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49 Sentences With "impugns"

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

Some critics of the new guidance say it unfairly impugns the motives of employers.
It impugns the reputation of science in general and scientists in that field in particular.
Long after he is gone, his legacy will still be felt, particularly among the nations he impugns.
Lawmakers are not permitted to make "personality-based comments" or anything that impugns another member or official.
Moreover, the article impugns the integrity of those partners, as well as the quality of their science.
"JCN's disregard for fair or truthful advertising impugns the integrity of the judicial election process," the independent group said.
A video posted by the Young Turks on Wednesday, viewed about 441,000 times, impugns the right for the heightened political violence.
I don't think it in any way impugns the Russia investigation, or provides any basis for firing any of the personnel involved.
"  Wray said last week "nothing in the report impugns the integrity of our workforce as a whole, or the FBI as an institution.
"Nothing in this report impugns the integrity of our workforce as a whole or the FBI as an institution," he said last month.
A brief London exhibition, Sudan / South Sudan Literature Week, impugns Western depictions of "war, violence, and unending political unrest" in the East African nations.
There's "collective outrage," which impugns the socialistic tendencies of the aggrieved masses, particularly those about to boycott, or strike, or bring down someone powerful.
Yet no steps have been taken to protect against the damage of official speech that falsely impugns a person's character in the national media.
It impugns the integrity of the African Development Bank, undermines our governance systems, and incorrectly insinuates that we operate under different standards from the World Bank.
"This somewhat impugns Apple's statement that the phone could not get gotten into by somebody else," Guy Kawasaki, a former chief evangelist at Apple, told CNBC Tuesday.
Based on his own record, President Trump will work tirelessly to manipulate each part of this story to promote a narrative that vindicates him and impugns his critics.
"Again today, a brave survivor has come forward with a story that impugns both Brett Kavanaugh's honesty and his character," said Credo Action co-Director Heidi Hess in a statement.
Not only does that give the state's crackdown a veneer of respectability, it also impugns the reputations of the journalists it targets, making them less credible to their readers and viewers.
Prominent Washington journalists, meanwhile, took pains to defend Ms. Sanders — earning their own opprobrium from some liberals who asked why reporters were sticking up for an administration that routinely impugns their work.
However much his wife (played with cool contempt by an impressive Nadia Bowers, who is married to Stoll) hectors him or impugns his manhood, he reasons his way meticulously through each moral question.
It would not be the first time that the Russians have sought to suppress or at least discredit any international finding that impugns the war conduct of the Kremlin or its Syrian ally.
Mr. Wray, in a rare news conference, said he took the report seriously but said that nothing in the report "impugns the integrity" of the F.B.I. "Our brand is doing just fine," he said.
"The witness has used language which impugns the motives of the president and suggests he's disloyal to his country, and those words should be stricken from the record and taken down," Mr. Johnson said.
As a recent experiment demonstrated, the best AI vision system might see a picture of your face and spit out a racial slur, a gender stereotype, or a term that impugns your good character.
What we have, then, is actual evidence that Ohio's voter purge system leads to disenfranchisement, measured against data that its voter lists are inaccurate -- but with nothing to suggest that this fact impugns our elections.
In "Golden Grid" (1966), the linear order of a latticed square with the golden threads of an attached carpet of yarn, vomit out a tumorous appendage whose chaotic presence impugns and is impugned by the grid's stiffness.
In public filings, Goldman has said its compensation agreements allow it to recoup funds from employees who do anything "which impairs, impugns, denigrates, disparages or negatively reflects upon the name, reputation or business interests" of the firm.
" During the hearing set for Monday afternoon, Republicans on the committee are likely to grill current FBI Director Christopher Wray, who insisted Thursday that "nothing in the report impugns the integrity of our workforce as a whole, or the FBI as an institution.
Iron Man sides with the government and becomes obsessed with imprisoning every hero who doesn't submit to the law; Captain America thinks the law impugns his civil liberty to punch bad guys in the face whenever he wants, and goes on the run.
