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34 Sentences With "brings to the fore"

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

This election brings to the fore a choice for all of us.
This brings to the fore a tension at the centre of Ms Warren's capitalism.
That possibility, though, brings to the fore a shadow over the future of Chinese science.
Anything involving banks brings to the fore the conflicts in his Administration between the Wall Streeters and the anti-globalists.
All of this brings to the fore concerns about the global economy's ability to withstand a shock from the coronavirus.
Whilst this is not insurmountable by any means, it brings to the fore the need to effect a change in mind-set inside the boardroom.
While privacy and data security are among the most compelling policy challenges in today's world, we wonder what additional capacity the FCC brings to the fore.
That is what the story of Mildred and Richard Loving brings to the fore; the right to marry equally and to have equal protection under the law.
Even an 18-year-old ballet dancer has been learning his or her craft for thousands of hours, and that is what Mr. Forsythe brings to the fore here.
While privacy and data security are among the most compelling policy challenges in today's world, there are doubts as to what additional capacity the FCC brings to the fore.
By excavating the horrors of the ongoing war and resulting humanitarian crisis in Syria, Azzam develops an aesthetics of exile that brings to the fore the silent memories and experiences of barely surviving groups.
Independently of the merits or demerits of the proposal, or of their fiscal and economic desirability, this particular provision has a significant impact on Puerto Rico and again brings to the fore its outstanding political status question.
The intricate sequence of appropriated gestures between the historical and contemporary footage is really stunning, and brings to the fore lots of complex questions about staging, gender and agency, and the camera's role in measuring and articulating bodies.
Song Yang's journey — from Liaoning to Saipan to her last breath in the district of Queens — brings to the fore the lives of immigrants who come to the U.S. dreaming of opportunity, only to be confronted with harsh reality.
Htin Kyaw's resignation "brings to the fore the issue of leadership and who the successors are going to be in Myanmar moving forward," Bridget Welsh, a political science professor at John Cabot University, told CNBC at the Credit Suisse Asia Investment Conference.
In this work, Susplugas summarizes our modern relationship to the pharmakon: the dependency of our culture on many of these substances isn't content-driven but fetish-driven, which brings to the fore Kliushnikov's preoccupation with the role of the pharmacological as a part of the utilitarian structure of capitalism.
Now, the release of Mr. Baluch, especially if it is tied to the United States peace talks with the Taliban, once again brings to the fore the concern that the American negotiations did not address the complexity of the conflict — and particularly how to consider the Taliban's increasing hold on the massive drug trade in the country.
Part of the exhibition's success is that, while Oehlen's development as an artist is evident — most obviously in the transition his colors and shapes have made from smeared and muddy to contrasting and crisp — it brings to the fore how much his post-2000 works relate to the architectural and dynamic elements in his earlier canvases, and the way the earlier compositions accentuate the chaos brewing in the contained minimalism of the recent paintings.
Echoes of the past continue in the main gallery, where "-PATCHING" (2019) — again a play on audio terminology, made literal by the bandages of foam and cloth wrapped around sections of a cable plugged thigh-high into the wall — brings to the fore thoughts of "Honigpumpe am Arbeitsplatz" (1977) and other genre-skewing installations by Joseph Beuys, whose self-mythologizing seems as pertinent today, as a keyhole into the mindset of ambitious men, as it felt disappointing and disreputable several years back.
The peer-reviewed, interdisciplinary publication is dedicated to publishing articles of research in health policy, health management, health systems, program strategies, and related fields. The quarterly publication brings to the fore scholarly empirical and academic research articles and offers a platform to scholars and avid researchers from all over the world.
Getting the Picture: The Visual Culture of the News. Bloomsbury Publishing. The wittingly ludicrous video documentation of the journey of the box and the content-free, but suggestive, luminogram brings to the fore the legitimacy of art as a representation of the theatre of war.Duganne, E. (2015). Uneasy witnesses: Broomberg, Chanarin, and photojournalism’s expanded field,’.
N. Krishnasamy wrote for The Indian Express, "Visu creates contrived situations, but as he unerringly brings to the fore qualities he wants his characters to show he gets away with them." The film was also noted for the famous scene of Visu's character recording the kissing incident, and presenting it on a Television to the whole family.
In Understanding TV Texts by Phil Wickham, Wickham opines that Captain Jack explicitly "brings to the fore" with his "brazen bisexuality", "something we have to come to expect [from Russell T Davies] as viewers of his work". Fans expressed fear that an Americanized fourth series of the show would mean the show would no longer portray Jack's bisexuality, but Davies assured interviewers that Jack's interests in both men and women would be honoured.
Mitra is a performer in the Indian music circuit. He is known for his mastery in the Dhrupad style of the Betia Banaras Gharana along with the Dagar alap style. He has been critically acclaimed over the last 50 years . His several accolades, bestowed titles and honors reflect his work as a vocalist where he brings to the fore the work with an exemplary sense of proportion and a unique sense of innovation.
"History from time to time, brings to the fore the kind of leaders who seize the moment,who cohere the wishes and inspirations of the oppressed.Such was Steve Biko,a fitting product of his time;a proud representative of the reawakening of a people."- Nelson MandelaNelson Mandela "Ten Years of Democracy:1994-2004" delivered 10 September 2004, also published in The Steve Biko Memorial Lectures 2000–2008, Macmillan, 2009, pp. 73–79.
