Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

26 Sentences With "flinching from"

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

"I salute Secretary Spencer for not flinching from his duties," Mr. Bloomberg said.
Tyler Shields is not flinching from critics who have condemned his photo shoot with Kathy Griffin.
"I salute Secretary Spencer for not flinching from his duties," Mr. Bloomberg said at the time.
Like Margherita, you find yourself flinching from him, pulled toward the milder moods that Moretti favors.
And it provides a way for Europe to seek Mr Erdogan's co-operation without flinching from criticising him.
But there is nothing of traditional valor or virtue in stirring up conflict abroad while flinching from moral leadership at home.
" Speaking at the Thursday morning news conference, Ross said: "People are using some predatory practices against us, and we're not flinching from that.
His depiction of the porn-making world is affectionate without ever flinching from squirmy details (such as a fluffer whose nickname is "Bouche d'Or").
It's the kind in which everyone suddenly gangs up on someone, who then expresses his pain by hitting himself and falling over and flinching from touch.
"The principles of separating your markets business from your commercial and retail banking are there ... we haven't seen any flinching from the PRA on that whatsoever," he added.
But the ugly expression—as though he were flinching from a horror—did appear and was all the more striking because of its incongruity with his usual mild demeanor.
What this moment demands is an honest, raw and difficult form of criticism, one that assesses work for its creative merit while not flinching from the circumstances of its creators.
All the books share an exquisite attention to the daily lives of people whose survival is intimately interdependent on nature and a direct, elegant style that respects young readers by never flinching from sorrow.
And it is him, specifically; turn on any pro wrestling, from any sized promotion, and watch their Okerlunds, the way the interviews are paced, the flinching from the inevitable crescendo of madness, and the faint look of disgust when the cutaway happens.
The race is tightening once again because Trump's perceived character — a strong leader with a simple message, never flinching from a fight, cutting through political correctness with a bracing bluntness — resonates in places like Appalachia where courage, country and cussedness are core values.
Never flinching from the physical disorientation or gore that sexual reassignment entails, she kicks off her ferocious 1994 essay "My Words to Victor Frankenstein Above the Village of Chamounix" with a description of her own rebirth that makes it sound like one of Frankenstein's macabre procedures.
Bergman's story also features a female parishioner who offers care and affection to the priest, without success, and she is mirrored, in "First Reformed," by the sorrowful figure of Esther (Victoria Hill), who is so brusquely rebuffed by Toller that we find ourselves flinching from him, and doubting the purity of his mission.
Terence Pettigrew (writing in 1982) wrote "Yesterday's Enemy was criticised at the time for its depiction of British Army cruelty to the natives in a progressively desperate fight to survive. Nothing is done to soften the harshness of armed conflict on all concerned and the film delivers its strong anti-war message without flinching from the task."Pettigrew, Terrence. British Film Character Actors.
At the same time, the crack troops of Louis Friant's Old Guard division began crossing the bridge and took up a position to defend Arcis. Sebastiani's badly shaken horsemen slowly began to recover from their panic and reorganize. During this crisis an Allied howitzer shell landed sputtering near the rallying troops. Seeing his soldiers flinching from the missile, Napoleon intentionally rode his horse directly over the bomb.
Not as art; they are expertly done, without flinching from the horror > of the acts and without exploitation. But they damage the movie as an > alleged authentic account. Bigelow and Boal – the team behind The Hurt > Locker – want to claim the authority of fact and the freedom of fiction at > the same time, and the contradiction mars an ambitious project. Steve Coll criticized the early claims for "journalism" with the use of composite characters.
In April 1998, he went to France to attend the world tournament of 67 kg class, fought against Jomhod Kiatadisak. He couldn't take a measure against Jomhod's neck wrestling, and he was knocked out by body shots with knee at 2R. When he was depressed just after the bout, Jomhod' second said him that "Jomhod said I was damaged as much as you were because I'm a human". When Ito heard this, he had confidence and stopped flinching from opponent's title and achievements.
However, at the same time, he could be cruel, not flinching from the application of force to put down rebellions and sometimes beating his own friends if he thought it necessary.Riasanovsky and Steinberg, pp. 215–217 Once he took over the governmental machinery, Peter found a distinct lack of skilled specialists with which to run his government. Never placing much importance in rank or origin, Peter began recruiting skilled specialists out of every corner of the Russian empire, including serfs, foreigners, clergymen, and foreign specialists along with the usual boyars.
It was only with the onset of war in 1914 that the control of entry of aliens to the United Kingdom really brought about focused application to the ongoing national problem. An Ulsterman, a tall commanding figure with a moustache, much resembling his father the Reverend Josias Leslie Porter who had been Dean of Queens College Belfast, Porter junior was known as a forceful, far sighted personality, a leader of men and strict disciplinarian. possibly due to a devout Presbyterian clerical upbringing. Popular with both his seniors and also his staff, he had the rare skill of being able to bring his staff into his confidence while never flinching from frank critiques to his political masters.
Woodblock by Utagawa Kuniyoshi depicting Hua Tuo operating on Guan Yu In the 14th-century historical novel Romance of the Three Kingdoms, Hua Tuo heals the general Guan Yu, who is hit by a poisoned arrow in the arm during the Battle of Fancheng in 219. Hua Tuo offers to anaesthetise Guan Yu, but he simply laughs and says that he is not afraid of pain. Hua Tuo uses a knife to cut the flesh from Guan Yu's arm and scrape the poison from the bone, and the sounds strike fear into all those who heard them. During this excruciating treatment, Guan Yu continues to play a game of weiqi with Ma Liang without flinching from pain.
These developments prompted Stjepan to give Krstjanins of the Bosnian Church safe haven and join the Ottomans in support of Bosnian anti-King Radivoj, Thomas' exiled brother, who was also Bosnian Church faithful and remained so in face of Thomas' crusade against the church adherents. However, traditionally, most Bosnians' attitude towards religion, and Vukčić's was no exception, was uncommonly flexible for Europe of the era. He titled himself after the shrine of an Orthodox saint while maintaining close relations with the papacy. In 1454 he both erected an Orthodox church in Goražde and requested that Catholic missionaries be sent from Southern Italy to proselytize in his land, while never flinching from developing close relation and/or allying himself with Ottoman Muslims.
According to W. W. Naughton writing for the Oakland Tribune, Attell won every round of the eighteen round bout, which was ended by a full left handed blow to the chin of Frankie Neil. Neil reportedly "took a terrible mauling without flinching. From the very first it was apparent that the only chance Neil had was to outgame Attell and wear him down by persistent rushing for he was being outpunched at least two to one and the blows of the Hebrew fighter (Attell) were not the easiest either."Smith, Eddie, "Frankie Neil Loses Hard Fought Battle to Attell", Oakland Tribune, pg. 28, 20 June 1909 Though Neil was the aggressor through much of the bout, Attell "peppered Neil with straight lefts", brought crushing rights to the jaw, and delivered solid rights to the midsection that eventually took their toll on his opponent.

No results under this filter, show 26 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.