Sentence examples for imagined unique from inspiring English sources

Exact(1)

When you own Van Gogh's Sunflowers you own the unique thing (even if it is fading a lot faster than some cheap copies), but a copy of the Folio is just one instance of something that was mass-produced in the first place, and which has at best an ambiguous relationship to any imagined unique holograph.

Similar(59)

Rather, it tries, successfully, to be more creative in imagining unique entertainment experiences that other companies have never thought of.

Now imagine unique jewelry, expensive watches, a collection of wine or antiques — all those mean it is time to sign up for a valuable personal property policy.

The way our family remembered the order of the two Cape Cod Canal bridges was, I imagine, unique: "First you're Bourne, and then you Sagamore".

Across the aisle from my bed was a young, fat-faced, rheumatic-fever convalescent whose military career had been, I imagine, unique, having consisted of two days at a reception centre, seven months A.W.O.L., and three weeks as a prisoner in the hospital.

Her failure to imagine what that was made everything feel useless and dumb, and she was sure, all of a sudden, that she had imagined his unique advance.

Our own civilisation inherited such a concept from ancient Hebrew sages who imagined a unique act of creation that inaugurated change within changelessness and time within eternity.

Chancellor John Mauceri said: "The founding visionaries of N.C.S.A. imagined a unique school for young artists who would be taught and inspired by great performing artists.

The nightclub, that place both real and imagined, that unique space which provides entertainment, release, solace, community, comfort, support, is as threatened as everything else in Boris Johnson's soulless, Keep Calm and Carry On Watching Dr Who city.

Poets must have the audacity to imagine themselves unique and the humility to appreciate that this uniqueness is a necessary myth for great art.

Or we can imagine a unique radiocative atom whose probabilities of decaying at various times obey a continuous law (e.g. exponential); yet according to finite frequentism, with probability 1 it decays at the exact time that it actually does, for its relative frequency of doing so is 1/1.

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