Use "meliorate" in a sentence
meliorate example sentences
meliorate
1. Tom found that he was bracing himself to ameliorate the effects
2. He continued to receive a stream of visitors which ameliorated the
3. Witnessing someone being eaten alive by microscopic machines would undoubtedly leave you plagued with the kind of nightmares that no psychiatrist could ameliorate
4. Some of them, especially society"s problems, are simply not solvable, but they can be ameliorated through tradeoffs
5. Was Cain mentioned first because man’s carnal (that is, self-serving) nature came into being before it was ameliorated by a painfully long, gradual recognition of the primacy of a Creator, in whose name and through whose teachings we seem to have learned the greater good of sharing, as with Abel?
6. There was a need to ameliorate the problems within the marriage
7. The EMT who accompanied the ambulance told them that Trooper Burns had excessively pepper sprayed Mike’s face and eyes and that she had used wash clothes to ameliorate the condition at Mike’s condo
8. Going the extra mile to ameliorate matters, I also emailed Mickey an apology (though I thought then, and still do, that none was warranted)
9. By mid-afternoon, its heat is ameliorated by gentle
10. His face was angular, with a cruel set to his features, and his smile did nothing to ameliorate the effect
11. “Needles,” Jeff echoed, as though repeating this might ameliorate their situation
12. The Ten Hours Factory Act, the legislation about women and children working in mines, the creation of ragged schools and reformatories, the rise and progress of the temperance movement, the many efforts to ameliorate the condition of the working classes by education, sanitation, public parks, and recreation grounds, hall these things have been the creation of the last fifty years
13. to these questions may help us avoid or ameliorate in the future the bad seasons in
14. It would take a few painful months but with a cocktail of the very latest drugs my condition and chances for survival would be considerably ameliorated
15. Conformity thereby ameliorates the fear of error
16. � She chose to see her own childhood suffering as meaningful and used that meaning to ameliorate the suffering of the child in her care
17. � In some cases, we intoxicate ourselves in one way or another to try to find our way and ameliorate the pain of not finding it
18. � When we can, we may well ameliorate the effects of mistaken (nice word and nice idea inside it) choices while still making the result of that choice a learning experience without a punishing lecture
19. I had problems a therapist couldn’t solve; grief that no man in a room could ameliorate
20. As for a control group’s buying up common stocks from OPMIs, there are three key factors that often ameliorate this tendency toward efficiency
21. This is sometimes ameliorated
22. Philosophy should be an energy; it should have for effort and effect to ameliorate the condition of man
23. If he be a member of the police or a prosecuting attorney, he asks, "And what would become of the State, if I, to ameliorate my existence, were to cease to serve it?" "What would become of commerce?" is his demand if he be a merchant; "What of civilization, if I cease to work for it, and seek only to better my own condition?" will be the objection of another
24. Everything depends upon the strength of conviction of each individual man in regard to Christian truth—But the advanced men of the present day consider it unnecessary to explain and profess Christian truth, regarding it sufficient for the improvement of human life to change its outward conditions within the limits allowed by power—Upon this scientific theory of hypocrisy, which has taken the place of the hypocrisy of religion, men of the wealthy classes base the justification of their position—In consequence of this hypocrisy, maintained by violence and falsehood, they can pretend before each other to be Christians, and rest content—The same hypocrisy allows men who preach the Christian doctrine to take part in a régime of violence—No external improvements of life can make it less miserable; its miseries are caused by disunion; disunion springs from following falsehood instead of truth—Union is possible only in truth—Hypocrisy forbids such a union, for while remaining hypocrites, men conceal from themselves and others the truth they know—Hypocrisy changes into evil everything destined to ameliorate life—It perverts the conception of right and wrong, and therefore is a bar to the perfection of men—Acknowledged malefactors and criminals do less harm than those who live by legalized violence cloaked by hypocrisy—All recognize the iniquity of our life, and would long since have modified it, if it were not covered by the cloak of hypocrisy—But it seems as if we had reached the limits of hypocrisy, and have but to make an effort of consciousness in order to awaken—like the man who has nightmare—to a different reality
25. Our system of life has reached the limit of misery, and cannot be ameliorated by any pagan reorganization—All our life, with its pagan institutions, is devoid of meaning—Are we obeying the will of God in maintaining our present privileges and obligations?—We are in this position, not because such is the law of the universe, that it is inevitable, but because we wish it, because it is advantageous for some of us—All our consciousness contradicts this, and our deliverance consists in acknowledging the Christian truth, not to do to one's neighbor that which one would not have done to one's self—As our obligations in regard to ourselves should be subordinate to our obligations to others, so in like manner our obligations to others should be subordinate to our obligations to God—Deliverance from our position consists, if not in giving up our position and its rights at once, at least in acknowledging our guilt, and neither lying nor trying to justify ourselves—The true significance of our life consists in knowing and professing the truth, whereas our approval of, and our activity in, the service of the State takes all meaning from life—God demands that we serve Him, that is, that we seek to establish the greatest degree of union among all human beings, which union is possible only in truth
26. This progress is very striking indeed; but owing to some bad luck, recognized, too, by the men of science, this progress has not yet ameliorated, but has rather deteriorated, the condition of working men
27. You cannot ameliorate this matter by any kind of amusements, comforts, powders, but only by turning over a new leaf
28. What way, then, can the annihilation of the life of some men ameliorate men's life? Annihilation of life cannot be a means of the amelioration of life; it is a suicidal act
29. In my opinion it would be ameliorated