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72 Sentences With "all the greater"

How to use all the greater in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "all the greater" and check conjugation/comparative form for "all the greater". Mastering all the usages of "all the greater" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Rivalry among Republicans is all the greater given the stakes.
That temptation could be all the greater if Cohen steals the show.
But growing old before it becomes rich makes Vietnam's problems all the greater.
Without the effort to achieve a common view, divergences would be all the greater.
The potential energy is all the greater because this domain is currently so backward.
That risk is all the greater because nationalising the Saint-Nazaire yard is popular.
Fortunately, it didn't, and it made one of the year's greatest shows all the greater.
The risk is all the greater because of the vast size of Europe's government procurement market.
The impact is all the greater as it coincides with what was already a slowing Chinese economy.
When the piece builds to a roar, as it does several times, the impact is all the greater.
The UK insists its influence in Riyadh is all the greater because it is a major arms supplier.
That danger is all the greater if the ideas or perspectives are ones a particular audience might think offensive . . . .
Their impact is all the greater because William and Harry have shone just as British politics slumped into disarray.
The natural bureaucratic reluctance to cede power is all the greater where profits from tourism fees or concessions are at stake.
Risking pain makes the achievement all the greater, as with Japan's urushi, lacquerware that requires artisans to work with toxic sap.
The impact is all the greater as the Fed has begun to unwind its massive bond holdings, as have central banks elsewhere.
And that as a woman, with all the greater wardrobe choice and freedom that suggests, she was the ideal person to wield it.
All the greater the pity that her achievements have been offset by a precipitous slide toward authoritarianism and an election in which Mrs.
That danger is all the greater if the ideas or perspectives are ones a particular audience might think offensive, at least at first hearing.
The impact of their indifferent, if not hostile, reception was all the greater because they had assumed the responsibility of citizenship they understood was theirs.
For most of them America remains the all-important protector, so their dismay is all the greater when it appears to be losing interest in them.
If it's hammy and apt to go viral, all the greater are the chances it will make it to that one set of eyes and ears.
In hospitals, the place we go for help and understanding, the need for trained, disciplined officers, able to safely de-escalate difficult situations, is all the greater.
" Bollinger added: "This terrible and tragic loss is all the greater because these individuals were dedicating their passion and very special talents to serving those in need.
"Risk of confrontation is all the greater because both Russia and the U.S. are coming from completely different viewpoints," Granville noted, referring to Russia's condemnation of the attacks.
The risk is all the greater in a country whose 2017 presidential elections finished with a runoff between Macron and the far-right and Eurosceptic Marine Le Pen.
If they fail, Ms. Merkel has only two options: a minority government, which she does not want, or new elections with all the greater uncertainties and further delays that entails.
The need is all the greater given Europe's fragmented response even as the virus rages, with the significant exception of European Central Bank President Christine Lagarde's rallying this week of eurozone central bankers.
And for the baby boomers like my parents who make up a substantial share of the cable news audience — the median age of MSNBC viewers is 65 — the Mueller frenzy is all the greater.
"The opportunities to show leadership in respect for animal life, in restoring health to our oceans and in farming sustainably, are now all the greater because we've decided to be outside the European Union," he said.
"This terrible and tragic loss is all the greater because these individuals were dedicating their passion and very special talents to serving those in need," Lee C. Bollinger, the president of Columbia University, said in a statement.
I found myself wishing that more of the score had been choreographed—Millepied will eventually make a full-length film in this style—but the impact was all the greater for being interspersed with purely orchestral surges of passion and lament.
From them I seemed to learn what would be the perennial sources of happiness, when all the greater evils of life shall have been removed… I needed to be made to feel that there was real, permanent happiness in tranquil contemplation.
Trump's technique of keeping an unusually large number of senior officials in his administration in an "acting" status has, in addition to circumventing senatorial confirmation requirements, made purging all the easier and the implied pressure from above all the greater.
Since at the moment, they seem quite confident that Remain will win (odds on Remain are 1/4 to 1/3, on Leave are 12/5 to 13/5), the shock on the morning of June 24th would be all the greater.
The need is all the greater, notes Covey, when governments and corporations are planting trees with the promise that they will thereby offset their industrial emissions by adding trees that soak up CO2, thus meeting their international obligations for cutting greenhouse gas emissions.
