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45 Sentences With "more biting"

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

Bennett argues that this round of sanctions is different, and more biting.
At this stage, these jobs have to entail being more subversive, more biting, more serious.
Their calls were easily as good as regular broadcasters, and often more biting than the norm.
Food delivery has become a particularly crowded cemetery, with Sprig, Maple, Juicero and more biting the dust.
The naming — re-naming, really — that she performs throughout the collection is thus more biting than caressing in nature.
North Korea has relied on Russia as well as China to shield it from even more biting United Nations sanctions.
I think by default my work has become more political and a little more biting than it was before, which I like.
"To be honest, with the Hawaii season I wanted to be more biting," says the venomous comedian Ryota Yamasato, popularly known as Yama-chan.
And just like Lottie Person, Snotgirl is a lot smarter, a lot more ruthless, and a lot more biting than it wants you to think.
Russian assets meanwhile have come under scrutiny, amid the potential for more biting and globally coordinated sanctions on Moscow if the spy poisoning case escalates further.
That does mean that some of the film's more biting satirical threads start to drop off as it spirals out of control — but that's on purpose.
Now comes the grueling homestretch of the campaign, where advertising will step up and the bickering between the candidates is likely to become even more biting.
But when Mr. Trump's remarks surfaced on Friday, she ripped up that speech, ultimately settling on one that was all the more biting for its intimate tone.
" More biting jokes take aim at some of the "scourge of the internet" stereotypes that linger around Reddit's largely male user base, including a post reading, "Please help!
The truth of the matter is that while Putin had rather more "biting" options at his disposal, they would hurt him more that they would hurt the Americans.
The trick of Kaling's comedy is that it's far more biting, culturally critical, and ridiculous than many people realize because it's said so quickly with such a sunny affect.
But as it spread, it morphed into a more biting satire of the credulity of the people who spend all day online and our inability to sort fact from fiction.
The competition will be much stiffer in 2017, as Bee (another Daily Show alum) has gotten rave reviews for being even more biting than anything we've ever seen from Oliver or Stewart.
CIBC economists Royce Mendes and Avery Shenfeld said the tariffs "could be more biting for the Canadian economy than previous moves by the administration" and said the prospects for retaliation were limited.
Inequality is a major political issue in the lead-up to the 2020 Presidential election; Democratic candidates are airing proposals for wealth taxes, steeper income taxes, more biting inheritance taxes, and a better social safety net.
Spending money only on the safe and familiar, imports from their own civilization, they help to leech New York of its more biting flavors, reducing it to a tepid broth that won't upset the unseasoned stomach.
While Serial Killers is a mix of criticism and fascination, Disney Targets is a more biting critique of society, fueled by mass shootings, police killings of black people, and the role of guns in American family life.
I might start swiping right a little more, biting the bullet and getting drinks with my matches whether I think they're Mr. Right or not, and trying to be more open to meeting people when I'm out.
That's inevitably a more biting critique of a broken culture than any protest album can muster, and certainly more potent than any of the shouty, monoculture indie that's continued to rise since the country retreated into itself.
" In the afternoon on Wednesday, US Ambassador to the UN Samantha Power released an even more biting assessment of the regime, which she said was "playing God, deciding who they try to starve and who, for now, they don't.
But while Mr. Trump spent four minutes on the subject at an Iowa rally last week, he has shied away from delivering some of his more biting campaign-trail attack lines when face to face with his rivals in previous debates.
Neatly political without ever laboring its points, "Angry Alan" is the better and more biting of two plays by Ms. Skinner to be running concurrently on the Fringe (the all-female, comparatively portentous "Meek," at the Traverse, is the other).
But the tone of Monday night's segments was more biting than yuk-yuk, and comes at a time when polls suggest the presidential race is tightening, with Trump now plausibly finding a path to the Electoral College votes he needs to win.
The internet, and sites like Tumblr especially, Reeve continues, encourage users to be funnier, more clever, more biting, more invested: Sometimes those one-liners spread across continents, tweaked by thousands of other teens who add their own jokes as they reblog the original.
It doesn't need to be that way: The bright minds that have created so many technologies that help us deal with our "first-world problems" can surely find ways to help those with more biting and pressing challenges as our society continues to evolve.
Some of Richmond's more biting attempts at humor appeared to fall flat, including an exchange in which the senator asked Scott to explain a photo that went viral this week of Trump adviser Kellyanne Conway sitting with her legs tucked under her on a couch in the Oval Office.
But the truth is that America is a nation that values humility and self-effacement in its leaders which is why it Ronald Reagan's "Ah, shucks" warmth resonated so deeply with the American public, as did Bill ClintonWilliam (Bill) Jefferson Clinton3 real problems Republicans need to address to win in 2020 Buckingham Palace: Any suggestion Prince Andrew was involved in Epstein scandal 'abhorrent' The magic of majority rule in elections MORE biting his lip and feeling our pain.
Emancipation was either opposed through happy plantation material or mildy supported with pieces that depicted slavery in a negative light. Eventually, direct criticism of the South became more biting..
Tara Judah, writing for Readings in 2013, noted that the novel is "far more biting than the melodramatic premise might suggest", and further commented on the juxtaposition of its Australian and English culture: "the novel feels equally as interested in Englishness as it is in Australianness".
