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105 Sentences With "makes plain"

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

The south end makes plain how the structure stands up.
This connection is entirely intentional, as Messud quickly makes plain.
But as the chart below makes plain, that market barely exists.
His 22018 loss to George W. Bush still rankles, this book makes plain.
But, as Mr Campbell's meticulous work makes plain, this was no typical colonial atrocity.
Snobbery and immense learning, he makes plain, do not always walk hand in hand.
Not every scout has been plucked from Sequoia's portfolio, as Mike Vernal himself makes plain.
As the EU makes plain, the notion of "open borders" is not all or nothing.
Sticking with the "brat market," though, Jones makes plain, was also a good business plan.
But Spree makes plain how a social-media-warped mindset can lead to warped values.
The British government's Foresight report on environmental threats makes plain what a warming world will deliver.
Our analysis makes plain a central conflict when it comes to privacy in big urban spaces.
The new order makes plain that holders of green cards and valid visas are now clearly exempt.
My Perfect Body makes plain Warhol's self-conscious relationship to his own body and fascination with others.
Yes, it's a gimmick, but it makes plain how many lives were wasted during this tumultuous era.
As Sylvie Simmons makes plain in her excellent biography "I'm Your Man," Cohen's apprenticeship was in letters.
The name of Tiffany Hsiao's fund — Matthews China Small Companies — makes plain where she puts her shareholders' money.
Further, the example of Israel, which has statutory damages, makes plain the problems with suggesting they chill innovation.
The nation's wounds are old and deep, "Race Card" makes plain, and Americans are still carrying the scars.
The majority makes plain, in the first 33 pages of its decision, that it believes Abood was wrong.
But this episode makes plain that we'll still be seeing the world through June's eyes more often than not.
Needless to say, Zex themselves are pretty jazzed about all this, as a post to their official Facebook makes plain.
"The Administrative Record in these cases makes plain that Secretary Ross's decision fell short on all these fronts," Furman added.
He knew Corneille by heart and could quote his plays, and this immersion, Jackson makes plain, was not merely for show.
In it, he makes plain the dangers of slipping back toward stop-and-frisk practices driven by a focus on numbers.
Without dwelling on the point, Benner makes plain the coarseness and brutality of the time, especially toward women and the weak.
It also makes plain that Outlander is at its best when Jamie and Claire and their compatriots are at home, in Scotland.
Performed in a mix of French and Vietnamese, it makes plain the intimate pain wrought by colonial arrogance, culture clashes and exile.
Reese makes plain that eating meat causes an enormous amount of avoidable pain and suffering, and refuses to accept ignorance as an excuse.
The document offers no new rules or marching orders, and from the outset Francis makes plain that no top-down edicts are coming.
Still, often enough, there's a catch in the caller's voice or a verbal tic that makes plain how time is an imperfect healer.
"This report makes plain what the Administration can no longer deny: this was a ransom payment to Iran for U.S. hostages," Cotton wrote.
Here's hoping that the new year makes plain bagels and regular old doughnuts great again — because they are great, just the way they are.
His existence makes plain the ridiculousness of assuming that something like Robocop could truly happen—a seamless, perfectly efficient blend of man and machine.
Scalia's hostility to gay rights, affirmative action, abortion and gun control infuriated his critics, as a petition signed by faculty and staff members makes plain.
And "Love Song Waltzes" makes plain that love is not merely a matter for couples: This dance is about community and isolated individuals as well.
One of Sebastian's counterintuitive mantras, in "Le 20 Novembre," is that he's not a Nazi, despite the hatred and xenophobia that Mr. Noren makes plain.
As Cercas makes plain in his latest book, "Lord of All the Dead" (Knopf), finely translated by Anne McLean, the truth is altogether less agreeable.
This is deeply disturbing, even enraging, on its face — which Aurora later makes plain by acting out her frustrations with her fists, all over Jim's face.
Donald Trump's presidency makes plain that global supremacy has become an end in itself, unmoored from the interests of the American people and most of humanity.
As a concurrent show at the National Gallery, "Drawing in Tintoretto's Venice," makes plain, he went whole hog on pictorial equivalents to the sculpture of Michelangelo.
And he makes plain the cosmological significance of Edison's phonograph—how, against all understandings of human impermanence, it allowed the dead to go on speaking forever.
Nobody can accuse him of trying to coerce the entire nation into thinking exactly as he does, and he makes plain that he has no such intention.
