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单词 humanise
例句 humanise
Photograph: Cathal MacIlwaine The biggest challenge for a show about gangsters is humanising the monsters who are its protagonists so that the viewer has a reason to invest time in their struggle. Have you been watching … The Fear? 2012-12-06T15:04:20Z
"The project was designed to humanise a publicly demonised character, to explore his daily life, and to explore the debate that surrounds land management and gamekeeping in Scotland," says Clarkson. It is What it Was: LCC MA Photojournalism on show 2012-12-13T10:18:36Z
For Poussin, it is humanised through ritual: the dying person is not alone but supported by a community.• Turner prize: too respectable? 2012-09-28T12:23:05Z
I think it is cliché that understanding dispels fear – maybe it exacerbates it – but I wanted to humanise the map. 5 great books on world travel 2013-02-04T12:45:00Z
But, just as in Angels in America Kushner managed to humanise the reptilian Roy Cohn, so here another piece provokes an unexpected understanding of Richard Nixon. Tiny Kushner 2010-09-06T14:53:00Z
“That friendship, that partnership in crime, that has been a humanising element all the way through all three series. I think he’s very much becoming more of a human being.” Sherlock's future in doubt as stars' Hollywood schedules fill 2016-12-29T05:00:00Z
The photographs can, at first look, be unsettling; the oral histories serve to humanise the photos, showing the purpose and even sweetness that underlie many of the images. Ben Fountain's top 10 books about Haiti 2013-05-15T14:34:17Z
I wasn’t going in thinking, “Ah, now I’m going to explain and humanise Russia and China to the West.” 5 great books on world travel 2013-02-04T12:45:00Z
One user said he was not a fan of the show, but praised it for seeking to "humanise" the British Pakistani community. Citizen Khan - view from abroad 2012-09-07T07:31:55Z
He's deliberately humanising her: mortal women wear makeup precisely to try to appear more like beautiful nymphs. Ovid's Heroines by Clare Pollard – review 2013-06-14T15:14:00Z
“We don’t get to see stories about these people so we don’t really get to humanise them and see how they get this way,” he says. ‘It’s impossible to be vulnerable’: how Moonlight reflects being a black gay man in the US 2016-09-15T04:00:00Z
“I’m trying to humanise these people as much as possible,” she says. Master of None's Lena Waithe: 'If you come from a poor background, TV becomes what you dream about' 2018-01-05T05:00:00Z
It’s a pretty transparent attempt to humanise the bot and distract from its core objective, and one that’s in keeping with the positive spin put on continually by employer bodies and the government around automation. Teaching a robot to do my job (and grimly cheering my obsolescence) | Ellen Wengert 2020-03-02T05:00:00Z
Newspapers, needing to humanise feature articles about class division, turned to it eagerly. Rich and poor 2010-03-23T21:00:00Z
If ever there were a couple that seem to be creative soulmates, I say, it’s you two – both of you humanise extreme characters in your writing; test our ability to empathise with monsters. Phoebe Waller-Bridge: 'I have an appetite for transgressive women' 2018-09-08T04:00:00Z
He was an extraordinary person: his politics, his writings, the way he humanised the industrial revolution, his interest in beauty. Jeremy Deller shows a 'wistfully aggressive' Britain at Venice Biennale 2013-05-28T13:27:45Z
Such details serve to humanise Eliot, who otherwise remains a distant figure. The Letters of TS Eliot, Volume 3 - review 2012-07-13T21:55:08Z
Next month Ms Rothschild takes over as chairman of the National Gallery: she understands how great art humanises. Secrets and pies 2015-07-02T04:00:00Z
Uggadóttir humanises issues such as poverty and immigration that are too often told through statistics, brilliantly laying bare the lack of accountability that exists in bureaucratic systems. My streaming gem: why you should watch And Breathe Normally 2020-11-16T05:00:00Z
For a moment, James comes close to being humanised, and I can almost see why Dinklage praised Three Billboards as “one of the best scripts I’ve ever read”. Three Billboards' portrayal of dwarfism is reductive and ableist, and I would know | Eva Squire 2018-01-31T05:00:00Z
But it also an important politically: humanising the aspirations aesthetics and emotions of the fighters of a much-caricatured and still little-understood movement that is about to defeat yet another foreign occupation. William Dalrymple's top 10 books on Afghanistan 2013-03-27T11:27:32Z
But whatever the – probably irrecoverable – objective truth of all the matters, the programme's great service was to re-complicate the story and humanise it. The Iraq War; Mothers, Murders and Mistresses; Confessions of a Male Stripper: First Cut – TV review 2013-05-30T06:00:17Z
Yet Aesop and Orwell humanised animals as a device to tell moral tales. Animals United defeat themselves 2010-12-20T11:11:45Z
In most shows, this might be an attempt to humanise a monster, but not here. Succession's 10 best moments: from Boar on the Floor to excruciating phone sex 2020-06-08T04:00:00Z
Carter and West know that they need to humanise all the conspicuous consumption. Jay-Z & Kanye West: Watch the Throne ? review 2011-08-13T23:05:27Z
Like all Aardman films, this has a simple premise – The Great Escape with chickens – but such is the animators’ ability to humanise the birds’ plight that it turns into an improbably emotional epic. Aardman's 20 best films – ranked! 2019-09-19T04:00:00Z
We’re usually ashamed to admit to inner struggles, yet almost always, they humanise us. Why are we so hostile to others? | Oliver Burkeman 2017-02-10T05:00:00Z
This is a show whose themes have run uncomfortably close to the headlines, from the death of a black inmate to this season’s focus on immigration detention centres, subjects Lyonne wants to humanise. Natasha Lyonne: ‘There’s a fighter in me that wants to survive’ 2019-07-21T04:00:00Z
Megan: The exit interviews are always your chance to humanise yourself beyond the editing. RuPaul's Drag Race recap: season seven, episode 12 – And the Rest is Drag 2015-05-19T04:00:00Z
A bit of gossip goes a long way towards humanising the old masters. Gossip, love and tragedy: what every artist's catalogue needs 2010-08-09T13:23:00Z
So when we talk about the humanising affects of travel, we really mean of suffering? Paul Theroux on travelling 2012-06-25T11:00:00Z
He will always find a way to humanise a character – a sprinkling of vulnerability here, a dash of tenderness there. Jared Harris: My wife can't believe how I keep getting bumped off! 2019-05-01T04:00:00Z
“I love the challenge of taking these really complicated subjects and trying to humanise them,” he says. City of Ghosts director Matthew Heineman: 'Imagine seeing people crucified – every day' 2017-07-21T04:00:00Z
Hirschbiegel attracted plenty of criticism – and also awards – for Downfall, in which it was said that Bruno Ganz, an established giant of European acting, humanised Hitler to a degree with which many viewers were uncomfortable. Trailer trash 2012-02-12T00:06:12Z
Yet she also “humanises those who might otherwise be mere faces in a crowd.” Busy people 2014-11-20T05:00:00Z
The show’s charismatic actors humanise its characters, taking our attention away from the structural context. Queen Olivia Colman, an epic budget and a cast of thousands: a year behind the scenes on The Crown 2019-09-07T04:00:00Z
Sequences showing Frankenstein's creation performing acts of charity among the homeless are evidently an attempt to humanise the monster. Frankenstein's Wedding ? review 2011-03-20T17:14:01Z
For another, the band are clearly fans of Kendal's Wild Beasts – and in his not dissimilar tales of incompetent dancing and general unkemptness, singer Mike Barrett helps humanise the band considerably. This week's new live music 2013-03-09T06:00:12Z
The Midlands estate his imagination haunts is set on the edge of countryside, so wooded lanes and dense foliage skirt its borders – but they become sinister and darkly humanised in his depictions. George Shaw's prophetic art of neglect 2011-04-04T10:40:17Z
“Though the Bechdel test is, of course, an over-simplified yardstick for feminism in film, it remains a simple, straightforward way to begin the conversation about how any given movie humanises its female characters,” she wrote. Ava DuVernay backs 'DuVernay test' to monitor racial diversity in Hollywood 2016-02-01T05:00:00Z
By the time he made his first two films, Human Nature and Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, both with the screenwriter Charlie Kaufman, Gondry was extending that humanising process to established stars. How Michel Gondry became cinema's most versatile director 2010-12-09T22:30:00Z
This humanising rhetoric throughout the film serves several purposes. Rise of the Planet of the Apes ? 'Human, all too human' 2011-08-19T12:55:33Z
As suggested by @thefilmgoer: "The way she says 'Oh, you beauty!' humanises Elizabeth II more in three words than most portraits do in a thousand." Helen Mirren: five best moments 2013-02-08T17:00:19Z
Seeing these people under stress certainly does a lot to humanise them even when the situation is clearly cultivated for a bit of drama. What kind of TV cookery shows do we want to see? 2010-05-05T10:45:00Z
The effect has been to "humanise" toys more than ever before. So girls are not all as nice as pie. And your point is? 2011-01-02T00:07:17Z
Yet in doing so it can't help humanising the very figure it is out to discredit. The Autobiography of Fidel?Castro by Norberto Fuentes 2010-04-30T23:14:00Z
Ganz's performance is a real tour de force, so much so that the New Yorker critic wondered aloud if it would have the effect of humanising Hitler. Will this be the Downfall of remix culture? Don't bet on it 2010-04-29T11:13:00Z