Payments can be clawed back for "cause," including if the former employee engages "in any act or making any statement which impairs, impugns, denigrates, disparages or negatively reflects upon the name, reputation or business interests" of Goldman, according to the bank's regulatory filings.
When Senator Mark Kirk of Illinois, who once described Trump as "too bigoted and racist" to be president, impugns the patriotic bona fides of his opponent, Tammy Duckworth, by invoking her Asian ancestry, it's absurd to pretend that these things came out of nowhere.
It debases our nation when the president praises foreign dictators who murder and torture their people, and impugns the character or patriotism of Americans he treats like enemies on a list that is longer than the darkest dreams of Richard Nixon on his darkest days.
Harlan dissented on the grounds that he "[found] nothing in this record which impugns the good faith of respondents in promulgating the armband regulation."Tinker, 393 U.S. at 526.
Concerns have been raised over less overt interventions in national political party funding made by foreign governments. As it impugns the reputation of nation-states on the world stage, the topic remains controversial and fiercely debated and defended.
Many of these plays were written in answer to a predecessor's version of the same or similar myth. Euripides mainly impugns the myths about the gods and begins his critique with an objection similar to the one previously expressed by Xenocrates: the gods, as traditionally represented, are far too crassly anthropomorphic.
These scruples are enunciated by Dikaiopolis as if he were the author or producer. He subsequently presents the anti-war argument with his head on a chopping block, a humorous reference to the danger that the satirist puts himself in when he impugns the motives of influential men like Cleon.
When Uncle Al is reported missing over the PA, Dwight realizes his mistake. Michael makes several attempts to recapture the limelight, culminating with an overlong toast at the wedding banquet in which he impugns Phyllis' chastity. Outraged, Phyllis' husband Bob Vance (Bobby Ray Shafer) throws him out of the reception hall. Dwight does not let him re- enter, taking satisfaction in being able to eject a real wedding crasher.
Own translation of Frei João Álvares, Ch. 23, p.126 Álvares, who was imprisoned alongside Ferdinand in Fez, impugns Abu Zakariya's personal character mercilessly, a person of 'low' background, who seized power by malice and deception, who brutally broke the Marinid nobility and kept the sultan in thrall, universally feared, but nonetheless disarmed his opponents with the affectation of mildness, piety and courtesy.Frei João Álvares, ch.23, p.126ff.
Laelius appears to have had a strong and well-presented case, and yet: Laelius presented the Greek and Jewish witnesses at the trial, while his co-counsel, the son of Gaius Appuleius Decianus, handled Roman citizens who had been living abroad. One of the accusations brought by Laelius was that Flaccus had tried to bribe Decianus. Cicero impugns Laelius's witnesses by their ethnicity. Although Macrobius later records Flaccus's guilt, the former governor was acquitted.
The French Revolution and the Napoleonic Wars had resulted in turmoil in Great Britain. The British government under Prime Minister William Pitt the Younger had raised taxes to support the war against Napoleon and had cracked down on the opposition and radicalism. Although he had died in 1806, Shelley impugns his legacy: "Pitt lends to each smooth rogue a courtier's smile." Spencer Perceval was the Tory Prime Minister of the United Kingdom in 1811 when the poem was written.
Unferth first appears at line 499: > Hunferð maþelode, Ecglafes bearn, > þe æt fotum sæt frean Scyldinga. > Unferth spoke, Ecglaf's son, > He who sat at the feet of the lord of the Scyldings. The poet states that Unferth is envious of Beowulf's fame (since Beowulf has offered to defeat the monster Grendel, which Unferth has failed to do). At line 506, Unferth impugns Beowulf, bringing up the story of Beowulf's swimming-contest with Breca the son of Beanstan.
When Carver comments about how the idea could be used for warfare, Claire impugns him, which causes him to walk out. When a monsoon strikes fifteen brief minutes later, he is drenched and later hospitalized for pneumonia. While resting up, he notices Claire has spent the whole day by his side. That night, when he needs to use the bathroom, Claire helps him and he is reminded of the times many years ago when he did the same for her.
