Sentence examples for perhaps tenuous from inspiring English sources

Exact(1)

From the Aegean Sea to Zambia, this year's most compelling destinations are awash in sublime landscapes, cutting-edge art and architecture, gala music festivals, and stylish new resorts.SETH SHERWOOD AND GISELA WILLIAMS With a recent (though perhaps tenuous) d?nte keeping the violence in check, the capital of Lebanon is poised to reclaim its title as the Paris of the Middle East.

Similar(59)

Although a connection between events in Mali and Guinea-Bissau is perhaps therefore tenuous, it is a reminder (as if one were needed) that political change is an ever-present component of the landscape in many parts of Africa.

Perhaps even more tenuous.

The contention is tenuous, perhaps, but it is also fairly routine.

Perhaps the most tenuous link of them all comes in the shape of a T-shirt featuring Jobs as a Minion (from Despicable Me) alongside an iPhone 5 with a banana icon on the screen.

Our assumption that the reservoir would be a species with a small body size is perhaps the most tenuous.

Apart from that, there is perhaps only one other tenuous connection between the two places.

Then, after a few moments of perhaps reflecting on her tenuous circumstances -- of her husband, a middle-school teacher and perennial RIF-getter, and her toddler son, who would still need daily child care while Alaina cobbled together enough sub gigs to get by, she added, "I mean, I couldn't do it for free, but... this is what I've always wanted to do.

Every brand under the sun has tried to jump on the Star Wars bandwagon, but the prize for the most tenuous connection has perhaps been claimed.

Or perhaps Kael, speaking of her tenuous virtual connection with Nixon's voters, meant something even simpler and stranger: that when she went to the theatre and saw the same movies that other people were watching in other parts of the country at exactly the same time, she felt that she was somehow in their presence.

In a dialogue which now survives only in excerpts, the soul is said to retain the eidos, or form, of the body, perhaps a counterpart to the tenuous vehicle which the soul carries into the afterlife in the eschatology of some Platonists (Methodius, On the Resurrection 22 [ed. Bonwetsch 1899: 93]; see further Schibli 1992).

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