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11 Sentences With "demur from"

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

One is that tech firms exert so much power that people demur from criticising them.
And there are particularly good reasons for the justices to demur from wiping out the sales-tax regime.
It is not clear whether Shea actively agreed to those tactics, but he did not appear to demur from any of the suggestions, according to the Guardian's review.
"I'm going to demur from answering the question that way," she said Tuesday when asked if she was "apprehensive" about Trump entering the Oval Office, according to The Washington Post.
This season, Dries Van Noten — never one to demur from the darker side of beauty and glamour — looked to darkness in another sense by channeling nocturnal forms, or the sort of outfits one sees after hours.
It's no coincidence that the rise of B2B startups fitting this theme has coincided with the bootstrap movement, in which tech entrepreneurs with major ambitions demur from raising venture funding because — well, they don't need the money anymore.
Orkin and Ying's forthcoming book's title, "The Gaijin Cookbook: Japanese Recipes from a Chef, Father, Eater, and Lifelong Outsider," addresses it directly, while Compagnon and Yang demur from calling Le Rigmarole a Japanese restaurant, speaking instead of a prevailing aesthetic and attention to technique.
More so than in any other foreign policy area, the Executive Branch and Congress are the closest to equals on sanctions policy, and there is no sign that, in the middle of a critical election year, either Democrats or Republicans will demur from reaching for those tools.
It is probably the painting mentioned by the historian Carlo Ridolfi as an "Effigy of the Saviour" in the Augustinian monastery of Santo Stefano Church in Venice. Morassi is the only art historian to demur from this consensus, instead identifying the painting seen by Ridolfi with a painting in a Swiss private collection dating to 1500.
Presuppositionalists assert that many of the classical arguments are logically fallacious, or do not prove enough, when used as arguments to prove the existence or character of God. They criticize both the assumption of neutrality and the "block house" or "piecemeal" method for failing to start at the level of the controlling beliefs of worldviews and implicitly allowing non-Christian assumptions from the start, thereby trying to build a Christian "house" on a non-Christian "foundation". Evidentialists demur from this assessment, claiming that presuppositionalism amounts to fideism because it rejects the idea of shared points of reference between the Christian and non- Christian from which they may reason in common. The conclusion of evidential apologetics is that the Bible's historical accounts and other truth-claims are more probably true than false, thus the whole of scriptural revelation may be rationally accepted, and where we can't approach absolute certainty we must accept the explanations most likely to be true.
The Baptism of Christ, by Piero della Francesca, 15th century Baptism is generally conferred with the Trinitarian formula, "in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit". Trinitarians identify this name with the Christian faith into which baptism is an initiation, as seen for example in the statement of Basil the Great (330–379): "We are bound to be baptized in the terms we have received, and to profess faith in the terms in which we have been baptized." The First Council of Constantinople (381) also says, "This is the Faith of our baptism that teaches us to believe in the Name of the Father, of the Son and of the Holy Spirit. According to this Faith there is one Godhead, Power, and Being of the Father, of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit." may be taken to indicate that baptism was associated with this formula from the earliest decades of the Church's existence. Other Trinitarian formulas found in the New Testament include in 2 Corinthians 13:14, 1 Corinthians 12:4–6, Ephesians 4:4–6, 1 Peter 1:2 and Revelation 1:4–5. Oneness Pentecostals demur from the Trinitarian view of baptism and emphasize baptism ‘in the name of Jesus Christ’ the original apostolic formula.

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