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"flimsiness" Definitions
  1. the fact of being badly made and not strong enough for the purpose for which it is used
  2. the quality in material of being thin and easily torn
  3. the fact of being difficult to believe synonym feebleness

53 Sentences With "flimsiness"

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

The flimsiness of Trump's economic argument is also an opportunity.
Something here of high class mitigates the work's prior jokey flimsiness.
The flimsiness of these claims dawned on some employees during their tenure.
There's only one place where the lightweight design veers into genuine flimsiness: the tablet's kickstand.
And that flimsiness may be why the market is starting to look a bit trendless.
There's no flex, and no sense of flimsiness anywhere with metal chassis and accents everywhere.
Privacy International says that the correspondence released today demonstrates the flimsiness of existing oversight mechanisms.
The flimsiness of the Times' quote does not give near enough credence to that line of speculation.
In 10 minutes or so of perfectly calibrated mayhem, Mr. Jacobs exposed the flimsiness of that idea.
Immigrant rights advocates and progressive lawmakers said the hesitation suggested the flimsiness of New York's pro-immigrant rhetoric.
The speed with which Iran has recently resumed high-level uranium enrichment revealed the flimsiness of the deal's restrictions.
Donald Trump had a solid education in the power of images, the flimsiness of objective reality, and the magnetism of authority.
It's still occasionally performed — "That woman refuses to go under," Mr. Wainwright said — even though it was widely criticized for its narrative flimsiness.
Right groups say the arrests highlight the flimsiness of the reform agenda promoted by the Kingdom's powerful young Crown Prince, Mohammad bin Salman.
The flimsiness of that support has opened the door for Bloomberg, who's now at 22020 percent, as well as Buttigieg, at 10 percent.
The flimsiness of protections for historic interiors was wittily underscored when drilling from an upper floor of the Seagram Building briefly interrupted the proceedings.
The flimsiness of their charges can be measured by the response they've gotten not from their political adversaries but from some of their allies.
Maria is adamant she's not a spy — and a recent article in the New Republic convincingly points out the flimsiness of the FBI's case against her.
As if aware of the flimsiness of their own work, mourning doves often repurpose abandoned robin or mockingbird nests, topping the original nest with additional materials.
Despite the flimsiness of his anti-impeachment talking points, Trump's Dallas audience ate them up, chanting "drain the swamp!" and booing on cue as Trump lambasted Democrats.
While most new shows suffer from secondary-character flimsiness, this one doesn't because it immediately understands who the people who make up Lena and Martin's life are.
Sarah's flimsiness as a character, as well as the flat prose, is one of many things a reviewer back in 2001 might have had a hard time criticizing.
Russia's 2014 invasion of Ukraine (and the West's de facto acquiescence in it) is the most visible evidence of the flimsiness of the post-Cold War's national borders.
But it also lacks the solid feel of other laptops, with more flex and flimsiness in its chassis than you'd expect or want from a laptop that costs this much.
By breaking down the human body to its stringiest components, Kay hoped to have the viewer consider the flimsiness of civilization's building blocks relative to the organic components of the human body.
Levi Bedall, one of three members of Pneuhaus, a design collective that specializes in inflatable architecture and art installations, said that in the last decade, inflatables have shed their reputation for flimsiness.
The story of how Mr. Mactaggart forced California lawmakers to pass a landmark consumer privacy law is, in part, a story of the power of this idea — and also of its flimsiness.
All of this flimsiness meant that the 360 often felt more like a toy than its more sophisticated nemesis, all quiet and sleek in its piano-black casing and divisive Spider-Man font.
"The flimsiness of the prewar intelligence before Iraq — I think that would have been exposed more clearly now," said Jill Abramson, who was New York Times Washington Bureau Chief during the Iraq War.
"A seventh trial would be unprecedented, and completely unwarranted given both the flimsiness of the evidence against him and the long trail of misconduct that has kept him wrongfully incarcerated all these years," Johnson said.
The surfaces of the images are manipulated with paint, bleach, fire, and marker to accentuate the flimsiness of the photo paper, metaphorically recalling the ways in which memories and definitions of identity, collective and personal, change over time.
