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30 Sentences With "for my own part"

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

For my own part, I think the answer is one.
For my own part, giving up the Kardashians is easy; I don't have any temptation to check in on Kylie's latest Snapchat.
For my own part, I simply wanted to be able to say, with St. Paul, that I fought the good fight, I stayed the course, I kept the faith.
In my opinion, we should: For my own part, as a professor in a business school, I also recognize the need to instill in our graduates a sense of duty to all stakeholders — employees, communities, and the environment, as well as customers and investors — as the key to sustainable success in all senses of the phrase, in addition to the usual critical thinking skills and analytical toolbox that we currently provide.
SO I CERTAINLY WANT TO MONITOR AND ASSESS HOW THE ECONOMY IS REACTING TO THOSE CUTS WE'RE STARTING TO SEE SOME IMPROVEMENT IN RESIDENTIAL INVESTMENTS AND TURN AROUND THERE WHICH IS THE KIND OF THING YOU WOULD EXPECT TO SEE IN A LOWER RATE ENVIRONMENT SO I THINK FOR MY OWN PART I WANT TO MONITOR, I WANT TO WAIT FOR A LITTLE BIT AS I ASSESS HOW THE OUTLOOK IS ADJUSTING.
For my own part I freely confess that, in my bachelorship, I was precisely such an over-curious simpleton as I now advise the reader not to be.
For my own part I freely confess that, in my bachelorship, I was precisely such an over-curious simpleton as I now advise the reader not to be.
They did not appear to attract the observation of the crowd around them, but I must candidly confess that for my, own part, I stared at them most pertinaciously.
A Modern Utopia is also notable for Chapter 10 ("Race in Utopia"), an enlightened discussion of race. Contemporary racialist discourse is condemned as crude, ignorant, and extravagant. "For my own part I am disposed to discount all adverse judgments and all statements of insurmountable differences between race and race."H.G. Wells, A Modern Utopia (Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1967), p. 334.
Roger Penrose suggests this because: "For my own part, I feel a little uncomfortable about having our finite device moving a potentially infinite tape backwards and forwards. No matter how lightweight its material, an infinite tape might be hard to shift!" Penrose's drawing shows a fixed tape head labelled "TM" reading limp tape from boxes extending to the visual vanishing point. (Cf page 36 in Roger Penrose, 1989, The Emperor's New Mind, Oxford University Press, Oxford UK, ).
It was not necessarily meant to be purely positive: > For my own part, I agree with those who think that the tribes of Germany are > free from all taint of inter-marriages with foreign nations, and that they > appear as a distinct, unmixed race, like none but themselves. Hence, too, > the same physical peculiarities throughout so vast a population. All have > fierce blue eyes, red hair, huge frames, fit only for a sudden exertion. > They are less able to bear laborious work.
For my own part, I > can safely aver, that I cannot see any real danger which is likely to accrue > to the internal peace of the Country, when I consider the present > dispositions and feelings of the people.The Times (19 July 1803), p. 1. William Pitt, in response, agreed: William Pitt. > I am sure there is not an heart that palpitates in a British bosom that will > not rouse for the common cause, and cordially join for the defence of the > country.
Coddington was very unhappy with the proceedings. He stood and asserted: > I do not see any clear witness against her, and you know it is a rule of the > court that no man may be a judge and an accuser too. I would entreat you to > consider whether those things which you have alleged against her deserve > such censure as you are about to pass, be it to banishment or imprisonment. > I beseech you: do not speak so as to force things along, for I do not, for > my own part, see any equity in the court in all your proceedings.
After the Washington Post ran a story about the issue in June 2004, a number of prominent Democrats wrote letters supporting Griffith. Abner Mikva, former Democratic congressman and former Chief Judge of the D.C. Circuit, wrote that he had known Griffith in and out of government and had "never heard a whisper against his integrity or responsibility." Seth Waxman, who had served as Solicitor General under Clinton, wrote that "for my own part I would stake most everything on [Griffith's] word alone." David E. Kendall and Lanny Breuer, two of Clinton's lawyers during the impeachment trial, also wrote letters supporting Griffith.
With regard to Anglican churches, as opposed to Catholic churches, nonconformist chapels or meeting houses, the designs of the Wren office provided a new standard for British church architecture ever since, as well as giving a distinctive face to the Anglican church in London."For my own part I view the work of Sir Christopher Wren as a beacon which never fails to inspire. And there is no finer monument of his genius than the character he gave to London," Sir Edwin Lutyens. From London City Churches Wren also designed a number of Anglican churches outside the City, including St James's, Piccadilly and St Clement Danes.
With regard to Anglican churches, as opposed to Catholic churches, nonconformist chapels or meeting houses, the designs of the Wren office provided a new standard for British church architecture ever since, as well as giving a distinctive face to the Anglican church in London."For my own part I view the work of Sir Christopher Wren as a beacon which never fails to inspire. And there is no finer monument of his genius than the character he gave to London" — Sir Edwin Lutyens. From London City Churches Wren also designed a number of Anglican churches outside the City, including St James's, Piccadilly and St Clement Danes.
