Sentence examples for ability to exercise control from inspiring English sources

Exact(20)

"These authorities include the ability to hire and fire, as well as the ability to exercise control over the budgets".

Energizer claims the distributors are firms that its rival "directly or indirectly controls or over which Duracell has the ability to exercise control".

But to critics of Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan, particularly among the secular elite, the move demonstrated his ability to exercise control over the country's key institutions.

He is even able to be grateful for the ability to exercise "control over my life, the final and most precious inches of my life, for the last real time I was able to".

Doc Searls, a leading blogger, has argued that the real issue around privacy is our ability to exercise control over our own data, choosing whether to restrict or share it.

An assessment whether, as of the date of the certification, the country to which the individual is to be transferred is facing a threat that could substantially affect its ability to exercise control over the individual.

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Similar(40)

According to the Foreign Ministry's official statement, the goals of the exercise include improving the Russian military's ability to exercise command and control of joint military operations across multiple services in the eastern theater of operations, to move troops across long distances to the Russian Far East, and to coordinate operations between ground forces and the Pacific Fleet.

Official sources question how far al Qaeda's leadership is able to influence its branches in far-flung North Africa, arguing that an intensive U.S. drone campaign on its presumed haven in Pakistan's tribal areas bordering Afghanistan has severely damaged its ability to exercise command and control.

Perhaps one of the reasons that weight-loss interventions fail, then, is that they have, for the most part, centered on personal life-style choices: your ability to exercise restraint and self-control.

In each case, we can begin with the theory-neutral definition of free will set out in section one: the unique ability of persons to exercise control over their conduct in the fullest manner necessary for moral responsibility.

As a theory-neutral point of departure, then, free will can be defined as the unique ability of persons to exercise control over their conduct in the manner necessary for moral responsibility.[2] Clearly, this definition is too lean when taken as an endpoint; the hard philosophical work is about how best to develop this special kind of control.

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