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"irrelevancy" Definitions
  1. irrelevance.

89 Sentences With "irrelevancy"

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

At that time, Glaad was teetering on insolvency and irrelevancy.
The greatest danger facing mainstream journalists in this country is irrelevancy.
None of this leaves India as an irrelevancy for the world's biggest companies.
All have two things in common now: complete irrelevancy and reputations in tatters.
You have a very specific mission moving forward: improve, or face increasing cultural irrelevancy.
It put itself on the path to institutional irrelevancy, and it has finally arrived.
Today's progressives are not destroying the Democratic Party, they're saving the party from irrelevancy.
But if Mr. Guaidó does not make a decision — and soon — he risks irrelevancy.
But, the Democratic Party risks the same irrelevancy as long as it pockets corporate dollars.
Now, some Republicans in the state wonder if their party is about to sink further into irrelevancy.
For the past four years, he has been a pathetic irrelevancy in the Johnson war White House.
If you're older than that, listen to Wavves with me instead, and we can revel in our irrelevancy.
It's debatable whether the Pirates of the Caribbean films have faded into the realm of irrelevancy or not.
The GMA effectively lobbied its way to irrelevancy because consumers had already found a better way to eat.
Generally, though, this appears to be another safe phone from a manufacturer that's well on its way to irrelevancy.
This is brass-knuckled political power that at a minimum pushes the press another circulation drop closer to irrelevancy.
The African Methodist Episcopal Church's Council of Bishops called on NAACP leaders to "restructure the organization" to avoid irrelevancy.
And its selectively conservative policies on sexuality, particularly of the female variety, will only guarantee it more cultural irrelevancy.
Yet for reasons that are difficult to comprehend, the Democrats in Congress have firmly embraced a trajectory of irrelevancy.
With its irrelevancy to the government, Guantanamo has also largely disappeared from the attention of the public and press.
Don't fall into this growth trap — doing so often leads to companies moving so slowly that they fall into irrelevancy.
He slid into political irrelevancy, as FUNCINPEC became co-opted by Hun Sen, a much savvier and tougher politician than Ranariddh.
Members of the opposition Labour Party are wondering if their leader, Jeremy Corbyn, will save them or plunge the party into irrelevancy.
It's a stunning turn of events for Bannon, who once harbored ambitious plans for 85033 but has now been consigned to political irrelevancy.
" Senator Jeff Flake, a retiring Republican from Arizona, said the party is "writing ourselves into irrelevancy if we don't appeal to a broader electorate.
You wouldn't know that from some of the reports in the American entertainment media, though, which has been announcing the festival's irrelevancy for years.
"Gun sales is the fastest declining big category in the US and, just based on sales, is reaching a point of retail irrelevancy," Flickinger said.
The primary reason New Jersey's proud high school football tradition is plunging toward irrelevancy is the growing concern about head injuries, many coaches and administrators said.
But as the world outside of Drake's own changes and shifts (and as he refuses to engage with it), is there a chance he's teetering toward irrelevancy?
It was, however, deeply unpopular, a fact that cut into both WWE's coffers and its willingness to try new things for fear of slipping further into irrelevancy.
As the fervor over Pokémon GO lulls, Benzi plans to update the network once more in January 2017—this time, to chart the app's spiral into irrelevancy.
"Rotten Tomatoes critic score (Season 3): 81%What critics said: "It can be a fun diversion, sweet in its willful irrelevancy and alluring in its jovial rhythms.
That prospect should be sufficiently horrifying for senators who are not wholly in the pocket of the president to resist the temptation to reform themselves into irrelevancy.
"Rotten Tomatoes critic score (Season 3): 82%What critics said: "It can be a fun diversion, sweet in its willful irrelevancy and alluring in its jovial rhythms.
There was a sense of American irrelevancy under Trump, that the United States was unlikely to contribute to any new global initiative aimed at tackling major problems.
The thing is, there's been this misconception that Valve or Samsung or Microsoft or Sony are Oculus's competitors, when the fact is that their main competitor is irrelevancy.
By all accounts, Guantanamo has become, to the Trump administration, a virtual irrelevancy -- useful for rhetorical flourishes whenever new terrorism suspects are arrested, but not worth any actual policy attention.
