Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

127 Sentences With "dysfunctions"

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

To be sure, on rare occasions trade deficits are symptoms of underlying dysfunctions, but they are never themselves a cause of these dysfunctions.
Chances are your family has a few dysfunctions of its own.
Among my clients are men who struggle with various sexual dysfunctions.
First, we understand very well the current dysfunctions and failings of Congress.
"The Five Dysfunctions of a Team: A Leadership Fable" by Patrick Lencioni
He pinpoints five main dysfunctions that even the best companies struggle with.
These are completely different dysfunctions, but they share the same core problem.
They are the big winners of the euro zone, including of its dysfunctions.
The authors suggest that medications could one day target these receptors to treat sexual dysfunctions.
I feel like I'm doing VICE a service by displaying my dysfunctions and my disorders.
From a narrow perspective, it is easy to shrug off the dysfunctions of China's markets.
But in other cases insults and barbed language reflect deeper dysfunctions in our political system.
At Hagberg's suggestion, he read through the book "5 Dysfunctions of Teams" by Patrick Lencioni.
Extraverts are also more sexually satisfied and less likely to report sexual dysfunctions or difficulties.
Every one of us is grappling with a different mix of mental and physical dysfunctions.
Today it is the dysfunctions, not the virtues, of the ancient Greeks that are ascendant.
But such dysfunctions are rare and usually resolve after the athlete lightens her training load.
This state of affairs is intimately linked to the corruption and dysfunctions of the government.
Watching the show is like flipping through a catalog of America's dysfunctions and societal problems.
But modern Peru's dysfunctions are preventing it from reaping the full benefit of the new finds.
As for my Knicks, they could self-publish their own how-to book of management dysfunctions.
It is trying to improve the dysfunctions in the administration and to investigate and punish anomalies.
Whatever various sexual dysfunctions signify, some argue these behaviors don't fit well under the "addiction" umbrella.
It suffers from the dysfunctions that afflict countries that have giant bureaucratic states lying heavy on society.
The analysis shows that Trump counties are places where white identity mixes with long-simmering economic dysfunctions.
That's one of the dysfunctions, or tragedies, not to be too dramatic, about the American political system.
"Many of our post-war presidents suffered from deep dysfunctions of one kind or another," Nexon writes.
"If you've already confronted so many dysfunctions, there has to be clearly a problem," Mr. Verhofstadt said.
This is no time for us to become weary of the betrayals and dysfunctions of this administration.
California's experience reveals some of the dysfunctions that come with the US lacking a coherent national climate policy.
Some children are exposed to multiple, chronic stresses: neglect, abuse, maternal depression, parental discord, crime and other domestic dysfunctions.
"The analysis shows that Trump counties are places where white identity mixes with long-simmering economic dysfunctions," they write.
The United States health care system is expensive and full of dysfunctions, making it susceptible to anti-establishment critiques.
"Therefore ASN demands that EDF proceed to a thorough analysis of the dysfunctions at EDF and its suppliers," it said.
Of all the dysfunctions that plague the world's megacities, none may be more pernicious than bad (really, really bad) traffic.
Much of the most interesting economic research these days is trying to understand and prove potential connections between these dysfunctions.
For lots of people, "Obamacare" has become synonymous with the health care system itself, with its many miracles and dysfunctions.
I want us to continue to be a family, complete with the dysfunctions, differences and disagreements that all families have.
These were just some of the dysfunctions reported at Nevada's Republican caucuses on Tuesday, which Donald Trump won in a landslide.
The source of today's dysfunctions goes back more than 40 years, to the Congressional Budget and Impoundment Control Act of 1974.
Tasked with Sisyphean chores and supplied with counterproductive tools, it is not surprising that the DEA and ICE share some dysfunctions.
Dogs can get pain from toothaches, eye dysfunctions, allergies, head injuries—many of the same things that cause humans to have headaches.
