Essence in a sentence as a noun

This is the essence of a rigged game.

I've distilled the essence of what she told me on a paper and I read it every night.

In essence, this judge, looking at these facts, said "OK, kids, time to stop squabbling in the sandbox and go home.

Where might Microsoft be now if that had happened?In essence: this is not a project to be ignored, spat on, or buried far too soon.

" [2]In essence, he is describing her as the greatest mathematician of the past decades, male or female.

The VIP Membership Program is the essence of JustFab's business model and yet it's missing entirely from the home page of their site.

They allow the ultimate flexibility, but in essence are worse than global variables.

In essence, the claim is: "The site tricked me. I went to buy a single pair of shoes, and in doing so, they actually started taxing my credit card every month, and no one warned me."Folks are right to be skeptical -- a lot of businesses have done this, tried to hide the fact there would be future charges.

In essence, the technological aspect of this "invention" is routine and so the question is whether anything beyond that is simply another way of trying to patent nothing more than an abstract idea.

Essence definitions

noun

the choicest or most essential or most vital part of some idea or experience; "the gist of the prosecutor's argument"; "the heart and soul of the Republican Party"; "the nub of the story"

See also: kernel substance core center centre gist heart inwardness

noun

any substance possessing to a high degree the predominant properties of a plant or drug or other natural product from which it is extracted

noun

the central meaning or theme of a speech or literary work

See also: effect burden core gist

noun

a toiletry that emits and diffuses a fragrant odor

See also: perfume