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"rigour" Definitions
  1. [uncountable] the fact of being careful and paying great attention to detail
  2. [uncountable] (formal) the fact of being strict or severe synonym severity
  3. the rigours of something [plural] the difficulties and unpleasant conditions of something

112 Sentences With "rigour"

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

In terms of rigour, RCEP falls far short of CPTPP.
Creditors were impressed by Syriza's rigour, but growth was subdued.
Creditors were impressed by Syriza's fiscal rigour, but growth was subdued.
This linguistic rigour should be extended through both time and space.
The state is now "acknowledging them, and will act with rigour".
But for all its rich reporting and panache, it lacks rigour.
Many hoped that private-sector rigour might thereby seep into government thinking.
They are often managed with greater rigour, thanks to the involvement of outside lenders.
Its sudden prominence reflects a lack of rigour characteristic of the party's activist fringe.
It has also brought uncomfortable scrutiny over new software, pilot training and regulatory rigour.
His technique mirrors the simplistic rigour of pure neoclassical theory – but with inverted conclusions.
At the time this rigour cost them dear in terms of deals, he says.
Macron is the opposite of an extremist, and he prizes efficiency and intellectual rigour.
It is supposed to serve society, and to offer rigour where gut instincts go wrong.
This, the researchers reckon, may have helped establish a culture of unusual rigour and openness.
Mr Arrow showed similar rigour in exploring one alternative to market co-ordination: collective decision-making.
The job of economists is to impose mathematical rigour on intuitions about markets, economies and people.
Political scientists and data journalists have battled for years to supplant fact-free punditry with quantitative rigour.
That reflects the rigour of America's vetting, refugees' hunger for advancement—and America's ability to feed it.
Even when sticking to a script, Mr Trump seems incapable of producing ideas of depth and rigour.
SPD leader Martin Schulz – who may become foreign minister – favours less fiscal rigour and more European solidarity.
"Well formulated plans and promised measures had not been executed with sufficient discipline or rigour," he said.
Such observational studies do not have the rigour of full-scale clinical trials but they do provide reassurance.
Growth remains disappointing, in part because of the fiscal rigour Jamaica accepted as part of the IMF deal.
They too need to be subject to the scientific rigour—and exhaustive testing—that has served medicine so well.
Since 2008 academics have, with varying degrees of success, tried to bring more quantitative rigour to his instability hypothesis.
FOR anyone with a bias towards scientific rigour, pharmacies in continental Europe are liable to send blood pressure soaring.
"This expedition will be hard work, with scientific rigour required during unforgiving wintery conditions," Jones-Williams said in the release.
" According to Hayter, most of the regulatory movements we've seen lately are positive and will "bring rigour and long term stability.
Budget management was "an exercise of hope rather than expectation"; the council's approach was "sloppy, lacking in rigour and without challenge".
The mountain of algebra in economic research is supposedly meant for clarification and rigour, but is too often deployed for obfuscation.
The rigour with which they dress is far more than a matter of style – it's a basic element of their art.
But a generation of young botanists is eager to explore this new frontier and is bring scientific rigour to the field.
If anything, Stroz says, approaching spirits with the same rigour and discipline with which he approaches radiology was a huge advantage.
These makeshift squads rarely challenged for titles and struggled to cope with the new defensive rigour imported by Chelsea manager José Mourinho.
Even in Singapore, where pupils can opt earlier for a vocational track, schools insist on academic rigour as well as practical work.
Candidates should have a boundless curiosity about the world and the ability to write about it concisely, wittily and with analytical rigour.
To try to bring some rigour to the question, he went hunting for examples of a cognitive experiment called the marshmallow test.
While a majority of Russians tell pollsters they are Orthodox, only a minority will observe the coming Lenten fast in all its rigour.
This will almost double its sensitivity, permitting it to observe with the same rigour a volume of space seven times larger than now.
However, the freedom that the Viennese espoused came at a price; self-expression could be accomplished only by intellectual rigour and self-discipline.
