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170 Sentences With "more emphatic"

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

Instead, it made its accession more emphatic by delivering a victory.
And since taking office as president, he has been even more emphatic.
The mayor of Mexico City, Miguel Ángel Mancera, was even more emphatic.
Ms. Barton responded to Ms. Park's performance with much more emphatic singing.
The noodles are supple, the herbs bountiful, cilantro alongside more emphatic culantro.
Seldom has a title ever earned its exclamation point in more emphatic fashion.
Mr. Ghesquière was even more emphatic about the potential of his former protégé.
Maggie Hassan (D) offered a more emphatic endorsement of the Democratic presidential nominee's trustworthiness.
Meanwhile, Trump has also grown more and more emphatic in his backing of Moore.
Every day the warnings grow more emphatic: Around the world, liberalism is in retreat.
Now, China has begun to tread on Europe's toes in even more emphatic fashion.
His scatterings of disparate props become more emphatic, as do expanses of raw canvas.
The next few hip-hop tracks, including "Follow God," sound similar, with more emphatic proselytizing.
Their cutlery dances during more emphatic gesticulations and they occasionally break off into loud guffaws.
The size of the "No" vote, at 2102.05 percent, was more emphatic than had been forecast.
And Mr Scalia was even more emphatic about not second-guessing the conclusions of democratic majorities.
They have been proven wrong in even more emphatic fashion now that he is president-elect.
The size of the "No" vote at 59.1 percent, was more emphatic than many had forecast.
The size of the "No" vote, at 59.1 percent, was more emphatic than had been forecast.
Crane acknowledged that the Astros "broke the rules" but refused to use the more emphatic synonym.
Barao suffered an even more emphatic loss to Dillashaw when they met two weeks later in Chicago.
Pete Teeley, a savvy and perceptive observer of the political scene was far more emphatic and blunt.
Bush was more emphatic in her own words, recalling in an interview with Page that she told Mrs.
Venus won a three-setter that finished a little before Halep's did — and in much more emphatic fashion.
Cassandra Grey, the founder of Violet Grey, a luxury beauty retailer in Los Angeles, is even more emphatic.
We cannot be more emphatic on this point: No young person or non-nicotine user should ever try JUUL.
" The company's chief financial officer, Ray Young, was more emphatic: "We actually feel very, very confident about our prospects.
Her more emphatic rhetoric against Wall Street excesses and the downsides of international trade deals sits uneasily with Clinton.
But they were more emphatic in their caution about airdrops on Thursday, 24 hours after the deadline had passed.
We cannot be more emphatic on this point: No young person or non-nicotine user should ever try Juul.
"  But she clearly held out hope for a more emphatic result, telling The Hill, "You're on the ground here.
Meanwhile, the divisions and the rhetoric in Trump World beyond Capitol Hill are growing more emphatic by the day.
One lesson learnt from earlier disasters was the need for earlier and more emphatic advice to people to seek refuge.
They bear a resemblance to Roni Horn's documentation of shifting gestures but are more emphatic about the passage of time.
"We cannot be more emphatic on this point: No young person or non-nicotine user should ever try Juul," she says.
By a more emphatic 68% to 28%, respondents said such decisions should be left to the free market rather than government.
Other officials were more emphatic that there would be a price to pay and that a response was in the making.
Saoi O'Connor, a 16-year-old from Ireland, was even more emphatic in arguing against specific demands as the meeting broke up.
" Michael Cannon, the director of health policy studies at the libertarian Cato Institute, was more emphatic: "Republicans don't care about health policy.
When he thought that I might be disagreeing with him, his protests became more emphatic "No, no, no, I do," he said.
" CNN's Jake Tapper was more emphatic: "The Obama administration has used the Espionage Act to go after whistleblowers who leaked to journalists . . .
In the age of the 803st century fan community, perhaps no group is more emphatic, organized and passionate than Michael Jackson's supporters.
VALERIYA SAFRONOVA I thought the monochromatic tones of the neighborhood made the girls' faces even more vivid and their movements more emphatic.
As a guilty-town ghost story, "The Fog" has a generic resemblance to "Poltergeist," which it predates, and is even more emphatic.
The company has said it made the warnings more emphatic in an effort to avoid the sort of fatal crash that occurred in May.
Even more emphatic is the power it is transferring to the board on determining the fate of the disputed content the members rule on.
This month, they were even more emphatic, voting almost unanimously to express their disapproval of his abrupt withdrawal of troops from Syria and Afghanistan.
But in the more recent artwork, the subversion of language into something to be seen as form rather than merely read becomes even more emphatic.
Twice they got themselves arrested when they decided not just to stand there but to do something more emphatic, in those cases staging sit-downs.
Every athlete has their own way of expressing sheer joy, but the more emphatic the reaction the more entertaining it is for the viewers at home.
Such an electoral defeat—the more emphatic, the better—would not only vanquish Trump but also lay the groundwork for decontaminating American culture of his influence.
Yet, from the first, Mr. Neenan's touch is slightly off: The dynamics he keeps asking of his dancers are always more emphatic than their musical accompaniment.
The final result was far more emphatic than it may have appeared in the last-gasp votes that played into the early hours of Wednesday morning.
China and India joined the United States in pushing back against more emphatic language that calls on countries to enhance their climate-action targets in 2020.
AeroMobil is more emphatic about safety than speed, however — the vehicle has a lot of features designed to make sure it can withstand even choppy flying weather.
Mounting an Independent presidential candidacy An even more emphatic expression of discontent has come when a marginalized faction bolts their party to support their own presidential candidate.
Suddenly there's a pause, and over more separated, more emphatic chords Ms. Spektor sings: "Enjoy your youth/Sounds like a threat," separating the lines with stark drumbeats.
In this faster, more emphatic, live-in-the-studio video, he makes it an explicit rejection of anti-immigrant policies, alluding to Woody Guthrie along the way.
