Sentence examples for but rather presenting from inspiring English sources

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Marketing has never been and shouldn't be about trying to speak someone else's language but rather presenting a genuine position of who and what your brand is in a compelling way.

These concepts might not be categorised as 'deep' reasoning concepts that address underlying processes, but rather presenting features of cases.> The least common eight paired co-occurrences for the literature concept or those ranging from 2-1% are more narrow biomedical and clinical concepts such as 'serum' (1%) and 'tissue' (2%).

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An expression of grief does not describe grief but rather presents it, as it might be presented by a face or a gesture.

Imagine, for a moment, that climate change was not synonymous with doomsday scenarios, but rather presented an opportunity to radically transform society for the better.

This section does not construe the ECJ's stated perspective on rights and free expression, but rather presents my theoretical defense, explaining why this subject is crucial to the EU's future.

(b) Extensive argument should not be offered into evidence but rather presented in opening or closing statements of counsel or in memoranda or proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law.

We therefore did not consider the clinical and economic implications of returning IFs to any patient who might receive NGS, but rather presented the results for three archetypal patient populations that may receive NGS and that illustrate the range of downstream clinical and economic consequences associated with returning IFs across a wide range of settings.

Unlike both Kant and Luther, Kierkegaard does not promote a particular judgment about Abraham, but rather presents his readers with a dilemma: either Abraham is no better than a murderer, and there are no grounds for admiring him; or moral duties do not constitute the highest claim on the human being.

There are two basic types of deceptive coloration: (1) concealing coloration, or camouflage, in which the organism blends into its surroundings; and (2) mimicry, in which the organism is not hidden but rather presents a false identity by its resemblance to another species.

This area is especially interesting because it's not a simple chart, but rather presented as a grid of image thumbnails with the number of impressions that post received is overlaid on top.

Some scholars have suggested that this was due to the facts that the notation was 2-dimensional instead of linear and that he didn't build upon the work of others but rather presented something radically new (e.g., Mendelsohn 2005, 2).

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