The tribunal, which will play a key role in the interpretation of all those details, is likely to have a bias for rigour.
"People don't believe in the rigour of EIAs," says José de Echave of CooperAcción, an NGO that works with communities affected by mining.
"I feel that we need to challenge ourselves within the archeological community, with scientific rigour behind us, to actually embrace that complexity," said Cole.
Internet firms are now the corporate world's largest spenders, but exhibit little of the rigour seen at conventional big investors such as Shell or Intel.
"Another World" is keenly aware of the political morass it is stepping into, and no doubt improved by the balance and rigour this situation demands.
During this long period, the economics profession went off in different directions, focusing on micro-economic problems, emphasising the importance of theoretical models and mathematical rigour.
A paper by her and her colleagues, just published in JAMA Internal Medicine, attempts to give statistical rigour to scientific hunches about end-of-life care.
People intuitively understood that riskier investments should generate higher returns to compensate for the dangers of losing their money, but there was little rigour to it.
It should start with an acknowledgment that the country's style of election coverage can seem frivolous—especially compared to the rigour of its reporting on government.
Berlin badly wants the Washington-based institution — widely seen as a paragon of fiscal rigour — to take part in the Greek bailout to appease German hawks.
Some senior economists shudder, with justification, at the thought of sitting through a sloppy seminar in silence, and worry that a cuddlier environment will soften intellectual rigour.
"I think the zeitgeist is changing a little bit away from fiscal rigour to fairness," said Mark Triffitt, a public policy lecturer at the University of Melbourne.
And Molly Scott Cato, a member of the European Parliament representing the Green party, writes about co-operative economics with great enthusiasm but little rigour or insight.
"The journal will have credibility only if its articles satisfy the highest standards of academic rigour," the authors wrote in a rebuttal to Malik in the Guardian.
Charlemagne's commitment to journalistic rigour did not extend to sampling Hipp's baby food, but the company confirms that its products are identical on either side of the border.
He is swiftly earning a reputation for exploring discomforting ideas about race and sex with humour, intellectual rigour, nods to pop culture and an engaging sense of spectacle.
It erred on the side of rigour rather than completeness, and only counted people whose names it knew and whose deaths were confirmed by more than one source.
Although Mechanical Turk allows for collection of large and diverse samples, it comes with other costs that may compromise scientific rigour, including questionable quality and validity of results.
Controlled by the mayor's office and responsible for the bungled response to Mr McDonald's killing, the agency does not oversee the police "fairly, competently, with rigour [or] independence".
When visiting the area, Rafael Correa, Ecuador's president, said building standards had to be applied with greater rigour to avoid a similar scale of destruction in the future.
If the notion of a middle way sounds intuitively appealing, Arthur Kroeber's book brings rigour to the debate to show why it is also the most likely outcome.
The Trump administration argues the 2015 deal did not place curbs on Iran's nuclear capability of sufficient rigour or duration and failed to address its ballistic missile programme.
About one third of audits of London-listed companies sampled by Britain's accounting regulator lack rigour and need improvements, the watchdog said in a report published on Thursday.
"I have always defended financial rigour in peacetime so that France does not have to skimp on its budget in times of war," Darmanin was quoted as saying.
"We had expected new chairman Ferran to bring greater rigour on costs, however the upgrade has come sooner than expected," Jefferies analyst Edward Mundy said in a note.
With his carefully calibrated German-speaking team, Mr Macron pitched his case to Berlin with just the right tone, restoring confidence with serious reform and fiscal rigour at home.
For others—younger people and those unfamiliar with the issues at stake—such strategies fail to educate or demonstrate the rigour of thinking that leads to certain ideological conclusions.
It is a view of the world at the same time bracing in its simple rigour and comforting in the lack of social burdens it places on corporate backs.
School reforms launched by the ruling junta, which took power in 2014, have largely focused on instilling a strong sense of national identity and military-like rigour and discipline.
