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"unhesitating" Definitions
  1. done or given immediately and confidently

37 Sentences With "unhesitating"

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

I'm pretty sure the global response to such a crisis would be unhesitating.
Modest she may be, but also unhesitating in her pursuit and exercise of power.
The end of all this Trump delirium is to prevent Americans from substituting genuine thought for unhesitating loyalty.
So, at Jefferson's prompting, and with Madison's unhesitating support, Congress passed the Vaccine Act of 1813 with virtually no opposition.
It was a remarkable embrace — open and unhesitating — of Nixon's polarizing campaign tactics, and of his overt appeals to Americans frightened by a chaotic stew of war, mass protests and racial unrest.
That can lead to unnecessary caution or new requirements, like forcing officers to put on certain equipment when they respond to an overdose — which could then lead to people in need of quick, unhesitating emergency help getting hurt or killed as they wait.
McCall's intrepidity and unhesitating > willingness to sacrifice his life exemplify the highest traditions of the > Armed Forces.
Cervantes seems to find it natural to blend a rainbow-like open-mindedness with an unhesitating decisiveness.
D tries to be realistic and rational. The stories of three characters whose joy, passion and despair overflow in one bed are tangled like a puzzle, and a fearless and unhesitating exploration of human desires.
She held him with her hands and traveled under her will. They finally ended up in an underwater kingdom, the abode of Kauravya. Arjuna came across a sacrificial fire there and offered his rites to the fire. Agni was pleased with Arjuna's unhesitating offering of oblations.
This could be in part because a quiet ending did not stir the audience into a wild show of appreciation but rather a more contemplative one, and in fact, the Daily Mail gave it a warm review, stating, "the symphony was received with unhesitating and most cordial warmth".
Murray Rothbard, , 1990 talk at Mises University at Stanford, at MisesMedia Youtube channel. After Mises died, his widow Margit quoted a passage that he had written about Benjamin Anderson. She said it best described Mises's own personality: > His most eminent qualities were his inflexible honesty, his unhesitating > sincerity. He never yielded.
This review in particular led to the introduction of a character Josiah Broome in subsequent novels, who allowed Gemmell to show a contrast between Shannow, a man unhesitating in using force to combat what he saw as evil, and Broome a man who regarded the use of force as an evil unto itself.
Due to her popularity, her works were translated into many diverse languages such as "French, Italian, Marathi, and the Mpongwe language of Gabon in West Africa." In 1845, the Christian Examiner praised her work and declared that Tonna had "secured an unhesitating reception amongst most of those called Evangelical Christians." Her legacy endures as a highly respected writer in the Evangelical Protestant community.
The Jewish Leadership Council and Community Security Trust jointly welcomed aspects of it. The Board of Deputies of British Jews said: "We hope that the implementation of this report will be rigorous and swift." Chief Rabbi Ephraim Mirvis also called for a "full and unhesitating implementation of the report's findings". Chakrabarti was Labour's sole nomination to the House of Lords in David Cameron's August 2016 Resignation Honours.
The first inspection report to Dr. Muir was a positive one, saying: 'This school has made a promising commencement and deserves the unhesitating support of the neighbourhood. The accommodation and equipment are both satisfactory. The teachers are able and zealous.' By August of the same year, the school in the little church hall was attracting a lot of interest, and its name had been changed to the Boys' High School, Rondebosch.
Very few believed the contrary, but one of them was Ernst Heinkel. Following his offer of unhesitating support, Heinkel placed at the disposal of von Braun an He 112 fuselage shell less wings for the standing tests. In 1936 von Braun had advanced far enough to begin trials. A great tongue of flame from the rocket motor roared through the fuselage tail to set up the back thrust.
Compton stood his ground and waited for the umpire to confirm whether Miller had caught the ball cleanly, and was duly given out by the unhesitating official.O'Reilly, p. 79. O'Reilly described Miller's effort as "perhaps the very best slips catch of the whole series and … a real match-winner." Johnston then removed Bedser for nine to end with 2/62 as Australia won by 409 runs and took a 2-0 series lead.
