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10 Sentences With "more civilly"

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

Even the most debauched club-hopping party animal talks about women more civilly than you.
It mostly demonstrates that it's possible to disagree more civilly with people of differing political views.
The candidates respond in turn, by behaving more civilly and reaching out to voters beyond their own base.
Third, ranked-choice voting also creates an incentive for candidates to behave more civilly because it is important to be many voters' "second choice".
We somehow got through that night and the day that followed, after she woke up and we talked — much more civilly than I expected — about what I had read.
"There's too much anger and too much hostility between the parties, and we need to start working with each other more and treat each other more civilly," said Rep.
I think they may be forced to treat Professor Ford a bit more civilly because there are women on the committee who will call them to task if they don't and because so many members of the committee were chastised for the way they treated Professor Hill.
Include Me > Out, pp. 37–41 Granger returned to civilian life and was pleased to discover his parents had curbed their drinking and were treating each other more civilly. Goldwyn increased his weekly salary to $200 and presented him with a 1940 Ford Coupe. The actor was introduced to Saul Chaplin and his wife Ethel, who became his lifelong mentor, confidante and best friend.
No matter where you live in the Bay Area, Ordinaire is worth the trip." Saveur editor Chris Cohen praised the selection, atmosphere, and affordability, writing "I usually dislike drinking wine out—something about seeing a wine listed for triple what I would pay in a store rubs me the wrong way. Ordinaire does things much more civilly: they're also a retail operation, and for $10 corkage they'll open anything in the shop for on-premises consumption." Esther Mobley at the San Francisco Chronicle wrote that domestic and foreign natural wines were well- represented in Ordinaire's selection, but "[i]f it all sounds too crunchy- granola for you, there's also excellent normal-tasting wine here: Cabernet from Corison; Champagne from Bérèche et Fils and Laherte Freres champagne.
That could only lead to assassinations; better by far to arm openly, as was their right; the government and the poor law administrators would then treat them more civilly: "I would recommend you, every one, before next Saturday night, to have a brace of horse pistols, a good sword and a musket, and to hang them up on your mantelpieces (not by any means to use them). They will petition for you" As with the Blackburn speech, this alarmed and alienated moderate support. The Anti-Poor Law agitation was however rapidly overtaken and supplanted as the great working-class Radical cause by the more sweeping Chartist movement, (whose constitutional program Oastler did not support); when that collapsed in 1839 (with the failure of the National Petition and a Government crackdown with many leaders arrested and charged with seditious speeches and involvement in unlawful assemblies),see list given as so did organised resistance to the New Poor Law. Many of Oastler's associates were involved in Chartism, and Oastler did not disown them: he played a prominent part in raising funds for the defence of J R Stephens; his last public campaigning for 5 years.

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