As for Mr. Mars, he's doing more emphatic talking than singing and is backed up by a barking chorus, adding tough-guy punch to his mellifluous boasts.
Her performance was reminiscent of her coach Kristin Armstrong's gold medal ride in the road time trial at the Rio Olympics, although this was far more emphatic.
"The theme that we're going for is that you can improve some things, but everything good comes with a cost," says Fallon, his hand movements growing more emphatic.
"I'm comfortable that he's served his time, has made his statement clear, and let's move on," Mr. de Blasio said then, in a tone more emphatic than diplomatic.
Kyle Richards is relieved Paris Hilton found her $2 million engagement ring -- but she's even more emphatic about her niece protecting her fortune when she walks down the aisle.
Vogue posted the exact same tweet again at 1:30am GMT, which predictably resulted in a series of "everyone" replies, with some of the tweets more emphatic than before.
I like that they convey a sense of weight; using one seems to send a much more emphatic message than what gets across by deploying a smaller, flat emoji.
The economic news, however, was much more emphatic, with U.S. retail sales rising the most in seven months in July as consumers spent more on 247.76 of 226 retail sectors.
While Bergkamp's time in Serie A must have been far more disheartening than Vieira's experience, the Dutchman has spoken about what the league taught him in even more emphatic terms.
In the U.S., people have also come to view women as more emphatic and sensitive than men over time, but most still view men as the more ambitious and aggressive sex.
" The progressive wing is more emphatic: In a December interview with The New York Times, Bernie Sanders said of the big technology companies, "I think we should be breaking them up.
"We share a common goal with FDA to keep JUUL products out of the hands of youth: We cannot be more emphatic on this point," the company said in an emailed statement.
But NASA scientists in the United States were more emphatic, saying in a public statement that the photographs posted online were more consistent with "a land based explosion" than with something from space.
It is also worth noting that as central bankers change their tune on inflation from tentative to more emphatic hopes for a revival, some very powerful disinflationary forces in the global economy remain.
The carmaker is pursuing electric options fairly aggressively, likely part of an overall shift dictated by its parent company Volkswagen, which has been more emphatic about its EV plans since its diesel emissions scandal.
In Rio, Stefanidi had won on countback but this time the victory was much more emphatic as she had 16 centimeters to spare over Morris, clearing a national record 4.91 meters to her rival's 4.75m.
Larry Sabato, a political scientist at the University of Virginia, was more emphatic: Let's put it this way: If Trump weren't supportive of Gillespie, it would drive a stake into the heart of Gillespie's candidacy.
"If I were back on that call with her right now, I would be more emphatic about her leaving," Lyford explains, noting he'd share with her some of the knowledge he's acquired since the cult's demise.
"Dollar bulls, it seems, were quite happy to belatedly indulge in more emphatic U.S. dollar buying on the pretext of hawkish surprise in the FOMC," Mizuho Senior Economist Vishnu Varathan said in an early morning note.
He was making a question go away without having to dirty his hands on it or lose followers with a more emphatic disavowal, and in that sense, he appeared to be doing something truly insidious: nothing.
Nudges that involve making the desired choice more attractive, or at least more obvious, range from making the wording on letters about late payment of taxes more emphatic to placing healthy food at eye level in canteens.
Over the course this five round war, Woodley undoubtedly achieved the more emphatic moments of success, nearly polishing is foe of with punches on two occasions, and almost stopping things with a guillotine choke in the fourth.
St. Louis Fed President James Bullard was even more emphatic about his concern about the softness in so-called core inflation, which rose only 1.6 percent in the 12 months through March, well below the Fed's 2 percent target.
Mr. Smith was widely regarded as one of the most original and accomplished British artists of his generation, with a ravishing sense of color and formal restraint that stood in marked contrast to the more emphatic, polemical American style.
She was a philosopher and academic as well as a writer, in the male-dominated intellectual world of Oxford, and I don't doubt that her refutation of domestic servitude needed to be louder and more emphatic than most people's.
He became more emphatic in his contempt for the Washington establishment (although I'm not sure what makes you a member if not eight years in the White House), and he became a high-profile target of the conspiratorial right wing.
The word "people" assumed a new gravity as Ms. Jungr adopted a darker, more emphatic voice, the better to remind us that the song's characters aren't quaint folksy sketches of everyday Britons in the 1960s but quietly suffering flesh-and-blood humans.
His passage begins with a statement of intent ("We come borderless, but full of body") and only becomes more emphatic from there, a statement of power and intent to a society whose most powerful people hold xenophobia and racism as core value.
In particular, I need to make more emphatic that the focus of my argument is on one very specific form of affirmative action: for blacks who would otherwise just miss being admitted to elite institutions because of inequities built into our system.
On the other hand, if you're a right-wing woman, the way to be perceived as communal is to be more conservative, more emphatic on so-called family values, more inclined to defend the status quo when it comes to American interests abroad.
The reason for this correlation, the authors argue, may be that people inclined toward delusional thinking are "more emphatic in their endorsement of NDE phenomena as they view it as less at odds with their pre-existing belief systems" or even as "evidence" of the validity of those beliefs.
An ideological movement asks for ever more emphatic declarations of ideological loyalty, while a network of interests can be satisfied, if not always mobilized, by a series of modest promises to pursue incremental progress on an issue, or sometimes merely to show recognition of the group and its causes.
But in the age of the 21st-century superfan, perhaps no group is more emphatic, organized and passionate online than the devotees of Michael Jackson, the King of Pop whose legacy includes decades of innuendo and court cases regarding what he did or did not do with young boys.
Should Suzuki make it to 29, or beyond, by season's end it would be an appropriate footnote to a more emphatic record he set back in 2004, when he was a superstar with the Seattle Mariners and set the record for base hits in a season, with 262.
Born into a provincial family of chocolatiers, she has good antennae for ''la France profonde" (deep France.) Not since the song was released a half-century ago has a more emphatic affirmative answer been given to the Beatles' question: "Will you still need me, will you still feed me, when I'm sixty-four?
