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Example sentences for "imputed"

Lexicographically close words:
impurity; imputable; imputation; imputations; impute; imputes; imputeth; imputing; imself
  1. It is on this ground that he maintains the Godhead to be absolutely good and upright, and its operation to be merely good and upright; against the old notion which imputed envy to it, and derived evil from it.

  2. Human nature has been so made by its Creator that the qualities of soul and body, of spirit and matter, are imputed in the individual man to each other.

  3. Blessed is the man to whom the Lord hath not imputed sin, and in whose spirit there is no guile.

  4. Fides specialis or fiduciary faith (fiducia) is that by which a man applies to himself the righteousness of the Redeemer, firmly trusting that his sins are for Christ’s sake not imputed to him.

  5. Manifestly in the same sense in which He is made unto us wisdom of God, that is to say, in so far as He imparts to us wisdom, which thereupon becomes our own, but not in the sense that the wisdom of Christ is outwardly imputed to us.

  6. It forms a counterpart to the imputed sacrilege of Omar, [24] eight centuries before, and shows that bigotry is the same in every faith and every age.

  7. More than half a century later, the learned Ambrosio Morales complained of the barrenness of the Castilian, which he imputed to the too exclusive adoption of the Latin upon all subjects of dignity and importance.

  8. Polybius, in his minute account of this celebrated military institution of the Greeks, has recapitulated nearly all the advantages and defects imputed to the Swiss hérisson, by modern European writers.

  9. This is imputed to the illness of their general, D'Aubigny, occasioned by the extreme unhealthiness of the climate.

  10. But the chef-d'oeuvre of monkish casuistry was the argument imputed to Ximenes for depriving the Moors of the benefits of the treaty, as a legitimate consequence of the rebellion, into which they had been driven by his own malpractices.

  11. During twelve days of severe imprisonment, the Templars remained constant in the denial of the horrible crimes imputed to the fraternity.

  12. But this is not imputed to them as their fault but as part of their damnation.

  13. First, because the more sound-minded a man is, the more grievous his sin, wherefore sins are not imputed to those who are demented.

  14. When thou hast made a vow to the Lord thy God thou shalt not delay to pay it: because the Lord thy God will require it; and if thou delay, it shall be imputed to thee for a sin.

  15. Wherefore what a man does while he sleeps and is deprived of reason's judgment, is not imputed to him as a sin, as neither are the actions of a maniac or an imbecile.

  16. Consequently, we must say that the omission begins to be imputed to him as a sin, when the time comes for the action; and yet this is on account of a preceding cause by reason of which the subsequent omission becomes voluntary.

  17. Therefore neither is it imputed to wayfarers as their fault, so that it is not a sin.

  18. Nor is it to be imputed as a fault to the man who consented to his being arbitrator, without adverting to the fact that he was appointed ordinary judge by the prince.

  19. The damned are outside the pale of hope on account of the impossibility of returning to happiness: hence it is not imputed to them that they hope not, but it is a part of their damnation.

  20. Now if danger ensue through not preaching, it is imputed to him who omitted to preach, according to the words of Ezech.

  21. Therefore what it does then is not imputed to it as a sin.

  22. When we do a thing for a good and lawful purpose, if thereby we unintentionally cause harm to anyone, it should by no means be imputed to us.

  23. And if the recipient takes therefrom an occasion of ingratitude, this is not to be imputed to the bestower.

  24. Therefore it would seem that it is less imputed to them if they fall short somewhat of their sanctification.

  25. The uniformity, generally imputed to Socialism, is, as so many other things, false and nonsensical.

  26. Eugen Richter and those who share his views may take comfort: if Socialism really implies the silly and unnatural aims imputed to it by them, it will go to pieces, and without the aid of the "Irrelehren" of Richter.

  27. The King, in a firm voice, denied some of the facts, imputed others to his ministers, and always appealed to the constitution, from which he declared he had never deviated.

  28. All the faults of the Court were there enumerated and imputed to Louis XVI.

  29. They sided with the little captain, and gave the general to understand clearly that they thought he was capable of the imputed meanness.

  30. Is the failure of the negotiation when the king was in the Isle of Wight to be imputed to the suspicions justly entertained of his sincerity, or to the ambition of the parliamentary leaders?

  31. Their present coldness might be imputed to the indistinctness of his declarations with respect to what was intended to be the future government.

  32. But such a principle of conduct was too fraudulent to be avowed; nor ought it, perhaps, in candour to be imputed to the majority of the party.

  33. Yet that in such circumstances he appeared dispirited and crestfallen, is, by the unrelenting malignity of party writers, imputed to him as cowardice and meanness of spirit.

  34. It is certain, however, that the Cameronians imputed to their opponents in opinion concerning the Indulgence, or others of their strained and fanatical notions, a disposition not only to seek their own safety, but to enjoy themselves.

  35. The facts are conceived in an animistic way, and a pragmatic animus is imputed to them.

  36. Any causal sequence which is apprehended to traverse the imputed propensity in events is a "disturbing factor.

  37. It is not a fact of observation, and cannot be asserted of the facts of observation except as a trait imputed to them.

  38. It sanctions the course of things, and gives legitimacy and substance to the sequence of events, so far as this sequence may be made to square with the requirements of the imputed end.

  39. This "real" value of commodities is the value imputed to them by the economist under the stress of his teleological preconception.

  40. Epistemologically speaking, activity is imputed to phenomena for the purpose of organising them into a dramatically consistent system.

  41. They may come to have a practical value imputed to them as a ground of superstitious observances, but they may also not.

