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Example sentences for "human culture"

  • He was the first to appreciate the importance of Greek in human culture.

  • Music includes literature, that is, human culture as distinguished from scientific knowledge.

  • Whilst, however, we dwell upon the analogy which exists between the phenomena of the organic world and the phenomena of human culture, we must not omit to notice the points of difference.

  • In short we must apply to the whole range of human culture, to the arts, whether of peace or war, the same method which has already been applied with some success to the history of language.

  • Spiritual kinsmen of Goethe in the British sphere of human culture.

  • It was left to Rudolf Steiner, shortly before the end of the century, to recognize the significance of 'Goetheanism' for the future development not only of science but of human culture in general.

  • To make use of art or religion as a refuge was a sign of their increasing separation from the rest of human culture.

  • Interpretation of these four kinds of evidence as to the antiquity of human culture in western Europe still leads to widely diverse opinions.

  • A life-history of human culture is a large topic, not to be attempted here even in the sketchiest outline.

  • But the growth of a scientific point of view begins farther back than modern Christendom, and a record of its growth would be a record of the growth of human culture.

  • These two divergent ranges of inquiry are to be found together in all phases of human culture.

  • We must now gather these threads together and ask what manner of men these were and how far and in what way they progressed on the road of human culture.

  • These beginnings of human culture were, however, peculiarly vulnerable to invading hosts of later comers.

  • Nevertheless, the barbarous notion is almost universally entertained by civilized man, that there is in all the manufactures of Nature something essentially coarse which can and must be eradicated by human culture.

  • It swoops into every hollow and swells over every ridge, gracefully complying with the varied topography, in shaggy, ungovernable exuberance, fairly dwarfing the utmost efforts of human culture out of sight and mind.

  • This, however, does not necessarily imply imperfection, or any process of change similar to that caused by human culture.

  • Human culture at any point in its history is the social structure: the aggregate of existing culture traits, the products of man's ingenuity, inventiveness and experimentation, set in their natural environment.

  • Human culture is the sum total of ideas, relationships, artifacts, institutions, purposes and ideals currently functioning in any community.

  • They have arisen out of particular historical situations, played distinctive roles, written their own histories and made varying contributions to the sum total of human culture.

  • Variety in human culture is caused by the variety in the human natural environment, the human social environment and in man himself.

  • The assumption may seem a violent one to the students of human culture, but it is a simple matter of course to the statesmen.

  • Nor is it as a school of human culture, for this or for any other grace or gift, that Parliament will be found first-rate or indispensable.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "human culture" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.


    Some common collocations, pairs and triplets of words:
    authentic history; heartily sorry; human anatomy; human beauty; human bodies; human existence; human faculty; human figures; human food; human hair; human hand; human hearts; human immortality; human labour; human lives; human mind; human need; human progress; human prudence; human reason; human responsibility; human sacrifice; human suffering; human sympathy; political opinion; through natural