And if anyone was worried about the lingering effects of a recent heart attack on Senator Bernie Sanders, they need not have been: He proved that no candidate can lean forward with more emphatic gusto and declare that he has received more donations than anyone else, at an average amount of $18, than he can.
He gave up the two soft runs in the second and then two much more emphatic ones in the third, courtesy of a mammoth home run by Gonzalez, who in the bottom of the inning would crash hard into the Green Monster trying, and failing, to catch a drive off the bat of Boston's Steve Pearce.
In the wake of defense complaints that prosecutors were treating Flynn unfairly as a result of a dispute that led to his being nixed as a government witness at his ex-partner's trial last summer, the new prosecution submission is more emphatic than past filings that a sentence of probation would be a reasonable one for Flynn.
We highlighted some of his more emphatic odes to beer below: During his opening statement, Kavanaugh mentioned his beer drinking four times, saying that during the summer of 1982 — when Ford alleges he pinned her down, groped her, and tried to take her clothes off — he was cutting lawns, working out, lifting weights, playing basketball, and drinking beers with friends.
Bernie SandersBernie SandersSenators introduce resolution warning that Congress has not authorized Iran war Ex-Trump campaign adviser: Biden would be able to 'sit down and get some things done' with Republicans Cardi B says she's filing for 'Nigerian citizenship' because Trump is putting lives 'in danger' MORE (I-Vt.) and Elizabeth WarrenElizabeth Ann WarrenTrump trade deal faces uncertain Senate timeline Trump, Democrats set for brawl on Iran war powers Senators introduce resolution warning that Congress has not authorized Iran war MORE (D-Mass.), have been more emphatic in their criticisms of Trump's actions.
Sometimes an asyndetic list is useful for the strong and direct climactic effect it has, much more emphatic than if a final conjunction were used.
This is demonstrated in the following example: Here, the addition of leai to the verb gāoi "to move" makes the statement more emphatic: not only did Sina not move, she did not move at all.
The Allmusic review called it a "Sharp trio set" and stated: "The results are uniformly solid, sometimes more emphatic than others. Burrell is still playing in a relaxed, easy groove, but occasionally increases the energy level".
The hydrography was so imperfectly known that one of the board's more emphatic recommendations was that a Coast Survey vessel should be attached to each blockading squadron.Official Records, Navies I, v. 16, p. 655. This recommendation was accepted.
Foister, however, is doubtful, owing to "the inconsistency in the sizes of the drawn heads". Holbein paid less attention to facial tones in his later drawings, making fewer and more emphatic strokes, but they are never formulaic.Parker, 28; Rowlands, 118–20.
This too is correlated with those phenomimes and psychomimes containing the same fricative sound, for example and . The use of the gemination can create a more emphatic or emotive version of a word, as in the following pairs of words: , , , and many others.
However, the possessive adjective preceding the noun is not always emphatic: when it is tucked away between two more emphatic words it is usually unemphatic:Ullman (1919), p. 411. :.Cicero, 87. :"He had set fire to my brother's house." It is also usual for the possessive to precede the noun when vocative: :Cicero, 1.103.
If the hiss and growl warning does not remove the threat, an attack by the cat may follow. Kittens as young as two to three weeks will hiss and spit when first picked up by a human. "Spitting" is a shorter but louder and more emphatic version of hissing. Familiar lion's roar recorded from a big cat in captivity.
Uehara was born as Rikiji Matsumoto in Ōdate, Akita Prefecture, Japan. He graduated from Senshu University, and made his professional debut with the song under the Japanese division of Polydor Records in 1936. His famous songs included the 1937 song . His vocal style, called kobushi, became popular as the more emphatic form among modern enka singers.
Fitzgerald's performances in the provincial championship saw him pick up an All Star award. In 1989 Fitzgerald lined out in his second Munster final. Once again it was near neighbours Cork who provided the opposition. On this occasion ‘the Rebels’ had a more emphatic victory as Fitzgerald's side lost out by 1–12 to 1–9.
The Hollywood executive at a motion-picture conference in New York City on May 5 was even more emphatic in his statements about production changes, vowing that "gangster pictures" such as "'Born to Kill' will no longer be produced by RKO Radio"."Films of Violence Abandoned: Schary", Motion Picture Daily (New York, N.Y.), May 6, 1947, pp. 1, 6. Internet Archive.
Therefore, by far the most common English translation is, "the Word was God,"e.g. King James Version, Revised Standard Version, New American Standard Bible, New International Version, New Living Translation, English Standard Version, and Young's Literal Translation, though even more emphatic translations such as "the Word was God Himself" (Amplified Bible) or "the Word ... was truly God" (Contemporary English Version) also exist.
The former contributed nothing new to the system except a more emphatic statement of the distinction between psychology and physiology. The latter formulated his theory of beauty. Jouffroy's claim to distinction rests mainly on his ability as an expositor of other men's ideas. His enthusiasm, and his command over the language of popular exposition, made him a great international medium for the transfusion of ideas.
General Bruce Palmer Jr., one of Westmoreland's three Field Force commanders, claimed that "the Viet Cong has been defeated" and that "He can't get food and he can't recruit. He has been forced to change his strategy from trying to control the people on the coast to try to survive in the mountains."Schmitz, p. 58. Westmoreland was even more emphatic in his assertions.
The length of the shell attains 45 mm. (original description) Shell of the same type Xanthodaphne agonia, but larger and proportionally much stouter, of the same pinkish brown color and delicate construction, and about five whorls. The spire is subconoid, with distinct suture and well-rounded whorls. The sculpture is similar to that of X. agonia but more emphatic, particularly the arcuate wrinkles which cross the anal fasciole.
The players are the real heroes and I just sit and watch them. They have an awful lot to do yet to get anywhere where they want to be but it's never about the manager, ever." O'Shea also admitted he was surprised by the 16-point winning margin saying "“It probably was more emphatic than we thought. I thought there was still a lot of hurling left in the game.
