Use "semantic" in a sentence
semantic example sentences
semantic
1. In contrast, the source is unknown in a way beyond semantic
2. facts are gathered, processed, and interpreted is as important as the semantic content of those
3. -My World? That’s all semantic
4. Based on a semantic analysis of the keywords, many softwares allow a real-time follow-up of the
5. Any comparison of the Florida wild hog to its domestic counterpart would be semantic and easily resolved by face to face confrontation with the wild variety
6. Watch for processes that violate semantic well-
7. [7]" This statement shows not only a lack of guilt and remorse, but a semantic lack of understanding of the concept
8. lost with semantic aphasia in the circumscribed field of speech
9. a patient with semantic aphasia can be said to represent such a
10. Also, to rank for more-related theme keywords, I suggest that you use as many latent semantic
11. Hence, while dealing with the Laws of Attraction and in almost every other aspect of life you’d be more likely to grasp a certain situation better only if you get past its basic semantic sense
12. Uncovering the semantic puzzle of words can only be accomplished if you know enough of the actual history and can link it together organically so it makes sense and you can put it into the correct relative historical context
13. When O = ALL and Y = Why, then you get the hidden semantic meaning of Chernobyl: Cherish Negative-ALL; but Why Love? Why love energies that are negative and destructive?
14. It is pure dehumanization at its most obscene example of demonstrating how the power, arrogance, and the stupidity of pure dead abstractions that are based upon semantic gibberish called ‘absolutes’… are more important than anyone who is alive and living and breathing and actually feels emotions and is unique and is human
15. The entire semantic use of the word: Constant by Science, and scientists is a garbled hoax
16. The entire usage of Constants, the use of mass, momentum, the speed of light, is one long series of semantic lies and hoaxes
17. Then there is hyperspace, ten dimensions, eleven dimensions, string theory, membrane theory, etc… All of them based upon a semantic trick of calling something a constant… regarding and using every fractional equivalent as if it were a Universal Constant
18. There are so many semantic levels of instinctive-subconscious-conscious selective irrational lies and self delusions in their logic of how they evolved their insane notions, and their official semantic scientific code-words and terms… it would take a thousand books to fully describe the pure idiocy of the process and formation of the project itself
19. For instance: Double Jeopardy: has been poisoning the semantic root of the meaning of an answer, by posing the answer as a question
20. This is semantic reversal of meanings
21. The titles rulers and Nobles had in those days were the semantic equivalent of brainwashing by terminology
22. The quibble about whether they do it legally or illegally is a semantic joke
23. They are merely concerned with the best, the highest rate of return… huh? Another semantic lie
24. Do you think these historical facts and semantic coincidences just might be connected?
25. Why are the richest people regarded as pillars of their society… when they are the complete opposite of supporting pillars? This is only one example of the brainwashed irrational semantic nonsense that people swallow, and actually believe-in
26. This semantic fiction was done mainly as an excuse to rob them and rule them, and gain wealth and territory
27. America has pioneered the selling of bigotry to the world: wrapped up in so many attractive consumer packages: that they have managed to hide the actual content of their ethics, and bigotry, and racism, and hate: under so many euphemistic, code-words, and semantic distortions: that the english dictionary has become a meaningless thing to them
28. By twisting the semantic meanings of words, by replacing semantically accurate words with lying mental with emotional trigger words that evoke subconscious reactions on a subliminal level
29. The entire terminology of positive, and negative is a bunch of semantic bullshit
30. The true semantic meaning of the word negative is: weak
31. The true semantic meaning of the word positive is: strong
32. Why does the semantic mix-up of ownership and possession still exist in every human language? In English; the difference between these, them, their, and theirs; is confusing as hell
33. Why this semantic boggle? Because the human subconscious still cannot tell the difference between a dead carcass of a dead human with its head missing, and a Neanderthal carcass with its head missing
34. What is the difference between a graveyard and a garbage dump? Except the semantic lie of one being sacred, and the other being not sacred? None
35. Is this subconscious, semantic interpretation of Jewish and ancient Egyptian history too unbelievable to swallow? Is the blindness of selective human reflective stupidity; too difficult to understand? Too unpleasant to swallow? Too humbling to admit-to?
36. If you study the subconscious semantic meanings of words: human history, many hidden truths will be revealed to you
37. Do you think these semantic meanings of these words are mere coincidence? If you look for the actual truth that is buried under the lies of history: you will find thousands upon thousands more of these self-explanatory subconscious clues that expose human cultures for what they actually were, and still are
38. The semantic connections are obvious
39. Peter becomes Black Peter…in a country that was oppressed and taxed into poverty for hundreds of years by Catholic Kings and their Church, and the Roman head of the Catholic Church… the living representative of St Peter… What is so surprising about this obvious semantic change in wording? A poor protestant country; ruled and oppressed by rich Catholics for hundreds of years: finally demonizes the Catholic St
40. The semantic meanings of words are unconscious-subconscious exposures and disclosures of all the hidden truths, all the hidden evil of these undead, unseen shit-filth
41. This is a crucial meaning of the many levels of semantic meaning of the Gordian knot
42. The Qu’ran consists of 114 Chapters or Suras, and has striking literary similarities and semantic resemblances to both the Old and New Testaments of the Bible, although the Qu’ran is a smaller book
43. In occultism a number of concepts at the same time has several, little different from each other semantic loads
44. It seemed impossible that he’d chosen to live here, at a latitude where spring was a semantic variation on winter, in a grid whose rigid geometry only a Greek or a builder of prisons could love, in a city that made its own gravy when it rained
45. To some extent, this labeling system is mostly a semantic argument, saying little more than if a trend fails to continue then it will go into a trading range, which, by definition, is a price area that does not continue in either direction, up or down
46. Apparently guarantees by the government are not regarded as debts—a semantic windfall for shrewder investors
47. I had always considered this a kind of semantic deadfall, but moving about in my own country I am not at all sure that is so
48. / Dialogic relationships are possible not only among whole (relatively whole) utterances; a dialogic approach is possible toward any signifying part of an utterance, even toward an individual word, if that word is perceived not as the impersonal word of language but as a sign of someone else’s semantic position, as the representative of another person’s utterance; that is, if we hear in it someone else’s voice
49. / On the other hand, dialogic relationships are also possible between language styles, social dialects, and so forth, insofar as they are perceived as semantic positions, as language worldviews of a sort, that is, as something no longer strictly within the realm of linguistic investigation
50. The word, directed toward its object, enters a dialogically agitated and tension-filled environment of alien words, value judgements and accents, weaves in and out of complex interrelationships, merges with some, recoils from others, intersects with yet a third group: and all this may crucially shape discourse, may leave a trace in all its semantic layers, may complicate its expression and influence its entire stylistic profile