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16 Sentences With "invidiously"

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

My objection is to the visa lottery, not what's invidiously called "chain" migration.
It may also take into account mapmaking ruled invidiously partisan by lower-court judges in North Carolina and Pennsylvania, both in Republican hands.
On the surface, they have it made — similar to the invidiously idealized young couple of Baumbach's "While We're Young," in which Driver co-starred.
Hillary Clinton, by contrast, tried to damage Trump by invidiously comparing him to "real billionaire" Warren Buffett, making the case that Trump wasn't really as rich as he said he was—that he was a liar, a tax cheat, and a bad businessman.
It would have to propose a new set of regulations to register and track people from particular countries during their time in the US. And it would have to argue, as the Bush administration did, that it wasn't using Muslim-majority countries as a proxy to "invidiously discriminate" against Muslims — something it might struggle to persuasively do.
A separate question points out that the American Bar Association's commentary to its Code of Judicial Conduct states that it is "inappropriate for a judge to hold membership in any organization that invidiously discriminates on the basis of race sex, religion or national origin" and asks if any organizations he is affiliated with currently or formerly did so.
It will have to propose a new set of regulations to register and track people from particular countries during their time in the US. And it will have to argue, as the Bush administration did, that it isn't using Muslim-majority countries as a proxy to "invidiously discriminate" against Muslims — something it might struggle to persuasively do.
That conversion destroyed the family's happiness. Her husband was the mayor of the city during the Fire of Moscow, and his wife, being a zealous Catholic, was to be invidiously portrayed as an enthroned mistress. In 1814, Rostopchin resigned as mayor, and the couple moved to Germany and then to France. After their return to Moscow, in 1824, their 18-year-old daughter, Yelizaveta, Rostopchin's favourite, died in early March the next year.
Rajeev vows to see that such a thing never happens. In Singapore, responding to Vijayakanth's overtures, Nadhiya first tries to knock him dead with her Datsun, and then tries to drown him with her motorboat daredevilry, but ultimately undergoes a change of heart and is eating out of his hands. But misunderstandings again cloud the relationship, and when it is cleared Rajeev is again at his insidious tricks invidiously playing up another suitor (Suresh).
As such, the Court conducted an analysis under the Fourteenth Amendment. According to the Court, the principal purpose of the Fourteenth Amendment was to prohibit the States from invidiously discriminating on the basis of race. This purpose, combined with the Fourteenth Amendment's Due Process Clause, properly ensures the “essential demands of fairness.” Turning to the particulars of Ham's case, the Court noted that voir dire, although subject to the Fourteenth Amendment, is governed by the discretion of the trial court.
Historian S. P. Foster says that Gibbon: :blamed the otherworldly preoccupations of Christianity for the decline of the Roman empire, heaped scorn and abuse on the church, and sneered at the entirety of monasticism as a dreary, superstition-ridden enterprise. The Decline and Fall compares Christianity invidiously with both the pagan religions of Rome and the religion of Islam. Volume I was originally published in sections, as was common for large works at the time. The first two were well received and widely praised.
The Court held that the lower court's determination was not clearly erroneous. The Court held that there was sufficient evidence to support a finding that the African-American citizens had been invidiously excluded from the political process by the county's system of elections. The Court found that the sheer geographic size of the county made it difficult for the African-American citizens to get to polling places or to campaign for office. The Court held that the elections system submerged the will of the African-American citizens and thus denied their access to the system.
State laws enacted pursuant to Art. II, § 1, of the Constitution to regulate the selection of electors must meet the requirements of the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. pp. 28–29. 3\. Ohio's restrictive election laws taken as a whole are invidiously discriminatory and violate the Equal Protection Clause because they give the two old, established parties a decided advantage over new parties. pp. 30–34. (a) The state laws here involved heavily burden the right of individuals to associate for the advancement of political beliefs and the right of qualified voters to cast their votes effectively. pp. 30–31.
Homer, Dante and Milton Shakespeare and > Sophocles, Aristophanes and Moliere, Thucydides, Tacitus, and Gibbon, Swift > and Scott, these every lover of letters will desire to possess in the > original languages or in translations. The list of such classics is short > indeed, and when we go beyond it, the tastes of men begin to differ very > widely. Lang’s book is at both an investigation of the “gentle-madness” of book collecting and a staunch defense of its practice. Lang writes: > This apology must be followed by a brief defence of the taste and passion of > book-collecting, and of the class of men known invidiously as bookworms and > bookhunters.
On direct appeal, the United States Supreme Court reversed. The per curiam opinion was joined by Brennan, White, Marshall, Powell, and Stevens. The per curiam Court held that old-age benefit payments were not constitutionally immunized against alterations of the kind at issue in the case and that Congress was authorized to replace one constitutional computation formula with another and to make the new formula prospective only. The former version of the challenged statute operated directly to compensate women for past economic discrimination and was deliberately enacted to compensate women for the particular economic disabilities they suffered. The subsequent amendment of § 415 was not a Congressional admission that its previous policy was invidiously discriminatory.
Employment practices that do not directly discriminate against a protected category may still be illegal if they produce a disparate impact on members of a protected group. Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 prohibits employment practices that have a discriminatory impact, unless they are related to job performance. > The Act requires the elimination of artificial, arbitrary, and unnecessary > barriers to employment that operate invidiously to discriminate on the basis > of race, and, if, as here, an employment practice that operates to exclude > Negroes cannot be shown to be related to job performance, it is prohibited, > notwithstanding the employer's lack of discriminatory intent. Height and weight requirements have been identified by the EEOC as having a disparate impact on national origin minorities.

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