¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Imponents
1. imponent [n] - See also: imponent
Lexicographical Neighbors of Imponents
Literary usage of Imponents
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Prolegomena to Ethics by Thomas Hill Green (1906)
"If the result of the philosopher's work is to popularise the notion that the
authorities to which men have chiefly looked as imponents of duties, ..."
2. Works of Thomas Hill Green by Thomas Hill Green (1906)
"... the discovery that the conflict is not really between duties, but between
powers invested by the imagination with the character of imponents of duty. ..."
3. The Theory of Light by Thomas Preston (1912)
"The experiment, and imponents as the li quartz in the lever,it was shown list be
regarded as be of transmission |. ..."
4. A Text-book of Physics by William Watson (1899)
"imponents, one along the axis of the circle and the other along the lint 1 .u lix'i'
angles to the axis. Since PD is at right angles to . ..."
5. The Life and Letters of Sir George Savile, Bart., First Marquis of Halifax &c by Helen Charlotte Foxcroft (1898)
"... hath not its true behaved itselfe very well,3 but it is most extravagantly
fined When nothing shall bee reall but the want of money The imponents (? ..."
6. Knowledge, Life and Reality: An Essay in Systematic Philosophy by George Trumbull Ladd (1918)
"... by a certain physical environment, and socially related to other like- minded
selves. But this form of legalism summarizes the external imponents, ..."
7. Philosophy of Conduct: A Treatise of the Facts, Principles, and Ideals of Ethics by George Trumbull Ladd (1902)
"Especially in respect of its moral consciousness, society is always superior to
the laws to which it has given the place of "external imponents. ..."