The moral power of Fussell's narrative is all the greater for being so unemphatically delivered.
Of all the Greater Manchester boroughs, Manchester has the highest incidence of crime, followed by Rochdale and Oldham. Trafford has the lowest incidence of crime in Greater Manchester.
For God's sake, Field- > Marshal, do not be deceived when you are told the people believe the lies > which are forced down their throats. The people despise these lies and hate > those who spread them abroad. That is the truth. It will break forth with > all the greater force the longer people try to surpass it.
In relation to the balance of justice between both parties, the Court was also "quite satisfied that the learned High Court judge was completely correct on this issue".Ibid 6. The Supreme Court added that, in light of the plaintiff's delay in commencing proceedings in the first place, the onus on him to prosecute them expeditiously was all the greater.
In 1312 was made the formal division of the Duchy. Przemko II, along with older brothers Henry IV the Faithful and Jan received Żagań, Ścinawa and Poznań as co-rulers. However, two years later, as a result of the disputes with Władysław I the Elbow-high, they lost all the Greater Poland lands, except the districts around the Obra River.
Practically the perspective of a renegotiation quickly appeared illusory after the result of the referendum. First, the challenge of a renegotiation was made all the greater by the diversity of reasons for the rejection of the treaty. Prime Minister Jean- Pierre Raffarin was quickly replaced by Dominique de Villepin. UMP leader Nicolas Sarkozy returned to cabinet as Minister of the Interior.
The whole quire now makes a grand, pleasant > impression. The parishioners’ joy over the new decoration of their otherwise > already lovely church can be all the greater, as they have their own > readiness to make sacrifices in large part to thank as the means for this > beautification. … The peculiar technique lends the glass a thoroughly > special charm; the hues are of a homey warmth.
By the election of the president by a > majority and for a short period, he never is the sovereign and chief of the > nation. He is never looked up to by the whole people as the head and front > of the nation. He is at best but the successful leader of a party. This > defect is all the greater on account of the practice of reelection.
You soon get an impression of speed, all the greater because you've got practically nothing [deux fois rien] between your hands. Two other things I noticed after a few hundred metres: I certainly didn't have the impression of turning 53 × 13, and the Obree position is no obstruction to breathing. But I wasn't pedalling at 55 km/h, 100 turns of the pedals a minute, yet my arms already hurt.
Really, there has been no lack of warnings! All the greater is the > culpability of an Andres Nin, of an Andrade, etc. – With a correct policy > the “Communist Left”, as a section of the Fourth International, might have > been at the head of the Spanish proletariat today. Instead of this, it > vegetates in the confused organization of a Maurin – without program, > without perspective, and without any political importance.
We are ahead of the old countries in almost every respect, but we have been behind in methods of communication within our cities. In New York this condition of communication has hitherto been barbarous. If the Greater New York is to be a success, quick communication is absolutely necessary. I hope this system we have seen tried here to-day will soon be extended over all the Greater New York.
The Tannery was originally built as a small log structure in 1743 along the east side of the Grist Mill (today Luckenbach Mill) tail race. Leather was both an important material and a valuable commodity in early Bethlehem, making the need for the tannery all the greater and one of the most profitable industries. It supplied the necessary leather for shoemakers, harness makers, and saddlers in Bethlehem, Nazareth, and the surrounding areas.Donchez Mowers, Charlene.
He instituted several montes pietatis (literally, "mountains of piety": nonprofit credit organizations that lent money at very low rates on pawned objects), and preached in all the greater cities. He was offered the bishopric of Milan in 1460, which he declined. St. James belonged to the Observant branch of the Friars Minor, then rapidly spreading and stirring up much controversy. In this task, he encouraged reforms in the Order of Friars Minor.
Its signal is hard to receive throughout all the Greater Montreal Area as it has strong interferences with CFOI-FM's 102.9 signal which is broadcast from Saint-Jérôme at 200 watts, it only be heard clearly in the Villeray-Saint-Michel-Parc-Extension area and Ahunstic-Cartierville as well. CILO-FM will focus on the South Asian diaspora community in Montreal, with most of its programs in Tamil.Fagstein: "Two proposals for radio stations serving Tamil community", August 11, 2013.
