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"measureless" Definitions
  1. very great or without limits

42 Sentences With "measureless"

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

You probably feel you have a measureless supply of it, but you have not.
Birds sang, rivers ran, there were caverns measureless to man (because man did not exist).
Then there's that ring everyone is after, which brings measureless might to those who renounce love.
Finally, the measureless grace of "I Can't Give Everything Away" ends the album on an epic note, riding its buoyant gliding stringthesizer off into the sunset.
Fontana buried his hands into these paintings' wounds, widening their lacerations by force before stuffing black gauze into them to give the impression of a measureless void.
Its (measureless) ethereality is a big part of its magic, which, even more than most art, is largely inspired by each viewer's unique story, way of seeing the world, and being in it.
Her video installation "Black Friday" was shown at the Whitney Museum last year — a hallucinatory, drone-videoed fugue about shopping malls, the 21st-century equivalent of Coleridge's "caverns measureless to man," where we are all spendthrift Kubla Khans.
The "measureless frozen ocean" that Captain De Long described is no more, and his era's obsession with conquering the North Pole has been replaced by the graver challenge that drives so many Old Weather volunteers: averting catastrophic climate change.
There is nothing about Brazil in her second book, "A Cold Spring," published in 1955, unless one accepts a glancing little poem of unusual warmth, titled "The Shampoo," which begins with lichens growing slowly, promises such measureless time to a "dear friend," and concludes: The shooting stars in your black hair in bright formation are flocking where, so straight, so soon?
Hard are the terms and measureless is the arrogancy of the king of Ashur.
Measure, being the unity of Quality and Quantity, now transitions into its version of the Infinite, the Measureless, which accordingly is the unity of the Qualitative and Quantitative Infinites. In the Measureless, the Quantitative Infinite is manifested in the potential of the Nodal line to increase endlessly; the Qualitative Infinite is manifested as the eternal beyond of any particular Qualitative determination. Seeing as the successive determinations are self-generated by an internal Quantitative Alteration of Measure, they can now be seen, from the standpoint of the Measureless, to be different States of one and the same Substrate. The nature of the Substrate is not tied, like the Something was, to a merely external Qualitative appearance, but represents the underlying unity of a variety of internally determined appearances, which are its States.
Its diet consisted of axe handles that are left unattended. It is a nocturnal creature that travels from camp to camp. ; Bahamut : A huge, measureless fish which is often used to describe the spaces between heaven, earth, and hell. ; Baldanders : Also known as Soon-Another, these creatures can assume many shapes.
Johnson's music career started in 2007, after she graduated from college. Her first extended play, Power of the Cross, was released on August 14, 2012, by Maranatha! Music.< She released, Your Kingdom Come, a studio album, on September 23, 2014, with LifeWay Worship. The second extended play, Measureless, is releasing on January 22, 2016, from LifeWay Worship.
The Tathagata does the same, and he is without > falsehood. First he preaches the three vehicles to attract and guide living > beings, but later he employs just the Great Vehicle to save them. Why? The > Tathagata possesses measureless wisdom, power, freedom from fear, the > storehouse of the Dharma. He is capable of giving to all living beings the > Dharma of the Great Vehicle.
Art Historian Estill Curtis Pennington wrote "Kes Woodward seems to bring the full authority of a carefully studied art historical tradition to ... sweeping visions of the seemingly measureless Alaska turf."Pennington, Estill Curtis. Frontier Sublime. Augusta GA: Morris Museum of Art, 1997. p45. In The Artist and the American Landscape John Driscoll wrote of the artist's “simple and compelling devotion to nature’s beauty and tranquility.”Driscoll, John.
Dante's Inferno, Charon ferries souls across the subterranean river Acheron. Greek mythology included the Styx, Phlegethon, Acheron, Cocytus, and Lethe as rivers within the Underworld. Dante Alighieri, in his Inferno, included the Acheron, Phlegethon, and Styx as rivers within his subterranean Hell. The river Alph, running "Through caverns measureless to man / Down to a sunless sea" is central to the poem Kubla Khan, by Samuel Taylor Coleridge.
Some authors make a distinction between unconditional love and conditional love. In conditional love, love is 'earned' on the basis of conscious or unconscious conditions being met by the lover, whereas in unconditional love, love is "given freely" to the loved one "no matter what". Loving is primary. Conditional love requires some kind of finite exchange, whereas unconditional love is seen as infinite and measureless.
Aside from the early memoir, "Lovecraft and Science" (in Marginalia), 1944, Sterling wrote the poignant reminiscent article "Caverns Measureless to Man" (Science- Fantasy Correspondent, 1975) about Lovecraft. This article quoted extensively from his letters to Lovecraft, which have not otherwise been widely available. It is hoped that his heirs will deposit these letters in an institution in the course of time.The New Lovecraft Collector 10 (Spring 1995), p.
