Sentence examples for justifiably objected from inspiring English sources

Exact(1)

"It now materialises the police were told masked men forced their way into the gurdwara carrying a range of bladed items other than kirpans, that are worn at all times by initiated Sikhs, and it may have been suggested they were holding hostages … This was a small group of young protesters who justifiably objected to an interfaith marriage that was to be carried out as a Sikh religious ceremony".

Similar(59)

Women today might justifiably object to being identified as painters of a specific sex, but in the mid-19th century it was rare for a woman to enter the bohemian art world and be taken seriously.

The program listed the performance as a world premiere, although listeners who heard Orpheus and Ms. Graham perform the work on Saturday in Easton, Pa., could justifiably object to that description.

In the case of Russia, for instance, while American politicians justifiably object to the repressive, authoritarian rule of Vladamir Putin, Berman believes the U.S. is somewhat limited in its ability to promote democracy and human rights lest we alienate a potential ally in combating Islamist extremism.

"A lot of people are justifiably worried about retribution by politicians". "I don't object to disclosure of contributions or expenditures of political actors, candidates, political parties, or PACs," Bopp said.

If I narrated a scene of a group of women heading into the outdoors at night, carrying strange objects and performing odd rituals, you'd justifiably anticipate the unfurling of a classic witch's tale.

It is this appeal to what has come to be referred to as "inference to the best explanation" that allegedly provides an answer to the Humean argument for phenomenalism, by allowing the supposed causal and explanatory relations between material objects and sensory experience to be known or justifiably believed in, despite the fact that they cannot themselves be immediately experienced.

We can justifiably affirm that a cognition is correct if we can "confirm causal efficacy" (arthakriyāsthiti), by which it is meant that we come to understand that the object does in fact have the causal powers we expected.

"Maybe justifiably".

Justifiably so.

We're justifiably bored.

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