According to Mosel & Hovdhaugen (1992, pp. 480–481) the only TAM particles that appear with leai are ʻua and e or te. This means that leai acts as if non-existence is a general fact, rather than linking it to a specific point in time. When another verb follows leai within the same verb phrase, it functions as a more emphatic negation meaning something like "not at all".
For example, in the case of Gibbons v. Ogden, , he wrote that the power to regulate interstate commerce "can never be exercised by the people themselves, but must be placed in the hands of agents, or lie dormant." Concurring Justice William Johnson was even more emphatic that the Constitution is "altogether in favor of the exclusive grants to Congress of power over commerce." Later, in the case of Willson v.
The treatment of space is more emphatic here than in other Norbertine abbey churches, on account of the happy combination of a radial plan with a very long and axially accentuated choir. The design combined Gothic structural forms, such as ribbed vaults, with Renaissance ornamental details. The church is considered a peculiar synthesis of Baroque and Gothic. No dome was built over the central section because in January 1668 one of the major piers collapsed.
Either is a more emphatic way of expressing the simpler "he pwns," but the former implies that the person is embodying the trait rather than merely possessing it. ;-ness suffix :Derivation of a noun from an adjective stem is done by attaching -ness to any adjective. This is entirely the same as the English form, except it is used much more often in Leet. Nouns such as lulzness and leetness are derivations using this suffix.
The Immortality of Writers is an Ancient Egyptian wisdom text likely to have been used as an instructional work in schools. It is recorded on the verso side of the Chester Beatty IV papyrus (BM 10684) held in the British Museum. It is notable for its rationalist skeptical outlook, even more emphatic than in the Harper's Songs, regarding an afterlife. The scribe advises that writings of authors provide a more sure immortality than fine tombs.
USA finished second in the 2010 Division Five after losing the final against Nepal and won promotion to 2010 Division Four. They continued their climb in more emphatic style by finishing first in 2010 Division Four, demolishing Italy in the final. They were promoted to 2011 Division Three where they took last place and were relegated to 2012 Division Four. There they finished in second place, and were promoted back to 2013 Division Three.
In the following sentence with antithesis, two topics, "the land journey" and "the journey by sea", are contrasted. Because they are contrasted, the topics are more emphatic than the focus: :Livy 26.26. :"The journey there by land is _short_ , and the sea journey from Naupactus is also _short_." Similar is the following, where the contrasted topics are "when I was a young man" and "now that I am an old one": :Cicero, 2.118.
In the video the band are performing on a stage, which contains close-up shots of its members. The footage was taken at one of their arena concerts. It shows Jonathan Cain's distinctive synthesizer opening and moves into the soft initial vocal work of John Waite. The tempo picks up with Deen Castronovo's drum work and Neal Schon's trademark guitar during which Waite becomes more emphatic vocally; the song finishes with Waite's soft vocals.
During threat displays, individuals will lower the front of the body, stretch the head low and forward, with partially extended wings and feathers on the head and raise their back. If continuously threatened or cornered, the posture in the threat display may become still more contoured and, if pressed, the owl will like back and attempt to slash with its large talons. The threat displays of males are generally more emphatic than those of females.Kaufman, K. (1996).
His best match figures came near the end of the tour when he took 5 for 52 and 5 for 20 against Minor Counties in a more emphatic victory. On the tour as a whole he took 59 first-class wickets at an average of 23.94.New Zealanders in British Isles 1937 bowling He played for Manawatu in the Hawke Cup from 1924-25 to 1946-47, taking 177 wickets at 11.59 and making 1409 runs at 32.76.
For example, Y may be called y rather than igrek (from "Greek i"). When giving the spelling of words, certain letters may be said in more emphatic ways to distinguish them from other identically pronounced characters. For example, H may be referred to as samo ha ("H alone") to distinguish it from CH (ce ha). The letter Ż may be called żet (or zet) zet z kropką ("Z with a dot") to distinguish it from RZ (er zet).
That tribe submitted with ill-concealed malevolence. The second instance, however, required a more emphatic response. When an Indian shaman died as the result of an accidental explosion during a whaling operation on 22 October, the natives of the village of Angoon seized two white men and two of the three company vessels involved and demanded a payment of 200 blankets. The superintendent quickly put to sea in the company's steam tug Favorite and made the voyage to Sitka.
She reaches a decision far more humane than murdering Renaud, by casting a further spell to make him fall in love with her. The bass amplifies and is much more emphatic in this part, while the supporting dynamic harmony permits a more melodic style. The idea is elaborated with accompanying music that evokes love and idealism, similar to the structure of a minuet. Repetition is also prevalent with the orchestra first introducing the entire melody, and Armide echoing its sentiment.
The tuba > then enters playing the first of this work's two major themes, a muscular, > ominous motif. Other brass join in to play the theme, growing louder and > more emphatic, but rigorously yoked to the underlying rhythm. Eventually the > horns blast as loudly as they can, with obsessive trills on the low > clarinets far underneath, and the strings enter with the slashing second > theme. The brass take up this new theme and bring it to a climax, after > which the music returns to its opening texture.
The alarm call and contact calls are high-pitched, ringing lengthy whistles, described as "tseee, tseee" or "zweeet": these calls are repeated multiple times, with pauses in between. The alarm call is harsher and more emphatic, described as "scree" or "scree chit chit". Males use a long and complex whistled song when displaying or exhibiting territorial behavior; this often consists of a long whistle that fades away, followed by shorter whistles, clicking or chacking noises, or bell-like sounds. The call of the borneensis subspecies is slightly different from the others.
