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82 Sentences With "more deferential"

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

According to our statistical analysis, with respect to both strategy and tactics, conservatives were more deferential to the military than liberals, older respondents were more deferential than younger ones, hawks were more deferential than doves, and men were more deferential than women.
The official response in South Korea has been more deferential.
Following the committee's vote, Trump cast a more deferential tone.
Democrats had been more deferential to the Fed's judgment under Yellen.
And why should they have to be more deferential than anyone else?
Wealthier respondents were also more deferential, as were veterans of the US armed forces.
But the British press, always more deferential to royal sensitivities, has not aired them.
Some Senate Republicans, however, worry that Ryan's successor will be more deferential to Trump.
While the building will dominate the skyline, it is more deferential on the street.
So I'd be more deferential to Paul, and what Paul wants me to do.
But the national intelligence director struck a more deferential tone in his Saturday statement.
No more business as usual, no more deferential or courteous acceptance of these phony platitudes.
He is also more careful and more reserved than Mr. Cohn — and more deferential to lawmakers.
Once in favor of keeping financiers in check, Democrats became much more deferential to the industry.
To the Editor: Ruth Whippman contends that men need to be taught to be less assertive and more deferential.
Republicans say Comey's conduct shows he was far more deferential to Clinton's team than he was with the Trump campaign.
"Courts can be deferential on national security, but they tend to be more deferential when there's an emergency," he said.
"Some of the black folks in southern Delaware were much more deferential in the face of white people," Howard said.
Throughout the travel ban cases, the Supreme Court has been a little more deferential to the administration than lower courts.
Leading organizations that oppose and support abortion rights both expect Kavanaugh to be more deferential to state and federal restrictions on abortion.
Members of the auditing profession would love nothing more than to see their P.C.A.O.B. audit quality inspections get a little softer and more deferential.
"Moreover, courts are often more deferential to immigration executive actions than in other areas because immigration touches on sovereignty and national security," he said.
"Venture capitalists that serve on boards have gotten more and more deferential and, I would say, have become more cheerleaders than actors," he said.
In the run of cases, the Court's decisions would likely be far more deferential to the democratic process and far more tightly linked to precedent.
The Citigroup and JPMorgan proposals "are more deferential to the boards in asking them to study the vicissitudes of a breakup," Naylor said in an interview.
Judge Bork's writings strongly suggest that his presence on the court would have produced a ruling far more deferential to legislative efforts to address gun violence.
It's unlikely that the "very liberal Ninth Circuit" (as Trump and his administration usually refer to it) is going to be more deferential to the president.
Republicans have long been more deferential to Trump on China -- a country they agree should be held accountable for intellectual property theft and other unfair trading practices.
"Congress has been more and more deferential to the president when they're of the same party," said Joshua C. Huder, a senior fellow at Georgetown University's Government Affairs Institute.
Defenders argue that this would make the court more deferential to precedent, and any one judge less able to spend years cutting a partisan path across the nation's highest court.
Still, a senior White House official said Mulvaney is more deferential to Trump's whims than Kelly was, and holds his tongue on more issues than the President's son-in-law.
During one class, students debated whether players should have been more deferential to the wishes of team owners and the league, or whether the league should have supported players more vocally.
For years the City Council was more deferential to top commanders, and police officials fell back on the notion that they needed to enforce minor crimes to stave off serious disorder.
As soon as the words came out, I realized I'd done something wrong: I should have delivered an answer that was more deferential, one that showed more recognition of his position.
Among them is the fact that courts are "generally more deferential to immigration actions by the executive branch than in other areas, because immigration touches on sovereignty and national security," he added.
Until the surveillance revealed by the National Security Agency contractor Edward J. Snowden, many American tech companies were also more deferential to the American government, especially its requests for law enforcement help.
Ignorant of how the legislative branch works, he let the Republican leaders set the priorities and was surprised that even though his party had the majority, Congress wasn't more deferential to him.
The first was that booing the vice president-elect is inappropriate and rude, and that the citizens of America should be more deferential to one of the men entrusted to lead their country.
