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"ingenuously" Definitions
  1. in an honest and willing way that shows you are willing to trust people

18 Sentences With "ingenuously"

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

South Korea's president is impeached; great jobs news for which Donald Trump cannot in a million years ingenuously take credit.
Performed so ingenuously, one is naturally ready to believe that country songs in the '70s were just as spaciously textured and brightly chipper.
Balty is a recognizable type: the bumbling, shiftless young man with neither talent nor accomplishments who ingenuously blurts out things he shouldn't say yet manages via wile and luck to survive.
When I wandered ingenuously onto the scene, Donald Britton was a young star, or so I considered him, just a few years older than me (actually a bit more than a few, it turns out — he always looked so boyish) yet somehow wiser.
In person, these works, done in acrylic, Sumi ink, and collage on enormous sheets of paper, tread a fine line between the purposive and the accidental, the exquisite and the rough-hewn — an uneasy mix of lustrous surfaces, refined lines, carved-up supports, and ingenuously awkward brushstrokes.
After Arthur leaves, Ezra ingenuously remarks how much Arthur looks and acts like the long-gone Billy, and Lucy moves to comfort him.
If you ask me, he was often fairly on the mark, but he was not one to waste time ingenuously explaining his agenda, unless it was going to further it.
The college hosts a seaward firing range, known as Gopalpur seaward firing ranges with a range about 75 km, to give the personnel practical knowledge about the air defence systems and missile firing. This range can be used for all types of Indian Army air defence systems. The ingenuously developed pilot-less target aircraft: DRDO Lakshya, is used as the target drone.
A young boy or young man or woman describes masters or "betters" with ingenuously presented realistic details. But Lazarillo speaks of "the blind man," "the squire," "the pardoner," presenting these characters as types. Significantly, the only named characters are Lazarillo and his family: his mother Antoña Pérez, his father Tomé Gonzáles, and his stepfather El Zayde. The surname de Tormes comes from the river Tormes.
The Supreme Court, in its only opinion to be signed by all nine justices, held that state governments had no power to nullify the Brown decision. The Supreme Court held that the Brown decision and its implementation "can neither be nullified openly and directly by state legislators or state executive or judicial officers nor nullified indirectly by them through evasive schemes for segregation whether attempted 'ingeniously or ingenuously'."Cooper, 358 U.S. at 17. Thus, Cooper v.
Fleeing the ship at Yucatan, she makes her way to > the Canal Zone, hoping to find passage back to her native land. Her > fantastic and pitiful story meets lifted eyebrows everywhere. To support > herself she becomes a singer in a night club which is frequented by > mysterious and sinister gentlemen of foreign tongue. Ingenuously she becomes > involved with several international plotters, who promise to obtain homeward > passage for her in return for certain information about the movements of the > American fleet.
In other poems, Cavalcanti tends to stifle poetic imagery under a dead weight of philosophy. On the other hand, in his Ballate, he pours himself out ingenuously, but with a consciousness of his art. The greatest of these is considered to be the ballata composed by Cavalcanti when he was banished from Florence with the party of the Bianchi in 1300, and took refuge at Sarzana. The third poet among the followers of the new school was Cino da Pistoia, of the family of the Sinibuldi.
Though the plot is clearly fantastical, Powys ingenuously blended real places and people into the novel and Hodgkinson successfully sued for libel on the basis that the person, the character and the activities of the capitalist Philip Crow were based on him. The libel case had a direct effect on Powys's career and output: subsequent editions of A Glastonbury Romance carried disclaimers reinforcing its status as fiction, and Powys's next novel Weymouth Sands was revised and published under a different name in the UK to avoid a repetition of the lawsuit from citizens of Weymouth.
The theme of the project was From Here and each artist's contribution was their response to that theme. They were recorded live, with two stereo mics and no overdubs. Artists involved included Martin Carthy, Eliza Carthy, John Kirkpatrick, Jon Boden and Spiro (band). Caught By The River Caught By The River said: "The idea behind this bountiful record... is so ingenuously ambitious and artfully executed, it feels both like the beginning of a major project of contemporary musicology and plays like a dream open-mic session at the perfect folk club".
Years later Thornton helped launch a controversy over "Hound Dog", claiming to have written it. However, when questioned further on the matter, Thornton explained that, while the song had been composed by Leiber and Stoller, she had transformed it: "They gave me the words, but I changed it around and did it my way". In his book Race, Rock, and Elvis, Michael T. Bertrand says that Thornton's explanation "ingenuously stresses artist interpretation as the sole yardstick with which to measure authenticity".Michael T. Bertrand, Race, Rock, and Elvis (University of Illinois Press, 2005) p. 190.
Both an author, typographer, or bookbinder, Castaing who by profession was collector of the taille in his hometown, is the author of several plays printed by himself in his print shop. This collection, whose plays have been described as "as bad as misprinted", has no other merit than its rarity. The author says ingenuously in his preface that by printing 30 copies of his theater, "he had no other purpose than to distract himself, without the annoyance to bother over thirty people". According to the same preface, it seems that this theater was to consist of four volumes, unless one counts for the fourth volume la Femme curieuse, printed in 1793, and which is part of Volume III.
Historian John Tipple has examined the writings of the 50 most influential analysts who used the robber baron model in the 1865–1914 period. He argues: > The originators of the Robber Baron concept were not the injured, the poor, > the faddists, the jealous, or a dispossessed elite, but rather a frustrated > group of observers led at last by protracted years of harsh depression to > believe that the American dream of abundant prosperity for all was a > hopeless myth. ... Thus the creation of the Robber Baron stereotype seems to > have been the product of an impulsive popular attempt to explain the shift > in the structure of American society in terms of the obvious. Rather than > make the effort to understand the intricate processes of change, most > critics appeared to slip into the easy vulgarizations of the "devil-view" of > history which ingenuously assumes that all human misfortunes can be traced > to the machinations of an easily located set of villains—in this case, the > big businessmen of America.
But I think it is > useful and will be quite necessary in our first convention, [or Synod] to > institute a diligent inquiry from the Scriptures, whether it is not possible > for some individuals through negligence to desert the commencement of their > existence in Christ, to cleave again to the present evil world, to decline > from the sound doctrine which was once delivered to them, to lose a good > conscience, and to cause Divine grace to be ineffectual. Though I here > openly and ingenuously affirm, I never taught that a true believer can, > either totally or finally fall away from the faith, and perish; yet I will > not conceal, that there are passages of scripture which seem to me to wear > this aspect; and those answers to them which I have been permitted to see, > are not of such a kind as to approve themselves on all points to my > understanding. On the other hand, certain passages are produced for the > contrary doctrine [of unconditional perseverance] which are worthy of much > consideration.Works of Arminius, 2:219–220.

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