They're living their lives large—on screen, in the media—and we hear about their challenges and their dysfunctions all the time.
Aisha Madu's short animation, Bodily Dysfunctions, is a riot that just keeps getting weirder and more ridiculous and more explicit with each pass.
Any effort to put on the table the moral and cultural dysfunctions afflicting the inner cities is condemned as blaming of the victims.
Sanders has defined his candidacy in large part on Medicare for All, his proposed solution to the dysfunctions of the health care system.
There has been much talk of which party "owns" the healthcare system and thus takes the blame from the public for its dysfunctions.
Reflections on life after stonewall A transgender activist urges that a movement, with all its differences and dysfunctions, band together as a family.
The light given off by our devices, or blue light, "can be used to treat circadian and sleep dysfunctions," according to a 2016 study.
So when they would laugh at my dysfunctions or my anxiety, I felt less alone, and I still do it for the same reason.
The dysfunctions within Congress are too numerous to explore here, but two of the most obvious examples are the broken confirmations and appropriations processes.
It seemed as if every political commentator put out a book ascribing South Africa's dysfunctions—from its power outages to its corruption—to Zuma.
Linking far-flung patients and insuring anonymity, online support groups facilitate conversations about clinical trials, home remedies for common body dysfunctions and insurance quandaries.
During my 16 years as a member of Congress, I would frequently visit a school to explain the functions (and dysfunctions) of the House.
An examination of the unconscious racial bias embedded in Izzy and Astor's interactions would have made for a more revelatory take on relationship dysfunctions.
But in fact, the absence of climate from the election was entirely predictable, indeed overdetermined, as the result of multiple overlapping dysfunctions and impediments.
Their willingness to try new things probably also helps to explain why highly open people are more sexually satisfied and less likely to develop sexual dysfunctions.
Women who experience postcoital dysphoria tend to have more psychological distress and sexual dysfunctions; in addition, they are statistically more likely to have been sexually victimized.
But ultimately, Congress will need to take responsibility and legislate, and to grasp that its dysfunctions are largely self-imposed — and so solutions must be, too.
Typically, this research has found that when some female athletes, such as marathon runners, train intensely for many hours a week, they can develop menstrual dysfunctions.
The Baduizm artist explained that certain physical dysfunctions, like digestive problems and reproductive issues, relate to your energy or chakra in that specific region of your body.
Future Family's second test, Fertility Age Test Plus, includes testing for the first three hormones and three tests for thyroid dysfunctions TSH, TPO (thyroperoxidase) and T3/T4.
Otis is disgusted by his own debilitating celibacy, unable to see it as the gift that makes him so good at helping others accept their sexual dysfunctions.
What about the argument that people from poor countries bring their national baggage with them — the dysfunctions and prejudices that help account for their troubles back home?
The painful spectacle of endowing a flaming narcissist with vast resources and public attention does give us an opportunity to witness our culture's dysfunctions, amplified into a caricature.
He meets other victims of the abuser, including one who is a militant atheist and another who blames his ongoing sexual and personal dysfunctions on his childhood travails.
In that sense, we're probably going to have some of the dysfunctions of a family, where we all come together for holidays but it doesn't mean we don't fight.
And they have to understand how it works and what are the good sites, what are the bad sites, what are problems with it, what are dysfunctions with it?
When rumors swirled around that the cast could come together for a fourth season, the internet orgasmed in collective delight at the thought that their fav domestic dysfunctions would return.
Compounding the problem has been the torrent of leaks from West Wing staff members and hangers-on, which has placed the White House's internal dysfunctions and hypocrisies on constant display.
Nguyen said "The Five Dysfunctions of a Team" is one of his favorite leadership books — it's also a standard issue at Bain & Company once you take on a leadership role.
But many psychiatric disorders could still share some common traits caused by similar dysfunctions in the brain, such as the lack of concentration seen in both people with ADHD and schizophrenia.
