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88 Sentences With "readier"

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

He also might be readier to strike down Roe v.
We might be readier to return to it than we know.
Federer, despite being the elder at 13, looks readier to rumble.
He also sounds readier to work with Donald Trump, America's president-elect.
Critics say that it should now be readier for political horse-trading.
Consumers seem readier to accept digital products than just a few years ago.
But it may be readier than Assad to agree concessions with his adversaries.
And South Africa, in his mind, is readier than ever for state-proofing.
Mr Gove may have won plaudits for being readier for dialogue than his predecessor.
Bourdain, who died Friday, was brasher, louder, readier to call an asshole an asshole.
Nonetheless, Japan needs to be much readier to accept diversity in general, says Ms Ishii.
In contrast Mr Gove has been readier to listen to grumbling by judges and lawyers.
But now at least, under new leadership, GMG seems readier to investigate all the options.
He thinks Pemex is readier than before to take tough decisions, such as cutting jobs.
Europeans have also been much readier to adopt quotas to bolster women's part in politics.
But today the companies may be readier to overcome differences, since their prospects look so uncertain.
The south has long been readier than the north to agitate against the strictures of caste.
But it is conceivable that by then they would be readier to pick a sensible successor.
"We believe there are no days when we have been readier than today," Mr. Narongsak said.
Access to the vast American market was what made other members readier to open up their own.
Opinion polls suggest they are readier to vote for a gay candidate than an evangelical Christian one.
Accumulating that kind of cash could help you feel readier to handle whatever life throws at you.
He instead portrayed a Britain readier than ever to defend, and trade with, its energy-rich Gulf friends.
And more money and time presumably will make it even readier to perform — in an absence of alternatives.
"We believe there are no days when we have been readier than today," Mr. Narongsak said on Sunday.
They are also readier to experiment, in part owing to the deluge of free porn they receive on smartphones.
When new management took over last year, it began dumping the news in favor of readier ways to make money.
Yet better times in the EU will not make European leaders any readier to bend the rules to accommodate the Brexiteers.
Beyond giving users readier control of the Touch Bar, Apple could also encourage developers to take advantage of the strip better.
Will those who suffer abuse be readier to speak up, and are managers more likely to believe them and take action?
There was something rawer and readier than gay culture that didn't get a look in until the show Queer as Folk, really.
If the Senate is still dominated by Republicans, Clinton would have incentive to nominate a person the GOP would be readier to accept.
It is also that, having no experience of a normal administration, they are readier to accept the compromises that serving Mr Trump entails.
But a more hardline prime minister might be readier to contemplate a no-deal Brexit, perhaps after holding and winning another general election.
Although European zoos were more likely than American zoos to cull large animals, many of them were no readier to acknowledge the practice.
And it's why lawmakers are nervously awaiting the next phase of impeachment even as the House appears readier than ever to move forward.
Likely, you've come away changed, readier to speak your own full-throated truth, for all human beings, even at risk of losing a relationship.
What to watch: As internet economy growth stalls for smaller players, Wenger points out, startups might be readier to take their case to Washington.
There's something about my postpartum vagina, though, that's been more assertive, more attuned to her own nerve endings, and readier to please than ever before.
Zolgensma is a particularly challenging case, because it is one of the first and parents in some cases have readier access to a rival drug.
It is said that Mr Kelly's years at Southern Command, overseeing crime-ridden Central America, left him readier to haul up drawbridges against a wicked world.
Compared with Hamilton, who is unimpressed by displays of emotion, Gunn is happier to use the language of therapy, and is readier to share her feelings.
But even setting these most moonshot-y visions aside, the reality of current VR hardware and software isn't even meeting rougher-and-readier early adopter expectations.
Habitual Labour voters seem readier to back a Lib Dem who has a chance of defeating a Tory than Lib Dem voters are to support Labour.
He is clearly readier to contemplate conventional war in Ukraine, where the West rarely discusses it, than in the Baltics, where we seem preoccupied by it.
The readier countries are to band together against an aggressive but powerful state determined to get its way, the less likely such a conflict is to happen.
As a result, it takes a lot for institutional investors (public pension funds are much readier to dissent) to come out in open opposition to a firm.
Consumers, readier to pay more for experiences rather than just products, show an ever-growing fondness for pricey shots of strong coffee, especially those squirted via plastic pods.
There has been friction with black Americans over jobs and local politics—though younger Haitians are much readier than their elders to see themselves as African-American, too.
