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47 Sentences With "of great consequence"

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

" He added, "I think he's a historical figure of great consequence.
Perhaps to Trump, these European alliances aren't of great consequence, but they should be.
"If the economy broadly behaves, I don't think it'll be of great consequence," Mr. Faust said.
Visits to the scenic wonderlands, historic sites and graveyards of great consequence smashed records in 2015.
Another looming issue of great consequence to public safety is what motivated these potentially deadly acts of terrorism.
That is a matter of great consequence because these governments play a key role in growth-supporting infrastructure investments.
It is a decision of great consequence on which all Republicans have a say, and all have a responsibility.
For evidence, look no further than a plethora of cases this week in which voting is proving to be of great consequence.
The 2010s were a decade of great consequence for LGBTQ Americans, but nothing was more significant than the struggle for equal marriage.
"This is just another gratuitous attack from the self-designated chiefs of the purity police on an issue of great consequence," he said.
The realistic potential value of AI is unknown, yet, as the technology advances, the ultimate impact could be of great consequence to virtually every economy.
"This may be the one place and a concrete example of where the reputation for a president to tell the truth is of great consequence," he said.
If you happen to be the president, of course, the smallest events of your life are already of great consequence — as are your pettiest reactions to them.
The settlement, achieved through an international panel of arbitrators, may have averted a trans-Atlantic war and, says Mr Chernow, "launched a new fraternal relationship of great consequence".
Given this year's fights over border security and the fate of ObamaCare — two issues of great consequence to Hispanics — Tobar said she's happy to be back on Capitol Hill.
But here, too, the negative partisan turn in our politics has deeper roots—it stretches back to the 1950s and 1960s, a time of great consequence in American political development.
Khashoggi's disappearance is a matter of great consequence to the U.S. Khashoggi was a moderate Saudi critic and an important voice on al-Qaeda and other terrorist movements with Saudi roots.
There are always moments in a startup's journey of great consequence and this is one of those times for Uber, to finally grow up and stop being the jackass we all think it is.
His first novel, THE GOOD DETECTIVE (Putnam, $27), which is pretty much perfect, features a decent if flawed hero battling personal troubles while occupied with a murder case of great consequence to his community.
"It is kind of dry, legal stuff, but it is of great consequence," said Bill Beardall, executive director of the Equal Justice Center in Texas, which provides legal help for low-income families and immigrants.
As we cast our minds back and consider those who lived at moments of great consequence, we naturally feel that if we had lived then, we would have been among those who made the noble choices rather than those who stumbled along, head down, changing nothing.
At a moment of great consequence for American health care, with drug prices skyrocketing and seemingly unchecked, there are myriad reasons why the Senate should oppose the nomination of former drug company executive Alex Azar for Secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS).
In fact, the last few weeks have provided Israel with a rare agreement between the prime minister's most avid supporters and his most relentless opponents: Both seem to think that whether Mr. Netanyahu survives his legal troubles or is forced out is a matter of great consequence for Israel's future.
Both were of great consequence to Ukraine and to our own national interest and security, but one looms largest: President Trump withheld hundreds of millions of dollars in military aid to a strategic partner at war with Russia to secure foreign help with his reelection, in other words, to cheat.
My question though is if Brett Kavanaugh is solidly Conservative, he&aposs maybe not Scalia, a full on textualist but if he&aposs solidly Conservative, replacing someone who&aposs judicially Conservative I&aposm saying, is it that big of a swing as the left is saying, "This is a swing justice" Is it really, given especially last year&aposs opinions of this court where Anthony Kennedy was with the five-four majority on every opinion of great consequence?
He was an artist of great consequence who had been invited by Pope Martin V to Rome.Pope-Hennessy, John. Paradiso.
986 online. The office of sacerdos required Roman citizenship but the early concilium combined citizen and non- citizens. The sacredos would have been a person of great consequence within the concilium Galliarum and his own provincial ordo. His influence would have extended well beyond his term of office, which was - unlike the lifetime priesthoods of Rome itself - limited to a single year.
This latter case is sometimes called "fossil water", and is realistically non-renewable. Normally, groundwater is utilized where surface sources are unavailable or when surface supply distribution is limited. Rivers sometimes flow through several countries and often serve as the boundary or demarcation between them. With these rivers, water supply, allocation, control, and use are of great consequence to survival, quality of life, and economic success.
Within four days prior to the release, Yeezus was leaked online. The New York Times wrote that the leak "stirred up a Twitter frenzy" and received widespread media coverage. The Washington Post commented on the significance of the leak: "Kanye West’s new album didn’t leak online over the weekend. It gushed out into the pop ecosystem like a million barrels of renegade crude — ominous, mesmerizing and of great consequence".
