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56 Sentences With "cases in point"

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

The epidemics of Zika and dengue are cases in point.
The comedian's two most accomplished successes are cases in point.
Discouraging smoking and encouraging healthy eating are cases in point.
Broader cases in point can be seen in Palo Alto, Calif.
Elliot's run-up to and comedown from his high are cases in point.
Jonathan Gardner's impressive second New York solo show is one of numerous cases in point.
Two cases in point: the Trump budget and the failed attempt to repeal and replace Obamacare.
Blockbuster and Barnes & Noble's money-losing attempts to compete with Netflix and Amazon, respectively, are cases in point.
Lev Parnas and Igor Fruman, the two Soviet-born businessman who were Giuliani's allies, are cases in point.
Cases in point: It's ideal with crop tops, perfect for tucking in T-shirts, and well-suited for bodysuits.
The two women who interview her for a potential job with a high-powered design firm are cases in point.
Cases in point: Ciara, Marion Cotillard, Olivia Munn and Kate Upton, who are all getting a head start on their mane makeovers.
Cases in point: The president still does not fully accept the verdict of his intelligence agencies that Russia interfered in the election.
VR and AR are two cases in point, where the graphic interfaces may need mapping to work but no maps to interact with services.
A lawsuit filed by Common Cause in North Carolina this month, and a multi-front fight over redistricting in Maryland are cases in point.
Cases in point: Amazon offers video to subscribers as a part of its broader Amazon Prime subscription, which also includes free shipping and other benefits.
Cases in point: leaden meatballs, soggy calamari and gummy, flavorless gnocchi — all of which should have been a cinch for the pizza aces in the kitchen.
Samson Wandolo Adera, a retired police officer in his 60s with a big, bushy white beard, and his wife Benter Were Wandolo, are cases in point.
The "best" cases in point are Uber and Lyft, two on-demand ride companies that have been resistant to allow drivers to access their fair share of wealth.
Cases in point: a lot of the newest initiatives in the country have actually been international roll outs of services created in the U.S., rather than services developed specifically for India.
South Africa's red-beret-wearing Economic Freedom Fighters – opposition rabble-rousers who idolise Venezuela's late Hugo Chavez – or Tanzania's hard left John Magufuli, who revels in his "Bulldozer" moniker, are two cases in point.
Cases in point: Same-sex black couples are disproportionately concentrated in Baltimore City, Maryland (where they make up 4.15 percent per 1,000 households), and Lee County, South Carolina (where that number stands at 3.69 percent).
Max, a new girl in the boys' class (Sadie Sink)—long Anne-of-Green-Gables hair and paint-stripper attitude—and her brother Billy (Dacre Montgomery)—a Camaro-driving bad boy—are cases in point.
Cases in point: At my first white nationalist rally, put on by the National Socialist Movement in Trenton, New Jersey, in 2011, there was plenty of talk of riots, counter-protester-bashing, and glorious battle.
Current shows in London galleries, such as those of Martine Syms at Sadie Coles, Doris Salcedo at White Cube, Kaari Upson at Massimo De Carlo, and Rochelle Feinstein at Campoli Presti are cases in point.
Cases in point: a 2017 Kickstarter to create a kaleidoscopic Lisa Frank makeup line and a revival of the teen brand Delia's, in all of its '90s glory, by the e-commerce company Dolls Kill.
Running large trade deficits with Germany enables German companies to recycle their dollar earnings in the U.S., killing whatever is left of jobs and incomes in our manufacturing – Detroit automakers being one of the prominent cases in point.
Cases in point: Donald Claflin's ornate 102.153 diamond floral brooch with an 84-carat tanzanite and, in 1969, Jean Schlumberger's fantastical winged-bird pin with diamonds, sapphires, rubies, a cabochon emerald and a large tanzanite as its stomach.
Mr. Abloh, who came from the streetwear world via his own brand, is the most obvious example, though Mr. Jones's Vuitton/Supreme project, and Mr. Van Assche's Dior BMX bike and ad campaigns with ASAP Rocky, are further cases in point.
Cases in point are the financially embattled Greek government's vetoing of a European Union statement condemning China's rights record at a UN meeting last month and Norwegian Prime Minister Erna Solberg's refusal last week to comment on calls for Liu's release.