The combination of the innocuous, sweet, humanising nature of home movies as a concept with knowing it was the Nixon administration – those two things together we knew would be interesting. Nixon's White House – caught on Super 8 2013-06-13T15:00:01Z
Throughout the film I was struck by the ways in which Caesar – a CGI chimpanzee – was humanised. Rise of the Planet of the Apes ? 'Human, all too human' 2011-08-19T12:55:33Z
So it’s nice to be humanised in fiction for once, especially in that genre. Peter Dinklage: ‘Tyrion has a sense of humour'’ 2015-08-09T04:00:00Z
The strangely touching little back stories humanise the evocation of a place that is like everywhere else, and which insists the characters there are like everyone else. Tales from the Mall by Ewan Morrison – review 2012-08-17T21:55:10Z
The child begins to affect him and really humanise him. Kyle Pruett on Fatherhood 2012-07-23T11:00:00Z
Reading it is an odd experience: there is the melancholy of having one's hero humanised, joined with renewed astonishment at the miracle he made of himself. Patrick Leigh Fermor: An Adventure by Artemis Cooper – review 2012-10-12T21:55:11Z
Fans will remember that Rose Tyler is still running around the parallel universe with her humanised Tenth Doctor. Who's in store 2013-04-10T15:22:22Z
“The concept is really to humanise people on both sides,” Vince explained to a Hollywood Radio & Television Society event this week. Vince Vaughn and Mel Gibson: the Hollywood cops out to prove all lives matter 2017-04-27T04:00:00Z
And when readers tell him – sometimes accusingly, sometimes gratefully – that his work humanises addicts, he can only answer: addicts are human. How dealing with past trauma may be the key to breaking addiction 2018-11-24T05:00:00Z
The facial reconstructions are part of the aim to humanise the story. Mary Rose museum brings public face to face with men who sailed her 2013-05-30T05:00:03Z
“It humanises him and it gives him an ability to show a connection to the American people and bypass the American media,” said Dvorchak. Chinese propaganda frames Xi's US pivot 2023-11-16T05:00:00Z
"Having the Livestrong bracelets, having the terrible kind of Nuts magazines littering everything, having the sort of dodgy clothes, it's very kind of humanising. It makes these places feel both surreal and specific." Emerald Fennell: Second film 'Saltburn' 'sticky, not easily explained' 2023-11-15T05:00:00Z
One is to promote the charitable work I do and to also promote officiating and to explain what a difficult job it is and to humanise it. 'People don't see the human side of refereeing' 2023-11-07T05:00:00Z
As is having high-achieving friends who are doing seemingly ridiculous things - it humanises the process. 'Winning gold makes the difficult times worthwhile' - Sawyers column 2023-06-19T04:00:00Z
Others quoted by the outlet said Mrs DeSantis helps "humanise" her husband and "give him a cleaner, softer image", but is "blindly ambitious", "paranoid" and feeds his worst instincts. Casey DeSantis: Who is the wife of Florida Governor Ron DeSantis? 2023-05-23T04:00:00Z
"Digital newsletters in particular, I think more than social media, really humanise you to your readers," says Ms Adams, who writes romance titles under her full name, and ghost stories as KC Adams. 'Digital newsletters really humanise you to your readers' 2022-11-13T05:00:00Z
He told the BBC's David Sillito that the series "sets out to to humanise the Royal Family and allow us to experience some of the emotion they had." The Crown: Cast defend criticism of Netflix show at London premiere 2022-11-08T05:00:00Z
With its mixture of tweedy understatement and strong feelings, it showed Queen Elizabeth having to adjust to changed times, filling in the unspoken gaps, in a way that humanised the Royal Family. Will The Crown make the young dislike the monarchy? 2022-11-07T05:00:00Z
"The referee should be out here explaining why he makes these decisions, if he made mistakes or not. That would humanise them a lot more," said Xavi. 'There is real injustice' - Xavi on Barca defeat 2022-10-04T04:00:00Z
Her constant presence at his side had lent a humanising touch to his political reforms. Obituary: Mikhail Gorbachev - Soviet leader who helped end Cold War 2022-08-30T04:00:00Z
It is hoped that the 3D images and smiling faces will humanise the missing person and the aminated characteristics and gestures will make them more memorable to passers-by. 3D images to replace traditional 'missing person' posters 2022-05-24T04:00:00Z
As for Mrs Long and Mr Eastwood, their swipes at the DUP struck more of a chord with the audience while Mr Beattie's effort to "humanise" the debate played to his strengths. NI election 2022: Leaders' debate raises energy levels of campaign 2022-05-03T04:00:00Z
Director Han Jun-hee said he sought to tell a humanising story about how the system makes deserters both victims and criminals, as well as the toll it takes on those forced to do the hunting. Popular Netflix series sparks new debate over S.Korea's military conscription 2021-09-14T04:00:00Z
Both Krishna and Bhagwat argue that there's a need to humanise the guru, and treat him like an expert in his field, rather than a god who can do no wrong. Gundecha Brothers: Famous Indian music gurus accused of sexual assault 2021-04-04T04:00:00Z
It humanised a figure whose epic life was as mazy as one of his left-footed dribbles. How Maradona's tormenting of England made him an Argentine deity 2020-11-25T05:00:00Z
At the same time, footage of rescue missions undermined the regime’s narrative and humanised its victims. How Syria's disinformation wars destroyed the co-founder of the White Helmets 2020-10-27T04:00:00Z
Eshun added that the exhibition’s aim was to humanise its subjects and encourage viewers to look more closely at the lives that the photographers are depicting. Charity images 'not doing enough' to humanise world's poor 2020-09-20T04:00:00Z
“We want to humanise this situation for everyone.” Onboarding during COVID: new hires grapple with office politics from home 2020-09-03T04:00:00Z
Some of the speakers sought to humanise the president, who is sometimes accused of lacking empathy. Trump warns Biden will 'demolish' American dream 2020-08-28T04:00:00Z
Instead it has been left to other witnesses to humanise the president. RNC 2020: Trump hailed as a benevolent chief who deserves re-election 2020-08-26T04:00:00Z
These women use their resumés as wives and mothers to soften and humanise their husbands. First ladies: voices of reason and compassion, central to US politics today 2020-08-23T04:00:00Z
What if it took a virus to reboot our workplace cultures and humanise them? Children interrupting Zoom meetings could be the reboot corporate culture needed | Catharine Lumby 2020-06-17T04:00:00Z
“It’s all about humanising the landscape” he says. Silhouetto: the visual appeal of tiny figures – a photo essay 2020-04-07T04:00:00Z
"To humanise technology, this is possible only if you have a great vision," he said. Vatican, IBM and Microsoft call for ethical AI 2020-02-28T05:00:00Z
"I didn't care about modernising the world that Emma exists in but I did care about humanising it for a modern audience," she says. Why Austen's Emma has a lot to say about 2020 2020-02-13T05:00:00Z
“Face-to-face conversation is the most human – and humanising – thing we do,” she wrote. The lost art of having a chat: what happened when I stopped texting and started talking 2020-02-09T05:00:00Z
It’s an affecting moment that speaks easily across centuries and cultures, humanising these women and their changing bodies, bringing out the volatility of pregnancy: here, now, a moment of change. Great expectations: art's struggle to depict pregnancy 2020-01-31T05:00:00Z
"We wanted to humanise the people going through those situations," says Kyla. The real lives behind 'shocking' migrant children's stories 2020-01-30T05:00:00Z
Koenraad Jonckheere, a professor of Renaissance and Baroque art at Ghent University, speculated that the overpainting was done to neutralise the "intense and humanised identification of the lamb into an expressionless animal". Art restored with 'alarmingly humanoid' lamb face 2020-01-22T05:00:00Z
Some fans are not pleased by the news, feeling it unnecessary to "humanise" an ultimately murderous character. Hunger Games prequel will reveal villain's origins 2020-01-22T05:00:00Z
News stories sensationalised the work both women did and ignored the parts of their lives that made them a person; the coverage of Jill Meagher’s murder, on the other hand, humanised her thoroughly. Rape is not 'sex', and 'broken hearts' don't cause murder. Women are dying – and language matters 2019-08-31T04:00:00Z
It humanises one of the most powerful female figures of our time in the political sphere – she remains the most trusted adviser to the Obamas. On my radar: Elaine Welteroth’s cultural highlights 2019-07-28T04:00:00Z
It humanises the situation and reminds the world of what is lost by being a divided country. Park Jongwoo’s best photograph: unearthing bodies in Korea's DMZ 2019-07-25T04:00:00Z
But the dramatisation humanises the determined, committed journalist and the impact of her work on her husband and three sons. Daphne Caruana Galizia’s son: ‘They killed my mother but they won’t stop me’ 2019-06-29T04:00:00Z
Though this tendency is decidedly on the way out in top-flight golf it was appealingly humanising and perhaps the reason that more good movies have been made about golf than most other elite sports. John Daly’s buggy gives us a joyride in front of po-faced golf authorities 2019-05-22T04:00:00Z
One consequence of humanising different perspectives is that Shakespeare’s tragedies are never quite as isolating as their alienated heroes might hope. May as Polonius, Gove as Cassius: is Brexit a Shakespearean tragedy? 2019-04-12T04:00:00Z
