Sentence examples for making judicious use from inspiring English sources

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Exact(4)

Baseball blows its horn about being the national sport, but then there are the Yankees, making judicious use of cable television swag, winning the pennant so often that the fans in the Bronx have their cheers and game rituals down pat.

The troupe managed to avoid bodily harm, partly by convincing the rioters that they were a French theater troupe and partly by making judicious use of the money the Adlers had won in court from Goldfaden.

There is a need for diagnostic tools that may help to reduce unnecessary hospital admissions while making judicious use of specialist resources.

Rather, it involves finding out what matters to the patient what is at stake for them and making judicious use of professional knowledge and status (to what extent, and in what ways, does this person want to be "empowered"?) and introducing research evidence in a way that informs a dialogue about what best to do, how, and why.

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The city could also make judicious use of technology, the report said.

A meticulous researcher, Beckman makes judicious use of the archive material, including hundreds of pages of trial documents.

Rourke's staging made judicious use of minimal props – chairs, mainly – and a set that was effectively one brick wall, half of it painted a richly stewed burgundy.

Some savvy rockers have already made judicious use of songs and images to encourage listeners and critics to think of them as the heirs to such earlier icons as Woody Guthrie or Elvis Presley.

When an evil character told her he wanted his tower to be "frightening, though not vulgar," she adopted a black-and-red palette and made judicious use of skulls as decorative elements.

In particular, the draft makes judicious use of some of the strongest phrasing available to the Council — such as "Demands," "Decides," and "shall: — that give the decisions made heft under international law and indicates commitments that the international community doesn't just recommend but fully requires Syria to follow through on.

Several of the translators make judicious use of anachronism to point up the indecorous explicitness of Proust's dissection of sexual desire in general, and the subcultures of male and female homosexuality in particular: Albertine is "lusted-after" in The Prisoner, for instance, and M de Charlus mentions "rent-boys" in Sodom and Gomorrah.

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