The poem is often paired with a number of poems written in response to Kipling, particularly with "Charity Begins at Home", published a few weeks earlier in the Colored Americanand pseudonymously written by "X-Ray". It was more biting in its criticism.Brantlinger, Patrick. Taming Cannibals: Race and the Victorians.
Moore has been termed "a cross between Virginia Woolf and Djuna Barnes, but with a more biting wit."Laura Doan and Jane Garrity (2006), Sapphic Modernities: Sexuality, Women, and National Culture, p. 3. Palgrave, New York. . Her novels make free use of modernist techniques such as stream of consciousness in their frank dealings with issues of sexuality and disability.
"US pushes toward more biting Iran sanctions". The christian science monitor. 3 November 2011. The House Foreign Affairs Committee has also passed the Iran Threat Reduction Act which makes it illegal for U.S. diplomats to engage their Iranian counterparts, strips the President's authority to license the repair of Iran's aging civilian aircraft to prevent civilian deaths, and imposes indiscriminate sanctions that could increase gas prices and hurt the Iranian civil society.
Gerald was not atypical, and similar views may be found in the writings of William of Malmesbury and William of Newburgh. When it comes to Irish marital and sexual customs Gerald is even more biting: "This is a filthy people, wallowing in vice. They indulge in incest, for example in marrying – or rather debauching – the wives of their dead brothers". Even earlier than this Archbishop Anselm accused the Irish of wife swapping, "exchanging their wives as freely as other men exchange their horses".
While with Potret, Goeslaw wrote numerous songs. Some were written conservatively as they were ordered by singers such as Krisdayanti and Ruth Sahanaya; other songs, generally the more "biting" ones, were used for Potret's albums. One of the songs on Potret's third album, "Diam" ("Silent"), which dealt with the abuse of women, caused some controversy due to the perceived amount of violence in the music video. Despite this controversy, "Diam" won Video Musik Indonesia's award for best interpretation of a song.
He now supplied it with themes from literature and the theatre, portraying scenes from Don Quixote by Cervantes, as well as from Erasmus Montanus, or other plays by Ludvig Holberg. Holberg's works would in fact provide Marstrand with an endless stream of inspiration. He also continued to paint genre paintings, and to make sketches, caricatures, and drawings, capturing the spirit of his time with gentle or more biting satire. On 8 June 1850, Marstrand married Margrethe Christine Weidemann, with whom he was to have five children.
However, this tumour is not native to Tasmanian devils and is also characterised as a tissue graft that is able to pass between hosts without inducing a response from the host's immune system. Dominant devils who engage in more biting behaviour are more exposed to the disease. Short of a cure, scientists are removing the sick animals and quarantining healthy devils in case the wild population dies out. Because Tasmanian devils have extremely low levels of genetic diversity and a chromosomal mutation unique among carnivorous mammals, they are more prone to the infectious cancer.
Kurtzman left after issue #28, but much of the content that appeared in the twenty-ninth and thirtieth issues was done under his supervision. Feldstein was still fresh on the job when Time reported that Hefner was to publish a "still unnamed magazine" and had "hired the whole staff of Mad, a short-lived satirical pulp." Kurtzman had lured away almost all the primary contributors except for Wally Wood, leaving Feldstein to build a new stable of contributors. Fans of the Kurtzman era felt that Kurtzman's post-Mad work was more biting and politically minded, while Feldstein's Mad was financially cautious and aimed at a somewhat younger audience.
Clay's lampoons of black Philadelphians were more biting, and ridiculed the supposed fancy dress, pretentious manners, snobbery, and malaprop-filled "black speech" of the city's small but visible black middle class.Kenneth Finkel, Philadelphia ReVisions: The Print Department Collects (Library Company of Philadelphia, 1983), p. 22. "The cartoons were so popular that the term ' _Life in Philadelphia_ ' became a standard phrase to refer to fashions, trends, and-- most especially--black Philadelphians' social practices and sartorial choices." Clay's cartoons were indicative of both the white supremacy and class insecurity of the Jacksonian Era, a time when abolitionism and free blacks were perceived as threats to both American slaveholders and the white working class.
On this occasion a critic recognized an affinity to English artist Thomas Rowlandson but noted that Sprinchorn saw things in a more fragmentary manner, in angles rather than curves, and with more biting humor. The critic concluded by saying Sprinchorn was "amazingly skillful in obtaining the richest and most splendid results by holding back the full force of his pigment, and suggesting reserves of color behind the surface painting." Sprinchorn showed three times in 1920, once with other Swedish-American artists at the American-Scandinavian Foundation, once with a group that included Anne Rector at the National Arts Club, and once in an exhibition of the Society of Independent Artists. In reviewing the first of the three, a Times critic said Sprinchorn contributed "two large paintings of great distinction" and drawings that were even stronger.
Stránský married Marie Doxrud (1881–1954), a soprano from Norway, in 1912. During his tenure with the Philharmonic, Stránský received praise for his interpretations of Franz Liszt and Richard Strauss by the prominent critic Henry T. Finck of the New York Evening Post. However, Daniel Gregory Mason expressed his dissatisfaction with what he referred to as "the Wagnerian, Lisztian and Tschaikowskian pap ladled out to us by ... Stransky of the Phihamonic Society", and went as far as to call the conductor "a total musical incompetent". In an even more biting critique published in H. L. Mencken's American Mercury Magazine, critic D. W. Sinclair wrote Woodlawn Cemetery in the Bronx, New York Mahler scholar Henry-Louis de La Grange has characterized Stránský as a "conscientious but uninspiring" leader, who allowed the high performing levels achieved by Mahler to fall.

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