The apparent issue is that Anderson is too hot to play Thatcher, and her beauty will humanise the reviled politician while making Anderson herself less likable. You can still like Gillian Anderson, even if she makes a great Thatcher 2019-01-21T05:00:00Z
At the same time, social media has had other, more humanising effects. Bowel movement: the push to change the way you poo 2018-11-30T05:00:00Z
“They don’t just socialise the homeless, they humanise us.” More than a meal: the swanky Rio restaurant for homeless people 2018-11-05T05:00:00Z
“I feel ashamed when I see them strolling on a bridge in the woods like they’re old friends – it humanises a man who treats his own people as less than human.” 'Ashamed': South Koreans chilled by Kim Jong-un's cuddles 2018-09-18T04:00:00Z
Trump added: “Jimmy Fallon apologised for humanising me, the poor guy, because now he’s going to lose all of us.” Trump jokes David Lynch's career is 'over' for praising his presidency 2018-06-25T04:00:00Z
But anonymity would be anathema to the concept of “humanising” refugees. I used to distance myself from my refugee identity. Now I own it | Danijel Malbasa 2018-06-19T04:00:00Z
But he says that by refusing to attack his parents, he has been criticised by some who say he has been humanising them too much. 'Don't tell me to hate my father' 2018-06-19T04:00:00Z
Professor Stephen Hawking humanised a field of endeavour that otherwise was the preserve of geniuses and today we celebrate a remarkable life. Ashes of Stephen Hawking buried at Westminster between the graves of Charles Darwin and Isaac Newton 2018-06-15T04:00:00Z
In short, the effort to humanise computing produced the very situation that the tech humanists now consider dehumanising: a wilderness of screens where digital devices chase every last instant of our attention. Why Silicon Valley can’t fix itself 2018-05-03T04:00:00Z
"Food humanises people - it humanises your adversaries," she explains. Diplomacy on the menu: How food can shape politics 2018-04-25T04:00:00Z
She recalls racing around trying to find details to humanise the murderer; she critiques the media’s drive to find any reason besides misogyny for the tragedy. If incels’ violent misogyny had a role in Toronto, we mustn’t downplay it | Emer O’Toole 2018-04-25T04:00:00Z
A Red Velvet band member's subsequent comment that it was an "honour" to meet Mr Kim divided many in South Korea, with some accusing her of humanising a reckless leader. What's behind North Korea's surge of friendly visitors? 2018-04-17T04:00:00Z
Founded in 1972 by evangelical Christians to provide a humanising alternative to mainstream prisons, the system has now reached 49 jails in Brazil, and has branches in Costa Rica, Chile and Ecuador. 'I have no thought of escaping': inside the Brazilian prisons with no guards | Jo Griffin 2018-04-02T04:00:00Z
To guide us out of that wilderness, tech humanists say we need more humanising. Why Silicon Valley can’t fix itself 2018-05-03T04:00:00Z
That’s why we have a Roseanne reboot and why, every week, there seems to be a story in the papers humanising the Nazi next door. Hand over my social media account to get a US visa? No thank you | Arwa Mahdawi 2018-03-31T04:00:00Z
The San Francisco stop-off was intended, like the visit to the children’s hospital in Pyonyang, to humanise diplomatic relations between two countries that were entirely unfamiliar to each other. Two minutes to midnight: did the US miss its chance to stop North Korea’s nuclear programme? 2018-03-30T04:00:00Z
For some critics, the comments by Mr Kim were little short of a careful and canny exercise in soft power and humanising an unreadable figure at a critical moment. What's behind North Korea's surge of friendly visitors? 2018-04-17T04:00:00Z
Poignantly, Stephen Hawking’s death at the age of 76 humanises him again. The world saw Stephen Hawking as an oracle. In fact, he was wonderfully human | Philip Ball 2018-03-15T04:00:00Z
Rather than trying to humanise technology, then, we should be trying to democratise it. Why Silicon Valley can’t fix itself 2018-05-03T04:00:00Z
In the eponymous film Churchill, the former prime minister is humanised. Empire strikes back: why former colonies don't need Britain after Brexit | Griffith Review 2018-03-09T05:00:00Z
"This is a problem Theresa May has often found but it's interesting to see that her recent apology for the NHS crisis had been notably humanised," Stone says. 'I'm sorry' - but how do you spot a fake apology? 2018-01-18T05:00:00Z
My own path over the past two decades – prompted in reaction to my experience with him – has been to help business leaders become more wholly human, and to humanise workplaces. Fear now rules Trump’s US. It’s what drives the president too | Tony Schwartz 2018-01-18T05:00:00Z
"It is important to tell this story as it humanises a role that very few people think about when thinking about this horrific period," he adds. The Tattooist of Auschwitz - and his secret love 2018-01-07T05:00:00Z
On the contrary, “humanising” technology has long been its central ambition and the source of its power. Why Silicon Valley can’t fix itself 2018-05-03T04:00:00Z
As Mayo’s ideas caught hold, companies attempted to humanise their workplaces. From inboxing to thought showers: how business bullshit took over 2017-11-23T05:00:00Z
More significantly, contemporary socialism repudiates the vaguely humanised capitalism marketed as the third way. Socialism with a spine: the only 21st century alternative | John Quiggin 2017-10-08T04:00:00Z
The face of a man who lived 4,000 years ago was reconstructed using 3-D digital technology to "humanise" him, a museum has said. Derbyshire Bronze Age farmer's skeleton 'humanised' - BBC News 2017-07-15T04:00:00Z
When it comes to the type of humour you might want to try out on your workmates, Prof Schweitzer says that self-deprecation "can be effective" because it humanises the joke-teller. Is humour the way to keep an office happy? - BBC News 2017-07-05T04:00:00Z
It was precisely by developing a “humanised” form of computing that entrepreneurs such as Steve Jobs brought computing into millions of users’ everyday lives. Why Silicon Valley can’t fix itself 2018-05-03T04:00:00Z
She was often photographed by her husband and mentor, the photographer and gallerist Alfred Stieglitz – but knowing what she liked to eat goes some way to humanise her beyond his powerful black and white images. Georgia O’Keeffe, health food devotee: the pioneer of modernism’s favourite recipes 2017-06-26T04:00:00Z
According to Hamad International Airport's official description, the bear is a "playful piece that humanises the space around it and reminds travellers of childhood or precious objects from home". Five facts about Qatar you might not know - BBC News 2017-06-05T04:00:00Z
"Dad preaching good behaviour to a wayward son is great for optics. There's nothing like a human interest narrative to humanise the brains of a war on drugs." Sebastian 'Baste' Duterte: The rebel surfer son of a president - BBC News 2017-05-19T04:00:00Z
"What we see with the men in our care in their approach to animals is that it softens them and it humanises them," he told the BBC. Drug-addicted python rehabilitated by Australian prisoners - BBC News 2017-04-11T04:00:00Z
The impulse to humanise computing enabled Silicon Valley to enter every crevice of our lives. Why Silicon Valley can’t fix itself 2018-05-03T04:00:00Z
In humanising rather than caricaturing those involved, we hope to gain a more honest, possibly more complex, picture of what is happening. Beyond the blade: the truth about knife crime in Britain 2017-03-28T04:00:00Z
As a device it was no more humanising than Berkeley’s favoured shots of disembodied legs, busts, feet or arms. A kaleidoscope of legs: Busby Berkeley's flamboyant dance fantasies 2017-03-23T04:00:00Z
Al-Thani is trying to humanise Islam and broaden perceptions of it in the US. The beauty of art can counter Islamophobia – but it won't be easy 2017-03-08T05:00:00Z
When early on Rasmussen delivers a savage beating for no clear reason, we guess that the story will see him humanised by his contact with the soldiers he appears to despise. Oscars 2017: what's up for best foreign language film? - BBC News 2017-02-17T05:00:00Z
This belief guided the generations who built the “humanised” machines that became the basis for the industry’s enormous power. Why Silicon Valley can’t fix itself 2018-05-03T04:00:00Z
It’s humanising because it puts incredibly famous people in positions with which we’re all familiar. Friendships, romance, humanity: mind-reading tech will kill it all | Catherine Shoard 2017-02-07T05:00:00Z
He said: "Refugees are productive members of society. It's important we humanise the experience of others." Trump ban: US sports figures criticise ban on immigrants 2017-01-31T05:00:00Z
The work inevitably raises the spectre of intelligent animals with humanised brains and also the potential for bizarre hybrid creatures to be accidentally released into the wild. First human-pig 'chimera' created in milestone study 2017-01-26T05:00:00Z
I was trying to humanise them, give them relatable qualities, such as “this guy likes jazz”. How we made Transformers 2017-01-17T05:00:00Z
Yeah, hanging out with his best mate for a few years has had a slightly softening, humanising effect on Sherlock. Martin Freeman: ‘Ricky will always make me laugh doing Brent’ 2017-01-01T05:00:00Z
"I hope my visit will shine a light on the situation, humanise the people that are there," she explains. The Calais conversation that left Lily Allen in tears - BBC News 2016-10-11T04:00:00Z
Mr Parker’s performance is admirable, as are his efforts to humanise both slaves and masters and his portrayal of the uses and abuses of faith. Blood on the leaves 2016-10-04T04:00:00Z