Japan's political opposition has fallen into disarray and its news media has grown ever more deferential, leaving a widespread feeling in the country that there is no alternative to the sitting prime minister.
"Bernie seems startled that people aren't more deferential," observed one Senate Democrat, who noted that Sanders was waiting for colleagues to come to him instead of going to them to initiate friendly chatter.
The sustained scrutiny in Politico, addressed to an international, English-speaking audience, rankled many in Belgium's famously parochial establishment — as the more deferential members of the country's French- and Dutch-language media looked on.
Those candidates didn't always win office, but their successful primary bids certainly struck fear into the hearts of many other GOP incumbents, and made many of them more deferential to the concerns of conservative voters.
You won't easily find a political figure in Washington more deferential to the cause of black lawmakers than Angela Rye, the celebrity political activist and commentator who was executive director of the CBC during the 112th Congress.
"You have structured your take-over to ensure that the transaction is reviewed under the lower, more deferential 'business judgment' standard, as opposed to the enhanced, more stringent 'entire fairness' standard," the investor said in a letter.
The Civil Rights Division's police-reform group has lost a quarter of its staff attorneys during the Trump administration, and those who remain have told former colleagues they've grown more deferential in their dealings with local law enforcement.
The 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans on Thursday ruled that a lower-court judge should have applied a more deferential standard in evaluating the state's decision to terminate the affiliates' Medicaid provider agreements in 2015.
This was in the early '90s, yet we hadn't really stopped telling them in a kind of deeper cultural way, in a more entrenched way, that they should see themselves as about their appearance and that they should be more deferential.
"It certainly was, in many ways quite a groundbreaking speech," said Nile Gardiner, an analyst at the conservative Heritage Foundation, who praised Trump for his "assertive and aggressive" delivery and for breaking with the more "deferential" multilateral doctrine of the Obama administration.
READ: Singapore businessmen think Trump got one thing right about Kim Jong Un North Korean state media has also been far more deferential toward Trump in recent missives mirroring the U.S. president's own warm words toward Kim since the meeting took place.
Indeed, it's stunning to consider that Trump seemed more deferential and solicitous to Vladimir Putin (saying the Russian President has an 82% approval rating and that he's been a leader far more than our President) than he was prepared to be to President Obama.
The current conservative court is also a lot more deferential to Trump on immigration than the Ninth Circuit; the assumption is that the Court will not only consider the case, but rule in the administration's favor and allow Trump to shut the door on DACA again.
For Mr. Trump, the worry about approval ratings would be less about what it might mean for the next election, still years away, but about how such numbers are interpreted by members of Congress, who historically have been more deferential to popular presidents than unpopular ones.
"I think some people in the White House think the agency should be more deferential and the core group at the EPA who have earned the administrator's trust don't trust people at the White House," said Matt Mackowiak, a Republican strategist who worked on the Bush-Cheney reelection campaign.
The seven House Democrats tasked with prosecuting President Donald Trump in the Senate have noticeably shifted their demeanor over the last three days, carefully adopting a more deferential — and at times, outright apologetic — tone in their final attempt to convince even a single Republican of the breadth and weight of their case against the president.
For me, the big difference that I felt a lot and I've been pushing this for a while is culturally there just seems to be this massive difference whereby — it sounds very patronizing and critical and I apologize in advance — but American journalists, especially political journalists, White House correspondents are way more deferential to people in power.
It isn't as though scholarship and the market have ever spoken the same language, though I suppose that in the past the market was more deferential (for its own ends) to scholarship than they seem to have been here, despite some of the credible scholars and commentators (Martin Kemp, Walter Isaacson, etc.) who have accepted at least the involvement of Leonardo in the Salvator Mundi.
While Obama discusses code-switching in the context of her interactions with girls in her neighborhood, the concept is more often raised in instances where a person of color must adapt their behavior to fit the expectations of white audiences, be it a black man adjusting his tone to be more deferential when interacting with police or a woman changing her natural hair before starting a job in an office.
City of Orland, 4 Cal. 4th at page 146 (December 1992). As a result, the constitutional separation of powers doctrine demanded a more deferential standard of review by the courts.Silicon Valley Taxpayers' Association, Inc. v.
