Nghĩa của từ by force of bằng Tiếng Anh

by the power of -, using -

Đặt câu với từ "by force of"

Dưới đây là những mẫu câu có chứa từ "by force of", trong bộ từ điển Từ điển Tiếng Anh. Chúng ta có thể tham khảo những mẫu câu này để đặt câu trong tình huống cần đặt câu với từ by force of, hoặc tham khảo ngữ cảnh sử dụng từ by force of trong bộ từ điển Từ điển Tiếng Anh

1. It's driven by force of necessity.

2. We were obliged to go by force of circumstance.

3. A great man can dominate others by force of character.

4. We were compelled by force of circumstance to take action.

5. 26 We were obliged to go by force of circumstance.

6. Gus , by force of long habit, went into his stomach exercise.

7. Unconsciously, by force of habit, she plugged the coffee pot in.

8. 5 A great man can dominate others by force of character.

9. Almost by force of habit I judge these to be the same.

10. 19 Unconsciously, by force of habit,(www.Sentencedict.com) she plugged the coffee pot in.

11. The whites displaced the Indians by force of arms , got their patrimony by fraudulent treaties.

12. Whole villages were compelled, by force of arms, to accept the collectivization of their holdings.

13. She who could transform herself by force of will into a passable semblance of a Genestealer.

14. Camerano cheese is a soft cheese drained naturally by force of gravity and is sometimes aged.

15. Thus compelled by force of arms, Isaac II was forced to fulfill his engagements in 1190.

16. Conquer definition, to acquire by force of arms; win in war: to Conquer a foreign land

17. The several States of the Union are by force of the Constitution Coequal in domestic legislative power

18. But we act in these matters not by authority of our competence but by force of our commissions.

19. After Ali's death, Muawiya became Caliph and founded the Umayyad dynasty (661?750), chiefly by force of arms

20. Some sectors, moreover, lagged behind completely, by force of circumstances or on account of reluctance to abandon traditional ways.

21. The whole movie is often frightening in the wrong way—not by force of satire but by weight of Attitudinizing

22. And arrowheads and other debris excavated from the ruins indicate that Qumran, too, opposed the Romans by force of arms.

23. The Bible acknowledges that at times people feel driven by force of circumstance to do what they otherwise would not do.

24. There are many whose manner of life is simple by force of circumstances, yet they are by no means content or happy.

25. The legal exchange rates were fixed by force of law for important foreign currencies which became acceptable in the settlement of internal transactions.

26. Alpha test starts off by introducing us to the the main character who is by force of plot illness a frail, romantically challenged, genius gamer who makes WAY TO MANY REFERENCES

27. Oxymoron is a rhetoric device that, by force of the surface contradiction of language forms, can express the ideas not only clearly and exactly but also more pithily, deeply and strongly.

28. 9 Oxymoron is a rhetoric device that, by force of the surface contradiction of language forms, can express the ideas not only clearly and exactly but also more pithily, deeply and strongly.

29. Past tense of conquer Synonyms & Antonyms of Conquered (Entry 2 of 2) 1 to bring under one's control by force of arms before his final defeat, Napoléon had managed to conquer much of Europe

30. Present participle of conquer Synonyms & Antonyms of Conquering (Entry 2 of 2) 1 to bring under one's control by force of arms before his final defeat, Napoléon had managed to conquer much of Europe

31. And Hooker teacheth rightly, (736) “that by force of union, the properties of both natures (and by consequence, Adorability, which is a property of the divine nature) are imputed to the person only in whom they are, and not what belongeth to the one nature really conveyed or translated into the other.”

32. A. concerned about the illegal seizure by force of the Spanish fishing vessel 'Estai' on 9 March 1995 by the Canadian authorities, when the vessel was legally fishing Greenland halibut in the international waters of the North Atlantic Fishing Organization (NAFO), which represents an act of aggression against the Community fleet and a violation of the international law of the sea and of the NAFO Convention,

33. Coerce (v.) mid-15c., cohercen, "restrain or constrain by force of law or authority," from Old French cohercier, from Latin Coercere "to control, restrain, shut up together," from assimilated form of com-"together" (see co-) + arcere "to enclose, confine, contain, ward off," from PIE *ark-"to hold, contain, guard" (see arcane).The unetymological -h-was perhaps by influence of cohere.