Sentence examples for use a broad definition from inspiring English sources

Exact(16)

To comply, some restaurants that emphasize local products also use a broad definition of "local," extending to Maine and Maryland.

In addition, police tend to use a broad definition of offender, often referring to those charged but not found guilty of crimes.

In other words, people who use a narrow definition of "fake news" claim to encounter it less frequently than people who use a broad definition — which is logical.

The team had to use a broad definition of "automated posting" (they count any account that makes more than 50 tweets a day with political hashtags), because Twitter would not share its own definition.

"Our front page will always have a diverse mix of people, and we use a broad definition of what a maker is, so it's not just coding systems but writing, marketing, documentation, customer support and events - all work often done by women that becomes invisible because it isn't as privileged or visible as the ethnical work".

But the group said it would focus its efforts on urging Congress to scale back three provisions of the law that let federal agents conduct "sneak and peek" searches of a home or business without immediately notifying the subject of such searches; demand records from institutions like libraries and medical offices; and use a broad definition of terrorism in pursuing suspects.

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Similar(44)

Others, such as the University of Pennsylvania, use a broader definition, counting both children and grandchildren of former undergrads and graduate students.

We use a broader definition of ability that includes all those unmeasured/unobserved characteristics that affect the worker's position along the earning distribution.

When we use a broader definition of skill in Panel B, we continue to find that immigrants are more responsive than natives to employment opportunities.

While the term "monument" prompts many to think of a general brandishing a sword from the saddle of a horse, Lisa Ackerman, executive vice president and COO of the non-profit World Monuments Fund, encourages travelers to use a broader definition.

However, most classification societies use a broader definition where a bulker is any ship that carries dry unpackaged goods.

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