Dictionary
the candidacies
noun
The state, or act of being a candidate
Exact(54)
The candidacies — at least in retrospect — seemed to provide voters with a logical rationale.
In 1980 he contributed equally to the candidacies of Bush, Connally, and Reagan.
"It certainly won't help the candidacies of any of the Republicans who are running for office".
"I think it would be wrong to remove any of the candidacies," Mr. Sobyanin said in a television interview.
On the streets of New York, some women expressed disgust at the candidacies of Mr. Weiner and Mr. Spitzer.
He feared that "forcible negro enlistments" would hurt the candidacies of those who wanted to rid the state of slavery.
31, the authority said it would then "examine the situation in the light of the candidacies that have been submitted".
But Mr. Manning said his party would file court documents challenging the candidacies of two Congress winners.
Those theses were tested, with varying results, with the candidacies of Eisenhower, Barry Goldwater, Richard Nixon, and Ronald Reagan.
His credentials were impressive but his name was merely whispered as the candidacies of Test stars Allan Donald, Jason Gillespie and Craig McDermott were shouted from the rooftops.
There is more to the candidacies and backgrounds of the two men, of course, than the shorthand descriptions of their wealth and personalities.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com