Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

20 Sentences With "hackish"

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

That process will depend on just how hackish and partisan FERC is willing to get.
But a hackish enough Trump Justice appointee could cite them as an excuse for the firing.
Democrats see the attorney general as a hackish Trump loyalist and evaluate the letter through that lens.
Meanwhile, he reportedly worked on a plan with Gordon Sondland, Trump's hackish ambassador to the European Union, to encourage more immigration from Europe.
Sure, some of those people are hackish partisans, willing to look past a little light perjury to get a fifth vote on the bench.
It will be a shame if their name and reputation are tarnished by Pruitt's hackish attempt to prosecute old and long-settled disputes over basic science.
Opinion Columnist At Wednesday's Judiciary Committee hearing on impeachment, the witness called by Republicans, the George Washington University law professor Jonathan Turley, gave a disingenuous, hackish performance.
Millions of people will sit through this thoroughly mediocre movie (directed with basic competence by Gareth Edwards from a surprisingly hackish script by Chris Weitz and Tony Gilroy) and convince themselves that it's perfectly delightful.
Especially because — let's be completely blunt here — Moore's entire record of writings and arguments are hackish, his prominence a testament to cable-television's appetite for partisans with think-tank titles, and those titles a testament to conservatism's decadence.
A more hackish appointee in his position, or someone who was less concerned with his reputation in the legal community, might not have done the same — or might have appointed a Special Counsel who was far less aggressive and experienced than Mueller.
A more hackish appointee in his position, or someone who was less concerned with his reputation in the legal community, might not have done the same — or might have appointed a special counsel who was far less aggressive and experienced than Mueller.
But with the passing of actor Christopher Evan Welch, who played eccentric VC Peter Gregory, the show has shifted some more of the Thiel satire onto Gavin, who considers his closest friends to be his devoted private security guard and a hackish life coach who preaches the gospels of meditation.
But to believe that the aftermath of Lehman's collapse couldn't have been much bleaker with a more feckless and volatile president at the helm and a more hackish cast around him, that the Bush administration's response was the worst of all possible options rather than among the least-bad, requires ignoring a lot of very dark economic history that we were lucky not to actually revisit.
Now, despite what seems to be implied by my friend's choice of reading material, it would be the epitome of hackish quackery (or quackish hackery) for me to suggest that Rodriguez is a narcissist in the clinical sense—this despite centaur-based evidence in support of the proposition (and a good amount of less mythological evidence, too)—because I am not competent to diagnose him, being neither an A-Rod confidant nor a psychologist.
In hacker culture, the exclamation mark is called "bang", "shriek", or, in the British slang known as Commonwealth Hackish, "pling". For example, the password communicated in the spoken phrase "Your password is em- nought-pee-aitch-pling-en-three" is `m0ph!n3`.
The term bogon stems from hacker jargon, where it is defined as the quantum of bogosity, or the property of being bogus. A bogon packet is frequently bogus both in the conventional sense of being forged for illegitimate purposes, and in the hackish sense of being incorrect, absurd, and useless. These unused IP addresses are collectively known as a bogon, a contraction of "bogus logon", or a logon from a place you know no one can actually logon.
The definition is similar to other, non-computer based uses of the term "hack- job". For instance, a professional modification of a production sports car into a racing machine would not be considered a hack-job, but a cobbled together backyard mechanic's result could be. Even though the outcome of a race of the two machines could not be assumed, a quick inspection would instantly reveal the difference in the level of professionalism of the designers. The adjective associated with hacker is "hackish" (see the Jargon file).
Even these engineering failures have been acknowledged to have educational value, and sometimes a follow-up attempt succeeds. One hack on the Great Dome is documented as having finally succeeded on the fourth try, after a complete re-engineering of both the installed artifact and the installation method. Smaller projects that can be completed by an individual student are sometimes accorded the honorific "a great hack" by other students, if they combine technical elegance with a hackish sense of humor. For example, an MIT undergrad transformed an ordinary grocery shopping cart into a high-performance electric vehicle, and had been frequently seen riding around campus in his "LOLrioKart".
According to the hackers' Jargon File, Chainik (East Slavic: чайник, "teakettle", "teapot") is a term that implies both ignorance and a certain amount of willingness to learn (as well as a propensity to cause disaster), but does not necessarily imply as little experience or short exposure time as newbie and is not as derogatory as luser. Both a novice user and someone using a computer system for a long time without any understanding of the internals can be referred to as chainiks. It is a widespread term in Russian hackish, often used in an English context by Russian-speaking hackers especially in Israel (e.g. "Our new colleague is a complete chainik").
Despite its tongue-in-cheek approach, multiple other style guides and similar works have cited The New Hacker's Dictionary as a reference, and even recommended following some of its "hackish" best practices. The Oxford English Dictionary has used the NHD as a source for computer-related neologisms. The Chicago Manual of Style, the leading American academic and book-publishing style guide, beginning with its 15th edition (2003) explicitly defers, for "computer writing", to the quotation punctuation style logical quotation recommended by the essay "Hacker Writing Style" in The New Hacker's Dictionary (and cites NHD for nothing else). The 16th edition (2010, and the current issue ) does likewise.

No results under this filter, show 20 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.