Sentence examples for embarrassments stemming from from inspiring English sources

Exact(1)

The bank has faced a series of embarrassments stemming from an ambitious foray into American investment banking, including an $80 million settlement with the Securities and Exchange Commission in December over dealings with Enron, and fraud charges against a former senior executive at the bank's arbitrage unit in New York.

Similar(59)

It is the United Nations, not the Clinton administration, that deserves the brunt of any embarrassment stemming from the resolution's failure.

The Court attempts to distinguish between these foreign acts on the ground that all foreign penal and revenue and perhaps other public laws are irrebuttably presumed invalid to avoid the embarrassment stemming from examination of some acts and that all foreign expropriations are presumed valid for the same reason.

This may be due to a sense of shame or embarrassment stemming from cultural norms associated with women being subservient to their husbands.

A graver embarrassment stemmed from Dimmock's habit of hiring a helicopter to fly film from Saturday sporting venues back to the BBC's Lime Grove studios for immediate use.

(p. 197/198) The embarrassment stems from the fact that an element of theft or academic 'espionage' seems involved in the DNA story and several critics have argued that Wilkins's behaviour (sharing confidential data with a member of a competing team without Franklin's explicit consent) was wrong, while Judson (1979) even claims that Wilkins stole the photograph from Franklin's drawer.

Obviously, disagreement stemming from cognitive impairments is no embarrassment for moral realism; at the limit, that a disagreement persists when some or all disputing parties are quite insane shows nothing deep about morality.

"I've seen the guys disappointed before but in the changing room today I think there's a bit of embarrassment". Bayliss' frustration stems from the fact this has happened before.

He later explained that his long silence stemmed from embarrassment over what he called his trifle.

The lead author, Patricia M. Dietz, an epidemiologist with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said that the deceit probably stemmed from embarrassment.

It is hard to imagine the television in any other country showing such indifference and I can only imagine that it stems from embarrassment that Britain's head of state is an hereditary monarch.

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