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"nowise" Definitions
  1. not at all

12 Sentences With "nowise"

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

It is, in any case, clear that the first governments were nowise instituted in order to provide the foundation for social cooperation toward the common good.
There are no > errors of grammar, no infelicities of phrase. Each Book is perfect in its > kind. I, daring to snatch credit for these [...] dared nowise to lay claim > to have touched The Book of the Law, not with my littlest finger-tip.The > Equinox of the Gods, p.
Griffiths Mlungisi Mxenge was the eldest son of Johnson Pinti and Hannah Nowise Mxenge. His parents were farmers in KwaRayi. He began his high schooling at Forbes Grant Secondary school in Ginsberg but matriculated from Newell High school in Port Elizabeth in 1956.[Mona G.V. New Dictionary of South African Biography Mxenge, Griffiths Mlungisi. Online.
Another effect of rapid technological change was that after 1910 the rate of capital investment slowed, primarily due to reduced investment in business structures. The depression led to additional large numbers of plant closings. > It cannot be emphasized too strongly that the [productivity, output and > employment] trends we are describing are long-time trends and were > thoroughly evident prior to 1929. These trends are in nowise the result of > the present depression, nor are they the result of the World War.
Modern geographers and hydrographers, however, have claimed that ancient Lefkada was an island. They noted that the causeway that connects it to the mainland today is a recent product of silting in the channel and so Lefkada may have experienced varying degrees of connection with the mainland over the last few thousand years. Dörpfeld may have believed that Lefkada was a freestanding island (or was regarded as such) at the time of Homer’s descriptions, in accordance with the above passage. Dörpfeld may also have felt that the difficulty of crossing the narrow causeway was referred to in Homer's enigmatic and repeated jest, "For nowise, methinks, didst thou come hither on foot".
" Merleau-Ponty himself refers to "that primordial being which is not yet the subject-being nor the object-being and which in every respect baffles reflection. From this primordial being to us, there is no derivation, nor any break..." Among the many working notes found on his desk at the time of his death, and published with the half-complete manuscript of The Visible and the Invisible, several make evident that Merleau-Ponty himself recognized a deep affinity between his notion of a primordial "flesh" and a radically transformed understanding of "nature." Hence in November 1960 he writes: "Do a psychoanalysis of Nature: it is the flesh, the mother." And in the last published working note, written in March 1961, he writes: "Nature as the other side of humanity (as flesh, nowise as 'matter').
It is said that he wrote a formal Palinodia or retractation of his book De vera obedientia; but the reference is probably to his sermon at the start of Advent, 1554, after Cardinal (later Archbishop of Canterbury) Reginald Pole had absolved the kingdom from schism. As chancellor he had the onerous task of negotiating the Queen's marriage treaty with Philip II of Spain, for which he shared a general repugnance. In executing it, he took care to make the terms as advantageous for England as possible, with express provision that the Spaniards should in nowise be allowed to interfere in the government of the country. After the appointment of Cardinal Pole, and the reconciliation of the realm to the see of Rome, he still remained in high favour.
She comports herself with noble moderation in this private colloquy with a man she fears and yet despises, commencing with nothing but an appeal to his clemency and mercy. His objections make her more impassioned: she sets her brother's misdemeanour in a touching light, and pleads forgiveness for a fault so human and in nowise past all pardon. As she observes the impression of her warmth, with ever-greater fire she goes on to address the hidden feeling of the judge's heart, which cannot possibly have been quite barred against the sentiments that made her brother stray, and to whose own experience she now appeals for help in her despairing plea for mercy. The ice of that heart is broken: Friedrich, stirred to his depths by Isabella's beauty, no longer feels himself his master; he promises to Isabella whatever she may ask, at price of her own body.
True Religious Unity , Catholic Truth Society, No. Pe1928a (1933). Pius XI rejected the hope: > that the nations, although they differ among themselves in certain religious > matters, will without much difficulty come to agree as brethren in > professing certain doctrines, which form as it were a common basis of the > spiritual life. For which reason conventions, meetings and addresses are > frequently arranged by these persons... Certainly such attempts can nowise > be approved by Catholics, founded as they are on that false opinion which > considers all religions to be more or less good and praiseworthy, since they > all in different ways manifest and signify that sense which is inborn in us > all, and by which we are led to God and to the obedient acknowledgment of > His rule. Not only are those who hold this opinion in error and deceived, > but also in distorting the idea of true religion they reject it, and little > by little.
Sunrise over Lake Virginia from Rollins College campus Erected in 1938 and dedicated on Armistice Day by college president Hamilton Holt, it consists of a German artillery shell, surrendered by Germany at the end of the First World War, mounted on a pedestal, bearing this inscription: :Pause, passerby and hang your head in shame :This Engine of Destruction, Torture and Death Symbolizes: :The Prostitution of the Inventor :The Avarice of the Manufacturer :The Blood-guilt of the statesman :The Savagery of the Soldier :The Perverted Patriotism of the Citizen :The Debasement of the Human Race :That it can be Employed as an Instrument of Defense of Liberty, Justice and Right in Nowise Invalidates the Truth of the Words Here Graven. ::--Hamilton Holt The top half of the monument was stolen by vandals during World War II, but the plaque from the bottom half survives and is in the stairwell leading to the second floor of the Mills Memorial building. In 2000, the Rollins College's Peace Monument was featured in a New York Times article.
The intrigues of a malevolent opponent compel me, in the defense of the honor of my Monarchy, for the protection of its dignity and its position as a power, for the security of its possessions, to grasp the sword after long years of peace. With a quickly forgetful ingratitude, the Kingdom of Serbia, which, from the first beginnings of its independence as a State until quite recently, had been supported and assisted by my ancestors, has for years trodden the path of open hostility to Austria-Hungary. When, after three decades of fruitful work for peace in Bosnia and Herzegovina, I extended my Sovereign rights to those lands, my decree called forth in the Kingdom of Serbia, whose rights were in nowise injured, outbreaks of unrestrained passion and the bitterest hate. My Government at that time employed the handsome privileges of the stronger, and with extreme consideration and leniency only requested Serbia to reduce her army to a peace footing and to promise that, for the future, she would tread the path of peace and friendship.
It was completed to Masbrough on 11 May 1840, and to Leeds on 1 July. The Sheffield Iris for 7 July reported on the opening ceremony: > the directors, accompanied by their friends, to the number of several > hundreds, in thirty-four carriages, drawn by two powerful engines, proceeded > from Leeds at eight o’clock in the morning, to Derby where they met the > directors of that end of the line…. At twenty-four minutes past ten the > train arrived at Masbro’ Station, where a number of passengers had arrived > from Sheffield… After a few minutes rest, to allow the engines to receive > water, the train moved on and arrived at Belper, at 14 minutes before one, > stayed four minutes, and at 10 minutes past one, stopped within the truly > splendid and extensive station at Derby where was provided a cold collation, > nowise unacceptable to the travellers…. The stay at Derby occupied about an > hour, or rather more, it being judged necessary to return as soon as > possible, on account of the time occupied in the trip.

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