"A review of the historical background here makes plain why the government wishes to focus on the executive order's text, rather than its context," Judge Watson wrote.
But as the murkiness at the centre of the play "Actually" makes plain, the problems surrounding sex on campus run deeper than legal concerns over consent and culpability.
Rogers, the more cutting (and less restrained) of the two, makes plain his frustration with these peers in Silicon Valley, who he sees as hoarding their incredible wealth.
The current production by the Public Theater makes plain that both Caesar and the conspirators who plot and carry out his assassination are violating the norms of democracy.
He makes plain he cares little for his impact on those around him, including his own children and the small people who thought of him as a father.
Unique features of the Apple CardExamining the rates and fees of the Apple Card is like evaluating the iPhone based on how well it makes plain old phone calls.
As Trollstation makes plain on their website, they are a "collective of social misfits playing mad mind games on the public" with the intention of being provocative and controversial.
Carbon Black is a big SaaS shop, something it makes plain in the early sections of its S-1 by noting that its revenue mix has increasingly skewed toward subscriptions.
This episode also reintroduces Bill Oakley (Peter Diseth), a prosecutor in the district attorney's office, who crosses paths with Jimmy and makes plain how much he despises his own work.
This is the story Swenson sets out to recount in his book, though he makes plain early on that it is not the only story he is going to tell.
Now comes this Wall Street Journal interview where Trump makes plain how badly he wants the Saudis to find an explanation that allows them to maintain their mutual financial interests.
Now, I doubt she cooks very much, but Cindy Adams, a New York Post columnist, has an incredible apartment on Park Avenue, as this feature on The Cut makes plain.
The screen tests were an apt prelude to the exhibition My Perfect Body, curated by Beck, which makes plain Warhol's self-conscious relationship to his own body and fascination with others.
But whatever the NHTSA determines to be the cause, the accident makes plain that self-driving cars still have a long way to go before they are ready for routine use.
The Gelbs, a husband-and-wife writing team with nine books between them, decline to give a definite answer, but the book makes plain that he likes to watch them suffer.
It includes a long and potent detour into the tragic life and powerful painting of the British Pop artist Pauline Boty (1938-66), whose work, Smith makes plain, should be better known.
While this hostile environment makes plain that none of us can take any of our human rights for granted, it's equally clear to me that people's thirst for justice is as strong as ever.
The answer they come up with makes plain what queer audiences have been quietly telling us forever: that their lives have always been present, even at times where their existence has been vehemently denied.
The Shed's soft-spoken retrospective, Agnes Denes: Absolutes and Intermediates, makes plain that the artist's oeuvre, spanning a half century, is so forward-looking parts of it remain ahead of their time even today.
Indeed, it makes plain that two things are true at once: Anti-gay prejudice still exists even in the most obvious of manners, but getting away with it -- reputation unscathed -- is another matter entirely.
Washington is a fellow in ethics at the Harvard Medical School; her 2008 book Medical Apartheid makes plain the ways in which the United States medical industry has benefited from the oppression of Black people.
"The order makes plain that broadband will be subject to a uniform, national framework that promotes investment and innovation," FCC Commissioner Michael O'Rielly said in his statement before voting to approve the repeal last week.
As my dad's sweater makes plain, however, this must have been a thoroughly Larkinesque happening ("most things may never happen"), though there is no indication as to what kind of gathering it might have been.
"(No) other form of sanction makes plain that all Americans are equally obligated to play by the rules and must be equally accountable for breaking them," US Attorney Andrew Lelling wrote in a recent filing.
As her own daughter Sasha prepares to start college, Michelle Obama has some clear-eyed advice for freshmen — and it makes plain that the former first lady has a vivid idea of what campus life is like.
Sources speaking with the Times claim that "bondage sex videos" were discovered on Rubin's work computer—and testimony from his ex-wife included in a civil suit makes plain the bent of the various extramarital affairs he initiated.
"Let's be clear: if regulators listen to those urging a ban of free data services, the government would be engaging in rate regulation, a point Rogerson makes plain," wrote Kevin Ryan, a senior adviser at the trade group.
The text, dated July 203, makes plain a 19-1 split in the G20 over the Paris climate accord, the 2015 global accord to fight climate change from which U.S. President Donald Trump said last month he would withdraw.