The series has been widely compared to Chelsea Handler's series Chelsea Lately. Cummings has responded to the comparison with Handler by saying she expects to be more deferential to her guests than Handler often is.
Other regional characterisations include the sharp shrewd stubborn Sussex Wealdsman and the more deferential Sussex Downsman. Sussex is known for its strong tradition of bonfire celebrations and its proud musical heritage. The county is home to England's largest arts festival, the Brighton Festival. Brighton Pride is one of the UK's largest and oldest gay pride parades.
In English, deference ('Excuse me, sir, could you please close the window') is associated with the avoidance or downplaying of an imposition; the more we feel we might be imposing, the more deferential we might be. It is clearly a strategy for negative politeness and the redressing of a threat to negative face, through actions such as favor-seeking.
Prithee was almost always used as a parenthesis in order to introduce indirect questions and requests. Prithee and pray you often coincide in Early Modern English texts, and the difference between the two terms has been debated by scholars. Scholars such as Roger Brown and Albert Gilman have suggested that prithee was an ingroup indicator. Other scholars suggest that it is simply the more deferential form.
In Perry v. Schwarzenegger, the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California in its Findings of Fact commented that sexual orientation could be considered a suspect class, but on the facts presented Proposition 8 failed even to satisfy the much more deferential rational basis review. The U.S. District Court for the District of Nebraska held the same in Citizens for Equal Protection v. Bruning,Citizens for Equal Protection v.
Leslie often consults Sarah on what he should do and what she thinks about the humans and the situation at hand. At first, Sarah urges wanness, but she also emphasizes the importance of contact. Though Sarah is more deferential than Nancy, she does assert herself to Leslie when an experience is important. For example, she insists on accompanying Leslie when he approaches the humans in act II after they have taken their submissive pose.
Daniel Farson in 1994 Daniel James Negley Farson (8 January 1927 – 27 November 1997) was a British writer and broadcaster, strongly identified with the early days of commercial television in the UK, when his sharp, investigative style contrasted with the BBC's more deferential culture. Farson was a prolific biographer and autobiographer, chronicling the bohemian life of Soho and his own experiences of running a music-hall pub on east London's Isle of Dogs. His memoirs were titled Never a Normal Man.
The Japanese language has some words and some grammatical constructions associated with men or boys, while others are associated with women or girls. Such differences are sometimes called "gendered language". In Japanese, speech patterns associated with women are referred to as or , and those associated with men are referred to as . In general, the words and speech patterns associated with men are perceived as rough, vulgar, or abrupt, while those associated with women are considered more polite, more deferential, or "softer".
There are at least two distinctive (and sometimes competing) approaches to Weiquan activism. Among Weiquan lawyers, the pragmatists (or consequentialists) are more deferential to the existing legal systems and institutions, and only pursue courses of actions that are likely to produce incremental improvements and reforms. These activists may reject approaches that are liable to be met with official reprisals. By contrast, the "radical" Weiquan activists (those adopting a deontological approach) view rights defending as a moral obligation that is to be pursued regardless of potential consequences.
The appellate court reviews issues of law de novo (anew, no deference) and may reverse or modify the lower court's decision if the appellate court believes the lower court misapplied the facts or the law. An appellate court may also review the lower judge's discretionary decisions, such as whether the judge properly granted a new trial or disallowed evidence. The lower court's decision is only changed in cases of an "abuse of discretion". This standard tends to be even more deferential than the "clear error" standard.
While the 1926 Constitution of Greater Lebanon was roughly modeled after the French constitution (Greater Lebanon being under French mandate), the office of the prime minister in Lebanon is notably significantly weaker in Lebanon than in France, for the president is the sole person who can dismiss him (at will), while in France the prime minister is appointed by the president, and can only be removed by the Parliament through a vote of no confidence. This means that the prime minister of Lebanon must be much more deferential to the president than his French counterpart.
