Sentence examples for venerable pedigree from inspiring English sources

Exact(8)

The idea that morality and sacredness are intertwined, he said, may now be out of fashion but has a venerable pedigree, tracing back to Emile Durkheim, a founder of sociology.

Second, history reminds us that if the euro can date its official inception only from the ratification of the Maastricht Treaty in 1993, it nonetheless has a long and venerable pedigree.8 The current state of European economic integration is the result of competing impulses, alternately favoring and opposing European political union, that have their roots deep in Europe's troubled past.

In fact, biographies of the grand old-business leaders books like Ron Chernow's John D. Rockefeller, Sr., biography (1998) and Richard Snow's "I Invented the Modern Age: The Rise of Henry Ford" (2013)—show that new-corporate maneuvers have a venerable pedigree.

The core central-banking doctrine of lending freely though at a penal rate during a financial panic was set out by Walter Bagehot, an early editor of The Economist, in "Lombard Street".Yet despite its venerable pedigree it is the Bank of England that has at times seemed the least sure-footed of the three central banks.

In fact, biographies of the grand old-business leaders — books like Ron Chernow's John D. Rockefeller, Sr., biography (1998) and Richard Snow's "I Invented the Modern Age: The Rise of Henry Ford" (2013) — show that new-corporate maneuvers have a venerable pedigree.

Despite the venerable pedigree, it is only in the last 50 years or so that something approaching a distinct field on the meaning of life has been established in Anglo-American philosophy, and it is only in the last 30 years that debate with real depth has appeared.

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This, too, has a venerable Irish pedigree.

MY first real job in journalism was as a junior editor at Esquire, a magazine with a venerable literary pedigree.

But in German literature, which largely missed out on big nineteenth-century novels, it's a genre with a venerable literary pedigree — invented, more or less, by Goethe, and refined by figures like Heinrich von Kleist and Paul Heyse.

Dried air-cured sausages have as venerable a pedigree as prosciutti: the Romans learned the craft from the Lucanians, a tribe in what today is Basilicata, in southern Italy.

The comedy of rage and anti-audience hostility has a venerable fringe pedigree, which includes Johnny Vegas's unforgettable 1997 debut – still the gold standard – and Nick Helm's recent, larynx-busting work.

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