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8 Sentences With "consternations"

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

Whatever Flake's consternations about the allegations against the nominee, Coons's friend still voted to put him on the court. Sen.
Sacco's reportage in comic form, reprinted below from Houghton Mifflin Harcourt's forthcoming anthology The Best American Comics 2019 (on sale October 1), offers a stark look at our bond to Big Oil and the consternations it creates, digging deep into the industry that extracts and refines bitumen, extremely heavy crude oil, from the earth.
The eagerness of Kamala and Elizabeth and Amy to leap into the 2020 fray, and the comparative consternations of Joe and Bernie, is to me a hopeful sign that the latter group recognizes they need to find a lane with more value than the disheartening truth that most American presidents up until now looked like them.
The cultural conversation about whether Deckard was a replicant, the angst about a dark film turning upbeat, and what that meant about its storied legacy, these are all questions spawned by the original 1982 edition of the film, and no matter how the movie has been modified or massaged since, those same questions and consternations trickle to the surface every single time you watch the Theatrical Cut.
He attempted to allay their consternations, posing the question, "Is it desirable that the workers on this farm should be the direct partakers of its proceeds?" He referred to the previously mentioned ‘Society Farm’ at Assington, Suffolk where thirty labourers had successfully tenanted a farm using an interest free loan from the owner. He encouraged self-expression and a vote by secret ballot but to no avail. Of the eleven voters, only one voted for ‘co-operation’, while the remainder voted for ‘every man for himself’.
The First Sikh Settlers started migrating from the Punjab in 1911, when the first Sikh Gurdwara was opened in London. During the start of the First and Second World Wars respectively, there was already an established Sikh presence in many parts of England. In London itself the community was small but this grew very rapidly during the 1950s and 60s and faced much discrimination, mainly due to consternations from the locals over job opportunities. In 2019, Seema Malhotra MP set up the first debate in Parliament to discuss the positive contribution of the Sikh community over the last 70 years.
The School hosts the Centre for Urbanism and Built Environment Studies, a platform for urban research, learning and civic engagement. In recent years the centre has focused on ’urban materialities’ and the place of the poor in South African cities, including how material realities of contemporary cities (their built environments at different scales, access to urban goods and central spaces, consternations about urban physical and political orders) affect urban citizens, particularly marginalized groups. CUBES activities include collective research programmes, individual members’ expertise and institutional partnerships. CUBES organises urban research- oriented events, conferences, exhibitions and the Faces of the City Seminar series (run weekly, jointly with the NRF Chair on Spatial Change and the Gauteng City Region Observatory, GCRO).
He tried to relieve their consternations by inviting the entire community to work with him as cultivators of the soil, not for him as master, where all comers would participate in the generated profits. Of the fifty-three eligible voters, forty-seven initially expressed an interest, however, after he published the value of the investment and the anticipated rewards from its success, their apathy increased and they withdrew their support. The villagers held the opinion: ‘If all the people were equal to-day, they would be unequal to-morrow’. Lawson persevered. In 1866, he published a new statement, offering, ‘co-operation to all comers regardless of their opinion’, declaring that he would donate all that year's profits above 2.5 per cent to the public good.

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