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"expansively" Definitions
  1. in a way that covers a large amount of space
  2. in a way that covers a large subject area
  3. in a very friendly way

137 Sentences With "expansively"

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

He used the power given to him expansively — much too expansively, in fact.
He speaks expansively on the subjects of character, destiny and God.
Isn't it time to look at men — and gender — more expansively?
"So much is going on in my head," he said, gesturing expansively.
Do you want to gesture expansively toward the future of news of Facebook?
The cavalier expansively offers his hand in a descending arc through the air.
But much will turn on how expansively or narrowly he interprets those categories.
Why might thinking about scarcity lead people to view their resources more expansively?
The DOJ defines "quid pro quo" expansively when deciding to indict other government officials.
He has not, since his op-ed, spoken frequently or expansively about being gay.
I'm not casting doubt upon those who are expansively praising an artist they love.
Gamper's arrival in London marked the beginning of an expansively creative period for the designer.
The blue column of her dress holds expansively before the background's retiring brownish-green ochres.
All they talked about was how dizzyingly, disarmingly, expansively passionate they felt about each other.
Americans once dreamed more expansively, she says, invoking ideas of social democracy and social justice.
In defining sex so expansively, the agencies may have walked themselves into a legal contradiction.
More expansively, it serves as a portal to both history and the otherworldly writ-large.
It's five bedrooms and baths nestled quite expansively into the 4,700 square feet of the home.
If so, why refer to closing the border so expansively and threaten to use the military?
The president has repeatedly used "welfare" to refer expansively to all programs that aid the poor.
But with a pen in his hand, he expansively let out his heartfelt and innermost feelings.
Both talk expansively and eloquently about government or community help that was crucial in their lives.
That gap could be filled only by amending the Constitution, not by expansively interpreting its words.
But Mr. Joel said that change was not because analysts were using their powers more expansively.
It's good to be the king All recent presidents have used their power expansively, wrote Julian Zelizer.
Instead, Mr. Nunn strode back and forth, gesturing expansively, circling his actors in a heavy-footed dance.
For most of its four hours, "Tristan" is expansively contemplative: a meditation on the power of love.
They identify American interests expansively and include ideals and ideological affinity in their sense of these interests.
Rather, he uses them as entry points to think more expansively about how inequality permeates our lives.
That powerful perch gave him wide latitude to investigate the president, and he used his authority expansively.
Versace's family has already criticized the series, but his experience is actually dealt with far less expansively.
He spoke expansively for close to 20 minutes without notes, and with his wife, Patti, at his side.
She also suggests you show that you can think expansively by asking about the industry and this company's competition.
The tracks aren't protest songs but enter the political domain anyway, as they expansively explore the politics of discourse.
He is sure to use the powers and tools of the Imperial Presidency rather expansively, as did President Obama.
Mr. Lavrov has often spoken expansively and sometimes humorously in the moments before or after meeting top American diplomats.
J.P. "Call Your Name" — from Karen Elson's second album, "Double Roses" — is a laconic song of mourning, expansively rendered.
In the 1990s, a liberal-minded court began interpreting Basic Laws — Israel's partial substitute for a constitution — more expansively.
By speaking expansively about intelligence gathering, Mr. Nunes may have broken the law by disclosing classified information, however obliquely.
Rather than unkindly dismissing it, or making a joke at his expense, Palmer reworded the question and answered it expansively.
Black voters, historically rebuked and scorned, turned out once again to support a democratic vision both profoundly hopeful and expansively inclusive.
As I've written this column, I have come to think more expansively of what it means to write something called Postscript.
Warren has long pushed the Education Department to more expansively interpret its powers to provide debt relief to student loan borrowers.
President Trump sat down with three New York Times reporters this week, and spoke expansively about the issues he's grappling with politically.
The paintings in "Blue" show Mr. Wong working bigger and more expansively than before, with a sense of real if unearthly light.
In Hollywood scripts, male characters are commonly named and described expansively, whereas female characters are often unnamed, highly sexualised, infantalised and meagrely described.