She proposes that (s)tudio actors developed their craft, not by using a single method, but rather by drawing on a complex integration of techniques taken from silent films, theater, dance, modeling, vaudeville, and the theories of Constantin Stanislavski." Baron's list reads like a resume of Scott's.—was often deprecated by critics who preferred the more emphatic stage styles of the pre- film era or the later method styles. Typical of the 1940s was Dick McCrone: "Miss Scott, who is an excellent clothes horse, rounds out the principals as Lancaster's moll.
It can be tempered or > augmented by contact with another form; it can be destroyed or emphasized; > it is multiplied or it disappears. An ellipse may change its circumference > because it is inscribed in a polygon. A form which is more emphatic than the > surrounding forms may govern the whole picture, may imprint its own effigy > upon everything. Those picture-makers who minutely imitate one or two leaves > in order that all the leaves of a tree may seem to be painted, show in a > clumsy fashion that they suspect this truth.
The Fyrby Runestone tells in fornyrðislag that two brothers were "the most rune-skilled brothers in Middle Earth." A verse form close to that of Beowulf existed in runestones and in the Old Norse Eddas; in Norse, it was called fornyrðislag, which means "past- words-law" or "way of ancient words". The Norse poets tended to break up their verses into stanzas of from two to eight lines (or more), rather than writing continuous verse after the Old English model. The loss of unstressed syllables made these verses seem denser and more emphatic.
The first three finishers in the Oaks met again in a Sweepstakes over one mile at Ascot on 1 June, the other nine entries having been withdrawn by their owners. The result was the more emphatic than at Epsom, with Oxygen leading from the start and winning very easily from Marmora and Guitar. After a break of four months, Oxygen returned in October for the Newmarket St Leger over two miles. She proved too good for the four colts who opposed her but was beaten by Camarine, a filly who went on to win the following year's Ascot Gold Cup.
It is widely believed by most practicing lawyers that legal dramas result in the general public having misconceptions about the legal process. Many of these misconceptions result from the desire to create an interesting story. For example, because conflict between parties make for an interesting story, legal dramas emphasize the trial and ignore the fact that the vast majority of civil and criminal cases in the United States are settled out of court. Trials in legal dramas are often shown to be more emphatic by disregarding actual rules in trials that prevent prejudicing defendants from juries.
Singing and percussion are the most important aspects of traditional Native American music. Vocalization takes many forms, ranging from solo and choral song to responsorial, unison and multipart singing. Percussion, especially drums and rattles, are common accompaniment to keep the rhythm steady for the singers, who generally use their native language or non-lexical vocables (nonsense syllables). Traditional music usually begins with slow and steady beats that grow gradually faster and more emphatic, while various flourishes like drum and rattle tremolos, shouts and accented patterns add variety and signal changes in performance for singers and dancers.
According to a studio report in Star Hits magazine, one of the early drafts of this song was called "One of the Faithful." A demo version by that name can be found on several bootlegs. The album version of the song is considerably different from the single and video versions, and from all the remixes. The former's original key and tempo are maintained, but mixes elements of the master to differing degrees for the single release, the main ones being a more emphatic, up-front mix for the percussion, brass, and backing vocal tracks, throughout the song.
This two-note call is preceded by a series of gwa notes given every half- second or so. They become more emphatic and after some time change to a sequence of the gwa co call proper, with the first syllable higher in pitch than the second, but not differing in emphasis or volume. The gwa co call may be repeated 50 times or more. Sometimes, the initial calls are a oo oo-oo cow- cow-cow, sometimes a descending gwaaaaaaa..... On occasion, the two-syllable call is not given, and instead the simple gwa is repeated as often as the full call.
In this case he tinkers with the movement's sonata form by reference to an historical variation of it. The recapitulation starts only with a statement of the second phrase of the movement's theme, which is in the dominant. This would have been a common technique earlier in the eighteenth century that, in this instance, is liable to confuse the unknowing listener looking for the statement of the first phrase of the theme in the tonic. It is not until 27 measures later that the listener is presented with a more emphatic reprise, which is actually a coda.
A melodic or harmonic-melodic third, triad (fifth) (such as in the song "Shallow Brown"), or seventh (such as in the song "Donald MacGillavry") may be built off this foundation. A "change" in levels is called a shift. We see this in double-tonic tunes such as "Donald MacGillavry" (notes: A to G in bar 4 below). Shifting is more emphatic than chord changes (chords: Am-G), but not as emphatic as modulations (keys: A minor to G major): "Donald MacGillavry" , last measure each line The foundation (root) is the most important note and accompanying chords are almost always built in root position.
By the 1920s, post-WWI disillusionment, as well as financially stressed Protestant churches, had contributed to the loss of interest in missionary work. As a result, funding from Methodist Episcopal Church Board became scarce, even threatening to force the Gales to leave their missionary post in Tunki altogether. However, Gale took advantage of the increasingly important relationship she had with supporters in the home field and was able to continue medical work, including building the Tunki General Hospital, relying solely upon monetary donations and gifts. Her letters became even more emphatic in relating how vital these gifts were as well as the gratitude of Chinese patients.
Like a single wink but more emphatic, two winks in a row may be used by the sender as a subtle way to imply that something said by the sender, immediately beforehand, was "sneaky", "tricky", "misleading", or "untrue" to the receiver. In English-speaking countries, this has also given rise to the expression of vocally saying "wink wink" while winking—or sometimes while not even winking at all, in which case the sender is not communicating the "trickiness" of their words to a third party, but to the receiver, and is thus signalling that their words should not be taken literally but as a hint or euphemism.
He started the season reasonably well with 5 tries from 11 league appearances but reinjured his shoulder in a November match against Rugby Lions. This time the injury was worse and he would keep him out of the Fylde team for the rest of the season, including missing out as the club retained the Lancashire Cup by defeating Preston Grasshoppers 15–7 away. He did recover in time to take part in the county championships with Lancashire but was restricted to the bench as his county retained the Bill Beaumont Cup, with an even more emphatic 36–6 win at Twickenham against the previous years' opponents Gloucestershire.
