Sentence examples for encapsulates one of from inspiring English sources

Exact(5)

The sentence in your Sept. 9 editorial "Justice on the Farm" describing a "visit to a duck farm in Sullivan County where workers toil through exhausting shifts to force feed poultry for foie gras" encapsulates one of the fundamental problems facing agriculture today: the perpetual chain of exploitation that occurs on many farms.

This remark encapsulates one of Barnett's strengths, a sense of humour, sometimes self-deprecating, which made him popular, and able to remain friends with powerful ministers whose requests for money he turned down.

This has provoked a storm of criticism among some Labour MPs, despite the fact that it merely encapsulates one of the party's five pledges to the electorate, to control immigration.

In 1993, by contrast, there were few dissenting voices in Congress to a huge programme of federal assistance.One grumbler argued, "We're basically telling people, 'We want you to buy insurance, but if you don't, we'll bail you out anyway.'" This encapsulates one of the main reasons to be more sceptical than Mr Moss about the desirability of governments acting as insurers: moral hazard.

This may only be a group-stage game (12 30 GMT start) but the clash encapsulates one of the most important stories of Sochi 2014, and of Winter Olympic sport.

Similar(55)

A word encapsulating one of the noblest human acts now conjures horror.

It's the sort of image that encapsulates one Sundance, the festival of flamboyant self-importance, and if the films had not been as good this year, it might have become a defining moment rather than a comic memento of an unexpectedly rewarding week.

In the resultant product, most of the fullerenes encapsulate one hydrogen molecule, obeying the formula H2@C70, although there is a small percentage, about 3%%, of doubly occupied cages.

Forty years of profound economic shift, all encapsulated on one catwalk.

Intact islets stimulated lymphocytes more than encapsulated and co-encapsulated ones.

Peter Kaplan, who died on Friday at 59, of cancer, was an editor whose career spanned and encapsulated what one of his many employees and protégées – John Homans now at New York Magazine – calls the "late Renaissance" of American journalism.

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