Sentence examples similar to possessing force from inspiring English sources

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In particular, rigid plaster models cannot mimic the physiological capabilities of the teeth in vivo, which would normally possess force-absorbing mechanisms.

In his obituary, he was described "as a speaker [who] took very high rank, possessing a force and fluency of expression, a power of lucid statement, and a readiness in debate, which with one or two exceptions have never been equalled in the Council".

The story opens with the death of Karegia's king, Ladras Lindblum, poisoned by the royal adviser Zilva Madigan: during his final moments, he releases his power into the world, causing many humans to become possessed by Force, including Veigue, Annie and Tytree.

In an ideal world, pregnancy narratives would possess the force and magnitude of war stories, which in fact they often are.

Yet no matter how enfeebled, Violet has to possess a force of will that at the very least matches Catharine's.

It was carried out in a decade when police were given no training on questioning suspects and the judges' rules that were designed to secure fair procedures did not possess the force of law and were frequently ignored.

What he had done was a crime only in retrospect, and he had always been a law-abiding citizen, because Hitler's orders, which he had certainly executed to the best of his ability, had possessed "the force of law" in the Third Reich.

Though the 24-minute "Cusp" seems to rely heavily on found moments and lacks the narrative coherence of "Jacaranda," those moments possess genuine force, and Alice, like so many adolescents, proves in a short span to be honestly vexatious, heartbreaking and lovable.

His earlier works are marked by the prevalence of brown tonalities and by a tendency to angularity in draftsmanship; the paintings of his middle period have greater purity and brilliance; and his last and greatest pictures possess more force and breadth and are full of a delicate silvery gray tone.

Descartes' matter possessed no "force" or active agency; the laws of motion were decreed by God and were sustained by his activity.

But thus construed presentedness fails to do the job required: the upper parts of the specious present depicted in Figure 16 evidently possess less force and vivacity than those lower down, but they don't seem in the least less present (in the temporal sense) as a result.

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