He had chosen to marry one, Anne Whateley, but when this became known he was immediately forced by Hathaway's family to marry their pregnant relative. Harris believed that "Shakespeare's loathing for his wife was measureless" because of his entrapment by her and that this was the spur to his decision to leave Stratford and pursue a career in the theatre.Frank Harris, The Man Shakespeare, BiblioBazaar, LLC, 2007, (reprint) p. 362.
Under King Andrew II, donations of land to nobles by the crown reached a new peak: whole counties were donated. As Andrew II said, "The best measure of royal generosity is measureless". After Béla IV inherited his father's throne he began to reconfiscate Andrew’s donations and to execute or expel his advisers. He also denied the nobles' right of personal hearings and accepted only written petitions to his chancellery.
And it throws forth brilliant and > fiery sparks which stir and enkindle heart and senses, will and desire, and > all the powers of the soul, with a fire of love; a storm, a rage, a > measureless fury of love. Mommaers & van Bragt, Mysticism Buddhist and Christian. Encounters with Jan van Ruusbroec (New York: Crossroad 1995), pp. 148-149. Zaehner evolved into a committed Christian, whose ethics and morals were founded on his Catholic faith.
His Fire becomes Solar fire and his Water becomes Lunar > water in our universe. Schamayim is the Universal Mercury or Azoth—the > measureless spirit of life. That original spiritual fiery water comes > through Edem ("vapor" in Hebrew) and pours itself into the four main rivers > of the four Elements. This comprises the River of Living Water—the Azoth—or > fiery mercurial essence, that flows out from the throne of God and Lamb.
He paraphrases Jan van Ruysbroeck: when the soul finds 'rest in God', the soul may become ablaze in God's love; then the soul's "living flame kindled by the fire of God is reunited with the divine fire".Evelyn Underhill, Ruysbroeck (London: Bell & Sons 1914; reprint 2003), pp. 74-75, quoting from Ruysbroeck's The Mirror of Eternal Salvation (1359): > That measureless Love which is God Himself, dwells in the pure deeps of our > spirit, like a burning brazier of coal.
He also takes the first step toward civilized intercourse between individuals, discovering tenderness in sexual relations, the inaugural burgeoning of what we know as love. In the end he dies a prophet's death at the hands of the obtuse masses, but he bequeathes a rich legacy to posterity. The next two books, with a second prehistoric patriarch, begins after another measureless lapse of time. The world has changed now, the volcano is extinct, the climate cooling.
Sheck Exley (April 1, 1949 – April 6, 1994) was an American cave diver. He is widely regarded as one of the pioneers of cave diving, and he wrote two major books on the subject: Basic Cave Diving: A Blueprint for Survival and Caverns Measureless to Man. On February 6, 1974, Exley became the first chairman of the Cave Diving Section of the National Speleological Society. During his career, he established many of the basic safety procedures used in cave and overhead diving today.
The three reviewers for Electronic Gaming Monthly saw potential in its battle system and world design, but generally faulted it as a poorly-constructed RPG. Game Informers Joe Juba was highly critical, saying there were too many faults and unusual design choices to make the game worth playing. Andrew Reiner, in a second opinion, was still less positive and called the game "a measureless disaster". GamePro praised the art design, but faulted the soundtrack, and found the progression system and design confusing and difficult to enjoy.
He shrieks and falls, but rises once again, because The Oracle missed her target. He rushes from the courtyard, blowing a whistle to summon the police, but is immobilized, within a force-field, near a monument of Falstaff, where he will stand and gibber until it is convenient to collect him. Zozim and Zoo, dressed impressively in costumes that they disparage as foolish, but are demanded by their short-lived clients, lead the visiting party into the temple. It, too, is most impressive with a show of eerie lighting in a measureless abyss.
Publication Notes: Broadway Magazine (Oct. 1868) > A patient spider, I mark'd where on a little promontory it stood isolated ; > Mark'd how to explore the vacant vast surrounding, It launch'd forth > filament, filament, filament, out of itself ; Ever unreeling them—ever > tirelessly speeding them. And you O my soul where you stand, Surrounded, > detached, in measureless oceans of space, Ceaselessly musing, venturing, > throwing,—seeking the spheres to con- nect them ; Till the bridge you > will need be form'd, till the ductile anchor hold ; Till the gossamer thread > you fling catch somewhere, O my soul.
