Sentence examples for pervasively used from inspiring English sources

Exact(10)

The term 'difficult' is pervasively used in relation to medically unexplained symptoms (MUS) and patients with MUS.

As a replacement for mineral materials, geotextiles have been pervasively used in civil engineering so as to provide separation and filtration.

The parallel clauses are pervasively used in slogans for stylistic formal symmetry.

79% report that file sharing and collaboration tools including Box, Egnyte, Google Apps, Microsoft Office 365, GroupLogic, ShareFile and others are pervasively used today.

BuzzFeed Open Lab fellows instead spend time on tech that isn't pervasively used as something like Facebook, Snapchat, livestreaming and online video are today.

As mentioned earlier, the IQA algorithm can be not only used for quality assessment tasks but also pervasively used in many other applications.

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Similar(50)

The sampling of ads, some of which had been made public earlier, came during a second day of hearings with the top lawyers for Facebook, Twitter and Google and were intended to show the executives how pervasively Russia used their platforms to further its campaign of misinformation.

The mechanical typewriter finally found wide use after World War I. Today its electronic variant, the computer video terminal, is used pervasively to record original text.

"The outdoors is used pervasively through a lot of advertising," he adds, to peddle products like automobiles, drugs and insurance in addition to merchandise endemic to the category, so "our challenge was how do we put a unique take on our creative".

The 110,000-seat Olympic Stadium in this sports-mad country was sold out as 10,500 athletes from 199 nations readied to march in the opening ceremonies, viewed as a restorative, celebratory pageant that would deflect attention from the ominous threats of corruption, burdensome size and the perception that performance-enhancing drugs are used pervasively.

Although hocket technique generally is found in short passages (often at the endings of sections or phrases) within a larger composition, it is used pervasively in the 14th-century French composer Guillaume de Machaut's "David," in which the two upper voices sing in hocket above a slower moving tenor.

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