(1) He discusses the infinite, distinguishing between the potentially infinite and the actual infinite .
(2) Trust me, an infinite amount of people ask me what camera I use, and the advertising is surely worth more money than a measly 300 bucks or so.
(3) In response, Hubbard says that risk studies aren't usually based on cataclysms for which a bank would have to hold infinite amounts of capital.
(4) I have an almost infinite amount to say about this subject, but it doesn't look like I'm going to have time to say it for a few days.
(5) I guess it could be the infinite amount of raindrops that incessantly keep dropping onto me that sends me into this light bout of dizziness.
(6) You can't point to an infinite amount of things.
(7) At the same time, there was an exhilarating account of the infinite in Georg Cantor's set theory.
(8) When you start out you have no money, no work and a seemingly infinite amount of time.
(9) An advertisement connects something with human desires; propaganda shapes the infinite into concrete images.
(10) If you express this vibration - the frequency of love, in its true, unconditional sense, you will connect with the same frequency out there in the infinite .
(11) You can see this brush of the infinite on the faces of anyone's who's mourning, even on the face of one who considers himself an agnostic, or an atheist.
(12) He claimed to be able to see things with greater clarity than ever before in his life and that he had touched the face of the infinite .
(13) Not to mention the seemingly infinite amount of equipment and crafting skills.
(14) And there is an infinite amount of things to say, and reasons to apologize, and questions to ask.
(15) The aggressive people of the world are identifying with something less than infinity, and thus they are arrayed against the infinite .
(16) But even with an infinite amount of money, aging could not be conquered.
(17) Mathematicians divide infinite sets into two categories, countable and uncountable sets.
(18) In this case the modal auxiliary carries the tense, aspect and person; therefore, the verb that follows should be in its bare infinite , nonfinite form.
(19) She felt like her mind was a sponge - soaking up infinite amounts of information that she would probably never hear again.
(20) Aristotle famously rejects the infinite in mathematics and in physics, with some notable exceptions.