Sentence examples for willingly taking on from inspiring English sources

Suggestions(1)

"willingly taking on" is a correct and usable phrase in written English.
It can be used in a sentence when describing someone who is willingly accepting or assuming a responsibility or task. Example: "Despite the challenges, Jane willingly took on the role of project manager and led the team to success."

Exact(4)

Here was one of the world's leading conductors willingly taking on the duties of an ordinary composer, awkwardly but genially trying to give his little kite a better chance of taking the breeze, pleading to a public whose patience is wearing away by the second.

This was shown in rural India, where a growing number of women are willingly taking on loans to build toilets, even though repayment rates are high.

With Met veterans willingly taking on small roles, like Ruth Ann Swenson as a golden-voiced Princess and Wendy White as the stern Mama, this performance was an impressive company effort.

Why would you want to attack a woman for willingly taking on that sort of political and social backlash?

Similar(56)

These burdens were often described as willingly taken on but bounded by one's tiaojian, the economic, cultural, and social resources one had access to.

Frank Lampard, Ricardo Carvalho, Esteban Cambiasso, John Terry, Walter Samuel, Didier Drogba, Diego Milito, Paulo Ferreira and more were all born between 1978 and 1980, and all willingly took on board everything Mourinho had to say.

Just count me among those who are skeptical that our State Legislature will willingly take on any of these complicated and unpopular issues without some brute force being applied.

The Mary who sits in her darkened house in Ephesus would not, I think, willingly take on the prayers of the world; all that she wishes for, she tells us at the book's close, is to confine dreams to the night-time and living to the daytime, and to live "in full recognition of the difference between the two".

Most saliently, it seems to mimic that of species like the social hymenopterans (such as ants, bees, and wasps), where some individuals (sterile workers) seem to willingly take on a massive fitness cost (namely, sterility) (Keller and Chapuisat 2010).

We willingly take on operational risks by measuring the anticipated consequences of our actions against potential gains.

People get more strokes for achievement than for being happy, so they willingly take on what is in fact a toxic work schedule.

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