Health-care spending in the U.S. has climbed to $3.5 trillion a year, and Gottlieb said there are countless "dysfunctions" that tech companies could tackle and ways they can add value.
The omissions are purposeful: his worlds feel familiar but unknowable in a borderline conspiratorial, almost post-apocalyptic way, much like how American society's current dysfunctions would feel alien to generations past.
Both your quant marketers and creative teams need systems and processes that help foster trust, harmony, commitment, accountability and orientation towards results (check out The 5 Dysfunctions of Team for more).
That economic vacuum is irresponsible, especially as these groups appeal most to people frustrated by their own lack of economic opportunities and by the dysfunctions of the whole market-based system.
Yet the various rail authorities cannot agree to close Teesside Airport rail, preferring to retain a zombie station that has come to symbolize some of the dysfunctions of Britain's transport network.
"He talks of major dysfunctions, he talks of a collective failure, but he does not draw any conclusions in terms of public policy," Ms. De Haas said in a video statement.
Seventy years after the signing of the North Atlantic Treaty and the formation of the Atlantic Alliance, the West's most powerful and enduring military bloc is suffering from deep systemic dysfunctions.
When you define characters almost exclusively by their sexual frustrations and dysfunctions (and literally introduce them with cute line drawings illustrating their preferred bonking positions), you can't waver between empathy and cruelty.
A lot of my hangups or dysfunctions in relationships are based on our primary relationship as children — what worked for us, what didn't, how difficult it was to share the same face.
It is not merely a way to reduce emissions, but also to ameliorate the other symptoms and dysfunctions of a late capitalist economy: growing inequality and concentration of power at the top.
According to the review, 81 percent of psychologists studied had a diagnosable psychiatric disorder (a large percent were mild) which varied from substance abuse, mood, depression, anxiety, eating disorders and other personality dysfunctions.
The absence of those opportunities has coincided with rising rates of depression, opioid abuse, early death and a range of social dysfunctions among this same demographic group of less educated, working-age men.
And it threatens to consolidate power in the tech companies and oppressive governments that deploy AI while rendering just about everyone else more vulnerable to its biases, capacities for surveillance, and myriad dysfunctions.
Researchers identified a number of potential factors, including tobacco use, obesity and psychological stress, but two of the leading causes can be pinned directly on the peculiarities and dysfunctions of American health care.
Mr. Trump has performed well thus far in Appalachian coal counties and in rural parts of Alabama and Mississippi, which are coping with economic and social dysfunctions like high unemployment rates and heroin addiction.
A somewhat different question is whether we would expect a real-world FTC staffed by actual human beings subject to errors of judgment, lobbying, conflicts of interest, and bureaucratic dysfunctions to actually accomplish this.
And many of the bloc's inefficiencies and dysfunctions can be traced to the unfinished work of strengthening European institutions and achieving greater integration between member states in areas such as banking, finance, security and defense.
He advocates civics classes in schools, the enactment of proportional representation, compulsory voting from the age of 16 and taking back control over egregious institutional dysfunctions (unfettered party funding, for example, and targeted political messaging).
Although each of these Band-Aid solutions and others address specific VA dysfunctions, they ironically have the more detrimental effect of providing false reassurance that something meaningful is being done about our veterans' overall predicament.
They ultimately found lots of distinct overlaps of molecular activity between the brains of people with psychiatric disorders that weren't found in "healthy" brains, indicating that many of the same sort of biological dysfunctions underpin them.
Like many of the prominent men in Salem more than 300 years ago, the powerful men of today use their social capital to exploit a given community's biases and dysfunctions to enrich, empower and please themselves.
It's thought that dysfunctions in the thalamus may be a cause of dyslexia, but the study shows that it's possible to make major changes in that area of the brain after six months of reading instruction.
They gripe about its administrative dysfunctions, its sometimes anarchic streets (illegal nighttime car races are the latest scare) and infrastructural embarrassments like the parodically problem-plagued new airport, now scheduled to open a decade late in 2021.
