Use selection in a sentence
Sentences ending with selection
- Therefore, if they were formerly of high importance to primeval man and to his ape-like progenitors, they would have been perfected or advanced through natural selection. [1]
- It would teach us a good deal merely to consider the names he has selected as typical, and the ground of their selection. [6]
- Gombert forced himself to keep silence, but the significant smile on his delicate, beardless lips betrayed what he thought of this selection. [10]
- With respect to the slight individual differences which are common, in a greater or less degree, to all the members of the same species, we have every reason to believe that they are by far the most important for the work of selection. [1]
- An examination into the process of collecting shows what sort of news we are likely to get, and that nine-tenths of that printed is collected without much intelligence exercised in selection. [4]
- The force of the newspaper is expended in extending these facilities, with little regard to discriminating selection. [4]
- Talking seemed like the exercise of a foreign language to her, but her smiling was free and unconstrained, and it belonged to all, without selection. [11]
- Judging from all that we know of man and the lower animals, there has always been sufficient variability in their intellectual and moral faculties, for a steady advance through natural selection. [1]
- We see only that this is subordinate in importance to the accumulated results of selection. [1]
- No one supposes that the nakedness of the skin is any direct advantage to man; his body therefore cannot have been divested of hair through natural selection. [1]
Sentences containing selection two or more times
- Sexual selection acts in a less rigorous manner than natural selection. [1]
- It was the importance of this distinction which led me to designate this form of selection as Sexual Selection. [1]
- Sexual selection will also be largely dominated by natural selection tending towards the general welfare of the species. [1]
More example sentences with the word selection in them
- And many times was Edith extracted from the recesses of the cellar in a condition bordering on hysterics, the day ending tamely with a Bible story or a selection from "Little Women" read by Cousin Eleanor. [9]
- The greater intellectual vigour and power of invention in man is probably due to natural selection, combined with the inherited effects of habit, for the most able men will have succeeded best in defending and providing for themselves and for their wives and offspring. [1]
- This follows from unconscious selection during a long series of generations--that is, the preservation of the most approved individuals--without any wish or expectation of such a result on the part of the breeder. [1]
- What impulse led to this selection she could not explain. [4]
- So we had to snatch our trunks open, and make a selection in a good deal of a hurry. [5]
- Any one with this assumption in his mind would naturally extend too far the action of natural selection, either during past or present times. [1]
- The Grecian poet, Theognis, who lived 550 B.C., clearly saw how important selection, if carefully applied, would be for the improvement of mankind. [1]
- His selection covered the whole range of legitimate literature. [5]
- Your selection for the State Department having become public, I am happy to find scarcely any objection to it. [7]
- Such social qualities, the paramount importance of which to the lower animals is disputed by no one, were no doubt acquired by the progenitors of man in a similar manner, namely, through natural selection, aided by inherited habit. [1]
- Under this title the Marchioness repaired, in tears, to the school of his selection, from which, as she soon distanced all competitors, she was removed before the lapse of many quarters to one of a higher grade. [12]
- As all animals tend to multiply beyond their means of subsistence, so it must have been with the progenitors of man; and this would inevitably lead to a struggle for existence and to natural selection. [1]
- The evil consequences, such as they may be, of the continued preservation of the same line of descent, without any selection, are checked by men of rank always wishing to increase their wealth and power; and this they effect by marrying heiresses. [1]
- We must adopt some principle of selection among the books outside of any particular branch which we may have selected for study. [6]
- Man has multiplied so rapidly, that he has necessarily been exposed to struggle for existence, and consequently to natural selection. [1]
- No one has shewn so well, how admirably such structures are adapted for their final purpose; and this adaptation can, as I believe, be explained through natural selection. [1]
- Limits of Natural Selection, 'North American Review,' Oct. 1870, p. [1]
- You make the selection, I can't bear it. [5]
- Cynthia's powers of selection were not remarkable at this period, and perhaps it was as well that she never knew the effect of the various works upon the hitherto untamed soul of her listener. [9]
- Their power of selection beats mine. [4]
- Your social orders seem able to resist Darwin's theory, but in a republic natural selection has a better chance. [4]
- That is to say, it is a divergence which of all others it is most impossible to ascribe to mere natural selection. [1]
- That is to say, in a conscientious selection of only the best for Evelyn, she became more fastidious as to the food for her own mind. [4]
- No art is required, nor any selection, nor any ideality, only capacity for increasing the vacuous commonplace in life. [4]
- This appears more probable than that the species in all cases originally tended to retain their ornamental plumage during the winter, but were saved from this through natural selection, resulting from the inconvenience or danger thus caused. [1]
- The survival or preservation of certain favoured words in the struggle for existence is natural selection. [1]
- Many little known pieces are included, and some whose merit is other than poetical.--This selection of poems is eminently that of a poet of keen intellectual tastes. [6]