To achieve the sort of consistency that is demanded by scientific rigour, stones were propelled down the ice using a robotic stone thrower that resembles a squashed Mars rover.
But the current decision-making process in Canada needs more "transparency" and "scientific rigour," according to an open letter signed by more than 1,300 young Canadian researchers and scientists.
Morgan Stanley analysts praised the company and its leadership, saying the new targets showed a "ruthless focus on optimising investment" and "the emerging benefits of increased focus and rigour".
For his part, Mr McQueen had two priorities for Soundtrack of America: historical rigour and a wish to involve young contemporary musicians who were just beginning to make their names.
It might have been interesting for the authors to apply the same rigour to films in which men are sexualised, to assess where the 'objectification' trend might be coming from.
Sarah Wallace, a senior lawyer at Irwin Mitchell, urged the SFO to apply more rigour when gathering and assessing evidence – and more realism about who to put in the dock.
Still, a splurge as planned in the coalition draft would have been harder to imagine with a finance ministry under Schaeuble, renowned for his laser-like focus on budgetary rigour.
"Felipe VI cannot allow there to be the slightest doubt over the rigour of his sister's trial," historian Pilar Urbano, who has written extensively about the royal family, told AFP.
"This decision is in line with the stance of the new Board of Directors of the oil company to be consistent with the principles of rigour and transparency," its statement said.
Today, if this year's elections are any guide, politicians and demagogues seem content to wrap themselves in the language of freedom while abandoning any obligations to intellectual rigour or self-discipline.
Alan Turing, a British mathematician who did a great deal of pioneering work on how to treat algorithms with mathematical rigour, once wrote a fairly complicated chess-playing algorithm on paper.
New research* into the unwrapping of presents by two professors at the Yale School of Management and one at the University of Miami bravely applies rigour where sentimentality has long ruled.
President Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa said in his inauguration speech the country has to respect its international commitments, especially within the European Union, and maintain financial rigour to avoid future crises.
"Schulz might make it easier for Germany to back down from its doctrine of economic rigour, which has alienated a few in southern Europe during the last few years," suggested Lea.
LONDON, March 2 (Reuters) - About one third of audits of London-listed companies sampled by Britain's accounting regulator lack rigour and need improvements, the watchdog said in a report published on Thursday.
His greatest contribution was to restore intellectual rigour to the free-market school, expositing in detail the "price mechanism" to show that socialist economics could not possibly work in theory, let alone practice.
A Catholic campus in the American Mid-West feels different from the cloisters of the Vatican; the Buddhism embraced by Californian beach-goers lacks the rigour of a monastery in Thailand or Tibet.
Reynolds would bring a sort of financial rigour to Pinterest's corporate finances and financial reporting, thanks to his understanding of investor interests and his expertise in how large companies run and achieve profits.
Since taking over as finance minister earlier this year, Scholz has adopted the same fiscal rigour as his conservative predecessor, Wolfgang Schaeuble, by limiting public spending and rejecting the issuance of new debt.
Samuel ordered almost all of his papers to be burned when he died, so some of the lively personality traits found here may be more the result of imaginative storytelling than documentary rigour.
Carolyn Everson, vice-president of global marketing solutions, said Facebook had approached the probe with the "same rigour and discipline" as when it quickly changed its business model to make advertising work on mobile phones.
Rakesh Kapoor, Reckitt's CEO since 2011, has a reputation for savvy deal-making and financial rigour in his quest to turn Reckitt from a stodgy British maker of cleaning products into a consumer healthcare powerhouse.
Anna Vignoles, an education expert at Cambridge University, estimates that half of universities already use contextual admissions in some form, though the rigour of the criteria used and the extent to which they publicise it varies.
Although mathematical models add clarity and rigour (and Mr Tirole is a heavy user in his own research), they can constrain which questions are asked, and be mistaken as the goal of research rather than the means.
