English for Academic Purposes: Vocabulary
Selecting vocabulary: Academic word list
Abstract
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It represents a dramatic step towards the |
abstraction |
and stylisation that were to characterise the artist’s work of the 1890s. |
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Once again we start with a simple “model” which, though |
abstract, |
helps us to understand the real world. |
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We must, therefore, bridge the worlds of principle and practice, and move from the |
abstract |
to the concrete. |
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The reason for this may have lain in the unwillingness of biologists to accept the highly |
abstract |
nature of his theory. |
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Thus, Irish nationalism is conceived by most members in an |
abstract |
way, but it has concrete import for key groups. |
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We should not be content with a code of the brief and |
abstract |
kind which has been adopted and used with success in foreign countries. |
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It is in the nature of the law, however, to be couched in |
abstract |
terms. |
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In the Vedic period the |
abstract |
idea of time was regarded as the fundamental principle of the universe. |
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They consider, sometimes in fairly |
abstract |
terms, the kinds of policies which Labour might adopt. |
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He simplified and |
abstracted |
the figures radically, to the point of distortion. |
| Older audiences rejected the | abstractness | of much modern jazz. |