  42. And it seems bootless to ask how much of the products of industry or of its productivity is to be imputed to these brute forces, human and non-human, as contrasted with the specifically human factors that make technological efficiency.

  43. Or it may be put in the converse form: When less of a teleological continuity came to be imputed to the course of events, more was thereby imputed to man's life process.

  44. Upon experiment I did not find that I could do this, but I imputed my failure to want of merit in myself and not the monument, and I willingly paid half a franc for the suggestion; if all one's failures cost so little, one could save money.

  45. Blessed is the man to whom the Lord hath not imputed sin.

  46. And if thou delay, it shall be imputed to thee for a sin.

  47. He does not mean to compare his sufferings with his real sins: but with the imaginary crimes which his friends imputed to him: and especially with his wrath, or grief, expressed in the third chapter, which they so much accused.

  48. That is, blessed is the man who hath retained his baptismal innocence, that no grievous sin can be imputed to him.

  49. That is, men knew not, or made no account of sin, neither was it imputed to them, in the manner it was afterwards, when they transgressed the known written law of God.

  50. None of his sins, which he hath committed, shall be imputed to him: he hath done judgment and justice, he shall surely live.

  51. An attempt of this nature was even imputed to L'Aubespine, the French ambassador; and that minister was obliged to leave the kingdom.

  52. Mary justified herself from the several articles of the charge, either by denying the facts imputed to her, or by throwing the blame on others.

  53. The earl of Worcester delivered his opinion in a couple of Latin verses; importing, that where the gods are offended, even, misfortunes ought to be imputed as crimes, and that accident is no excuse for transgressions against the Divinity.

  54. The crime imputed to him seems to have consisted in his treating of a subject which lay before the parliament: so little notion had they as yet of general liberty.

  55. Nobody could accuse him of the flattery generally imputed to his species; through the course of a long and varied life, he had never once been known to say a civil thing.

  56. His life was spent in the pomp of the palace, in the society of his wives and concubines; and even the clemency which he showed, and the peace which he strove to preserve, must be imputed to the softness and indolence of his character.

  57. On his return to the city, the people, still conscious of their danger, accompanied his triumph with acclamations of joy and gratitude, which were imputed as a crime to the victorious general.

  58. His cold and reserved demeanor might be imputed to arrogance; his justice was not always exempt from cruelty, nor his clemency from weakness; and his rigid economy too often exposed him to the reproach of avarice.

  59. Footnote 9: It was one of the fifteen heresies imputed to Origen, and denied by his apologist, (Photius, Bibliothec.

  60. The death of Constantine was imputed to poison; and his son Romanus, who derived that name from his maternal grandfather, ascended the throne of Constantinople.

  61. And all these statements of the apostle are wise and good, since whatever evil they have in them is to be imputed to those who denied the resurrection of the dead.

  62. And if the man who baptizes happens to entertain hatred against another man, this will also be imputed to him who is baptized.

  63. Never was any class so eager to free itself from charges that imputed to it the presumption of holding independent views of its own.

  64. In various instances have I been praised for acts that were either totally without any merit, or at least the particular merit imputed to them; while I have been even (p.

  65. But there were some blunders which can only be imputed to pure unadulterated ignorance.

  66. The insinuation was uncalled for and unjustifiable; and as the editor subsequently admitted that it was only made in jest, it may be imputed to his credit that he had the grace to be ashamed of it.

  67. We were much disappointed to find them neither fat nor well flavoured; and we imputed it to their having been long kept in crawls or pens of brackish water, without food.

  68. We endeavoured to learn the medical qualities which they imputed to their plants, but our knowledge of their language was too imperfect for us to succeed.

  69. About this time, it is noted, the scurvy made its appearance on eight or ten of the crew, which was imputed in a great degree to the moistness of the weather.

  70. If the fall of a sparrow, as well as its preservation, is imputed to Providence, why not the fall as well as the preservation of a man?

  71. It is not fit that a practice so horrid and so strange should be imputed to human beings upon slight evidence, but I have such as abundantly justifies me in the account I have given.

  72. Nor is it, sir, to be imputed as a just reason for censure to those who have opposed the motion, that no other measures have been offered by them to the consideration of the committee.

  73. Had that corruption availed so as to extinguish in them the sensibility to pleasure, passion, and natural scenery, which is imputed to them as an imperfection, the last triumph of evil would have been achieved.

  74. Wherefore then was delay to be imputed to our English parliament, if it waited for that of the sister kingdom?

  75. The new projects imputed to her friends even against the queen's life, exasperated the hatred of the protestants against Mary.

  76. The large views of civil government entertained by the puritans were sometimes imputed to them as a crime by their more courtly adversaries, who reproached them with the writings of Buchanan and Languet.

  77. Gross drunkenness is imputed even to some of the ladies who acted in the court pageants (Nugae Antiquae, i.

  78. After discussing the merits of the petition, and considerably extenuating the wrongs imputed to Spain, he adverted to the circumstance of its being presented to the Commons.

  79. It is not likely, however, that Heyle should have used the exact words imputed to him.

  80. The crimes imputed to her did not immediately gain credit among the people; and some of higher rank were too experienced politicians to turn aside for such considerations.

  81. It consisted mainly in a pitiful attempt by the court to entrap him into a confession that the imputed libel was of his writing, as to which their proof was deficient.

  82. Nor did other abuses imputed to these obnoxious judicatures fail to provoke censure, such as the unreasonable fees of their officers, and the usage of granting licences, and commuting penances for money.


  83. The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "imputed" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.
    Other words:
    accountable; alleged; ascribable; attributable; charged; credited; derivative; due; explicable; imputable; owing; putative; referable; traceable