At its root, it's a parable that cuts to the central dysfunctions in the American economic and political order, one that should dismantle our notions of meritocracy and put a strict limit on our forbearance for elites.
But they all flow in part from the same dysfunctions of a weak state gnawed by corruption and thrown off balance by constant Russian pressure, and the open vistas of opportunity for skulduggery that these have offered.
In 2012, a Swiss jurist, Laurent Kasper-Ansermet, resigned as a reserve co-investigating judge and issued a statement denouncing what he said were "egregious dysfunctions" within the tribunal and government interference in his investigations of additional defendants.
"The Civil War was caused by the compromises in the Constitution over slavery, which shaped not only the evolution of slavery but also so many of the functions and dysfunctions of national politics, and still does," Mr. Waldstreicher said.
Watching them turn on one another, devour one another, in what has become a grotesque, animalistic spectacle of dysfunctions, might for some bring a perverse pleasure because it exposes Trump and his supposed managerial acumen as an abject fraud.
Koolhaas came to believe that Lagos was a "paradigmatic case-study of a city at the forefront of globalizing modernity," and began to make the radical argument that many of the city's dysfunctions should be heralded rather than fixed.
To people who spend time studying the United States' economic relationship with China, Mr. Trump's accounting of its dysfunctions contains both legitimate, accurate complaints and elements that completely misstate how things work between the world's largest and second-largest economies.
"A House Is Not a Home" (season 222, episode 22) If the first five seasons are a long exercise in burrowing deep into the Gilmore family and uncovering all of its hidden dysfunctions, here's where it all comes out to play.
Then apologize to her, to all of the people who suffer from actual sexual dysfunctions (whose maladies you've made a mockery of), and to anyone whom you might have used sexually and perhaps emotionally misled to fulfill your own needs.
But the scandal now roiling Washington underscores how Ukraine's own domestic struggles, feuds and dysfunctions have shaped the controversy — and shows how the pursuit of political advantage by actors in each country fed the other in ways that neither side foresaw.
The condition, which was featured in a 2018 episode of Grey's Anatomy, presents itself more commonly in patients with liver dysfunctions, diabetes and chronic intestinal obstructions, according to research, though it can also appear in individuals with seemingly normal health.
Psychologist Lori Brotto has been studying the usefulness of mindfulness exercises in the treatment of various sexual dysfunctions for years, and Rosenbaum herself also contributed to a paper on using a mindfulness-based approach in the treatment of sexual pain and anxiety.
Wayne Jonas, a physician at the Fort Belvoir Community Hospital Pain Clinic in Fairfax County, Va., told NPR that when a person is in pain, their body "bumps up a variety of dysfunctions," like producing the stress hormone cortisol and increasing inflammation.
Most serious readers agree: The direction of American poetry has, on the whole, remained stagnant since the widespread adoption of psychotherapy and counseling to help people grasp the complex undercurrents and fallout of family dysfunctions, grueling addictions, pitched anxieties and illicit yearnings.
But I suspect that he is a symptom as well as a cause, and that to uncover the root of our national dysfunctions we must go deeper than politics, deeper than poverty, deeper than demagoguery, and confront the inequality that is America today.
I used to think Congress and Washington were broken, but this electoral season reveals broader and deeper dysfunctions: the intractability of the two-party system, the dubious role of the media, and the polarized, crass, uncivil, uneducated, sensationalist, shallow and self-absorbed national culture.
ANAVEX 3-71, also targeting sigma-8853 and M1 muscarinic receptors, is a promising preclinical drug candidate demonstrating disease modifications against the major Alzheimer's hallmarks in transgenic (3xTg-AD) mice, including cognitive deficits, amyloid and tau pathologies, and also with beneficial effects on neuroinflammation and mitochondrial dysfunctions.