- I had always perceived, that rare and strongly-marked deviations of structure, deserving to be called monstrosities, could seldom be preserved through natural selection, and that the preservation of even highly-beneficial variations would depend to a certain extent on chance. [1]
- But when, so painfully surprised that her eyes filled with tears, she confessed that her selection perhaps had not been very appropriate, and sadly added the inquiry why her beloved sovereign condemned a trivial offence so harshly, he wrathfully exclaimed, "For more than one reason. [10]
- But as with our domesticated animals, a cross-breed can certainly be fixed and made uniform by careful selection (51. [1]
- In some cases, organs have been reduced by means of natural selection, from having become injurious to the species under changed habits of life. [1]
- But some remarks on the action of natural selection on civilised nations may be worth adding. [1]
- In the discussion on Sexual Selection in my 'Descent of Man,' no case interested and perplexed me so much as the brightly-coloured hinder ends and adjoining parts of certain monkeys. [1]
- With the election of the best man for Mayor would follow the selection of the best man for Police Commissioner and Chief of Police. [5]
- The modification, therefore, of the basal caudal vertebrae in man and the higher apes may have been effected, directly or indirectly, through natural selection. [1]
- This latter kind of selection is closely analogous to that which man unintentionally, yet effectually, brings to bear on his domesticated productions, when he preserves during a long period the most pleasing or useful individuals, without any wish to modify the breed. [1]
- In the case of corporeal structures, it is the selection of the slightly better-endowed and the elimination of the slightly less well-endowed individuals, and not the preservation of strongly-marked and rare anomalies, that leads to the advancement of a species. [1]
- Our author's selection of a coat of arms, the distinguishing feature of which was "three Turks' heads," showed little more originality. [4]
- But the greater number of the more complex instincts appear to have been gained in a wholly different manner, through the natural selection of variations of simpler instinctive actions. [1]
- This topic is not the selection of the Drawer, the province of which is to note, but not to criticise, the higher civilization. [4]
- Hence there is not the least a priori improbability in the development of her tail having been checked through natural selection. [1]
- The acquirement of new characters by the sterile worker-bees is a much more difficult case, but I have endeavoured to shew in my 'Origin of Species,' how these sterile beings are subjected to the power of natural selection. [1]
- Sexual selection can never act on any animal before the age for reproduction arrives. [1]
- Variability is the necessary basis for the action of selection, and is wholly independent of it. [1]
- In another and much more important respect, man differs widely from any strictly domesticated animal; for his breeding has never long been controlled, either by methodical or unconscious selection. [1]
- I knew that Mr. Lowell must gather about him, wherever he might be, the choicest company, but what his selection would be I was curious to learn. [6]
- It is, however, more probable that these colours have been intensified through artificial selection, as this species has been carefully bred in China from a remote period. [1]
- Nor does the moderate accumulation of wealth interfere with the process of selection. [1]
- As every man may count two grandfathers, four great-grandfathers, eight great-great-grandfathers, and so on, a few generations give him a good chance for selection. [6]
- Sudden and strongly marked variations are rare; it is also doubtful whether if beneficial they would often be preserved through selection and transmitted to succeeding generations. [1]
- It is here manifestly impossible to select the more sterile individuals, which have already ceased to yield seeds; so that the acme of sterility, when the germen alone is affected, cannot have been gained through selection. [1]
- In this respect man resembles those forms, called by naturalists protean or polymorphic, which have remained extremely variable, owing, as it seems, to such variations being of an indifferent nature, and to their having thus escaped the action of natural selection. [1]
- It was not love she felt in the old, in the big, in the noble sense, but it had behind it selection and instinct and natural gravitation. [11]
- I should also like a selection from the ten commandments, in big letters, posted up conspicuously, and a few traps, that will detain, but not maim, for the benefit of those who cannot read. [4]
- We are therefore led to enquire whether slight individual differences, to which man is eminently liable, may not have been preserved and augmented during a long series of generations through natural selection. [1]
- Nevertheless the more intelligent members within the same community will succeed better in the long run than the inferior, and leave a more numerous progeny, and this is a form of natural selection. [1]
- Fish, in his instructions:-- "It might, indeed, well have occurred in the event of the selection by lot of the arbitrator or umpire in different cases, involving however precisely the same principles, that different awards, resting upon antagonistic principles, might have been made. [6]
- Hence Mr. Bates inferred that the butterflies which imitate the protected species have acquired their present marvellously deceptive appearance through variation and natural selection, in order to be mistaken for the protected kinds, and thus to escape being devoured. [1]
- Man tends to increase at a greater rate than his means of subsistence; consequently he is occasionally subjected to a severe struggle for existence, and natural selection will have effected whatever lies within its scope. [1]
- Sexual selection, which implies the possession of considerable perceptive powers and of strong passions, seems to have been more effective with the Lamellicorns than with any other family of beetles. [1]
- From the foregoing illustrations, we see that even with almost unlimited time at command, it would be an extremely difficult and complex, perhaps an impossible process, to change one form of transmission into the other through selection. [1]
