given meaning造句
例句與造句
- The very details of their appearance and actions are given meaning through the labels and brands which they wear and use.
- When she learns there is nothing that can be done, her life is given meaning and she decides to study medicine.
- The community is initiated by God, is given meaning and direction by Christ, and is sustained by the Holy Spirit.
- But the Male Chorus tells her that all pain is given meaning, and all sin redeemed, in the suffering of Christ.
- But her senseless death can be given meaning if it spurs the state to accept a broader responsibility for the care of the mentally ill.
- It's difficult to find given meaning in a sentence. 用given meaning造句挺難的
- This trivia note is suddenly given meaning on this new disc as Bramhall records " Change It " for himself for the first time.
- This trivia note suddenly is given meaning on this new disc as Bramhall records " Change It " for himself for the first time.
- Bruce Clark offered them a wonderful news story, a story that would have given meaning to his son's tragic death, and possibly more.
- In October 2016, the go-ahead for a third runway at Heathrow was given meaning that the idea of a Thames Estuary airport is now unlikely.
- "Love letters date from the introduction of glass beads about 1830, which were quickly given meanings dependent upon their color, " the site says.
- Such a reading would make the word " necessary " redundant, which goes against the well-known rule that every word in an enactment must be given meaning.
- "To President Bush, " said the inscription, " whose lifetime of public service has given meaning to these words : Ask not what your country can do for you.
- But if " About Schimdt " is a story of frustration and futility, it is also a comedy of unexpected fulfillment, about the serendipitous ways that life can be given meaning.
- Back home, Mac keeps quiet about his emotional pain, although he wonders aloud to Rosa Lee why his once sorry existence has been given meaning and, on the other hand, his daughter died.
- For the verb itself, the most commonly given meaning is " to open / stretch wide " or " to rip open ", whereas the meaning " to open up the mouth, devour " occurs in fewer varieties.