The NLRB applies a similarly strict standard in reviewing unions' enforcement of exclusive hiring halls, i.e., those in which the employer is bound, by contract, to hire only employees referred to it by the union. The NLRB requires unions to establish clear procedures and to follow those procedures in order to minimize the likelihood that the union would use a hiring hall procedure to exclude non-members or those out of favour with the union from the workplace. On the other hand, the NLRB applies the more deferential standard applied to union decisions generally in the case of non-exclusive hiring halls, i.e.
Stephen A. Willier 1969, "Madness, the Gothic, and Bellini's Il pirata". The Opera Quarterly, #6, pp. 7–23. Also, Bellini's recycling of his own music in this opera has been analyzed, as well as his utilizing "a more self- consciously innovative compositional style" and participating more in work on the libretto, as compared with prior efforts where he was more deferential to the librettists chosen by the Naples opera management and the corresponding texts.Mary Ann Smart, "In Praise of Convention: Formula and Experiment in Bellini's Self-Borrowings", Journal of the American Musicological Society, #53(1), pp.
Michael Sharlot, dean of the University of Texas at Austin Law School, found the Fifth Circuit to be a "much more conservative circuit" than the Ninth Circuit to which federal appeals from California are made. According to him, the Fifth is "more deferential to the popular will" that is strongly pro-death penalty and creates few legal obstacles to execution within its jurisdiction.As quoted in Robert Bryce, "Why Texas is Execution Capital," The Christian Science Monitor, December 14, 1998. As of 2004, however, Texas may have a lower rate of death sentencing than other states, according to a study by Cornell University.
PRIDE is an acronym for Personal Rights in Defense and Education. The organization was formed in Los Angeles, California in 1966 by Steve Ginsburg. PRIDE, from its very inception, was much more radical than the pre-1960s homosexual rights groups, which were more deferential. PRIDE's goal was to get out on the streets and get in the faces of the opposition with noisy, loud demonstrations and political action, as opposed to the conservative approach taken by its predecessors. The then 27-year-old founder, Steve Ginsburg, made it clear from the start that the organization would not hold back on showing its youthful overt sexuality.
And the number of raids conducted during Obama's first 4 1/2 years had reached 270, in contrast to 260 during Bush's 8 years. Early in President Obama's second term, in August 2013, the Justice Department issued a new Cole memo setting forth the conditions under which federal law would be enforced. The memo was prompted in particular by the recent legalization of non-medical cannabis in Washington and Colorado, but also addressed enforcement in medical cannabis states. Regarding the medical use of cannabis, the memo was considered to take a significantly more deferential approach towards the states (compared to the 2011 Cole memo), similar in nature to how the 2009 Ogden memo was originally widely interpreted.
Though they never married, from 1927 the two lived in close relation – living together, vacationing together, and being seen in public together. In 1929, Reynolds took up bookbinding at the Atelier of master French binder Pierre Legrain. Legrain’s style of binding was notably modernist in contrast to the prior tradition of French book binding which was more deferential to a classical style. Legrain’s influence, as well as that of Duchamp, led Reynolds to adopt a relatively avant-garde style of book binding, influenced by French Surrealism. She produced many bindings herself, as well as a few in collaboration with Duchamp, such as their collaboration on a binding for Alfred Jarry’s Ubu Roi.
Unlike arbitrary and capricious review, substantial evidence review gives the courts leeway to consider whether an agency's factual and policy determinations were warranted in light of all the information before the agency at the time of decision. Accordingly, arbitrary and capricious review is understood to be more deferential to agencies than substantial evidence review is. Arbitrary and capricious review allows agency decisions to stand as long as an agency can give a reasonable explanation for its decision based on the information that it had at the time. In contrast, the courts tend to look much harder at decisions resulting from trial-like procedures because they resemble actual trial-court procedures, but Article III of the Constitution reserves the judicial powers for actual courts.
Manhattanites and out-of-towners tended to favor continuing cooperation with the non-Orthodox groups, while Brooklynites, who were more deferential to haredi rabbinical leaders, tended to favor withdrawing from the council. Jacobs sympathized with the advocates of withdrawal but in his role as president of an organization with a large anti-withdrawal faction, refrained from openly campaigning to pull out of the council. A resolution at the 1966 OU national convention asking for withdrawal from the council was defeated, 74 to 16. By early 1974, however, opposition to the council reached the point that the OU's board of directors voted to suspend the organization's participation in the council until a full debate and vote were held at the next convention.
