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59 Sentences With "play havoc with"

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

Meanwhile, fear and despair play havoc with the opposition too.
Not surprisingly, interest on the debt promises to play havoc with the federal budget.
And alcohol can play havoc with the medications people take to control those conditions.
In practice a rising dollar can play havoc with emerging markets that have dollar debts.
Most municipal lots are actually owned by building landlords (who can play havoc with rent costs).
Tax cuts and spending increases can play havoc with people's incentives, undermining the efficiency of the economy.
In fact, he says, even the anticipation of lower marginal tax rates could play havoc with revenues next year.
Unpredictable solar winds cause disturbances in our planet's magnetic field and can play havoc with communications technology on Earth.
But they and equivalent Chinese weapons could play havoc with satellites on which Western forces have come to rely.
The cat apparently didn't like me writing a novel and would often play havoc with my manuscript on the desk.
Shifts added or subtracted at short notice play havoc with budgets and lives, and disproportionately hurt black and Hispanic women.
The rain is not necessarily a problem but high winds can make the waves perilous and also play havoc with course markings.
But it is time to discourage the short notice call-ins and call-offs that play havoc with employees' incomes and lives.
Then there are your pills and your capsules, like Green Beans and Pink Panthers, which Jim later admits play havoc with your prostate.
From the Great Lakes into New England, winds could play havoc with fly balls as the 2016 Major League Baseball season kicks off.
Mayflower Advisors' Larry Glazer says it's been so long since the last meaningful correction, the next one will play havoc with investors' heads.
If it happens on a sufficiently large scale, the practice of tweaking quality in lieu of price could play havoc with essential economic data.
One-shot changes in prices constantly play havoc with central bankers' attempts to target inflation down to the last tenth of a percentage point.
Critics say the regulations, as proposed, could play havoc with the internal finances of a range of unsuspecting businesses, from multinational corporations to limited partnerships.
The uncertainty principleIf it happens on a sufficiently large scale, the practice of tweaking quality in lieu of price could play havoc with essential economic data.
Edgar is generally light on his feet but keeps a wide stance to bounce around in, meaning a good kick can play havoc with his balance.
Swonk said the "wacky weather" may play havoc with the jobs number, and there's a risk that it could make the wage gains look even higher.
"CBPP3 exit dynamics could potentially play 'havoc' with covered bond spreads, given their weight in the covered bond investor base," BBVA analysts wrote in a recent note.
There are hints that the broth is poisoned, but it hardly requires human agency for this rotting bone to play havoc with the digestive systems of all concerned.
Along the fence the loss of retreat drastically limits a fighter's defensive options and feints play havoc with the trapped fighter's composure and force him to show his hand.
Indeed, incomplete information can play havoc with a market; imagine trying to trade stocks without knowing the share price or searching for a house without knowing the square footage.
All of this could play havoc with businesses that depend on China for components, from auto factories in the American Midwest and Mexico to apparel plants in Bangladesh and Turkey.
The patches of sun play havoc with atmospheric perspective, with the sudden sharp-focus appearance of a bright green mountain range behind the blurry, clouded blue-gray ridge of pastureland.
After a quick lunch, the players were sent straight back out to begin their third round ties due to concerns that the weather could play havoc with the schedule over the weekend.
TAIPEI, March 13 (Reuters) - Apple's manufacturing partner Foxconn reported its biggest monthly drop in revenue in about seven years on Thursday as the coronavirus outbreak continued to play havoc with its business.
Trump is under increasing pressure from U.S. business groups and some members of the U.S. Congress, who say excluding Canada from NAFTA would play havoc with the three member nations' increasingly integrated economies.
As the mounting pressure of success and willful excess began to play havoc with Barnett's head, having everything he'd spent his youth dreaming about on his doorstep quickly brought the singer to his knees.
If our fluctuating hormones can play havoc with our minds when we're awake—and make me randomly cry when I remember George Michael died—then they must be doing something when we're asleep, too.
If you really want to watch a film about how an inflated electricity bill can play havoc with the life of a common man, watch Sumitra Bhave and Sunil Sukthankar's delightful "Ek Cup Chya" instead.
In Asia, China equities painted an isolated picture on fears that a virus outbreak could play havoc with overall demand, particularly in the tourism sector, even as most major regional markets looked the other way.
A CAAM official told Reuters last month that auto sales are likely to drop by more than 10% in the first half of this year as travel and quarantine restrictions continue to play havoc with demand.
If Clinton hasn't sufficiently recovered by the time they kick off, if she cancels, or if she demonstrates symptoms of illness onstage, it could play havoc with a race that's already looking too close for comfort for Democrats.
But dropping the hook below the eye line and bringing it up as an uppercut will often play havoc with the opponent, having none of the telegraph and a little bit more reach than the rear handed uppercut.
