Sentence examples for true claim for from inspiring English sources

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Exact(4)

"Are you really going to say that someone who has a true claim for protection perfectly well made has to be at the mercy of modern technology?" he asked.

"Are we really going to say," he asked, "that somebody who has a true claim for privacy, perfectly well made, which the newspapers and media can't report, has to be at the mercy of somebody using modern technology?" But Charlotte Harris, a media lawyer who has represented both public figures seeking injunctions and people arguing against injunctions, said that could be extremely difficult.

Lord Judge, the lord chief justice, asked (rhetorically?): "Are you really going to say that someone who has a true claim for protection perfectly well made has to be at the mercy of modern technology?" To which one refers M'Lud Judge to the case of Barlow, 1996.

The Champions League is not the World Cup, however, so it may take a World Cup trophy this summer for either country to stake a true claim for supremacy.

Similar(56)

Unless there is some other true claim about reasons for "ends" understood as actions, there is nothing to be transmitted.

Producer: Yes, now the "one true" claim could cause problems for a couple of reasons.

In this case, interpretive charity directs us not to look for true claims supported by sound reasoning, but for whimsical claims defended by bewildering, even madcap arguments.

Anti-abortion and anti-contraception activists often brand themselves as the "true" feminists, claiming, for example, that "women deserve better" than abortion.

Describing the "despair" felt by many within the parliamentary party, the MP for Manchester Blackley wrote: "It is simply not true to claim that the desire for Gordon to go is not representative of the majority view of the party members.

But since Fness is a universal, it could be instantiated in another object, b, hence the mere existence of a and Fness is not sufficient for making true the claim 'a is F': a and Fness need to be tied together in the fact of a's being F. Armstrong (1997) and Olson (1987) also maintain that facts are needed to make sense of the tie that binds particular objects to universals.

If true, this claim would yield Theorem 2.7 for uniformly continuous local radial contractions in a more general class of spaces.

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