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21 Sentences With "by virtue of what"

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

By virtue of what it is, The Disaster Artist is difficult to parse.
TV, by virtue of what it is, seems to reduce everything to entertainment.
But can that audience, by virtue of what they're doing, inform business intelligence?
They are entities that define themselves by virtue of what they are against.
We have to do it by virtue of what you highlighted, the fact that we are new.
Nootropics were destined to join this list, just by virtue of what they are and what they claim to do.
Purely by virtue of what I did beforehand, the demos and all, people would know I wasn't some sort of neophyte.
"You in fact can make a difference in how people feel about something by virtue of what you call it," Sherman says.
"We live and die by these books by virtue of what we write in them," said Officer Shaun McGill, 47, who is assigned to the First Precinct in TriBeCa.
"Google, by virtue of what we do and the velocity that we do it at, we are necessarily the petri dish that privacy engineering is being cultivated in," says Google's Enright.
Things did change for those intimately connected to the events of 9/11, either by virtue of what happened on that Tuesday morning or because of the two misguided wars the attacks precipitated.
But in most instances, the First Amendment doesn't favor speech of the right or the left; it simply takes the government out of the business of controlling speakers by virtue of what they say.
"When you are a newer professional league and you have expansion teams, I think just by virtue of what you are you're going to attract different ownership groups," said Kindle Betz, whose franchise is expected to launch for the 2022 season.
Smerconish: And you mean by virtue of what you're going through now, facing this impending trial, the things that have been taken away from you, you're looking forward to having them restored, and that's what you would most hope to be remembered for?
In December 2015, the couple visited Central Park and stopped at a bench behind the Metropolitan Museum of Art that Mr. Atmakuri's family had donated in honor of his grandparents — and by virtue of what they both called "a double proposal," they became engaged there.
Gibbs also stressed that the absence of a longitudinal electromagnetic wave, which is needed to account for the observed properties of light, is automatically guaranteed by Maxwell's equations (by virtue of what is now called their "gauge invariance"), whereas in mechanical theories of light, such as Lord Kelvin's, it must be imposed as an ad hoc condition on the properties of the aether. In his last paper on physical optics, Gibbs concluded that Shortly afterwards, the electromagnetic nature of light was demonstrated by the experiments of Heinrich Hertz in Germany.
Three cases came up from the circuit Court of the United States for the district of New Jersey, upon a certificate of division in opinion between the judges thereof. The dispute arose from attempts to recover money embezzled by Customs agents at the Port of New York who purchased land with stolen money. This case arose from an action of ejectment, in which both parties claimed title to certain property. Defendants claimed title under a sale by virtue of what was referred to as a distress warrant, issued by the solicitor of the treasury under an act of Congress.
Nominalism arose in reaction to the problem of universals, specifically accounting for the fact that some things are of the same type. For example, Fluffy and Kitzler are both cats, or, the fact that certain properties are repeatable, such as: the grass, the shirt, and Kermit the Frog are green. One wants to know by virtue of what are Fluffy and Kitzler both cats, and what makes the grass, the shirt, and Kermit green. The Platonist answer is that all the green things are green in virtue of the existence of a universal: a single abstract thing that, in this case, is a part of all the green things.
X says that "they will belong to the domain to which they were closest in dry weather." But seeing the need for more clarity, the treaty declares in Art. XII that "both Majesties will appoint, as soon as possible, intelligent commissioners, who, visiting the whole line, adjust with the greatest distinction and clarity, the places where the demarcation has to run, by virtue of what is expressed in this treaty", and that where the commissioners are unable to agree, the matter must be referred back to the monarchs for resolution. The practical arrangement as envisaged by the two kings was that there would be two teams of commissioners, one working from the northMendonça Furtado himself will be formally appointed as a commissioner for this region (See under Expansion and fortification in the Amazon Basin.) and the other from the south.
The Mount Greylock massif seen from the west in winter, with the deep valley known as "The Hopper" directly below the summit Geologically and physically, the Berkshires are the southern continuation of the Green Mountains of Vermont, distinct from them only by their lower average elevation and by virtue of what side of the border they fall on. In physical geography, the Berkshires extend from the Housatonic River and Hoosic River valleys in western Massachusetts, to the Connecticut River valley in north-central Massachusetts, and to the foot of the lower Westfield River valley in south- central Massachusetts. In Connecticut, where they are referred to as the Litchfield Hills, they extend east from the upper Housatonic River valley in the northwest part of the state. Geologically, the Berkshires are bordered on the west by the Taconic Mountains, the marble valleys of the Hoosic River and Housatonic River and, further south, by the Hudson Highlands; to the east, they are bordered by the Metacomet Ridge geology.
This is fine in principle but difficult in practice, particularly for science, as it requires the journalist to make a judgement about how credible a scientific claim is and thus how it should be reported. For example, should it be reported in a balanced way, in which two more or less equal sides get to make contrasting claims, as a story about a fringe, maverick or otherwise highly uncertain claim being made but not widely supported, or simply ignored as nonsense and not reported at all? In the UK, the reporting of the MMR controversy arguably adopted the ‘balanced approach’ for too long, thus lending greater credibility to the claims that MMR was dangerous than they deserved according to most members of the scientific community. In the latter stages of the debate these stories were often produced by the general news journalists and not the specialist health or science journalists who, by virtue of what we might call their interactional expertise, no longer saw the claims as credible.

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