His gallant and wholly voluntary action in the face of > overwhelming firepower, however, so encouraged his comrades and diverted the > enemy's attention that other elements of the company were able to surround > the house, capturing more than 200 hostile soldiers and much equipment, > besides freeing 3 members of an American bomber crew held prisoner there. > The intrepidity and unhesitating self-sacrifice of Pfc. Stryker were in > keeping with the highest traditions of the military service.
Kisters > voluntarily advanced alone toward the second gun emplacement. While creeping > forward, he was struck 5 times by enemy bullets, receiving wounds in both > legs and his right arm. Despite the wounds, he continued to advance on the > enemy, and captured the second machinegun after killing 3 of its crew and > forcing the fourth member to flee. The courage of this soldier and his > unhesitating willingness to sacrifice his life, if necessary, served as an > inspiration to the command.
Marivaux is reputed to have been a witty conversationalist, with a somewhat contradictory personality. He was extremely good-natured, but fond of saying very severe things, unhesitating in his acceptance of favours (he drew a regular annuity from Claude Adrien Helvétius), but exceedingly touchy if he thought himself in any way slighted. At the same time, he was a great cultivator of sensibility and unsparingly criticized the rising philosophes. Perhaps for this reason, Voltaire became his enemy and often disparaged him.
The Distinguished Service Cross is presented to Howard Burdick, Second Lieutenant (Air Service), U.S. Army, for extraordinary heroism in action northwest of Cambrai, France, September 28, 1918. Attacked by two Fokker biplanes, Lieutenant Burdick outmaneuvered both machines, shot one into flames and routed the other one. Later, seeing three Fokkers attacking an American aviator, he at once dove into the combat to his assistance, shooting down one and driving off the other two. His quick and unhesitating attack, single-handed, on the three Fokkers save the life of his fellow pilot.
Compton stood his ground and waited for the umpire to confirm whether Miller had caught the ball cleanly, and was duly given out by the unhesitating official. O'Reilly described Miller's effort as "perhaps the very best slips catch of the whole series and ... a real match-winner." England had lost a wicket without adding to their overnight total. Yardley and Dollery took the score to 133 before Toshack bowled the former for 11. He trapped the new man Coxon two balls later in the same over for a duck, leaving England at 133/6.
If a fighting force has officers unwilling to put certain enlisted personnel at risk or if enlisted soldiers believe that their selection for a perceived suicide mission is not motivated solely by a coldly impartial assessment of military strategy (to sacrifice some units so that the force as a whole will prevail), the enlisted soldiers may fail to provide the unhesitating obedience necessary to the realization of that strategy or may even attack their superiors. The Christmas Truce was a notable instance of fraternization in World War I.
Finding that it was advisable to cement the ties between the empire and the papacy, John IX gave unhesitating support to Lambert of Spoleto in preference to Arnulf of Carinthia during the Synod of Rome, and also induced the council to determine that henceforth the consecration of the Popes should take place only in the presence of the imperial legates. The sudden death of Lambert shattered the hopes which this alliance seemed to promise. John IX died in the year 900 and was succeeded by Pope Benedict IV (900–903).
Lexa, and her relationship with Clarke, have been well received by critics and fans. Maureen Ryan, writing for The Huffington Post, stated, "In a show packed with morally compromised characters, Lexa stood out; she led a tribe of Earth inhabitants named Grounders with a combination of deftness, intelligence and unhesitating ferocity." Ryan felt Lexa "does not suffer fools gladly, yet Debnam-Carey made Lexa's vulnerability and her attraction to Clarke Griffin (Eliza Taylor) not just believable, but engrossing." Linda Ge of TheWrap referred to her as a fan-favorite, while Eric Goldman of IGN called her "a standout, highly popular character".
