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24 Sentences With "putting across"

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

Despite the narrative gaps, Ms. Lipitz excels at putting across those personalities.
What counts most, however, is the people putting across the message and how they do it.
There's an unpleasant sense that Ondaatje is regaling us rather than simply putting across a story.
And though both performers excel at putting across this kind of material, that almost makes it worse.
But I think what you're seeing is the volume of content we're putting across the network is going up tremendously.
It's a deliciously deranged performance, putting across the "Hamlet" story but also sampling Mr. Busey's film roles and personal grievances.
Putting across so many medical factoids and bits of real stories has the paradoxical effect of diminishing a sense of emotional truth.
"I'd like to see more consideration for what message a female character's design is putting across," Mr. McKelvie said in an interview at the time.
"If a man's message is, 'Yeah, but look at my tie,' that seems like anything other than the actual message he should be putting across."
There's are a wealth of sticker packs now available, covering everything from cute cartoon characters to text bubbles that give you another way of putting across a catchphrase.
And since he departs in a few weeks he can be blunter than he has been in putting across the message that governments, not just the ECB, must act.
By continuing to pursue "persons unknown" while closely surveilling individuals, the companies are potentially bypassing the protesters' democratic rights by preventing them putting across a defense in the injunction hearings.
Fox's live broadcast (ably co-directed by Scott Ellis and Alex Rudzinski) smartly emphasized what sets the show apart from the film: big production numbers, putting across generally tuneful songs.
"Yoti," she retorted at once, using her nickname for me with a blend of great affection and snappy humor, that way she had of putting across a serious point not so seriously.
And maybe we're not doing our job putting across what we're trying to put across or whatever, but I feel like we don't fit in with a lot of other bands, and it throws a lot of people off.
Instead, he scanned the harsh ground from atop his tractor, putt-putting across a moonlike limestone hillside, for any signs of a curry plant, also known as "immortelle" for its ability to survive in dry terrain and to remain alive long after being plucked.
The film, with its forcible assault upon both eye and ear, is a powerful weapon of propaganda. And it could be used with effect for ‘putting across’ to the public the idea of preventive medicine. Perhaps the Minister of Health, Sir Kingsley Wood, a master of propaganda, might enlist the help of the moving picture in his campaign for the improved health of the people.” Papworth and Propaganda.
He is an author whose novels have narrative strength and efficacy. “When I write, I try to make the story entertaining. My intention is not to shock people, regardless of how risqué is what I am putting across. If it makes you laugh or cry, like it or not, that is up to the reader. Simply, what I try to do is to tell a story that hooks you up, not to bore you”.
Protest against alleged electoral fraud. A rhetorical question is one for which the questioner does not expect a direct answer: in many cases it may be intended to start a discourse, or as a means of putting across the speaker's or author's opinion on a topic. A common example is the question "Can't you do anything right?" This question, when posed, is intended not to ask about the listener's ability but rather to insinuate the listener's lack of ability.
He also performed poorly in putting across government policy on television. On 14 February 1962, over whisky at 10 Downing Street, Macmillan persuaded the railway union bosses to call off their planned strike, an achievement trumpeted by the press as "Mac's Triumph". The NEDC first met on 7 March 1962. The Liberals did very well at a by-election at Conservative-held Blackpool North on 13 March 1962, and took Orpington off the Conservatives at another by-election on 14 March, a sensational victory in a seat adjacent to Macmillan's own seat at Bromley.
Assured and assertive as they are (partly thanks to interview questions designed by other autistic people), they're a reassuring example for people with all kinds of different problems in childhood, and their inclusion highlights how rarely we hear any such voices. Between them, these diverse people do an effective job of putting across where the differences are that making fitting into mainstream society so difficult. Their different backgrounds keep their stories interesting and they quickly do away with the notion that autistic people have no sense of humor. This contributes to the film's other achievement - illustrating how much common ground there is and showing that mutual understanding, whilst it may pose challenges, is far from impossible.
Theater critic Robert Feldberg wrote that he preferred Muñoz in the role originated by Miranda, pointing out that the romance between Usnavi and Vanessa seemed more "believable" and that in putting across the main storyline in a way that Miranda had been unable to do, Muñoz turned the star vehicle into an "emotionally persuasive" ensemble performance. In 2015 Muñoz began performing as alternate for the role of Alexander Hamilton in the Broadway production Hamilton. By spring 2016, Muñoz appeared in the role originated by Lin-Manuel Miranda every Sunday and on weekdays whenever Miranda needed to be elsewhere on a weekday. Muñoz played the role of Hamilton the night President Barack Obama brought his family to watch the show.
A telling report of her work in this connection was published in the bulletin of the American Academy of Medicine. While teaching, she gave occasional lecturers before women's clubs, ass meetings, teachers' associations, including the Wisconsin Academy of Science and the Wisconsin State Teachers' association. The lecturers discussed such methods of teaching biology that the subjects of reproduction, as well as of growth, were developed, together with reasons for a social rather than an individualistic attitude toward life and living. So successful was she in the is phase of her work that she increasingly turned teaching instincts into this channel, finding in it the more universal medium of personal contact, and the Morse significant way of "putting across" her individual ideas.
" SF Gate said, "The cliches come at an onslaught pace" in "a wonderfully conceived story that gives a bigger than life and fascinating explanation for why so many horror movie cliches exist in the first place... By the time the ride is over, director Drew Goddard and co-writers Goddard and Joss Whedon will change course three or four times, nodding and winking but never losing momentum." Of the screenplay by Goddard and Whedon, a CNN reviewer praised "these horror hipsters' acidic, postmodern designs on one of the movie industry's hoariest, least respected staples... the dialogue is always a notch or three smarter and snappier than you'd expect." Keith Phipps of The A. V. Club addressed "...the difficult challenge of putting across a satirical film with a serious body count. Cabin touches on everything from The Evil Dead and Friday The 13th to the mechanized mutilations of the Saw series while digging deeper into the Lovecraftian roots of horror in an attempt to reveal what makes the genre work... It's an exercise in metafiction that, while providing grisly fun, never distances viewers.

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