Sentence examples for phrasing the issue from inspiring English sources

Exact(2)

Phrasing the issue in a new way, and perhaps a better way is: Should a content creator go to his audience, or should he expect his audience to come to him?

In phrasing the issue this way, she's echoing her husband's false assertion that laws that Democrats are leading to the family separations.

Similar(57)

"It seemed the way he phrased the issue that he was not going to be among the people that called for a special election.

(Barack Obama phrased the issue this way in December with regard to the Senate's inability to pass legislation: "If this pattern continues, you're going to see an inability on the part of America to deal with big problems in a very competitive world, and other countries are going to start running circles around us").

Respondents largely did not have issues phrasing the first constructs during a session.

The answer to these questions must inevitably speak as loudly about the preoccupations of the film-maker as they do about the contingent issues of phrasing the material and organising the story for a film audience.

Here's another way to phrase the issue: Should sacrifices be made only by the poorest-paid employees, or should they be shared by their (presumably) wealthier employers?

To use the paper's own phrase, the issue encapsulates "what it means to be English in our culture and our history, and in our blood and our bones".

Perhaps the most important argument to incorporate neurobiological measures in the field of criminology relates to the empirical validity of criminological theories.Armstrong et al. (2009) phrased this issue as follows: "For a theory to have empirical validity, the theory must offer causal propositions that are consistent with "the facts".

A Tim Shipman's new Brexit book has some juicy claims that David Cameron muttered to colleagues that May was 'lily-livered' (such an old-fashioned, yet utterly Cameroonian turn of phrase) on the issue.

(DAILY MAIL (London) August 22, 2016)   (11) A Tim Shipman's new Brexit book has some juicy claims that David Cameron muttered to colleagues that May was 'lily-livered' (such an old-fashioned, yet utterly Cameroonian turn of phrase) on the issue.

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