Even his outlandish gaffes are said to humanise him, emphasising his status as outsider and non-politician. Hidden faultline: how Trump v Clinton is laying bare America's class divide 2016-10-02T04:00:00Z
Politicians everywhere use social media to humanise themselves and connect directly with voters. The velvet glove frays 2016-09-29T04:00:00Z
Prof Kendall said trying to stop the practice sent an important signal about "humanising and ethicising and professionalising" mental health services in England. Face-down restraint continuing in NHS - BBC News 2016-09-21T04:00:00Z
If the films I re-enacted as a kid could humanise mutants and aliens, maybe there was hope for us. Typecast as a terrorist | Riz Ahmed | The Long Read 2016-09-15T04:00:00Z
To help build rapport, Mr Butler organised a basketball game involving officers and churchmen, a humanising idea that he wants to extend to other cities. Progress and its discontents 2016-07-14T04:00:00Z
Much as Mission: Impossible III humanised Tom Cruise, 11.22.63 showcases a credible traditional leading man performance by James Franco. JJ Abrams: ‘Star Wars fans are passionate and obsessive. And I’m one of them’ 2016-04-30T04:00:00Z
Photograph: Thames & Hudson Christian art has often dwelt on the goriest aspects of the crucifixion, not merely to shock but to humanise Christ. Andres Serrano on Donald Trump: 'I never speak ill of people who've posed for me' 2016-04-03T04:00:00Z
Sinking Water, which takes its name from a cockler's emergency call on 5 February 2004, would "humanise" what happened, writer Daniel York said. Morecambe Bay cockling disaster to become musical - BBC News 2016-02-25T05:00:00Z
But Jimmy Burns, who has written a biography of the current pope, Pope Francis, said it did humanise the former pope. Pope John Paul II letters reveal 32-year relationship with woman 2016-02-15T05:00:00Z
And finding humanised robots attractive is more common than we at first may think. The rise of the romantic robot - BBC News 2016-02-13T05:00:00Z
In that way, it humanised a crisis that for many seemed rather remote and abstract. Alan Kurdi’s aunt: ‘My dead nephew’s picture saved thousands of lives’ - BBC News 2016-01-01T05:00:00Z
The film's director wants his picture to humanise migrants who often appear as anonymous statistics in news reports. Migrants' story told in feature film - BBC News 2015-11-18T05:00:00Z
However, her project to humanise homelessness suddenly became very personal when her own father ended up living rough. Weekend Edition: The week's best reads - BBC News 2015-11-06T05:00:00Z
“If he managed to have a good, strong emotional relationship, without breaking his vows, it humanises him. From an ethical point of view, one can’t hold anything against him,” Burns said. Pope John Paul II letters reveal 32-year relationship with woman 2016-02-15T05:00:00Z
The attraction of the exotic "other", the excitement of danger and control, as well as the egotistical curiosity of humanising a machine so that it thinks and feels like we do. The rise of the romantic robot - BBC News 2016-02-13T05:00:00Z
But her project to humanise homelessness suddenly became very personal when her own father ended up living rough. I found my father living on the street - BBC News 2015-11-04T05:00:00Z
It makes it desperately hard to humanise the black-shirted machine, which is possibly the intention. Richie McCaw prepares to leave black hole in heart of New Zealand 2015-10-29T04:00:00Z
The majority of people think that it’s important to look out for an animal’s welfare, but there isn’t the same desire to humanise them.” The public dissection of a zoo’s lion is essential viewing for meat-eaters | Helen Russell 2015-10-15T04:00:00Z
"These red flags and potential lines of humanising and mitigating information were never developed. Additionally, no life history chronology has ever been completed for Mr Nunley nor has any in-depth social history ever been done. " For one Missouri lawyer, eight clients executed in 18 months - BBC News 2015-09-02T04:00:00Z
It’s what we strive to do on our science channel, SciQ—to humanise science in a way that meets girls and women where they are. MacGyvering a Female Engineer Onto Television 2015-08-26T04:00:00Z
But his style seems to work against any intention to humanise his subjects. A latter-day freak show? Bruce Gilden's extreme portraits are relentlessly cruel 2015-08-19T04:00:00Z
He says that many self-driving car companies are now actively trying to humanise their algorithms to match the way people drive, slowing right down for curves, for instance, or hesitating at traffic lights. Google's self-driving cars are accident-prone – but it may not be their fault 2015-06-28T04:00:00Z
Its founder, Simon Walsh, said he wanted to "humanise" digital education through individual online tuition. Eton launches online lessons for China - BBC News 2015-06-18T04:00:00Z
She fought with a friend, who accused her of humanising him, of suffering from Stockholm syndrome. The odd couple: why an apartheid activist joined forces with a murderer 2015-06-06T04:00:00Z
Professor Temple is also not entirely convinced that the photo ops succeed in their aim of humanising politicians to voters. Election 2015: Is there any sense behind political photo ops? - BBC News 2015-04-25T04:00:00Z
Liberia isn't the US, however, and while Mr Romney assuredly needed a humanising touch as well, the downside of playing up his role as pater familias was minimal compared to the challenges facing Mrs Clinton. Hillary Clinton's grandmother gambit 2015-02-19T05:00:00Z
"It humanises people who we would have kept our distance from, out of fear that something could happen," Sao Paulo resident Luan Drezza says. A page for the homeless 2014-12-10T05:00:00Z
Without seeking to mitigate their crimes by humanising them we wanted to cut them down to human size. What do dictators like to eat? 2014-12-04T05:00:00Z
It was surely not the jihadists' aim, but this humanises and individualises the men as more than just further evidence of horror in Syria. Islamic State video draws attention to Syrian victims 2014-11-20T05:00:00Z
Geffen recommends trying to make eye contact if you take the middle of the lane, so as to humanise the interaction. Would these five changes actually help cyclists? 2014-11-04T05:00:00Z
The humanising effect of having youngsters in tow during a campaign appearance isn't limited to female candidates, of course. Hillary Clinton's grandmother gambit 2015-02-19T05:00:00Z
How did Mexican illustrators use art to humanise missing students? Trends of the week - in 60 seconds 2014-11-01T04:00:00Z
Setting aside the curious charge that the Palestinian terrorists, who were human beings and are compared to beasts by a major character, are unnecessarily humanised, protesters say the opera romanticises terrorism. We took four New Yorkers to The Death of Klinghoffer: what was their verdict? 2014-10-21T04:00:00Z
Morris says the opera is a tragedy that shows the human cost of an old conflict, and says those who complain that it humanises Klinghoffer’s killers miss the point. Rudy Giuliani expected to join protest against Met's Klinghoffer opera 2014-10-19T04:00:00Z
He tried to photograph recognisable things, to humanise the scenes and to make them look less remote. Weekendish: The best of the week's reads 2014-10-10T04:00:00Z
“There are plenty of examples of people where you’re able to enjoy the literature before interviews. Unless people go: ‘Oh God, Chaucer, he needed to be humanised. Richard Ayoade: ‘Shyness can be interpreted as a kind of aggression’ 2014-10-05T04:00:00Z
But what made the evidence in the Dutch case so vital was that it humanised the victims. The death list that names 5,000 victims 2014-08-25T04:00:00Z
The people are humanised, learn something about them. Nude photographs of the Dinka: art or exploitation? 2014-07-16T04:00:00Z
Ruins inspire the imagination, incite pleasantly melancholy thoughts, and humanise a landscape. The ruin-hunters who drove a car down Mexico's forgotten railways 2014-06-11T04:00:00Z
Amid controversy over Australia's asylum seeker policies, one man is urging people to humanise the debate. Australians say sorry to asylum seekers via new website 2014-02-28T02:39:59Z
It is the sudden plunge in reaction at a point just before a face is fully humanised. Why we're afraid of 'zombie' faces 2013-10-29T09:37:05Z
"Sensitive testimony that might humanise Bo Xilai or cast Beijing in a bad light has been scrubbed from the public transcripts of the former politburo member's corruption trial," insiders tell Hong Kong's . China media: Bo Xilai 2013-08-26T05:30:21Z
Here's another example of photography that humanises its subjects, in this case drug addicts. Nude photographs of the Dinka: art or exploitation? 2014-07-16T04:00:00Z
"Dress codes are more relaxed and that feels at first sight like something very humanising," says Chris Grey, professor of organisation studies at Royal Holloway University. Why did offices become like the home? 2013-08-02T02:32:09Z
It also humanises the interaction, so hopefully people will be more understanding. Video debating site hopes to help banish trolls from net 2013-07-21T08:00:00Z
"That, in many ways, humanised Andy for the public and the press." 'There were tears, it was horrible' 2013-06-21T13:43:16Z
Also we want to focus on the individual, and these expressions help to humanise a problem. Does a child die of hunger every 10 seconds? 2013-06-18T00:48:21Z
Tony Blair's former spin doctor Lance Price says the footage from St Paul's will "not do him any harm" as it was an authentic, humanising moment. Why the fuss over George Osborne's tears? 2013-04-18T13:09:55Z
Samsung made intuitive, humanising software front and centre of the Galaxy S4, which is launched last week at a lavish event in . Samsung's Secret To Innovating: An Extraordinary Grip On Components 2013-03-19T20:42:48Z
