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24 Sentences With "more charitably"

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

Or to put it more charitably, we take on trust.
The sit-in was a stunt — or, more charitably, a symbol.
But there's also good reason for stagnation, or, put more charitably, for taking things slowly.
More charitably, Junot Díaz says he is surprised by how often the prizes get it right.
Or, to put it more charitably, perhaps he is listening and then blatantly ignoring the advice he is receiving.
Investors tend to view such unintentional failures to pay more charitably than defaults caused by an actual lack of funds.
It seems like that person is probably either not good at their job or more charitably overloaded and can't do a lot?
More charitably, they may be worried that your new fancy house might mean you're going to dump them now that you're a rich snob.
Similarly (if more charitably), Zoox blames many of its disengagements on its system's failure to accurately predict where cyclists, pedestrians, scooters, and other vehicles are headed.
Even more charitably Trump's administration have ignored reports of a Russian air base on an island off of Venezuela that will pave the way for a permanent Russian presence there.
Or, more charitably, where you can live out the dream of not even needing to tell anyone to mind their own business, at least in the vicinity of your property.
This makes sense if one understands the central project of the Joe Biden campaign to be making Joe Biden the president or, more charitably, denying Donald Trump a second term.
The history of compelled funding for the arts is rather darker than most of its champions would admit, though more charitably it may be that they are happily unaware of that history.
So, well into their 0003s, they undertook two new volumes that clarified some psychological mysteries, dealt more charitably with O'Neill's parents and judged O'Neill's drinking and other self-destructive excesses more harshly.
The reading of the film that has swayed me slightly toward feeling more charitably toward it (and even were I to adopt a "the movie's better than its critical reputation" stance, I'd still find the filmmaking junky and pedestrian) is an overtly leftist one.
Its melodies are a little bit early aughts emo as played by the pranksters in PC Music—a few of my friends have pointed out that such a description basically just sounds like recent Fall Out Boy material but I tend to view it more charitably.
Yet he sees such work as potentially crowd-pleasing or, more charitably perhaps, as being attractive to afficionadi of painterly technique.
92 Anthony Boucher dismissed Timeliner as an example of "mere cliche-museums"."Recommended Reading," F&SF;, July 1955, p.101. P. Schuyler Miller more charitably noted that the novel "doesn't quite meet current standards."Miller, P. Schuyler.
In rhetoric, emotive or emotional conjugation (also known as the Russell's conjugation) mimics the form of a grammatical conjugation of an irregular verb to illustrate humans' tendency to describe their own behavior more charitably than the behavior of others. Used seriously, such loaded language can lend false support to an argument by obscuring a fallacy of meaning.
Lang himself was gloomy about his legacy; he believed that since he had not led his country back into an Age of Faith, or marked his primacy with a great historical act, he had failed to live up to his own high standard. Others have judged him more charitably, praising his industry, his administrative ability and his devotion to duty.
Through his influence, natural law and philosophy were taught at most German universities, in particular those located in the Protestant principalities. Wolff personally expedited their introduction inside Hesse-Cassel.Ingrao, 1982, p. 955 Until the 1960s, it was usually maintained by historians that Wolff's philosophy amounted to a common-sense adaptation or watering-down of the Leibnizian system; or, more charitably, Wolff was said to have methodized and "reduced" to dogmatic form the thoughts of his great predecessor.
Towards the land are lofty hills > streaming with waterfalls. The garden is sheltered by firs, or pines, which > grow there so prosperously, that some, which the present inhabitant planted, > are very high and thick. Boswell’s own Journal confirms Johnson’s description in its physical essentials, but concludes more charitably that “Talisker is a better place than one commonly finds in Sky”. Preshal More overlooks Talisker from the south In 1820 Donald Macleod, 6th of Talisker, a major in the 56th Regiment, sold his interest in Talisker and emigrated to Van Diemen’s Land (financed by his father-in-law, Alexander Maclean of Coll).
Still, the musical material itself sounds routinely dreary and uninspired, as if Braxton was declaring that he too could write music as sterile and vapid as his European contemporaries. One might more charitably, however, write this effort off as an interesting experiment that failed; ideas appear herein that would bear far more beautiful fruit in later works". Reviewing the rereleased recordings for All About Jazz Clifford Allen observed "The work moves in cycles based around single chords, and though certainly a lot busier than Morton Feldman's later orchestral works, there is an affinity for instrumental flurries presenting themselves in relation to a steady and central pulse. Furthermore, though the number of musicians participating, one never gets the sense of an overbearing sonic weight.
Several themes are touched upon by Frost in this poem including family, power, justice, mercy, age, death, friendship, redemption, guilt and belonging. A major theme in the poem is that of the ‘home’ or homecoming. Despite the fact that Silas’ brother should seemingly be the natural home for Silas to die, he has chosen Warren and Mary’s farm. Warren wrestles with the idea that “Home is the place where, when you have to go there, / They have to take you in.” (Presumably he says this bitterly or sarcastically.) By saying this he is highlighting, at least at that point in the poem, that he does not feel obliged to put a roof over Silas’ head because of his betrayal of leaving the farm. Mary replies, more charitably: “I should have called it / Something you somehow haven’t to deserve.” Silas has evidently returned ‘home’ to the farm to try to reaffirm some meaning in his life before he dies by helping with the next season, and trying to redeem his relationship with Harold – neither of these pursuits are fulfilled. The poem does not blatantly imply that Warren and Mary have had children of their own.

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