Mineral traffic was an altogether different matter, dwarfing all other traffic in volume, receipts and profits. The key source summarises it "...the 'Track of the Ironmasters' ran like a main traffic artery through an area honeycombed with mines, quarries and ironworks." The associated drama was all the greater because all the company's lines abounded with steep inclines and sharp curves, frequently requiring banking. The saving grace was that south of Workington at least, most gradients favoured loaded trains.
Its curricula was also broadened to meet the requirements of school, professional and commercial examinations. This was made all the greater by the extension of correspondence to prepare students for university and other entrance examinations. Such was the response to Skerry's College that similar facilities were gradually provided during this period in Glasgow, Newcastle and Liverpool with Glasgow eventually becoming the main centre. Thus it became possible for students throughout Britain to study by correspondence for entry to a wide range of careers.
In the Aristophanes satire Plutus, an Athenian and his slave say to Plutus, the god of wealth, that while men may become weary of greed for love, music, figs, and other pleasures, they will never tire of greed for wealth: > If a man has thirteen talents, he has all the greater ardour to possess > sixteen; if that wish is achieved, he will want forty or will complain that > he knows not how to make both ends meet. Aristophanes. Plutus. The Internet > Classics Archive.
Michael was recalled from abroad, and Olga went to work in a military hospital as a nurse. Olga continued to press the Tsar to allow her divorce. In a letter she wrote, "... finish with the divorce now during the war while all eyes and minds are occupied elsewhere—and such a small thing would be lost in all the greater things".Letter from Grand Duchess Olga to Tsar Nicholas II, 16 May 1916, State Archive of the Russian Federation, 643 28, quoted in Phenix, p.
Age of Arthur. p. 75. – Gildas: "... The federate complained that their monthly deliveries were inadequately paid..." – "All the greater towns fell to their enemy...." The Romano-British responded by appealing to the Roman commander of the Western empire, Aëtius, for help (a document known as the Groans of the Britons), even though Honorius, the Western Roman Emperor, had written to the British in or about 410 telling them to look to their own defence.Gildas.The Ruin of Britain II.20 . What Gildas had to say about the letter to Aëtius.Dark.
The Christ child in full relief is highly finished, the shallower relief of the Virgin finished to a lesser degree, St. John more so again, while the background is roughly executed. These marked variations in texture help establish the relative status of the three figures while creating a sense of compositional depth all the greater for not being more conventionally "finished". Many of Michelangelo's works are unfinished. According to nineteenth-century French sculptor and critic Eugène Guillaume, Michelangelo's "non finito" was "one of the master's expressive devices in his quest for infinite suggestiveness".
Her achievement was all the greater in light of the excruciating pain she was suffering from as a result of a teenage riding accident. She spent a period at Princeton University, where she studied with Thomas Nagel, Richard Rorty and others, and received her Ph.D. She then lived the life of an Oxbridge don. After a time at King's College, Cambridge, she became a fellow of St Hilda's College, Oxford, in 1973, and was a lecturer in philosophy in the University of Oxford for the rest of her career.Newton- Smith, Bill.
She was already living with her boy- friend in a commune and was now, despite her stellar academic pedigree, required to train for work as a librarian. Lothar and Erika Berthold (Erika- Dorothea's mother) were appalled. The shock was all the greater because of the prominent part in the protest played by the eldest daughter of a committed academic member of the "Ideology Commission". By the end of 1968 Lothar Berthold, as the young protester's father, had been obliged to resign not merely from the commission but also from the presidency of the Institute for Marxism–Leninism and "associated functions".
Many followers took a great deal of pride that the parade had returned to State Street. However, because of the positive effect that the Michigan Avenue parade route had on the city's economy—bringing many potential holiday shoppers into the many world-famous stores on Michigan Avenue—many individuals voiced great criticism. After all, the Greater State Street Council had made it very clear that no State Street businesses would be open for business on Thanksgiving Day. The Chicago Festival Association responded that although the parade was originally created to stimulate economic growth, the parade now primarily exists as a community celebration.
