uselessly lifelessly soullessly inorganically spiritlessly inactively abiotically nervelessly mechanically woodenly motionlessly powerlessly unawarely obliviously cluelessly ignorantly innocently unknowingly unwittingly deafly heedlessly imperceptively imperviously unmindfully unsuspectingly unfamiliarly blindly inattentively carelessly forgetfully indifferently unaffectedly apathetically unresponsively unmovedly obdurately stoically unemotionally passionlessly listlessly unconcernedly sluggishly languidly insouciantly nonchalantly uninterestedly disinterestedly incuriously perfunctorily uncuriously casually complacently uncaringly detachedly blasély coolly aloofly crassly crudely roughly uncouthly grossly unrefinedly vulgarly coarsely raffishly rudely ruggedly tastelessly commonly illiberally lowly boorishly loutishly impolitely indelicately inelegantly callously heartlessly unsympathetically ruthlessly mercilessly hardly pitilessly cruelly inhumanly uncharitably harshly unmercifully inhumanely stonily remorselessly unsparingly foggily fuzzily groggily muzzily vaguely bewilderedly confusedly disorientedly dizzily woolily(US) woollily(UK) woozily illiterately uneducatedly naively obtusely unintellectually witlessly benightedly imbecilically inexperiencedly mindlessly moronically unlearnedly cretinously densely shallowly thickly unsophisticatedly simply ingenuously greenly unsuspiciously naifly immaturely dewily rawly credulously simplemindedly impressionably freshly naïvely youthfully highly stonedly intoxicatedly trippingly flyingly euphorically deliriously floatingly immaterially aerially airily celestially disembodiedly dreamily ethereally ghostlily heavenlily imponderably incorporeally insubstantially intangibly metaphysically nonmaterially nonphysically psychically shadowily spectrally absently preoccupiedly scattily absent-mindedly neglectfully slackly negligently distractedly disregardfully remissly slipshodly laxly More

28 Sentences With "insensibly"

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

Our two most famous Neanderthal disrupters, one on each coast, have been in a race to see who can flame out more quickly — and insensibly. Arrogance. Chaos.
When it's plugged into your TV via its dock, it acts like a regular gaming console: the two small wireless controllers (insensibly called "Joy-Con R" and "Joy-Con L") can be held individually or attached to a grip and you have your ordinary big screen experience.
He turned into a side gallery that led into a grovy part of the garden, grading insensibly into the park proper.
Crawford begged Girty to shoot him, but Girty was unwilling or afraid to intervene. After about two hours of torture, Crawford fell down unconscious. He was scalped, and a woman poured hot coals over his head, which revived him. He began to walk about insensibly as the torture continued.
The longitudinal folds disappear insensibly upon the right side of the body whorl, at the upper part of which we find merely nodosities. The whitish aperture is rounded. The cavity has a brown color, and is marked by transverse bands. The outer lip is bordered externally, and ornamented internally, with small, fine striae.
Amudha makes Vikraman insensibly drunk after a dance and takes the key. Parthiban's associates reach the prison, set him free, put the same on Vikraman's face and dump him in prison. Parthiban assumes charge of the kingdom and introduces citizen friendly policies which are welcomed by the people. Naganathan suspects foul play.
The review includes: "Miss Reid is not a sentimentalist. She records changes without defending or decrying them, and after their moments of grief or joy her characters must insensibly resume the ordinary round".The Times, 4 October 1939. The reviewer in the Times Literary Supplement wrote: "It is a shrewd piece of work, gracefully carried out, and one takes great pleasure in the reasonable mind behind it".
His wife's death in 1907 was a great blow to Ivanov. Thereafter the dazzling Byzantine texture of his poetry wore thin, as he insensibly slipped into theosophy and mysticism. The poet even claimed to have had a vision of his late wife ordering him to marry Vera Shvarsalon, her daughter by her first marriage. Indeed, he married 23-year-old Vera in the summer of 1913; their son Dmitry had been born in 1912.
Michael and Basiliskianos were insensibly drunk following a banquet at the palace of Anthimos when Basil, with a small group of companions (including his father Bardas, brother Marinos, and cousin Ayleon), gained entry. The locks to the chamber doors had been tampered with and the chamberlain had not posted guards; both victims were then put to the sword. On Michael III's death, Basil, as an already acclaimed co-emperor, automatically became the ruling basileus..
During all his life he went to pray to the church every day, at night he made all-night prayerful vigils. Insensibly he accustomed his novices to this way of life. While there was the strength Blessed Paul often traveled to holy places, including journeys of 3000 versts on foot to Solovki more than once. But by old age he could go no longer, he dispatched to monasteries his novices and believers, who came to him.
On immigration and universal suffrage, Bellamy wrote in the editorial of The Illustrated American, Vol. XXII, No. 394, p. 258: "[a] democracy like ours cannot afford to throw itself open to the world where every man is a lawmaker, every dull-witted or fanatical immigrant admitted to our citizenship is a bane to the commonwealth.” And further: "Where all classes of society merge insensibly into one another every alien immigrant of inferior race may bring corruption to the stock.
