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13 Sentences With "cohere to"

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

Taken together, the narratives cohere to expose the contrasts between lives lived in the same places.
China's state-sponsored media warp reality to cohere to Communist Party doctrine -- and thus turn truth into farce.
But they cohere to make an argument: Living in a fat body means you whiplash between those two states all the time.
But gradually — at least in the best of the pieces — these cohere to form extraordinary, unforgettable visions of life in its chaotic beauty and misery.
While "The Whirligig" offers treats for fans of in-the-moment acting, its moments fail to cohere, to become a bigger picture that resembles real life.
Read the timelines and crossover explanations of the Metal Gear, Kingdom Hearts, or Dark Souls games to find people creating an rigid, iron monolith for these works to perfectly cohere to.
Its overall appearance is primarily baroque; the buildings, plaza, and central monument all cohere to uniform and specific styles. The architectural style to which most of the surrounding buildings belong to is that of the neohispanic or neocolonial styles within the realm of European derived architecture.
When it reached the temples, the pulsation of the arteries increased in those areas. The brain was affected to some length but nonetheless, the patient was able to reason and cohere to his ideas. One time the mechanic experienced furious paroxysm at his own house where he warned his wife to flee to avoid death. He also experienced the same periodical fury at the asylum where he plotted against the governor.
Heather has over 500 publications, mainly peer reviewed journal articles and a number of book titles. Most recently he co- edited 'Addiction & Choice: rethinking the relationship' with Gabriel Segal, which includes a number of chapters by leading experts in the addiction field. The book explores a 'multidisciplinary perspective from philosophy, neuroscience, psychiatry, psychology and the law, demonstrating to readers how diverse positions from varying academic and scientific disciplines can cohere to form a radically new perspective on addiction'.
Their [intrinsic] > relations compose the concrete structures that are the primary subject > matters of a tenable scientific realism. They regularly cohere to form > interesting units, and these groupings make up the particulars investigated > by the sciences and described by scientific theories. Scientific theories > describe [intrinsic] causal properties, concrete structures, and particulars > such as objects, events, and processes. Semirealism maintains that under > certain conditions it is reasonable for realists to believe that the best of > these descriptions tell us not merely about things that can be experienced > with the unaided senses, but also about some of the unobservable things > underlying them.
Cargill's Castle would not have looked out of place in the Cimini Hills; it also has an almost hacienda spirit. His work in the Gothic style was lighter and more delicate than that of Alfred Waterhouse, and equal in detail to Augustus Pugin's. It has been said of his work that he never fully developed his vision or overcame the limitations of his training, but his experience as an engineer equipped him to find sound innovative solutions to construction problems. His placing the dome at the Blessed Sacrament over the altar has also been criticised, as many feel it does not cohere to the design.
Despite being the most respected conservative historian of the events, Alfred Cobban acknowledged that Burke's pamphlet in so far as it "deals with the causes of the Revolution [...] they are not merely inadequate, but misleading" and that its main success is as a "violent parti pris". Cobban notes that Burke was extremely well informed on America, Ireland and India, but in the case of the French Revolution relied on weak information and poor sources and as a result his thesis does not cohere to the ground reality of France at the onset of the Revolution, where the situation was indeed dire enough to sweep existing institutions. Cobban concludes: "As literature, as political theory, as anything but history, his Reflections is magnificent".
While recognizing a prince's supreme temporal power, Salisbury argued that princes must be subordinate to the will of God and the Church. > For myself, I am satisfied and persuaded that loyal shoulders should uphold > the power of the ruler; and not only do I submit to his power patiently, but > with pleasure, so long as it is exercised in subjection to God and follows > His ordinances. But on the other hand if it resists and opposes the divine > commandments, and wishes to make me share in its war against God; then with > unrestrained voice I answer back that God must be preferred before any man > on earth. Therefore inferiors should cleave and cohere to their superiors, > and all the limbs should be in subjection to the head; but always and only > on condition that religion is kept inviolate.

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