Sentence examples for suspect nature from inspiring English sources

Exact(11)

Their collapse cannot be put down solely to Kane's withdrawal, especially given the suspect nature of Spurs' defending all afternoon.

The trustee for victims of Mr. Madoff's fraud has accused Mr. Wilpon and Mr. Katz of having turned a blind eye to warnings about the suspect nature of his multibillion-dollar investment operation while using the profits they reaped from their investments with him to enrich themselves and fuel their business empire.

According to the lawyer involved in the case, Mr. Picard's lawsuit will claim that Mr. Wilpon and Mr. Katz ignored or failed to heed what amounted to "red flags" in recent years about the potentially suspect nature of Mr. Madoff's operation.

In your memoir, I was struck by your saying that the exhilaration of language, particularly for a young poet, is almost inseparable from its power, but that, at a certain point, the suspect nature of the power undermined the exhilaration you were feeling, and you started to examine issues with respect to women, and the passivity associated with women and Irish poetry.

However, sometimes you may get a strong clue that a trend is of a suspect nature.

Now there appears to be a clear link between viewing these images and subsequent abuse, only someone of a very suspect nature would object to their restriction and removal.

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Similar(49)

Their sinister antics transformed my suspecting nature and I was hurled into the macabre delirium of Macbeth, a thug played by Jacob Boham.

Provisional ballots are suspect by nature.

They have also, like the 1973 outbreak in Berry, Alabama, which led Dr. Nitzkin to suspect the nature of the episode at the Bay Harbor school, tended to occur in schools or other closed communities, and to conceal their functional origin behind a mask of organic illness.

Its implicit theme seems to be that disability appeals are suspect by nature, and judges who approve more than the average must be up to no good.

However, it is a defence for a person to demonstrate that the publication was "printed, published, sold, issued, circulated or reproduced, as the case may be, without his authority, consent and knowledge, and without any want of due care or caution on his part, and that he did not know and had no reason to suspect the nature of the document or publication".

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