"A seventh trial would be unprecedented and completely unwarranted given both the flimsiness of the evidence against him and the long trail of misconduct that has kept him wrongfully incarcerated all these years," Ms. Johnson said in a statement.
The flimsiness of these structures emphasizes humanity's ability to destroy the natural and historic fabric of a landscape, while their placement, which resembles a chaotic archaeological dig, points to our pitiful attempts at restoration in the face of destruction.
The artwork — a piece of paper cut into an M, and another piece of paper rolled into a tube and stuck through the middle of the M — might look a bit silly on Earth, where gravity would accentuate its flimsiness.
The surprising flimsiness of Poland's right-wing façade, but also the deep divisions in the country, were revealed in October, when local elections with the highest turnout since the fall of communism illuminated a large gap between Poland's countryside and its cities.
That flimsiness extends to the rest of the document, the release of which FBI officials and Democrats have been furiously lobbying against for days, in part because it amounts to ammunition Trump and his allies can use to try to shut down the Russia investigation.
Noah has an expectedly basic social media presence that exposes the flimsiness of our targeted affection, but it was our love for the character Peter Kavinsky that ignited our online crush, since his character was delightfully and surprisingly self-aware, generous, and sweet as all hell.
The towers are connected by a system of elevated walkways, suspended 18 feet above the gallery floor, and are designed to disorient: the walkway is rigged to have a certain bounce and flimsiness, with the sound of your steps clattered, distorted, and amplified by hidden microphones and speakers.
But as it breaks down the greed and narcissism driving this family forward, as it exposes the hollowness of their beliefs and the flimsiness of their institutions, it's hard not to suspect McBride has once again hit upon something all too real, something as frighteningly current as it is funny. 
Tom Scott, the excellent YouTuber and overall hilarious Brit, covered this issue last month, doing an on-location video in the unfortunately named British city of Penistone to help fill the clip with visual puns, while making an astute point about the overall flimsiness of word filters: They're the linguistic equivalent of the Streisand Effect.
Playing on the screen gets tough if you have more than two people, and combined with the flimsiness of the built-in kickstand it's probably more enjoyable to drop the console in the dock and play on a TV. The Joy-Con controllers themselves are awkwardly small at times, and the left Joy-Con is far more natural to use in the sideways position than the awkwardly centered joystick on the right controller.
Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty. 11 March 2015. Retrieved 24 January 2016. According to Reporters Without Borders, Ismayilova's lawyer, Fariz Namazly, said the authorities were trying to compensate for the flimsiness of the initial charges brought against her.
Mauro Antonelli. Heusenstamm: Ontos, 2008 The Fragment on Mackintosh severely criticizes the alleged flimsiness and misrepresentations of Sir James Mackintosh's Dissertation on the Progress of Ethical Philosophy (1830), and discusses the foundations of ethics from the author's utilitarian point of view.
They also had a son in 1792. In June 1793, tired of waiting on the authorities, he began to build a church himself, and by September, at a cost of about £67, completed a building capable of holding 500 people. Even allowing for the difference in the purchasing power of money and the comparative flimsiness of the structure, this was a remarkable achievement.
At this time, the passport colour was changed to burgundy red, in line with most other EEC passports. The first generation of machine-readable passports attracted significant criticism for their perceived flimsiness, mass-produced nature and sudden deviation from the traditional design. Since the introduction of biometric passports, the British passport has introduced a new design every five years. March 2020 saw the introduction of a new navy blue passport with a continuity design based on the last 1988 issue.
This difference in campaign fundraising may be attributed to the fact that Roemer had limited donations to $100 per US citizen, and is denying all PAC, Super PAC, and corporate donations.buddyroemer.com His campaign garnered some visibility, nonetheless, when Roemer starred in an advertisement for Stephen Colbert's Super PAC, in November 2011. The ad lampooned the flimsiness of legal restrictions against Super PACs coordinating with the candidates they support. On Wednesday, November 30, 2011, Buddy Roemer officially announced that he would seek the Americans Elect nomination.
Series C The introduction of the burgundy machine-readable passport between 1988 and 1993 had been met with significant resistance. The burgundy passports attracted criticism for their perceived flimsiness, mass-produced nature and sudden deviation from the traditional design. There was speculation regarding re-introduction of the old-style passport following the UK's withdrawal from the European Union.Brexit: Blue passport may actually be reintroduced once Britain leaves EU, from The Independent on 13 September 2016, accessed on 19 February 2017 but the government denied any immediate plans.