Early in the novel, which parodies the dynastic histories that have been well-known in China for two millennia, the author makes plain that his fictitious township "replicated in miniature the pain and prosperity undergone by the nation itself".
Crabb makes plain from the start that this isn't an academic study of early printed books; rather, it's intended as an entertaining visual primer of some fantastic and sometimes downright creepy visions that have emerged from the human mind.
"It is an effort by the league to inhibit player choice, does nothing to address the development of youth soccer, and makes plain MLS's selective application of international rules to suit its own agenda," the union said in a statement.
And what his Twitter feed makes plain is that the President of the United States spent some decent-sized chunk of his morning watching a taped show by a conservative anchor who has emerged as one of his biggest defenders.
An extended hypothesis or supposition as much as a play, "Elegy" quickly makes plain the parameters of the ethical debate, and it is bookended by the triumph, after a fashion, of science: a postoperative Lorna is talkative and well, but at a grievous cost.
As the rush of women seeking justice for past sexual grievances makes plain, women have historically avoided making these complaints for fear of being dismissed as naïve or, more likely, as attention-seeking harlots (Bill Clinton's supporters, for example, often maligned his accusers as "bimbo eruptions").
Through the executive order, the president makes plain his plan to challenge the decision, known as the Flores agreement: The Attorney General shall promptly file a request with the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California to modify the Settlement Agreement in Flores v.
I love the way this finding makes plain something we all know but aren't supposed to say: A father who is distracted by his interests and obligations in the adult world is being, well, a father; a mother who does the same is failing her children.
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The appointment of Mary Daly as the second-ever woman to head up the San Francisco Federal Reserve makes plain that some regional central banks continue to make strides in creating a diverse leadership as criticism intensifies about the Fed's hiring policies while others fall behind.
In a diligent and adulatory study of Kirk's life and thought, the Hillsdale College historian Bradley J. Birzer makes high claims for Kirk as both a man of letters and a philosopher, and makes plain why Kirk worked such a fascination on thinking Americans, even non­conservatives, half a century ago.
What the Times story makes plain is that at least one of the main reasons Trump may never release his returns -- or, at least, a major reason -- is that to do so would implode the myth that he pulled himself up from his bootstraps and through sheer force of will made himself into a billionaire.
The recent plethora of school shootings makes plain not only the costs of weak gun laws, the risks of untreated mental illness, and the tragic repercussions of rearing children through the proxies of digital media and abandoning them to the tender mercies of the NRA—but also what amounts to the national morality play of this moment: nihilism versus self-sacrificing love.
Yet a review of the 113 race, drawn from dozens of interviews with aides, advisers and adversaries, makes plain that Mr. Bloomberg's political origin story owes to almost supernaturally improbable conditions — a blend of searing tragedy, canny check-writing and a string of flukes so politically fortuitous that his Democratic rival began wondering if the New York Yankees were conspiring against him.
Morris's book does for American history what Norman Cohn's The Pursuit of the Millennium did for pre-modern European history: Rather than accept that the United States is ever proudly marching forward toward progress, enlightenment, and democracy, American Messiahs makes plain that we have always been a nation waiting on the cusp of the Millennium, and that time and time again we've turned to the prophets shouting that the End is close.
Before spatting, each participating athlete should send a signed Spat Notice letter to their athletic director (and local media), stating that: The school's shoe/apparel contract makes plain that the player is required to promote by wearing and displaying a logo; NCAA bylaws make plain that amateurism forbids players from commercial promotion; Player-school contracts do not require athletes to wear and display logos; As such, the undersigned athletes intend to spat their shoes and uniforms with logos for upcoming televised games, until and unless the school meets their demands.
As the song goes on, her voice gets thicker, more lustrous, as she makes plain what she'll tolerate and what she won't, and also makes clear that you can't play a player: I'll admit, I haven't been completely faithfulbut that was way back in Aprilwhen we didn't have a labelYeah, I tried to play it coolguess we're never really stable "Sideline" moves at a casual stroll, slinking alluringly from one thump to the next as Niia seeps into all the crevices and pockets, her voice rich at the center but with fuzzy edges.
But acting inquisitorially does not mean acting unfairly, as paragraph 17 of the Scheme makes plain.
However, this figure is under considerable dispute as the lengthy academic critique by Hahn and Hahn (2010) makes plain. & . Die Vertreibung im deutschen Erinnern. Legenden, Mythos, Geschichte, Paderborn: Schöningh, 2010, pp.
