Sentence examples for as she terms it from inspiring English sources

Exact(6)

She came upon the Victory, which looks the part of a "cultural reservoir," as she terms it.

Like Austen before her, Eliot prefers a vision of romance that is based on common values and mutual respect, rather than a faith in masculine and feminine difference (the goose and the gander, as she terms it).

Because of Park51's location, Geller compares the community center (or the "9/11 Monster Mosque," as she terms it) to Al Aqsa, the ancient mosque on the Temple Mount in Jerusalem — a flash point for Jewish extremists in Israel.

Because of Park51's location, Geller compares the community center (or the "9/11 Monster Mosque," as she terms it) to Al Aqsa, the ancient mosque on the Temple Mount in Jerusalem a flash point for Jewish extremists in Israel.

Will she come across as the woman she is ― the single mom from, as she terms it, the ragged edge of the middle class who made it the hard way from hardscrabble origins in Oklahoma?

A range of findings on this issue are presented in the literature from doctors who have embraced managerial roles, such as the GPs studied by Pickard, 18 who shows how the medical profession has been, as she terms it, reprofessionalised, 'incorporating a new series of managerially defined competencies and a new type of clinical autonomy' (p. 255).

Similar(54)

Yes, Manolo Blahnik was the "matron of honor," as she termed it, at her 1977 wedding to the theater critic John Heilpern.

It caused her face to swell and her hair to fall out; it required her to give herself injections of cortisone, and, eventually, to walk with aluminum crutches because "the misery," as she termed it, affected her hips.

Muriel Spark was once commonly mentioned in the same breath as Evelyn Waugh and Graham Greene – thanks in part to her Romantic Catholicism (as she termed it), but mainly due to her precocious talent.

To Bennetts, the new "stay-at-home momism," as she termed it in the 2005 magazine article from which this book grew, is a kind of nationwide female delusion: "a plague of silence across the land," she says, with Friedanesque rhetoric.

Through her scholarship, her influential but often scathing critiques of the "humanitarian industry", as she termed it, but above all for her insistence that the voices of refugees must be heard, their agency recognised and their rights protected, she transformed humanitarian practice from its paternalistic and self-justifying modes of action.

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