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intelligible - use in sentences
Adjective complement with noun phrase
- render: Professor Hoppen has rendered an older complex historiography more intelligible.
- make: They contain information rather than advice, to make complex health problems more intelligible.
Modifies a noun
- language: He showed us his company's policy booklet, which sets out the extent of the cover provided in simple, intelligible language.
- speech: By proper choice of pulse characteristics, intelligible speech may be created " quotes the report.
- extension: Without sensations, however, intelligible extension is not up to the task of representing particular bodies.
- species: Phantasms do not, however, become irrelevant once the intelligible species has been abstracted.
- explanation: Next, an intelligible explanation of what the patient does have is required.
- manner: You need to persuade the reader that you understand the process of research and that you can present this in a clear intelligible manner.
Modifying Another Word
- mutually: This language is not mutually intelligible with any form of English.
- scarcely: And if the inspired apostle did not cherish that belief, his language to the Corinthians and Philippians seems scarcely intelligible.
- readily: The latter's position in refusing to divulge the information to the claimant is readily intelligible on its face.
- perfectly: There is no merit in following a poem which is perfectly intelligible.
- barely: I fear my letter will be barely intelligible to you.
- immediately: Tho not immediately intelligible this could be reflect the corner of the original south chancel before its northern counterpart was added.
Used with adjective complement
- render: On what doctrine of man or theory of consciousness can we render intelligible the notion of an afterlife in heaven?
- seem: It made railroad station announcements seem intelligible by comparison!
- become: And the scientific meaning of Death now becomes clearly intelligible.
- make: The object or the material pursued must be made intelligible in the terms of the culture under study.
Preposition: without
- reference: Tables These should be intelligible without reference to the text.
Preposition: in
- term: The object or the material pursued must be made intelligible in the terms of the culture under study.
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.
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