It could be a very hopeful, or slightly desperate, attempt to humanise and rescue an otherwise depressing supermarket experience, increasingly challenged by online shopping. Is a Tesco Giraffe still a Giraffe? When nice little companies get bought up 2013-03-14T13:00:01Z
That, in many ways, humanised Andy for the public and the press. 'There were tears, it was horrible' 2013-06-21T13:43:16Z
To humanise the crisis, he mentioned janitors cleaning up the empty Congress building after the departure of senators and representatives as the kind of people who would suffer. Obama blames Republicans before signing 'arbitrary' sequester order 2013-03-01T19:40:04Z
Sometimes the old-fashioned, humanised ways of doing business really are the best. Premier League: 10 talking points from this weekend's action 2013-02-04T08:54:00Z
Cash successfully humanised the prison population and gave them a voice. What Johnny Cash did for prison reform 2013-01-23T00:06:37Z
The players, like poor old Bond, have been humanised, dragged out into the light by snooker's attempts to scrub up and become Just Another Sport. Ronnie O'Sullivan, snooker's last James Bond, will surely be back 2012-11-09T19:30:55Z
Here are nine more teary moments, mixing heartfelt humanising triumphs with some embarrassing explosions of waterworks. Top 10 crying moments from Obama to Gazza 2012-11-09T15:18:56Z
Mr Romney's wife Ann is expected to seek to "humanise" her husband, a former business star who remains something of an unknown quantity to many voters. Republicans ready to crown Romney 2012-08-28T15:02:44Z
Charles Dickens, in 1854, in his popular weekly Household Words, pleaded with economists to humanise their discipline. The cost of living timebomb that's ticking for us all 2012-08-26T01:02:00Z
The doodles are a way to "humanise the home page", says Hom. Who's behind Google’s doodles? 2012-08-12T23:50:15Z
Her very presence created an atmosphere that softened and humanised him. A Gamble with Life 2012-04-11T02:00:33.587Z
He became the treasurer of a society for the humanising of Russian prisons; but when Nicholas became Czar in 1825 Venning’s work became more difficult, though the Emperor was sympathetic.  The Life of George Borrow 2012-01-26T03:00:14.707Z
It was that quality which humanised Achilles, who without it would have been a brute. The Life and Writings of Henry Fuseli, Volume I (of 3) 2012-01-18T03:00:13.193Z
The spirit of the new comedy as it existed in Greece, was not, on the whole, calculated to elevate, but it certainly was capable of humanising the Roman character. The Roman Poets of the Republic 2012-01-15T03:00:14.187Z
We have now humanised our practice, but we have not purified our land of all its veiled symbols. Ancient Pagan and Modern Christian Symbolism With an Essay on Baal Worship, On The Assyrian Sacred "Grove," And Other 2012-01-05T03:00:28.663Z
Here it was that the curiosity, as I have called it, of Shady Hill was justified—so did its action prove largely humanising. Notes of a Son and Brother 2011-12-29T03:00:14.087Z
They had not, moreover, the humanising passion for song and dance that Andalusia knew.  The Life of George Borrow 2012-01-26T03:00:14.707Z
That power of enlivening the inanimate, which humanises the pump, representing Father Mathew at a small party in "The Comic Almanack" of 1844, exasperates this pot and bids it strike home. George Cruikshank 2011-12-18T03:00:20.137Z
And while the male transmitted to offspring his virile fighting and destructive qualities, woman tempered and humanised these by incorporating with them her milder traits and artistries of peace. Feminism and Sex-Extinction 2011-11-11T03:00:29.100Z
It is not only the humanising influence of the garden, it is its democratising influence too. Leaves in the Wind 2011-10-28T02:00:25.937Z
Yet the fact is that so long as divinity was attributed to and felt in trees, logs of wood, stones, and beasts, people shrank from humanising their forms as from an act of godlessness. Human, All-Too-Human, Part II 2011-10-26T02:00:29.773Z
At Savernake there is nothing so humanised as the pig, even of the old type; you may roam for long hours and see no man and no domestic animal. Birds and Man 2011-10-20T02:00:25.513Z
Yet a child coming under the humanising influences of culture soon gets far away from the level of the savage. Children's Ways 2011-08-11T02:00:16.473Z
It is not too much to say that it is humanised, redeemed. Feminism and Sex-Extinction 2011-11-11T03:00:29.100Z
But so far as social life is really adapted to the advancement of intellect, the humanising and refinement of our sympathies, it promotes an improvement which cannot but spread beyond the immediate circle. Social Rights And Duties Addresses to Ethical Societies Vol II 2011-08-05T02:00:45.557Z
Do not let us blame him for this, we should rather remember his achievement in humanising the heavenly host than his failure to make it human without self-consciousness. Murillo 2011-08-02T02:00:19.967Z
The difference Edwards made, he believes, was to humanise this rationality a little, to always remember that their users were people, not programmers. Douglas Edwards: I was Google employee No 59 2011-07-30T23:04:10Z
A liberal and enlightened spirit, and a love of all the arts that humanise mankind, seem to have been hereditary in this princely family. Visits and Sketches at Home and Abroad with Tales and Miscellanies Now First Collected Vol. I (of 3) 2011-07-24T02:00:11.383Z
So that—War over—they find it well-nigh unendurable to return to the more refined and humanising womanly employments of their pre-war days. Feminism and Sex-Extinction 2011-11-11T03:00:29.100Z
And because they do refer to it, the teaching of them should be spiritualised, moralised, humanised; it ought to acquire the concreteness of philosophy, and therefore never ignore the exigencies of art and of religion. The Reform of Education 2011-07-18T02:00:21.207Z
"The world has humanised him, made him fonder of us." The Old Blood 2011-06-13T02:00:22.897Z
Much of Swift himself, softened and humanised, something of Fielding, whom he justly regarded as a model, and a great deal of Hogarth may be detected in Thackeray. The Age of Tennyson 2011-05-31T02:00:36.607Z
The gods of Babylonian mythology still belonged to heaven and not to earth, and its heroes are men and not humanised gods. The Religions of Ancient Egypt and Babylonia 2011-04-14T02:00:46.297Z
The more delicate, sympathetic, and humanising amenities have no appeal for them. Feminism and Sex-Extinction 2011-11-11T03:00:29.100Z
By using colours and naming his vehicles, it humanised the trucks. How did Eddie Stobart become so famous? 2011-04-01T12:55:39Z
To the comfort which I have just mentioned, I added that of taking off my beard, as well as changing my linen, and my people followed the humanising example. Voyages from Montreal Through the Continent of North America to the Frozen and Pacific Oceans in 1789 and 1793 Vol. II 2011-03-24T02:00:13.247Z
Perhaps he hopes for some comments on his desire for "fair play"; or at least to simply humanise his image. Jeremy Hunt: Why I did not block News Corporation buyout of BSkyB 2011-03-21T07:00:09Z
And also rather dangerous because they inevitably humanise Hitler, which I suppose is why it is as good as banned in Germany. Nazi craze 2011-03-17T09:13:05Z
Even the bloodthirsty Indian appears less of a savage when engaged in a compassionate act, and the wild desperado I had fallen in with seemed softened and humanised by the service he was rendering me. Tales from Blackwood Volume 5 2011-03-13T03:00:21.980Z
Everything was in perfect order, and had the humanised air of use and occupation which nothing but use and occupation can impart to senseless objects. Anna of the Five Towns 2011-03-08T03:00:38.117Z
For a single second something had disturbed the imperturbability of the Marquis's countenance—it seemed, indeed, as though some strange finger had humanised it, had softened the eyes and drawn apart the lips. The Wicked Marquis 2011-02-24T03:01:06.123Z
Shall we extol the Geneva Convention, which humanised warfare, as a fruit of advanced culture; and yet within our kingdom, like barbarians, without any consideration for the opponent, fly one upon another with dishonourable weapons? Socialism and the Social Movement in the 19th Century 2011-02-09T03:00:48.103Z
It was a very tense time but to get them all together across the table eating lunch really humanised the situation. The food of love 2011-01-22T13:00:37Z
The digitised archive will help to humanise views of JFK, says the library's director. Entire JFK library to go online 2011-01-13T12:24:52Z
This was made easier when the unearthly phenomenon had a healing or saving function in the everyday material world; miracle then re-established its ancient identity with medicine, and both of them were humanised. Character and Opinion in the United States 2010-12-20T17:12:15.253Z
He goes about his task of persuading and humanising as gaily as a man might set out to laugh at a comedy. A Cursory History of Swearing
He could not say the creed without feeling that the centre of faith was the natural centre of all humanising influence. The Formation of Christendom, Volume VII
The opinion of the powerful and enlightened class, with rare exceptions, made no effort to purify and humanise the grossness of the masses. Roman Society from Nero to Marcus Aurelius
So the Milesians were fetched from “Spain” and endowed with the main characteristics, only more humanised, of the People of Dana. Myths & Legends of the Celtic Race
No. Daughter to-day of tradition and no longer of productive nature, humanised and harmonised, she has a still firmer hold on the heart. Underground Man
