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But the suspicion pricked her: perhaps the truth was far less noble.
2
While free education is a noble gesture, the issue is more complex.
3
The English take great pleasure in humbling the great and the noble.
4
He'd always heard that the great North River was a noble sight.
5
Hybrid cars popular with noble-minded Hollywood stars also provide a recent example.
1
The people are indeed the fuel; but the nobility fan the flame.
2
The Senate and the Roman nobility were in the main the same.
3
Enough of nobility in name; I mean to prove nobility in deed.
4
Let the disputing families see that true nobility is expressed in largesse.
5
This in itself shows a lack of nobility in the popular theology.
1
Matter is inert; it is the seat of necessity; it proceeds mechanically.
2
Even within the five-mile circle the great majority of people were inert.
3
Detta changed course and began to crawl toward the gunslinger's inert body.
4
On account of his unfortunate condition, however, Hotblack Desiato remained totally inert.
5
One of the latest is the tungsten arc in an inert gas.
1
Seemingly such a molecule, whatever its physical properties, must be chemicallyinert, incapable of any atomic readjustments.
2
Still, these hybrids are the closest thing we have to the ideal chemicallyinert but thermally responsive pan.
3
The nitrogen, which makes up much of the air we breathe, is chemicallyinert and can be used again and again.
4
This problem has been largely overcome by the development of chemicallyinert membranes that retain proteins after electroblotting from the polyacrylamide gel.
5
It is "among the most nonreactive, chemicallyinert molecules in the living world," in the words of the geneticist Richard Lewontin.
1
Fluorescent nanosized carbon dots (Cdots) are an emerging bioimaging agent with excellent chemicalinertness and marginal cytotoxicity in comparison to widely used semiconductor quantum dots.
1
Most cultures showed either absent or lowreactivity of anti-leukemia CTL against patient non-leukemia cells.
2
Markers for human microglia and T-cells showed only lowreactivity in direct proximity to the grafts.
3
The masking of carbonyls may explain the lowreactivity of PQQ with carbonyl reagents in acid.
4
The apparent lowreactivity of terminally unsubstituted allenes is associated with a competing allene dimerization that irreversibly sequesters rhodium.
5
Lowreactivity was characteristic of those with relatively low cognitive ability.
1
With the m-state powder's stubborn lackofreactivity, I don't think any analyzing equipment could tell you the exact ratio of metals.
Usage of inertness in English
1
Now, there is no doubt at all that there is inertness somewhere.
2
This kind of action is quite consistent with the general notion of inertness.
3
This kind of being has shaken off the reproach of inertness.
4
Yet simultaneously he derided himself for the inertness of his imagination.
5
We shall see later the magnificent problem raised by this inertness.
6
She it was, doubtless, who then struck Kutusoff with the palsy of inertness.
7
All Lionel's inertness was gone at the sound of the name.
8
But the apathy and inertness are, I fear, too profound-tooprovidential.
9
And it was drawn out by His disciples' denseness and inertness.
10
The inertness you complain of in the ministry starts early.
11
The physical thus differs from the spiritual (as regards inertness) by defect.
12
The inertness of the young Sultan was not from want of will or zeal.
13
For a breathless stretch of time she was frozen to inertness by sheer terror.
14
Of this inertness of disposition Johnson had all his life too great a share.
15
Matter is the vain imagination of man through his wrong idea of Nature's inertness.
16
Almost any course would have been preferable to Hooker's inertness.