In some ways, this declaration of irrelevancy seemed to have a larger impact than other celebrities have had when deciding to take their social media accounts private or delete them altogether.
"I really love that there are advocates out there in the world being very vocal about the fact that aging is not a slow march to irrelevancy, death and decay," says Swift.
The company held onto its past too long, renamed itself after its flagship product, and you know the rest, pretty much drove itself into irrelevancy by fighting Android and clearly defined market data.
If dim sum trolleys continue their descent into irrelevancy with modern British diners, yum cha may soon be just a tasty, hollowed-out har gau pastry shell of what it once truly was.
It sounds like a joke: That Yahoo would create an app in 2016 — amid an ever accelerating tailspin toward irrelevancy — that essentially amounts to a repackaged version of Yahoo Answers is certainly laughable.
Says the star: "I really love that there are advocates out there in the world being very vocal about the fact that aging is not a slow march to irrelevancy, death and decay."
Rather, Facebook's efforts to play the news game reveal the company to be much like the news outlets it is rapidly driving toward irrelevancy: a select group of professionals with vaguely center-left sensibilities.
Mets 5, Diamondbacks 3 PHOENIX — Before Sunday's game against the Arizona Diamondbacks, the Mets had lost 12 of their previous 2003 games, continuing their slide toward irrelevancy in a season that once seemed fairly promising.
In either scenario, former Vice President Joe Biden would not be included -- and the risk that he descends into irrelevancy is quite real unless he can pull off strong victories in Nevada and South Carolina.
The two have known each other for decades, and during recent congressional travels, they concluded it was essential to restore the appropriations process if there was any hope of rescuing the Senate from gridlock and legislative irrelevancy.
There were times of marginalisation, even irrelevancy, like that which followed Robert Peel's decision to repeal the Corn Laws in 1846 and the one that was ushered in by the victory of Tony Blair's New Labour in 1997.
The New Orleans Pelicans are coming off a 23-point home loss to the worst team in the Eastern Conference and now have to face the best in the East while struggling to keep their season from falling into irrelevancy.
During a talk about gun safety after Warren's speech, Minister Kirsten John Foy drew applause when he asked people to look away from the scene in Washington, where "a moron tweets every hour about some irrelevancy," and refocus on states, cities and smaller communities.
Weinstein was an important figure in the film industry, to be sure, but his company was increasingly seen as on the edge of irrelevancy and even insolvency in the months leading up to the bombshell reports in the New York Times and New Yorker that ultimately ended his career.
" And this sentence, about college in the 1950s: "I suppose I am talking about just that: the ambiguity of belonging to a generation distrustful of political highs, the historical irrelevancy of growing up convinced that the heart of darkness lay not in some error of social organization but in man's own blood.
It is both my belief and continued hope that President Trump's journey to irrelevancy on the world stage advances by the tweet, continuing to take further root so that we will soon see the day when it will not only be reasonable for world leaders to ignore Trump but it will be the only rational thing for them to do.
The UN General Assembly has also issued many resolutions to combat TOC; however, most have been ineffective because of their vagueness and irrelevancy.
Some analysts projected that this ability would increase Apple's penetration into the enterprise market, others said it was "game over" and was only a sign of the Mac platform's irrelevancy.
They also jointly requested Chief Executive Carrie Lam to dismiss Junius Ho from the University Council. The University issued a statement afterwards stating the irrelevancy between the stance of University and the actions of Ho. The statement also highlighted their respect for freedom of speech.
In addition, most of these groups became extremely dependent on the Syrian government financially and for military supplies. It may be that the PFLP and DFLP's neutrality in the War of the Camps saved them from the mediocre fate that led to the irrelevancy held by the PFLP-General Command to this day.
In early 2001, the ULA held a press conference at CBGBs in New York City which was attended by George Plimpton, staffers at The Paris Review, and staffers of Open City magazine. The ULA debated with those who attended about what they perceive to be the irrelevancy and lack of integrity of the current realm of corporate/academia- sponsored literature.
He praised lead actors Theo James and Shailene Woodley's performances, judging that they "add personality and physicality to the limp script they're acting out". Scott Mendelson of Forbes magazine echoed these sentiments, arguing that despite Woodley's excellent performance, "the generic story reduced a large portion of the mythology to irrelevancy". Mendelson believed that the film would please the novel's fanbase.