Mortgage brokers in Queensland state said that banks can insist on more documentation in high-risk postcodes, including evidence of insurance prior to agreeing a loan, but the rigour with which they enforce the rules is patchy.
Mortgage brokers in Queensland state said that banks can insist on more documentation in high-risk postcodes, including evidence of insurance prior to agreeing a loan, but the rigour with which they enforce the rules is patchy.
"Such a lack of rigour, sadly," he added, "has been a disturbing trend in much of the politically charged public discourse about the law lately, and one that lawyers—regardless of their politics—owe a duty to abjure".
In an interview with The Spectator magazine, Fox said that after Britain, the EU's second largest economy, leaves the bloc, Berlin will lose a key ally in enforcing "economic rigour" and could end up paying for other EU nations.
BERLIN (Reuters) - After Emmanuel Macron's victory in France's presidential election, Germany must decide whether it wants to continue its single-minded focus on budget rigour or work with him to ensure the future of the European project, a German diplomat said.
Alongside the lack of macroeconomic rigour, there was a lot of microeconomic meddling: the government pursued a clumsy industrial policy and shortchanged the private sector, for example by insisting on absurdly low rates of return on concessions to run infrastructure projects.
"We want to bring the same level of analytics, sophistication, and scientific rigour to managing people as is currently applied to managing finance and customers," Peakon co-founder Dan Rogers, who was most recently VP Growth at Songkick, tells me.
League leader Matteo Salvini blames the euro for Italy's prolonged economic malaise and expects it to collapse, putting him at odds with Berlusconi, who wants to keep the currency and has promised some of the budget rigour EU rules demand.
The indirect cost to Mr Trump of Mr Sessions's recusal is that the FBI probe has now been passed to an independent counsel, Mr Mueller, a former FBI director with a reputation for probity and rigour earned under both Republican and Democratic administrations.
This leads to wasted resources—including lab animals used in studies, and patient data—and scientific potential, as methods and results often aren't up to scientific rigour or can't be easily located by others who might want to consult their findings later on.
"No other state has a science-based, environmental restoration and protection project of this rigour," says Justin Ehrenwerth, a former member of Barack Obama's administration, who now runs the Water Institute of the Gulf, a research outfit in Baton Rouge dedicated to mitigating coastal erosion.
In the seemingly endless, seemingly eternal, gap between the institutional rigour and uniform of secondary school and the limitless possibilities of sixth form education, with its free periods and trips to the local chippy, I spent most of my time feeling sorry for myself.
My course got copious amounts of press and two popular reactions emerged: there were those who were absolutely ecstatic that Beyoncé would be studied with intellectual rigour, and there were those who thought that her inclusion in university study signaled the demise of post-secondary education.
Their experimental rigour mostly leads to the recommendations which might be expected from liberal Boston-area academics: higher taxes on the rich to limit inequality, more help for both domestic and foreign poor, more migration and freer trade, but with more help for those who lose out.
"These findings are important not only because of their novelty and the rigour of the study, but because they point the way to the development of targeted treatments that potentially could better address some of the core pathology in schizophrenia," offers the Lawson Institute's Jeffrey Reiss in a statement.
Paschal Donohoe, the Fine Gael transport minister, says he has enjoyed working with Britain in Europe, for example to support liberal aviation regimes; but with or without Britain, Ireland will stay in the EU. Despite Britain's absence, Ireland has benefited from the "competitive rigour" of the single currency, he believes.
There he bluntly informed civil servants of their shortcomings, fired off hectoring e-mails written in capitals, took a bulldozer to Mr Gove's softly-softly Liberal Democrat coalition partners and agitated to prise the state's fingers off schools, inject the exam system with new rigour and boost the teaching of science and maths.
"While the targets offered for margins and sales growth didn't set our pulse racing, we felt there was some proper rigour behind those targets," analysts at RBC Capital Markets, who were already factoring in a margin of 17.6 percent by 2020, said, adding they were sticking to an "outperform" rating and an 10 Swiss francs price target.

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