Sentence examples for exerted to make from inspiring English sources

Exact(2)

Sheldon, who in the spirit of political loyalty apparently was willing to fall on his paperclip for higher-ups, told Markon: "I don't think there was any undue influence exerted to make this grant go one way or the other".

Therefore care must be exerted to make sure that as much as possible of the plant material under assessment is producing NO; otherwise NO uptake by healthy tissue would reduce the overall NO emission from the plant.

Similar(58)

Some have taken that as evidence of the pressure that Downing Street was exerting to make the dossier more dramatic.

If he had more experience with crime dramas, though, he might have exerted pressure to make the cases a little more interesting.

'Strategies' refers to whether or not to cooperate with government, media, primary stakeholders or other vocal groups to exert pressure to make firms incorporate social and environmental responsibility in their decision making process.

Vaughn shambles along, not exerting himself to make us like him, or make the story believable – he lacks the script zingers or comedy situations to do so.

Spielberg exerts himself to make his principles plain, but he does so surreptitiously, under the guise of solemn fidelity to the authority of history.

Politically, Dallas Buyers Club looks pretty conservative, and veterans of the Act Up campaign may not be delighted by this story of a straight man riding to the rescue of gays, and also exerting himself to make America feel good about itself.

Slaboshpytskiy is not obviously exerting himself to make things plain for non-signing audiences, although the scene in which the two young women put on Italy-themed T-shirts was there artificially, I suspect, to make an important plot-point clear to us.

In this situation, men could extensively monitor and strategically adjust their verbal and nonverbal behavior during the interaction, and they had to exert effort to make the interaction run smoothly and override habitual or dispositional responses in order to make the desired impression (Vohs et al., 2005).

There are reasons to think that effort which is unnecessary, in our revised sense, confers no moral worth it simply seems implausible that one should gain moral credit by exerting effort that neither makes nor is reasonably expected to make any difference to the moral desirability of one's action.

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