Snyder et al., p. 44 The Amazona species found in the Caribbean are divided in two groups: five mid-sized species found in the Greater Antilles and seven large species in the Lesser Antilles.Snyder et al., p. 46 All the Greater Antillean amazons display characteristics leading to suppositions of relatedness, including predominantly green-toned color patterns and white rings around the eyes. Russello and Amato conclude that all Greater Antillean Amazona descend from Amazona albifrons with Amazona vittata, Amazona leucocephala, and Amazona ventralis constituting a complex, a cluster of species so closely related that they intergrade.
85) writes in an interview with king Hussein of Jordan: : "His puzzlement was all the greater given that the Jordanian authorities had been doing everything that they could 'to prevent infiltration and to prevent access to Israel.'" Shlaim writes that an Israeli historian and reserve general, Yehoshafat Harkabi, supported this position: : "…having personally made a detailed study of the whole phenomenon of infiltration, he had arrived at the conclusion that Jordanians and especially the [Arab] Legion were doing their best to prevent infiltration, which was a natural, decentralized and sporadic movement." (The Iron Wall p.93, Shlaim) Other Israeli officials have supported that view.
Islamic peoples of the Soviet Union, by Shirin Akiner, pg. 85 A few Muslims migrated to ethnically Lithuanian lands, now the current Republic of Lithuania, mainly under rule of Grand Duke Vytautas (early 15th century). The Tatars, now referred to as Lithuanian Tatars, lost their language over time and now speak Lithuanian; however, they maintained Islam as their religion. Due to the long isolation from all the greater Islamic world, the practices of the Lithuanian Tatars differ somewhat from the rest of Sunni Muslims; they are not considered a separate sect, however, although some of the Lithuanian Tatars practice what could be called Folk Islam.
A group of the more senior Burradon miners: Maddox, Carr, Urwin (and Baxter Langley, editor of the Newcastle Daily Chronicle) had been at the forefront of a campaign to set up an insurance scheme for miners hurt or killed down the pit. The mine owners procrastinated on this proposal. The mineworkers had enlisted the help, and won great respect, from the editor and owner of a local newspaper, who supported their case with everything at their disposal. The anger felt towards the mine owners and the vigour with which the subsequent trial was fought was all the greater because the disaster had been predicted.
He left over £25,000 in his will, listing Eliza as executrix. As their marriage had been bigamous, he described her as "my reputed wife Eliza Ann Booth, otherwise Eliza Ann Hoy". The obituarist for The Manchester Guardian wrote that Formby was one of the "great drolls" of the music hall whose humour "always seemed to take its rise in a sympathetic perception of human vanities and weaknesses". The Dundee Courier considered him a great comedian, made all the greater by his continuing to perform through his illness, while the drama critic J. T. Grein, writing in The Illustrated London News, thought that Formby, "along with [Harry] Lauder, Robey and [Albert] Chevalier, formed the leading quartette of the profession".
Thanks to the assistance that he was again granted, Hakman was ready to depart for Vienna in the autumn of 1920. He enrolled in a private school, where classes were held in an informal manner: students painted according to their personal affinities, while the only corrections made were on errors of a technical nature. Soon after his arrival, Hakman realized that the situation in the Austrian metropolis was not quite what he wanted either, although the abundant museums of Vienna gave him the chance to enrich his formal education. His disappointment was all the greater for having another unsuccessful, uncompleted school year behind him, and for the weakening of his reputation at Prosveta.
Firstly, the pretensions of Władysław I the Elbow-high and the princes of Legnica-Brzeg-Wroclaw (Bolesław III the Generous and Henry VI the Good). The result of the consequent war was that Bolesław, together with his brothers, had been forced to given the towns of Uraz, Wołów and Lubiąż to Bolesław III and Henry VI and almost all the Greater Poland lands to Władysław I. These losses originated further rebellions of the Greater Poland inhabitants, who were complete dissatisfied with the multiple government of the brothers. Bolesław died unexpectedly by April 1321 year and was buried in the Piast Mausoleum in the Cistercian monastery of Trzebnica. Unmarried and childless, on his death his domains were inherited by his brother Konrad I.