Brogitarus also became high priest of the Great Mother at Pessinus after the incumbent was removed through a law introduced by Clodius Pulcher. Cicero impugns not only this procedure but also Brogitarus' character, claiming that the priesthood "was sold for a large sum to Brogitarus, a profligate man, and unworthy of any such sacred character, especially as he had desired it not for the purpose of doing honour to the goddess, but only of profaning her temple."M. Tullius Cicero. Pro Sestio 25:56.
At Bellomont Bertha continues to pursue Selden in an attempt to rekindle the flame of an adulterous affair they have been carrying on but with which he has become disenamored. As Book I ends, she invites Lily to accompany her on a Mediterranean cruise to distract her husband so she can carry on an affair with Ned Silverton. Bertha understands, as a married woman, she must keep up appearances and ruthlessly impugns Lily's reputation to mask her own adultery. She spreads false rumors that besmirch Lily's virtue among their friends.
Mr. Mason sends her to live with a couple who torment her until she dies, and Antoinette does not see her again. Part Two alternates between the points of view of Antoinette and her husband during their honeymoon excursion to Granbois, Dominica. Likely catalysts for Antoinette's downfall are the mutual suspicions that develop between the couple, and the machinations of Daniel, who claims he is Antoinette's illegitimate half-brother; he impugns Antoinette's reputation and mental state and demands money to keep quiet. Antoinette's old nurse Christophine openly distrusts the Englishman.
Although Garfield often impugns Odie's intelligence, one strip shows him enjoying classical music on TV with a novel, War and Peace by Leo Tolstoy, nearby after Jon and Garfield leave the house. (According to Davis's comments in the 20th-anniversary book, "I couldn't resist.") Another has him lock the others out of the car on a camping trip, where he enjoys the sandwiches, radio, and chips, while the others just get wet. In others he has been seen setting decoys, completing a sudoku puzzle, completing a crossword puzzle (to Jon's amazement), writing poetry, and while playing as superheroes with Garfield, finding a complete outfit to one-up Garfield's cape.
Today, China proper is a controversial concept in China itself, since the current official paradigm does not contrast the core and the periphery of China. There is no single widely used term corresponding to it in the Mandarin language. The separation of China into a "China proper" dominated by Han Chinese and one or more "Other Chinas" of ethnic minorities impugns on the legitimacy of China's current borders, which is based on the succession of states principle. According to Sinologist Colin Mackerras, foreign governments have generally accepted Chinese claims over its minority areas, because to redefine a country's territory every time it underwent a change of regime would cause endless instability and warfare.
The book was first published in Venice in 1589, and is most notable for criticizing methods of statecraft associated with Niccolò Machiavelli and presenting economics as an aspect of politics. Since the beginning of his treatise, Botero claims his determined opposition to machiavellism. He impugns any notion of the reason of State that would be based on immorality, that is on constant transgression of God's prescriptions. The most significant point of departure from Machiavelli's intellectual 'shadow' concerns Botero's warm embrace and strong support of Christianity and the Roman Catholic Church in particular: In essence, Botero asserts that piety, religion and Roman Catholicism are indispensable parts of any reason of state approach to governing.
In 1628 appeared Brabourne's Discourse upon the Sabbath Day, in which he impugns the received doctrine of the sabbatical character of the Lord's day, and maintains that Saturday is still the sabbath. Robert Cox regarded him as "the founder in England of the sect at first known as Sabbatarians, but now calling themselves seventh-day baptists". In the Dictionary of National Biography, Alexander Gordon contradicted Cox, stating that Brabourne was no baptist, founded no sect, and, true to the original Puritan standpoint, wrote vehemently against all separatists from the national church, and in favour of the supremacy of the civil power in matters ecclesiastical. Brabourne's attention had been drawn to the Sabbath question by a work published at Oxford in 1621 by Thomas Broad, a Gloucestershire clergyman, Three Questions concerning the obligations of the Fourth Commandment.

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