Thanks in part to Mr Trump himself and in part to the multiple dysfunctions that brought him to the White House, America is becoming a source of bad ideas rather than good ones, of polarisation rather than problem-solving and, bizarrely, of parochialism rather than cosmopolitanism.
But at the root of all of these, and indeed underpinning a great many of the dysfunctions in China's financial system, is something that is not easily changed: a belief that, when all else fails, the state will always be there to rescue investors from their mistakes.
At some point in the not too distant future, neuroscience will advance to the point where blood can be taken from a newborn child, and based on that baby's genome, scientists will be able to predict what mental dysfunctions or illnesses that individual will have a predisposition for.
Rather, these operations often cause "major complications, including penile deformity, shortening, and erectile dysfunctions," and 80 percent of patients were left dissatisfied, according to the study conducted by researchers at the Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology and Neuroscience at King's College London, and King's College hospital urologist Gordon Muir.
To that end, he recently wrote a paper with his Harvard colleague Edward Glaeser, a leading scholar of urban and regional economics, and Benjamin Austin that examined how the rising rate of nonemployment among prime-aged men in parts of the American heartland had fed into social dysfunctions.
" Yet the reason the Green New Deal does include social programs is that, as Vox's David Roberts put it, "It is not merely a way to reduce emissions, but also to ameliorate the other symptoms and dysfunctions of a late capitalist economy: growing inequality and concentration of power at the top.
The hit TV shows that he created—first "The Thick of It," in Britain, and then "Veep"—bristle with satirical zeal, but you do wonder, after a while, whether the everyday dysfunctions, enraging as they are, of an essentially functioning democracy are not too easy a bull's-eye for his scorn.
It was this dilemma that helped make J. D. Vance's "Hillbilly Elegy" a runaway best seller in 2016 — the tale of a young man who'd overcome the dysfunctions of his transplanted Appalachian family to ascend to the Ivy League and Silicon Valley, with plenty of culture shocks along the way.
Why it has taken so long is a study in how Russia, despite the concentration of immense power in the Kremlin under Mr. Putin, has carried forward many of the dysfunctions that characterized the chaotic rule of President Boris N. Yeltsin in the 1990s, an era that Mr. Putin has vowed to banish.
The human health effects of EDCs are not entirely understood, but the list of potential problems is long: prostate and breast cancer, infertility, fibroids, endometriosis, male and female reproductive dysfunction, birth defects, disrupted immune function, obesity, diabetes, cardiopulmonary disease, neurobehavioral and learning dysfunctions like autism, hermaphroditism and alternation of sexual identity in animals.
Looking ahead, Bauer's team would like to use this study as a model for studying brain changes in a different population of individuals with visual impairments, specifically those with visual dysfunctions not because of damage to the eyeball, but because of early developmental brain damage to areas of the brain responsible for visual processing.
Since ancient philosophers first began to ponder the problem of criminal behavior, great minds in science and law have sought a single holy grail, the point at which the two fields intersect: What nervous or brain dysfunctions can explain how people become so incapacitated that they are not responsible for their own criminal behavior?
"We already knew that women experience substantial psychological distress around the breast cancer diagnosis and during the main treatment period," said lead study author Helena Carreira of the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine in the UK. "There is a need for greater awareness that anxiety, depression and cognitive and sexual dysfunctions are common after breast cancer, and that treatments are available," Carreira said by email.
Either the United States will resolve as a nation to tackle the worst dysfunctions of the public education system and salvage the futures of millions of children with no alternative to imposed failure, or the Department of Justice will need to increase continuously the number of state and federal prisons to handle the vast spectrum of human wreckage that will result within the next generation.
The Success Academy schools have been very successful in certain ways for certain kids, but unless their founder can talk clearly and sympathetically about the tangle of dysfunctions besetting public schools — including segregation, poverty, class, inequality, the effects of wealthy donors and unions on the education system and the disparate expectations of the stakeholders within it — she will always be just a local crusader with a chip on her shoulder.

No results under this filter, show 127 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.