On the outbreak of the Second World War Adam rejoined the RAF as a Wing Commander and served from 1939–1945. During the Battle of Britain in the summer of 1940 he was the Fighter Controller for the Hornchurch sector. It was Adam's job to co-ordinate the fighter command interceptions by using data gathered by radar and ground observers and then to dispatch fighters to intercept. Jeffrey Quill, the distinguished Spitfire test pilot on attachment to 65 Squadron at Hornchurch during the Battle of Britain, wrote of Adam: 'Apart from being highly competent at the actual job, his voice had a quality of calm and unhesitating certainty.
" In 1945 Gerald E. Williams was awarded a Silver Star Citation for conspicuous gallantry in action, while serving with the Ninth Air Force. > "The inexorable determination, outstanding skill and unhesitating courage of > the officers and men of the group in so brilliantly carrying the attack to > the enemy is in keeping with the highest traditions of the Army Air Forces." The citation continued: > "[A]lthough his formation was subjected to intense anti-aircraft fire, > Colonel Williams gallantly led his formation to attack the assigned target > with superior bombing results. The bombs were released on three road > intersections and twenty-seven large buildings were left blazing after the > devastating attack.
In 1948, under the new communist regime, he was elected a titular member of the Romanian Academy. Membrii Academiei Române din 1866 până în prezent at the Romanian Academy site Although an unhesitating adherent to the ruling party—indifferent to a succession of dictatorships, he was primarily concerned with using them to the advantage of his studies—his liberal Europeanism caused him to be excluded from the university between 1951 and 1954, a period of high Stalinism.Alexandru Niculescu, Individualitatea limbii române între limbile romanice, vol. III, p. 302-03. Bucharest: Editura Științifică și Enciclopedică, 1999. In 1961, he established the Academy's Center for Phonetic and Dialectological Research, formerly a department within Iorgu Iordan's Institute of Linguistics.
He also played in Fyntanaki (Φυντανάκι) from the same play by Pantelis Horn, A Girl in Black (Κορίτσι με τα μαύρα) by Michalis Kakogiannis, I Odysseia enos xerizomenou (Η Οδύσσεια ενός ξεριζωμένου) by Apostolos Tegopoulos, Battle of Crete by Vassilis Georgiadis, Papaflessa by Errikos Andreou, The Man with the Carnation (Ο άνθρωπος με το γαρύφαλλο) by N. Tzima. Anametrisi (Αναμέτρηση) by Karypidis in 1982, as well as Egklima sto Kolonaki (Έγκλημα στο Κολωνάκι), Santa Chiquita, O atsidas (Ο ατσίδας), Gia mia choufta Touristries (Για μια χούφτα τουρίστριες), etc. He also acted in television (Police Stories, Eastern Winds). He was one of the popular characters in Greek theater and film, mainly in bitter and unhesitating roles.
Pillsbury gave a marvellous performance, winning 13 > of the 16 blindfold games, drawing two, and losing only one. He played > strong chess and made no mistakes [presumably in recalling the positions]. > The picture of Pillsbury sitting calmly in an armchair, with his back to the > players, smoking one cigar after another, and replying to his opponents' > moves after brief consideration in a clear, unhesitating manner, came back > to my mind 30 years later, when I refereed Alekhine's world record > performance at the Chicago World's Fair, where he played 32 blindfold games > simultaneously. It was quite an astounding demonstration, but Alekhine made > quite a number of mistakes, and his performance did not impress me half as > much as Pillsbury's in Breslau.
In 1810, one year after Haydn's death, Dies published a biography based on what he learned in his visits (see References below). This work is organized around the sequence of visits, reporting each in turn. It continues to serve as a substantial source of information on the composer's life. Compared with another biography written at the same time by Georg August Griesinger, Dies's work is almost certainly less accurate and is more likely to have been sentimentalized and embellished, which he himself alludes to in the introduction of his book: > In order not to leave out of the picture the most interesting phase of > Haydn's life, I meanwhile made unhesitating use of several articles from the > Leipzig Musikalische Zeitung, without entirely suppressing my own untutored > opinions.
