embody - use in sentences

Object

  • presumption: In practice does the land-use planning system still embody a presumption in favor of development?
  • spirit: He manages to embody the spirit of a man on the verge of a great change with ease.
  • cognition: Interestingly, the concept of ' embodied cognition ' is beginning to have an impact on neuropsychology as well.
  • principle: We do, however, broadly support the principles embodied in these parts of the Bill.

Used with why or when

  • what: How can we be ourselves on the spot and embody what we want to communicate?

Modifying Another Word

  • perfectly: In that picturesque expression, it seems to me, is perfectly embodied the incurable morbidity of modern ethics.
  • completely: Within a minute you feel completely embodied in the robot: what we see and move we become.

Adjective complement

  • most: The Satan of Sativa also wrote the Single Convention Treaty which embodies most of Anslinger's Reefer Madness into international law.

Preposition: in

  • legislation: The philosophy now embodied in legislation is, in essence, that the person who creates the problem has to clear it up!
  • code: Defect n. The result of the developer's error embodied in the product source code, initial data, or documents.
  • institution: More and more, personal trust is being transferred to expert systems embodied in institutions or professions.
  • object: In some ways makers can be regarded as performers, whose performance is embodied in an object.
  • machine: This, embodied in a new machine, soon allowed decoding of the Luftwaffe signals.

Modifying Another Word

  • thus: By practicing together, the performers master a common " code " and thus embody a sense of the company's esthetic borders.
  • fully: The work guides us to fully embody the experience of emotional territory by giving expression to our awareness through rooted movement.
  • exactly: Sassoon's burial-place at Mells seems to embody exactly that: a oneness, a concluded peace.

The word usage examples above have been gathered from various sources to reflect current and historical usage. They do not represent the opinions of YourDictionary.com.