Positive search tends to view irrelevancy as undesirable. Having a system actively identify and pursue irrelevant content for the purpose of elimination from a user experience may prove a highly powerful mechanism. It follows that positive and negative search are not mutually exclusive and that a more powerful search may result from the combination of selection and elimination as tools to empower user experience in negative searches.
This sends the message that they aren't worth the attention. The gesture is used in many cases, most typically when a person is talking and is interrupted by another individual. In this case, a sharp cut-eye is given in order to show the level of anger and disrespect felt by the user. In addition, it shows the perceived irrelevancy of the individual who interrupted.
In these elections PiS lost most of its moderate electorate but attracted voters from its former coalition members and then turned to nationalism and populism. As a result LPR and SRP lost all their seats and descended into political irrelevancy. Several leading members, including sitting president Lech Kaczyński, died in a plane crash in 2010. During its founding the party was dominated by the Kaczyńskis' conservative and law and order agenda.
The dividend irrelevancy in this model exists because shareholders are indifferent between paying out dividends and investing retained earnings in new opportunities. The firm finances opportunities either through retained earnings or by issuing new shares to raise capital. The amount used up in paying out dividends is replaced by the new capital raised through issuing shares. This will affect the value of the firm in an opposite way.
30, No. 2, Winter 2004, pp. 225-248 Latour questioned the fundamental premises on which he had based most of his career, asking, "Was I wrong to participate in the invention of this field known as science studies?" He undertakes a trenchant critique of his own field of study and, more generally, of social criticism in contemporary academia. He suggests that critique, as currently practiced, is bordering on irrelevancy.
The Morning Star seeks the Demiurge at the edge of the Universe, but only receives a revelation of mankind's irrelevancy. In his brief absence, the Princess is seduced by a fellow mortal. As he returns to his place in the sky, Hyperion understands that the Demiurge was right. Luceafărul enjoys fame not just as a poetic masterpiece, but also as one of the very last works completed and read publicly by Eminescu before his debilitating mental illness and hospitalization.
" Robert Barnard said of the characters that "Super-stockbrokerbelt setting, and quite exceptionally nasty family of suspects. (Christie usually prefers to keep most of her characters at least potentially sympathetic as well as potential murderers, but here they are only the latter)." He felt that the plot was "Something of a re-run of Hercule Poirot's Christmas (loathsome father, goody-goody son, ne'er-do-well son, gold-digger wife, etc.), but without its tight construction and ingenuity. And the rhyme is an irrelevancy.
But when Ainslie went to consult with his new clients the next morning, he found them dead, hanging from the rafters of a shed behind the temporary jail. One account says that George realized "the importance of demurrer and the irrelevancy of an appeal" and "retired in good order." After spending the winter teaching in Clackamas County, Oregon, Ainslie moved to Idaho City, the county seat of Boise County, Idaho. He would practice law there, and invest in mining properties, for over a quarter century.
PCE was legalized on 9 April 1977. Its legalization was viewed at the time as an important required step in Spain's democratic transition. The decision by Adolfo Suarez to legalize the party was sped up as a result of PCE's actions following the 24 January 1977 murders of seven labor lawyers in Atocha. While PCE had positioned itself to be a leading left-wing organization in the transition period, generational differences and ideological differences of the role of women would speed up its political irrelevancy by 1981.
11–13 Maajid Nawaz and Sam Harris argue that many acts of Islamic extremism can not be connected in any way with the Western intervention in Muslim lands. > Nawaz: ... What does killing the Yazidi population on Mount Sinjar have to > do with US foreign policy? What does enforcing headscarves (tents in fact) > on women in Waziristan and Afghanistan, and lashing them, forcing men to > grow beards under threat of a whip, chopping off hands, and so forth, have > to do with US foreign policy? > Harris: This catalogue of irrelevancy could be extended indefinitely.
