Sentence examples for conclusively called from inspiring English sources

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Last month, the British Medical Journal finally and conclusively called bullshit on Andrew Wakefield's controversial 1998 paper that drew a link between autism and MMR vaccines (which is pretty much the only thing that ever has drawn a link between the two).

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Conclusively, we call our approach iCFP (Integrated gene and protein expression Carbon Flux Paths).

The real highlight, however, came from Daryl "Run" DMC (whose music I was previously uninitiated in, but whom I can conclusively say manages to make a song called "My Adidas" really work).

(A new lab diagnostic called the FM test claims to conclusively diagnose fibromyalgia, but its reliability is under scrutiny).

Alan Moore said he was also about 26 chapters into a long-long-in-the-works novel called "Jerusalem," in which, he said, "I can conclusively prove that death is a perspective illusion of the third dimension and that none of us have anything to worry about".

Conclusively, the aforementioned problems call for urgent attempts to suggest an empirical therapy based on local resistance patterns.

The legal team that defended Mr. Stevens, Republican of Alaska, called those suspensions "pathetic" and inadequate, saying the department had "demonstrated conclusively that it is not capable of disciplining its prosecutors".

These are the notions we employ when we say things like 'Fred must have stolen the book (the evidence shows conclusively that he did it),' or 'Mary cannot be in London (she would have called me).' These modal utterances seem to make claims about what the available evidence shows, or about which scenarios can be ruled out on the basis of the evidence.

In a way, the extremely peculiar film series called Punk 'n' Pie, which begins Friday at BAMcinématek in Brooklyn, demonstrates pretty conclusively that punk remains, three decades later, defiantly resistant to definition, still pogoing so furiously that the camera can't quite keep it in focus.

The company incorporates pesticides called neonicotinoids into some of its seeds; these chemicals have been implicated, though never conclusively, in colony-collapse disorder.

But more than 30 countries still ban Canadian beef, in part because Canadian officials have not been able to pinpoint conclusively how that lone cow on a remote ranch in northern Alberta contracted the disease, formally called bovine spongiform encephalopathy, or B.S.E.

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