Sentence examples for strictly rather than from inspiring English sources

Exact(1)

In a recent article for the Sunday Review, Joel Benenson, who is President Obama's pollster, and Kate Connolly, who works for Mr. Benenson, explored why Americans say they want universal background checks and that they want to ban assault weapons, but also say they would prefer the government "enforce current gun laws more strictly" rather than pass new laws.

Similar(57)

It seemed to violate the idea of making legal judgments on purely legal merits, using a strictly rational, rather than emotional, process.

Furnishings are few and strictly functional rather than atmospheric.

So it is likely that inter-party relations will be strictly sexual rather than romantic.

According to Sara Pantuliano, director of humanitarian programmes at the Overseas Development Institute, MSF's ability to speak out so plainly and so often is derived from the fact that its focus is strictly humanitarian rather than developmental.

For those who suffer eating disorders, for those who must diet, or otherwise restrict or consume for the sake of their health, or for those for whom food is strictly necessity rather than luxury, I'm sure my experience is all too familiar.

We argue that AIAI is fundamentally distinct from other mechanisms leading to prior adaptation primarily because the evolution is strictly contemporary rather than longstanding, and because the AIAI scenario emphasizes the central role of humans in imposing selective pressures within the native range and in enhancing dispersal via global trade.

Even Abraham Lincoln and Theodore Roosevelt, who asked for sweeping new executive powers, did so with strictly constitutional arguments rather than with populist ones.

Much to the reader's dread, the book will return over and over again to this, strictly for kicks rather than for any dramatic purpose.

He admits he gets stopped in the street primarily because he once won Strictly Come Dancing rather than for his cricket.

Although no universal definition of it exists [8], participation rate (strictly a proportion rather than a rate) is generally understood as the proportion of those selected, contacted and eligible who actually participate meaningfully in the study.

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