During the official public comment period for the proposed regulations, corporations including banks and manufacturers warned that the changes would play havoc with intercompany loans and other cash management measures intended to keep day-to-day operations moving smoothly.
The satellites could still play havoc with radioastronomyA dark coating doesn&apost address one of the major problems with the Starlink satellites: They could compromise a sub-field of astronomy, called radio astronomy, that studies normally invisible wavelengths of light.
And tighter immigration controls would play havoc with NHS staffing: 10% of its doctors come from the EU. Chris Hopson, chief executive of NHS Providers, which represents managers of NHS hospitals and trusts, reports that 75% of his members believe that Brexit would have a negative impact on the NHS.
Bartenders often use fresh turmeric root, a tincture or a syrup, as in the pisco and ginger liqueur-based Always Sunny cocktail at Decca, in Louisville, Ky. Eben Freeman, a veteran New York bartender who ran Genuine Liquorette before it closed in December, noted that the spice can play havoc with bar equipment.
The arena also had a reputation for variable conditions, the sun or warm winds could play havoc with ice conditions throughout a championship.
Whilst freezing conditions continued to play havoc with club matches, William Thomson played for the Scottish League XI against the Irish League in Belfast on 2 February – the Scots winning 4-1.
"Drought Corn Silage". Retrieved May 26, 2008. Frosts and freezes play havoc with crops both during the spring and fall. For example, peach trees in full bloom can have their potential peach crop decimated by a spring freeze.
Breckinridge pursued the Federals on November 14 and engaged them near Russellville, causing a rout. The Federals fell back to Strawberry Plains (outside of Knoxville) where Breckinridge again engaged his forces. Federal reinforcements soon arrived and foul weather began to play havoc with the roads and streams. Breckinridge, with most of his force, retired back to Virginia.
By the early 1980s the aircraft collection had grown to a very impressive 30 machines but another very hard lesson had been learned. Collecting aircraft, restoring them and displaying them was not enough. At this time the Museum was still an open-air display and the effects of the weather were beginning to play havoc with the aircraft. No matter how robustly constructed an aircraft may be, if it is left exposed to the elements it will eventually succumb.
Possibly her most acclaimed work, Waar is die liefde? was published in 1950 by APB in their Môrester series. The novel has, as mise-en- scène, the private cabins and decks of a liner en route from Cape Town to England where happenstance and fate all play havoc with a marriage under stress. As a book critic of the now-defunct newspaper, Die Vaderland, wrote, “What the author offers here is presumably the reworking of a trip that she herself had made.
There are passing places at Avenue Road and just north of Beckenham Road, these two being additional stops served by Tramlink. At Beckenham Junction there is a twin track tram terminus although this is not used to its full potential. As on route 1, the single track sections can play havoc with reliability. Beckenham Road and Birkbeck stops are actually on the single track sections, thus unusually having only one platform (Birkbeck being opposite the single platform on the heavy rail line).
The origins of the name are obscure and may never be known with certainty. "Silent Unseen" probably related to how some soldiers seemingly disappeared from their line units overnight to volunteer for special operations service, and also describes those "who appear silently where they are least expected, play havoc with the enemy and disappear whence they came, unnoticed, unseen."Kazimierz Iranek-Osmecki, The Unseen and Silent, p. 350. The Silent Unseen were trained initially in Scotland in preparation for missions for the Polish underground in occupied Poland, such as building- clearance and bridge-demolition.
These are usually made from thick, high-quality laminated maple. Two problems present themselves with bowling alley wood: first, the waxes used on the surface for bowling frequently contain silicone and other substances that can play havoc with work pieces at finishing time—a little silicone on a project will cause trouble with many finishes, and won't manifest itself until it's too late. The other problem with bowling alley wood is nails. Most pieces have loads of nails buried in them, which do not mix well with woodworking tools.
Gilson undertook to analyze Thomism from a historical perspective. To Gilson, Thomism is certainly not identical with scholasticism in the pejorative sense, but indeed rather a revolt against it.The Christian Philosophy of St. Thomas Aquinas, University of Notre Dame Press, Indiana, 1956, pp. 366–367 Gilson considered the philosophy of his own era to be deteriorating into a science which would signal humanity's abdication of the right to judge and rule nature, humanity made a mere part of nature, which in turn would give the green light for the most reckless of social adventures to play havoc with human lives and institutions.
Station engineers had to constantly adjust the phasing network as tides in the Neponset River would play havoc with the station's directional pattern. However, the saltwater marsh area provided the station with an excellent coastal signal. While the night signal could not be heard clearly inland at many Boston suburban locations (especially in the growing and affluent western and southwestern suburbs), the station's nighttime transmissions were heard very clearly across the water to the Boston city neighborhoods and the working class North Shore areas. The saltwater path nighttime transmissions reached up to Nova Scotia and Labrador, gaining the station an audience in those areas, as well.
