Sentence examples for but a subject from inspiring English sources

Exact(14)

But a subject is in a less threatening situation than a target, someone who may expect to be charged.

Suddenly the books were no longer a private passion but a subject out of which to spin endless blog posts and freelance articles.

"It's not just a portrait but a subject from modern life," said Charles Moffett, an executive vice president at Sotheby's in New York who was also a co-curator of the 1983 show.

"Aging for me is not a condition, but a subject," she said, one that JR's interest in her allowed her to explore even as she kept her focus on other people, "getting the best of their worlds, the best of their behaviors".

Meryl used the occasion to explain that Disney was an arse – not the greatest revelation to many of us, but a subject Hollywood has surprisingly yet to explore on film – as well as to undermine the awards season itself, which recently got under way, and which will be with us for way longer than 40 days and 40 nights.

"I think we struck a nerve generally in the classical music world with the Bard festival and with the American Symphony concerts," he said, "by curating concerts, by treating the public seriously in a way that is not forbidding and by making music not a dead object behind glass, but a subject of living controversy and reinterpretation on the part of the audience as well as the performers.

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Similar(46)

Results showed a low step-to-step variability of each subject, but a high subject-to-subject variability in local extrema of body-weight normalized forces and moments and impulse data.

But where a subject had a fruit bowl on the counter, they weighed about 13lbs (9kg) less.

He visited an orphanage where 40 children tried to entertain their guests by putting on a show, but with a subject as dark as any Shakespearean tragedy.

But for a subject like physics we are still stuck with only around 20-25% of the undergraduate population being girls, and even lower numbers in subjects like computing.

In the late 19th century, the great German mathematician Georg Cantor took on infinity not as a means to an end, but as a subject worthy of rigorous study in itself.

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