Cases in point: the Jeep Wrangler, an SUV designed for off-road driving, just set an all-time monthly sales record, and the Lincoln Navigator, a luxury SUV costing up to $100,000, has been selling so fast Ford has had to ramp up production.
Cases in point: the decision by Democrats in 2013 to eliminate the 60-vote threshold for filibusters on most nominations, the Republican blockade in 2016 against Judge Merrick B. Garland's nomination to the Supreme Court and the elimination in 2017 by Republicans of the 60-vote threshold on Supreme Court nominations.
His ridiculing of the United States senator who leads the Foreign Relations Committee, his repeated use of the word "fake" to describe news coverage when he actually means "unpleasant" and his style of rhetoric in front of the United Nations, where he called terrorists "losers" and applied a childish epithet to the head of a nation in whose shadow tens of thousands of American troops serve and with whom nuclear war is a live possibility, are all cases in point.
Doukas has a section of athletics. Many notable Greek athletes have transferred in Doukas. Cases in point are Niki Bakogianni, Angeliki Tsiolakoudi and Stella Tsikouna.
The "public performances" enacted by black females such as the assumption of the role of the "black vixen" are also cases in point. Researchers cite that roles are performed to reenact, reimagine and even revise personal and collective history.
There are several examples of classical fields. Classical field theories remain useful wherever quantum properties do not arise, and can be active areas of research. Elasticity of materials, fluid dynamics and Maxwell's equations are cases in point. Some of the simplest physical fields are vector force fields.
Seeing Red, November 2000, > National Geographic Magazine The style should not be confused with commercial photography campaigns which highlight a color to draw attention as well as for brand association. Cases in point are Tiffany and Co.'s "blue box" advertising campaign, and The Coca-Cola Company's red and white, originally hand-painted Christmas advertisement campaigns.
He is a brother of the noted Ruralist leader Santiago Bordaberry, based in Durazno Department, central Uruguay. Pedro Bordaberry's career is one of a number of examples in Latin American politics of the son of a President of authoritarian tendencies making his mark subsequently while upholding constitutional legitimacy. The careers of Omar Torrijos and Martín Torrijos of Panama are comparable cases in point.
Transmountain railroads are railroads that need to cross dauntingly high mountain ranges to cross between countries on one side to the other. The Himalayan Mountains, Andes and the Alps would be cases in point. Because of construction difficulties, some such railways are yet to be built. With globalisation and trade liberalisation, the economic viability of constructing of these railways is improving.
Olympiacos track and field department was established on November 16, 1953. The department has had in its ranks, through transfers, some of the best athletes in the track and field events in Greece including Olympic medalists as well as World, European, Mediterranean, Balkan and Pan-Hellenic Champions. Cases in point are Kenteris, Thanou, Iakovakis, Voggoli, Devetzi, Halkia, Maniani, Xanthou, Meletoglou, Dimotsios, Doupis, Polias, Polymerou, Papadias, Karastamati, Iltsios, Redoumi, Papagianni and more.
Graphs may be presented, for example, of coincidence rate against the difference between the settings a and b, but if a more comprehensive set of experiments had been done it might have become clear that the rate depended on a and b separately. Cases in point may be Weihs' experiment (Weihs, 1998), presented as having closed the locality loophole, and Kwiat’s demonstration of entanglement using an “ultrabright photon source” (Kwiat, 1999).
Even though Mexico's majority mestizo, racially mixed and assimilated, culture, permeated by machismo, is hostile to male homosexuality, particularly in its more effeminate manifestations, some of its indigenous cultures are a lot more tolerant. Isthmus Zapotecs and Yucatán Mayans are cases in point. Particularly, the Zapotecs developed the concept of a third gender, which they referred to as muxe, as an intermediate between male and female. Somewhat androgynous, they do both women's and men's work.
During the Senate Judiciary Committee vote for Supreme Court nominee Samuel Alito, Sen. Richard Durbin attested that now Justice Alito hailed from "Princeton Law" (Alito attended Princeton University for his undergraduate studies, but received his law degree from Yale Law School). Both de Russy and Durbin became cases in point for Sexton's comments, since the former is an academic holding a Ph.D., while the latter holds a Juris Doctor (J.D.) from Georgetown University Law Center.