At some point she studied with the Art Students League and she taught art to children at Parsons The New School for Design 1959–60. Her first illustrations for publication in a children's book were for Story of Ophelia by Mary J. Gibbons (Doubleday, April 1954) —using "charcoal, crayon, ink, pencil and tempera". Kirkus Reviews said, "Evaline Ness' color pictures of elongated, human-looking animals express in their flimsiness, a searching quality." Although successful as a commercial artist, she focused on children's literature beginning with her second illustrated book, The Bridge by Charlton Ogburn (Houghton Mifflin, 1957).
Marvin Harris described Totem and Taboo as representative of what Boas's followers regarded as "the worst form of evolutionary speculation", criticizing "the grandiosity of its compass, the flimsiness of its evidence ... the generality of its conclusions" and its "anachronistic framework". In his view, nothing about the work prepared "orthodox Freudians" to deal with the variety of culturally determined personality structures revealed by the work of Bronisław Malinowski, Margaret Mead, and Ruth Benedict. Peter Farb wrote that Totem and Taboo "demonstrates the lengths to which a theorist will go to find an explanation" for totemism, adding that despite their disagreements on other issues, anthropologists by 1968 concurred that the work is "totally discredited".
His plays, published in 1635–1638, are all in the manner of Lope de Vega. They were staged with much success, but, with the exception of Los Amantes de Teruel, are little more than clever improvizations. Montalbán almost rivaled Lope de Vega in dramatic productiveness, but, according to one critic, he followed that writer's conventional manner, flimsiness in construction, and carelessness in execution too closely. The prose tales in Sucesos y prodigios de amor, en ocho novelets ejemplares (1624) and Para todos: Exemplos morales, humanos y divinos (1632) were very popular. George Ticknor characterized “The Disastrous Friendship,” a tale in the former collection, as one of the best in the Spanish language. “Aurora and the Prince,” was translated into English by Thomas Stanley (1647).
Vonnegut believed that ideas, and the convincing communication of those ideas to the reader, were vital to literary art. He did not always sugarcoat his points: much of Player Piano leads up to the moment when Paul, on trial and hooked up to a lie detector, is asked to tell a falsehood, and states, "every new piece of scientific knowledge is a good thing for humanity". Robert T. Tally Jr., in his volume on Vonnegut's novels, wrote, "rather than tearing down and destroying the icons of twentieth-century, middle-class American life, Vonnegut gently reveals their basic flimsiness." Vonnegut did not simply propose utopian solutions to the ills of American society, but showed how such schemes would not allow ordinary people to live lives free from want and anxiety.
Although they perform the off-screen soundtrack music, the Dave Clark Five (unlike the Beatles in their films) do not portray themselves, but appear to be a team of freelance stuntmen/extras led by the saturnine Steve (Dave Clark). Clark had worked as a stuntman on several films, which appears to have provided him with a level of cinematic experience and camera sense rare for a pop artist of the time. alt= The film is less of a conventional pop vehicle than one dealing with the frailty of personal relationships, the flimsiness of dreams and the difficulty of maintaining spontaneity, authenticity and integrity in a stage-managed "society of the spectacle." Boorman's debut film drew favourable notices from Pauline Kael and Dilys Powell, as it captured much of the enormous cultural energy of the time.
Geoffrey Hillditch spends a quarter of his chapter on Albion buses detailing the Nimbus and his mostly negative experience of it. His first sight of it was at the 1956 Earls Court show, he had served his time at LNER's Gorton Loco works so he was incredulous at the flimsiness of the frame with a chassis weighing only 2 ton 17.25cwt, but he says "I recognised the logic behind the inception of the design." One of the first problems he encountered with the Great Yarmouth MR9s was, that in order for the automatic bypass vacuum generator to provide sufficient vacuum for braking assistance idling speed had to be kept low, this resulted in an engine straining at its mountings. Eventually failure of the mountings happened on one of them but not before another managed to shed its dynamo whilst in service, others had sheared a number of chassis brackets.

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