Adjectives for Culture | Words to describe Culture
Profitable
Different
Networked
Personal
Technological
Several-Days-Old
Artificial
Walnut
Intensive
Nominal
Speech
Forest
Pure
Digital
European
Real
High
Good
Secular
Commercial
Early
Distinct
Baby
Considerable
Advanced
Babylonian
'Intensive
Foreign
Traditional
Greek
Scholarly
English
Voice
Anglo-Irish
Spiritual
Old
Intellectual
General
Sumerian
Moral
Human
Conscientious
Orchid
How do you describe Culture?
- 1. But these are coarser, more palpable signs of that uneasy consciousness which frets at a continued dependence on European culture. 🔊
- 2. It may be said of Phoenicia herself that she built-up her advanced culture on ideas borrowed almost wholly from her customers. 🔊
- 3. Pepe is an unlettered peasant, knowing nothing but the labour of the soil but possessing the traditional culture of Spain. 🔊
- 4. When he has garnered his crop, he maintains its purity by keeping his selected seed, the pure culture, free from all contamination. 🔊
- 5. The ambitious student of speech culture, whether for use in conversation or in public, will do well to emulate the example of such great writers. 🔊
- 6. In the early stages of Sumerian culture, the gods and goddesses who formed groups were indistinguishable from demons. 🔊
- 7. Intensive culture of the fields, irrigated meadows, the hot-house, and finally the kitchen garden under glass are realities. 🔊
- 8. Now, this child should either have taken up voice culture at eleven years of age or not "lead the singing" in school. 🔊
- 9. But all such places were primitive, savage, almost unendurable to a man born and tuned to the violin-string pitch of technological culture. 🔊
- 10. Writing is a fine art, and one of the finest; and he who would be a master in this art must unite genial gifts with conscientious culture. 🔊
- 11. That would be a hard conclusion, if we had to admit that Judaism cannot stand the test of contact with foreign culture. 🔊
- 12. PREFACE Mushrooms and their extensive and profitable culture should concern every one. 🔊
- 13. But I also believe in the power and creativity of commercial culture and political speech carried on mass media. 🔊
- 14. This was the religion of ancient Babylonia and of those other countries which were influenced by Babylonian culture. 🔊
- 15. And this knowledge extends, by allegory and experience, to areas far beyond digital culture, to the broader challenges of our time. 🔊
- 16. He was a man of considerable culture and taste, an extensive reader, and a reader who, happily, remembered what he had read. 🔊
- 17. Now Michelangelo's early artistic training was under the influence of the Greek culture. 🔊
- 18. The intensive culture phase is very clear in my memory; it came near the end of his career and when I was between eleven and twelve. 🔊
- 19. What is understood as a scientific observation of nature, is not its highest form, so far, at least, as spiritual culture is concerned. 🔊
- 20. The habit of this abstraction in enjoyment, information, feeling and demeanour, constitutes training in this sphere, or nominal culture in general. 🔊
- 21. The large infusion of the German element has been immensely beneficial, not only in relation to commerce, but to the general culture of the town. 🔊
- 22. Orchid culture was practised here, as in Macclesfield and Birmingham, long before what orchids are was even a question in many parts. 🔊
- 23. Manchester is now, like Liverpool, if not a school of refinement, one of the principal seats of English culture. 🔊
- 24. Yet their readiness to adopt secular culture does not seem to have abated their religious authority, or to have sensibly weakened their influence over the people at large. 🔊
- 25. By the use of the Gram-Weigert stain organisms from a several-days-old culture on beer-wort-agar gave an interesting reaction. 🔊
- 26. The highest purpose of reading is for the acquisition of useful knowledge and personal culture, and we should keep these two aims constantly before us. 🔊
- 27. Within the present boundary of Bontoc Province there are three distinct patterns of wooden shields in use in three quite distinct culture areas. 🔊
- 28. Anglo-Irish culture is indeed dead, but Gaelic culture is only seriously sick, and on that side there is always room for hope. 🔊
- 29. It is self-evident that we in nowise desire all exchange to be suppressed, nor that each region should strive to produce that which will only grow in its climate by a more or less artificial culture. 🔊
- 30. The reading of great books is desirable and indispensable to education, but real culture comes through the additional training one receives in conversation. 🔊
- 31. It not only no longer plays an essential part in production, but by its imperialist methods of appropriation is destroying the economic structure of the world and human culture generally. 🔊
- 32. What is gained if some nervous disorders are helped by belief, if the belief itself devastates our intellectual culture and brings the masses down again to a view of the world which has all the earmarks of barbarism? 🔊
- 33. They are evidence that these contests call out a high grade of intellectual and moral culture, showing as they do keen and clear thinking and high moral ideals. 🔊
- 34. In conclusion, I must insist upon several results of what I may call the 'intensive culture' of the reason. 🔊
- 35. To this early culture, perhaps, we are indebted for the great poetic power which has enabled him to compose the remarkable libretti which have furnished the basis of his music. 🔊
- 36. Intensive culture greatly increases this disposition to trouble mankind; it makes a garden touchy and hysterical, a drugged and demoralised and over-irritated garden. 🔊
- 37. Except for small swamp and river bottom areas, where the land is likely to be more valuable for agriculture than for forest culture, pure cedar stands are not common. 🔊
- 38. So long as the Irish language preserved to the people their old culture they never failed to absorb into their life every people that came among them. 🔊
- 39. Had I belonged to those who advocate excessive early culture, my brain would, I believe, have burst, so continually was it teeming. 🔊
- 40. MORAL CULTURE. 🔊
- 41. The emergence of a networked culture, accompanied by an ethic of media literacy, open discussion and direct action held the promise of a more responsive political system wherever it spread. 🔊
- 42. Jacob Beer was a rich Jewish banker of Berlin, highly honoured for his robust intellect and scholarly culture, as well as his wealth. 🔊
- 43. Mr. Moderator, I have in my brief case a translation of the French book on walnut culture, and there is a section on root stocks. 🔊
- 44. The recital of these tragic stories would not be devoid of interest; it would illustrate the possibilities of ignorance and superstition, and the power man gains from intellectual culture and scientific study. 🔊
- 45. We were immediately struck with the different culture of the vines, festooning as near Naples, over the other trees, in a manner more picturesque than useful. 🔊
- 46. They are worthy interpreters of the cause of peace, but they are, as well, noble illustrations of the type of intellectual and moral culture of American students. 🔊
- 47. But if 10 million work-days are given to good culture during 3 or 4 years, the result will be that later on crops of 44 to 55 bushels per acre will be obtained by only working half the time. 🔊
- 48. The values engendered by our fledgling networked culture may, in fact, help a world struggling with the impact of globalism, the lure of fundamentalism and the clash of conflicting value systems. 🔊
- 49. In rhetoric, this art of omission is a chief secret of power, and, in general, it is proof of high culture, to say the greatest matters in the simplest way. 🔊
- 50. In the nursery lecture on baby culture I retained two or three pieces of advice which seemed to me remarkably good, although my ignorance would not have enabled me to give them. 🔊