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6 Sentences With "more condemnatory"

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

Because of this skewed system, the Council has targeted Israel with more condemnatory country-specific resolutions than the rest of the world combined.
His former communications adviser had more condemnatory wishes: "I'm in the camp that thinks that it's important for him to suffer a humiliating defeat in November," Tim Miller told Vox's Andrew Prokop.
"The Chinese have been growing a little more condemnatory of the North Korean actions, but you see a huge change in the overall economic relations between the two countries," Baker said, pointing to Beijing's larger regional concerns.
Councilor Hoffman resigned on June 19. When Grimm returned he faced another commission of inquiry, this time appointed by the presidium of the Swiss Social Democratic Party. On September 1, 1917 the presidium voted 18-15 to accept the majority report of the commission, which came to most of the same conclusions as the Stockholm commission and recommended Grimm be restored to his previous party posts. A minority report signed by Charles Naine, Grimms former ISC colleague, was more condemnatory and denied the right of the presidium to restore Grimm to his previous mandates.
The trial date was set back to 5 May 1887 to accommodate the West Australian, to the evident delight of its competitor, the Daily News. Rather than being heard before a jury as is usual for a libel case, the case was heard by Chief Justice Onslow and Justice Stone, sitting in banco, and went for a little over a month. Many witnesses testified as to the basic truth of Gribble's allegations, and the Chief Justice, summing up, was apparently about to decide for the plaintiff, when he astounded the audience by finding for the newspaper, saying that Gribble had shown little restraint in presenting hearsay knowledge as fact. His associate was more condemnatory and found against Gribble, with costs.
As described by Narayan Lakshman, writing from Washington, D.C. for The Hindu, the United States "watered down" the resolution, while UN Watch describes the revised resolution as "toned down". Lakshman notes that "an entire paragraph calling for 'unfettered access'... by a host of external observers and specialists was deleted", that the resolution's reworded demand for international investigation into "alleged human rights violations" was elevated in prominence to an earlier section but then "veer[ed] off towards an apparent preference for Sri Lanka to conduct its own internal investigation"; he notes in general that "weaker language has been inserted in place of [the earlier] more condemnatory tone". The revised resolution remained entitled, "Promoting Reconciliation and Accountability in Sri Lanka" and was assigned the UN code "A/HRC/22/L.1/Rev.1". As finally submitted, the U.S. resolution was co-sponsored by 33 countries, including three other members of the U.N. Security council at that time (the UK, France, and Germany), and four other European nations (Ireland, Italy, the Netherlands, and Switzerland).

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