Sentence examples for phrase in relation to from inspiring English sources

Exact(4)

The campaign represents "a coming of age" for Sage, Ms. Blackwood says, adding: "It's odd to use that phrase in relation to Sage, but for 30 years it has been unsung.

The only other thing I'd add to it would be tossing the phrase (in relation to the Republicans' reaction) "14th nervous breakdown" in there somewhere, just as a garnish.

Moran responded by commending Murray's military service, while saying that he used the phrase in relation to Murray not having engaged in "local civic engagement" and not having served in local office.

Population health has emerged as a widely used phrase in relation to accountable care organisations (ACOs).

Similar(54)

But insofar as that phrase developed in relation to astonishing writers like Virginia Woolf and Gertrude Stein, i.e., meticulous writers who aimed to provide a written experience of certain forms of consciousness, or William James, who was interested in how the mind forms habits which can be notably disrupted, I don't mind the phrase.

Results indicated that rats spontaneously encoded information regarding the serial position of phrasing cues in relation to chunk length.

Finally, all but two measures were designed and phrased specifically in relation to childbirth, which may increase the validity of these measures.

Furthermore, QoL instruments have mainly been developed and validated in younger populations and tend to be phrased mainly in relation to physical function, thus underestimating QoL in older persons whose physical function is likely to be not as good as that of younger people [ 19].

She went on to say: 'Your French teacher … I think, mentioned you used the word terrorism.' "I remembered the lesson and explained that I had mentioned the phrase eco-terrorism in relation to eco-warriors and protecting the environment.

The phrase "Cinderella story" in relation to sports may have gotten its biggest boost from the 1980 comedy "Caddyshack," wherein Bill Murray's greenskeeper Carl Spackler, a kind of Shakespearean fool on the links, imagines himself coming "out of nowhere" to win the Masters: "He's a Cinderella boy, tears in his eyes".

In the CPSS, the phrase "feeling guilty" in relation to a traumatic event was removed from the question of distress upon re-exposure (CPSS.4) because at least one child in every focus group said that asking about guilt implied the child should feel guilty.

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