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58 Sentences With "are cognizant of"

How to use are cognizant of in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "are cognizant of" and check conjugation/comparative form for "are cognizant of". Mastering all the usages of "are cognizant of" from sentence examples published by news publications.

But they are cognizant of the impact those thriving years had on the environment.
These firms are cognizant of the fallout, and they want their clients to be ready.
But Sanders supporters do not give the impression that they are cognizant of Sander's vulnerabilities.
Other Black people can make sure that light-skinned Black people are cognizant of their privilege. 17.
Just people are cognizant of their own mistakes and faults, and so they are forgiving of others.
We are cognizant of the terrible attacks that have taken place in capitals all over the world.
Logan said methane leakage had gone under the radar, but now investors are cognizant of the problem.
We are cognizant of the terrible attacks that have taken place in capitols all over the world.
Yet while they're paying handsomely for self-driving talent, investors and acquirers are cognizant of the risks Stallman says.
This is one of the infatuations that Musk's fans have with him – whether they are cognizant of it or not.
Young voters are cognizant of this fact, and are increasingly aware of how our actions impact the world around us.
His latest book about creativity acknowledges the intersection between art and commerce, and how the best artists are cognizant of both.
"We are cognizant of the fact that millennials have diverse interests," said New York Lottery communications director Lee Park in an email.
Texas Republicans, especially in the House, are cognizant of this — they're a lot more bearish on the wall than the Trump administration.
NEPA's basic purpose of ensuring that agency decisionmakers are cognizant of the potential environmental impacts of their actions thus falls by the wayside.
Retail CEOs are cognizant of the issue and in turn are sweetening benefits, such as by adding better paid parental leave and raising wages.
It is also crucial to me as the director of photography that our editors are cognizant of issues of representation of people of color.
Well, I think a lot of the people that I talk to are cognizant of a sense of responsibility they have to other people.
Because I think there is a handful of publishers that care a lot about it, and some of their readers are cognizant of it.
Given its covert promotion of Pollock and friends, it would seem that CIA officials are cognizant of the political messages even paint splatters can convey.
Bottom line: It's clear that even as they race toward impeaching Trump, Democrats are cognizant of the complaint by Republicans that they have abused the process.
I do think people are cognizant of what sort of information should and shouldn't be shared, regardless of whether we've got somebody out there hacking us.
Despite this month's wave of new financings, however, investors are cognizant of underwriters foisting aggressive term loans on them, and are assessing credits with greater scrutiny.
We are not ingrates and we are not idle; we are cognizant of the sacrifices that both federal and local workers face, laboring alongside one another.
"We're fully aware of what's going on in this digital economy and we are cognizant of the need to provide consumers with true protections," Becerra said.
"In terms of more of the macro or the global sentiment, we are cognizant of the uncertain environment today," CFO Steven Sordello said on Thursday's conference call.
That desire to do good translates to shopping from brands whose missions offer transparent, ethical business practices, use sustainable materials, and are cognizant of their social impact.
But while most major candidates have said they are cognizant of or are tracking superdelegates, the effort is nowhere near as prominent as it was in 2016.
For their part, Burmese dining at KFC are cognizant of the looming health risks nearly destined to befall the country, given the opportunities they've offered the foreign chains.
As Gunton put it, the producers are cognizant of wanting the program to be entertaining and revelatory, without glossing over the more brutal aspects of life in the wild.
Democrats, while encouraged about having a tool to mobilize black voters in an off-year election, are cognizant of national polling that shows opposition to removing Confederate monuments is bipartisan.
A senior Republican aide said there's no decision on whether the 23 percent increase will be included, but members are cognizant of the fact state budgets have already been finalized.
Moreover, Iranian officials are cognizant of the political value of the facility, which remains open to this day despite the pressure Western powers brought to bear to have the facility shuttered.
Aides are cognizant of the political toll that the heart attack could take, and are pursuing a "lean-in" strategy that they hope will mitigate doubts in his ability to campaign.
Turkey is ideologically split between a conservative religious movement, who are cognizant of the benefits of international agreements and proponents of NATO, and an isolationist, secular old guard who look ideologically eastward.
"I found that hardly any consumers are cognizant of the fact that once a non-white food is rebranded by white people for white people it seems to be valued more," Rawat said.
"We are cognizant of, and sensitive to, Turkish views on our cooperation with the Syrian Kurds," said a senior American official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he was discussing internal deliberations.
And while Taboola and Outbrain are well-designed platforms that are cognizant of their respective reputations, the challenges around that reputation lead some to believe that they have the potential to damage respected brands.
Working in the building that first housed the Whitney Museum, MFA students at the New York Studio School of Drawing, Paintings, and Sculpture are cognizant of how art history has actively influenced their work.
"We are cognizant of the fact that we still need air support over both Iraq and Syria, and not be too quick to start reducing that support before it's proven that we can," Brig. Gen.
During the 1918 Spanish flu, the virus spread rapidly among soldiers mobilized for World War I, and officials are cognizant of the dangers inherent in large groups of men and women living and working in close proximity.
While we are cognizant of the yield curve challenges banks are facing, we are of the view that many of the stocks are now discounting a tougher NII outlook, and the short case is tougher to make here.
While these short volatility products are marketed as complex and risky products aimed at sophisticated investors who are cognizant of the risk they are undertaking, the success of these products has reeled in a lot of retail interest.