On 1 February Howard wrote to Walsingham: "It doth appear no less by your letter but that we may assure ourselves that Scotland is the mark which they shoot at to offend us, and therefore most necessary to provide for that...for my own part, had rather be drawn in pieces with wild horses than that they should pass through Scotland and I lie here".Laughton, Volume I, pp. 56–57. On 14 February Howard again wrote to Walsingham that Elizabeth would be "no good housewife for herself" if she refused to grant James VI a pension for his support for England rather than Spain.Laughton, Volume I, p. 70.
The word is familiar in its most general sense from the motto for the Gladstonian Liberal party in British politics, "Peace, Retrenchment and Reform." The 1906 Liberal landslide manifesto was launched with this slogan: > Expenditure calls for taxes, and taxes are the plaything of the tariff > reformer. Militarism, extravagance, protection are weeds which grow in the > same field, and if you want to clear the field for honest cultivation you > must root them all out. For my own part, I do not believe that we should > have been confronted by the spectre of protection if it had not been for the > South African war.
Thomas Fuller, in his History of the Worthies of England, praised Bright as follows: > For my own part, I behold this Master Bright placed by Divine Providence in > this city, in the Marches, that he might equally communicate the lustre of > grammar learning to youth both of England and Wales. Pupils did attend the school from Wales as well as England. Bright arranged for Worcester Cathedral chapter to provide exhibition scholarships of 2 shillings per annum for pupils he sent to university. His reputation was also echoed by Anthony Wood in his Fasti Oxoniensis: > He had a most excellent faculty in instructing youths in Latin, Greek and > Hebrew, most of which were afterwards sent to the universities, where they > proved eminent to emulation.
He will make himself an exile from the > earth. He also criticizes what he sees as the dominant social paradigm, what he calls the expansionist view, and the belief that technology will solve all our problems: "Confusing life expectancy with life-span, the gullible begin to believe that medical science has accomplished a miracle—lengthened human life!" Abbey takes this theme to an extreme at various points of the narrative, concluding that: "Wilderness preservations like a hundred other good causes will be forgotten under the overwhelming pressure, or a struggle for mere survival and sanity in a completely urbanized completely industrialized, ever more crowded environment, for my own part I would rather take my chances in a thermonuclear war than live in such a world".
The Gothic Quest, by Ralph Adams Cram (1907; New York, The Baker and Taylor Company.) Almost three decades later, Cram's enthusiasm was unabated, writing "For my own part I think Halsey Wood was potentially one of the greatest architects of modern times".My Life in Architecture by Ralph Adams Cram (1936; Boston, Little Brown & Co.) Another positive assessment came in 1936 from architectural critic and urban theorist Lewis Mumford, whose writings were instrumental in understanding the 1880s "as the seedbed of modern architecture". In "The Sky Line", his regular column in The New Yorker, Mumford linked Wood with H. H. Richardson and others who had lain the groundwork for Modernism.Lewis Mumford,"The Sky Line," The New Yorker, February 29, 1936.
An appeal against conviction was made to the Court of Criminal Appeal on the ground that his conviction was unsafe and unsatisfactory. That appeal was dismissed. Sully J, one of the three judges presiding, said of the appeal; > 'For my own part, I would say at once that, were it permissible Kingdom, I > would favour upholding the present appeal upon the ground now being > discussed. I would take that view because, broadly speaking, I have in > purely subjective terms a feeling of anxiety and discomfort about the > verdicts of guilty that were returned against the present appellant' The other two justices, Cripps JA and Finlay J, agreed with Sully J in dismissing the appeal; but dissociated themselves from his expressed feeling of anxiety or discomfort.
Calvert replaced as Governor the Protestant Thomas Brooke, whose "malicious designs" he had been sent to bring to an end. Early on he worked to reassert the Proprietary interest and prerogative against the privileges of the colonists as set out in the Maryland Charter. He also worked to ease tensions between the propriety government and its subjects. In a speech in 1725 he suggested that their differences might be of a devilish nature: > I am afraid some Evil Spirits walk among us and it would be a matter of > Great pleasure to such, to have your house [the people of Maryland] and mine > [Lord Baltimore] att Variance, but for my own part, I defy the Devill and > his Works to do it.
For my own part, imagining all along that there might be something of real Antiquity couch'd under that name, I am almost perswaded [sic] that Laberius Durus the Tribune, slain by the Britains [sic]... was buried here; and that from him the Barrow was call'd Jul-Laber. Camden's ideas were largely accepted by later antiquarian commentators on the site, among them William Lambarde in his 1576 Perambulation of Kent, Richard Kilburne in his 1650 A Topographie of Kent, and Thomas Philipott in this 1659 Villare Cantianum. The account would also influence William Gostling, who in various editions of his Walk in and About the City of Canterbury—published between 1774 and 1825—included the long barrow on a map, where he labelled it "Jullaber or Tomb of Laberius". One of Stukeley's three engravings of the barrow, 1724.
