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"harshen" Definitions
  1. to make (something, such as a voice) harsh
  2. to become harsh

5 Sentences With "harshen"

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

The federal chatter would seem enough to harshen even the deepest of mellows.
Jim Jordan's bill, which would harshen work requirements on adults without dependents as well as extend work requirements to adults with children — as a means of finding savings for tax reform and other Republican spending priorities.
In the lead-up to Thursday, a lot of other things were aligning: House Republicans will almost certainly pass two tough-on-immigration bills, which would harshen penalties for deported criminals who reenter the United States and expand US law over sanctuary cities.
In 2004, an update to article 10 of the constitution placed the responsibility for establishing gender equality on the state: "men and women have equal rights. The state shall have the obligation to ensure that this equality exists in practice". In 2005, the Turkish penal code was changed to criminalize marital rape and harshen the sentences for those convicted of honor killings, which previously carried reduced sentenced because of "provocation". The Human Rights Directorate reported that the number of honor killings committed in Turkey rose to 220 in 2007, with most of the killings occurring in major cities.
Following the riots, the government announced its willingness to harshen the current football stadia act, also known as Pisanu decree (Italian: Decreto Pisanu) after former Minister of the Interior Giuseppe Pisanu, who enacted the law in 2005. In its original form, the Pisanu decree required Italian mayors and football clubs to meet specific safety standards in their stadiums; however, these have been ignored by most of Serie A and B clubs, meaning that the majority of Italian football venues, including Catania, did not comply with these standards. Former Minister of the Interior Giuliano Amato officially permitted departures from these standards for the 2006–07 football season. The events in Catania, however, led Minister Amato, and Minister of Sports Giovanna Melandri, to immediately cancel every derogation, thus forcing teams to play "behind closed doors" (forbidding the presence of spectators for every venue not within the law), including Stadio San Siro in Milan, Stadio San Paolo in Naples and Stadio Artemio Franchi in Florence.

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