Long lives most expansively in Robert Penn Warren's novel "All the King's Men" (1946), an epic that turns a youthful 70 this year.
Third, Yemen and its neighbors should open all land and air crossings, as well as all ports, as expansively and efficiently as practicable.
Critics of the government's pursuit of cases under the law have argued that regulators are reading its language too expansively, holding back business.
The takeaway is that, not surprisingly, the more expansively women's groups — and Congress — interpreted women's policy authority, the more often these groups testified.
The central tension in these three cases arises from the fact that the text of a federal civil rights law — Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 — is written expansively, so expansively that even Gorsuch seemed to acknowledge at some points during Tuesday's oral argument that the text of the law favors a victory for the gay and trans plaintiffs.
That would mean national regulations like the hovercraft ban could be interpreted more expansively to cover land within a conservation area not federally owned.
Now, however, customers conceive of it much more expansively, and include evaluations of such diverse factors as:How difficult is your organization to work with?
Book Entry Although Adam Smith had no children, he has been identified as either the father of economics or, more expansively, of modern capitalism.
These decisions are part of a trend in which the justices have shown greater skepticism to government's arguments that statutes need to be read expansively.
Hardison, the Supreme Court defined "undue hardship" expansively, ruling that it included any accommodation that imposed more than a "de minimis cost" on the employer.
In each, dancers repeatedly move from a bent-forward position — with arms together pointing like a unicorn's horn — to an expansively arched-back open gesture.
Robert Bothwell, another historian at the University of Toronto, said that Professor Bliss had favored writing his books — 14 in all — as expansively as possible.
It is as expansively comprehensive as you could wish, with room for some creative display techniques that, for the most part, enhance the viewing experience.
So The Loving Story is valuable as a fuller, more expansively humanized portrait of the couple than you could get from the newsreels and history books.
Many political journalists have the experience of getting a direct callback from Donald Trump in which he ruminates expansively, even recklessly, on whatever questions he's asked.
While Sanders's fellow candidates didn't parrot his vocabulary and denounce "oligarchs" and "oligarchy," they spoke expansively about gross income inequality and the need to tackle it.
The law was passed to define and restrain presidential power, which until then had been interpreted expansively under the Trading with the Enemy Act of 1917.
The law was passed to define and restrain presidential power, which until then had been interpreted expansively under the Trading with the Enemy Act of 1917.
Then Mueller's indictment of the Internet Research Agency established publicly beyond any question that people close to the Kremlin meddled extensively, expansively, and expensively in the election.
"The president has instructed his team to look very expansively at what we need to do and not be impeded by the potential price tag," Ueland said.
It is not declaring Somalia an "area of active hostilities," which would free up the American military to carry out airstrikes targeting low-level militants more expansively.
But it is unclear whether the administration will be able to — or even try to — carry out deportations as expansively as suggested in the executive order's language.
Many of the justices' questions on Tuesday indicated they agreed that the text of the law is clear, leaving little room for them to interpret it more expansively.
More expansively, the report advocated for billions of dollars in new resources promoting jobs, education and health care to be directed toward urban centers and high poverty communities.
That October 11 decision by the US Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit was expansively written and reflected the judiciary's entrenched regard for Congress' oversight authority.
In the context of Trump and the unprincipled Republicans who have enabled him, Democrats' willingness to search their souls, admit error and think expansively and inclusively is beyond refreshing.
The scenes with Patty and Matt don't yet justify the presence of this entire other subplot in a show that already sprawls so expansively, especially since they're so often trite.
Together, in 2011, they founded the label Visionquest, releasing early records from folks like Benoit & Sergio and Tale of Us, and becoming known for slow-rolling, expansively oceanic tech-house.
After being left for dead on a fur expedition by a cruel companion (Tom Hardy), Glass plods through expansively (and expensively) shot, drop-dead-gorgeous snowy landscapes, bent on revenge.
You either hate it, in which case you'll want to expansively express that distaste, or you'll love it, and there are not enough dramatic arm twirls to get your point across.