He then began a thorough study of the Scriptures and the Church Fathers, and soon became convinced that the Church of Luther was not the true Church and that Lutheran morals did not make for the betterment of the people. To express his dissatisfaction with the new teaching, he wrote in 1527 two works which he sent to the theologians of Wittenberg without, however, receiving any satisfaction from them. To give more emphatic expression to his conviction of the error of the new religion, he resigned his charge in 1531 and returned with his family to Vacha. Here he spent two years in extreme poverty.
Cueing is achieved by "engaging" the players before their entry (by looking at them) and executing a clear preparation gesture, often directed toward the specific players. An inhalation, which may or may not be a semi-audible "sniff" from the conductor, is a common element in the cueing technique of some conductors. Mere eye contact or a look in the general direction of the players may be sufficient in many instances, as when more than one section of the ensemble enters at the same time. Larger musical events may warrant the use of a larger or more emphatic cue designed to encourage emotion and energy.
When it moved to Detroit its president was George Hermann Derry, who was the first lay person to serve as a president of a Catholic women's college in the United States. In the decades after World War I, Marygrove College was an important local center of Catholic social action. Faculty members were chosen for their education, character, and faith, and President Derry encouraged each student to look beyond the prospect of eventual marriage and to become capable of "doing her part in the world's work in whatever sphere of life she may be placed". By 1936, the college catalog spoke in far more emphatic terms of female independence.
A Darren Jackson goal gave Celtic a 1-0 win to take over to Zagreb, but an insipid second leg performance in match dominated by Robert Prosinečki saw Celtic beaten 3-0 to go out on aggregate. Only a fine showing from Jonathan Gould in goal saved Celtic from a more emphatic defeat. The club dropped into the UEFA Cup. Portuguese side Vitória de Guimarães were defeated 2-1 in both legs in the first round, but Celtic crashed out in the second round against Zürich 5-3 on aggregate as a public row between captain Paul Lambert and managing director Jock Brown raged behind the scenes.
Two years later, Whistler painted another portrait of Hiffernan in white, this time displaying his newfound interest in Asian motifs, which he entitled The Little White Girl. His Lady of the Land Lijsen and The Golden Screen, both completed in 1864, again portray his mistress, in even more emphatic Asian dress and surroundings. During this period Whistler became close to Gustave Courbet, the early leader of the French realist school, but when Hiffernan modeled in the nude for Courbet, Whistler became enraged and his relationship with Hiffernan began to fall apart. In January 1864, Whistler's very religious and very proper mother arrived in London, upsetting her son's bohemian existence and temporarily exacerbating family tensions.
In his work of the 1980s, Alexander painted the prairie landscape, with its flat expanses and huge skies, as well as developing a thicker, more emphatic way of applying paint. During the 1990s, he sought to convey the structure and shapes of the forms that compose the mountains, varying his practice to create rectangles of either vertical or horizontal orientation interspersed with near-square paintings as well as panoramic- format paintings. For imagery, he sometimes used an invented juxtaposition: a huge flower blooming in front of an Arctic landscape. Beginning in 2004 (after an initial inspiration in 2001), Alexander began to focus on water surfaces and their fleeting colour and light effects in his paintings.
Quotation: "Balthasar does not deny the possibility of salvation outside the boundaries of explicit Christianity - in fact he is probably more emphatic than Rahner in maintaining the legitimacy of Christian hope for universal salvation." Many, however, reject this criticism as a misreading of the theologian's work."It is curious indeed that a text so often characterized as advocating an easy 'universalism' in regard to salvation actually commences with a clear statement that all men stand under the divine judgment. Whatever else Hans Urs von Balthasar says in this book, the one thing he is quite clearly not saying is that we have certain knowledge that all people will be saved." Barron, Robert (2014).
As Frank Kameny put it, "[P]icketing as such had become questionable. Dissent and dissatisfaction had begun to take new and more emphatic forms in society.". At the November 1–2, 1969 meeting of the Eastern Regional Conference of Homophile Organizations (the successor to ECHO), Ellen Broidy of the NYU Student Homophile League presented Craig Rodwell's proposal for a new commemorative demonstration. The conference passed a resolution drafted by Rodwell, his partner Fred Sargeant, Broidy and Linda Rhodes to move the demonstration from July 4 in Philadelphia to the last weekend in June in New York City, as well as proposing to "other organizations throughout the country... suggest(ing) that they hold parallel demonstrations on that day" to commemorate the Stonewall riot.
His more than five hundred single-movement keyboard sonatas also contain abrupt changes of texture, but these changes are organized into periods, balanced phrases that became a hallmark of the classical style. However, Scarlatti's changes in texture still sound sudden and unprepared. The outstanding achievement of the great classical composers (Haydn, Mozart and Beethoven) was their ability to make these dramatic surprises sound logically motivated, so that "the expressive and the elegant could join hands." At first the new style took over Baroque forms—the ternary da capo aria and the sinfonia and concerto—but composed with simpler parts, more notated ornamentation, rather than the improvised ornaments that were common in the Baroque era, and more emphatic division of pieces into sections.
Get a life is an idiom and catch phrase that has gained international usage. It is intended as a taunt, to indicate that the person being so addressed is devoting an inordinate amount of time to someone else's trivial matters. The phrase has also appeared as a generally more emphatic variant of the taunt "get a job" and implies the addressee needs to go out and make their way in the world, without being supported by outside sources such as parents or benefactors. It may also be directed at someone who is perceived as boring or single-minded; suggesting they acquire some other, more practical interests or hobbies and get dates, find a job, or move into their own home.
Butland was named in Stuart Pearce's 18-man Great Britain squad for the 2012 Summer Olympics. He was only included after receiving special dispensation from the FA, who had decided that no players in England's Euro 2012 squad would be eligible for selection. He came on as a half-time substitute in a pre-Games friendly against Brazil on 20 July, and according to the Telegraph, "Only three superb late saves from Jack Butland prevented the scoreline being more emphatic" as Great Britain lost 2–0. Butland started all of Britain's group matches in the tournament and conceded two goals, one in a 1–1 draw with Senegal and the other in a 3–1 victory over the United Arab Emirates.
