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词汇 example_english_sensibility
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Examples of sensibility


These examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors.
Medically, their absence of inner heat, susceptible temperaments, pale countenances and enervated sensibilities bore out their emptiness of being.
Such events see the patron's own sensibilities meander through very different architectural cultures.
His nonconformism attracted a countercultural audience whom he mocked and a college audience whose left and liberal sensibilities he delighted in offending.
His theory is sufficiently general to support many different sensibilities in the interpretation of it.
The cosmopolitan meanings ascribed to recordings had a particularly strong impact on the development of local urban sensibilities and cultural practices.
One such claim is that the controversy was not so much a conflict of ideas, but a clash of egos, ambitions, sensibilities, and the like.
What is intriguing is that negative priming studies emphasizing body position and spatial sensibilities demonstrate the "embodiment" of the processes of suppression.
Although this may seem natural to our current sensibilities (why would government schools turn out shaykhs?), it nevertheless represents a significant displacement.
The second point requires that the varied "constructivist" sensibilities about science must be extended to the forms of economic calculation that provide its context.
The first must be education to feed the sensibilities and historical understanding of the population.
Presumably because science holds a far stronger and more central place in modern sensibilities than steamships do.
They show, for instance, how music can be used within fiction to indicate the feelings and sensibilities of the characters.
The sheer effort of creation takes too great a toll of the sensibilities.
In jazz, modernism challenged an aesthetic establishment within the sensibilities of popular entertainment.
Cross-cultural change, especially in urban areas, would still logically be low because of renewed group sensibilities.
Such attempts to preserve sensibilities, of course, rarely preserve the humour.
The more we mature and develop our moral sensibilities and our understanding of reality, the more our "world" expands so as to encompass global concerns.
As a quality of regulation, autonomy is characterized by an open processing of possibilities and a matching of these with sensibilities, needs, and known constraints.
Post-colonial theory, it appears, is ill at ease with pre-colonial sensibilities, especially literary ones.
Each were regarded as deeply transgressive at the time, and each shocked western sensibilities with their explicitness.
They also reveal something of the nature of musical influence, and of one man's tastes and sensibilities.
Instead of feeling the need to preclude hurt sensibilities, it would have been more useful to have an adequate rationale for the selection.
There has always been a contrast between their respective destinies, "hers narrowly personal, his charged with far-reaching sensibilities" (621; bk. 7, ch. 50).
As a corollary, writing poetry will automatically produce the cultivation of unmistakably middle-class sensibilities in the poet.
The construction of unrealized speech, then, not only increases one's expressive possibilities; it also provides an oppor tunity to convey one's moral sensibilities.
In installations where sound is essential to the work, the sensibilities of musicians can assume a significant role.
What grates on one's epistemic sensibilities slightly, however, is the level or quantum of proof that the defendant's case must achieve.
How can governments balance ' non-racial and race-conscious political sensibilities ' ?
The attraction of ontological narrative in architecture lies as a way of legitimating, discussing and formalising the sensibilities of the individual in the design process.
Considerations of statecraft discouraged the state administration from disrupting locally embedded bodies, for that would offend popular sensibilities, and invite their protest.
We do open our pocketbooks sometimes, but only when television images of massive destruction overwhelm our sensibilities.
Clothing styles were routinely modified to fit the relative age, experience, rank and habit of the wearer and, most importantly, to suit their sensibilities.
Writers-turned-editors, they would say, are hampered and at times blinded by their writer sensibilities.
Such a person recognizes that the rules will often require her to act in ways that offend her political and ethical sensibilities.
They are dispreferred, not from fear of physical or metaphysical harm, but lest the speakers lose face by offending the sensibilities of their audience.
The rapidity and violence with which it struck and the sudden diarrhoeic attacks which accompanied it were especially shocking for nineteenth-century sensibilities.
The argument that some stories are unreliable while others make perfect sense simply because of an author's own sensibilities does not wash anymore.
In particular, forms of labor involving the production and exchange of commodities raise some pointed questions about the nature of middle-class, male sensibilities.
Dating from 1811, this is not of course derived from the first (or possibly any) production, but suggests the impression made by the play upon contemporary sensibilities.
Biotech opponents want to appear rational and scientific; biotech proponents don't want to offend religious sensibilities or frighten people with the very real, life-altering power of their technology.
In recovering a sense of the public discourse of the period, a person of contemporary sensibilities almost certainly will find the tone shocking to the ear.
The other satisfactory aspect of getting older is the pleasure of working with new generations of performers and enjoying the different sensibilities that they bring to my work.
At other times when their hip pockets were bulging, or when their religious sensibilities were not upset, they were more than willing to accept the political status-quo.
Heightened sensibilities for the future, for the past, and for the expanses of existence may scale down many extravagant desires that are dominated by the perspectives of here and now.
I feel it is our duty as educators to develop these abilities and sensibilities, in whatever shape or form they may manifest themselves, to the fullest in 'all' our students.
The focus is on the relation of par ticular constructions of masculinity and femininity to cultural sensibilities and taste (in music, leisure activities, work, politics) and to transgression and risk-taking.
The activities of the groups are wounding the ethnic sensibilities of other groups and have created a situation of disorder and anarchy in some sections of the country.
I think that at least some philosophers occasionally express themselves the way the alleged straw man does and that some of them share his sensibilities too.
Conceived in one continuous span, it follows a pattern of slow-fast-slow-fast, ending with a satisfying, gentle epilogue where less fastidious sensibilities might have staged a blatant peroration.
Contextualization also meant reconceptualization of science's relation to religion, to the occult, to artistic sensibilities of its time, and to technological possibilities.
Articulating the culturally current association between women and horses, opponents of fashionable dress attempted through moralizing mockery to expose its fatuous character and make clear their own superior sensibilities.
In a language that sported neologisms such as 'grouping' (qun) and 'people's power' (minquan), it contributed to a political discourse that eventually clashed with traditional precepts and sensibilities.
Workable reform models require the precious but elusive aura of legitimacy, a resource that derives less from theoretical acumen than from a plausible marriage between policy innovation and public sensibilities.
Conjugal relations, informed by new sensibilities and at last free from the taboos which had to be observed under the authority of the elders, assumed an altogether new character.
Critics argue that they represent a western attempt to ride rough-shod over diverse cultural sensibilities, or yet one more imposition of the tyranny of enlightenment values.
Interestingly, in encouraging a language that polarized particular and general interests, utility and uselessness, the monarchy helped to intensify local civic humanistic sensibilities while abolishing politically autonomous republics.
In an atmosphere of change, frustration and hope, cultural rationalities worked upon class sensibilities in a mutually dependant way, making notions of an allencompassing class consciousness redundant.
The danger is that we will adopt schemes that will turn out to be monstrous and our own histories and moral sensibilities will soon find them repulsive.
Ironically, the need to bend to public sensibilities was felt more strongly in projects sponsored by the federal government than they had been when paid for by private capital.
What was there about minor tonality1 that so affected the sensibilities of late eighteenth-century listeners and that prompted composers to be so wary of its use?
If this is the case, then a two-tier thinking is especially necessary; for judging among the competing moral sensibilities that define various atrocities as intolerable becomes a really urgent task.
Through their soundings and rhythms, musical recordings furthermore foster distinct musical sensibilities that conjure distinctive identities for listeners, musicians, and the social collectivities associated with this soundscape.
You have given us proof of your impartiality, your respect for all political sensibilities, even minority opinions, and your ability to avoid political discrimination.
From Europarl Parallel Corpus - English
No aspect of public life should be immune to progress and to the evolution of people's sensibilities.
From Europarl Parallel Corpus - English
Not only does he have acute sensibilities about his doctrine, but he evidently seeks to have them enshrined in statute.
From the
Hansard archive

Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0
I have referred to the strong regional and local sensibilities.
From the
Hansard archive

Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0
What can be said of such political sensibilities?
From the
Hansard archive

Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0
We are dealing with delicate matters and there are sensibilities involved which must properly be attended to and taken into consideration.
From the
Hansard archive

Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0
They have also miscalculated the attitudes, views and moral sensibilities of the general public.
From the
Hansard archive

Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0
I wanted to thank the shadow rapporteurs of the different political parties who, with their different sensibilities, have contributed very effectively to this report.
From Europarl Parallel Corpus - English
We must therefore bring subsidiarity into play, and we are well aware that in such areas, national sensibilities may be expressed in diverse ways.
From Europarl Parallel Corpus - English
Why should they have their sensibilities protected while women's sensibilities are ignored?
From the
Hansard archive

Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0
At best, we can say that those offended the sensibilities of a number of our constituents.
From the
Hansard archive

Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0
One is not unfamiliar with cautious evasion of leadership in the alleged interest of protecting minority sensibilities.
From the
Hansard archive

Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0
Such a form of random testing should not trouble the sensibilities of those people who think that civil liberties are threatened.
From the
Hansard archive

Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0
I ask her not to be fobbed off with what are called "special dispensations" for cultural and religious sensibilities.
From the
Hansard archive

Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0
As long as the substance is there, we do not care about form, and we are insensitive to the sensibilities of other peoples.
From the
Hansard archive

Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0
Should not the sensibilities of the majority be more important than those of the minority?
From the
Hansard archive

Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0
We do not think that it would be appropriate to change the law in order to punish those who merely offend other people's religious sensibilities.
From the
Hansard archive

Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0
There are sensitivities on both sides, but we should not be so careful to avoid offending everyone's sensibilities that we say nothing.
From the
Hansard archive

Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0
They do this in the light of their individual histories and respective sensibilities, and these are not identical.
From Europarl Parallel Corpus - English
They were true to form; she rightly talked about the importance of sophisticated argument and sensibilities in respect of numbers.
From the
Hansard archive

Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0
They may offend the sensibilities of the clever economists and smug media commentators who presume to tell us what we can and cannot do.
From the
Hansard archive

Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0
What does it mean to aim for a global perspective while maintaining local sensibilities?
While aspects of contact are held, their presence in understanding is explored in higher sensibilities.
What may have authentically expressed contemporary sensibilities in the earlier seventeenth century no longer did so - or could do so - in the later eighteenth.
With nearly half of all constituencies contested, the election dramatically confirmed the extent to which divergent religious sensibilities provoked opposing political affiliations.
They sought to demonstrate that the harsh laws were anachronistic and out of line with the habits and sensibilities of the people.
To modern sensibilities these key dramatic moments that withhold opera's defining force, the virtuosic voice, may seem odd.
Creative, that is, in the truest sense: they are creators of sensibilities.
Musiking in the classical repertoire tends to negate the performer's attempts to express her self, her sexuality, her sensibilities.
His emphasis on pleasure and on gratification of the senses has offended the sensibilities even of some of his stoutest defenders.
However, it is a striking observation that women's moral sensibilities are, more often than men's, triggered by an awareness which is essentially aesthetic.
Again, the negative example (here in an emphatic, sublime way) is used to educate the listener's patriotic sensibilities.
Unlike deontological and teleological views, which concentrate on some privileged sensibilities, utilitarianism does not discriminate between them but takes everybody's feelings equally into account.
There are conflicting duties between state responsibility for the health of their populations and the protection of their moral sensibilities.
Instinctively, the prospect runs counter to our sensibilities.
Cases such as this tend not to stir our moral sensibilities much at all.
These examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors.
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