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Example sentences for "discriminated"

Lexicographically close words:
discretional; discretionary; discretions; discrimen; discriminate; discriminates; discriminating; discrimination; discriminations; discriminative
  1. One not within the class claimed to be discriminated against cannot raise the question of constitutionality of a statute on the ground that it denies equal protection of the law.

  2. One who is not discriminated against cannot attack a statute because it does not go further; and if what it commands of one it commands of all others in the same class, that person cannot complain of matter which the statute does not cover.

  3. When the last man had vanished, they listened for a long time to the throb of the drum--then the sound was lost in the distance; a mere pulsing in the air continued, discriminated by the keen discernment of the Indians.

  4. Thoughts are discriminated by the presence or absence of certain attributes.

  5. Now and then a flake of a glittering white density glided through it, which his eyes, accustomed to long distances, discriminated as a swan.

  6. In those earlier tyrants, the Centaur progenitors of feebler broods, through generations in which men gradually discriminated the twy-formed nature of their ancestry, the lust and luxury of sin had been at their last apogee.

  7. Three main points may be discriminated in the intellectual movement briefly surveyed in the preceding paragraphs.

  8. Duties were imposed, but they discriminated between sugar and cereals, and between colonial and imported grain.

  9. On the other hand, the only large railroad of Western Virginia, the Baltimore and Ohio, was constantly discriminated against at Richmond[41] and in every session of the legislature restrictions were aimed at its activities.

  10. Here a person of color had been discriminated against by a Mississippi River navigation company which was called to answer before a United States court for violating this act.

  11. The quality is in no wise injured by the mechanical mishap, but eggs so ruptured are usually discriminated against by candlers.

  12. Such eggs if consumed when fresh are perfectly wholesome, but when marketed are discriminated against and are likely to become an entire loss.

  13. They had been scattered and lost, and, perhaps, had not been discriminated among the numerous manuscript plays of that age.

  14. Modern literature may, perhaps, still be discriminated from the ancient, by a term it began to be called by at the Reformation, that of "the New Learning.

  15. To what an appalling degree women were discriminated against by the law prior to 1860, may be inferred from subsequent legislative enactments.

  16. For by the cogitant organ every sentient being is cognisant of objects in general, discriminated or not discriminated, when irradiated by the light which is identical with the external things.

  17. Spinoza has not discriminated aright between these two concepts, in respect either of their nature or their origin.

  18. Those to whom our authour's labours were exhibited had more skill in pomps or processions than in poetical language, and perhaps wanted some visible and discriminated events, as comments on the dialogue.

  19. Characters thus ample and general were not easily discriminated and preserved, yet perhaps no poet ever kept his personages more distinct from each other.

  20. The only machinery by which the more efficient directors of labour could be discriminated from the less efficient would be broken.

  21. Such are the effects of habitation among mountains, and such were the qualities of the Highlanders, while their rocks secluded them from the rest of mankind, and kept them an unaltered and discriminated race.

  22. We simply want the laws of our country so framed that we are not discriminated against.

  23. They have a right to fix some limit; and the only thing we want is that the literature of liberty, the literature of real Freethought, shall not be discriminated against.

  24. Thus in perceptions under certain circumstances the events discriminated assert their own relations of cogredience.

  25. Such knowledge is essentially the product of significance, since the general character of the external discriminated events has informed us that there are events within the sphere and has also informed us of their geometrical structure.

  26. This whole event is discriminated by us into partial events.

  27. This vividness lights up the discriminated field within a duration.

  28. The discerned is comprised of those elements of the general fact which are discriminated with their own individual peculiarities.

  29. Thus apart from the touch an entity with a certain specific relation to the thing seen would have been disclosed by sense-awareness but not otherwise discriminated in respect to its individual character.

  30. The discernible is all nature as disclosed in that sense-awareness, and extends beyond and comprises all of nature as actually discriminated or discerned in that sense-awareness.

  31. A duration is discriminated as a complex of partial events, and the natural entities which are components of this complex are thereby said to be 'simultaneous with this duration.

  32. But the entities of this field have relations to other entities which are not particularly discriminated in this individual way.

  33. But the general system of space-relations relating the entity discriminated by sight with that discriminated by sight is not dependent on the peculiar character of the other entity as reported by the alternative sense.

  34. The duration which is the immediate disclosure of our sense-awareness is discriminated into parts.

  35. It is this unit factor, retaining in itself the passage of nature, which is the primary concrete element discriminated in nature.

  36. As the memory-images denoted by words are weaker, fainter, and less clearly discriminated than the original sensations, it comes to pass that a number of similar ideas of memory receive a common name.

  37. These words are discriminated by the two distinct senses of observe.

  38. The words discriminated in this book are for the most part those which are mentioned in the "Foundations of Rhetoric," and they have been arranged in the same order.

  39. It may not be desirable to drill pupils on all the words whose meanings are discriminated here and in chapters V.

  40. Example: If Titus conceals his religion in order not to be unjustly discriminated against, his motive is good; but if he wishes to be taken for a non-Catholic, his motive is evil.

  41. Descartes in his own time discriminated the body sharply from the mind, and "the spirit 'tis that builds itself the body," says Goethe.

  42. Sensations acquire meaning through being identified with and discriminated from other sensations to which they are related.

  43. Language, the leading principle which unites or separates the tribes of mankind, soon discriminated the sectaries of the East, by a peculiar and perpetual badge, which abolished the means of intercourse and the hope of reconciliation.

  44. To the three former, the Syriac is common; but of the latter, each is discriminated by the use of a national idiom.

  45. The gross fact of water rising when the suction valve is worked is resolved or discriminated into a number of independent variables, some of which had never before been observed or even thought of in connection with the fact.

  46. To many persons trees are just trees, being discriminated only into deciduous trees and evergreens, with perhaps recognition of one or two kinds of each.

  47. Observation is to be discriminated from recognition, or perception of what is familiar.


  48. The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "discriminated" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.
    Other words:
    assorted; contrary; deviating; different; differing; disagreeing; discordant; discrepant; discrete; disparate; dissimilar; dissonant; distinct; distinguished; divergent; divers; diverse; diversified; heterogeneous; incompatible; incongruous; inconsistent; inharmonious; irreconcilable; many; motley; multifarious; separate; separated; several; unequal; unlike; variant; varied; variegated; various; varying