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16 Sentences With "having no use for"

How to use having no use for in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "having no use for" and check conjugation/comparative form for "having no use for". Mastering all the usages of "having no use for" from sentence examples published by news publications.

I want to test Mr. Giuliani's claims of being adamantly against pornography and having no use for adult film stars.
The secret to his majesty is that he was a square citizen, untroubled by ambivalence and having no use for irony.
Having no use for prerogatives, Whitman took in all the world that was and returned himself to it, giving himself continuously away. ♦
I suddenly have the subliminal urge to buy tomato soup, Hungry Hungry Hippos, and a gas can, despite having no use for any of them.[Vimeo]
In 1856 his sister, Agnes Melvin, donated slightly under 7000 Latin books to Marischal College, having no use for the books.
Ball pp.170-171 On the other hand, Ball argues that his charges to Dublin grand juries show him to have been both intelligent and humane.Ball pp.169-70 He amassed a large collection of legal textbooks; after his death his son, Christopher, having no use for them, put them up for sale.
119–120 Both ships survived the war. As part of the Treaty of Versailles, which ended the war, the ships were awarded to the victorious powers as war prizes. Kolberg was allocated to France, where she was commissioned into the French Navy as Colmar. Augsburg was transferred to Japanese control; having no use for her, they sold the ship for scrapping.
After repairs were effected, she joined the harbor defense at Pola. Sebenico was withdrawn from guard duties in 1918 and assigned to the torpedo school. All three ships were seized as war prizes by the victorious Allied powers after the war in 1918, and all three were awarded to Italy in 1920. Having no use for the vessels, the Italians immediately sold all three to ship breakers.
This incites jealous anger in Crash, who is frustrated by Nuke's failure to recognize all the talent he was blessed with. Nuke leaves, Annie ends their relationship, and Crash overcomes his jealousy to leave Nuke with some final words of advice. The Bulls, now having no use for Nuke's mentor, release Crash. Crash then presents himself at Annie's house and the two consummate their attraction with a weekend-long lovemaking session.
Dazzler appears as a member of the X-Men. She is a chain smoker, having no use for a singing voice in this timeline. She is also more skilled with her powers, being able to create hard- light constructs, as well as manipulate both light and sound energies. With this new power-set, Dazzler serves as a one-woman training facility, as well as a messenger via holographic transmissions.
John Stewart was at first hesitant about the relationship, but he eventually came to love Fatality, but it turned out that it had been the impostor at that point. In the final battle of the "Uprising", the impostor revealed itself as Verrat Din, an eons-old Durlan, and destroyed Fatality's Star Sapphire ring, having no use for it after gaining the power of a Daxamite. Though Stewart defeated the powerful threat, he was shaken by having been misled for so long, and having been intimate with a Durlan shape-shifter. Stewart immediately set out to find the real Fatality, and when he did, he was astonished to discover that she had reverted to hating him.
After the station closed in 1976, the Antwerp Historical Society purchased it from the Norfolk and Western Railway; having no use for the station, the railroad asked the society to relocate it, and the depot was moved to its present location, approximately to the west of its original site. Four years later, the depot was listed on the National Register of Historic Places as the Antwerp Norfolk and Western Depot, both because of its distinctive architecture and because of its significance in local history. This designation is unusual, for buildings that have been moved from their original locations are not normally eligible for inclusion on the National Register.National Register Criteria for Evaluation, National Park Service.
When producer Jack Schwartzman became involved, he asked Connery to play Bond; Connery agreed, negotiating a fee of $3 million, ($ million in dollars) casting and script approval, and a percentage of the profits. Subsequent to Connery reprising the role, the script has several references to Bond's advancing years – playing on Connery being 52 at the time of filming – and academic Jeremy Black has pointed out that there are other aspects of age and disillusionment in the film, such as the Shrubland's porter referring to Bond's car ("They don't make them like that anymore."), the new M having no use for the 00 section and Q with his reduced budgets. For the main villain in the film, Maximillian Largo, Connery suggested Klaus Maria Brandauer, the lead of the 1981 Academy Award-winning Hungarian film Mephisto.
In Redcliffe Salaman's book The History and Social Influence of the Potato first published in 1949, it was noted that parentage of King Edward was unknown. It was bred by a gardener in Northumberland who called it 'Fellside Hero' and passed into the hands of a grower in Yorkshire and in turn a potato merchant in Manchester who having no use for it passed it onto John Butler of Scotter in Lincolnshire. He in turn purchased all the seed stocks available and multiplied the variety on 50 acres of land before renaming the variety King Edward on the advice of a potato merchant. The Coronation of King Edward VII in 1902 coincided with the introduction of this variety of potato and its name is believed to originate as a 'commemoration' of this occasion.
Mueller, faced with crisis, sought President Paul von Hindenburg's help, asking for power to rule by decree pursuant to Article 48 -- a power that had been granted in 1923 to Chancellor Gustav Stresemann by President Friedrich Ebert in economic crises and that would soon be granted by Hindenburg to each of Mueller's successors as Chancellor. The haughty, aristocratic and thoroughly anti-democratic Hindenburg, having no use for any Social Democrat, refused, having decided earlier to use the opportunity to oust the SPD from its position of power in the government; he relished the chance to have formed an anti-parliamentary and anti-Marxist government. Kershaw pp. 323-324. The result was, in accordance with Hindenburg's plan, the appointment of Heinrich Brüning, a Centrist, as Chancellor with no SPD members in his cabinet.
He was a tall, erect, distinguished- > looking man, who, with his white hair, blue eyes, ruddy complexion, white > mustache, and in his manner and dress, conveyed the impression that he might > have come from the English landed aristocracy. He was perfectly cordial, but > gave us clearly to understand that our rather similar views on such matters > as foreign policy and the administration in Washington were no basis for > familiarity. The New York Times wrote: > He did consider himself an aristocrat, and his imposing stature-- tall, with > a muscular body weighing over , his erect soldierly bearing, his reserved > manner and his distinguished appearance--made it easy for him to play that > role. But if he was one, he was an aristocrat, according to his friends, in > the best sense of the word, despising the idle rich and having no use for > parasites, dilettantes or mere pleasure-seekers, whose company, clubs and > amusements he avoided.

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