" In the case of President Richard Nixon, the Supreme Court held unanimously that privileges "are not lightly created nor expansively construed, for they are in derogation of the search for truth.
Mr. Stafford said that after the success of Mr. Peck's unorthodox ballet "The Times Are Racing," in 2017, the interim team was inclined to keep thinking expansively in its programming choices.
Yet his legacy will be defined primarily by his opinions in the area of gay rights, where he wrote the major majority opinions expansively reading the Constitution to protect gay Americans.
The Koch network has also been bolstering its ground game and will be knocking on doors and hitting phones even more expansively than it has in past cycles, the official said.
But I'll start with my home museum, and I'll take as a shaping theme images both of, and by, women in the collection, specifically women of power, with power expansively defined.
"(for example, pictures of empty sky)" continues her early publishing practices that interrogated technology's relationship to the structure of the book, and more expansively, technology's relationship to public and private narratives.
By allowing the voices of black women and men, icons and ordinary people, to join in our larger democratic story, we come to see how African-Americans expansively transformed the United States.
Stepping back from an analysis of the funding and science — and politics — that shaped the Apollo Program, I asked NASA's chief historian to weigh in more expansively on its accomplishments and legacy.
Lionsgate's low-budget "Blair Witch" and Universal's expansively marketed "Bridget Jones's Baby," which marked the return of Renée Zellweger after a career hiatus, both fizzled at North American theaters over the weekend.
And they desperately need protection from the kind of bills that patients like Mr. Cencini are likely to incur in a system that charges expansively for every bit of care it dispenses.
"If we ever did again get technical indicators that an adversary was trying to do something, we would be able to move more quickly and much more expansively across the country," she said.
Throughout the speech, Clinton struck an expansively inclusive tone, welcoming supporters of Bernie Sanders—many of whom have been protesting her nomination since the start of the convention—under the Democratic Party's tent.
But rather than tedious, as these conversations can be in your own life, reading along to Johnson's is compelling—not least because of how freely she shares her emotions, how expansively vulnerable she is.
Director of photography Jeff Cutter's intimate camerawork, often relying on darkly expressive close-ups before expansively capitalizing on later plot developments, ably establishes the film's unsettling tone, underpinned by Bear McCreary's brooding orchestral score.
That in itself was a defeat for the baker and his supporters, because they had asked for a very broad ruling: that an expansively defined constitutional right to free speech trumps any nondiscrimination statute.
While the Israeli leader kept his focus on "the terrible nuclear deal with Iran," Mr. Trump spoke expansively about a peace agreement as though it was a genuine possibility, somewhat to the Israelis' surprise.
Beyond that, in realistic political terms, Clinton is likely to face the same congressional gridlock that's bedeviled Obama for the past five years in ways that will make it impossible for her to govern expansively.
For right now, I'm happy to stan a girl from Houston who is not only rapping better and loving herself harder; she is, arguably, dreaming bigger, and more expansively, than anyone else in hip-hop.
Instead, his theory relies on the First Amendment, which conservative justices tend to read expansively to protect the free speech, religious freedom, and associational rights of a wide variety of individuals, groups, and even corporations.
Bottura's goal with his souped-up soup kitchens is similar to his approach at Osteria Francescana, where he strives to keep his employees thinking expansively through exposure to music, art and even elegant home décor.
That was when Robert H. Bork, a federal appellate judge named to the Supreme Court by President Ronald Reagan, testified expansively and combatively as he expounded his conservative judicial philosophy at his Senate confirmation hearing.
But the FTC has interpreted the law more expansively than that: because YouTube channel owners benefit from YouTube's collection and use of kids' cookies, the FTC claims that they are subject to COPPA as well.
Opening for Bilal at this show is the Onyx Collective, a federation of young improvisers making low-lit, expansively improvised jazz, often with collaborators from the worlds of hip-hop, R&B and spoken word.
"The National Bank has further possibilities to act expansively," he said, noting inflation was set to creep back into positive territory by mid-2017 but this depended heavily on oil prices and the franc's exchange rate.
