Sentence examples for has a firm foothold from inspiring English sources

Exact(9)

Especially in chronic wound care and in palliative cancer treatment plasma has a firm foothold [1, 2].

Now that FreshDirect has a firm foothold in the tri-state area, Mr. Braddock said he planned to renew the company's focus on growth.

Andrew Taylor of the People and Planet Network, which has launched over fifty 'Fossil Free' campaigns across the UK involving over 15,000 students in the past year, said: "Divestment now has a firm foothold in the UK.

It's a work of huge power and emotional impact: it's been performed more than 500 times (around 150 of them by me) and it has a firm foothold in the orchestral canon.

Mr. Zinman has a firm foothold in the United States at the Aspen Music Festival and School, where as music director he devotes considerable time and energy to teaching, particularly at the American Academy of Conducting, an institute developed on his watch that earmarks a whole student orchestra for the rehearsals and performances of its young conductors.

So as long as this remains a troubled region and Djibouti is happy to play host, Washington has a firm foothold on the Horn of Africa.

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Similar(51)

Not surprisingly Ms. Franklin's most electrifying performances have a firm foothold in the church.

A decade later, the members of the St . Lawrence String Quartet— Geoff Nuttall, Barry Shiffman, Lesley Robertson, and Marina Hoover — have a firm foothold in the world of American chamber music.

Peter Cowgill, executive chairman, said of the outdoor business: "Although initial results have been more disappointing than originally anticipated we now have a firm foothold in a different and growing lifestyle market in the UK".

It is also likely that the Basque tongue, which had a firm foothold in the country that then began to be called Vasconia, experienced a substantial expansion toward the southwest, which carried it to the Rioja Alta (High Rioja) region in Old Castile and near Burgos.

According to the OED, just 10 years ago the word did not exist, "but the verb (of a man: to explain something needlessly, overbearingly, or condescendingly, especially to a woman, in a manner thought to reveal a patronising or chauvinistic attitude) and the concept it describes now have a firm foothold in the language".

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