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to warranting
noun
A protector or defender.
Exact(5)
"Cuba has not even come close to warranting a change in their relationship with the United States," the congresswoman said.
We find that the reduction in self-sufficiency associated with the MEAT diet cannot, or can only partly, be compensated for by strategies that aim at ubiquitously closing currently prevailing yield gaps on cropland19, a strategy identified as instrumental to warranting food security and to reducing biomass harvest and cropland demand on the global scale8,16,41,47.
No consequence of this apparently terrifying slippery slope comes close to warranting the ignorance and barbarism it takes to sustain the spectacularly failing drug war.
Though he would ultimately vote to acquit Clinton, Feingold who's running for the Senate in Wisconsin again this year, after having been ousted in 2010 stated that Bill's many deceptions came "perilously close" to warranting conviction and removal from office.
All the samples were adjusted to the same final volume and centrifuged at 4,000 g to warranting precipitate removal.
Similar(55)
Louise would seem to warrant top billing.
They found nothing to warrant their suspicion.
Little seemed to warrant any special pride.
In gen., to promise sacredly, to warrant, vow (class.).
We had to be doing something to warrant those fouls.
Not enough to warrant mounting, according to Dr. Walter Granger.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com