As a general, Chares has been charged with rashness, especially in the needless exposure of his own person; this said he appears to have been, during the greater portion of his career, the best commander that Athens had. In politics, we see him connected throughout with Demosthenes. Morally he must have been an incubus on any party to which he attached himself, notwithstanding the assistance he might sometimes render it through the orators whom he is said to have kept constantly in pay. His alleged profligacy, which was measureless, he unblushingly avowed and gloried in, openly ridiculing the austere Phocion.
Lauder in 1909 Sir Henry Lauder (; 4 August 1870 – 26 February 1950)Russell, Dave. "Lauder, Sir Henry (1870–1950)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004, online edition, January 2011, accessed 27 April 2014 was a Scottish singer and comedian popular in both music hall and vaudevillian theatre traditions; he achieved international success. He was described by Sir Winston Churchill as "Scotland's greatest ever ambassador", who also wrote that Lauder, "... by his inspiring songs and valiant life, rendered measureless service to the Scottish race and to the British Empire."Winston S. Churchill, The Second World War – Volume III, p.
Part of his address included the declaration that > We are assisting at a solemn function, the conferring of a new charter, the > charter of the modern conscience, on each race and nation as a member of the > world-system.... From this watch-tower of Humanity, we seem to hear the > measureless tread of generations behind and before, to witness the universal > march and procession of Humanity, at the opening of a new era... Michael Biddiss notes that Seal's opening words 'set the tone of effusion and euphoria' which pervaded much of the Congress as a whole.
She refers here to St. Francis of Assisi. "Hungry love," "generous love," "stormy love" touches the human soul with its Divine creative energy and, once we become conscious of it, evokes in us an answering storm of love. "The whole of our human growth within the spiritual order is conditioned by the quality of this response; by the will, the industry, the courage, with which [we accept our] part in the Divine give- and-take." [74] As Ruysbroeck puts it: > That measureless Love which is God Himself, dwells in the pure deeps of our > spirit, like a burning brazier of coal.
Hand-mixing paint is an intimate, timeconsuming, and repetitive activity, resulting in modest batches that settle and cohere in accordance with the subtle variations of each particular admixture of pigment, linseed oil, and mineral spirit. No two batches are the same, recalling the ancient philosopher Heraclitus of Ephesus’s observation that “You cannot step twice into the same river.” At the core of Guyer’s paintings and drawings is an awareness and embrace of life as a vulnerable and temporary moment within a measureless, universal continuum.” In his exhibition text, Anthony Huberman, the Director and Chief Curator of CCA Wattis Institute, writes: “Léonie Guyer makes paintings and drawings.
A number of critical works have approached the question of the influence of Finnegans Wake on Derrida's writings and thinking, such as: Borg, Ruben (2007); The Measureless Time of Joyce, Deleuze and Derrida, London: Bloomsbury; Mahon, Peter (2007); Imagining Joyce and Derrida: Between Finnegans Wake and Glas, University of Toronto Press, ; and Roughly, Alan; Reading Derrida Reading Joyce, University Press of Florida; Derrida tells an anecdote about the two books' importance for his own thought; in a bookstore in Tokyo, > an American tourist of the most typical variety leaned over my shoulder and > sighed: "So many books! What is the definitive one? Is there any?" It was an > extremely small book shop, a news agency.
And it throws forth brilliant and > fiery sparks which stir and enkindle heart and senses, will and desire, and > all the powers of the soul, with a fire of love; a storm, a rage, a > measureless fury of love. These be the weapons with which we fight against > the terrible and immense Love of God, who would consume all loving spirits > and swallow them in Himself. Love arms us with its own gifts, and clarifies > our reason, and commands, counsels and advises us to oppose Him, to fight > against Him, and to maintain against Him our right to love, so long as we > may. [74–75]She again quotes from The Mirror of Eternal Salvation at cap.
In response to his question Woglinde and Wellgunde reveal the gold's secret: measureless power would belong to the one who could forge a ring from it. Flosshilde scolds them for giving this secret away, but her concerns are dismissed—only someone who has forsworn love can obtain the gold, and Alberich is clearly so besotted as to present no danger. But their confidence is misplaced; in his humiliation Alberich decides that world mastery is more desirable than love. As the maidens continue to jeer his antics he scrambles up the rock and, uttering a curse on love, seizes the gold and disappears, leaving the Rhinemaidens to dive after him bewailing their loss.
Bastiat strongly believed that what was really needed was a science of economics that would explain the harmony of a free society. He made a major contribution to this end himself by publishing his incomplete magnum opus Harmonies of Political Economy In the book, Bastiat writes of "the measureless disproportion" between what each of us contributes to society and what each of us receives in return. The American economist Amasa Walker commented that, "Of all the writers on the subject, no one seems to have been more full and clear in the definition and illustration of value" than Bastiat, in the distinction he draws in Economic Harmonies between value and utility. Bastiat dedicated Harmonies of Political Economy to the youth of France.
