Usa "metaphorical" in una frase
metaphorical frasi di esempio
metaphorical
1. carriageway seemed to drift above her and hold its metaphorical breath
2. Smith drew a metaphorical line in the cosmic sand
3. the metaphorical net curtain that hid the outer reaches of the old melodies from His
4. The sound of rumbling rubber from the cars on the dual carriageway seemed to drift above her and hold its metaphorical breath
5. metaphorical level, we began to release the trapped
6. metaphorical heaven and hell
7. Like language, it is metaphorical, but unlike language it is a mathematical construct
8. Meets ovum, with a metaphor for the metaphorical: Happy, sad, angry, afraid: with a sudden insight: An eyesore spots the light at the end of the tunnel…
9. “Discovery of the implicit” or metaphorical manipulation Is more of an isolating and adding connections that seem More arbitrary than pre-destined; yet, interests often fall Into place with amazing, unthought of implications—
10. “The fifth element is spirit, which is more of a metaphorical element
11. She had been told that; it just remained more metaphorical until that moment
12. ‖ Secularism, in modern times, may be properly considered the (metaphorical) false idol superseding the God of ancient traditions
13. The metaphorical Job had searched toward the source of a truer meaning
14. I wanted to learn more about Levi, and for the interest of my kind, I needed to, but Levi not trusting me tugged at my metaphorical heart strings
15. Eventually, a 19th-century almanac put this metaphorical moon in the sky
16. The term “fifth column” was invented as a metaphorical addition to Hitler’s armed forces to identify subversive elements within America during World War II
17. the non-contact forces of quantum physics that rely upon metaphorical
18. When Joshua said he was the vine, did he mean that he was an actual plant that grows in the ground? Or did he compare himself to a vine in a metaphorical way? Isn’t the answer that he was speaking metaphorically?
19. a misinterpreted form of metaphorical interpretation and could have
20. The above examples help illustrate how metaphorical interpretation
21. , but in a metaphorical sense only, not a literal one
22. no choice but to spill the beans on myself, in a metaphorical
23. “You can consign yourself to the metaphorical monastery, or you can choose Controlled Folly to appear to be participating in your former world at their level
24. “You can consign yourself to the metaphorical monastery, or choose Controlled Folly, to appear to be participating in your former world
25. world in a metaphorical sense
26. but in a metaphorical sense, this person was verifying
27. Discovering what ‘water’ actually represents in the metaphorical terms of the Bible is no
28. trees but in a metaphorical sense, this person was verifying that he understood this
29. From that metaphorical ocean, the divine is observing life on shore
30. A metaphorical lightbulb switched on above her head, perhaps the hand mirror would be of use? She quickly retrieved the silver frame from her bag and stared into the reflection
31. metaphorical references to it everywhere
32. Jim Marion writes that the word “devil” is rather a metaphorical way of
33. metaphorical bolt of lightning that will disrupt the status quo; when it
34. the opposite way of creationists, and tried to give metaphorical import
35. Maybe they were only metaphorical
36. ’ I’ve always liked that because he used a metaphor to describe a metaphorical art
37. It is abundantly clear from many of the above verses that the Koran is not talking of metaphorical battles or of moral crusades: it is talking of the battlefield
38. The title A Spark Neglected Burns the House is itself metaphorical
39. ‘Taqwa’ is also used in a metaphorical sense in the context of a person leading their spirit to become illuminated by God’s Light, which then will allow it to witness the evil hidden behind disobedience
40. We missed the next big thing, because we were in the midst of its evolution and only now have more and more people begun to become aware not only of the metaphorical and metaphysical changes that have occurred within personal and collective perception, but also that a significant reality change has occurred
41. The Black Friday plague has crept into it and turned it into Tryptophan Thursday, when overfed zombies sleep walk to stores to consume more in many metaphorical ways
42. metaphorical expressions in the Hebrew Torah literally would be a disservice to these past peers of
43. communities are portrayed in a negative slant in this metaphorical tale starring two mouse cousins
44. In my notes, the previous quote was accredited to Jonathan Livingston Seagull, 187a metaphorical
45. “Nazi?” the other twin's forbidden epithet, whose hatred also had been majestically adorned with the metaphorical veil of Non-word word, whispered itself through Faith's awakening
46. “Is it energy efficient to keep all of them?” Faith experienced a virtual, a metaphorical, an allegorized, digitized self-interest
47. but is also metaphorical – and so has a universal
48. based on a few metaphorical verses, view the second