She is readier than her colleagues, including senior liberal Ruth Bader Ginsburg, to move to the middle of the ideological spectrum to strike deals to keep the court centered.
But there are hints of a preference for meddling over markets, for example in her suggestion that the government should be readier to stop foreign takeovers of British firms.
As more homeowners gain pride in their slick interiors, they may feel readier to spend less time sipping latte and more hanging out with friends in their own alluring lounges.
Kavanaugh also appears readier than Gorsuch to finesse relations in the distinct social milieu of the nation's highest court, where the nine are thrown together in closed quarters -- for life.
In a series of laboratory experiments, they found that people tend to be humbler, and readier to consider other perspectives, when they are asked to describe problems in the third person.
By 2014, the world was readier: More than 120 CubeSats went into space, and soon Rocket Lab had a $6.9 million NASA contract to develop its rocket and do a demo flight.
Mrs Clinton's hawkish instincts are sincere: several times as Secretary of State from 2009-13, she was readier to use force as a tool of geopolitics than was her boss, Barack Obama.
"Trump is readier to give a pass to countries that pose a real threat to Western values and security than to America's traditional allies," said Peter Westmacott, a former British ambassador to Washington.
CLINTON: Look, I think we are readier than we used to be, but it's a constant effort that has to be undertaken to make sure we are as ready as we need to be.
They are readier to fire at short range and even use tear gas in confined spaces with risks to the public, such as when chasing protesters into mass-transit stations and down the escalators.
They are readier to accept tough spending measures than politicians in Paris imagine, claims Mr Grelier, if it is part of a coherent plan to revive the economy—and a sense of pride in France.
IN HIS office behind Tokyo's Aoyama cemetery, Yukihiro Masuda says that these days prospective clients are so much readier to talk about the end of life that he encourages them to try out his coffins.
Yet Mr Trump has made such a mockery of diplomacy and policymaking that the world is readier to believe them than his ostensible reason for withdrawing from one of the most successful international accords of recent years.
Mr Salvini's blunder signalled a looming doubt: whether poor countries of origin will be any readier to co-operate with the leader of a xenophobic, hard-right party than they have been with previous, moderate Italian governments.
If more people saw the idea of infinite growth as a departure from the history of economics rather than a timeless law of nature, perhaps they'd be readier to reimagine the links between the environment and the economy.
She is far readier to pass on what she has learned about love ("I know, it's enough just to make you go crazy, crazy, crazy") to being more nonchalant and of the moment ("Don't worry, baby") than to wallow.
President Park Geun-hye took a hard-line stance on the North, but under President Moon Jae-in, a liberal who took office in May, the South Korean government has indicated it will be readier to consider humanitarian aid.
At the same time, though, she said some New Yorkers seem more sensitive to shady behavior, and readier to call it out, echoing former NYPD commissioner Bill Bratton's assertion that the "Cosby Effect" has encouraged more women to report sexual assault in recent years.
But it's also made us worse—readier to brand the white working class as failures—and in doing so, consciously or unconsciously, we are becoming much less sympathetic to their inability to defend or safeguard their social standing in an age when higher education is everything.
Vivian Wang wrote in the Times: Before Tuesday's victory catapulted her to the front of the political conversation, Ms. Ocasio-Cortez seemed to find readier audiences with outlets such as Elite Daily, Mic or Refinery343 — websites most often associated with millennial and female audiences — than with traditional publications.
Ashbrook and Powers, p. 58 Busoni's princess Turandot is not quite so implacable; her heart is readier to melt.
In the mid 19th century, finished capitals and stones were delivered from these to Cologne Cathedral. Thirty-nine small farms grew what was needed. New farm lanes that afforded readier access were laid to make farmwork easier. A few farmers received certificates about 1900 for good yields.
"No message ever had a readier recipient"p. 293, Robinson and Coward and he struck 7 fours in his unbeaten 34 off 44 balls. A grateful Bradman spoke of "the sheer artistry, the classical style and power of an innings by Miller" when interviewed just after the Test.p.
In this case, they may move down mountain sides for more comfortable living conditions and a readier food supply. There is little information or support on how the Blyth's tragopan moves, but it is suggested that they travel together in groups of four to five, much like other species of tragopans.
The principal submarine base is located at Teluk Sepanggar, Sabah, which also serves as HQ Naval Region II. Another base is also being constructed on Pulau Langkawi, Kedah to provide the RMN with readier access into the Indian Ocean. Ready access into the Pacific Ocean is available via the existing base at Labuan and Semporna, Sabah.