However, they ran up against resistance from Hitler's cabinet ministers, who headed deeply entrenched spheres of influence and were excluded from the committee. Seeing it as a threat to their power, Joseph Goebbels, Albert Speer, Hermann Göring and Heinrich Himmler worked together to bring it down. The result was that nothing changed, and the Committee of Three declined into irrelevance. Over time Lammers lost power and influence because of the increasing irrelevancy of his position due to the war and as a consequence of Martin Bormann's growing influence with Hitler.
Layer II can also optionally use intensity stereo coding, a form of joint stereo. This means that the frequencies above 6 kHz of both channels are combined/down-mixed into one single (mono) channel, but the "side channel" information on the relative intensity (volume, amplitude) of each channel is preserved and encoded into the bitstream separately. On playback, the single channel is played through left and right speakers, with the intensity information applied to each channel to give the illusion of stereo sound. This perceptual trick is known as "stereo irrelevancy".
The ACJ rapidly declined in both political activity and influence following the Six-Day War in 1967, when the American Jewish community was swept up in overwhelming support of Israel, and moderates within the Council forced Elmer Berger to resign the following year for declaring that Israel had been the primary aggressor in the war. The council continued to support progressive Judaism, but its views became less popular with American Jewry, and as a result it shrank. According to The New York Times, it was effectively "consigned to irrelevancy." In 2010, its mailing list was only a few thousand.
The term measure here refers to the measure-theoretic approach to probability. Violations of unit measure have been reported in arguments about the outcomes of events R. Christensen and T. Reichert: "Unit measure violations in pattern recognition: ambiguity and irrelevancy" Pattern Recognition, 8, No. 4 1976.T. Oldberg and R. Christensen "Erratic measure" NDE for the Energy Industry 1995, American Society of Mechanical Engineers, New York, NY. under which events acquire "probabilities" that are not the probabilities of probability theory. In situations such as these the term "probability" serves as a false premise to the associated argument.
Lydecker's successor, New York businessman Charles Daniel Orth I, subsequently pushed the League to advocate a quasi-fascist centralization of the national economy to further ensure the nation's security. Orth proposed even more repressive and less democratic measures, such as demanding "education campaigns" to indoctrinate Americanism into immigrants and children and a pogrom to drive radicals out of the nation's institutions of higher education. As more longtime League supporters, such as Samuel Gompers and Albert Bushnell Hart, withdrew their support, the League sank further into extremism and irrelevancy. Lieutenant General Robert Lee Bullard became the NSL's last president, taking over in 1925.
In 1978 he attempted to begin a sabbatical year of fieldwork with the Gitksan, ostensibly studying the relationship between mythology and masks. The Gitksan-Carrier Tribal Council refused him permission to do fieldwork, on grounds of irrelevancy and lack of community control, until a compromise was reached between Cove and the director of the Gitksan land-claims office, Neil J. Sterritt, whereby Cove returned his grant money and worked for the Tribal Council studying "pre- contact relations with nature." Eventually, he worked for eight years for the Gitksan and Wet'suwet'en ("Carrier") in research that eventually led to the Delgamuukw vs. the Queen land-claims case.
Lauaki and his followers were not ready to concede their authority as the decision makers for Samoa to a foreign power. This was the impetus for the Mau a Pule movement which sought to retain the authority of the Traditional political structure which was based on thousands of years of historical events, cultural designations and achievements. This indigenous structure in Lauaki's opinion, as well as many other Samoan Chiefs including Mata'afa Iosefo, who fought against foreign interference with Samoan traditional authority, was too deeply entrenched in Samoa's cultural structure, thus it was unacceptable to Lauaki for Samoans to live in a world where the Samoan way was relegated to irrelevancy.
In telecommunication, data compaction is the reduction of the number of data elements, bandwidth, cost, and time for the generation, transmission, and storage of data without loss of information by eliminating unnecessary redundancy, removing irrelevancy, or using special coding. Examples of data compaction methods are the use of fixed-tolerance bands, variable-tolerance bands, slope-keypoints, sample changes, curve patterns, curve fitting, variable-precision coding, frequency analysis, and probability analysis. Simply squeezing noncompacted data into a smaller space, for example by increasing packing density by transferring images from newsprint to microfilm or by transferring data on punched cards onto magnetic tape, is not data compaction.
