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27 Sentences With "have the temerity"

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

People smile, and some even have the temerity to chuckle.
I will never have the temerity to go up against the old gods again.
Who will have the temerity to make these wars the subject of bracing comedy?
How can anyone have the temerity to try to fall in love in a time like this?
Who or what would have the temerity to tell him to stop if Death itself couldn't do it?
When you have the temerity to seek perfection in a game that never grants it, nothing should come as a surprise.
As at Landry, the officials said, it is often the adults, not the young people, who have the temerity to manipulate the application process.
Until then, it's welcome to see a primetime TV show have the temerity to acknowledge that there's still room for adventure in one's demographically undesirable years.
"There's not much love coming from the 'yes' quarters towards people who have the temerity to disagree," he said, referring to their "love is love" motto.
The reclamation of an important piece of culture and history would obviously be wasted on that little, tiny island that they have the temerity to call home.
Who but a precocious 23-year-old would have the temerity to confront one of the twentieth century's densest and wildest novels, impenetrable to many readers and seemingly an unfilmable text?
This appears to be Trump's sincere view: Any person or institution that would have the temerity to criticize him on any grounds is corrupt and incompetent and thus not worth listening to on any subject.
One senior aide to a Senate Republican put it this way: If the most respected law enforcement official of his generation did not have the temerity to accuse Mr. Trump of obstructing justice, why should they?
In 2017 when information lives in the palm of our hands, it's almost incredulous that the speechwriter would have the temerity, the lack of diligence, or the confluence of the two sins to make such a mistake.
We have all been witness to attacks on innocent people – shamed and humiliated – just because they have the temerity to express a view or present an image or persona that others don't like or don't agree with.
My phone no longer clings to its charging cable like it's a hospital drip, and the battery itself has stopped taking surprise nosedives from 40 percent charge down to zero when I have the temerity to go outside in the cold.
And then we white readers have the temerity to ask why readers of color are angry and disappointed when they're handed another tale about dark savages or another magical white girl who saves the world thanks to the sacrifice of her brown sidekick.
With Democrats feeling this mercurial, no one should have the temerity to project what will happen in the South Carolina primary on February 29 or in the 14 states that head to the polls in the Super Tuesday contests on March 3.
The floodgates to silliness opened when people figured out that the online interface allows them to reach out and ask for things they might not have the temerity to ask for in person, said Amir Pasic, dean of Indiana University's Lilly Family School of Philanthropy.
But it's sort of interesting, now that you mention oil pricing going down, how does this board and Vicki have the temerity to risk the company, literally risk the dividends for certain, and even end up like this when they don't have a balance sheet to back it up.
For those who think this smacks of appeasement, consider that the U.S. clearly has a deterrent capability that could virtually eliminate the North Korean regime should North Korea ever have the temerity to actually use a nuclear weapon in any conflict with a neighbor or the U.S. itself.
"It is bad enough that ISPs lobbied to repeal the FCC's robust broadband privacy rules; they now have the temerity to pretend that the near-total vacuum of privacy protections for ISP customers at the federal level constitutes some kind of 'uniform' federal approach to privacy with which Maine's law could conflict," Reid said.
"They suffer twice — first at the hand of cops who abuse them and then by a city law department that puts them through the wringer if they have the temerity to sue over it," said Joel Berger, a lawyer who used to work for the city defending cops in civil cases and now works as a civil rights lawyer.
In the space of a few hours, Trump announced that he really would be building the wall, he really would be banning Muslims from entering the country (if they have the temerity to be from one of the countries that America is bombing, that is), he really would open an investigation into election fraud based on an anecdote about people who looked a bit dark-skinned being allowed to go to the polls when an impeccably white German citizen wasn't.
Burke elaborated, saying "Because we were picking fifth in 2012, and he was outraged we would have the temerity to interview him. Because he was going to go first overall." Burke added that during the draft interview, a fistfight almost developed between Yakupov and John Lilley, Toronto's chief amateur scout.
To them > genocide is an appropriate answer to any group of black people who have the > temerity to attempt to evolve their own social system. > When the Nigerians violated our basic human rights and liberties, we > decided reluctantly but bravely to found our own state, to exercise our > inalienable right to self-determination as our only remaining hope for > survival as a people. Yet, because we are black, we are denied by the white > powers the exercise of this right which they themselves have proclaimed > inalienable. In our struggle we have learnt that the right of self- > determination is inalienable, but only to the white man.
The growing tension between Britain and Spain came to a head in 1731 during an incident known as Jenkins' Ear, when a British merchant captain was captured for illegal trading off the coast of Cuba by a Spanish privateer, and in punishment for his alleged breach of the strict laws forbidding foreign commerce with Spanish colonies, he had an ear cut off.Rodger. Command of the Ocean. p.235 The incident shocked Britain not so much because of its brutality but because many saw it as an outrage that Spain should have the temerity to harm a British subject simply for trading, which many held to be a legitimate occupation.Simms p.248 In 1738, Jenkins appeared in parliament to testify about his treatment.

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