Sentence examples for consequence of the words from inspiring English sources

Exact(1)

Whenever proof of special damage is necessary to maintain an action of slander, the claim for the same must be set forth in the declaration, and it must appear that the special damage is the natural and proximate consequence of the words spoken, else the allegation will not entitle the plaintiff to recover.

Similar(59)

That the odds ratio for repetitive work with the wrist and hand was only 1.5 may be a consequence of the wording of the question by which exposure was ascertained.

Delving back into etymology and fiction – and a consideration of how these linguistic roots have branched into a modern weed of unfairness – can help us better understand the social consequences of the words we choose.

Whereas the street fights of the late nineteen-sixties were the consequence of Vietnam, the word fights of this decade were not the consequence of Iraq — if anything, it was the other way around.

"History offers brutal reminders of the consequences of ignoring the words of leaders who seek to identify and suppress one single religious group," the letter reads.

Even if they do not follow the path of a Betty White, the onslaught of America's 79 million baby boomers is necessarily going to change the meaning and consequences of the word "retirement".

Jews and Americans have seen the consequences of disregarding the words of leaders who espouse hatred.

And the one thing that I've tried to impress upon you through jokes and being serious, is the consequences of these words in the world in which we live in.

If Mr. Trump was aware of the reaction that would ensue after his clearly improvised remarks, he appeared immune to the consequences of those words, which electrified the lobby of his signature office building.

That "unintended consequence"—in the words of Gawain Kripke of Oxfam International, a British charity has caused serious problems for the organisations that bring food aid to the poorest.

He reminds us that, today, such dense cities are surrounded by ever-expanding and mind-numbingly banal outer-suburbia; as a consequence – in the words of the theorist of renewable energies, Peter Droege – the promiscuously sprawling 21st-century city is "a fossil-fuel construct in search of rapid restructuring".

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