Slaviša Jokanović was appointed as Levski's manager in July 2013. Levski started the campaign with 2 lost games in-a-row against Botev Plovdiv and Lokomotiv Plovdiv finding themselves on last position. After two disappointing home draws against Beroe and Cherno More Varna the team signed with 5 new players – Larsen Touré, Alex Perez, Dimitar Makriev, Miroslav Ivanov and Goran Blažević. Insensibly the team started to improve in the Championship and got up in among the first 7.
On 26 December 1792, Wollstonecraft saw the former king, Louis XVI, being taken to be tried before the National Assembly, and much to her own surprise, found 'the tears flow[ing] insensibly from my eyes, when I saw Louis sitting, with more dignity than I expected from his character, in a hackney coach going to meet death, where so many of his race have triumphed'.Furniss 65. France declared war on Britain in February 1793. Wollstonecraft tried to leave France for Switzerland but was denied permission.
The length of the shell attains 7.9 mm, its diameter 2 mm. (Description by Joseph Verco) The solid, elongate-fusiform shell consists of whorls, including the blunt protoconch, which merges into the spire insensibly. The first whorl and a half are smooth and rather flat; the next is scarcely convex, and has at first distant invalid axial angulations, which gradually become more numerous and costulate. In the next whorl they become more distant again, and remain throughout the shell as feeble axial angulations which are just visible when looking at the shell from the apex.
He claimed that the spirit of "authentic English Liberalism" had "built up its work piece by piece without ever destroying what had once been built, but basing upon it every new departure". This liberalism had "insensibly adapted ancient institutions to modern needs" and "instinctively recoiled from all abstract proclamations of principles and rights". Ruggiero claimed that this liberalism was challenged by what he called the "new Liberalism of France" that was characterised by egalitarianism and a "rationalistic consciousness". In 1848, Francis Lieber distinguished between what he called "Anglican and Gallican Liberty".
Kramer on accident as he thinks meets with a charming Natalia whom he helps to start the stalled car. A week later with bouquet of flowers and champagne Kramer comes to visit her. On one of stair landings he runs into a black man who exists a neighboring apartment with a Dalmatian on the leash. Natalia asks Kramer to help her unfasten the necklace with the plate that is supposed to block the alarm in the bank and insensibly throws the adornment into the window where it is picked by Moks.
As narrator, the flow of actions leads insensibly, spontaneous and full of humor a custom situation, characterized by the developed part of fabulom anecdotal narration, fully describing atmosphere time on any deals. The range of his work is very wide, from historical figures and events, through the fictional characters of our time, to youth readings that represents chronicle youth, all of us. In his works not only provides insight into the life and world figures, but pictures of different areas, giving a general picture space and time on. His works can be found in school curricula along with German high school textbooks.
Sharpe wondered how he'd ever been caught since he had an uncanny ability to find his way in the dark and assumed he must have been drunk (Sharpe's Gold). Hagman was one of the very few who had not gotten insensibly drunk with the rest of the company in Sharpe's Rifles. He was seriously wounded at a skirmish outside Barca d'Avintas in Portugal, taking a ball to the chest. Sharpe refused to leave him behind, and as luck would have it, they billeted in one of the English merchant's houses for almost a month, giving Hagman the chance to heal.
Despite being published during the French Revolution, the French Revolutionary Wars, and the lead up to the 1794 Treason Trials in Britain, Political Justice argues that humanity will inevitably progress: it argues for human perfectibility and enlightenment. McCann explains that "Political Justice is ... first and foremost a critique of political institutions. Its vision of human perfectibility is anarchist in so far as it sees government and related social practices such as property monopoly, marriage and monarchy as restraining the progress of mankind." Godwin believed that government "insinuates itself into our personal dispositions, and insensibly communicates its own spirit to our private transactions".Qtd.
Joseph Priestley's activities were causing embarrassment to his friends, not least, Benjamin Vaughan and John Vaughan. With Joseph Priestley now being styled the "journeyman of discontent and sedition",Philadelphia Gazette, 12 April 1800. John Vaughan wrote to his brother that Joseph Priestley: had allowed himself to fall too much under the influence of a Thomas Cooper, a man whose "violence creates Violence in the neighbourhood, the Dr has got himself into the Vortex insensibly, & been (by those who want the sanction of his name) urged to Measures, he had hitherto avoided".John Vaughan to Benjamin Vaughan, 29 Dec 1799 (American Philosophical Society: Benjamin Vaughan papers).
Chapter VI begins by saying the next three chapters will address possible objections to the theory, the first being that often no intermediate forms between closely related species are found, though the theory implies such forms must have existed. As Darwin noted, "Firstly, why, if species have descended from other species by insensibly fine gradations, do we not everywhere see innumerable transitional forms? Why is not all nature in confusion, instead of the species being, as we see them, well defined?" Darwin attributed this to the competition between different forms, combined with the small number of individuals of intermediate forms, often leading to extinction of such forms.
