Lexicographical Neighbors of Motiles
Literary usage of Motiles
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The American Journal of Psychology by Granville Stanley Hall, Edward Bradford Titchener (1913)
"The people whom the psychologists class as ' motiles,' then, ... In motiles,
then, the motor idea tends to adequate presentation in terms of the local ..."
2. Educational Psychology by Edward Lee Thorndike (1921)
"... motiles, etc., with the meaning that the visualizers had more vivid, faithful
and frequent visual images than other people and less vivid, faithful and ..."
3. Principles of Education Applied to Practice by Wallace Franklin Jones (1911)
"... and motiles are most at home if they can do things. Thus the teacher who draws
an illustration on the board, or writes a word or figure, must not forget ..."
4. Psychology as Applied to Education by Peter Magnus Magnusson (1913)
"These are of the motor type, or motiles. Eye Training at the Expense of Ear Training.
— Some minds learn best through the eye, others through the ear. ..."
5. Analytic Psychology by George Frederick Stout (1918)
"In the motiles, reproductions of muscular experience have the greatest importance.
These distinctions have an important bearing on the present subject. ..."
6. Science by American Association for the Advancement of Science (1897)
"That is a dangerous word to apply to nature, which works in many ways. Most men
may be ' visuals', but some of us are 'motiles '; the horse is an 'audile,' ..."
7. The American Journal of Psychology by Granville Stanley Hall, Edward Bradford Titchener (1913)
"The people whom the psychologists class as ' motiles,' then, ... In motiles,
then, the motor idea tends to adequate presentation in terms of the local ..."
8. Educational Psychology by Edward Lee Thorndike (1921)
"... motiles, etc., with the meaning that the visualizers had more vivid, faithful
and frequent visual images than other people and less vivid, faithful and ..."
9. Principles of Education Applied to Practice by Wallace Franklin Jones (1911)
"... and motiles are most at home if they can do things. Thus the teacher who draws
an illustration on the board, or writes a word or figure, must not forget ..."
10. Psychology as Applied to Education by Peter Magnus Magnusson (1913)
"These are of the motor type, or motiles. Eye Training at the Expense of Ear Training.
— Some minds learn best through the eye, others through the ear. ..."
11. Analytic Psychology by George Frederick Stout (1918)
"In the motiles, reproductions of muscular experience have the greatest importance.
These distinctions have an important bearing on the present subject. ..."
12. Science by American Association for the Advancement of Science (1897)
"That is a dangerous word to apply to nature, which works in many ways. Most men
may be ' visuals', but some of us are 'motiles '; the horse is an 'audile,' ..."