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    Synonyms and Definitions

    Use "realisation" in a sentence

    realisation example sentences

    realisation


    1. Practice of Dharma leads to the perfect realisation of essential unity with the Supreme or the final end, the highest good, namely, ‘Moksha’ (liberation)


    2. This fact had been borne on me when I was looking for the job at the school … it is a daunting realisation


    3. Cultivate the realisation that eternity is long and that that which is slowly built up endures forever


    4. unwelcome and chilling realisation hit her squarely in the chest


    5. While sat on the loo, I had dozed gently before the realisation that the loo roll only had two sheets of paper left stirred what was left of my brain into action


    6. From where or how this sudden realisation came,


    7. your reality born out of the realisation that Rousseau and freedom and brotherhood


    8. At times I felt as though I could burst through the fabric of the building, but I always came back to the same singular realisation


    9. She chuckled, the realisation that she’d be grateful for his company – for a variety of reasons - coming as something of a surprise


    10. This is your reality born out of the realisation that Rousseau and freedom and brotherhood are lies

    11. To discover that the Yeti people actually exist was sufficiently stunning to this poor Earthman and the realisation that they have a sophisticated culture still seems fantastical


    12. In as much as the memory is also the realisation


    13. and into some realisation of what we would be


    14. But in that moment, in that realisation


    15. What on earth can be the matter? In a bolt of realisation it comes to me – Sam! I’m just about to throw off the duvet when the door opens again and Simon comes back in


    16. ' I hazarded, emboldened by this realisation


    17. As realisation of the other woman’s intention percolated into Chrissie’s brain, nausea threatened


    18. The tags of the wind wailed high in the atmosphere – a lost soul vanishing as quickly as her realisation of its presence before reappearing again from another, unexpected quarter


    19. Bram and Brasham looked at each other, the realisation forming


    20. A moment of silence and it dawns on him; a joke, sick realisation, but then Ted thinks about it; cash from the Scots bastard, cash from this arsehole, it's the same thing

    21. I can still see my face mirrored in front of me as the realisation hit


    22. lips, and was coming to the realisation that Henri was


    23. his wife had seen him in months, and with the realisation


    24. The realisation was depressing, and his


    25. the lepers of Saint Sebastien, and his own realisation that


    26. realisation dawned, and the world swam before his eyes


    27. Maybe it was a way of postponing the realisation that she was gone


    28. He straightened up and felt the realisation hit home – had something happened to him too? Normally his father led the platoon on his majestic steed and would have been the first one to enter the plain


    29. Zarko could see the turmoil in Azubah’s eyes as she battled to come to terms with the realisation that her niece was about to do something against their customs and traditions


    30. And then the full realisation hit her head on

    31. The sudden cold realisation that something, perhaps that spider bot, had returned and removed it


    32. Unintimidated, she stared straight back at him, “Since the realisation that Earth would have nothing more to do with us set in quarter of a century ago, we have been coming to terms with that


    33. At this point his vision became so distorted he couldn't make out what was happening to him, but the sound of drilling was unmistakable – and the stark realisation that he was in the presence of a sentient lifeform


    34. It was only now, as the drugs were finally losing their grip, that the realisation struck her


    35. But at that point of realisation, a more chilling thought occurred to him


    36. He knew this was the isolation field generator – the realisation of his research, back when all he had to work with was micro induction modules powering bare bones componentry


    37. The sound, and the strange realisation that


    38. “We all know where this place is,” he continued, the realisation


    39. The realisation hit her; if she had sold him a clean knife, he wouldn’t have used such a filthy shard of glass


    40. He was embarrassed by the dawning realisation that he’d simply enjoyed having strong opinions

    41. Shock overwhelmed in nauseous waves, and then the inevitable hit of realisation that he was meant to be there – meant to be dead


    42. The true realisation had hit him after he’d left the dinner hall on Monday and returned to his cell


    43. He could have taken that realisation on board at a much earlier age, and accepted mediocrity


    44. The realisation struck him, the sudden alertness, as if hit by a shower of cold water


    45. Then from a feeling of pure unburdened peacefulness to the realisation that this was only temporary


    46. She had been struggling with the realisation for some time, knowing that it could only hurt them both, that it was hopeless to begin a relationship that could never flourish within these walls


    47. He had exhausted all of his anger now, and the rage and hatred drifted away as a new realisation dawned upon him


    48. As he thought over his life, he was dismayed by the growing realisation that he hadn’t learnt anything in his whole life


    49. The man stared at the little girl, a slow realisation breaking upon him


    50. Then the realisation struck him, slammed into his consciousness








































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    Synonyms for "realisation"

    fruition realisation realization actualisation actualization recognition

    "realisation" definitions

    a musical composition that has been completed or enriched by someone other than the composer


    coming to understand something clearly and distinctly


    a sale in order to obtain money (as a sale of stock or a sale of the estate of a bankrupt person) or the money so obtained


    the completion or enrichment of a piece of music left sparsely notated by a composer


    making real or giving the appearance of reality


    something that is made real or concrete