Sentence examples for which technically has from inspiring English sources

Exact(6)

He also served for two years as a whip, which technically has the status of a treasury minister, between 1972 and 1974.

Even the tax code can be tweaked from the series's longtime default "999" tax plan, which, technically, has nothing to do with the former Republican presidential candidate Herman Cain.

If these shares were to come to the market, ABN Amro, which technically has control of the board now, could become the majority investor by buying its opponents' stakes.

And not just kosher, glatt kosher — which technically has to do with lesions on the lungs of the animals used for meat, but is often used by restaurants to indicate extra-strictness.

The claim that the group wants to bring against Google is based on the outcome of a similar case from the U.S., where Google admitted to the use of secret tracking cookies on computers and mobile devices running Safari, which technically has a facility to block these tracing cookies.

The only files that should be in your root folder without their own folder is the main index (which, technically, has its own folder; it's whatever the name of your site is), the.HTACCESS file, the favicon.ico file, and the robots.txt file.

Similar(54)

When the United States, which technically had command of the combined American-South Korean forces, did not prevent Mr. Chun's junta from unleashing troops against its own people, students turned against Washington.

If the green card had not arrived, Suresh, like thousands of other immigrants working on H-1B visas, suddenly would have been "out of status," which technically would have forced him to leave the country.

Luxembourg's decisions, however, are binding on all courts throughout the EU, unlike those from the ECHR, which, technically, only have to be "taken into account".

As soon as the plans were announced, they were derided by campaigners, experts and activists, with even the home secretary's own advisers saying the bill would be "impossible" to enact – mostly because the Home Office wanted to ban anything deemed "psychoactive", which, technically, would have included alcohol, nicotine and food.

That is a sentence in which the word "technically" has very little effective meaning; "but we don't" is just not that much of a counterweight.

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