Sentence examples for derives perhaps from inspiring English sources

Exact(2)

Egyptians are known for their patience, which derives, perhaps, from the eternity of the Nile.

The incongruity derives, perhaps, from Freud's own struggles to reconcile the unwieldy findings of psychoanalysis with the orderly positivism of the Helmholtz school of science, in which he had been educated.

Similar(58)

The men shared temperamental quirks, derived, perhaps, from similarities in their childhoods.

Her eminence among the modern poets of the day thus derived perhaps less from the quality of her own verse than from her courageous and highly pragmatic leadership.

One of the earliest forms of clothing, it is derived, perhaps, from a narrow band around the waist from which amuletic and decorative pendants were hung.

The high emotions inspired by the D-Wave controversy derive, perhaps, from the almost metaphysical allure of the field, an allure that has existed since the physicists Paul Benioff and Richard P. Feynman proposed the idea of quantum computing in the early 1980s.

Bringing this novel together is one of the great comic gifts in 20th-century literature, derived, perhaps, from the parody-thick Cyclops chapter in "Ulysses," but taken to many places even great Joyce could not go.

Serious, of course, compassionate at points, but lurking within its intelligence was something like humour, or wit, derived perhaps from its godly distance, which in turn reminded me of a novelist's omniscience.

Though I never managed to beat my linguist mother, or poetry-quoting-mathematician father, I learned to derive (perhaps too much) pride from small wordish successes that still buoy me when the days get long.

The specific denotation of architecture as "the art of building," however, seems to be a French tradition, deriving perhaps from the medieval status of master masons, as understood by the 16th-century architect Philibert Delorme.

During the interview, he offered us this self-reflection regarding the question about how he worked as an intermediary: Simon: "To bring two people together in looking at the position of A, understanding the A position, [then] understanding the B position, and then derive perhaps with A, with the A people, understanding or looking through the eyes of the B people, a C vision".

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