"We are cognizant of the cost of living for New Zealanders, which is why the first thing we did when we came into government was improve the incomes of low- and middle-income families," she told parliament on Wednesday.
As someone with very low tolerance for racist bullshit, I've managed to surround myself with white people who are cognizant of their privilege and strive to make the world a less terrifying and frustrating place for people of color.
While the economic recovery is strong, the Fed minutes show that officials are cognizant of the disparity between slow growth in nominal wages and the strength of the labor market, but they remain largely convinced those gains are about to accelerate.
The solitary confinement cells were built so that criminals — those who are cognizant of what they've done and know that it was wrong — would be separated, usually for a matter of hours, until they were calm or composed enough to re-enter the general population.
As CNN has previously reported, the precise timing of the announcement has been a moving target, but Justice officials are cognizant of President Donald Trump's upcoming summit with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un in Vietnam next week, which could play a role in the report's timing.
Serious plein air artists like Heidkamp, who are cognizant of 20th and 21st century shifts in the language and intent of painting, yet choose to take on the furious flux of the upwelling world, are staking out a territory that represents — in the full sense of re-presenting — an art that joins what we see with what we feel.
Lessons can be learned from each case study on how to effectively communicate as a company in the current political environment, but the overall result of these activities is proof that there is room for these companies to remain politically active as long as they are cognizant of the costs and benefits associated with their actions.
Most people in cyclical cultures tend to understand that other cultures have different perspectives of time and are cognizant of this when acting on a global stage.
Consumers who are not well versed in how marketing works may find themselves situations they did not wish to be in. However, consumers who are cognizant of how marketing works may find this very useful in how they do or do not expend their resources.
A game-theoretic explanation for democratic peace is that public and open debate in democracies sends clear and reliable information regarding their intentions to other states. In contrast, it is difficult to know the intentions of nondemocratic leaders, what effect concessions will have, and if promises will be kept. Thus there will be mistrust and unwillingness to make concessions if at least one of the parties in a dispute is a non-democracy. On the other hand, game theory predicts that two countries may still go to war even if their leaders are cognizant of the costs of fighting.
Other terms include non-observant Jew, non-religious Jew, non-practicing Jew, and secular Jew. The term may also refer to Jews who do not practice the religion of Judaism. Typically, ethnic Jews are cognizant of their Jewish background and may feel strong cultural (even if not religious) ties to Jewish traditions and to the Jewish people or nation. Like people of any other ethnicity, non- religious ethnic Jews often assimilate into a surrounding non-Jewish culture, but, especially in areas where there is a strong local Jewish culture, they may remain largely part of that culture instead.
For example, when disadvantaged groups are left out of the planning process, adaptation methods such as agricultural or water programmes may increase vulnerabilities. The book draws on findings from Africa and outlines how conflict-sensitive adaptation activities should look that are cognizant of the conflict-effects adaptation may have. The authors provide a "Memorandum for Action on Adaptation for Peace and Stability" that outlines principles to support processes for adaptation and peace such as the establishment of peace and conflict assessments for adaptation programmes, mainstreaming climate change adaptation in conflict- prone contexts, applying conflict sensitive approaches or provisions to ensure participatory processes to design and implement adaptation measures.
In The Return of Feminist Liberalism, Abbey examines a number of contemporary feminists who, notwithstanding decades of feminist critique, are unwilling to give up on liberalism. Her examination centres on the work of Martha Nussbaum, the late Susan Moller Okin (1946–2004) and the late Jean Hampton (1954–1996) all of whom situate themselves within the liberal tradition and outline well developed positions on the compatibility of feminism and liberalism. Abbey examines why, and in what ways, each of them believes that liberalism contains the normative and political resources for the continuing improvement of women's situations. She asks whether they are cognizant of, and can reply to, the major criticisms of liberalism mounted by many feminists.
It is eventually learned upon visiting Leg Horse's former home that he was once "Prince Horrace", the ruler of the game prior to the "Great Change". It is then explained that Leg Horse's brother has been corrupt as well, and the group is ambushed by "20th Century Boy", the corrupt version of Leg Horse's brother. Philip notices that certain objects appear as graphical glitches, which the denizens of the world are cognizant of and call "errors", but do not remember what they once were before the "Great Change". Once players defeat the King of Crime, they make their way to the City of Forms, which is intensely glitched, and resembles a video game debug room, with the "forms" referring to the game's sprites.
Within an organization, the principles and practices of ethical accountability aim to improve both the internal standard of individual and group conduct as well as external factors, such as sustainable economic and ecologic strategies. Also, ethical accountability plays a progressively important role in academic fields, such as laboratory experiments and field research. Debates around the practice of ethical accountability on the part of researchers in the social field – whether professional or others – have been thoroughly explored by Norma R.A. Romm in her work on Accountability in Social Research, including her book on New Racism: Revisiting Researcher Accountabilities, reviewed by Carole Truman in the journal Sociological Research Online. Here it is suggested that researcher accountability implies that researchers are cognizant of, and take some responsibility for, the potential impact of their ways of doing research – and of writing it up – on the social fields of which the research is part.

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