Anti-war rally in Washington, D.C., March 15, 2003 Religious groups have long formally opposed or sought to limit war as in the Second Vatican Council document Gaudiem et Spes: "Any act of war aimed indiscriminately at the destruction of entire cities of extensive areas along with their population is a crime against God and man himself. It merits unequivocal and unhesitating condemnation.""PASTORAL CONSTITUTION ON THE CHURCH IN THE MODERN WORLD GAUDIUM ET SPES PROMULGATED BY HIS HOLINESS, POPE PAUL VI ON DECEMBER 7, 1965" Anti- war movements have existed for every major war in the 20th century, including, most prominently, World War I, World War II, and the Vietnam War. In the 21st century, worldwide anti-war movements occurred in response to the United States invasion of Afghanistan and Iraq.
It praised "her unhesitating confidence, the graceful ease and swiftness of her motions, together with her placidly smiling face, [which] destroy all sense of fear for her safety in the minds of the audience, and enable them to enjoy the spectacle of her extraordinary agility, strength, and seemingly terribly daring feats, with none but pleasurable, although strongly excited sensations." The author went on to describe the mix of anxiety and delight an audience member should expect to experience, and noted that Richter counted among her fans future king Edward VII, who reportedly attended two of her shows when he was Prince of Wales. Music often accompanied her performances. At the Aquarium, musical director Charles Dubois composed waltzes for her, which featured prominently in some of the show's advertising.
There were suggestions within and beyond the diplomatic establishment that his unusually rapid rise through the ranks of the German diplomatic service had been both the result of his inherited family connections and a direct reflection of von Mackensen's uncritical and unhesitating execution of every order he received from his superiors, combined with an apparent reluctance to feed any ideas of his own back to Berlin. Someone else who declined to be dazzled by von Mackensen's diplomatic cachet was the French ambassador to Berlin, André François-Poncet: "J’ai visité l’Auswärtiges Amt; j’ai vu le père, et j’ai vu le fils, mais je n’ai pas vu le Saint Esprit". On 30 January 1942 the German ambassador to Rome nevertheless received the considerable honour of being appointed an SS Group Leader ("Gruppenführer") on the staff of Reichsführer-SS Heinrich Himmler.
Sales of Wayne Gretzky Hockey reached 350,000 units by 1995, which "put Bethesda Softworks on the gaming map", according to PC Gamer US. In the April 1989 edition of Computer Gaming World, Johnny Wilson gave an "unhesitating recommendation" of the game "to anyone who enjoys hockey". In the January 1990 edition of Games International (Issue 12), Mike Siggins found the arcade version of the game uninspiring, and the strategy game only a bit better. He concluded by giving the game 3 out of 5 for game play and 4 out of 5 for graphics, saying, "It is among the best hockey games around but sadly, given the earlier efforts in this field, that is not saying much [...] It is neither a good arcade game or stats based game, while it attempts to do both." In 1996, Computer Gaming World declared Wayne Gretzky Hockey the 111th-best computer game ever released.
Banda Singh Bahadur issued Khalsa currency from here, a coin in the name of Guru Nanak-Gobind Singh with Persian inscription sikkah bar har do alam tegh-i-Nanak wahib ast, Fateh Gobind Singh shah-i-shahan Fazal-i-Sacha Sahib ast (Coin struck in the two Worlds by the grace of True Lord; Victory to Gobind Singh, the King of Kings; the sword of Nanak is granter of desires). Banda singh also had a royal stamp inscribed, Degh Tegh Fateh Nusrait-i-Bedirang Yaft az Nanak Guru Gobind Singh (The kettle (symbol to feed the poor), the sword (symbol of power to protect the weak and helpless) the Victory and unhesitating patronage has been obtained from Nanak Guru Gobind Singh). After Banda Singh Bahadur left Lohgarh in 1715 in search of a more secure place to defend against attacking Mughal forces, the Mughal and the forces of the Nahan State repeatedly demolished the fort at Lohgarh. Presently there are only ruins of the fort in form of a few stones.

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