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Example sentences for "take account"

  • Pragmatically, their reality means that we submit to them, take account of them, whether we like to or not, but this we must perpetually do with experiences other than our own.

  • Vaguely and in general, we take account of a reality by preserving it in as unmodified a form as possible.

  • In measuring labor we, of course, take account of the quality of the men who perform it, and the work of a skillful man is counted as more units of labor than that of an unskillful one.

  • If it were spilled on the sand, the man would have only to dip up another bucketful, with an expenditure of effort that would be too small to take account of.

  • These are forces of which Social Economics has to take account; but the more egoistic motive, desire to secure the largest net benefit from the wealth-creating process, is one of the premises of any economic science.

  • For the present, what interests us is the life of the center itself, and in studying this we take account of the influence of the environment.

  • It is not necessary for our purposes to take account of Knapp's theory in detail.

  • We shall subsequently, in the chapters above referred to, take account of this fundamental complication.

  • I shall, however, take account of the distinction as I proceed, in justice to other, more moderate, quantity theorists.

  • The Community and the Member State shall comply with the commitments and take account of the objectives they have approved in the context of the United Nations and other competent international organizations.

  • It is henceforth relatively easy to take account of the fashion in which law has been raised up to the rank of a decisive factor of society, and thus of history, directly or indirectly.

  • We must, first of all, take account of this difficulty when we use the expression or the formula "materialistic conception of history.

  • For the determination of the resultant movement, it is necessary to take account of effects induced on the two sides of the organ.

  • In addition to these effects induced during the incidence of light, we have to take account of the after-effects on the cessation of light.

  • Let us consider the effect of daily variation of light on Mimosa; we have here to take account both of intensity and duration.

  • We need to be able to take account of our social stock as we go along.

  • Since 1873 the attempt has been made each year to take account of social stock and show what is being done for all classes needing help toward better living.

  • To take account of the variable friction of the bearings, and the stiffness of the cord, with recourse, if necessary, to approximation by quadratures.

  • To take account of the friction during the blow, and afterwards to estimate the loss of vis viva in cases which admit of it.

  • How to take account of the inertia and friction of the jointed rods, as well as of the force necessary to move the regulating lever, &c.

  • In addition to this general consideration we have to take account of the linguistic difficulties discussed above.

  • In conclusion we have to take account of supernatural properties possessed by beings which in themselves are natural.

  • In order to form a sound opinion one would have to take account of the history of narrative poetry among the neighbouring peoples, more especially the Bulgarians and Slovenians[155].

  • Here the stimulus-response diagram is complicated to take account of the emotional state.

  • Summary of Animal Learning Let us take account of stock at this point, before passing to human learning, and attempt to generalize what we have observed in animals of the process of learning.

  • Theory of Attention The chief facts to take account of in attempting to form a conception of the brain action in attention are mobility, persistence in spite of mobility, and focusing.

  • He assumes that a bright morning means good weather all day, till, often disappointed, he learns to take account of less obvious signs of the weather.

  • Rebekah was a clever woman, and quite competent to outwit men like Isaac and Esau, but she had in her scheming neglected to take account of Laban, a man true brother to herself in cunning.

  • But well-conceived and brilliantly executed as this campaign had been, the experienced warrior had failed to take account of the most formidable opponent he would have to reckon with.

  • Without some power to realize the future and to take account of what is to be as well as of what already is, we could not carry on the common affairs of life.

  • No reflection is needed to see that in proportion as business men fail to take account of forces outside the business, in that proportion they are likely to miscalculate the results of business policies.

  • We have begun to take account of what we have, and we are able in a rough way to figure the loss from what we have squandered.

  • Sometime they will have to take account of the fact that unwise consumption impairs efficiency and depletes the purchasing power from which advertisers must be paid.

  • For materialism is the philosophy of the subject that forgets to take account of itself.

  • Descartes was a man of supreme ability, and if we take account of the age he lived in, he accomplished a great deal.

  • Yet we have to take account of the modifications that depend upon physical capacities for enjoyment, and hence upon age.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "take account" 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:
    half long; know her; rising ground; take another; take any; take arms; take breath; take chances; take charge; take cold; take courage; take cover; take kindly; take offence; take orders; take refuge; take root; take shelter; take steps; take this; take vengeance; taken aback; taken alive; taken back; taken three; takes part