"His paramount aim was to make the world better by the humanising influences of literature." Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol. 98, June 21 1890
Since the Incarnation we have actually needed help from the other side, to prevent us from humanising our conceptions over-much. The Expositor's Bible: The Book of Exodus
The Y.M.C.A. has a very thorough understanding of men, and with that sympathy which has characterised its work throughout has brought to the National Employment Exchange system an element which has humanised the movement. The Romance of the Red Triangle The story of the coming of the red triangle and the service rendered by the Y.M.C.A. to the sailors and soldiers of the British Empire
The humanising of English law long steeped in blood and tears, is less attributable to bench and bar than to the books of Jeremy Bentham. The Revival of Irish Literature Addresses by Sir Charles Gavan Duffy, K.C.M.G, Dr. George Sigerson, and Dr. Douglas Hyde
The homely truthfulness of his art, though it may occasionally result in details somewhat shocking to the reverent mind, was, nevertheless, well adapted to set forth the humanising side of Scripture incidents. Great Masters in Painting: Rembrandt van Rijn
In this age of advertising, Literature, at a low ebb, Needs a little "humanising." Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol. 98, June 21 1890
She achieves this not without aid from the communication with the inferior Creature, which often leads her thoughts to revolve upon the past with a tender and humanising influence that exalts rather than depresses her. The Poetical Works of William Wordsworth, Volume IV (of 8)
And yet it was love for another—that passion so humanising in its influence, so calculated to assuage the stormy and vindictive traits of even a savage nature—it was love that made them thus. Arthur O'Leary His Wanderings And Ponderings In Many Lands
The terrible preachers of the Sixteen,—the monks who went armed with muskets in the processions of the League—are suddenly humanised, and become gentle. Priests, Women, and Families
I saw myself surrounded by barbarians or half-savages, not yet much more humanised than those, at whose sacrifices of men we are struck with horror. Tales from the German Comprising specimens from the most celebrated authors
To me the Christian Christ seems not so much a humanised God as an incomprehensibly sinless being, neither God nor man. Modern Substitutes for Christianity
The mother is like a wild beast, whose nature and habits cannot now be subdued; but her cubs, her little ones, may still be tamed and humanised. Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 61, No. 377, March 1847
And, in a manner as it would seem of action and re-action, the goddess became humanised and the woman deified. Of Six Mediæval Women To Which Is Added A Note on Mediæval Gardens
The poet's heart, humanised to utmost tenderness by the beauty of its own merciful thoughts, extends its pity to the poor beasts of prey. Recreations of Christopher North, Volume I (of 2)
I call bringing children into the world a codfish act which causes an overflux of vulgar little earthlings, if the process be not humanised and spiritualised. The Kempton-Wace Letters
The case was analogous to that of an ogress balked of her meal, after going to no end of expense in humanised cream and such-like. When Ghost Meets Ghost
A countryside must be humanised, and that through many successive generations, before it can lay hold upon your heart by its loving-kindness, and draw moisture from your eyes. The Record of Nicholas Freydon An Autobiography
One result of all this was that Finn became greatly humanised. Finn The Wolfhound
Children would not only benefit thereby, but the home with all its civilising, humanising influences would develop more rapidly. Religion & Sex Studies in the Pathology of Religious Development
They maintain a human nature in Christ, but they do not humanise His person. Monophysitism Past and Present A Study in Christology
Political economy, he thought, would have to be recast and humanised. War Letters of a Public-School Boy
But, even in the late 'seventies, it possessed that sort of smoothness, that comparative trimness and humanised air of comfort, which only the lapse of years can give. The Record of Nicholas Freydon An Autobiography
This law of evolution we cannot overthrow, we can only humanise its action. British Socialism An Examination of Its Doctrines, Policy, Aims and Practical Proposals
The military profession became surrounded with all the ceremonies and paraphernalia of religion, without being in the least humanised by the alliance. Religion & Sex Studies in the Pathology of Religious Development
Amongst moderns the danger of idealising the human is greater than that of humanising the divine. Monophysitism Past and Present A Study in Christology
Not only is Nature beautiful, she is humanised by the works of Man. Appearances Being Notes of Travel
Her blind devotion to him humanises 339 both her shrewdness and her selfishness. When Winter Comes to Main Street
Such reading is excellent as a means of humanising and making anarchists of refined people, but how could you appeal to the rebellious workers with such books as these? An Anarchist Woman
A still more humanising portion of their tastes is their passion for music. Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 61, No. 380, June, 1847
Voice lovely still, but not quite under her control always, and a tiny roughness in it that humanises, somehow—it was too clear before, though that sounds absurd. Margarita's Soul The Romantic Recollections of a Man of Fifty
But even as she looks, something of the man creeps into Philip's eyes, humanising them. When the Birds Begin to Sing
In famous cases of shipwreck, it is very rare indeed that any person of any humanising education or refinement resorts to this dreadful means of prolonging life. The Letters of Charles Dickens Vol. 1, 1833-1856
True art has gone much further in deifying humanity than in humanising divinity. Fair Margaret A Portrait
In such a place, men become unbelievers like savages, because removed from all humanising influences, and booksellers can carry on a trade in blasphemy. The English Utilitarians, Volume II (of 3) James Mill
Moreover, the humanising influence of the tidy English wife might be seen in the improvement of his outward or artificial man. The International Monthly, Volume 3, No. 1, April, 1851
The squire humanised, influenced by him—he knew that was the image in Meyrick's mind; he remembered with a quiet scorn its presence in his own. Robert Elsmere
The defects of his work are obvious—its want of method, its disdain of classification, its abuse of hypotheses, its humanising of the animal world, its pomp of style. A History of French Literature Short Histories of the Literatures of the World: II.
The Gregs had always been distinguished for their efforts to humanise the semi-barbarous population that the extraordinary development of the cotton industry was then attracting to Lancashire. Critical Miscellanies (Vol. 3 of 3) Essay 7: W.R. Greg: A Sketch
After securing Lemon's favour Captain Howard drew scores of comic humanised beasts and birds in the form of initials and decorations. The History of "Punch"
It is good that they should be loved, and if simplification and amplification humanise them I can stand the charge with philosophy. Gudrid the Fair A Tale of the Discovery of America
His life was holy, his temper calm and gentle, and all his works humanising and instructive. Grace Darling Heroine of the Farne Islands
Floriculture is amongst the most innocent and humanising of all pleasures, and everything which tends to diffuse such pursuits amongst those who have too few amusements, is a point gained for happiness and for virtue. The Lost Dahlia
Can her loss after this lapse of well nigh two score years have left anything, at most, but a humanising tenderness in my memory? Recollections With Photogravure Portrait of the Author and a number of Original Letters, of which one by George Meredith and another by Robert Louis Stevenson are reproduced in facsimile
Years had passed by since they had been called upon to take active service of a pacific and humanising nature in the ranks of the orchestra. The Violin Its Famous Makers and Their Imitators
At least, while there are many charitable names among the wealthier Jews, there are no names that stand for an actual, practical humanising of industry, its methods and its returns. The Jew and American Ideals
Presently Bounce’s owner appeared, and went through something of a similar performance—humanised, however, and with more of dignity. Jeff Benson, or the Young Coastguardsman
The certain approach of death had already humanised and softened his flinty heart. The King's Own
The meeting with Sarah humanised me, and every feeling of revenge was chased from my memory. Jacob Faithful
Attention was turned to the subject; its humanising effects were recognised, and parties met in several places for the practice of chamber music. The Violin Its Famous Makers and Their Imitators
An unnatural and unhealthy mode of life, cut off from the sweet and humanising influences of nature, has produced an unnatural and unhealthy mentality, to which we shall find no parallels in the past. Spirit and Music
The first Christian settlement formed here was in 1561, when the Jesuits founded an Aldea, and collected and humanised some of the natives. Journal of a Voyage to Brazil And Residence There During Part of the Years 1821, 1822, 1823
That lofty independence needs to be humanised by grateful acceptance of the refreshment of human sympathy even though we can do without it. Expositions of Holy Scripture Second Corinthians, Galatians, and Philippians Chapters I to End. Colossians, Thessalonians, and First Timothy.
