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23 Sentences With "more conversant"

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

As he has become more conversant in Petipa's style, his freedom within it has increased.
But none were more conversant with the structure and details of the kingpin's business than Mr. Zambada.
He is Jewish and was raised by Yiddish-speaking parents in Brownsville, Brooklyn, but now is more conversant in Italian.
He is more conversant with the intricacies of health policy, and more adept at the politics, than some of his predecessors.
Had Trump been more conversant with the details of the bill, he could have attempted to sell it to his base.
With more environmental regulation likely, "They need to get more conversant with climate risk," she said in an interview on Tuesday.
Mr. Votto may be an extreme example — more conversant in advanced statistics and more cerebral about using them than most players.
Many lawmakers have become more fluent in tech — or at least more conversant — since the infamous Mark Zuckerberg hearings in 2018.
My sister is a cognitive scientist at M.I.T., more conversant than most people in the mental processes involved in tracking and misplacing objects.
According to several people involved in the process, it's that he was significantly more conversant on taxes than he ever appeared to be on health care.
Which means he still has some time to bone up on issues to the point where he is more conversant than he demonstrated in the WaPo interview.
And, as on his near-daily visits to Capitol Hill, Pence found in Europe that leaders and diplomats were eager for a US representative more conversant in matters of policy.
For those more conversant with the details of his upbringing, the sense that T.R. was almost always in motion showed the determination and other qualities of character that had enabled him to triumph over youthful physical frailty.
It was among those people that, during the Obama years, terms like "woke" and "privilege" flourished — ideas that bestowed enlightenment on the formerly clueless and gave white people a language of culpability that made them more conversant with people of color.
No matter how rare school shootings are for the vast majority of students, they have grown up in a world so attuned to these threats that high schoolers are now more conversant in the language of lockdowns and code red drills than their parents.
He is more conversant in the finer points of advanced data, is more willing to abandon his game plan at a moment's notice, and has learned — like an increasing number of today's pitchers — to counterattack the fly-ball revolution by pitching up in the strike zone.
Chicago: Fitzroy Dearborn 1997, p. 616. The region where he grew up had a large concentration of indigenous groups, and as a young man he was more conversant in the local language than Spanish.Richmond, "Vicente Guerrero", p. 616.Green, Stanley C. The Mexican Republic: The First Decade, 1823–1832.
Stanton's book Great Negotiations: Agreements that Changed the Modern World was published in 2010. The book was noted as unusual for focusing on negotiating content and the diplomatic process, rather than the direct major policy results or the diplomatic developments which resulted from the negotiations discussed therein. The book presents the negotiations in a story-like format that "reads like fiction" in order to "appeal to both casual historians and those more conversant in international relations and foreign policy." The book has been considered as a learning tool.
Autographed image of the author, 1921 The Play Pictorial commented, "Housemaster bears on every scene the unmistakable imprint of Ian Hay's master hand. No one is more conversant than he with school life, while his knowledge of the theatre ensures that the play develops with dramatic and humorous effect.""Housemaster", The Play Pictorial, June 1937, p. 2 The Times found the piece pleasing, but thought the romantic interludes involving Rosemary "have little sentimental interest and are not very funny"; it also thought that the author let the odious headmaster off too lightly to be dramatically satisfying.
They are also offered new houses in a Liverpool suburb and jobs in a cotton mill for those who want them. Rob has his own reasons for wanting the village flooded; he is a native of Dolwyn, but was stoned out of it twenty years before for thievery. He therefore hates and despises the villagers, who are actually oblivious to his shameful past and bear him no ill will. Whilst preparing to pack up and leave, Gareth (played by Richard Burton), who has also lived in England and is more conversant with the language, discovers documents that prove his foster-mother, Merri (who has very little English), has a right to own her land in perpetuity.
After Malaya became independent in 1957, a radical transformation occurred in the use of Malay in Christian literature. The original thrust had been two-fold, to work amongst the Peranakan Chinese and the Malays. The former had no longer become dependent on Baba Malay literature as the younger generation started becoming more conversant in English while legal and social considerations had essentially halted evangelistic work amongst the Malays, especially in Malaya (and to a lesser extant in Singapore). The emphasis shifted from providing literature in the Malay language to one that would provide literature in the Malaysian language, a standardised form of Malay in Malaysia, for future generations who would be educated in the language.
They protested against the buying up of lands, they criticized as costly; less than necessary projects to employ Jewish immigrants at double salaries, though doing less works, at a cost to public education. "...the highest posts with fat salaries are given to the Jews", the delegates complained, "while the native official, who is more conversant with local needs, is relegated to a third-class position, with a salary too little for his needs and out of all proportion with his work". The delegation objected to the draft Mandate for Palestine, which added nothing to Arab rights already derived from existing law, but gave the British her right of handing over to the Jews Crown lands which are not her own. "On the other hand, the Jews have been granted a true advantage, namely, that of becoming our rulers".
In the Augustan era, poets were more conversant with the writings of each other than were the contemporary novelists (see Augustan prose). They wrote in counterpoint and towards direct expansion of the works of each other, with each poet writing satire when in opposition. In the early part of the century, there was a great struggle over the nature and role of the pastoral, primarily between Ambrose Philips and Alexander Pope, and then between their followers, but such a controversy was only possible because of two simultaneous literary movements. The general movement, carried forward only with struggle between poets, was the same as in the novel: the invention of the subjective self as a worthy topic, the emergence of a priority on individual psychology, against the insistence that all acts of art are a performance and a public gesture meant for the benefit of society at large.

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