Sentence examples for arguably mirror from inspiring English sources

Exact(1)

Haneke points the burden of culpability at the audience, for being as complicit as the white bourgeois characters he creates – arguably, mirror images of his target audiences.

Similar(59)

The price reduction programme adopted by Morrison is described by management as a snowball process arguably mirroring the approach applied by Asda in late 2013, when Asda also withdrew from vouchering and commenced price cuts.

In the final account, we can see Ibn Gabirol as uniquely sensitive to the equal importance of both matter and form, their intimate interdependence one upon the other, and, ultimately, their unity as a single whole a dynamic arguably mirroring his vision of God's own reality in terms of essential and active "moments" which are ultimately one inseparable unity.

Arguably, it's a mirror of our national and global psyche.

The number of students enrolled in higher vocational education in the Netherlands has grown significantly in recent decades, from approximately 200,000 in 1978 to over 400,000 in 2010 (CBS 2013), mirroring a European and arguably a global trend towards 'massification' in higher education (Altbach et al. 2009).

Mirrors have the same effect and are arguably even more powerful, because they compel us to peer, metaphorically, into our own souls.

Arguably, the Daily Express's online revamp makes it better than the Mirror's too.

Bashir calls himself a caged bird and tells the woman who arguably ruined his life: "Maybe you need us to hold a mirror to your monstrosities".

Politicians were assailing the dreaded "speculator," probably because it's easier to blame a fictional villain than look in the mirror and accept responsibility for contributing to an inept (or arguably nonexistent) national energy policy.

If one wishes to have an acceptable final situation, one mirroring the fact that we have definite perceptions, one is arguably compelled to break the linearity of the theory at an appropriate stage.

But he wanted to avoid mentioning the so-called golden era of Hugh Cudlipp's Daily Mirror, which emerged in the late 1940s and continued into the mid-1960s arguablyuabeyondeyond that.

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