1992 Expo in Seville, Spain From World Expo 88 in Brisbane onwards, countries started to use expositions as a platform to improve their national image through their pavilions. Finland, Japan, Canada, France, and Spain are cases in point. A major study by Tjaco Walvis called "Expo 2000 Hanover in Numbers" showed that improving national image was the main goal for 73% of the countries participating in Expo 2000. Pavilions became a kind of advertising campaign, and the Expo served as a vehicle for "nation branding".
Because of Israel's participation in the Eurovision Song Contest, many Arab states that are eligible to participate do not do so. Tunisia, Morocco, and Lebanon are cases in point. Tunisia was about to participate in 1977, but decided not to do so in the end; Lebanon was just about to participate in 2005 when it withdrew (incurring a fine by the EBU) because Lebanese law does not allow recognition of Israel, and consequently Lebanese television would not transmit any Israeli material – which would have been a violation of the EBU's rules.
Mauritius is also compliant with norms prescribed by International Organization of Securities Commissions, Iowa Interstate Railroad, Financial Action Task Force on Money Laundering and the Basel Committee and has enacted necessary legislation. In this regard, the Mutual Assistance in Criminal and Related Matters Act and the Financial Intelligence and Anti-Money Laundering Act 2002 which provides a framework for exchange of information on money laundering with members of international financial intelligence groups are cases in point. The Asset Recovery Act was promulgated to enlarges the scope for freezing ill-gotten assets.
Oversight occurs through a wide variety of congressional activities and avenues. Some of the most publicized are the comparatively rare investigations by select committees into major scandals or into executive branch operations gone awry. Cases in point are temporary select committee inquiries into: China’s acquisition of U.S. nuclear weapons information, in 1999; the Iran-Contra affair, in 1987; intelligence agency abuses, in 1975–1976, and the Watergate scandal in 1973–1974. The precedent for this kind of oversight goes back two centuries: in 1792, a special House committee investigated the defeat of an Army force by confederated Indian tribes.
US President Jimmy Carter expressed his concern over the severity of the sentence and the secrecy of the trial. Washington senator Henry M. Jackson said, "The Orlov trial, and the Ginzburg and Shcharansky incarcerations, are dramatic cases in point" when discussing Soviet breaches of law. The US National Academy of Sciences officially protested against the trial of Orlov. In the summer of 1978, 2400 American scientists including physicists at the University of California's Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory created Scientists for Sakharov, Orlov and Shcharansky (SOS), an international movement to promote and protect the human rights of scientists.
All this is a substantial amount of work, even if authoring tools have become available to ease the task.For an example of an ITS authoring tool, see Cognitive Tutoring Authoring Tools This means that building an ITS is an option only in situations in which they, in spite of their relatively high development costs, still reduce the overall costs through reducing the need for human instructors or sufficiently boosting overall productivity. Such situations occur when large groups need to be tutored simultaneously or many replicated tutoring efforts are needed. Cases in point are technical training situations such as training of military recruits and high school mathematics.
They are tormented most of all by the ineradicable memory of the joys and pleasures of the embraces they shared in life. In writing Francesca da Rimini, Tchaikovsky expressed a poignant identification with the heroine and her tragic fate, a sympathy which was also dramatically evoked in his ballet Swan Lake and the Romeo and Juliet Fantasy-Overture. This symphonic poem, perhaps more than any other of Tchaikovsky's works, shows the possible influence of Franz Liszt, both musically and in terms of subject matter, and Richard Wagner, whose music dramas Tchaikovsky had traveled to Bayreuth to review. Liszt frequently chose subjects of a Gothic, diabolical nature: the Totentanz (1849), Sonata Après une lecture de Dante (1856), and Dante Symphony (1857) are cases in point.
In many instances (Selinus and Carthage being cases in point) the city's inhabitants were enslaved and not permitted to return to their destroyed homes. In more recent times, the burning of homes was used to devastating effect in the War of the Grand Alliance in the 17th century, during which Louis XIV of France ordered the systematic destruction of the German cities of Bingen, Heidelberg, Mannheim, Oppenheim, Spier and Worms (while sparing the cathedrals). Germany had suffered even more extensively in the earlier Thirty Years' War, in which as much as two-thirds of German real estate is estimated to have been destroyed and reconstruction took as long as fifty years."Depredations", André Corvisier, in A Dictionary of Military History and the Art of War, pp.
