Sentence examples similar to it essentially matters from inspiring English sources

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It counseled against Supreme Court intervention in "essentially matters of state law" that are still "unresolved or highly ambiguous" by the time they reach the court.

One of the crucial failings of SDS, according to Gitlin and others, was its withdrawal from the 1968 election in the belief that Hubert Humphrey, the democratic nominee, and Richard Nixon, the republican one, were mostly the same and that it wouldn't essentially matter who won.

Both have rich, polished voices and were sufficiently expressive that Mr. Quasthoff's comments were essentially matters of fine-tuning and goading them to think more carefully about how particular passages might be most eloquently presented.

Workers also thought the proposal should have addressed longstanding disputes over what the union terms "quality of work life" issues -- essentially matters at work sites that involve decisions made jointly by union and management.

His final work, Nathan the Wiseman, fittingly portrays a Jewish sage (presumably modeled on Mendelssohn) who makes a poignant plea for tolerance by arguing that the differences among religions are essentially matters of history and not reason.

Gooey eyed academics and their acolytes like to talk about other stakeholders and corporate social responsibility, but what essentially matters is the price of a company's stock.

They are no doubt impacted by weather changes and natural disasters like everyone else but what essentially matters is how they approach the problem of climate change as future leaders, businessmen or drivers of climate action.

Isn't it essentially a public health matter?

Instead of trying to keep things out of your inbox, allowing you to pretend that some emails don't matter, it essentially operates a one in, one out policy.

This conclusion is incompatible with the idea that the physically described systems are essentially matter-like, with the velocity of transfer of information therefore limited to less than or equal to the speed of light.

Harvard Law Professor Yochai Benkler explained in the New Republic in March why this theory poses such a profound threat to basic press freedoms as it essentially converts all leaks, no matter the intent, into a form of treason.

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