Juul Labs CEO Kevin Burns said, "we are committed to deterring young people, as well as adults who do not currently smoke from using our products. We cannot be more emphatic on this point: No young person or non- nicotine user should ever try Juul." The FDA followed up by issuing more than 60 warning letters and fines to stores that were found to be illegally selling Juul products to minors. In September 2018, the FDA sent letters to Juul Labs and the manufacturers of the four other largest e-cigarette brands in the US—R.J. Reynolds' Vuse, Altria's MarkTen, Imperial Brands' blu eCigs, and Japan Tobacco International's Logic—giving them 60 days to lay out their plans to address widespread youth use of their products.
Vane's relationship with Boyes has many similarities with Sayers' love affair (1921–1922) with the author John Cournos (1881–1966), a Russian-born American Jew. Biographers note that Sayers' later relationship with Bill White and her marriage to the fellow writer Oswald Atherton "Mac" Fleming provide grist for Vane's struggle to balance love (and perhaps marriage to Wimsey) and her work. After Sayers' affairs with Cournos and White were revealed, the comparisons between Sayers and Vane became more emphatic. (Neither of these affairs was publicly known during Sayers' lifetime.) McGregor and Lewis suggest that some of Vane's and Wimsey's observations about mystery in story versus real life – though in the context of a mystery story – reflect Sayers' sense of fun and ability to laugh with her characters.
Pigeard speaks of only 1,250 men killed, wounded or missing and 2,000 prisoners for the Prussians, and of 2,000 men lost for the Russians. Since Pigeard asserts that these casualties occurred during the pursuit, it is possible that these figures do not take into account the casualties incurred during the initial actions of this battle (one battalion of Zieten's brigade captured, plus the 2,000 prisoners taken during Grouchy's and Nansouty's joint action against Zieten). According to Pigeard, the French registered very light casualties of around 600 men. Military Historian Jacques Garnier, analysing the battle in Jean Tulard's Dictionnaire Napoléon, notes that only the muddy, sodden ground, hampering an efficient deployment of the French artillery and infantry, prevented a much more emphatic victory.
Very lyrical and nice, sometimes with odd rhyhms... Despite this stellar list of Tzadik musicians, the music itself has a kind of déjà-vu effect, even if some of the playing is more emphatic than on other albums".Stef, The Free Jazz Collective Review, Free Jazz Collective, April 21, 2010 PopMatters correspondent Benjamin Aspray was also unimpressed noting "his new record features many of the virtues that set even his lesser works above the vast majority of experimental music. The compositions are balanced just right between being intricate and hanging loose, and the piano-led ensemble assembled here plays through them with precision and restraint. The production is crisp and clear; the vibes shimmer on top of sinewy basslines, and no one overtakes anyone else.
In April the Irish Police launched 'Operation Faoisimh' which was described as a proactive initiative to ensure victims are supported and protected during the virus. Separately the county's Department of Justice announced that it was allocating €160,000 to community and voluntary groups to support their work and made a series TV, radio and social media ads to try and reach victims. The Scottish Government relaunched its previous awareness campaign against domestic abuse on 10 April 2020, with Justice Secretary Humza Yousaf emphasising that victims can call on police and support services round the clock, even during the crisis, and they do not have to wait until the crisis is over. A government advertisement released on the same day was more emphatic: 'Don't delay in seeking help during the current coronavirus situation.
Copies of the Assyrian King List record that "Aššūr-nādin or nāṣir-apli,The Nassouhi King List (NaKL) and the Khorsabad King List (KhKL) say Aššūr-nādin-apli but the Seventh Day Adventist Seminary King List (SDAS) says Aššūr-nāṣir-apli. his son, seized the throne (for himself and) ruled for three or fourThe NaKL says three years, while the KhKL and the SDAS say four years. years." Brinkman relates that "it is uncertain whether one or two princes lie behind the conflicting scribal traditions," but Grayson is more emphatic, "there seem to have been at least two sons." Yamada, however, argues that it was scribal confusion with the later succession of Tukulti-Ninurta II by Aššūr-nāṣir-apli II. The names differ by just one cuneiform character, PAB for nāṣir and SUM for nādin.
Fern Shaffer, Ginkgo, acrylic on canvas, 60" x 84," © 1994 In her early work, Shaffer painted in a minimalist, abstract style influenced by artists such as Barnett Newman. Her first solo show, Ontology at 36 (1981), however, marked a shift that would continue, toward experimentation with mixed materials, representational elements such as the figure, landscape or symbolic imagery, and more emphatic themes. The "Morphogenic Fields" series (1983)—its title referencing the aura of radiation that emanates from living beings—features the female form, rendered in soul- baring, tenuous outline. Shaffer uses a shifting figure/ground relationship calling to mind the flow of energy in, out and through us, depicting women enveloped within fields of gestural DNA-like marks or packed with radiating color strokes like bursts of energy set against darker voids.
The band's logo was designed by Ivor Arbiter On 11 February 1963, the Beatles recorded ten songs during a single studio session for their debut LP, Please Please Me. The album was supplemented by the four tracks already released on their first two singles. Martin originally considered recording the Beatles' debut LP live at The Cavern Club, but after deciding that the building's acoustics were inadequate, he elected to simulate a "live" album with minimal production in "a single marathon session at Abbey Road". After the moderate success of "Love Me Do", the single "Please Please Me" met with a more emphatic reception. Released in January 1963, two months ahead of the album of the same name, the song reached number one on every UK chart except Record Retailer, where it peaked at number two.
