Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

61 Sentences With "disavowals"

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

Despite the president's occasional disavowals, these people really like him.
"Disavowals," her most heartfelt book, had not been well received.
The Trump campaign has become the mother ship of disavowals.
Denials of interference have not been accompanied by disavowals of ties to Russia.
But his disavowals have done little to silence the growing buzz around his name.
Feminine?" she wrote in her book "Aveux non Avenus," published in English as "Disavowals.
For all his narrative twisting and disavowals, Khoury gives us a vivid glimpse of the unspeakable.
Mr. Nunberg added that the president's disavowals of his former strategist would mean little to voters.
Despite the subsequent disavowals, the Tulagi scheme was not the misguided initiative of a wayward provincial premier.
His "disavowals" -- which were uncharacteristically tepid -- stood in stark contrast to his usual bold and passionate pronouncements.
Some condemned Trump by name, but others confined themselves to more general disavowals of racism and white supremacy.
Utah Republicans led that defection, with prominent officials in the state making some of the harshest disavowals of Trump.
His campaign last year drew the support of white supremacists and other right-wing groups, despite his disavowals of them.
But in some of these disavowals is language that opens room for debate about Moore's position, should he be elected.
He frequently signals to his supporters that his disavowals of white-nationalist groups and other right-wing racists are not genuine.
More and more, they also expose the genre's disavowals and patriarchal dirty secrets, vindicating erased maternal contributions and buried collateral lines.
Mr. Greenblatt added that research had shown that white supremacists interpret Mr. Trump's "hesitant disavowals" as a "green light" for their views.
And the leak of a draft order reinstating black-site prisons and harsh interrogation techniques consumed more attention despite White House disavowals.
But despite Mr. Martinez's belated disavowals, violence, including serious injuries, has been a constant feature of his union's protests over the past few months.
In March, after a series of embarrassing disavowals by the institutions they funded, two Sackler charitable organizations announced they would temporarily pause their philanthropy.
While almost all Republican senators couched their disavowals with "if this is true," it's clear that the party is willing to break with the elected frontrunner.
Now, veils of silence in legislative chambers are lifting as public disavowals and calls for resignations pour in against the accused, even from fellow party members.
Most of the budget is dead on arrival Hours after the budget rollout, Democrats gleefully compiled and distributed a list of Republican complaints, gripes, and disavowals for its proposals.
But it's been a rocky year for Snap, as it weathered severe backlash for its recent Snapchat redesign, disavowals from well-known celebrity influencers, and multiple rounds of layoffs.
Mr. Kim certainly inspires passionate disavowals among Korean-Americans and immigrants living here, but his meeting with Mr. Trump drew muted interest across Korean bars, restaurants and entertainment spaces.
The latter could not properly be called "vows," because they are in fact disavowals: of the institution of marriage, the biological family, and the dysfunction that both can breed.
If we care about the law — and about holding public figures accountable for their false denials — the impassioned disavowals of collusion by members of the Trump circle mean nothing.
While Collins has a bipartisan reputation in the Senate, until she and her GOP colleagues reckon with the toxic proposals that appeal to the party's base, disavowals like this mean little.
"Their disavowals of bigotry are belied by their actions: rank-and-file Proud Boys and leaders regularly spout white nationalist memes and maintain affiliations with known extremists," the SPLC's website states.
The chance to effectively compete in the future, however, will not come from continued disparagement of Trump's supporters as ignorant racists, or disavowals of our country's decision as not our own.
But what, exactly, happened to lend benzos such incredible popularity—and why, despite high-profile disavowals and tragedies, have so many doctors, patients and recreational users seemed to remain oblivious to their hidden dangers?
"Their disavowals of bigotry are belied by their actions," the Southern Poverty Law Center, a nonprofit organization that tracks extremist groups, wrote in an online memo labeling the Proud Boys as a hate group.
The documents argued that Cohen lied about the real estate deal in Russia because Trump himself had made "repeated disavowals of commercial and political ties between himself and Russia," and Cohen wanted to protect him.
Three years ago, KQED's Pop blog insisted that ''nothing is as divisive as Taylor Swift'': the men, the disavowals of feminism, the purportedly slut-shaming lyrics, the arguable award-show side-eye given and taken.
But they are hungry for gains across the political map, and in red areas they have encouraged candidates to put local imperatives above fealty to the national party, even tolerating outright disavowals of Ms. Pelosi.
Yet it carries a sinister import: As Jonathan Greeenblatt of the Anti-Defamation League told The New York Times, there is research showing that racists interpret Trump's "hesitant disavowals" as a "green light" for their own bigotry.
And then she pivots to an emotional discussion of online harassment; you can hear that it's clearly shaped her perception of the race: You can understand why Warren seems to think Sanders's disavowals ring a bit hollow.