But the court has read the Federal Arbitration Act quite expansively in the past, and there is a risk that its decision might make it more difficult for states to override confidentiality clauses in arbitration agreements.
Because criminal laws are written expansively, mandatory minimums shift sentencing power from judges to prosecutors, who can effectively choose the sentence when they decide which of a range of eligible charges to bring against a defendant.
Since then, the big band has been a medium for expansively minded composers, who aren't aiming for dancers but have a lot to say about physical movement as it occurs on the bandstand, within the music.
The speech, of course, comes at a time when other Democratic presidential candidates are working to court the votes of unions across the country, with Sanders by far rolling out the most expansively pro-labor plan.
A likely explanation for this disparity is that courts found the notion that any religious person could be exempt from nearly any law unworkable, so they were reluctant to read the free exercise clause too expansively.
Fortunately, the lower courts have largely recognized that the decision should not be read expansively to impose a straitjacket on legislative efforts to deal with the serious US problem of gun violence -- unique among developed countries.
"Initially what we're trying to do is make sure we're thinking expansively and creatively," an administration official said, including identifying how new technology such as drones and autonomous vehicles can help go beyond merely replacing aging infrastructure.
"We're now able to look expansively at the continent and how the schools of art in each region were influenced not just by Spanish culture but by local culture and customs, flora and fauna," Ms. Wicha said.
Talking expansively about the course, his recent putting woes and the opportunities he has missed this year to end his victory drought, he suddenly turned economical with his words when the dark days of mid-2017 were raised.
Interpreting the emoluments clause In his opinion, Messitte expansively read the term "emolument" in the Constitution to cover, and ultimately ban, the President from receiving "anything more than de minimis profit, gain, or advantage" in his private capacity.
He said the term "emolument" expansively covers any so-called non-de minimis profit, gain or advantage the president receives through the Trump International Hotel by virtue of government customers' patronage of the hotel, according to court documents.
"There are more fires that are burning more expansively over longer periods of time, and there are fewer resources available to respond, especially to respond quickly," said Carroll Wills, a spokesman for the California Professional Firefighters, a statewide union.
It is not unusual for procedural orders in emergency applications to leave readers unsatisfied: these documents are more succinct and much less expansively delineated than opinions in cases where the court considers a full round of briefs and hears oral argument.
Imhof is best known for her understated, tense performance pieces, although she works expansively in sculptural, video, and two-dimensional forms as well, often combining these elements into installations that either document or are activated by her strictly choreographed performances.
In November, Herndon launched a crowd-sourced database of sound work dealing with the internet; if you want to get some insight into how she goes about making her expansively microdetailed compositions, she also recently shared some information about her process.
However, a series of recent U.S. Supreme Court decisions have interpreted the FAA so expansively that the law has become an enormous gift to powerful corporate interests that can now effectively say "no thanks" to judicial scrutiny of their wrongdoing.
While Cornelius Ferguson, aka Traxman's albums are usually characterized by eclectic sampling tendencies—he'll jump from understated bells to hard rock—this mix finds him exploring moods and sounds as expansively as ever despite the fact that he's sampling just one band.
While most lower court judges embrace a framework that is fairly permissive of gun regulations, there is a faction of conservative judges who reject this framework and who have argued, mostly in dissenting opinions, that the Second Amendment should be read more expansively.
Among other things, the proposed law would create a process for "designated communications providers" — defined so expansively that it covers any business hosting a website — to assist intelligence and law enforcement agencies to do almost anything to give them access to encrypted communications.
That made health care the top reason for voting for Democrats in 2018, but it also revealed what has become a defining partisan difference: a Republican Party determined to destroy government outside of defense and a Democratic Party determined to use it expansively.
Yet the series format allows creator Billy Ray to more expansively look at the studios during the gilded mid-1930s, weaving in real-life personalities like mogul Louis B. Mayer (Saul Rubinek) and director Fritz Lang (Iddo Goldberg) -- the latter a notorious "pervert," we're told.
