Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

19 Sentences With "ill constructed"

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

Of course, the flip is that an ill-constructed impeachment drive will boost it.
Six percent said their most annoying co-workers are the ones who write rude or ill-constructed emails.
I fully appreciate the importance of party loyalty, particularly during the first 100 days of a new presidency, but not when decisions are ill-constructed, and violate the fundamental values that define our country.
For a city currently undergoing radical change itself, the destruction of an ill-constructed infrastructure becomes symbolic in its replacement by something that is an image of its old self, though newer and more expensive.
But whereas Trump is an emotional tweeter, known for unleashing ill-constructed and ill-informed Twitter rants, Wilders has traditionally been cool and collected – though he does block almost anyone who criticizes him (including this author).
Twenty-two houses were destroyed. Most of the houses that were destroyed are ill-constructed houses made of mud, brick and stone.
The first fort needed to be built quickly, and as a result, it was ill-constructed and primitive. The second fort, which still stands today, was built in 1838.
After leaving the News of the World, Regan wrote biographies. He started with his former proprietor Rupert Murdoch, and then followed with two royal biographies. A reviewer found the biography of Murdoch "disgracefully ill-written and ill- constructed".Michael Leapman, "Pared-down style", The Times, 29 January 1976, p. 12.
Philosophy itself is with him classification and consideration of ideas. Logic he regarded as a practical art, and his Esercizio logico has the further title, Art of deriving benefit from ill-constructed books. In ethics Gioja follows Bentham generally, and his large treatise Del merito e delle recompense (1818) is a clear and systematic view of social ethics from the utilitarian principle. In political economy this avidity for facts produced better fruits.
Oxford: Clarendon Press. and the verb σκοπεῖν, look (in)to, examine. The term colonoscopy is however ill-constructed, as this form supposes that the first part of the compound consists of a possible root κολωv- or κολοv-, with the connecting vowel -o, instead of the root κόλ- of κόλον. A compound such as κολωνοειδής, like a hill, (with the additional -on-) is derived from the ancient Greek word κολώνη or κολωνός, hill.
The General Assembly House in the 1870s The quality of the first meeting house for the New Zealand Parliament found little favour. The Daily Southern Cross called it a "wretched, ill- constructed building". The building was drafty and the roof leaked. Henry Sewell, New Zealand's first premier after responsible government had been granted in 1856, described the meeting chamber of the House of Representatives and the building in general as follows: It is believed that the original building measured .
In 1828 the French explorer René Caillié, who travelled disguised as a Muslim, became the first European to visit Djenné. He published a detailed description in his book Travels through Central Africa to Timbuctoo: > The town of Jenné is about two miles and half in circumference; it is > surrounded by a very ill constructed earth wall, about ten feet high, and > fourteen inches thick. There are several gates, but they are all small. The > houses are built of bricks dried in the sun.
The 'mod' approach was cancelled, beginning with the 1979–1980 school year, leaving a school ill-constructed for a more traditional subject-based classroom. In response, many of the large rooms were repartitioned into smaller class-rooms with thin, somewhat flexible walls. These walls did not block noise well, but created a perception of smaller classrooms, and were in use at least until the late 1990s. Many of the teachers who came to Jefferson on its inception to be part of the new curriculum stayed on as it transitioned to a more traditional approach.
"The egyptians advanced to the attack; but the Greeks held their ill-constructed entrenchments with obstinate valour. At last, however, the discipline and numbers of the enemy prevailed; but not before 800 of the Greeks and over 400 egyptians had fallen. Dikaios himself fought like a lion; and the headless trunk of the burly priest was discovered surrounded by piles of slain egyptians." The head and body of Papaflessas were recovered and placed upright on a post; not in dishonour, but as a mark of respect for a valiant foe.
Although the film was made in 1977 it did not air in Sydney until 1979. The Sydney Morning Herald called it "of poor quality... rather than the plot justfying itself, it seems to be an ill-constructed frame that ties together, rather clumsily, less important aspects of the film that don't stand up by themselves." Filmink magazine later wrote: > [The movie has] a very James Bond set up, but the treatment is surprisingly > downbeat and film noir-y – Waters’ character gets beaten up a lot. However, > the climax does involve Waters running through a wildlife safari park and > stumbling into a lion enclosure, so that’s pretty Bond-y.
Chapman wrote much on the anatomy of apes and was fortunate in securing a gorilla (1878) and a chimpanzee (1899) for dissection; practically all the valuable material coming out of the Philadelphia Zoological Garden passed through his hands. He records in a report that his experience as prosector showed "that the principal causes of deaths during the first six months of the existence of the Garden were improper food, badly regulated temperature and ill constructed cages." His articles on the placenta of an elephant and on the placentation of the kangaroo "are his most important contributions to original research" (Nolan). For nearly thirty years he spent his summers at Bar Harbor, Maine, where he devoted himself to its flora and fauna.
In 1494, eleven-year-old Babur became the ruler of Fergana, in present-day Uzbekistan, after Umar Sheikh Mirza died "while tending pigeons in an ill-constructed dovecote that toppled into the ravine below the palace". During this time, two of his uncles from the neighbouring kingdoms, who were hostile to his father, and a group of nobles who wanted his younger brother Jahangir to be the ruler, threatened his succession to the throne. His uncles were relentless in their attempts to dislodge him from this position as well as from many of his other territorial possessions to come. Babur was able to secure his throne mainly because of help from his maternal grandmother, Aisan Daulat Begum, although there was also some luck involved.
However, he goes on to write that 'Dombey and Son is a novel which in its beginning promises more than its progress fulfils' and gives the following reasons why: > Impossible to avoid the reflection that the death of Dombey's son and heir > marks the end of a complete story, that we feel a gap between Chapter XVI > and what comes after (the author speaks of feeling it himself, of his > striving to "transfer the interest to Florence") and that the narrative of > the later part is ill-constructed, often wearisome, sometimes incredible. We > miss Paul, we miss Walter Gay (shadowy young hero though he be); Florence is > too colourless for deep interest, and the second Mrs. Dombey is rather > forced upon us than accepted as a natural figure in the drama. Dickens's > familiar shortcomings are abundantly exemplified.
The Foxtrot was first broadcast on BBC1 on 29 April 1971 to a mixed critical reception. In his review for the Financial Times, T.C. Worsley described the play as "appallingly ill-constructed" and attacked Philip Saville's direction, which he considered "pretentious" and "gimmicky".T.C. Worsley, "Begging to Differ", Financial Times, 5 May 1971 Martin Jackson's rather more positive review for The Daily Express stated that despite the play's "marvellously observed characters", Adrian's "gift for comedy" and Saville's "strikingly photographed" direction, he lamented "the erosion of the simple art of storytelling";Martin Jackson, 'Great talent — but who lost the plot?', The Daily Express, 24 April 1971 this sentiment was shared by several other critics, including Virginia Ironside in The Daily Mail, who asked whether the confidence of Adrian's writing meant that her inability to "grasp the point of the play" made her "thick as a post", or if the author had actually "written a baffling play".

No results under this filter, show 19 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.