- One selection from his letters to the French member, Miss Helene Picard, of St.-Die, France, will explain the club and present a side of Mask Twain somewhat different from that found in most of his correspondence. [5]
- As they are highly beneficial to the species, they have in all probability been acquired through natural selection. [1]
- If he could have chosen an official position out of the highest, he would have been embarrassed in the selection. [5]
- Now as organisms have become slowly adapted to diversified lines of life by means of natural selection, their parts will have become more and more differentiated and specialised for various functions from the advantage gained by the division of physiological labour. [1]
- With a firm hand, I have had to make my own "natural selection. [4]
- Natural selection follows from the struggle for existence; and this from a rapid rate of increase. [1]
- Nevertheless the first foundation or origin of the moral sense lies in the social instincts, including sympathy; and these instincts no doubt were primarily gained, as in the case of the lower animals, through natural selection. [1]
- And this double form of selection seems actually to have occurred, especially during the earlier periods of our long history. [1]
- If the candidate for that fearful calling had seen the process of selection and elimination, he would have felt still more desperately. [6]
- Here are the extracts, or rather here is a selection from them, with a translation of them into English. [6]
- You see our experience--living right among books all the time--that sort of thing makes us able to help a customer make a selection, you know. [5]
- Whether his equine experience was of any use to him in the selection of the mate with whom he was to go in double harness so long as they both should live, we need not stop to question. [6]
- But whether this evil is of sufficient magnitude to have led to the denudation of his body through natural selection, may be doubted, since none of the many quadrupeds inhabiting the tropics have, as far as I know, acquired any specialised means of relief. [1]
- A selection had evidently been made for her, until she had acquired the taste, or the habit rather, of choosing only the best for herself. [4]
- There is no evidence that it is possible by natural selection to convert one form of transmission into another. [1]
- I have now endeavoured to shew that some of the most distinctive characters of man have in all probability been acquired, either directly, or more commonly indirectly, through natural selection. [1]
- Rudimentary organs are eminently variable; and this is partly intelligible, as they are useless, or nearly useless, and consequently are no longer subjected to natural selection. [1]
- In 1876 Mr. Emerson published a selection from his poems, adding six new ones, and omitting many. [6]
- Kentucky will no doubt co-operate, and through her Legislature make the most judicious selection of a line. [7]
- It is very difficult to decide how far these correlated modifications are the result of natural selection, and how far of the inherited effects of the increased use of certain parts, or of the action of one part on another. [1]
- Talk about the Darwinian theory of development, and the principle of natural selection! [4]
- Although civilisation thus checks in many ways the action of natural selection, it apparently favours the better development of the body, by means of good food and the freedom from occasional hardships. [1]
- Nevertheless, in the cases of some few wild animals, as shewn in the supplement, the proportions seem to fluctuate either during different seasons or in different localities in a sufficient degree to lead to such selection. [1]
- Hence conspicuous colours cannot have been gradually acquired for this purpose through natural selection. [1]
- Yet he might by selection do something not only for the bodily constitution and frame of his offspring, but for their intellectual and moral qualities. [1]
- No one knew better than this great criminal lawyer that the battle was fought on the selection of the jury. [5]
- Sexual selection has been treated at great length in this work; for, as I have attempted to shew, it has played an important part in the history of the organic world. [1]
- Had he not been subjected during primeval times to natural selection, assuredly he would never have attained to his present rank. [1]
- There must have been not only a selection, but an election, not by ballot, but by consent some way expressed, and the privileged persons got their positions because they were the strongest, or the wisest, or the most cunning. [4]
- Such structures cannot be accounted for by any form of selection, or by the inherited effects of the use and disuse of parts. [1]
- We may feel assured that the inherited effects of the long-continued use or disuse of parts will have done much in the same direction with natural selection. [1]
- With some fishes, as with many of the lowest animals, splendid colours may be the direct result of the nature of their tissues and of the surrounding conditions, without the aid of selection of any kind. [1]
- With civilised nations, as far as an advanced standard of morality, and an increased number of fairly good men are concerned, natural selection apparently effects but little; though the fundamental social instincts were originally thus gained. [1]
- Variability and inheritance are the foundations for the work of selection. [1]
- Changed structures, which are in no way beneficial, cannot be kept uniform through natural selection, though the injurious will be thus eliminated. [1]
- Therefore the conditions are favourable for their development through natural selection. [1]
- Of course, if any principle of selection has come in, as in those special associations of young men which are common in cities, it deranges the uniformity of the assemblage. [6]
- With strictly social animals, natural selection sometimes acts on the individual, through the preservation of variations which are beneficial to the community. [1]
- If the above-named animals were gradually to extend their range into regions perpetually covered with snow, their pale winter-coats would probably be rendered through natural selection, whiter and whiter, until they became as white as snow. [1]
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