Sentences with phrase «scattered fragments»

"Scattered fragments" refers to small, broken pieces that are spread out in different directions or locations. Full definition
He manipulated the paint with his fingers and various instruments to make furrows, sometimes including scattered fragments of Murano glass.
Nord has an annoying way of stringing out his argument in scattered fragments.
The hitherto scattered fragments of humanity, being at length brought into close contact, are beginning to interpenetrate to the point of reacting economically and psychically upon each other; with the result, given the fundamental relationship between biological compression and the heightening of consciousness, of an irresistible rise within us and around us of the level of Reflection.
Specifically, scattered fragments amounting to 1 per cent of the Denisovan genome look much older than the rest of it.
A few days later the truck crashed, scattering fragments of mixers and melters over the freeway.
As the police search for clues, Emma comforts an increasingly distraught Lizzie whose memories of that morning flash in scattered fragments.
With their help, I began cobbling together the scattered fragments of my college education into a coherent whole.
You soon realise that you need to find the scattered fragments of this amulet if you wish to make it back to the real world and be reunited with your parents!
Kingdom in the Sky is a city - builder / management - game about piecing together the scattered fragments of the world in order to build a prosperous new society amongst the clouds.
That means surviving being hunted, looting abandoned buildings, and collecting up scattered fragments of a mysterious machine which should enable you to get home.
The scattered fragments, like randomly placed windows onto a larger space, make the gallery itself the diagram.
Scattered fragments of material (texts, images, and objects) are gathered into ambivalent and theatrical patterns of association, expression, and style.
The real and true transduction from one medium to another comes, in effect, from describing only the «backstage,» the scattered fragments that, gathering together spontaneous signs and gestures, secure an actual transfer of meaning.
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