The power of an administrative agency is executive and administrative, but not legislative. The scope of authority held by an agency is determined by the agency's organic statute. Where an administrative agency wishes to assume the traditionally legislative power to make policy, the power must be expressly granted by the agency's organic statute, and not implied from other terms of the statute. This principle applies especially where the policy involves issues of great consequence.
This abortive rebellion was not of great consequence to the colonial regime, but it marked the history of the peninsula and clearly delineated anti-colonial tensions in the region. The uprising was a precursor to the social upheaval that would explode less than a century later, as the Caste War. The Canek rebellion is remembered today as a symbol of the racial and social conflict that predominated for centuries in the Spanish colonies.
138; Cannon; Trench, p. 300. Elizabeth Montagu said of him, "With him our laws and liberties were safe, he possessed in a great degree the confidence of his people and the respect of foreign governments; and a certain steadiness of character made him of great consequence in these unsettled times ... His character would not afford subject for epic poetry, but will look well in the sober page of history."Quoted in Black, George II, p. 254.
Because of its long and continued existence it was the seat of a number of dynasties and dynastic rules. It was credited to be the capital of the ancient Janpadas like Asmaka. Thus, Paithan gained the epithet as "Supratisthana" (Sanskrit: सुप्रतिष्ठान, lit. standing very firmly) not only for its political importance as the capital city during the long rule of the Satavahanas and of great consequence till the Yadavas, but also for its affluence and of highly advanced civilization.
In 1380, allegations were lodged against Dongan that revenues he had been collecting – in an official capacity as collector in Ireland for Pope Urban – were illegally retained. These allegations did not turn out to be of great consequence, and he sided with English-backed Urban against the Scottish-backed anti-pope Clement VII. The latter deprived him of bishopric on 15 July 1387, appointing Michael, previously Archbishop of Cashel, to replace him.Dowden, Bishops, pp. 286-7; Watt & Murray, Fasti Ecclesiae, pp. 262—3.
In July 1969, Jean Sainteny, a former French official in Vietnam who knew Ho secretly transmitted a letter to him from President Richard Nixon. Nixon's letter proposed working together to end this "tragic war", but also warned that if North Vietnam made no concessions at the peace talks in Paris by 1 November, Nixon would resort to "measures of great consequence and force". Ho's reply, which Nixon received on 30 August 1969 made no concessions, as Nixon's threats apparently made no impression on him.
In 1794, he obtained a colonelcy of an existing regiment, the 9th (East Norfolk) Regiment of Foot, instead. Bertie was promoted lieutenant-general in 1798 and general in 1803. In 1804, the Duke of York recommended him for the colonelcy of the 77th Regiment of Foot, then part of the Indian establishment, noting that "the difference of emolument is of great consequence" to Bertie. In 1808, he became commander of the 89th Regiment of Foot after John Whitelocke was cashiered and dismissed from the service.
Levinson was highly critical of president George W. Bush who he regarded as possibly the "absolutely worst president." Levinson notes that President Obama seems likely to repeat the pattern of expansive presidential power. He wrote an essay titled "The Decider Can Become a Dictator" in which he criticized a system which allows presidents to make dictatorial decisions of great consequence without providing ways to discipline those who display bad judgment. Levinson commented about a ban on gay marriage proposed by former President George W. Bush in legal terms as a Constitutional issue.
In January 2012, Hastings published The Operators, a book that details his travels with General Stanley McChrystal and his team in April 2010. It included extensive quotations from over 20 hours of audio recordings of McChrystal and his inner circle. The Daily Beast called it a "book of great consequence... The Operators seems destined to join the pantheon of great GWOT literature". The Wall Street Journal slammed the book, but the reviewer was a military consultant who had worked for both McChrystal and General Petraeus, which the Journal failed to disclose.
The council ended in 1418, solving the Schism and — of great consequence to Sigismund's future career — having the Czech religious reformer, Jan Hus, burned at the stake for heresy in July 1415. The complicity of Sigismund in the death of Hus is a matter of controversy. He had granted him a safe-conduct and protested against his imprisonment; and Hus was burned during Sigismund's absence. When at one point during the council a cardinal corrected Sigismund's Latin, Sigismund replied Ego sum rex Romanus et super grammaticam ("I am king of the Romans and above grammar").
A cultural project of particular interest was his 1761 project of reorganizing the musical staff at his court. He brought in new players, reassigned his aging Kapellmeister Gregor Werner to cover just church music, and appointed the young Joseph Haydn as Vice-Kapellmeister, in charge of the orchestra. Since this provided Haydn with his own orchestra, with ample opportunities to compose symphonies for it to perform, the appointment was of great consequence for the growing status of the symphony and thus for the history of music. When Paul Anton died in Vienna in 1762 without children, he was succeeded by his brother Nikolaus.