Mr Maxwell, the solicitor for the late Mr Johnson, tells Mainwaring and Wilson that the only things he left of any value are the clothes he stood up in, and his boat The Naughty Jane. Wilson adds that Mr Johnson's account was overdrawn to the extent of £33 12s 6d. Mainwaring admits that that means the boat becomes the property of the bank, and can be used to offset the overdraft. Just as Mr Maxwell leaves, Mainwaring has an idea, much to Wilson's panic: the platoon can use that boat for river patrols and tells him that half a dozen determined men, armed to the teeth, can play havoc with the Nazis if they invaded.
Prices for some natural resources are subject to wide fluctuation: for example, crude oil prices rose from around $3 per barrel to $12/bbl in 1974 following the 1973 oil crisis and fell from $27/bbl to below $10/bbl during the 1986 glut. In the decade from 1998 to 2008, it rose from $10/bbl to $145/bbl, before falling by more than half to $60/bbl over a few months. When government revenues are dominated by inflows from natural resources (for example, 99.3% of Angola's exports came from just oil and diamonds in 2005), this volatility can play havoc with government planning and debt service. Abrupt changes in economic realities that result from this often provoke widespread breaking of contracts or curtailment of social programs, eroding the rule of law and popular support.
Herb Sargent, a TV comedy writer since the days of Broadway Open House in the early 1950s, created and produced the show; it debuted on Wednesday, June 15, 1983, airing for a half hour at 10:00 pm Eastern Time. Sargent was also producer of the American version of the seminal news-satire program, That Was the Week That Was, which also aired on NBC, from January 1964 to May 1965. Described as a "pseudo-newscast...to lampoon, satirize, bludgeon, incinerate, josh, reduce to ashes, and otherwise play havoc with the real news of the preceding seven days,""The Sargent of Satire", Washington Post TNITN featured Karen Dale as the lead anchor, with Michael Davis, Simon Jones, Charlotte Moore, Lynne Thigpen and Trey Wilson as correspondents. Michael Palin also contributed a segment on the first anniversary of the surrender of Argentinian forces in the Falkland Islands.
The prose is pithy and light on theory." But the reviewer described the economist's account of ideology by elites throughout history as lesser than accounts by thinkers like Theodor W. Adorno and Michel Foucault because Piketty "flits between case studies" and suggests that "elites are only ever self-serving"; the reviewer also said that he insufficiently deals with concerns that "sky-high wealth taxes would play havoc with incentives, reducing investment and entrepreneurship [...] it is hard not to conclude that, deep down, Mr Piketty believes the worth of a society is measured by its Gini coefficient alone." The Guardian's Paul Mason said that Piketty's discussions of history and ideologies show ignorance of the "methodological debates that rage" in the field of history. The journalist also argued that "Piketty’s solutions [for the rise of nativism and xenophobia] are perfunctory [...] a survey of ‘red wall‘ seats found they [...] reject attempts to take money from the modestly well-off and even from billionaires“.
Kelly forces two line-repairers to damage the track at Glenrowan in a plot to derail the Police Special Train The gang estimated that the policemen inside Sherritt's hut would relay news of his murder to Beechworth by early Sunday morning, prompting a special police train to be sent up from Melbourne. They also surmised that the train would collect reinforcements in Benalla before continuing through Glenrowan, a small town in the Warby Ranges. There, the gang planned to wreck the train and shoot dead any survivors, then ride to an unpoliced Benalla where they would rob the banks, set fire to the courthouse, blow up the police barracks, release anyone imprisoned in the gaol, and "generally play havoc with the entire town" before returning to the bush. While Byrne and Dan were in the Woolshed Valley, Ned and Hart tried, but failed, to damage the track at Glenrowan, so they forced line-repairers camped nearby to finish the job.
But sometimes goes crazy: laughs like hell when hearing something funny (inherited this from her mother,) goes insane playing the games of rock-paper-scissors and goldfish scooping, etc. The family is named after The Tale of Heike (a classic novel published centuries ago as well as that of Genji.)On the final Episodes she becomes a superheroine, which makes references of Sailor Moon(Her Transformation scene,Poses and the voice actress). ; Rei Kuki: (voiced by Sakiko Tamagawa) :An antagonist of the series, born on 21 August, takes advantage of her wealthy family, uses her grandfather's authority and scatters money to make everything her way, however, feels very lonely inside her heart because her parents are busy and travel around the world so much that they don't have time to pay attention to their child, thus is in the charge of her grandfather being neglected by them. When wearing an Onyomiko suit she's the commander of a synth-monster and makes that creature play havoc with things that get in the way of her goal.

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