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6 Sentences With "having insight into"

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

We can have much more in-depth conversation about professional career development with him having insight into that.
With pressure on traders and banks due to a weak world economy and a rout in commodities markets, having insight into cargo movements could give them an edge in gauging which way prices will go.
She boasts almost 800,000 followers at the time of this publication (down from the 211,220 figure cited in a 25 Man Repeller interview), and in 200 that number seems to counts for a great deal more than knowing, or having insight into, anything in particular.
She used the opportunity to retire to a leper derelict hospital in Statte, close to Huy, on the heights of the river Meuse to tend to the inmates, and more fully follow her religious calling. She left her two sons in the care of their grandfather. Ten years later, she became an anchoress and was enclosed in a chapel cell near the colony in a ceremony conducted by the abbot of Abbaye Notre-Dame d'Orval. From there she offered guidance to pilgrims who considered her a prophetess in the apostolic sense of having insight into the divine.
Polka is on the steering committee for Rescuing Biomedical Research, an initiative to discuss solutions to problems addressed in the April 2014 PNAS article "Rescuing US biomedical research from its systemic flaws". Polka is recognised as having insight into issues surrounding open peer review, preprint and early career progression, and has been quoted in numerous articles by Nature and Science on these topics. In 2015, Polka and Viviane Callier wrote an article for the careers column in Nature where they argue that funding agencies should support more than 16% of postdocs through fellowships. This would allow postdocs to "strike out away from the beaten path [and] will bring fresh ideas and approaches to the table".
Ronald Rivlin describes Wilson in 1944 as an "bluff, outgoing, middle aged Yorkshireman"Autobiographical note, Collected papers of R.S. Rivlin, Volume 1 By Ronald S. Rivlin, G. I. Barenblatt, Daniel D. Joseph, p xxii who "enthusiastically encouraged" him in his research ideas around the theory of elasticity. Wilson was said by his peers to be forceful and unconventional: > Directness was his very nature; he said what he meant and he meant what he > said to anyone without fear or favour. With this moral courage went > unconscionable physical bravery as revealed by his antics on war service in > France where he took to night-time excursions in no-man's land to relieve > boredom in front-line trenches, and also, more recently, by his car driving > which could be quite fearful for passengers.The Times, Obituaries 24 > September 1976 He was also credited as having insight into what was needed to make successful scientific research: > His contribution to industrial research was characterized by an ability to > excite the interest of (and to support financially) academically experienced > scientists.

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