Sentence examples similar to come to terms with conscience from inspiring English sources

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"This tragic event may cause the white South to come to terms with its conscience," the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. predicted at the little girls' funeral.

Indeed this tragic event may cause the white South to come to terms with its conscience.

Wendell Steavenson is not reporting the story as a dispassionate, invisible observer — she is, in a way, a character in it, with her own narrative arc of struggling to understand and come to terms with the failure of human conscience in extremity.

It concluded that Grass's ill-judged broadside sprung from Germany's own guilty conscience – "part of the German people's efforts to come to terms with the past".

Have you come to terms with this?

"I have come to terms with it.

"He has come to terms with practice.

And that, the world has to come to terms with.

Come to terms with history.

I'm learning to come to terms with that term.

I've come to terms with this.

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