During the lead-up to the override, Reagan appointed Edward Perkins, who is black, ambassador to South Africa. Conservative Representative Dick Cheney was opposed to the override, saying that Nelson Mandela was the head of an organisation that the State Department had deemed "terrorist". In the week leading up to the vote, President Reagan appealed to members of the Republican Party for support, but as Senator Lowell P. Weicker, Jr. would state, "For this moment, at least, the President has become an irrelevancy to the ideals, heartfelt and spoken, of America." The legislation, which banned all new US trade and investment in South Africa, also refused South African Airways flights landing permission at US airports.
Praetors also presided over the "permanent jury courts" (quaestio perpetua).Abbott, 377 The irrelevancy of the Praetorship became obvious when the emperor Hadrian issued a decree (the edictum perpetuum),Abbott, 377 which robbed the Praetors of their authority to issue edicts and transferred most of their judicial powers to either the Consuls or to district court judges. Under the empire, the Plebeian Tribunes remained sacrosanct,Abbott, 378 and, in theory at least, retained the power to summon, or to veto, the senate and the assemblies.Abbott, 378 The emperor, who held tribunician powers, dominated the College of Tribunes, and while technically any member of the college could veto any other member, no Tribune dared to oppose the emperor.
On the debate on wine cellar humidity, Kramer states in Making Sense of Wine, "the precept that a home cellar should be humid is a relic of the past" due to the inherent humidity within the bottles themselves, and are "impervious to moisture or humidity-laden air", concluding, "humidity in the home cellar is an irrelevancy".Gaiter, Dorothy J.; Brecher, John, Wall Street Journal (October 4, 2008). Going for Godello Kramer was the target of criticism by Australian wine writer James Halliday who stated Kramer was "even more misguided than Robert Parker". Halliday spoke in reaction to what he perceived to be "Kramer's suggestions of big company taste fixing", which he called "farcical".
The concessions to Aragon, which had begun a period of relative irrelevancy compared to Castile, would once again restore the kingdom's power within the Iberian Peninsula. Aragon had previously reached its height under the Treaty of Cazola and the Treaty of Almizra which saw its territory and influence expand considerably. Ferdinand insisted on the Aragonese alliance to cement an alliance between Aragon and the Marinid dynasty so that they would not intervene in the coming war with Granada. After the signing of the treaty at Alcalá de Henares, Castile and Aragon both sent emissaries to the court at Avignon to gain the support of Pope Clement V and to obtain the clerical backing of an official Crusade to further support military operations.
The concessions to Aragon, which had begun a period of relative irrelevancy compared to Castile, would make the kingdom once again very powerful on the Iberian Peninsula. Aragon had previously reached its height under the Treaty of Cazola and the Treaty of Almizra which saw its territory and influence expand considerably. Ferdinand insisted on the Aragonese alliance to cement an alliance between Aragon and the king of Morocco so that they would not intervene in the coming war with Granada. After the signing of the treaty at Alcala de Henares, Castile and Aragon both sent emissaries to the court at Avignon to gain the support of Pope Clement V and to obtain the clerical backing of an official Crusade to further support military operations.
Halberstam clarifies his points encouraging failure in a lecture called "On Behalf of Failure": "My basic point with failure is that in a world where success is countered in relationship to profit ... or relayed through heteronormative marriage, failure is not a bad place to start for a critique of both capitalism and heteronormativity." Halberstam describes low theory as a "utility of getting lost over finding our way". In reference to societal norms and definitions of success, Halberstam asks the reader how to avoid those forms of knowing and being that relegate other forms of knowing to redundancy and irrelevancy. Halberstam provides several examples of publications, films and popular cultural artifacts in order to aid in explaining the concept of low theory.
Beggar, Etude for Farewell to Rus, 1933 Korin feverishly painted people present at the burial service for Tikhon, often the last survivors of families of Russian nobility, or dissident priests, soon to be destroyed. Rumors about the dangerous painting soon became a matter of NKVD interest. In 1931 Maxim Gorky advised Korin that the name Requiem for Russia was too strong to be accepted and recommended a change to Русь Уходящая - literally Rus that is going away, but usually translated as Farewell to Rus. Gorky believed that the painting showing the last parade of the Orthodox Church, depicting the tragedy and at the same time the misery of those people who would disappear into irrelevancy, would be accepted and even well received by the Government.