49. But it is obvious that a man who can speak with the tongue of angels, who has put his seal on his century, and who will be remembered when we have returned, forgotten, to the Prussian dust from which we came--or rather not forgotten because we were at no time remembered, but simply ignored--it is obvious that such a man may wear what tie he pleases when he comes to dine, and still ought to be received on metaphorical knees of reverence and gratitude
50. The larger Bible he placed close by his side should any uninvited guests require another verse from the metaphorical book of Exodus
51. Nothing like a good metaphorical decapitation to fill the billboards with
52. a metaphorical stick in the spokes of the bike Cooper was riding to what he thought was going to be Northeastern
53. reference to hell is metaphorical, it might also be viewed as an affirmation reflecting direct
54. To understand the situation at a metaphorical level we take the example of “State”
55. Much of Sacred Scripture needs to be interpreted from a metaphorical and allegorical literary perspective than from a literal literary perspective if we are to derive from this work its full sense of meaning and purpose
56. However they may also have been written at a time and in a culture where they were intended to be interpreted within a genre that expresses messages through deeper metaphorical and allegorical (figurative and symbolic) meanings
57. This is, reinterpreting literal or metaphorical messages from antiquity into messages that are relevant for today
58. At a deeper underlying and metaphorical level of meaning, perhaps the author of these two verses is emphasising the power of the Creator’s ability to mystically relate with all peoples through divine unconditional love, no matter whatever their past, present or future personal experiences
59. This notion of not judging others, is emphatically stated in the teachings in Matthew 7:1-5 and the metaphorical parables of Matthew in Chapter 13, and Mark 4: 24
60. Although this statement seems to be a very harsh one if read literally, Jesus Christ is perhaps saying in a metaphorical way that unrepentant sinners will suffer in a way that humans perceive death as being painful
61. The appropriate contextual and metaphorical interpretation of Scripture can replace the perceived reality of pure literal interpretation of Scripture, allowing for the reconciliation of the scientific evidence of creation with Scripture’s stories of creation with regard to the predetermination of creation through evolution originating with the ‘big bang’ or ‘the Word’
62. But these verses may also be seen to have deeper and more profound allegorical and metaphorical meanings also based on the culture, faith, spirituality and religion of the time
63. This was until (Saint) Ambrose gave him the idea of the spiritual, moral and metaphorical interpretations necessary for the reading of Scripture
64. They need to be read generally, and broadly, with an insight and notion for seeking a common thread and theme so that readers may more fully appreciate their true literary metaphorical and ‘spiritual’ meaning
65. The Metaphorical view of both Heaven and Hell
66. [6] THE METAPHORICAL VIEW OF BOTH HEAVEN AND
67. metaphorical view of is Hell is pictured as a place of fire, but it
68. Some believe Hell is Metaphorical, it is not literally hot,
69. [6] THE METAPHORICAL VIEW OF BOTH HEAVEN AND HELL: We are
70. The metaphorical view of is Hell is
71. The Metaphorical view of both Heaven and Hel
72. (6) THE METAPHORICAL VIEW OF BOTH HEAVEN AND HELL: We are
73. The metaphorical view of is Hell is pictured as a
74. Once both these metaphorical children have attained their seats -no matter the amount of attempts or time required to accomplish this- the process begins
75. (6) THE METAPHORICAL VIEW OF BOTH HEAVEN AND HELL: We are not told what Heaven and Hell will literally be like
76. The metaphorical view of is Hell is pictured as a place of fire; being burned in fire is one of the worst pains we know of, but it will not literally have fire as we know it, or literal darkness as we know it
77. He can see but one sense, that of them metaphorical
78. He has shown us a large use these word in their metaphorical sense, but how does that prove that such will be their final use? I call the little children to the stand to witness this exhibition of the peculiar play of a biased judgment
79. How then can it teach the same thing after it is admitted to be metaphorical? And if it be established by rational argument to be symbolical, then to apply as a historical fact to prove a theory is the strongest proof possible that the theory is founded in the labyrinth of error
80. Why is it, then, when we take those Greek words to the Bible, somehow, it appeals to us that we must transfer the literal from the symbols to the more simple teaching? Why is it that, to us, the last destruction has all the ear-marks of a literal one? The shaping and forging of the evidence, caused all scripture to bow meekly to a few metaphorical texts, which anticipated a reversion of all these same words used in the plain, simple instruction to God’s people
81. There is not a doctrine of the gospel which He did not involve in an envelope of metaphorical speech, partly as a punitive measure towards dishonest souls, partly as an exercise of the pious ingenuity of His disciples
