Sentence examples for so often characterized from inspiring English sources

Exact(4)

& foresake the distressing taste for mediocrit that has so often characterized the American political system.

Father Sava recognizes the difficulties of battling the extremism that has so often characterized politics in and about Kosovo.

Is this elision symptomatic of that notorious intolerance by omission that so often characterized the attitude of '60s "sexual revolutionaries" toward male homosexuality, and that was all the more pernicious for its resistance to exposure?

This is true and necessary, especially in a world so often characterized by our neglect of one another.

Similar(56)

What's striking is that he loves ballet without adopting the academic posiness that so often characterizes it.

"Rather than adding to the partisanship that so often characterizes Congress," he said, "I would like to focus on bridging differences and helping to move important legislation forward".

Rushdie walked the audience through a selection of slides of what is left of the Hamzanama (only two hundred or so of the paintings have survived), pointing out the fantasy, humor, and gore that so often characterize his novels.

As he does so, he ­eases our movement through the sentence's embedded clauses with the strategically distributed alliterative pairs and triplets in the rhythmic cascade that so often characterizes his prose.

With the orchestra, Mr. Barenboim said, he and Said wanted to "encourage conversations between Arabs and Israelis and connect people individually across the chasm of speechlessness that so often characterizes the Palestinian-Israeli conflict".

Neuroscience research on the adolescent brain describes the drive for intense experience without regard for future consequences that so often characterizes adolescents to be the result, not of characterological or personality deficits, but of the mix of a combination of an increased number of dopamine receptors and surges in sex hormones (Steinberg 2014).

"In my work, I attempt to articulate something in between the freezing of time that so often characterizes photography and its relentless passing.

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