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38 Sentences With "more dishonest"

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

NBC news is #FakeNews and more dishonest than even CNN.
If it is attacking the EITE exemptions, it is even more dishonest.
Which is worse and which is more dishonest - the #Oscars or the Emmys?
"Which is worse and which is more dishonest," he asked his followers in 2014.
Such statements are far more dishonest than the statistical flight of fancy promoted by Biden.
It's one more dishonest message from Uber demanding that we have to obey Uber or else.
" Trump tweeted, following it up with another, saying: "The Fake News is becoming more and more dishonest!
But no, she's not more dishonest than other politicians, and compared with her opponent, she's George Washington.
They fail to see that the more dishonest they appear, the more they are in fact helping Trump.
However, Clinton is viewed as slightly more dishonest than Trump -- 29% say Clinton is honest, compared to 35% for Trump.
Participants in the game also became more dishonest more quickly when it would benefit just them and not their partner.
You might ask how I can be sure that one candidate will be so much more dishonest than the other.
Carl Bernstein, a reporter who helped expose the Watergate cover-up, on Sunday said Trump is even more dishonest than Nixon.
The latest season is stronger than season 10, and that might be in part because the government feels more dishonest than ever.
" Here are some of the president's key quotes: On the media "I've never seen more dishonest media than frankly, the political media.
Voters viewed him more unfavorably, thought he was unqualified for the presidency and, yes, even thought he was more dishonest than Mrs. Clinton.
In another set of studies, we found that people viewed hypocrites as dishonest — more dishonest, in fact, than people who uttered outright falsehoods.
Social science suggests that Trump may become more dishonest in 2019, because he is likely becoming inured to the effects of what he's doing.
" In addition to his criticism of the Times, Trump also asserted on Wednesday that the "press has never been more dishonest than it is today.
I sort of enjoy this back and forth, and I guess I have all my life, but never seen more dishonest media than frankly the political media.
Trump, who is consistently at war with the media, denounced the leak on Friday as an example of "more dishonest reporting," and called on Bloomberg to apologize.
" In 2014 he added the Academy Awards to his beefing with the tweet that asked, "Which is worse and which is more dishonest -- the Oscars or the Emmys?
It is partly a failure of today's media that the public views Clinton only slightly less unfavorably than it views Trump, and sees her as far more dishonest than he.
I think we ought to have a really serious look at all the different ways in which the establishment grew more corrupt, more dishonest, more willing to lie to the American people.
" In response, Lin Wood, a lawyer for Unsworth, called Spiro's comments "simply more dishonest accusations made as part of a dishonest defense and PR campaign by Musk to demean and falsely attack Mr. Unsworth.
Democrats said Republicans stood out in other ways, too: 42 percent found them more dishonest than other Americans; 35 percent said members of the other party were more immoral than the rest of the nation.
"I have never seen more dishonest media, frankly than the political media," Trump said, later slamming leaks to the press from the intelligence community -- some of which led to the resignation of national security adviser Michael Flynn.
Obscuring an income surtax under the guise of taxing for Medicare, the ACA or upon net investment income is one of the more dishonest things that Congress has ever done in the history of the tax code.
Not only do almost half of Republicans say Democrats are lazier than other Americans, more dishonest (45 percent), more closed-minded (52 percent) and more immoral (47 percent), most (59 percent) also say the members of their own party are more hard-working.
But what's even more dishonest about Speaker Ryan's critique — and it echoes many on the right — is the idea that our public policy should be focused on preventing future crimes and not merely backwards looking at the failures that have already allowed crimes to happen.
The much more dishonest ad from the American Action Network is more emotionally effective since it entirely throws caution to the wind — focusing on a steelworker who lost his job due to competition from foreign steel and then just hand-waving about corporate taxes.
" #Hannity" More dishonest than anyone knows 8:27 AM and 8:31 AM, today: Somebody hacked the DNC but why did they not have "hacking defense" like the RNC has and why have they not responded to the terrible...... things they did and said (like giving the questions to the debate to H). A total double standard!
On the other hand, nonpredatory clients present a lower cost for cheating, and thus experience more cheating behaviors from the cleaners. Some evidence suggest that physiological processes can mediate the cleaners' decision to switch from cooperating to cheating in mutualistic interactions. For example, in the bluestreak cleaner wrasse, changes in cortisol levels are associated with behavior changes. For smaller clients, increase cortisol levels in the water lead to more cooperative behavior, while for larger clients, the same treatment lead to more dishonest behavior.
Since the Tiananmen Square protests, corruption has not slowed as a result of greater economic freedom, but instead has grown more entrenched and severe in its character and scope. Business deals often involve corruption. In popular perception, there are more dishonest CPC officials than honest ones, a reversal of the views held in the first decade of reform of the 1980s. China specialist Minxin Pei argues that failure to contain widespread corruption is among the most serious threats to China's future economic and political stability.
Forensic teams find evidence that confirms Charlie Herrin to be the Golden Gate Strangler. Monk believes that Herrin only recently escalated to murder and has been taking peoples' left shoes for some time. Monk explains to Natalie that he believes Bertrum Gruber to be even more dishonest than before, saying that Bertrum remembered the M567 in Herrin's license plate because it reminded him of his mother's birthday. Now if she was born on May 5, 1967, it means she would have been ten years old when Bertrum was born.
An avid Dr. Pepper drinker, Stanley is kind and concerned about others, but will not tolerate the more dishonest shenanigans of Marshall, Kathleen and Carlotta. Has a close bond with his mother, Mother B. (who calls him Skippy) and is usually there to help his half-brother and half-sister in-law with getting used to being wealthy after years of not having much, or in helping them in dealing with the other Becks and thwarting their schemes. Marshall Beck (Michael Lombard) Big Guy's oldest, bi-sexual (and in therapy for it) son, and as snobby as his wife. Despite his snobbishness, however, he was also slightly milquetoast and weak willed compared to his strong-willed and snotty wife.
In an editorial, New Scientist suggested "a cynic might wonder if politicians are actually any more dishonest than they used to be", and hypothesized that "fibs once whispered into select ears are now overheard by everyone". Similarly, Viner suggested that while social media has helped some untruths to spread, it has also restrained others; as an example, she said The Suns false "The Truth" story following the Hillsborough disaster, and the associated police cover-up, would be hard to imagine in the social media age. The journalist George Gillett has suggested that the term "post-truth" mistakenly conflates empirical and ethical judgements, writing that the supposedly "post-truth" movement is in fact a rebellion against "expert economic opinion becoming a surrogate for values-based political judgements". Toby Young, writing for The Spectator, called the term a "cliché" used selectively primarily by left-wing commentators to attack what are actually universal ideological biases, contending that "[w]e are all post- truthers and probably always have been".
Like the music, the ballet still comes under critical fire at times. In a New York Times 2011 review of the Mariinsky staging, Alastair Macaulay faults Alonso for turning "the dance impulse in Bizet’s music into something heavier and more clumsily expressionistic," then adds, > Nothing about "Carmen Suite" is remotely subtle, though the narrative makes > Carmen look considerably more dishonest about her change of erotic > allegiance (from José to the Torero) than in the opera. The characters keep > posing for us and one another; steps are hurled flamboyantly, like stunts. > Early on it seems Carmen is the bullfighter aiming her darts at first one > lover, then the next; but a final quartet — featuring her, José, the Torero > and Fate — proceeds through a certain amount of partner changing until > Carmen lies dead at José’s feet and Fate at the Torero’s. (It’s not often > that you come away feeling Fate got a rough deal.)Macaulay, NY Times review.

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