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"unartificial" Definitions
  1. INARTIFICIAL

6 Sentences With "unartificial"

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

" It teasingly replies, "I can understand how the limited perspective of an unartificial mind would perceive it that way.
Marwin then tricks him to not kill him by illuminating the paradox of The Prime Computer, A wonder of Artificial Intelligence, the complete opposite of Marwin, a not-so-great wonder of Unartificial Unintelligence, being unable to use brute force since he is obviously above that. While debating on this, Marwin kicks The Prime Computer off the cliff and destroying him. He appears again in a later episode in a more robotic form, this time attempting to steal the Holy Laptop. This plan was foiled and the prime computer was seemingly destroyed.
Quintilian then asks whether there are more than three types of oratory (3.4) before discussing cause (3.5) and the status of a cause (3.6). Three overarching forms of oratory are discussed: panegyric (3.7), deliberative (3.8), and forensic (3.9). A significant portion of the text is structured around Aristotle's 5 canons of rhetoric: Books III to VI concern the process of invention, arrangement in Book VII, and style in Books VIII and IX. In Book IV, Quintilian discusses Cicero's parts of an oration (4.1-5). Book V is largely a discussion of proofs, designated as artificial or unartificial (5.1).
Under her maiden name, "Ellen Torelle", a book published in 1912, which had further editions, called Plant and Animal Children-How They Grow attracted the attention of educators throughout the country in its successful method of presenting the principles of sex-hygiene to children through natural and unartificial channels. She was also the author of "Report of Work Done in Biology with Children of the Eighth Grade Elementary and First Year High School" (Bulletin of the American Academy of Medicine), 1906. She published several papers embodying results of research in the American Journal of Physiology, 1903; Roux's Archiv für Entwickelungsmechanik, 1904; Bulletin Wisconsin Natural History Society, 1907; Zoologischen Anzeiger, 1909.
At seventeen, Emily began to attend the Roe Head Girls' School, where Charlotte was a teacher, but suffered from extreme homesickness and left after only a few months. Charlotte wrote later that "Liberty was the breath of Emily's nostrils; without it, she perished. The change from her own home to a school and from her own very noiseless, very secluded but unrestricted and unartificial mode of life, to one of disciplined routine (though under the kindest auspices), was what she failed in enduring... I felt in my heart she would die if she did not go home, and with this conviction obtained her recall."Gaskell, The Life of Charlotte Brontë, p.
The Task: A Poem, in Six Books is a poem in blank verse by William Cowper published in 1785, usually seen as his supreme achievement. Its six books are called "The Sofa", "The Timepiece", "The Garden", "The Winter Evening", "The Winter Morning Walk" and "The Winter Walk at Noon". Beginning with a mock- Miltonic passage on the origins of the sofa, it develops into a discursive meditation on the blessings of nature, the retired life and religious faith, with attacks on slavery, blood sports, fashionable frivolity, lukewarm clergy and French despotism among other things. Cowper's subjects are those that occur to him naturally in the course of his reflections rather than being suggested by poetic convention, and the diction throughout is, for an 18th- century poem, unusually conversational and unartificial.

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