existences in English

noun
1
the fact or state of living or having objective reality.
the plane was the oldest Boeing remaining in existence

Use "existences" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "existences" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "existences", or refer to the context using the word "existences" in the English Dictionary.

1. Lives, existences, hopes.

2. Bachel Model College registered existences in the year 2008 with multi-dimensional academic mandate

3. Louis Kahn: How accidental our existences are really and how full of influence by circumstance.

4. This article stands attheheights of culture philosophy; toimplements cogitate style as a kind of double existences.

5. Takin are found in small family groups of around 20 individuals, although older males may lead more solitary existences.

6. Every teenage fantasy, frustration and obsession is here as the naive youngsters exchange their drab existences for an alcohol-induced escapism.

7. It is not something peculiar to the Royal Family - people have very humdrum existences and the Royals provide a bit of excitement.

8. VOLUME III (OF 4) GEORGE GROTE To draw out the series of Cognitions, is to develop the series of existences.

9. In the aim of detailed observations of existences, Albert Piette thinks that ethnography, working especially on groups and activities, is less suitable that phenomenography, focusing on singular individuals.

10. Corporation definition, an association of individuals, created by law or under authority of law, having a continuous existence independent of the existences of its members, and powers and liabilities distinct from those of its members

11. Animism (from the Latin: animus or anima, meaning mind or soul) refers to a belief in numerous personalized, supernatural beings endowed with reason, intelligence and/or volition, that inhabit both objects and living beings and govern their existences.

12. He speaks to her with the intention of buying one of her flowers, but she recognises at once his potential and offers him five of the lotuses if he would promise that they would become husband and wife in all their next existences.

13. ‘Someone who is signing on to receive this is said to be on the Broo.’ ‘Glaswegian writer James Kelman gave voice to the oppressed, dispossessed, disillusioned working class, portraying characters such as Robert Hines in Bus Conductor Hines, Sammy Samuels in How Late it Was, How Late or the hundreds of characters in his short stories spending their existences on the Broo or just talking