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Can understand
Answer for the clue "Can understand ", 7 letters:
relates
Alternative clues for the word relates
Usage examples of relates.
There would thus be a discipline that could cover in a single movement both the dimension of ethnology that relates the human sciences to the positivities in which they are framed and the dimension of psychoanalysis that relates the knowledge of man to the finitude that gives it its foundation.
Both the blue and the note are immediately posited by the discrimination of sense-awareness which relates the mind to nature.
Federal Government by section 9, relates only to penal and criminal legislation and not to civil laws which affect private rights adversely.
While the consent will usually precede the compact or agreement, it may be given subsequently where the agreement relates to a matter which could not be well considered until its nature is fully developed.
It takes into consideration those factors which we deem relevant, and relates their significances.
Porphyry relates, attained to this ecstatic union with God four times during the six years he was with him.
What I have been saying as to the effect produced by a reduction of the quantity of money relates to the whole country.
When I say general positions, I mean to exclude from consideration so much as relates to the present embarrassed state of the treasury in consequence of the Mexican War.
While it cannot be denied that the letter of the laws favor the construction claimed by some of the creditors that interest-bearing bonds were required to be issued to them, inasmuch as the restriction that no interest is to run on said bonds until 1st January, 1860, relates solely to the bonds issued under the Act of 1857.
To avoid misunderstanding, it may be proper to say that this proclamation, so far as it relates to State governments, has no reference to States wherein loyal State governments have all the while been maintained.
I suppose the doctor is enjoying all the rights of a civilian, I only quote that part of my letter which relates to the church.
All beyond this which is strictly peculiar to War relates merely to the peculiar nature of the means which it uses.
Every activity in War, therefore, necessarily relates to the combat either directly or indirectly.
For although he sometimes relates occurrences with great minuteness, still he falls short very often of showing that the deductions drawn necessarily proceed from the inner relations of these events.
But this uselessness is not altogether absolute, it relates only to those subjects which depend on a knowledge of minute details, or on those things in which the method of conducting war has changed.