The team that proudly brought the Scottish Junior Cup to Rutherglen for the first time by beating Maryhill 1–0 at Meadowside is considered as one of the greatest ever, including future Scotland senior international forwards Jimmy McMenemy and Alec Bennett, both natives of the town. It was not until 1918–19 that the Glens won the Scottish Junior Cup again, beating St Anthony's 1–0. Glencairn's third Scottish Junior Cup win was in season 1926–27 and the satisfaction was all the greater because it was Cambuslang Rangers, their great local rivals, who were defeated 2–1. The Glens won the Scottish Junior Cup again for the last time in season 1938-39 when Shawfield (the other local rivals, from Oatlands) went down 2–1.
The father of Byzantine satire is Lucian. His celebrated "Dialogues of the Dead" furnished the model for two works, one of which, the "Timarion" (12th century) is marked by more rude humour, the other, "Mazaris" (15th century), by keen satire. Each describes a journey to the underworld and conversations with dead contemporaries; in the former their defects are lashed with good-natured raillery; in the latter, under the masks of dead men, living persons and contemporary conditions, especially at the Byzantine Court, are sharply stigmatized. The former is more a literary satire, the latter a political pamphlet, with keen personal thrusts and without literary value, but with all the greater interest for the history of civilization; the former is in a genuinely popular tone, the latter in vulgar and crude [Cf.
The shock was all the greater because the trauma was not limited to a catastrophic and deeply embarrassing defeat of her military forces - it also involved the unleashing of a conservative political revolution that, on 10 July 1940, interred the Third Republic and replaced it with the authoritarian, collaborationist Etat Français of Vichy. All this was so deeply disorienting because France had been regarded as a great power....The collapse of France, however, was a different case (a 'strange defeat' as it was dubbed in the haunting phrase of the Sorbonne's great medieval historian and Resistance martyr, Marc Bloch). One of the most influential books on the war was written in summer 1940 by French historian Marc Bloch: L'Étrange Défaite ("Strange Defeat"). He raised most of the issues historians have debated since.
The many accounts of conversations in the Journal were aided by Edmond's excellent memory, and, according to Flaubert, by Jules' habit of jotting notes on his shirt-cuff on the spot. Ludovic Halévy, who was present at many of these conversations, gave the brothers credit for extreme accuracy, and similarly the narrator of Proust's Le Temps retrouvé thought that Edmond de Goncourt "knew how to listen, just as he knew how to see"; but some among the Goncourts' contemporaries claimed that the brothers either consciously or unconsciously distorted the conversations they recorded. The painter Jacques Blanche, for example, said that "nothing is less true than their journals", though André Gide, who thoroughly enjoyed the Journal's accounts of conversations, retorted that that would make the Goncourts' achievement as original artists all the greater.
LCM Kallenberg provided a parametric LP implementation to compute the indices for all states of a Markov chain. Further, Katehakis and Veinott demonstrated that the index is the expected reward of a Markov decision process constructed over the Markov chain and known as Restart in State and can be calculated exactly by solving that problem with the policy iteration algorithm, or approximately with the value iteration algorithm. This approach also has the advantage of calculating the index for one specific state without having to calculate all the greater indexes and it is valid under more general state space conditions. A faster algorithm for the calculation of all indices was obtained in 2004 by Sonin as a consequence of his elimination algorithm for the optimal stopping of a Markov chain.
Lawson was born in Wolverhampton, the daughter of Alexander Lawson, an artist, and his wife Florence, née Thistlewood.Parker, p. 954 She was educated in Wolverhampton and Vevey, Switzerland. She started her singing career as a concert performer; after a 1918 concert, The Times said, "It is becoming rare nowadays to hear a high soprano who sings perfectly in tune, with a flexible voice and without tremolo, and the pleasure is all the greater when it does come.""M. Vigliani's Concert", The Times, 20 March 1918, p. 9 She made her first appearance on the London opera stage in 1920 as the Countess Almaviva in The Marriage of Figaro at the Old Vic."Mozart at The 'Old Vic'," The Times, 17 January 1920, p. 8 The Times reviewer wrote that Lawson was one of three singers who "made us all feel the truth that there is nothing in the world quite so beautiful as Mozart's airs for the soprano voice". In February 1920 Lawson appeared as principal soprano with Old Vic colleagues in the first performances of Purcell's The Fairy-Queen since the composer's lifetime, receiving praise from the leading music critic Ernest Newman.

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