Spread over four days with multiple events, ILF Samanvay 2015 will ensure that the theme is carried on to extra-literary and epistemic fields too. The sessions concerning the child's position vis-a-vis writing and publishing in the country; gender and sexuality; media and language; the architectural, ecological and cultural continuities and discontinuities that make the city of Delhi etc. are cases in point. The Art Appreciation workshop by the renowned cultural critic Sadanand Menon is a major value addition in this regard. Talking about the festival, Rakesh Kacker, Festival Director Samanvay & Director - India Habitat Centre , says, “One does not necessarily have to recognise language as a basic instinct to properly appreciate its role as an organic part of human existence.
One could also consider seals, crabs, shorebirds, frogs, bats, dolphins/whales and other "border animals" to be liminal: "the wild duck and swan are cases in point...intermediate creatures that combine underwater activity and the bird flight with an intermediate, terrestrial life".Joseph Henderson in Jung 1978, 153. Shamans and spiritual guides also serve as liminal beings, acting as "mediators between this and the other world; his presence is betwixt and between the human and supernatural." Many believe that shamans and spiritual advisers were born into their fate, possessing a greater understanding of and connection to the natural world, and thus they often live in the margins of society, existing in a liminal state between worlds and outside of common society.
Unlike neighboring pisco which spread itself across two contending countries, singani has always been made only in the territory of Bolivia, and no domain controversy exists as it has for pisco. An exclusive regional product for over 400 years, Bolivia only in recent decades has moved to protect its interests. Part of the motivation was to establish standards so that moonshine could not be called singani. Another impetus was to solidify control of the singani name, the unsatisfactory experience of pisco and of tequila which can be exported in bulk and bottled under foreign labels being cases in point. Bolivian Supreme Decree 21948 (1988) declares singani an exclusive and native product of Bolivia, where the word singani cannot be otherwise used, or modified for use, outside of its stated purpose.
At no point are any Indians held up to ridicule; indeed Ackerley tends to reserve this for the pompous and often absurd Europeans who drift through the narrative - two cases in point being the preposterous Mrs Bristow, whose contrary, vacuous small- talk leaves Ackerley dumbfounded,(1932), p. 107 and the architect Mr Bramble, who is engaged to construct a 'Greek Temple' for the Europhile Maharajah. Most of the Europeans emerge as comparatively one-dimensional, in contrast to the complex depictions of the Maharajah, with his profligate life and his homosexual attractions, or of the persona of Abdul, whose relentless pursuit of Ackerley for his own personal gain is more than counterbalanced by the stark poverty of his existence. In a passage written with not a hint of pathos, Abdul's meagre home life is described in vivid detail, before the narrative returns to an extensive series of interactions where Abdul attempts to extract money or influence (or both) from the hapless Ackerley.
Sanctuary of Our Lady of Lourdes Marian apparitions have resulted in the construction of major Marian churches.Moved by Mary: The Power of Pilgrimage in the Modern World by Anna- Karina Hermkens, Willy Jansen 2009 page 217 Some of the very largest Roman Catholic Marian churches in the world did not start based on a decisions made by informed theologians in Rome but based on the statements of young and less- than-sophisticated people about their religious experiences on remote (and often unheard of) hilltops.Zenit NewsPilgrims to Our Lady of Guadalupe There are remarkable similarities in the accounts of the reported visions which have led to the construction of the churches.What Mary Means to Christians: An Ancient Tradition Explained by Peter Stravinskas 2012, Paulist Press chapter on "Lourdes, Fatima, Guadalupe"The Catholic Almanac's Guide to the Church by Matthew Bunson 2001 page 194 Two cases in point are the largest Marian churches in Mexico and France, based on the reported Marian apparitions to Saint Juan Diego in Cerro del Tepeyac, (Guadalupe) Mexico in 1531 and Saint Bernadette Soubirous as a child in Lourdes in 1858.

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