Sentence examples for frequent appeal from inspiring English sources

Exact(3)

Mr. Boucher repeated the administration's frequent appeal to the Palestinian Authority to take "sustained and credible steps" to arrest those responsible for terrorism.

Mr. Liu was quoted as repeating a frequent appeal by China for a resumption of talks that would result in the removal of nuclear weapons from the Korean Peninsula "as soon as possible".

In both financial Ponzi schemes and religious manipulation, the frequent appeal is to self-aggrandisement and selfishness.

Similar(57)

His frequent appeals to Gujarati chauvinism jar outside the state, and he struggled to maintain decorum when provoked.

It raises questions about the government's frequent appeals to donors for financial aid and its willingness to enact economic reforms as a condition of that aid.

The Kremlin has not spoken publicly about his case, despite frequent appeals by Mr. Browder and senior British and American officials.

Western diplomats say there is no evidence to suggest that Medvedev's frequent appeals – calling on Russia to transform itself into a genuine democracy and progressive society – have had any effect whatsoever.

His position stands in interesting relation to Reid's frequent appeals to universals of language in support of the claim that given beliefs are held by all humankind.

The frequent appeals to science and the laws of nature, as well as the appropriation of scientific vernacular to describe the essential premises of the founding, are both powerful evidence that America was intended to be a kind of technocratic republic.

Notwithstanding Suhrawardi's frequent appeals to the authority of Plato, another, more fruitful area of research might rest with such works as the Arabic Theology of Aristotle (a paraphrase of parts of Books IV-VI of Plotinus' Enneads), in particular, the passages it contains from Enneads IV, 8.1, where the names of many philosophers of the Greek tradition important to Suhrawardi are mentioned.

In the next place, it may be considered as an objection inherent in the principle, that as every appeal to the people would carry an implication of some defect in the government, frequent appeals would in great measure deprive the government of that veneration, which time bestows on every thing, and without which perhaps the wisest and freest governments would not possess the requisite stability.

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