Complexities can be categorized as a noun.
Noun |
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complexity - the quality of being intricate and compounded; "he enjoyed the complexity of modern computers" |
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1. | noun | Complexities surrounding the operation of the Off Balance Sheet Facility ("OBSF") which commenced two weeks before the year end. | |
2. | noun | He dwelt on the complexities of modern life. | |
3. | noun | The road to simplicity is paved with hellish complexities. | |
4. | noun | The child who, say, from five to eight years old, can learn the game of chess will find it much easier than an adult to master the complexities of this game-science-art. | |
5. | noun | He enjoyed the complexity of modern computers. | |
6. | noun | It cannot plausibly be argued that behaviour of such complexity derives entirely from instinct. | |
7. | noun | However, I recommend that you take the JR Narita Express (a train leaves every 30-60 minutes from the airport), to avoid the complexity of changing trains. | |
8. | noun | We have to try to reduce its complexity. | |
9. | noun | This adds a new dimension of complexity to the problem. | |
10. | noun | He's contemplating the complexity of contemporary life. | |
11. | noun | Other factors of importance, which make litigation of large corporations more difficult, are the size and complexity of their activities. | |
12. | noun | As science advances as some describe it, into itself, - by creating technology which is then subsequently of a higher complexity than the ideas it is to help explain - complications often can arise, such as a need for higher education for those who utilise it. This may not be a negative complication in itself, but gives rise to another problem: that this causes education about the subject's fundamentals to be sacrificed for the training in the utilisation of ever changing technology. | |
13. | noun | The world is a place of seemingly infinite complexity. | |
14. | noun | Complexity is often a device for claiming sophistication, or for evading simple truths. | |
15. | noun | Sami can't seem to understand the complexity of the situation. |
Sentence | |
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noun | |
Complexities surrounding the operation of the Off Balance Sheet Facility ("OBSF") which commenced two weeks before the year end. |
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He dwelt on the complexities of modern life. | |
The road to simplicity is paved with hellish complexities. | |
The child who, say, from five to eight years old, can learn the game of chess will find it much easier than an adult to master the complexities of this game-science-art. | |
He enjoyed the complexity of modern computers. |
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It cannot plausibly be argued that behaviour of such complexity derives entirely from instinct. | |
However, I recommend that you take the JR Narita Express (a train leaves every 30-60 minutes from the airport), to avoid the complexity of changing trains. | |
We have to try to reduce its complexity. | |
This adds a new dimension of complexity to the problem. | |
He's contemplating the complexity of contemporary life. | |
Other factors of importance, which make litigation of large corporations more difficult, are the size and complexity of their activities. | |
As science advances as some describe it, into itself, - by creating technology which is then subsequently of a higher complexity than the ideas it is to help explain - complications often can arise, such as a need for higher education for those who utilise it. This may not be a negative complication in itself, but gives rise to another problem: that this causes education about the subject's fundamentals to be sacrificed for the training in the utilisation of ever changing technology. | |
The world is a place of seemingly infinite complexity. | |
Complexity is often a device for claiming sophistication, or for evading simple truths. | |
Sami can't seem to understand the complexity of the situation. |