Adjectives for Courses | Words to describe Courses

Different
Few
Other
Various
Post-Graduate
Several
Circular
Full
Opposite
Evil
Solid
Important
Such
Advanced
Short
Pertinent
Technical
Many
Popular
Whole
Own
Complementary
Special
Seditious

How do you describe Courses?

  • 1. It displays wrinkles and seams, due to the different courses of mortar, or else knotty protuberances distributed almost concentrically. 🔊
  • 2. The high schools, colleges, professional and technical courses continue this process of elimination, identification and selection. 🔊
  • 3. These, the most important courses of all, came, if not daily, at least often enough to keep one under constant strain. 🔊
  • 4. Those who can speak enough English could take advantage of certain short courses already offered by the schools of social work. 🔊
  • 5. How many deeds and whole courses of action, chameleon-like, utterly change their complexions, according to the light of attributed motives! 🔊
  • 6. We now came once more to outcrops of limestone in regular layers, with disintegrated masses overlying them, or sandwiched between their solid courses. 🔊
  • 7. This is proved by the regularity with which they are placed, irrespective of the heights of the various courses of masonry, and of the levels at which the joints occur. 🔊
  • 8. These instances, a few among many, are produced as an answer to the insinuation of his having pursued high popular courses which in his late book he has abandoned. 🔊
  • 9. The Jesuits, besides providing special courses of study for members of their order, conducted a college for the education of Spanish youth. 🔊
  • 10. Soon men of such minds began to print pamphlets, according to the fashion of the time, and to attempt to prevent the radicals from pushing the colonies into seditious courses. 🔊
  • 11. Your schools of science and your post-graduate courses may be well enough in their way, but they do not give us what we are after, and we cannot afford to wait until they may be able to give it. 🔊
  • 12. The great dispensation of his natural providence, as well as the express declaration of his word, forbids the inference that he desires the happiness of those who obstinately persist in their evil courses. 🔊
  • 13. The remedies for syphilis are full courses of mercury, for both primary and secondary symptoms; except where a tendency to phthisis, or a delicate constitution forbids them. 🔊
  • 14. Similarly, in Cliviger Dean the two Calders issue from the same fragment of watery waste, destined immediately for opposite courses. 🔊
  • 15. To prove that the plates of solid gold on which the many courses were served were not used twice, they were when changed ostentatiously cast through the open windows into the Tiber. 🔊
  • 16. The Dutch digestion triumphantly survives this severe test at the outset of the meal, and courageously proceeds to the complementary courses of beefsteak, fritters and cheese. 🔊
  • 17. By carrying through the usual estimate procedure, including the analysis of all pertinent courses of action, he assists himself to arrive at a proper concept of the action to be taken to capture X island. 🔊
  • 18. The commander is interested in everything that the enemy can do which may materially influence the commander's own courses of action. 🔊
  • 19. Most of the principal cities were twice visited, and several courses were given in Boston, New York, and Philadelphia. 🔊
  • 20. The recitation lasted through several courses, and our hostess once or twice threw uneasy glances toward us, for Browning was the "lion" of the evening. 🔊
  • 21. When he considered the vast width of the prairie, and the extreme improbability of two figures, shaping opposite courses, meeting point-blank in the middle of it, he was ready to despair of finding the boy. 🔊
  • 22. She wheedled, she bullied, she threatened, she took a hundred other courses--all with one purpose. 🔊
  • 23. Perhaps such courses should not be specifically on "The Family," but this institution ought, in the course, to occupy a place proportionate to that which belongs to it in life. 🔊
  • 24. Rudyerd's lighthouse was entirely of wood, weighted at the base by a few courses of mason work, and 92 feet in height. 🔊
  • 25. The actual loss of time and of money incurred by such courses of conduct, is generally of less consequence than the losses arising from habitual distraction of mind, and the acquisition of an acquaintanceship with a set of idle or silly companions. 🔊
  • 26. There were several less important courses, but these were the most important, and although they did not come every day, they came often enough to keep you in such a state of mind that you never knew what your next move would be. 🔊

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