The First Battle of Gaza was fought on 26 March 1917, during the first attempt by the Egyptian Expeditionary Force (EEF) to invade the south of Palestine in the Ottoman Empire during the Sinai and Palestine Campaign of the First World War. Fighting took place in and around the town of Gaza on the Mediterranean coast when infantry and mounted infantry from the Desert Column, a component of the Eastern Force, attacked the town. Late in the afternoon, on the verge of capturing Gaza, the Desert Column was withdrawn due to concerns about the approaching darkness and large Ottoman reinforcements. This British defeat was followed a few weeks later by the even more emphatic defeat of the Eastern Force at the Second Battle of Gaza in April 1917.
In 20th-century music, a dot placed above or below a note indicates that it should be played staccato, and a wedge is used for the more emphatic staccatissimo. However, before 1850, dots, dashes, and wedges were all likely to have the same meaning, even though some theorists from as early as the 1750s distinguished different degrees of staccato through the use of dots and dashes, with the dash indicating a shorter, sharper note, and the dot a longer, lighter one. A number of signs came to be used in the late 19th and early 20th centuries to discriminate more subtle nuances of staccato. These signs involve various combinations of dots, vertical and horizontal dashes, vertical and horizontal wedges, and the like, but attempts to standardize these signs have not generally been successful.
A strong 4–0 home win over Newcastle on the opening day of the season was followed by a series of poor performances, including giving Cardiff City their first win in the top division of English football since they last were in the division, in 1961. However, an improved showing in the Champions League against Viktoria Plzeň led to a one-sided 4–1 annihilation of Manchester United, a game which was commented by the press as being even more emphatic than the 6–1 derby day win of two seasons previous. A week of vastly improved football was capped by a 5–0 demolition of Wigan Athletic, the team who had defeated City in the previous FA Cup final. In the Champions League, however, the team suffered a home defeat by reigning champions Bayern Munich, 3–1.
With Coach Walsh's return to the States, a new head coach was appointed in 1988. Another American, Nick Fantini, was in town on a 12-month exchange visit, and he agreed to take over the reins during his stay. Unfortunately for both Fantini and the club, the previous year's success had resulted in promotion to the Premier Division of the Budweiser League. The higher standard of football quickly became obvious, as the Pirates tumbled to a 0–10 season. Included in those 10 losses was a 110–0 defeat at the Granite City Oilers. To date this is still the second heaviest defeat suffered in domestic American Football games in the United Kingdom (only Mersey Centurions 148–6 defeat of Halton Demons in a 1989 BNGL game was more emphatic). Nick returned home after this season, but he was to return later.
The theory of nuclear deterrence states that, should Warsaw Pact forces score substantial military successes or make substantial advances this side of the Iron Curtain, the United States would initiate the suicidal duel of strategic nuclear exchanges with the Soviet Union. One can only greet this idea with an even more emphatic 'One must be mad to think of it'. That a nation staring ultimate military defeat in the face would choose self-extermination is unbelievable enough; but that the United States, separated from Europe by the Atlantic Ocean, would regard the loss of the first pawn in the long game as necessitating harakiri is not describable by the ordinary resources of language". The reason why governments, including in the US, supported nuclear weapons was that "enormous economic and financial interests are vested in the continuation and elaboration of nuclear armaments.
The possibility that the Guri reservoir reached the critical level was first seen by President Hugo Chávez on 31 January 2010, by ensuring that if the companies did not reduce their electricity consumption "70% of the country would be left without electric service". On 9 March, Chávez was more emphatic about it, declaring: Subsequently, on 18 March, the Minister of Electric Power, Alí Rodríguez Araque, announced that there will be no electrical collapse, and that they planned to operate the Simón Bolívar hydroelectric plant below the safety level, although, he admitted, with limitations in the generation of electricity. He also accused the Venezuelan opposition of causing fear in the population by talking about "collapse." Operating below this level is dangerous because steam could enter the turbines, a phenomenon known as cavitation, that can cause mechanical damage to them.
Labov theorized that those employees who had the most extreme shift in style from their own speech variety (a casual style) to the standard form (a more emphatic style) were more insecure in a linguistic sense. The term has since been used to describe any situation in which a speaker is led to hypercorrect, or shift one's patterns of speech, due to a negative attitude or lack of confidence regarding one's normal speech. This lack of confidence need not be consciously acknowledged by a speaker in order for him/her to be affected by linguistic insecurity, and the changes in pronunciation and stylistic shifts indicative of linguistic insecurity can emerge absent of speaker intent. Linguistic insecurity may also be a characteristic of an entire speech community, especially in how it relates to other speech communities of the same language that employ a more standardized form.
In January 1762 a private 'Society' was established in the house (No. 50) adjoining the tavern; this was the first of Almack's clubs, and was the immediate precursor of two of the greatest clubs in St. James's Street, Brooks's and Boodle's. It appears to have been formed in opposition, perhaps for political reasons, to White's (then often called Arthur's), for rule 12 as originally drafted forbade any member of Almack's from membership of any other London club, 'nor of what is at present called Arthur's or by whatever Name that Society or Club may be afterwards called, neither of new or old club or any other belonging to it'. In February 1763 this rule was altered and made even more emphatic: 'If any Member of this Society becomes a Member of Arthur's or a Candidate for Arthur's, he is of Course struck out of this Society.
I would not > have a single word changed of this: "The Godhead is effective in the living > and not in the dead, in the becoming and the changing, not in the become and > the set-fast; and therefore, similarly, the reason is concerned only to > strive towards the divine through the becoming and the living, and the > understanding only to make use of the become and the set-fast.(Letter to > Eckermann)" This sentence comprises my entire philosophy. Scholars now agree that the word "decline" more accurately renders the intended meaning of Spengler's original German word "Untergang" (often translated as the more emphatic "downfall"; "Unter" being "under" and "gang" being "going", it is also accurately rendered in English as the "going under" of the West). Spengler explained that he did not mean to describe a catastrophic occurrence, but rather a protracted fall--a twilight or sunset (Sonnenuntergang is German for sunset, and Abendland, his word for the West, literally means the "evening land").

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