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23 Sentences With "behoves"

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

First, argues Mr Davies, it behoves liberals and rationalists to acknowledge where things went wrong.
It behoves them to think through what needs regulating, and what does not, with care.
As behoves an unusual cleric from an ever more diverse land, the ceremony in Rome was full of peculiarities.
It therefore behoves the administration to include mechanisms within the new NAFTA that will allow for bold forward steps on regulatory cooperation.
In the wake of those controversies, it certainly behoves Google to take a moral stand against unethical use of AI.[Google, ACLU, CNET]
Given that Mr Farron's dilemma was a private and existential one, it hardly behoves Erasmus, or any third party, to say how he should have handled it.
Similarly, Mr Mattis and Mr Tillerson appear to hold mainstream conservative views; both say it behoves the United States to uphold international rules, ideally by working through traditional alliances such as NATO.
But it surely behoves anybody who holds or aspires to moral leadership in the Western world, from clerics to politicians to public intellectuals, to be ultra-careful not to give any sort of cover to nativist fanaticism.
"There are options open to us and it behoves us to examine all of those options in the interests of providing a working government that is going to last," Kenny told parliament before formally resigning and becoming caretaker prime minister.
The book went to press fractionally before the Brexit vote so the characterisation of Britain might now need to be sharpened up: the church's most sceptical member is not merely shuffling in the pews or refusing to sing hymns, but actually heading for the ancient oak door, as behoves a full-blown apostate.
As behoves people who take their spiritual destiny seriously, they argue perpetually about many things: for example over whether the fate of a human soul is predetermined, or how exactly a believer can be redeemed from the "total depravity" which is, in the view of John Calvin (1509-1564), the natural state of humanity.
"The parliamentary system that both Malaysia and Britain share enables the PM to call elections at any time, but it also behoves the PM to step down if his leadership stands under the kind of scrutiny that Najib faces now," she pointed out, noting that the British Prime Minister resigned following results of the U.K.'s Brexit referendum.
Another significant reason to embrace the concept of patient blood management is cost. Allogeneic blood transfusion is extremely expensive. For example, some studies reported increased costs of $300–$1,000 per unit of allogeneic blood transfused. The more blood that is transfused directly impacts hospital expenditures, and of course, it behoves administrators to search for ways to reduce this cost.
Dryden concludes the poem with a plea for moderation in all things including religious debate. On this subject, more than all others, it behoves each citizen to 'curb' their 'private Reason' (or opinions) rather than disturb 'the publick Peace'. It is notable that the climax of this long series of complex religious arguments is social rather than religious: 'Common quiet is Mankind's concern'.
It is probably an early work, which, as behoves an architectural painter, gives much prominence to the buildings in the composition.David R. Smith, Jan van der Heyden's Feast of Purim, in: David R. Smith, Parody and Festivity in Early Modern Art: Essays on Comedy as Social Vision, Ashgate Publishing, Ltd., 2012, p. 142-164 Despite the apparently naturalistic style, which was so detailed that every single brick was visible, the artist did not strive for topographical accuracy in his city views.
The American journalist, Keller, also realises the futility of presenting such a story to the cynical public, and in the end Kipling tells them he will print the story as a piece of fiction, where it will get a better reception. Truth, he says, “is a naked lady, and if by accident she is drawn up from the bottom of the sea, it behoves a gentleman either to give her a print petticoat or to turn his back and vow that he did not see”.
The song of the Cluniac is a great cry of pain wrung from a deeply religious and even mystical soul at the first dawning consciousness of a new order of human ideals and aspirations. The poet-preacher is also a prophet; Antichrist, he says, is born in Spain; Elijah has come to life again in the Orient. The last days are at hand, and it behoves the true Christian to awake and be ready for the dissolution of an order now grown intolerable, in which religion itself is henceforth represented by cant and hypocrisy.
In England it appeared early in William Caxton's collection of Aesop's fablesAesopica site and was later included in those of Francis BarlowA translation of the Latin and Samuel Croxall.Fable 134 It also appeared in Thomas Bewick's Select Fables, but was there told of a bee rather than an ant.p.181 La Fontaine's Fables also include this storyII.12 and underline the kinship between it and The Lion and the Mouse by running the two together under a common introduction: :::To show to all your kindness it behoves :::There's none so small but you his aid may need.
The one urges to adultery and corruption, avarice and deceit; the other bids farewell to these things. We cannot, therefore, be the friends of both; and it behoves us, by renouncing the one, to make sure of the other. Let us reckon that it is better to hate the things present, since they are trifling, and transient, and corruptible; and to love those [who are to come,] as being good and incorruptible. For if we do the will of Christ, we shall find rest; otherwise, nothing shall deliver us from eternal punishment, if we disobey His commandments.
Simancas, E 508. By this same courier we are sending you a copy of > a note, drawn up with the approval of the Queen [Mary I], giving the names > of the men who are to receive pensions, together with the sums. It seems > advisable that these pensions should be paid out from your household, so > that the recipients may realise that they come from you, whom it behoves > them to serve and follow. The sums are rather high to begin with, for in > order to gain credit and goodwill it was inevitable; but the future will > furnish us with means of moderating them.
Initially they had used names specifically related to the Isles: "Udaller, Udal-Book and Udal-Right for Member, List of Members and Membership respectively [and also] Huss-Thing, Schynd-Bill, Great Foud and Stem- Rod".Townsend, p. 188; the "old terms" were the idea of Alfred Johnston, the first Secretary and "generally acknowledged to be the true founder of the Society", Townsend, pp. 181-82. Both publications also made fun of the "weaking" pronunciation of viking and of the ambitious statement of intent in the prospectus: "It behoves every one who is directly or indirectly connected with or interested in the North to give the Viking Club such support as will enable it to take its proper place among the foremost societies in Europe".
Mozart wearing the insignia of the Order of the Golden Spur. Copy, dated 1777, of an older painting dating from his Italian journey As a teenager, Mozart went on tours of Italy, accompanied by his father. During the first of these, Leopold and Wolfgang visited Rome (1770), where Wolfgang was awarded the Order of the Golden Spur, a form of honorary knighthood, by Pope Clement XIV. The papal patent for the award said: > Inasmuch as it behoves the beneficence of the Roman Pontiff and the > Apostolic See that those who have shown them no small signs of faith and > devotion and are graced with the merits of probity and virtue, shall be > decorated with the honours and favors of the Roman Pontiff and the said See. > (4 July 1770)Printed in translation in Deutsch 1965, 123–124 The following day Mozart received his official insignia, consisting of "a golden cross on a red sash, sword, and spurs," emblematic of honorary knighthood.
Certain activities in the market have strongly been criticized by a good number of people across the country, who have painfully experienced the loss of money and prized gadgets to the schemes of unqualified engineers and fraudsters, who use the chaotic market as a medium to rip off people or sell counterfeit products and services, such as mobile phones, software, accessories, etc. There are several stories about stolen phones that often find their way into the market, but these unlawful act are usually perpetrated by unregistered traders and Retailers, some of whom it behoves to transact on vehicles' hoods, walkways, and display units rather than a proper brick-and-mortar store. However, there are two major categories of traders in the market, the registered and unregistered or free traders, who often sell in a nomadic and unaccountable fashion. The later category of traders are easily the perpetrators of the crime in the market, given their drifting liberties.

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