I suppose we are all agreed that true religion has a very humanising and refining influence. True to his Colours The Life that Wears Best
Philanthropic reform still remained with the evangelical school that so powerfully helped to sweep away the slave trade, cleansed the prisons, and aided in humanising the criminal law. The Life of William Ewart Gladstone, Vol. 1 (of 3) 1809-1859
In his treatment of the gods, Euripides can hardly be quoted as an example of the humanising tendency. Religion and Art in Ancient Greece
It was a fine, glad, good-humoured smile, and humanised her wonderful eyes just as though you clothed a ghost in flesh, making the spectre natural and commonplace. The Honour of the Flag
They had not, moreover, the humanising passion for song and dance that Andalusia knew. George Borrow and His Circle Wherein May Be Found Many Hitherto Unpublished Letters Of Borrow And His Friends
Whether it was from unexpectedly meeting with a moderately humanised countenance suddenly appearing among those I observed daily around me, or that I had met with a face exquisitely lovely, I will not determine. Confessions of an Etonian
If we like to put it so, he was steadfast for making politics more human, and no branch of civilised life needs humanising more. The Life of William Ewart Gladstone, Vol. 1 (of 3) 1809-1859
In a large room of this manor house, furnished with a luxuriant elegance one would not have expected in a region so far from humanising influences, sat two men. The Triumphs of Eugène Valmont
So once it would have been,—'tis so no more I have submitted to a new control: A power is gone, which nothing can restore; A deep distress hath humanised my soul. The Golden Treasury Of the Best Songs and Lyrical Poems in the English Language
Depend upon it, we lose much humanising feeling, much true refinement, much of the poetry of life, in parting with the roughness of our Summer Lodgings. Chambers's Edinburgh Journal, No. 439 Volume 17, New Series, May 29, 1852
On Lord Cromer, on the other hand, time produced a humanising and mellowing effect. Some Diversions of a Man of Letters
If I were a statesman instead of a Loafer, I reckon I should try might and main to humanise those neglected folk—and they are neglected—before they teach some of us a terrific lesson. The Chequers Being the Natural History of a Public-House, Set Forth in a Loafer's Diary
He accepted in their fullness both ideals, and so spiritualised his humanism and humanised his idealism. Among Famous Books
It is said by those who have seen it to be particularly brutal; but it was never a very humanising amusement when practised by the English nobility not such a very long time back. Spanish Life in Town and Country
The gods who came to be regarded as culture-deities appear from their names to be of various origins: some are humanised totems, others are in origin deities of vegetation or local natural phenomena.  Celtic Religion in Pre-Christian Times
The former naïve joy of living, embodied in the Rhine-daughters, and their not yet humanised song, which seems to come direct from the heart of nature, is destroyed by the theft of the Rhine-gold. The Evolution of Love
Over the grey desolation of that cruel North Sea no humanising agency ever travelled to soften Jim Billings and his like; but there were many agencies at work to convert the men into brutes. The Chequers Being the Natural History of a Public-House, Set Forth in a Loafer's Diary
With every grain of intellect and ingenuity that I can scrape together I am going to devise a means of humanising the tea interval. Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol. 159, 1920-09-15
Painting and architecture, alas, are not the whole of life; the fine arts are only the flowers of existence; they are useful as humanising elements; but they are not indispensable.  Masques & Phases
Only he states it so abstractly that to people familiar with Browning's concrete and humanised dialectic it seems cold and artificial. Letters from Mesopotamia in 1915 and January, 1916, from Robert Palmer, who was killed in the Battle of Um El Hannah, June 21, 1916, aged 27 years
He might have replied, that it is easier for a nation to renounce Christianity in name, than to obliterate altogether the traces of its humanising influence. The History of Napoleon Buonaparte
“A volume which will be welcomed as an honest and tolerant attempt to humanise economics, and to point the way to a freer, worthier life.” The Digger Movement in the Days of the Commonwealth As Revealed in the Writings of Gerrard Winstanley, the Digger, Mystic and Rationalist, Communist and Social Reformer
You have brought new things to me, the soft, humanising stimulus of a new hope, a new joy. Nobody's Man
She saw at once the utter futility of any attempt to civilise or humanise the degraded beings she associated with; and so she took to the children. Chambers's Edinburgh Journal, No. 429 Volume 17, New Series, March 20, 1852
The schoolmaster without this humanising virtue never yet won your love and admiration, and to miss your affection and loyalty is to lose one of life's chiefest delights. The Story of Baden-Powell 'The Wolf That Never Sleeps'
The tone of all members of the caravan, as I have mentioned, is now much humanised. Narrative of a Mission to Central Africa Performed in the Years 1850-51, Volume 1 Under the Orders and at the Expense of Her Majesty's Government
It would still be advisable to "humanise the governors of prisons, to civilise the warders, and to Christianise the Chaplains." Oscar Wilde, His Life and Confessions Volume 2
"The sound was a greatly magnified and humanised edition of what I have several times heard in the drawing-room below the dressing-room, and which has been heard by several of the party together." The Alleged Haunting of B—— House
He made what we consider mistakes, as what man does not who is a product of a period of passionate revivals of human and humanising ideals?—but how few they are! Richard Wagner Composer of Operas
He puts his heart into his subject, writes as he feels, and humanises whatever he touches. Lectures on the English Poets Delivered at the Surrey Institution
It was a room humanised by the hand of a kind and clever woman. Married Life The True Romance
In general, my aim has been to aid in humanising the Irish Question. The Open Secret of Ireland
I have been wrong in holding religion to be the great cause why men are cruel,—as in believing that free-thought must needs humanise us all. Lady Good-for-Nothing
The Church during its best age directed the moral relations of individual men, and attempted, more or less successfully, to humanise the relations of communities. Diderot and the Encyclopædists (Vol 1 of 2)
Those "nameless, unremembered acts of kindness and of love," by which their influence is felt through every part of society, humanising and consoling wherever it travels, are their theology. Painted Windows Studies in Religious Personality
Will he not suck in the humanising truth with his very milk? Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 1, November 20, 1841
It was our duty not to count the cost of humanising a lower race. The Inheritors
It hath humanised the conduct of wars; it hath ceased to excite them. Evidence of Christianity
The Renaissance galleries and woodwork, mellowed by time, were dusted by that soft warm glow, and the somewhat sparse congregation, in its magnificently isolated groups, was humanised by it too. Simon Called Peter
They nearly humanised the gaunt parlourmaid, who stood grimly and primly waiting until these tedious sentimental preliminaries should cease from interfering with her duties in regard to the luggage. The Lion's Share
On the whole, then, for these instances might be supported by many more, Nature is alive in Browning, but she is not humanised at all, nor at all at one with us. The Poetry Of Robert Browning
As for ‘the gentle and humanising influence,’ this is taking Dickens just a little too seriously. Reviews
We are at present only on the threshold of such a knowledge of that art as will enable us to use it eventually as the greatest of all humanising and educational agents. The Lost Stradivarius
It is almost metaphysical music; pure ideas take visible form, humanise themselves in a new kind of ecstasy. Plays, Acting and Music A Book Of Theory
Patrons of all the arts that humanise mankind—under your protection I place humanity herself! The Glory of English Prose Letters to My Grandson
Tennyson does not make her alive, but he does humanise her. The Poetry Of Robert Browning
The Fate of the Greeks has become humanised and made subjective. The Theory of the Theatre
The irruption of that turbulent rascal, natural science, has perhaps had most to do with humanising our humanistic studies. Cambridge Essays on Education
The poets doubtless do something to humanise and beautify the popular conception of a deity, but they seldom deliberately set out with any such purpose. Life in the Roman World of Nero and St. Paul
It was fully occupied with the task of seeking to impart to the fierce conquerors--the Vandals; Goths, and other Barbarians--the humanising and civilising knowledge of Christianity. The World's Greatest Books — Volume 11 — Ancient and Mediæval History
The grotesque, pretentious little apartment was mysteriously humanised; it was no longer the reception-room of a furnished flat by chance hired for a month; they had lived in it. The Pretty Lady
It may have a humanising influence upon her. Witness for the Defense
Those gentlemen had built and endowed a church and a school for their hands, and everything was done in their mill which could humanise and improve the lot of the men, women, and children. What I Remember, Volume 2
Mr. Thomson writes: 'It is clear that the Fijians humanised their gods, because they had once existed on earth in human form…. The Making of Religion
It is doubtful if what commonly passes for politeness in more refined regions is equally humanised with that of the Kentuckian so described. George Washington's Rules of Civility Traced to their Sources and Restored by Moncure D. Conway
By choosing incidents like these from real home-life, Giotto, through his painting, humanised the mysteries of faith, and brought them close to common feeling. Renaissance in Italy Volume 3 The Fine Arts
It is unquestionable that the influence of the Church tended to mitigate the evils of slavery, to humanise the relations between master and slave, between the lord and the serf. On Compromise
It is a place for humanising those who might otherwise be tyrants, or even experts. All Things Considered
You are a young man that I should like to put in the witness-box, to humanise the minds of the legal profession. Little Dorrit
The faces of the women, as I have said, it humanises and refines. American Notes
In the course of performing this work, the painters helped to humanise religion, and revealed the dignity and beauty of the body of man. Renaissance in Italy Volume 3 The Fine Arts
Moral advancement depends absolutely on the humanising influences of intellectual advancement. Tracks of a Rolling Stone
