How to use gives a leg up in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "gives a leg up" and check conjugation/comparative form for "gives a leg up". Mastering all the usages of "gives a leg up" from sentence examples published by news publications.
The treatment of Maoris, some say, gives a leg-up to other minorities too.
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"A service like Scan4You gives a leg up for these criminals," Trend Micro's chief cybersecurity officer Ed Cabrera told Wired.
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In many countries, the state gives a leg-up to members of certain groups because they have suffered discrimination in the past or continue to endure it today.
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Trump is specially pushing to end family-based immigration, which conservatives call "chain migration," and which gives a leg up to family members of people already in the United States.
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Because of the state's size, television is among the best mediums to connect with voters, and it can cost millions to even make a dent (a dynamic that gives a leg up to better-funded candidates, or wealthier ones, like former New York City Mayor Mike Bloomberg).
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"At a time when Chinese stainless steel producers are engaged in unfair trade practices and market uncertainty exists, this treaty victory gives a leg up to the American workers who produce quality stainless slabs in Ghent, Kentucky," North American Stainless CEO Cristobal Fuentes said in a statement Tuesday evening.
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There are differing views about how important it is to have a family member or relative who also attended a college. It is clear that it is a factor; one report suggested that having a family member who is an alumnus gives "a leg up" for applicants. One report suggested that siblings do not count as legacies. In some cases, a parent's attendance at a related graduate school counts as a legacy, but most colleges do not count this.
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