And when they compare his full-throated denunciation of a piece of musical theater to his garbled, terse, and delayed disavowals of the support by white supremacists, they see a wink and a nod, and fear it's a nudge.
And then she pivots to an emotional discussion of online harassment; you can hear that it's clearly shaped her perception of the race: In the interview, it's clear that Sanders's disavowals of online harassment ring a little hollow in Warren's ears.
Brushing aside Mr. Trump's disavowals, he described the Trump campaign as something of a scene setter for his own return to politics, after spending years lecturing in Russia and other European countries, though he was expelled from some and arrested in others.
Such evocations of a gritty and exciting New York are often accompanied by embarrassed disavowals, by a sense that the 1970s city was a violent wasteland with nothing worth recovering or going back to, best left behind and remembered only as a vivid curiosity.
SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - A Facebook Inc executive said in an internal memo in 2016 that the social media company needed to pursue adding users above all else, BuzzFeed News reported on Thursday, prompting disavowals from the executive and Facebook Chief Executive Officer Mark Zuckerberg.
SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - A Facebook Inc executive said in an internal memo in 2016 that the social media company needed to pursue adding users above all else, BuzzFeed News reported on Thursday, prompting disavowals from the executive and Facebook Chief Executive Officer Mark Zuckerberg.
The challenge Srinivasan's nomination would pose to environmentalists mirrors the struggle many of the activists face in the Democratic presidential primary, in which Bernie Sanders has captured green hearts with his blanket disavowals of the fossil fuel industry's influence — something Hillary Clinton is only lately trying to match.
What is surprising is that when you add the two disavowals together — first the establishment's repudiation of Bush during the 2010 midterm cycle, then Trump's repudiation of the establishment during the 2016 cycle — what you get is a party that's spun around so far it's ended up back where it started.
It's not exactly clear which Republican constituency would find Walsh appealing: Republican voters turned off by Trump's own conspiracy theorizing and racism are unlikely to support another Republican prone to the same, his current disavowals of such behavior notwithstanding, and Republican voters who don't find Trump's invective unappealing will simply vote for him again.
"As such, I was aware of Individual 1's repeated disavowals of commercial and political ties between himself and Russia, his repeated statements that investigations of such ties were politically motivated and without evidence, and that any contact with Russian nationals by Individual 1's campaign or the Trump Organization had all terminated before the Iowa Caucus, which was on February 1 of 2016," Cohen said.
Renov, Michael. "Documentary disavowals or the digital, documentary and postmodernity." Polygraph 13, 2001. Suderburg does not consider film a strictly linear medium but a form of hypermedia embracing both screen and viewer.
Disavowals or cancelled confessions () is an anti-realist, surrealist autobiography by Claude Cahun. It was created to serve as a critique of the dominant cultural conservatism in France through the subversion of traditional autobiography with the use of illustrated photomontages alongside the artist's own aphorisms in the aftermath of World War I .
And he was a part-time librarian, with Franklin's Library Company of Philadelphia. Bonvouloir contacted Daymon. When the librarian told Franklin about the encounter, Franklin was wary: this could be a British spy; however, after some further deliberation, felt the benefits justified the risks. In spite of Bonvouloir's fervent disavowals, it was clear he was acting on the orders of the French government.
Concurrently, he also improved the land tax collection system in Jiangxi province.Wright, Mary C. The Last Stand of Chinese Conservatism: The T’ung-Chih Restoration, 1862-1874. (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1962), 154. He also took part in obtaining a peace settlement with Japan, following the Mudan Incident and Japan's invasion of Taiwan in response to imperial disavowals of sovereignty over the islands' native tribes.
On 17 May the Library of the Archbishop of Canterbury was taken from him."the Library of the late Archbishop of Canterbury, and now, or lately, in the Hands of Mr. Hugh Peters, be forthwith secured". He was excepted from the Act of Indemnity and apprehended on September 2 in Southwark. Peters's preaching and addresses to Parliament on Cromwell's behalf had made him too well known as a Puritan opponent of the royal house of Stuart for any disavowals to save him, and repentance was probably his best hope.
He was a vocal and extremely critical opponent of President Dwight Eisenhower, and acted as the AFL-CIO's point man against the president while Meany and other leaders muted their criticism. Despite public disavowals of his extreme attacks on the administration, AFL-CIO leaders privately supported his actions and in 1955 he was named to an AFL-CIO committee on economic policy.Stetson, "President Scored by Textile Union," New York Times, May 3, 1954; "Democrats Told Not to Ape G.O.P.," New York Times, May 15, 1956; "A.F.L.-C.I.O Unit Named," New York Times, December 30, 1955.
In 1989, copies of the KGB documents claim "the WCC executive and central committee adopted public statements (eight) and messages (three)" which corresponded to its own political direction. Appeals from suffering dissidents both from within the Russian Orthodox Church and Protestants were ignored in 1983. Metropolitan Aleksi Ridiger of Tallinn and Estonia was repeatedly alleged to be a KGB agent codenamed DROZDOV, who in 1988 was awarded an honorary citation for services to the KGB by its chairman. Despite official disavowals, The Guardian described the evidence as "compelling".
