Treatises
in sentence
20 examples of Treatises in a sentence
And I went back and I read a whole host of memory treatises,
treatises
written 2,000-plus years ago in Latin, in antiquity, and then later, in the Middle Ages.
This is advice that goes back 2,000-plus years to the earliest Latin memory
treatises.
Charles Darwin said, "I sometimes think that general and popular
treatises
are almost as important for the progress of science as original work."
I went online, and there I learned about how multispectral imaging had been used to recover two lost
treatises
of the famed Greek mathematician Archimedes from a 13th-century palimpsest.
All these stuffy old white guys with their
treatises
and obscure terminologies.
And it was their
treatises
and their works in turn that inspired the first technical communities and the first projects of spaceflight, thus creating a direct chain of influence that goes from Godwin to Poe to Verne to the Apollo program and to the present-day communities of spaceflight.
He penned
treatises
on everything from anatomy to nutrition to bedside manner, meticulously cataloguing his writings to ensure their preservation.
This change accelerated the game’s pace, and as other rules were popularized,
treatises
analyzing common openings and endgames appeared.
They write these great symbolic
treatises
called books, and papers, and op-ed articles.
She wrote dramas, comedies, and
treatises
on philosophy and mathematics, in addition to religious music and poetry.
Gone are the spacial jumps and switching between stocks, the "documentary realism" and the
treatises.
The list of policy mistakes is almost endless: interest-rate hikes by the European Central Bank in July 2008 and again in April 2011; imposing the harshest austerity on the economies facing the worst slump; authoritative
treatises
advocating beggar-thy-neighbor competitive internal devaluations; and a banking union that lacks an appropriate deposit-insurance scheme.
Indeed, the events and personalities that have so far gained attention seem to fill the void where the declarations of freedom and
treatises
on rights – where the ideas – should be.
But you won’t find the word “bubble” in most economics
treatises
or textbooks.
“There are many academic
treatises
on the subject,” she replied.
He had books sent to him, and his ill-digested reading still further excited his brain, especially a medical book entitled L'Hygiéne du mineur, in which a Belgian doctor had summed up the evils of which the people in coal mines were dying; without counting
treatises
on political economy, incomprehensible in their technical dryness, Anarchist pamphlets which upset his ideas, and old numbers of newspapers which he preserved as irrefutable arguments for possible discussions.
The seventeen learned societies unanimously voted the presumptuous Blotton an ignorant meddler, and forthwith set to work upon more
treatises
than ever.
"I glanced at the books upon the table, and in spite of my ignorance of German I could see that two of them were
treatises
on science, the others being volumes of poetry.
I have gone through the
treatises
of Cassanion, and all those memoirs, pamphlets, answers, and rejoinders published respecting the skeleton of Teutobochus, the invader of Gaul, dug out of a sandpit in the Dauphiné, in 1613.
But Vinicius, as a man more concerned with reality than with
treatises
on virtue, replied,--"To-morrow I shall see Lygia, and then have her in my house daily, always, and till death."
Related words
Their
Books
Years
Technical
Science
Poetry
Pamphlets
Memory
Learned
Ideas
Almost
Wrote
Written
Writings
Write
Worst
Works
Without
Whole
White