Campbell-Bannerman saw off both of these issues by offering the positions of Chancellor of the Exchequer, Foreign Secretary and Secretary of State for War to Asquith, Grey and Haldane respectively, which all three accepted, whilst immediately dissolving Parliament and calling a general election. In his first public speech as Prime Minister on 22 December 1905, Campbell-Bannerman launched the Liberal election campaign, focusing on the traditional Liberal platform of "peace, retrenchment and reform": > Expenditure calls for taxes, and taxes are the plaything of the tariff > reformer. Militarism, extravagance, protection are weeds which grow in the > same field, and if you want to clear the field for honest cultivation you > must root them all out. For my own part, I do not believe that we should > have been confronted by the spectre of protection if it had not been for the > South African war.
Barnes considers the story of the potion-induced miscarriages to be an allegation without further reference.Timothy Barnes, "Ammianus Marcellinus and the Representation of Historical Reality" (1998), page 123 Gibbon had not completely dismissed the report:"even the fruits of his [Julian's] marriage-bed were blasted by the jealous artifices of Eusebia herself, who, on this occasion alone, seems to have been unmindful of the tenderness of her sex, and the generosity of her character" ... "For my own part I am inclined to hope that the public malignity imputed the effects of accident as the guilt of Eusebia." He left the question of the existence of such a poison open and to be determined by physicians rather than historians. "A History of Medicine" (1995) by Plinio Prioreschi dismisses the account as an example of a very common error in accounts of ancient medicine, "the attribution to drugs of properties that they could not have".
He had discovered oxygen gas (O2). As revised for Experiments and Observations, his paper begins: > The contents of this section will furnish a very striking illustration of > the truth of a remark which I have more than once made in my [natural] > philosophical writings … that more is owing to what we call chance—that is, > philosophically speaking, to the observations of events rising from unknown > causes than to any proper design or preconceived theory in this business. … > For my own part, I will frankly acknowledge that at the commencement of my > experiments recited in this section I was so far from having formed any > hypothesis that led to the discoveries I made in pursuing them that they > would have appeared very improbable to me had I been told of them; and when > the decisive facts did at length obtrude themselves upon my notice it was > very slowly, and with great hesitation, that I yielded to the evidence of my > senses.
Timothy Barnes, "Ammianus Marcellinus and the Representation of Historical Reality" (1998), page 123 Edward Gibbon had not completely dismissed the report:"even the fruits of his [Julian's] marriage-bed were blasted by the jealous artifices of Eusebia herself, who, on this occasion alone, seems to have been unmindful of the tenderness of her sex, and the generosity of her character" ... "For my own part I am inclined to hope that the public malignity imputed the effects of accident as the guilt of Eusebia." He left the question of the existence of such a poison open and to be determined by physicians rather than historians.Edward Gibbon, "The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire", vol. 2, Chapter 19, note 39 "A History of Medicine" (1995) by Plinio Prioreschi dismisses the account as an example of a very common error in accounts of ancient medicine, "the attribution to drugs of properties that they could not have".
In 1711 Joseph Addison wrote in The Spectator: > The old song of "Chevy-Chase" is the favourite ballad of the common people > of England, and Ben Jonson used to say he had rather have been the author of > it than of all his works. Sir Philip Sidney, in his discourse of Poetry [The > Defence of Poesie], speaks of it in the following words: "I never heard the > old song of Percy and Douglas that I found not my heart more moved than with > a trumpet; and yet it is sung by some blind crowder with no rougher voice > than rude style, which being so evil apparelled in the dust and cobweb of > that uncivil age, what would it work trimmed in the gorgeous eloquence of > Pindar?" For my own part, I am so professed an admirer of this antiquated > song, that I shall give my reader a critique upon it without any further > apology for so doing.The Works of Joseph Addison: Complete in Three Volumes: > Embracing the Whole of the "Spectator," &c;, Harper & Brothers, 1837, p.
To many politicians, such as Winston Churchill, rather than simply highlighting the plight of the poor, Rowntree's study prompted further evidence for the necessity to improve National Efficiency; an issue of great contemporary concern for government, fuelling fears in relation to the perceived decline of the British Empire as a world power, at least in relation to other major powers, namely the growing military might of Germany. In addition to this, Churchill concluded from Rowntree's findings that it was quite evident "that the American labourer is a stronger, larger, healthier, better fed, and consequently more efficient animal than a large proportion of our population, and this is surely a fact which our unbridled Imperialists, who have no thought but to pile up armaments, taxation and territory, should not lose sight of". Furthermore, he wrote: "For my own part, I see little glory in an Empire which can rule the waves and is unable to flush its sewers." Contextually, the study was published in 1901 amidst furore over the ongoing Second Boer War, in which Britain, an Imperialist-power, was seemingly unable to defeat a "far-inferior" Boer force of Calvinistic farmers.

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