The Invisible Plane (commonly known as the Invisible Jet) is the fictional DC Comics superheroine Wonder Woman's venerable, though now seldom-used, mode of transport. Created by William Moulton Marston as an allegory for how women of the Depression Era onward had easily come into the male dominated work place in droves, unchallenged, with those women's readier feminine compliance emotion, among other factors, making that possible. It first appeared in Sensation Comics #1 (Jan. 1942).
Attempts by the SPD to win the USPD for a coalition failed because the latter refused to cooperate with the Zentrum. The Zentrum, readier than the SPD to accept the stipulations of the ultimatum, now tried to form a government including both the DVP and the SPD. However, the DVP had voted against the ultimatum and a consensus proved impossible. Among those discussed as possible chancellors were Gustav Bauer and Paul Löbe (both SPD), Konrad Adenauer and Joseph Wirth (both Zentrum).
"I likewise advised them to withdraw the Senecas of Ohio from thence and settle them nearer their natural friends as at present by their Connections with others they bring disgrace & suspicion on their own confederacy, and this I was the readier induced to do, as Kayashota the chief of those on Ohio, a man of universal influence was present & had privately assured me that it was agreeable to him." Sir William Johnson to the Earl of Dartmouth, (Johnson Hall, Nov. 4, 1772) Johnson, Sir William in: Documents, Relative to the Colonial History of the State of New York (Lon.Docs.: XLIII), vol.
The leader of the Venetian relief force was Nicolò Canal, known as "a man of letters rather than a fighter, a learned man readier to read books than direct the affairs of the sea."The Guinness Book of Naval Blunders, page 137 His fleet had 53 galleys and 18 smaller ships, a fifth of the Ottoman fleet's size. He arrived three weeks into the siege, lost his nerve and withdrew to Samothrace, asking for more help, but only Papal indulgences arrived. Canal could have broken the siege if he had attacked the pontoon bridge the Turks depended on.
It made several changes: for one, the Geneva edition was the first to show the division into verses. The chapter division was made three centuries earlier, but the verses belong to the Genevan version, and are meant to make the book suitable for responsive use and for readier reference. They were taken in large part from the work of Stephanus (Robert Estienne of Paris), who had divided the Greek Testament into verses in 1551, during a journey which he was compelled to make between Paris and Lyon. The Geneva version was printed both in Roman type and in the older typeface, black letter.
The literary societies at Washington & Jefferson College, and its predecessors Jefferson College, Washington College, Canonsburg Academy, and Washington Academy, developed in order to make students more familiar with debate, literature, oratory, and writing. According to W.M. McClelland, Professor of English Language and Literature at Washington & Jefferson College, the literary societies existed to "make young men in college familiar with parliamentary rules, with the perennial themes of human discussion, and to give them a readier use of their mother tongue." Typical early activities include the presentation of dialogues, translations of passages from Greek or Latin classics, and extemporaneous speaking. Later, the literary societies began to present declamations.
Based on research of numerous archives, Morris provides an analysis of Haganah-induced flight: > Undoubtedly, as was understood by IDF intelligence, the most important > single factor in the exodus of April–June was Jewish attack. This is > demonstrated clearly by the fact that each exodus occurred during or in the > immediate wake of military assault. No town was abandoned by the bulk of its > population before the Haganah/IZL assault... The closer drew the 15 May > British withdrawal deadline and the prospect of invasion by Arab states, the > readier became commanders to resort to "cleansing" operations and expulsions > to rid their rear areas. [R]elatively few commanders faced the moral dilemma > of having to carry out the expulsion clauses.
This led to time-wasting and obstruction and presented opportunities for embezzling ships' stores. Because of the innumerable abuses, "too many to be named, and some too subtle to be discovered", Dummer ensured that men and materials were placed close together under the constant eye of command, saving time and costs. The thirteen officers' dwelling houses were similarly sited "on the most eminent spot of ground in the yard, for the officers' better observance of things abroad, and readier communication and conference with one another, on all occasions". An abstract of the costs in Dummer's 1694 account amounted to £50,000, but he was at pains to point out that this was because of the greatness and novelty of the works, which overcame the deficiencies of the other yards.
However, the levels of support for Conchita varied across Europe: on average she received 4.4 points out of 12 from the post-Soviet states (excluding the Baltic states), 6 points from the other ex-socialist states, and 10.5 points from Western Europe, Scandinavia, Greece, and Israel. Commenting on this, political analyst Alan Renwick of the British University of Reading asserted that "Even in those countries where the ruling elites are often highly intolerant, the wider population might be readier to accept that different people might be different." Upon being awarded the trophy, Conchita held it aloft and proclaimed "We are unity and we are unstoppable". She later confirmed to reporters that this was a message meant for politicians who opposed LGBT rights, including President of Russia Vladimir Putin, whose administration had implemented a law restricting LGBT rights in June 2013.