He argued passionately against the neutrality of the United States, writing, "We earn as a nation measureless scorn and contempt if we follow the lead of those who exalt peace over righteousness, if we heed the voice of those feeble folk who bleat to high Heaven for peace when there is no peace." Roosevelt worked on editorial articles for Metropolitan until his death in January 1919. His last action was to write a letter to his son Theodore Jr. with the proofs for his last article in the magazine. In 1919 _Metropolitan_ launched the Metropolitan Newspaper Service (MNS), which a syndicated content from the magazine including the column Fairchild Fashions, the writings of Margot Asquith, the comic strip Dickey's Dogs, and more.
According to Candradhara Sarma, Turiya state is where the foundational Self is realized, it is measureless, neither cause nor effect, all pervading, without suffering, blissful, changeless, self-luminous, real, immanent in all things and transcendent. Those who have experienced the Turiya stage of self- consciousness have reached the pure awareness of their own non-dual Self as one with everyone and everything, for them the knowledge, the knower, the known becomes one, they are the Jivanmukta.; ; Advaita traces the foundation of this ontological theory in more ancient Sanskrit texts.PT Raju (1985), Structural Depths of Indian Thought, State University New York Press, , pages 32-33 For example, chapters 8.7 through 8.12 of Chandogya Upanishad discuss the "four states of consciousness" as awake, dream-filled sleep, deep sleep, and beyond deep sleep.
Turiya is discussed in Verse 7 of the Mandukya Upanishad; however, the idea is found in the oldest Upanishads. For example, Chapters 8.7 through 8.12 of Chandogya Upanishad discuss the "four states of consciousness" as awake, dream-filled sleep, deep sleep, and beyond deep sleep.PT Raju (1985), Structural Depths of Indian Thought, State University New York Press, , pages 32-33; Quote: "We can see that this story [in Chandogya Upanishad] is an anticipation of the Mandukya doctrine, (...)"Robert Hume, Chandogya Upanishad - Eighth Prathapaka, Seventh through Twelfth Khanda, Oxford University Press, pages 268-273 Similarly, Brihadaranyaka Upanishad, in chapter 5.14 discusses Turiya state, as does Maitri Upanishad in sections 6.19 and 7.11. Verse VII of the Mandukya Upanishad describes Turiya: The insight during meditation of Turiya is known as amātra, the 'immeasurable' or 'measureless' in the Mandukya Upanishad, being synonymous with samādhi in Yoga terminology.
According to Candradhara Sarma, Turiya state is where the foundational Self is realized, it is measureless, neither cause nor effect, all prevading, without suffering, blissful, changeless, self-luminous, real, immanent in all things and transcendent. Those who have experienced the Turiya stage of self-consciousness have reached the pure awareness of their own non-dual Self as one with everyone and everything, for them the knowledge, the knower, the known becomes one, they are the Jivanmukta.; ; Advaita traces the foundation of this ontological theory in more ancient Sanskrit texts.PT Raju (1985), Structural Depths of Indian Thought, State University New York Press, , pages 32–33 For example, chapters 8.7 through 8.12 of Chandogya Upanishad discuss the "four states of consciousness" as awake, dream-filled sleep, deep sleep, and beyond deep sleep.Robert Hume, Chandogya Upanishad – Eighth Prathapaka, Seventh through Twelfth Khanda, Oxford University Press, pages 268–273 One of the earliest mentions of Turiya, in the Hindu scriptures, occurs in verse 5.14.
Throughout his life, Gaskell worked for numerous local charitable concerns to alleviate poverty, improve living conditions and reduce the transmission of disease, particularly epidemic cholera and typhus. During the 1830s–1860s, some of the worst conditions for the poor in England were to be found in Manchester.Briggs A. Victorian Cities (2nd ed.) (Pelican Books; 1968) In 1845, Engels described one of the poorest slums, not far from the Gaskells' house:Engels F The Condition of the Working Class in England (1845) > 'ruinous cottages behind broken windows, mended with oilskin, sprung doors, > and rotten doorposts, [...] dark wet cellars, in measureless filth and > stench...' It was also a city of extreme social inequality between the so-called 'millocracy' and the workers; Elizabeth Gaskell once described an acquaintance attending a ball wearing £400 of lace and £10,000 in diamonds.Letter to Marianne Gaskell (December 1863) in Chapple & Pollard The Gaskell family moved between the two worlds, allowing Gaskell not only to collect charitable subscriptions from their wide circle and promote longer-lasting changes from within the local bureaucracy, but also to understand the real concerns of those living in poverty, with whom he was probably more at ease.

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