646; Rush produced a copy in Mrs. Madison's hand; the original also survives. The contemporary letter to Edward Coles (Brant, p. 639) makes plain that the enemy in question is the nullifier.
While celebrating their courage and skill, the film also makes plain how Mohawks are forced to leave home in order to make a living, with McComber regretting that his sons have had to grow up without their father.
Psychoanalysts have made ample use of hermeneutics since Sigmund Freud first gave birth to their discipline. In 1900 Freud wrote that the title he chose for The Interpretation of Dreams 'makes plain which of the traditional approaches to the problem of dreams I am inclined to follow...[i.e.] "interpreting" a dream implies assigning a "meaning" to it.' The French psychoanalyst Jacques Lacan later extended Freudian hermeneutics into other psychical realms.
It is a treatise in conformity with Spanish anti- Machiavellism, proposing a politics free of intrigue and unconnected with bad influences. Towards 1636 Quevedo concluded his last great satirical prose: The hour of everybody and the Fortune with prudence, unpublished until 1650. In it, Jupiter requests Fortune to give for one hour what each individual truly deserves. This makes plain the falsity of appearances, and the hidden truth under the veils of the hypocrisy.
After various unsuccessful attempts at seduction, a series of sexual assaults, and an extended period of kidnapping, the rakish Mr. B eventually reforms and makes Pamela a sincere proposal of marriage. In the novel's second part Pamela marries Mr. B and tries to acclimatize to her new position in upper-class society. The full title, Pamela; or, Virtue Rewarded, makes plain Richardson's moral purpose. A best-seller of its time, Pamela was widely read but was also criticized for its perceived licentiousness and disregard for class barriers.
This Is Acting makes plain the fact of manufacture – a process akin to bespoke tailoring." This Is Acting (2016) alternates more reggae and electropop with more introspective themes. In her 2016 live performances, Sia's music is part of performance-art-like shows that involve dance and theatrical effects. For an MTV News writer "Sia's throaty, slurred vocals are her norm", while a The Fader contributor noted "In the Billboard Hot 100 landscape, Sia's songwriting voice, which deals with depression and addiction, is singular—her actual voice even more so.
Affirmed. Justice William O. Douglas delivered the opinion of the court. The Court held that transporting a woman or girl across state lines for the purpose of making her a plural wife in a polygamous marriage is a violation of the Mann ActMann Act, 36 Stat. 825, 18 U.S.C. § 398 because it is for "an immoral purpose." In explaining its reasoning, the court opined that although the Mann Act was primarily intended to target commercialized white sex slave trade, the phrase "for any other immoral purpose" makes plain that the Act is not so narrowly limited.
Whether Spada either met or became an assistant of Caravaggio, like Manfredi, is unclear. The biographer Malvasia makes plain in his Felsina pittrice his distaste for Caravaggio, and apparently describes Spada and Caravaggio as equally "dissolute" and "precipitous"; and there are suggestions that for Caravaggio, Spada was a man "close to his heart", and perhaps not metaphorically. Malvasia also tells the story of Spada posing for Caravaggio's ‘’Death of John the Baptist’’: afraid that Spada might flee and, that without a model the painting would be incomplete, Caravaggio imprisoned him in a room until he had finished. However, it is unclear if Spada ever physically encountered Caravaggio in Rome.
In Chapter 5 of The Art of Moral Protest, Jasper defines a moral shock as "an unexpected event or piece of information [which] raises such a sense of outrage in a person that she becomes inclined toward political action, with or without the network of personal contacts emphasized in mobilization and process theories."The Art of Moral Protest, 106. For example, seeing a documentary about illicit banking practices may motivate an individual to participate in financial reform efforts. The motivation generated by a moral shock is, as the conceptual label makes plain, moral in nature; it operates at a level of normative force beyond just the purely cognitive or emotional.
Critics have noted acerbity as a characteristic of Douglas's writing as she "makes plain her frustration that hyperfiction works and their writers are still not considered part of the canon." Douglas is recognized for having discovered a node in Michael Joyce's hypertext novel Afternoon: a story that had no inbound links. In discussions about the novel, the node became known as "Jane's space" because she was the first to remark on its orphan status. She became implicated in revisions to this node, which originally (1987 edition) featured only a single phrase from Jung, "Man... never perceives anything", but later (1990 edition) included a second line: "and only Jane Yellowlees Douglas has read this line".