82. May not, then, the whole sense of Christ's language respecting Life and Death, as the destinies of men, be a portion of the metaphorical vocabulary in which He presented the truth? The writings of the Apostles of Christ contain several indications of the strong secondary associations which belong to these terms, as when S
83. The impression prevails among many readers of the Bible that inasmuch as it is an Oriental Book, and the genius of Oriental Speech is metaphorical and symbolical, it is a dangerous fallacy to handle its Language according to the cold canons of European language
84. With respect to the Bible, to impute a highflown metaphorical style to its writers as their ordinary habit is manifestly a delusion
85. To assert, therefore, that in the Greek gospel of John, written in the clear sunshine of Ionian Greece itself, the language is probably metaphorical at every turn, that we shall most likely err in taking two to mean life, and qa>natov to mean death, and shall more likely reach the truth by supposing that ajpoqnh>skein signifies to be banished from God, or to live forever in misery, is to offer a violent contradiction to one of the most obvious facts in philology,—namely, that the use of Greek in the New Testament is in itself a presumption that its ordinary terms are taken in their natural signification
86. His title as the Life of Men must be understood as applicable to Him only in a vague metaphorical sense, as the giver of grace and happiness
87. The metaphorical part of this discourse, specially the difficulty occasioned by His assertions of a descent from heaven, of the necessity of eating His flesh in order to eternal life, Christ at the close, according to custom, explained to His faithful disciples
88. ’ They daily heard from the party of the Sadducees that there was no foundation whatever for such a metaphorical treatment of the promises and the threatenings of the Old Testament Scriptures
89. The death of the Lord Jesus being placed in opposition to the impending death of man, it cannot be supposed that the same term has diverse significations in the two cases: and since the loss of 'a right to the tree of life’ in Adam was followed by 'a return to the dust whence he was taken,’ it seems inevitable to conclude that He at whose death the veil of the Holiest (the type of Paradise) was rent asunder, has procured for us a literal, and not a metaphorical, participation of immortality
90. ’ It commences with the statement that Adam was created immortal, as God Himself—with respect to his soul, but as to his body, susceptible of death; (2) that he was placed in Paradise, on trial forever lasting life, under the menace of death; while notwithstanding, irrespectively of the tree of Life, the chief part of his nature was already incapable of extinction; that the privilege held out to him really was, therefore, to escape death of the body alone in the literal sense of the threatening, and death of the soul only in a metaphorical signification of the term; (3) that, failing in his probation, he brought upon himself death of the body, and eternal misery of the soul; and upon his posterity, according to one account, simply temporal death (which system of interpretation does not render any very lucid explanation of the natural state and legal prospects of the souls of the posterity);—according to another account, more ancient and orthodox, and held by all the great historical churches, both temporal death and eternal misery of the soul; (4) that, therefore, all mankind are born, before they have sinned after the similitude of Adam’s transgression, justly liable to everlasting misery, whether through imputation, or through the possession of a nature necessarily corrupt in all its developments; (5) that Christ came into the world to bear the curse of the law, which was death a curse which signified eternal misery in the instance of mankind, but was taken to mean 'death of the cross’ only, in the person of the Savior; (6) that in consequence of this literal death of Christ, death in all the figurative senses has been removed from the believer, and his physical death shall be abolished by resurrection; (7) that although the Mosaic law 'entered that the offence might abound,’ it made no mention of eternal misery, while nevertheless Christ's death delivers us from that legal curse of which no mention is made; (8) that while the penalty for despising the law of Moses was literal 'death under two or three witnesses,’ the penalty of despising a system of mercy shall be infinitely more tremendous than that, being to suffer misery throughout endless duration; the punishment for rejecting the divine mercy being, therefore, infinitely more terrible than that for rejecting the divine justice; and, lastly, (9) that although the greater part of mankind have been altogether deprived, under divine providence, of the means of grace, they have been placed on the same awful probation, unknown to themselves, for an eternal existence in happiness or in misery; the redemption by Christ having added this incalculable burden to the original curse on Adam, that their bodies shall be raised from the dead to die a second death, which signifies living forever in torment
91. In this department of exegesis, as in so many others, God is supposed to be glorified by resolving all His promises into metaphorical unrealities
92. Metaphorical associative images at work with children and adults