distill

IPA: dɪstˈɪɫ

verb

  • US standard spelling of distil. [(transitive)]
Advertisement

Examples of "distill" in Sentences

  • The word distill comes from the Latin destillare, “to drip.”
  • And if you feel you must distill the history from the fiction, then you are welcome to do research of your own.
  • To take a single case, why should he not have spelt _until_ with two _l_s, instead of one, -- as he does "distill,"
  • You'll read books that capture and distill the human condition, that pry your eyes open to the lives and realities beyond our own.
  • I believe that oil wins (b) by a large margin, but hydrogen may win (a) and (c), depending on the source of the energy required to "distill" it.
  • The process of picking up the pieces is still underway, and on Monday in Washington the International Monetary Fund kicks off a two-day conference of top economists to try to distill some lessons.
  • In the book of Job, there is a remarkable description of how evaporation works: “He draws up the drops of water water vapor NLT, they distill rain from the mist; which the clouds pour down” 36:27–28 NASB.
  • For a perverse death cult with powerful members in every stratum of society has learned how to distill from the bones of their sacrificed victims the ultimate thrill — a nectar that, once tasted, is impossible to resist.
  • But I was trying with this book, and it is a big book and it goes off on all these - and tells a lot of different stories, but I was trying to kind of distill a series of patterns that you see again and again in the stories of innovation, and particularly in the environments that lead to breakthrough ideas.

Related Links

synonyms for distill
Advertisement
#AaBbCcDdEeFfGgHhIiJjKkLlMmNnOoPpQqRrSsTtUuVvWwXxYyZz

© 2024 Copyright: WordPapa