The film examines the phantom's appearance and disappearance in relation to the "present/absent dynamic of visible lesbian sexuality" in both the history of cinema and art history. As of 2014, her most recent film is Magic Mirror (2013), which was funded by Arts Council England, and is published as a DVD by LUX. Magic Mirror examines the word and image connections in Claude Cahun’s writing from her book Aveux non avenus (Disavowals) through a re-staging of her photographs. Magic Mirror, which is "part essay, part film poem", seeks to explore the links between Cahun’s photographs and her writings.
Anal Rope treated, among other things, the role of connotation in such representations and disavowals. Redressing film criticism’s refusal to acknowledge the homosexuality of Hitchcock’s protagonists (inspired by Leopold and Loeb), Miller argued that the celebrated technique that had been film critics’ exclusive and obsessive focus was informed by and inseparable from the threat posed by gay male sexuality. Like Miller's later essays on homosexuality and Hollywood cinema "Visual Pleasure in 1959" (1997) and "On the Universality of Brokeback Mountain" (2007), Anal Rope maintained that this threat was not marginal, but rather "central" to the making and maintenance of heterosexual identity.
Despite Washburne's disavowals, he was a contender at the 1880 Republican National Convention in Chicago. With 379 votes required to win the nomination, he consistently received support from 30 to 40 delegates; Grant had been the early front runner, and consistently received between 300 and 315 votes. Recognizing after more than 30 ballots that neither Grant nor the other leading contenders, James G. Blaine and John Sherman could be nominated, delegates began to search for a dark horse. Having failed to build momentum for Washburne on an earlier ballot, on the 34th ballot 16 Washburne delegates from Wisconsin cast their votes for James A. Garfield without warning.
In spite of these disavowals, the Declaration of 1682 remained thenceforward the living symbol of Gallicanism, professed by the great majority of the French clergy, obligatorily defended in the faculties of theology, schools, and seminaries, guarded from the lukewarmness of French theologians and the attacks of foreigners by the inquisitorial vigilance of the French parliaments, which never failed to condemn to suppression every work that seemed hostile to the principles of the Declaration. From France Gallicanism spread, about the middle of the eighteenth century, into the Low Countries, thanks to the works of the jurisconsult Zeger Bernhard van Espen. Under the pseudonym of Febronius, Hontheim introduced it into Germany where it took the forms of Febronianism and Josephism.
Van Vliet claimed that he never attended public school, alleging "half a day of kindergarten" to be the extent of his formal education and saying that "if you want to be a different fish, you've got to jump out of the school". His associates said that he only dropped out during his senior year of high school to help support the family after his father's heart attack. His graduation picture appears in the school's yearbook. His claims to have never attended school – and his general disavowals of education – may have been related to his experience of dyslexia which, although never officially diagnosed, was obvious to sidemen such as John French and Denny Walley, who observed his difficulty reading cue-cards on stage, and his frequent need to be read aloud to.
The name of Tihomir Blaškić was also floated in the media in this context. Josipović was confronted about it during the third debate, and he claimed that the disavowals were made because of peer pressure. The Bandić campaign also released their own list of associations of Croatian defenders who allegedly supported him in the second round, including the Association of the 105th Brigade of the Croatian National Guard, but the war-time commander of the 105th Brigade of the Croatian Army Stjepan Ivanić came forward to state that their association was both named and listed wrongly and said that their members were "appalled by the disinformation". The Bandić campaign created a negative campaign television ad that used a recording of Josipović's words, but after the Josipović campaign complained, the State Election Committee banned it as a violation of campaign rules, while Bandić campaign complained of censorship.
"Disciplinary power," Miller wrote, "constitutively mobilizes a tactic of tact: it is the policing power that never passes for such, but is either invisible or visible only under cover of other, nobler or simply blander intentionalities (to educate, to cure, to produce, to defend)." Miller's book thus countered critical celebrations of the novel as inherently emancipatory. (Indeed, The Novel and the Police exposed these celebrations as "perpetuating the [novel’s] ruse".) Against this "subversion hypothesis", Miller called for attention to the novel's ability effectively to produce subjects, its capacity to form "a subject habituated to psychic displacements, evacuations, reinvestments, in a social order whose totalizing power circulates all the more easily for being pulverized". In Anal Rope(1990), his definitive reading of Alfred Hitchcock’s 1948 film Rope, and in his next books, Bringing Out Roland Barthes (1992) and Place for Us: Essay on the Broadway Musical (1998), Miller turned to more explicitly gay-themed works, even while insisting on the importance of the implicit in mainstream culture’s representations and disavowals of homosexuality.

No results under this filter, show 61 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.