Sentence examples for typically asserted from inspiring English sources

Exact(4)

Jonson's epilogues typically asserted the merits of his play and defended it from anticipated criticism.

We can both maintain the distinction between the error theoretic position and noncognitivism, and accommodate the Strawsonian complication, if the error theoretic position is defined as the view that the relevant sentences of the discourse in question are, though typically asserted, untrue.

Many of these new religious movements had strong apocalyptic beliefs regarding a coming new age, which they typically asserted would be brought about by contact with extraterrestrials.

41 A strength of this study is the utilization of an exercise bike with engaging virtual features, a comfortable recumbent seat, safe indoor location, and easy access step-through design, all of which overcome many barriers typically asserted by sedentary older adults.

Similar(8)

Economists typically assert that cartels dissolve naturally after members cheat or become irrational.

Zen teachers typically assert rather that all of these practices must be performed correctly as authentic expressions of awakening, as exemplified by previous generations of Zen teachers.

Advocates for laws to register, publicize and monitor sex offenders after their release from custody typically assert that those convicted of sex crimes pose a high risk of sex crime recidivism.

Such letters typically assert that a particular tax strategy is "more likely than not" to survive an I.R.S. audit, but often they are based on unreasonable economic and legal assumptions that do not necessarily match the specific circumstances of the taxpayer who buys the letter.

Unlike most accused rapists, an accused athlete typically asserts his claims through a press conference, putting his accuser on the defensive and touching off pretrial press coverage where the accuser is vilified as an opportunist out to seek fame or money by filing a false rape complaint.

Libertarianism typically asserts that the right to suicide is a right of noninterference, to wit, that others are morally barred from interfering with suicidal behavior.

However, a speaker who utters such a sentence typically asserts a full proposition that completes the propositional radical that the sentence semantically expresses.

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