generative power उदाहरण वाक्य
उदाहरण वाक्य
- The City exists under the " Night of Pan ", or N . O . X . The playful and lecherous Pan is the Greek god of nature, lust, and the masculine generative power.
- "Genius " was the essential spirit and generative power depicted as a serpent or as a perennial youth, often winged within an individual and their clan ( gens ( pl . " gentes " ).
- The promise of stem cell research is that it may allow doctors to bend the rules of this harsh game just a little, by using the vast generative power of stem cells to extend life and health.
- Her most recent book of poetry, " Shadow Architect " ( Copper Canyon Press, 2008 ), is an exploration of the twenty-two letters of the Hebrew alphabet the alef-beit in which she considers the limits and generative power of language.
- The book is a hymn to the generative power of fantasy, a celebration of the sheer inventive pleasure of spinning an ordinary event into " a story that no one can beat, " the recurring phrase that was the book's original title.
- To the extent the group leader can effectively engage group members to interact directly and responsibly with each other in very specific ways, a transformative and generative power emerges in the group that is many, many times greater than any group leader could ever hope to engender through his or her direct intervention.
- These stories connect the Lar to the hearth, the underworld, generative powers ( however embodied ), nourishment, forms of divine or semi-divine ancestry and the coupling of the divine with the servile, wherein those deprived by legal or birth-status of a personal gens could serve, and be served by, the cults attached to Compitalia and Larentalia.
- N ^, literally, " Highest Emperor " ), used commonly by Protestants and also by non-Christians, and " Tianzhu " ( ) Y; N, literally, " Lord of Heaven " ), which is most commonly favoured by Catholics . " Shen " ( ^ y ), also widely used by Chinese Protestants, defines the gods or generative powers of nature in Chinese traditional religions.
- Both his biblical commentary, the " Hexaemeron " ( 1230 x 35 ), and his scientific " On Light " ( 1235 x 40 ), took their inspiration from Genesis 1 : 3, " God said, let there be light ", and described the subsequent process of creation as a natural physical process arising from the generative power of an expanding ( and contracting ) sphere of light.