It is this gradual humanising of the divine female that brings about the spiritualising of the unregenerate male. Quest of the Golden Girl, a Romance
The poet ennobled political life, the broader outlook of affairs enriched his poetry and humanised it. A Lute of Jade : selections from the classical poets of China
For myself, I know no station in which, the occupation of to-day cheerfully done and the occupation of to-morrow cheerfully looked to, any one of these pursuits is not most humanising and laudable. American Notes
The faith suffered by having its mysteries brought into the light of day, incarnated in form, and humanised. Renaissance in Italy Volume 3 The Fine Arts
She wanted—what some people want throughout life—a grief that should deeply touch her, and thus humanise and make her capable of sympathy. The Scarlet Letter
I believe the Southern poets' dream will not be realised Till the plains are irrigated and the land is humanised. In the Days When the World Was Wide and Other Verses
They were animals, humanised animals,—triumphs of vivisection. The Island of Doctor Moreau
To reach this consummation all the best humanising and civilising energies of mankind will be needed. Essays in War-Time Further Studies in the Task of Social Hygiene
Lady Maxwell's fine eyes and stately ways were humanised after all by a quick responsiveness, which for most people, however critical, made conversation with her draw like a magnet. Sir George Tressady — Volume I
I have heard her talk something of these depraved natures, and of the times when they are all to be humanised. Anna St. Ives
He was a reformer, this "Kingwoon Menghyi," and believed in the humanising effect of free access to the charms of nature. Camps, Quarters, and Casual Places
Gradually the latter began to get humanised, until finally he began to think the priest was a good sort of fellow. My Double Life The Memoirs of Sarah Bernhardt
But now that she's more at ease with us—you see?—there's the purity of line just the same—but subtilised—humanised—somehow! Eleanor
Make it penal to practise certain trades in the houses of the people—drive them all into factories of a certain size, where alone these degraded industries can be humanised and controlled. Sir George Tressady — Volume I
How they humanise, how they realise the Mystery! Earthwork out of Tuscany Being Impressions and Translations of Maurice Hewlett
Tennyson told Mr. Aubrey de Vere that the poem was an experiment meant to test the degree in which it is in the power of poetry to humanise external nature. The Early Poems of Alfred Lord Tennyson
The harsh story favoured by Sophocles has been greatly humanised by Euripides, who could not accept all the savagery of the received legend. Authors of Greece
The people of the small rustic community have not been de- humanised. A Traveller in Little Things
Here the humanising influence of the Teutonic school of philosophic analysis was demonstrated by my mother's action. Not George Washington — an Autobiographical Novel
True, Bethel was of modern date, but they had had resident vicars for centuries; and where had they been, and where was the humanising tendency of much-vaunted Christianity? Field and Hedgerow Being the Last Essays of Richard Jefferies
It is the gentle laugh, not violating, but just humanising, that very solemn kiss; the quip that just saves passion from toppling over the brink into bathos, that mark the skilful lover. Young Lives
Sooner might you tame the grizzly bear of Missouri than humanise a thing so essentially cruel and heartless. White Jacket or, the World on a Man-of-War
The place is utterly unsoftened by human influences, by any humanising associations of history, good or bad. Three More John Silence Stories
Beautiful it was to see Ina relax, soften, warm, transform, humanise. Miss Lulu Bett
It may be that the Gael's conception of humanised spirits may not have been uninfluenced by the traditions of that earlier diminutive race whose arrow-heads of flint were so long regarded as "elf-bolts." Elves and Heroes
After all, his office-life was associated with much contraband merriment; and, unconsciously, his associates had taken a valuable part in his training, humanised him in certain directions, as he had humanised them in others. Young Lives
His face, always remarkable in its thin, eager, intellectual aspect, looked ghastly, and his eyes no longer feverish in their brilliancy, were humanised by the dew of tears. Temporal Power
He was above all things, a just man, and he realised that justice was not true justice unless it were humanised by knowledge and the sympathy of comprehension. The Adventure of Living : a Subjective Autobiography
More humanised than the grizzly hear, or the panther of the Rocky Mountains; unless the beaver, which is a wise and knowing animal, may be so reckoned. The Prairie
We find our interest in a humanised state-craft, makes us, in spite of our vast difference in training and habits, curiously akin. A Modern Utopia
Schools, colleges, and hospitals are built; shelters, rescue homes, and orphanages are opened; even war itself is in some measure humanised by the Red Cross Society and Christian commissions. When the Holy Ghost is Come
The loss of it is a new, thrilling, humanising experience. The Cardinal's Snuff-Box
It was but the lingering ghost of the humanised shell of air that was seen at Victoria station. The Morals of Marcus Ordeyne : a Novel
Captain O'Kelly was a man of more practical sense, or of better education, than most of his family, and he did do a good deal to humanise the place. The Kellys and the O'Kellys
A Modern Utopia, unlike its predecessors, dare not pretend to change the last condition; it may order and humanise the conflict, but men must still survive or fail. A Modern Utopia
It has been claimed by a recent critic that Fichte was the first modern philosopher to humanise morals. The Idea of Progress An inguiry into its origin and growth
He could appreciate the beautiful aspects of Christianity as a legend, its nobility as a humanising power, its rich results in literature, its grandeur in historic retrospect. Born in Exile
Pshaw! humanise humanity at large by devotion to an artistic ideal; the other aim is paltry, imbecile, charlatan.' A Life's Morning
To humanise the multitude two things are necessary—two things of the simplest kind conceivable. The Nether World
Looking, then, to human causes, there is hope to be derived from the humanising effects of Literature, which has now first begun to act upon all ranks.  Sir Thomas More, or, Colloquies on the Progress and Prospects of Society
Because they humanised knowledge; because they broadened the basis of life and intelligence; because they worked powerfully to diffuse sweetness and light, to make reason and the will of God prevail. Culture and Anarchy
In the world to which sincerity would condemn him, only the worst elements of his character found nourishment and range; here he was humanised, made receptive of all gentle sympathies. Born in Exile
You talk of getting up concerts in low parts of London, of humanising ruffians by the influence of music. A Life's Morning
No, no; these managers were of too coarse a type; they spoke grossly; what possibility of their exerting a humanising influence on the people to whom they dispensed soup? The Nether World
She becomes in her long wanderings almost wholly humanised, and in return, she and Persephone, alone of the Greek gods, seem to have been the objects of a sort of personal love and loyalty. Greek Studies: a Series of Essays
We then began to humanise that wild and fearful fowl, the gun. Little Wars; a game for boys from twelve years of age to one hundred and fifty and for that more intelligent sort of girl who likes boys' games and books.
But they are not nearly so hypocritical as they are uneducated and unintelligent, rebellious to the humanising influence of art and literature. Oscar Wilde, His Life and Confessions — Volume 1
The recruits, humanised and drawn together by misery, were becoming acquainted. The Garden of Allah
When he had gone, there was the house to look after, and the servants to humanise, and several kettles of Helen's to keep on the boil. Howards End
For the higher side of the Greek religion, thus humanised and refined by art, and elevated by it to the sense of beauty, is here also. Greek Studies: a Series of Essays
And over there, among beautiful scenes and noble monuments, perhaps the old gentleman would be softened; such things were supposed to exert a humanising influence. Washington Square
The reach which Shelton chose was innocent of launches, champagne bottles and loud laughter; it was uncivilised, and seldom troubled by these humanising influences. The Island Pharisees
May this my narration be a lesson to the afflicted, afford hope to the despairing, fortitude to the wavering, and humanise the hearts of kings.  The Life and Adventures of Baron Trenck, Volume 2
They were the unconscious instruments of enlightening the understandings and humanising the hearts of millions. The History of England, from the Accession of James II — Volume 4
Hardly less humanised is the Theban legend of Dionysus, the legend of his birth from Semele, which, out of the entire body of tradition concerning him, was accepted as central by the Athenian imagination. Greek Studies: a Series of Essays
Of this one thing I am sure: that every one thawed and became more humanised and conversible as soon as these innocent people appeared upon the scene. The Pocket R.L.S., being favourite passages from the works of Stevenson
Let your soul humanise itself with a little pity! Amphitryon
They united the various races of men by the friendly links of mutual advantage and mutual dependence, conciliated them, softened them, humanised them. History of Phoenicia
Whether or no this spirit was produced by, it clearly works with, a creed which postulates a humanised God and a vividly personal immortality. A Miscellany of Men
And in so graceful a faith the Greeks had their share; what was crude and inane in it becoming, in the atmosphere of their energetic, imaginative intelligence, refined and humanised. Greek Studies: a Series of Essays
Never had woman's humanising influence made itself more clearly felt. Stories by English Authors: Africa (Selected by Scribners)
One such truth-teller is worth all the moralists and preachers who ever laboured to humanise mankind.  The Private Papers of Henry Ryecroft
And I doubt not that, in manners as well as in religion, the Norse were humanised and civilised by their contact with the Celts, both in Scotland and in Ireland.  Historical Lectures and Essays
As a supplementary means of progress he highly approves of aesthetic culture, and he can speak with some eloquence of the humanising influence of the fine arts. Russia
I told him I had heard the marriage would be a splendid one; on which, brightened and humanised by his luck, he laughed and said "Do you mean for HER?" The Coxon Fund
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