Appeal to ridicule (also called appeal to mockery, ab absurdo, or the horse laughBrooke Noel Moore and Richard Parker, Critical Thinking, McGraw-Hill, 2000, p. 526.) is an informal fallacy which presents an opponent's argument as absurd, ridiculous, or humourous, and therefore not worthy of serious consideration. Appeal to ridicule is often found in the form of comparing a nuanced circumstance or argument to a laughably commonplace occurrence or to some other irrelevancy on the basis of comedic timing, wordplay, or making an opponent and their argument the object of a joke. This is a rhetorical tactic that mocks an opponent's argument or standpoint, attempting to inspire an emotional reaction (making it a type of appeal to emotion) in the audience and to highlight any counter-intuitive aspects of that argument, making it appear foolish and contrary to common sense.
By the early 7th century the church had succeeded in relegating Irish druids to ignominious irrelevancy, while the filidh, masters of traditional learning, operated in easy harmony with their clerical counterparts, contriving at the same time to retain a considerable part of their pre-Christian tradition, social status, and privilege. But virtually all the vast corpus of early vernacular literature that has survived was written down in monastic scriptoria, and it is part of the task of modern scholarship to identify the relative roles of traditional continuity and ecclesiastical innovation as reflected in the written texts. Cormac's Glossary (c. 900 CE) recounts that St. Patrick banished those mantic rites of the filidh that involved offerings to "demons", and that the church took particular pains to stamp out animal sacrifice and other rituals repugnant to Christian teaching.
These "post-environmental movement" thinkers argue that the ecological crises the human species faces in the 21st century are qualitatively different from the problems the environmental movement was created to address in the 1960s and 1970s. They argue that climate change and habitat destruction are global and more complex, therefore demanding far deeper transformations of the economy, the culture and political life. The consequence of environmentalism's outdated and arbitrary definition, they argue, is a political irrelevancy. These "politically neutral" groups tend to avoid global conflicts and view the settlement of inter-human conflict as separate from regard for nature – in direct contradiction to the ecology movement and peace movement which have increasingly close links: while Green Parties, Greenpeace, and groups like the ACTivist Magazine regard ecology, biodiversity, and an end to non-human extinction as an absolute basis for peace, the local groups may not, and see a high degree of global competition and conflict as justifiable if it lets them preserve their own local uniqueness.
The poetry requirement remained standard for many decades, despite some controversy, although briefly abolished for the examination year 833–834 (by order of Li Deyu).Yu, 58–59, who notes factual inaccuracy of the former belief that the poetry requirement was eliminated from 781–834 During the Song dynasty, in the late 1060s Wang Anshi removed the traditional poetry composition sections (regulated verse and fu), on the grounds of irrelevancy to the official functions of bureaucratic office: on the other side of the debate, Su Shi (Dongpo) pointed out that the selection of great ministers of the past had not been obstructed by the poetry requirements, that the study and practice of poetry encouraged careful writing, and that the evaluation and grading of poetry was more objective than for the prose essays, due to the strict and detailed rules for writing verse according to the formal requirements.Murck, 52 Starting from the Yuan dynasty, poetry was abolished as a subject in the examinations, being regarded as frivolous. This process was completed at the inception of the following Ming dynasty.
By the 18th century, few if any of the Cornish boroughs had competitive political elections in modern sense: competition, where it occurred at all, was on the basis of personal influence or pecuniary advantage promised and delivered. Sir Lewis Namier, who in his classic analysis of the structure of British politics in 1760 took the Cornish boroughs as one of his case studies, called it "an elaborate and quaint machinery for making members of parliament, in which irrelevancy reached its acme... there was no humbug about the way in which Cornish boroughs chose their representatives.". This he expounded by quoting Thomas Pitt, writing in 1740, who considered that "...there are few [Cornish] boroughs where the common sort of people do not think they have as much right to sell themselves and their votes, as they have to sell their corn and their cattle." Party competition in the modern sense was entirely absent: in fact there seems to have been a tacit agreement that the Tories should be left undisturbed in the two county seats while making no attempt to interfere in the Whig boroughs, except for the few wholly owned by Tory patrons.

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