Sentence examples for quite imperative from inspiring English sources

Exact(4)

This implies that the design of the bypass design is quite imperative in the practice of real applications.

It is quite imperative to understand the needs and taste of customers especially in fashion industry to offer them the right product of their match.

1) The issue of antigen specificity is not addressed and it is quite imperative that results from experiments showing antigen-specific B cell responses are included.

Needless to say, this is quite imperative as medications are seldom tested on elderly populations and pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics processes may be overlooked [ 38].

Similar(56)

Andy Murray may never again have an imperative quite so weighty as the one that sits on his shoulders when he walks on to Centre Court today.

It's tempting to wonder if the State Ballet of Georgia hasn't quite found its artistic imperative, beyond Mr. Saakashvili's request.

The study subjects reported that the off-putting slogan — with language that was not quite bullying but certainly imperative — threatened their sense of "freedom in expressing their identity," Mr. Bhattacharjee said.

The fact that such clear prejudices toward the male are so thoroughly and clearly intertwined in our Talmudic text with decisions favoring male-centered practice suggests that if we bring different assumptions to our sacred thinking - and different company as well - we may arrive, with equal conviction, and with an equal sense of sacred imperative, at quite different conclusions.

Moreover, the emergency and acute nature of ICU can render planning difficult when patients sometimes deteriorate quite rapidly, and resourcing imperatives direct the focus of care to where life can be saved.

Alice Kahn, writer (1943–)"Western society has accepted as unquestionable a technological imperative that is quite as arbitrary as the most primitive taboo: not merely the duty to foster invention and constantly to create technological novelties, but equally the duty to surrender to these novelties unconditionally, just because they are offered, without respect to their human consequences".

The "categorical imperative" means something quite different, but it does sound like the right term for the self-protective psychological urge that drove Peter Mark Roget (1779-1869), creatof of the Thesaurus, to classify and categorize all manner of things over a long lifetime.

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