There were of course many notaries in the service of the pontifical chancery; the seven regional notaries preserved a certain pre-eminence over the others and became the protonotary (also spelled "prothonotaries"), whose name and office continued. The ordinary notaries of the chancery, however, were gradually known by other names, according to their various functions, so that the term ceased to be employed in the pontifical and other chanceries. The prothonotaries were and still are a college of prelates, enjoying numerous privileges; they are known as "participants", but outside of Rome there are many purely honorary prothonotaries. The official duties had insensibly almost ceased; but Pius X in his reorganization of the Roman Curia appointed participant prothonotaries to the chancery (Const.
"Crossing the whole breadth of a lovely valley; the road is conducted along the bottom, continually winding in natural easy sweeps, and presenting at every bend some new scene to the view ... insensibly ascending, all the way". It finally "rises under a thick wood in the garden up to the house, where it suddenly bursts out upon a rich, and extensive prospect, with the town and the churches of Reading full in sight, and the hills of Windsor forest in the horizon."Whately 1770, p. 142. In April 1786, Thomas Jefferson, the future third President of the United States, visited Caversham Park and other places described in Whately's treatise in search of inspirations for his own gardens at Monticello and other architectural projects.
The Secession of the People to the Mons Sacer, engraving by B. Barloccini, 1849. Enlightenment-era historian Edward Gibbon might have agreed with this narrative of Roman class conflict. In the third volume of The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, he relates the origins of the struggle: > '[T]he plebeians of Rome [...] had been oppressed from the earliest times by > the weight of debt and usury; and the husbandman, during the term of his > military service, was obliged to abandon the cultivation of his farm. The > lands of Italy which had been originally divided among the families of free > and indigent proprietors, were insensibly purchased or usurped by the > avarice of the nobles; and in the age which preceded the fall of the > republic, it was computed that only two thousand citizens were possessed of > an independent substance.
While out on a job acting as Satan's hitman in the Dakotas, Ernie had a premonition about a dark enchantress whom he'd often have visions of whenever he slept or was awake killing other sinners, ignoring Smiley's pleas of worry Ernest set about finding people affiliated with murder so he could discover the secrets to these odd visions of his. Soon making his way to a highway near Kansas State, his newest mark; Ethan Mueller who was a wanted murderer and was shot dead before he could receive any insight from his mystery woman. Sensing whoever he's searching for is somehow linked in some way to death Ernie sets his sights on finding people who broadcast an insensibly high body count. Every step of the way he's either met with or pursued by various forces seeking to impede his progress, such as Chastity Marks and Morgan Gallows; along with his Chosen.
In his own opening statements forming the preface to his Lesson XIII, "Modo per portare la voce" (method to carry the voice),The translator in the Schirmer edition translates this as "The Glide", which directly contradicts the sense explained in the text he is editing. Vaccai states: "By carrying the voice from one note to another, it is not meant that you should drag or drawl the voice through all the intermediate intervals, an abuse that is frequently committed—but it means, to 'unite' perfectly the one note with the other."Vaccai 1975, 30. He goes on to describe and illustrate that where a consonant falls between the two notes to be ligatured in this way, the portamento is achieved either by "almost insensibly" anticipating the second note of a pair in the final moments of the vowel sound preceding it, or else by minutely deferring the "salto" or leap between the notes until the first moment of the vowel sound in the second note.
The English traveler and musical critic Charles Burney attended a mass at the Basilica in Padua in 1770. He wrote the following about the orchestra there and Vandini in particular: ″I wanted much to hear [...] the famous old Antonio Vandini, on the violoncello, who, the Italians say, plays and expresses a parlare, that is, in such a manner as to make his instrument speak; but neither of these performers had solo parts. However, I give them credit for great abilities, as they are highly extolled by their countrymen, who must, by the frequent hearing of excellent performers of all kinds, insensibly become good judges of musical merit. [...] It was remarkable that Antonio [Vandini], and all the other violoncello players here, hold the bow in the old-fashioned way, with the hand under it.” Through Burney's anonymous informers it is clear that Vandini was well known for his expressive, rhetorical playing that evoked speech.
With the Peloponnesian War, increasing military expenditures began to undermine the liturgical system of public finance. The need for trierarchs was greater than ever, but the rich were increasingly trying to avoid the obligation. For the first time, the idea became current that personal wealth is not primarily intended to serve the city, but one's own good, even though expressed "discreetly, insensibly, without the rich admitting it openly".Anne Queyrel, p. 177 Thus, in 415 BC., the wealthy supporters of Nicias, opposed like him to the expedition to Sicily, preferred not to intervene, rather than risk the impression of worrying more about their own interests than those of the city. By 411 BC., the wealthy were less hesitant to defend their private interests, when they set up the oligarchy of the Four Hundred. In 405 BC, one of the characters in The Frogs remarks that "you can no longer find a rich man to be trierarch: each puts on rags and goes about whining 'I am needy!'"Aristophanes, Frogs (1065–1066) The city emerged from the war impoverished and burdened by the debt incurred by the Thirty.

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