Sentences with phrase «in a generic sense»

Also I assume you are talking about these things in a generic sense and not strictly from a biblical perspective?
Having your name as part of your URL may not be a bad idea early on, but a persons name isn't generally searchable in a generic sense.
Throughout American history the idea has often been considered in its generic sense and has included different forms of employee share ownership as another way of making employees partners on the upside gain in businesses.
We, as humans, can not expect forgiveness from God if we do not «confess» (again, i use the word in a generic sense).
Spirituality in its generic sense may be reinforced by these groups, but the evidence that a specifically Christian identity is being nurtured is less compelling.
4 I follow Whitehead in using his term «symbol» in a generic sense applying to both linguistic expressions and sense presentations as natural signs.
A ripe serrano would also be a chipotle, technically speaking, as the word refers to any smoked chile in a generic sense.
A 1759 history book uses common æra in a generic sense, to refer to the common era of the Jews.
Preschools need to get children ready for school, not just in a generic sense, but ready for something specific that will be provided at the next educational step and then built on thereafter.
Often it is a canvas only in the generic sense, consisting of untreated fabric progressively built up with cement, sacking and tempera.»
ROBERT MOTHERWELL: In the generic sense of revolution, of changing, transforming, bringing about real historical effects, that that was the task for all of us.
Some referred to a specific compact by its formal name and thus were capitalized, while others referred the noun in its generic sense.
Google Photos has long been adept at recognizing animals in a generic sense.
For the last twenty years this author has written and spoken frequently about the dangers of a medical assistant referring to herself / himself as a «nurse,» even in a generic sense.
I use the word «religious» in a generic sense; any person, lay or cleric, male or female, vowed or secular, may fit this type.
Don't think I would call any of them religious (in the generic sense).
In the generic sense, for Whitehead, the customs of any given civilized society function as the requisite «patterns of relationship,» which not only define but also substantiate the particular order of that society.
When it talks about «man,» in the generic sense, it looks at human life and speaks about it with no regard for what I have styled the cosmic context, the wider perspective of the world's creative dynamic and structure.
I use the term «thriller» in the generic sense, as this plays out more like a Jean - Pierre Melville portrait of isolated underworld professionals, freelancers in the international network of criminal enterprise.
Up to this point, I've used the word «editor» in a generic sense, but the work that editors do covers a significant range of services, from the nitty - gritty of proofreading and copy editing to the wide - angle scope of book development and book doctoring.
In a generic sense, it is a common question faced by nearly everyone.
In a generic sense this doesn't many any difference to gameplay, but there are special events that can occur if you have the right head equipped at the right time.
For me, and I think, for most of us who cover games, this is not «Thanksgiving season» or «Holiday Season» in the generic sense.
If we're talking about the experience of a game (in the generic sense) progression through rising difficulty, new levels, new places, etc..
I thought that you were saying that in a generic sense, consensus recommends geoengineering research.
The blogger to whom Kevin alludes never said anything about scamming lawyer customers, just «customers» in a generic sense.
In a generic sense, it may also include judges and law - trained support staff.
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