¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Symbolises
1. symbolise [v] - See also: symbolise
Lexicographical Neighbors of Symbolises
Literary usage of Symbolises
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Theosophist by Theosophical Society (Madras, India) (1890)
"... the same nature (or symbolises) the Highest : if it is single-faced the ...
to Pancha Brahma,5 and symbolises them; and will destroy the sin of even a ..."
2. The Alternative: A Study in Psychology by Edmund R. Clay (1882)
"The idea of all men congregated on the Day of Judgment symbolises a kind as a
whole; that denoted by the term, all men, in the proposition, ..."
3. The Alternative: A Study in Psychology by E. R. Clay (1882)
"The idea of all men congregated on the Day of Judgment symbolises a kind as a
whole ; that denoted by the term, all men, in the proposition, ..."
4. The State in Its Relations with the Church by William Ewart Gladstone (1841)
"Still more remarkable is the State in that which it symbolises. Independent of
the will of man alike in the origin and in the exercise of its power, ..."
5. History of Scottish Seals from the Eleventh to the Seventeenth Century, with by Walter de Gray Birch (1905)
"This symbolises his intention of defending his kingdom and his right against all
enemies. The feet rest on a dais or platform of restricted dimensions. ..."
6. The Theosophist by Theosophical Society (Madras, India) (1890)
"... the same nature (or symbolises) the Highest : if it is single-faced the ...
to Pancha Brahma,5 and symbolises them; and will destroy the sin of even a ..."
7. The Alternative: A Study in Psychology by Edmund R. Clay (1882)
"The idea of all men congregated on the Day of Judgment symbolises a kind as a
whole; that denoted by the term, all men, in the proposition, ..."
8. The Alternative: A Study in Psychology by E. R. Clay (1882)
"The idea of all men congregated on the Day of Judgment symbolises a kind as a
whole ; that denoted by the term, all men, in the proposition, ..."
9. The State in Its Relations with the Church by William Ewart Gladstone (1841)
"Still more remarkable is the State in that which it symbolises. Independent of
the will of man alike in the origin and in the exercise of its power, ..."
10. History of Scottish Seals from the Eleventh to the Seventeenth Century, with by Walter de Gray Birch (1905)
"This symbolises his intention of defending his kingdom and his right against all
enemies. The feet rest on a dais or platform of restricted dimensions. ..."