Use "symbolise|symbolised|symbolises|symbolising" in a sentence

1. The stalks symbolise ASEAN's ten members.

2. 3 In buddhism they symbolise wisdom.

3. These images symbolised the chaos which continues to worsen.

4. The temple is a representation of Mount Meru, the home of the gods: the central quincunx of towers symbolises the five peaks of the mountain, and the walls and moat symbolise the surrounding mountain ranges and ocean.

5. Its very awkwardness symbolises the strained relationship.

6. 1 What does this strange mark symbolise?

7. 18 Young and exuberant,[www.Sentencedict.com] he symbolises Italy's new vitality.

8. Originally he would have symbolised vegetative fertility, and possibly even the sacrificial May King.

9. A global power must also symbolise and espouse global values.

10. They sought to Actualize what their predecessors tried to symbolise

11. 5 Folds of fat and pendulous breasts symbolise the bounty of the inundation.

12. Each of these badges had a maple leaf above to symbolise Canada.

13. Folds of fat and pendulous breasts symbolise the bounty of the inundation.

14. 18 In Hinduism the patterns of the peacocks feathers, resembling eyes, symbolise And stars.

15. Symbolises: conservativeness , security, maturity and reliability, but it can also signify gloominess and sadness.

16. 14 It was an instant hit, and later came to symbolise Trenet's joie de vivre.

17. 11 Decoding the paintings is not difficult once you know what the component parts symbolise.

18. 19 He is holding a book and pen, attributes used to symbolise his education.

19. Ladies and Gentlemen, for India, Mauritius symbolises the very triumph of its own civilisational ethos and character.

20. 4 In the Middle Ages, men wore them to symbolise their courage and virility.

21. 9 The completion of the M25 now seems to symbolise the high-water mark of Thatcherism.

22. Antonyms for Antithesize include represent, symbolise, symbolize, embody, typify, characterise, characterize, demonstrate, epitomise and epitomize

23. It was an instant hit, and later came to symbolise Trenet's joie de vivre.

24. Batik motifs themselves hold significant meaning – from the parang which symbolises war and victory, to the kawung which represents wisdom and power.

25. On this day the walls in the house are cleared , painted and decorated with figures of male animals and crops symbolising plenty .

26. Amphisbaenas often featured in Mesoamerican and Inca cultures too, frequently depicted with a vertically undulating body, and symbolised eternity

27. According to the sculptor, it symbolises the way in which victims of nasty remarks often seek comfort in chocolate. Sentencedict.com

28. 16 That's why in modern architecture conic roofs are often used. They symbolise a Mansi tent.

29. 10 Whatever the holy sites of Bethlehem symbolise, it is not a world free of pain.

30. He had incorporated the picture of a tiger in the logo to symbolise Activeness, patience and strength.

31. "Dhruv" in the contemporary context of the Advanced Light Helicopter symbolises the beacon light which will further guide the vast expanse of India-Mauritius relations.

32. 8 The domestic pig might well symbolise prosperity to man, so closely knit and tied together were their lives.

33. In that case, the dancers could here represent the fertile land, with the acanthus symbolising their role in the creation of vegetation.

34. 12 Dionysius was usually depicted with the flanks of a goat or bull to symbolise his fertility aspect.

35. Accra Expat - the expat webpage informing about the planned events in Accra Buy [ edit ] [ add listing ] Local currency is the Ghanaian cedi symbolised internationally and in our guides as GHC (placed before the amount with no intervening space) but sometimes symbolised locally as Gh¢, GH₵, ¢ or ₵ placed before or after the amount.

36. The four corners of the basic throne symbolises the Four Unlimited Qualities or Boundlessnesses: unlimited love, unlimited compassion, unlimited joy and unlimited equanimity

37. 6 Tattooing of the body was traditionally used to symbolise ones family lineage and today this art form is again becoming popular.

38. Going Barefoot is the gentlest way of walking and can symbolise a way of living — being authentic, vulnerable, sensitive to our surroundings.

39. 13 One way this is done is to project the internal situation into current real situations when they symbolise the internal situation.

40. 15 Indeed, the outcome of the battle of the battle flag only serves to symbolise ambivalence and irreconcilability in the South.

41. 2 To symbolise their commitment to work together in the future, they will read together an extract from the Swanwick Declaration.

42. The author himself explained that the Boat symbolised for him Life which collects the harvest of our achieve - ment and goes floating on the stream of time , leaving us behind .

43. Mao Zedong started the Cultural Revolution in 1966, and the youth militia known as the Red Guards saw Puyi, who symbolised Imperial China, as an easy target.

44. In 1973 the Philadelphia Orchestra performed in Beijing, an event that symbolised a sea change in America's relations with China following President Nixon's visit there a year earlier.

45. The establishment of the Second Republic in 1945 saw the return of the original (First Republic) arms, with broken chains added to symbolise Austria's liberation.

46. RIDA was renamed as the Majlis Amanah Rakyat (The Indigenous People's Trust Council) or MARA in 1965, and came to symbolise the development of Malay entrepreneurship.

47. The red star represents the Communist Party, and its position over hammer and sickle symbolises its leading role in socialist society to unify and enlighten the workers and peasants in the building of communism.

48. Kate Bush in the Babooshka video The video featured Bush beside a double bass symbolising the husband, wearing a black bodysuit and a veil in her role as the embittered wife, then changing into an

49. 17 That's why in modern architecture conic roofs are often used. They symbolise a Mansi tent. This is the building of district tax inspection in the picture.

50. ‘But the success of the past two seasons mean that the standard emblazoned with four Bezants or gold coins, to symbolise both wealth and wheels of a car is apt.’

51. 30 In a way it is again a mode as one might say of metonymically symbolising satisfaction, and here we are led straight away to the dialectic of the money box and the miser.

52. At the poet's feet are four allegoric groups symbolising the Motherland (from the face of the monument along Sienna Street), Science (facing north), Courage (facing Sukiennice Hall) and Poetry (facing Church of St. Wojciech, south).

53. 7 The four rings of the Audi badge symbolise the brands Audi, DKW, Horch and Wanderer,(www.Sentencedict.com) which were combined under the umbrella of Auto Union in 1932 and eventuate into Audi AG in 19

54. "L'Affaire", as it is known in French, has come to symbolise modern injustice in the Francophone world, and it remains one of the most notable examples of a complex miscarriage of justice and antisemitism.

55. The Andante symbolises a moment of reflection and nostalgic reminiscence.: È caratterizzata da un tempo più veloce (Andante ± 96 bpm), uno stile rubato e da una struttura di base semplice.It is characterized by having a quicker tempo (Andante ± 96 bpm) and a rubato style, and by being

56. ‘The second movement is a set of recitatives and Ariosos for tenor, chorus, soprano, and bass, in which we are transported to that final moment of death and seek the support of God in our trial.’ ‘Bostridge then railed against destiny in a long arioso, but his powerlessness was symbolised by the next chorus.’

57. (492) In this context, the magical means of obtaining money also comes to symbolise more than the old trope of money's bewitching, uncanny influence over individuals and national economies; it also denotes the obscuratory nature of money, its ability (as sign system and Assigner of values) to subsume subject and object within its self-referential operation.

58. As in Hans HOLBEIN the Younger's famous canvas The Ambassadors (1533), James HOPKINS brings together two pictorial traditions from the Renaissance: on the one hand the anamorphosis - where an image is hidden in a distorted perspective; on the other hand the vanitas - a still life representing objects that symbolise the fragility and Briefness of life, amongst which the human skull, and