The amir just made his peace with the Hazaras, on the west of Kabul, who had long been a thorn in his side, and is thus able to spare more men for the campaign against Nadir Khan, and so to neutralize his success. Early in September the Durrani tribe drives his governor and garrison out of the town of Kandahar. From a military point of view this loss is not of great consequence, but it cuts off Kabul from one of its great sources of food supply, and causes the price of bread to rise there seriously.
In July 1177, William sent a delegation of Archbishop Romuald of Salerno and Count Roger of Andria to sign the Treaty of Venice with the Emperor. In 1184, he released 30-year-old Constance from convent, engaged her to the Emperor's son, the future Emperor Henry VI to secure the peace, and married her off on January 1186, causing a general oath to be taken to her as his heir presumptive. This step, of great consequence to the Norman realm, was possibly taken that William might devote himself to foreign conquests. Monreale Cathedral, built during William's II reign.
236 Local planter Gen. Joseph M. Hernández made mention of Clarke's horticultural activities in an address to the Agricultural Society of St. Augustine (transcribed in the East Florida Herald and reproduced in the Pensacola Gazette of June 25, 1825): "Many valuable plants have been introduced from the northern states by George J. F. Clarke of St. Augustine and by Col. Murat, both of whom are attentively engaged in experiments that are likely to prove of great consequence to the Territory." Clarke wrote a series of articles for the St. Augustine newspaper and its successor, the East Florida Herald, which appeared regularly from 1823 to 1832, describing the results of his horticultural observations and experiments.
She was buried in Dornoch. Robert Gordon of Gordonstoun wrote her into the history of the House of Gordon; > "a vertuous and comelie lady, judicious, of excellent memorie, and great > understanding above the capacitie of her sex; in this much to be commended > that ... schoe alwise managed her effaris with so great prudence and > foresight that the enemeis of the familie could never prevail against her, > ... Further shoe hath by her great care and diligence brought to a > prosperous end many hard and difficult business, of great consequence > appertyning to the house of Sutherland ... Shoe wes dureing her dayes a > great ornament to that familie, ..."Sanderson, Margaret H. B., Mary > Stewart's People (Edinburgh, 1987), p. 53 quoting Fraser, William, > Sutherland Book, vol. 1, 168.
The earlier history of Trantor is recapitulated in The Currents of Space, mentioning the five worlds of the Trantorian Republic growing into the Trantorian Confederation and then Trantorian Empire (evidently modeled on the Roman Republic, originally ruling only part of central Italy, developing into the vast Roman Empire). At the time when Currents takes place, Trantor controls about half of the worlds in the Galaxy, while the other half is divided into innumerable independent worlds and miniature empires - which naturally makes a Trantorian Ambassador a person of great consequence on any of the still-independent worlds. Later on, conquest of the entire galaxy made the Galactic Empire, with Trantor as its capital planet, a reality; the planet no longer sending out ambassadors, but only royal governors to subject worlds. This situation had already existed for thousands of years at the time of Pebble in the Sky, the next chronological book on this timeline. Its surface of 194,000,000 km (75,000,000 sq mi, approx.
They restored stability to Gujarat for the latter half of the 13th century, while the Vaghela kings and their officials were dedicated patrons of the arts and temple-building. Early in the thirteenth century, it was apparently called Dhavalgadh and held by Vir Dhaval, the founder of the Vaghela dynasty, whose territories included the lands of Godhra and Lat. In records of the Muslim kings and viceroys, though never a place of great consequence, Dholka is often mentioned as a town and fort, the quarters of a local governor; its remains show that at one time, it was adorned by many beautiful Muslim buildings. In the eighteenth-century troubles, Dholka seems to have been taken by the Marathas in 1736; to have been recovered by the Viceroy in 1741; to have again fallen into the Gaikwad's hands in 1757; and to have remained with him till its cession to the British in 1804.
In addition to his priesthood of the Imperial cult for the Three Gauls (Tres Galliae), Vercondaridubnus held Roman citizenship. He also had a role in his provincial deliberative body (concilium), which had legal power to negotiate with the Roman administration. Although the priesthood was an annual office, its holders would have held great influence thereafter. As the most notable men of the Three Gauls were invited to the inaugural ceremony, Vercondaridubnus would have been someone of great consequence to both Romans and Gauls in his province.Duncan Fishwick, "The Imperial Cult in the Latin West: Studies in the Ruler Cult of the Western Provinces of the Roman Empire", volume 1, (1991), p. 101., & vol 3, (2002), 1, pp 12-13. The Aedui had been allies of Rome since the 120s BCE, with the relationship expressed formally as that of “brothers” (fratres), and in the 1st century AD produced the first Roman senators from Gallia Comata. The name Gaius Julius Vercondaridubnus is a hybrid of Latin and Celtic nomenclature.

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