Sentence examples for clarity tensions from inspiring English sources

Exact(1)

The referendum exposed with terrifying clarity tensions within the Labour movement that have built up over the last decade.

Similar(57)

Meanwhile, the independent variables (Table  1) were work environment (autonomy, perceived quality of work place, team work, organizational support for staff), drivers of job satisfaction (job clarity, tension) and dummy variables (data year, mental health hospital and occupation group).

"But to ignore him is equally absurd, for no other painter has set forth with such pitiless clarity the tensions and paradoxes that surround all efforts to see, let alone paint, the human figure in the age of photography".

Wayne Shorter's "The Soothsayer," from 1965, a new reissue in Blue Note's Rudy Van Gelder Series (named for the legendary recording engineer, who, now in his eighties, is supervising the remastering), reflects with a startling clarity the tensions that were pulling jazz apart at the time.

At brisk tempos he summons a terrific clarity and tension, leaning against the current of his rhythm section, with Danton Boller on bass and Montez Coleman on drums.

Farrell: If my note before is directionally correct that most of the banks "pass" the stress test, I think the results should be announced and the clarity would ease tensions.

In a similar synthesis of Roman and French Baroque seasoned with Palladian elements, he also created a new type of town palace characterized by impressive form, structural clarity, and the dynamic tension of its decoration.

The ensemble played with remarkable coordination, clarity and an underlying tension that kept the symphony bristling in both the faster, jubilant sections (played at daredevil speed) and more introspective moments.

The Guardian Nancy Banks-Smith similarly felt that transmitting live made for "tension, not clarity", commenting that bookmakers would be "absolutely delighted" with the outcome, but that viewers would be "incredulous".

Future analyses on other intersectoral issues may provide clarity on points of tension and differing types of evidence used in intersectoral work.

8 11 Although in literature those states have been described using many different terms such as 'psychological distress', 10 'heightened emotional arousal', 12 'tension' 13 or 'aversive tension', 9 14 we will use the term 'aversive tension' for clarity reasons.

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