About two years later, when the fund withdrew its sponsorship, Ms. Jensen took the site over, turning into fund-raiser in chief in addition to editor in chief to keep it afloat and further its mission of writing about women's issues, which she defined expansively.
In a state where black students are at higher risk of being suspended or expelled for disciplinary violations, there is no reason to believe the results would be any different when they are accused of "sexual violence" as the California law expansively defines it.
In one repeated phrase (13 seconds to 24 seconds), her torso leans forward as she gives special emphasis to one small step (petit développé); then another step (a turning relevé grand développé) opens her body up more expansively; and there follows a bigger, quicker jump.
Mr. Hajdu, the juror, said that in recent years, those behind the Pulitzers have sought to "assertively think and listen more expansively, with more open ears," pointing to wins in the music category by the experimental jazz musicians Ornette Coleman in 2007 and Henry Threadgill in 2016.
My sense is that Democrats to some extent keep being surprised and taken aback by just how many people are willing to abase themselves for Trump and by just how expansively they'll shred etiquette, trash tradition, junk their reputations and test the very boundaries of the law.
Flake's solution falls in between more liberal bills from the Democrats that would expansively protect immigrants and their families with a pathway to citizenship and less interior enforcement and conservative efforts that would restrict some legal immigration and limit those who can be protected from deportation.
Mr. Hajdu says that in recent years, the people behind the prize have "sought to assertively think and listen more expansively, with open ears" since the prize has been awarded primarily to classical artists and later onto Jazz and now in the genre of Hip-hop to Kendrick.
It was an indictment unprecedented in American history—a direct and public charge that America's main foreign adversary meddled extensively, expensively, and expansively in the core of the American democratic process, attempting to influence voters, spread disparaging information about the Democratic nominee, and "help" presidential candidate Donald Trump take office.
Even though the company indicated it may not institute the price hikes more expansively, or even permanently, it seems likely that it'll be forced to — if not now then soon — given the rising competition within the streaming audio space, and its investment in more original podcasts and expansive licensing agreements.
The National Security Council's records office, which is coordinating the review, apparently intends to scour the book not just for classified material but for information implicating executive privilege — a privilege that Mr. Trump and his lawyers have construed expansively in other contexts — though executive privilege is decidedly not a permissible basis for prior restraint.
Her current exhibition at the BMA, curated by Hileman, features many of the same works in the smaller A+P space and lays it out expansively, a luxurious retrospective that features performances, drawings, video, and the large sculptural installations made of the New York Times newspaper, rope, wire, and plastic bags that the artist has become widely known for.
Cory Booker quintupled down on his pitch as the candidate of love — and was so expansively loving to several of the other Democrats, including Kamala Harris and Biden, that I found myself wondering if this debate was a bid to salvage a flagging campaign or the beginning of an audition to be the eventual nominee's running mate.
They love the ubiquitous water views, of Gardiners Bay, Northwest Harbor, Sag Harbor Bay and Noyac Bay — which, Ms. Drackett pointed out, you don't get in other parts of the Hamptons — and enjoy getting out on paddleboards and in boats, from which they can glimpse houses that look modest from the street but open expansively on the waterfront.
It has condemned Israel with greater frequency than Syria (which frequently uses chemical weapons against children), North Korea (which employs prison camps against and ignores the starvation of its own population), Iran (which expansively uses the death penalty against its own people, including minors, and routinely persecutes religious and ethnic minorities), and many other despotic countries.
At the heart of the fight will be differing interpretations of the government's duties under the Clean Air Act, which the Obama administration construed expansively (and correctly in our view) to allow a variety of weapons to be deployed against carbon dioxide, and the Trump administration's much more cramped view, which would leave us stuck with an outdated energy system.
Frank Bruni Some years ago I had the privilege of a long evening with Carrie Fisher, starting at her house in Beverly Hills and proceeding to a nearby restaurant, and she talked so expansively — about her memories of "Star Wars," about her electric shock treatments, about Diet Coke, about everything — that I didn't come away with just a few impressions of her.

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