ACAS, headquartered at Euston Tower, issues a binding Code of Practice on how to handle workplace disputes and potential dismissals. While some courts have chosen to be more deferential to the employer's substantive reasons for dismissal,cf Bowater v Northwest London Hospitals NHS Trust [2011] EWCA Civ 63, Longmore LJ, 'the employer cannot be the final arbiter of its own conduct in dismissing an employee.' they emphasise more strongly the importance of employers having a fair process. The Advisory, Conciliation and Arbitration Service Code of Practice (2009) explains that good industry practice for disciplinaries requires, among other things, written warnings, a fair hearing by people who have no reason to side against the employee, or with any manager involved in the dispute, and the opportunity for union representation. Often a company handbook will include its own system, which if not followed will likely mean the dismissal was unfair.
Apart from its ingenious plotting, murder method and solution (revolving around the proposition that fishes' scales are individually identifiable in the same way as human fingerprints, hence the punning title), the novel represents a shift in the author's presentation of the English gentry, with whom she was on close terms from her youthful days in New Zealand, and then in 1920s London. (Comparison has been made with Marsh's somewhat more deferential pre-War presentation of the English landed gentry in earlier Alleyn novels; with the 1941 Surfeit of Lampreys showing a more ambivalent attitude.) Through its plot, characters and solution, the book is frankly critical of its rural gentry, their values and actions, especially in key confrontations between Lady Lacklander and the dead boy's father, and between the kindly, conservative District Nurse Kettle and the interloper revealed to be the murderer, for whom considerable reader sympathy is elicited.
Other groups were more charity-orientated with politics around saviorism rather than a horizontalist interpretation of mutual aid. Although the proliferation of mutual aid groups in the UK brought the term into the common parlance, not everyone involved in the groups are necessarily working from the same understanding of the origins and practice of mutual aid; for example some groups are more deferential to local authorities and politicians than others. Other conflicts in the early days of the groups included disputes over approaches to safeguarding and data protection (synonymous in the UK with the EU General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)), for example over whether volunteers should be required to have a background check for simply checking in on their neighbours. After the first few groups were set up, a website called "Covid-19 Mutual Aid" was created to help develop an organisational model for the mutual aid groups and facilitate the sharing of resources.
The substantive requirements for assessments are contained in constitutional provisions of dignity at least equal to the constitutional separation of powers provision. Prior to Proposition 218, special assessment laws were generally statutory, and the constitutional separation of powers doctrine served as a foundation for a more deferential standard of review by the courts. However, after Proposition 218 became law, an assessment's validity is now a constitutional question. Relying on various provisions of Proposition 218, including the burden of demonstration provision applicable to assessments, as well as language in the Proposition 218 ballot pamphlet, the California Supreme Court concluded that because Proposition 218's underlying purpose was to limit government's power to exact revenue and to curtail the deference that had been traditionally accorded legislative enactments on fees, assessments, and charges, a more rigorous standard of review was warranted. The separation of powers doctrine no longer justified allowing a local agency to usurp the judicial function of interpreting and applying the constitutional provisions that govern assessments under Proposition 218.
Aware of Blake's visions, William Wordsworth commented, "There was no doubt that this poor man was mad, but there is something in the madness of this man which interests me more than the sanity of Lord Byron and Walter Scott." In a more deferential vein, John William Cousins wrote in A Short Biographical Dictionary of English Literature that Blake was "a truly pious and loving soul, neglected and misunderstood by the world, but appreciated by an elect few", who "led a cheerful and contented life of poverty illumined by visions and celestial inspirations". Blake's sanity was called into question as recently as the publication of the 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica, whose entry on Blake comments that "the question whether Blake was or was not mad seems likely to remain in dispute, but there can be no doubt whatever that he was at different periods of his life under the influence of illusions for which there are no outward facts to account, and that much of what he wrote is so far wanting in the quality of sanity as to be without a logical coherence".

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