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The phrase "intentionally allowing" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when discussing a deliberate decision to permit or enable something to happen.
Example: "The committee is intentionally allowing more time for public comments to ensure everyone has a chance to voice their opinions."
Alternatives: "deliberately permitting" or "purposely enabling".
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Max Maksimyadis said he had his best game last year when he yielded just one goal before intentionally allowing others.
He missed the next three intentionally, allowing the children to have free tickets to Saturday's game against the Boston Celtics.
When teams do foul, it goes against two instincts: intentionally allowing points and extending the game, even though they hold the lead.
Explains Angela Campbell, the attorney representing the two groups in their complaint to the FTC, "Google is intentionally allowing advertisers to reach children aged 5 and under using the YouTube Kids app.
The game ended in the bottom of ninth inning when the umpire, former player and St . Louisnative Bill Gleason, determined that Cincinnati was intentionally allowing St . Louisto score in an effort to delay the game.
Similar(54)
whistle-blowers said on Wednesday that this was the only Project Gunrunner offshoot that intentionally allowed suspects to obtain weapons.
"If you look at how we have set up our system, we intentionally allow good access to it," he said.
But Suzuki's smart at-bat, which happened only after Lim failed to walk him intentionally, allowed Japan to call itself the best team in the world.
As the would-be Eden turned into a nightmare, a cousin of the rasberry known as the "crazy ant" thrived, even though it was never intentionally allowed into the ecosystem.
He intentionally allowed his most conservative members to sit in the driver's seat as they tried in vain to get the Senate to accept one failed measure after another — first to defund the health care law, then to delay it, then to chip away at it.
Brundage told me that he has fought against "fake history" for decades; in the nineteen-eighties, he often heard bizarre claims related to Pearl Harbor — that Franklin Roosevelt intentionally allowed the Japanese to attack or tried suppressing information about a potential attack and whether it would bring the U.S. into the war.
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CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com