The masking of such familiar milestones and the moving backwards and forwards between them simultaneously upsets the Western mind's reliance on a linear time structure and brings to the fore a concentration on what the author sees as innate Chinese characteristics that are as much a part of the Chinese mind as ancient walls and ancient ships are part of its landscape. The dominating motif of the novel is an imposing and ancient glass noodle factory.
A particular characteristic of many FONOPs, and in particular American FONOPs, is that they are undertaken by vessels of a national navy. This brings to the fore a hot debate over whether freedom of navigation extends to military vessels. Most notably, Chinese legal scholars and government policymakers argue that the right of freedom of navigation given to civilian vessels in foreign waters does not apply to military vessels. Because of this, some countries including China requires warships to attain prior authorization before they enter Chinese national waters.
Nadell's scholarship focuses on American Jewish history, especially the history of American Jewish women. In 1995, she was guest editor of an issue of American Jewish History devoted to research about women. She subsequently edited volumes including Women and American Judaism: Historical Perspectives (2001; with Jonathan D. Sarna), and American Jewish Women's History: A Reader, and authored others, including Women Who Would be Rabbis: A History of Women's Ordination and America's Jewish Women: A History from Colonial Times to Today. Her work brings to the fore Jewish women previously ignored in most history books.
Their friendship remains intact, although Mick's mother Josie (Joan Hooley) who is also Fred's receptionist, is not so understanding and denounces Fred's lifestyle as immoral. Fred's sexuality also brings to the fore homophobic tendencies in other residents of Walford, including teenager Martin Fowler (James Alexandrou). When Josie's confused stepdaughter, Kim (Krystle Williams), approaches Fred to find out more about homosexuality, Josie accuses Fred of "recruiting Kim to the gay cause", and states that he should not be around young children, which deeply offends Fred. Shortly after, Dr. Fonseca decides to leave Walford to work in a new practice in Islington in February 2000.
Darashikoh, or Daru as he is referred to, is a mid-level banker with a short fuse. His aggression had served him well as a college-boxer but an out-of-character outburst gets him fired. The loss of income brings to the fore a widening gap between him and his classmates, and Daru exposes his bitterness to the wealthy in his commentary. This contrast in income, though present through their years at school becomes evident to Daru only now as he comes to realise that money and wealth mean more than his personal traits can offer.
Film critic Gbenga Awomodu, reviewing for CP Africa praised the cinematography and acting, remarking that the film "brings to the fore some important themes in today's world, including love, racism, culture, stigma and life as an immigrant in a foreign country". He further emphasised that the film is illustrative of culture clashes between Nigeria and the US in attitude rowards rape, and the culture of shame, silence and stigma associated with it. The film garnered the Award of Excellence at the Canada International Film Festival, the Golden Ace Award at the Las Vegas International Film Festival, the Silver Palm Award at the Mexico International Film Festival, the Melvin van Peebles Award at the San Francisco Black Festival, and the Festival Prize for Best International Student at Swansea Bay Film Festival.
For Gretchen's story, Schumann employs operatic music, beginning with a love duet, proceeding to Gretchen's passionate and desperate aria, and concluding with a church scene. The second part of the work opens with stark contrast: on the one hand, the lively, fresh music of Ariel and the spirits calls Faust to savor the beauties of nature; on the other hand, in the scene following, Schumann's restless orchestration brings to the fore Faust's delusions upon hearing of a new world being created and its rapturous promise of an everlasting present. The final scenes, drawing the work to its placid yet unsettled conclusion, hold some of Schumann's best choral writing. Scenes from Goethe's Faust has often been overlooked within Schumann's impressive oeuvre, but has enjoyed a resurgence since the 1970s.
The field of diaspora politics does consider modern diasporas as having the potential to be transnational political actors. While the term "transnationalism" emphasizes the ways in which nations are no longer able to contain or control the disputes and negotiations through which social groups annex a global dimension to their meaningful practices, the notion of diaspora brings to the fore the racial dynamics underlying the international division of labor and the economic turmoil of global capital. In an article published in 2006, Asale Angel-Ajani claimed that "there is the possibility within diaspora studies to move away from the politically sanitized discourse that surrounds transnational studies". Since African diaspora studies have focused on racial formation, racism, and white supremacy, diaspora theory has the potential to bring to transnationalism "a varied political, if not radical political, perspective to the study of transnational processes and—globalization".
Goethe, 1830, by Moritz Oppenheim, 1864 Something of Mendelssohn's intense attachment to his personal vision of music is conveyed in his comments to a correspondent who suggested converting some of the Songs Without Words into lieder by adding texts: "What [the] music I love expresses to me, are not thoughts that are too indefinite for me to put into words, but on the contrary, too definite." Schumann wrote of Mendelssohn that he was "the Mozart of the nineteenth century, the most brilliant musician, the one who most clearly sees through the contradictions of the age and for the first time reconciles them." This appreciation brings to the fore two features that characterized Mendelssohn's compositions and his compositional process. First, that his inspiration for musical style was rooted in his technical mastery and his interpretation of the style of previous masters, although he certainly recognized and developed the strains of early Romanticism in the music of Beethoven and Weber.

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