The film begins with a sumptuous banquet at the opulent estate of the Grand Yakuza leader Sekiuchi (Soichiro Kitamura), boss of the Sanno-kai, a huge organized crime syndicate controlling the entire Kanto region. He has invited the many Yakuza leaders under his control. After the formal conclusion of the banquet, Kato, the chief lieutenant of Sekiuchi, pulls one of the Yakuza leaders, Ikemoto, aside and makes plain that he is displeased with the news that Ikemoto has become friendly with a rival gang leader, Murase, while the two were unexpectedly imprisoned together. Kato, underboss of the Sanno-kai, orders Ikemoto to bring the unassociated Murase-gumi gang in line, and Ikemoto immediately passes the task on to his subordinate Otomo (Beat Takeshi), who runs his own crew.
The poet denies that his love is a form of idolatry and that the youth himself is an idol. He insists that he has been constantly devoted to the values of fairness, kindness and truth. Being three themes united in the figure of the youth, there is great scope for verse, since they have never been united in one person before. The language used is similar in some respects to the language in the Book of Common Prayer used to describe the Holy Trinity, and Shakespeare's triple repetition of the three attributes of the Fair Youth - "Three themes in one" - makes plain his deliberate comparison of the youth to a form of deity or idol, even as he purports not to engage in idolatry (in the sense of polytheistic worship of idols).
Dutch police have also stated that enforcing the ban is not a priority, and that they likely would not respond to a complaint within a thirty-minute timeframe. The Dutch government has also come under fire for the "burqa ban" from certain members of the UN claiming it is discriminatory towards Muslim women. On 7 October 2019 Tendayi Achiume, The United Nations Special Rapporteur on racism, wrote a report questioning the perceived inclusivity of Dutch society and how that perception masks a reality of treating racial and ethnic minorities as foreign. Speaking about the "burqa ban" Achiume said "The political debate surrounding the adoption of this law makes plain its intended targeting of Muslim women, and even if this targeting was not the intent, it has certainly been the effect".
In 2019, Helgoe explored the relationship between narcissism and American political and interpersonal discourse in her book Fragile Bully: Understanding Our Destructive Affair with Narcissism in the Age of Trump (Diversion Books, 2019). Paul L. Wachtel, Ph.D., distinguished professor at CCNY and integrative psychology theorist, noted that Helgoe's writing provides “seemingly effortless linkage between the intimately psychological and the broadly social and cultural” and that “[s]he probes the depth of individual experience, explores the dynamics of couples and families, and makes plain how all of this derives both from the powerful impact of our earliest experiences and from the equally powerful impact of our current interactions and current social and cultural context. In her hands, there is no contradiction in this complex web of causality, just a rich tapestry of interwoven threads that create a life.”Wachtel, P. L. (2019). Foreword.
Yet, the surface order in which the constituents of the utterance appear does not necessarily correspond to the order in which the mental operations underlying utterance construction were performed by the speaker. Further, the surface order of the constituents varies from language to language while linguistic operations, as has been said before, are supposed to form a stable class common to all languages. Let us take DO as an example: in a metaoperational theoretic approach, it is a fundamental marker because « it makes plain, in the most direct way possible, the existence of a natural metalanguage in human languages […], it materializes at the surface level the relationship between subject and predicate, and occurs whenever such a material target is necessary » (Adamczewski 1999: 42–transl. ours). DO therefore relates to one of the most fundamental linguistic operations, i.e. predicating, « an operation which represents the very basis of utterance construction » (Adamczewski & Delmas 1982: 79–transl. ours).
" Paine makes plain his judgment that Howe was but a sycophant of George III: "Perhaps you thought America too was taking a nap, and therefore chose, like Satan to Eve, to whisper the delusion softly, lest you should awaken her. This continent, Sir, is too extensive to sleep all at once, and too watchful, even in its slumbers, not to startle at the unhallowed foot of an invader." Paine makes it clear that he believes that George is not up to his former standards when it came to his duties with the American colonies. Paine also sheds light onto what he felt the future would hold for the emerging country, "The United States of America, will sound as pompously in the world, or in history [as] the Kingdom of Great Britain; the character of General Washington will fill a page with as much luster as that of Lord Howe; and Congress have as much right to command the king and parliament of London to desist from legislation, as they or you have to command the Congress.

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