Although women and girls probably worked in mining since antiquity, the earliest known written references to female manual labourers in mining are in the 13th and 14th century records of the royal lead and silver mines at Bere Alston, on the border between Devon and Cornwall. The mines were bordered on three sides by a loop of the River Tamar, since 936 the traditional boundary between Devon and Cornwall. The mines themselves were on the Devon side of the border at Bere Alston itself, but the surface-level smelters were on the Cornish side at Calstock as there was a readier supply of timber for use in the furnaces. Although the mining itself was carried out by men, female workers were employed to sort ore for crushing, to prepare the bone ash used as a flux during the smelting process, and for general manual labour.
His linguistic skill with the Biblical languages often disarmed critics, who saw his approach as a betrayal of Christian truth but who relied on English translations of the two testaments. Ariarajah says that "without denying any of the positive aspects of mission", Cracknell challenges Christians to re-think their attitudes to Others free from "prejudices stemming from the assumption of cultural superiority." Ariarajah, op cit p 191 citing Cracknell (1995) p 93 where Cracknell refers to the relationship between colonial attitudes of superiority and the "legacies of earlier missionary theologies" as "one single sad tangle". Hugh Goddard refers to a "detailed study" of the Protestant World Missionary Conference of 1910 in Cracknell (1994) in which he "concluded that in some ways nineteenth century Christian thinking, including that of some missionaries, was readier than subsequent Christian thought to contemplate continuity rather than discontinuity between Christianity and other religions".
The Gothic Revival 19th-century chapel of Mansfield College, Oxford, an English Calvinist foundation, with statues and stained glass figures of divines of the Reform tradition Lutheran Churches continue to be ornate, with respect to sacred art: Calvinist aniconism, especially in printed material, and stained glass, can generally be said to have weakened in force, although the range and context of images used are much more restricted than in Catholicism, Lutheranism, or parts of Anglicanism, the latter of which also incorporated many high church practices after the Oxford Movement. The Methodist and Pentecostal traditions, as well as other Wesleyan-Arminian Evangelical churches, are inspired by the Moravian rather than Calvinist tradition, and are therefore readier to use large crosses and other images, though not with the profusion of traditional Catholicism or Lutheranism. Hence works like the 52 ft tall Lux Mundi statue in Ohio. Bob Jones University, a standard bearer for Protestant Fundamentalism, has a major collection of Baroque old master Catholic altarpieces proclaiming the Counter-Reformation message, though these are in a gallery, rather than in a church.
In Elizabetha Triumphans, published in 1588, James Aske provides a version of the speech, reworked in verse: :Their loyal hearts to us their lawful Queen. :For sure we are that none beneath the heavens :Have readier subjects to defend their right: :Which happiness we count to us as chief. :And though of love their duties crave no less :Yet say to them that we in like regard :And estimate of this their dearest zeal :(In time of need shall ever call them forth :To dare in field their fierce and cruel foes) :Will be ourself their noted General :Ne dear at all to us shall be our life, :Ne palaces or Castles huge of stone :Shall hold as then our presence from their view: :But in the midst and very heart of them :Bellona-like we mean as them to march; :On common lot of gain or loss to both :They well shall see we recke shall then betide. :And as for honour with most large rewards, :Let them not care they common there shall be: :The meanest man who shall deserve a might, :A mountain shall for his desart receive.
On Sunday, September 21, the two remaining US investment banks, Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley, with the approval of the Federal Reserve, converted to bank holding companies, a status subject to more regulation, but with readier access to capital."Shift for Goldman and Morgan Marks the End of an Era" article by Andrew Ross Sorkin and Vikas Bajaj in The New York Times September 21, 2008 On September 21, Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson announced that the original proposal, which would have excluded foreign banks, had been widened to include foreign financial institutions with a presence in the US. The US administration was pressuring other countries to set up similar bailout plans. On Monday and Tuesday during the week of September 22, appearances were made by the US Secretary of the Treasury and the Chairman of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve before Congressional committees and on Wednesday a prime-time presidential address was delivered by the President of the United States on television. Behind the scenes, negotiations were held refining the proposal which had grown to 42 pages from its original 3 and was reported to include both an oversight structure and limitations on executive salaries, with other provisions under consideration.

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