Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

22 Sentences With "give the impression to"

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

All this outgoing will create a level of strife inside the company and give the impression to the outside of chaos.
I don't want to give the impression to the audience that the party is going to take the story in a dramatic direction.
Mr. Kim's purpose was to give the impression to the Americans that he was entering the meetings with China at his back, they said.
Failure to do so "would give the impression to the European people that we are weak," Le Maire told reporters European metals industry conference.
"  "Folks, now was I wrong a few weeks ago to somehow give the impression to people that I was praising those men who I successfully opposed time and again?
But by so often putting his words under a microscope, journalists may give the impression to Mr. Trump's supporters and even some undecided voters that they are out to get him.
While Beijing likes to give the impression to the outside world that the legal system is being reformed, there is no respect for the legal process when it comes to government critics.
The creation of special zones for minorities can give the impression to majority groups that the international community plays favorites by selectively assisting some while ignoring the plight of others, creating resentment.
But, if the attacks become personal and unfairly give the impression to jurors that prosecutors are trying to flout the rules or violate their duty to fairly present evidence, then justice is not done.
In one great example, he borrowed a big yacht from a friend of his father's and changed some of the pictures to his own family to give the impression to friends at Harrow visiting during the summer that it was the Low family yacht.
A utility building and gatehouse was re- Christened Badger Hall and survives to this day:St. Giles Church, Badger: a Brief Guide even this is sufficiently grand to give the impression to visitors that the original Hall still exists. However, the 1950s marked a turning point. With the increasing availability of motor cars, villages like Badger have become much more attractive places to live.
Starting from the entrance in the west the girders give the impression to taper towards the east. The ogival form of the girders grants the interior a kind of Gothic, very modern though, appeal. This form evoked certain mysticism, which is unusual for the rather sober Protestant church architecture of those years. This and the modern as well as voluminous appearance earned the church the nickname Powerhouse of God ().
The second, alternate cover of The Monster Bed. There are two major morals in The Monster Bed that can both give children two lessons. One is fear of the opposite race, such as monsters' fear of children and children's fear of monsters. The book was meant to give the impression to children that their fear was as scared of them as they were of their fear, providing comfort for the small children.
Instead of proving stereotypes true, Filipino men wanted to appeal to the masculinity portrayed by Hollywood stars in the 1920s and 1930s. Having multiple girlfriends and mistresses was common and even encouraged among these men. As mentioned earlier, Filipinos sent photographs of themselves donning suits to give the impression to their families back home that they were successful. These photographs encouraged other Filipino men to come to the United States in order to fulfill the “American Dream”.
Riess, p. 153.Schönzeler, p. 75. The same situation occurred during another concert later on, when a photographer had been mobilized by the Nazis for the occasion: the photo of the famous handshake between Furtwängler and Hitler was distributed everywhere by Goebbels. Goebbels had obtained what he desired: to keep Furtwängler in Germany and to give the impression to those who were not well informed (especially outside the country) that Furtwängler was now a supporter of the regime.
Additionally, the Belgian health insurance organization were accused of putting themselves above the law as commercial entities by reimbursing alternative treatments. According to SKEPP, by reimbursing alternative treatments, health insurance organizations will give the impression to the Belgian public that these are effective medications or treatments. In 2014, the Belgian court of appeal in Brussels proved SKEPP right against the appeal of the Dutch physician Robert Görter, who was called a quack by the organization in 2004.
He continued to help care for the children for years, and became something of a celebrity in the onslaught of media attention. In response to public interest, a special nursery was built for the children where the curious members of the public viewed them. There was no charge to this, so it did not give the impression to the viewers they were exploiting the children. This was generally approved of at the time, but later generated criticism for the sideshow atmosphere it produced.
Detail from an 18th-century map annotated to show the English expedition's movements after the raid On the morning of the third day, Church gave the orders to destroy the dykes and, in turn, all of the crops. Seven dykes were broken, destroying most of the harvest and ruining over 200 hogsheads of stored wheat. To give the impression to the Acadians and Mi'kmaq that his forces were leaving, Church had his soldiers burn the fortifications they had built the day before. He also had them load themselves and the whale boats back onto their transport vessels.
Esperantists were killed during the Holocaust, with Zamenhof's family in particular singled out to be killed. The efforts of a minority of German Esperantists to expel their Jewish colleagues and overtly align themselves with the Reich were futile, and Esperanto was legally forbidden in 1935. Esperantists in German concentration camps did, however, teach Esperanto to fellow prisoners, telling guards they were teaching Italian, the language of one of Germany's Axis allies. In Imperial Japan, the left wing of the Japanese Esperanto movement was forbidden, but its leaders were careful enough not to give the impression to the government that the Esperantists were socialist revolutionaries, which proved a successful strategy.
It was also decided that Pujol should avoid giving the times of impacts, and should mostly report on those which occurred in the north west of London, to give the impression to the Germans that they were overshooting the target area. While Pujol downplayed the extent of V-1 damage, trouble came from Ostro, an agent in Lisbon who pretended to have agents reporting from London. He told the Germans that London had been devastated and had been mostly evacuated as a result of enormous casualties. The Germans could not perform aerial reconnaissance of London, and believed his damage reports in preference to Pujol's.
Each episode during the series was pre-recorded in the preceding week, and shown in an 'as live' format. The National Lottery draw - which usually took place before the final round of the game - and the TV Home Play segments were broadcast in live inserts to again give the impression to the viewers that the entire episode was live. The episodes on 27 June and 4 July were broadcast in an earlier timeslot due to the BBC's coverage of the 1998 FIFA World Cup, which resulted in the National Lottery draw not actually happening within these episodes as tickets were still being sold by retailers at the time of broadcast. Consequently, the National Lottery draw was instead shown during half-time of the matches broadcast on those dates.
In late 1961, the Viet Cong began assuming a predominant presence, initially seizing the provincial capital of Phuoc Vinh. Kennedy increased the number of military advisers and special forces in the area, from 11,000 in 1962 to 16,000 by late 1963, but he was reluctant to order a full-scale deployment of troops. However, Kennedy, who was wary about the region's successful war of independence against France, was also eager to not give the impression to the Vietnamese people that the United States was acting as the region's new colonizer, even stating in his journal at one point that the United States was “more and more becoming colonists in the minds of the people.” A year and three months later on March 8, 1965, his successor, President Lyndon Johnson, committed the first combat troops to Vietnam and greatly escalated U.S. involvement, with forces reaching 184,000 that year and 536,000 in 1968.

No results under this filter, show 22 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.