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Dictionary
Scrutinizing
verb
Present participle of scrutinize
Exact(60)
Scrutinizing the decisions of our artists has become at best an interesting daily discussion and - at worst - a cruel sport.
Agents were scrutinizing the applications to measure how much the groups were involved in politics.
Peter Schweizer – whose book scrutinizing donations to the Clinton Foundation has earned sharp rebukes from Hillary Clinton's campaign and liberally aligned groups – confirmed on Thursday plans to investigate Bush's past financial dealings.
America's economy is a mosaic of puzzles and contradictions that has economists and bloggers scrambling for explanations and scrutinizing the data for quirks and flaws.
I'M NOT sure this is the kind of thing that will convince people that the financial sector is providing a valuable public service:An increasing number of hedge funds and brokerages are scrutinizing professional poker to find talent and analytical tools, according to financial recruiters including Options Group, a New York-based executive-search company.
China is closely scrutinizing every single move in Taiwan.
A team of Googlers would spend day after day staring at computer screens, scrutinizing tiny snippets of street photographs, asking themselves the same question over and over again: "Am I looking at an address or not?' Click.
After scrutinizing two lead codices, he found that the material used was consistent with the possibility of it being ancient, and that the construction of the objects appeared not to be recent.
Sheldon M. Novick took up a much-examined subject, Henry James, scrutinizing his later work in Henry James: The Mature Master.
It took over from the ecclesiastical courts the narrow jurisdiction left to them, that of scrutinizing instruments purporting to be testaments; but simultaneously its jurisdiction was extended to wills i.e., instruments purporting to dispose of real property.
Descartes proved wrong in his beliefs that all sensory inputs focused on the pineal gland and that the pineal itself was a selective motor organ, suspended in a whirl of "animal spirits," dancing and jigging "like a balloon captive above a fire," yet capable in humans of scrutinizing inputs and producing actions "consistent with wisdom".
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