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30 Sentences With "more egregiously"

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

The psychological component is frequently the one more egregiously lacking.
We all fall short, some more publicly and perhaps more egregiously than others.
Sharot wonders: As a person lies more egregiously, do the people around them adapt, too?
More egregiously, he oversimplifies the complex forces operating in today's technologically advanced and hyper-competitive economy.
More egregiously, however, is a policy buried in FaceApp's terms of service, which was last updated in August.
Then in 2015 and 2016, CNN, now headed by Zucker, promoted Trump's presidential candidacy even more egregiously than Fox News.
More egregiously, they've actually created a huge political headache for themselves in New Jersey by not "disarming" unilaterally after Sen.
Mr Comey's tactic also established a pattern that would lead him, three months later, to intrude into the election more egregiously.
" He continued, "More egregiously, perhaps, was the effect profiling had on the response of safety officers and other University offices to these events.
More egregiously, in mid-March, General McMaster tried to fire Ezra Cohen-Watnick, the senior director for intelligence programs at the National Security Council.
But its opinion section is even more egregiously attuned to the interests and concerns of whoever happens to have the most money to spend.
"Even more egregiously, Facebook took steps to protect its own employees from the security risk, but not the vast majority of its users," it continued.
But while more and more people recognize Raspail's amazing foresight, establishment liberal opinion attempts to demonize and distort the books' message more egregiously than ever.
More egregiously, we have seen this trend continue in the hiring of the Proskauer Rose law firm to advise the island's newly created fiscal control board.
In return, India was handing over Muslim holy sites, like the Babri Mosque, for Hindu extremists to tear down and, more egregiously, excluding Muslims as citizens under Indian law.
Even more egregiously ... Promobot allegedly asked Arnold to pose for a photo with its robot while he was in St. Petersberg to deliver a speech in 2019 ... and he refused.
They are, however, outside the EU's much-criticised common agricultural policy (in fact they subsidise their farmers even more egregiously than the EU does), as well as its common fisheries policy.
Even more egregiously, he offloaded personal debts onto the corporate balance sheet and had the public company purchase services ranging from bottled water to plane flights from Trump's privately held enterprises.
Yet if the court reverses the Wisconsin panel's decision and once again rules that there are no judicial tests available to stop partisan gerrymandering, then we can expect ever more egregiously partisan redistricting.
More egregiously, former White House Communications Director Hope Hicks and Lewandowski refused to answer some of the questions posed by the House Intelligence Committee, notably declining to share information on the presidential transition.
Sure, the Republican Party will occasionally try to distance itself from one of its more egregiously hateful members, like Representative Steve King of Iowa, who lost committee assignments after seeming to defend white nationalism.
If you believe there'll be more egregiously wealthy humans on the planet — whether in number or in amplitude of wealth — then it only makes sense to own extraordinarily exclusive items like this all-black Bugatti.
More egregiously, Fox's Sleepy Hollow teased a romance between its leads Ichabod Crane and Abbie Mills for three seasons before killing her off (and dooming the show to explore even further depths of mediocrity before its cancelation).
So, you know, the usual, but with ostentatious chapter breaks and narrative padding, including some dead-end references both to 1970s German politics (cue the tear gas, riots and Baader-Meinhof mentions) and, more egregiously, to the Holocaust.
In the U.S., Bill ClintonWilliam (Bill) Jefferson ClintonRepublican group targets Graham in ad calling for fair Senate trial Trump rallies supporters as he becomes third president to be impeached House votes to impeach Trump MORE betrayed progressives even more egregiously.
Similarly, but even more egregiously, when asked "what would be a fair deal" to strike on trade with Europe, Trump simply pushes for deregulation: A fair deal is that they have to take down their barriers and that they have to start — stop charging us massive taxes for our people — and also their standards.
"In the United States, we currently face the highest risk of illness, complications, and even death due to lack of quality maternal care and, more egregiously, institutional bias and racism rampant in our hospitals and healthcare systems," Elizabeth Dawes Gay and Angela Doyinsola Aina, co-directors of the Black Mamas Matter Alliance, said in a statement provided to Refinery29.
Saintsbury, EB, 298 For example, the scandalous novel Vicaire des Ardennes (1822)—banned for its depiction of nearly-incestuous relations and, more egregiously, of a married priest—attributed to a "Horace de Saint- Aubin".Robb, 103 These books were potboiler novels, designed to sell quickly and titillate audiences. In Saintsbury's view, "they are curiously, interestingly, almost enthrallingly bad".Saintsbury, "Honoré de Balzac", xv Saintsbury indicates that Robert Louis Stevenson tried to dissuade him from reading these early works of Balzac.
More pertinently, Gama's judgment was also questioned in whispers through the court. The 4th Armada that Vasco da Gama had commanded to India in 1502 had not been a success. He had failed to bring the Zamorin to terms and, more egregiously, the coastal patrol he left behind, under his uncle Vicente Sodré, had nearly cost the Portuguese their position in India. While the fault should be properly assigned to the Sodré brothers for dereliction of duty, there was a sense in the royal court that the patrol's failure was at least partly Gama's fault.
The film was not a box office success, earning a domestic gross of $23,438,250, barely over its estimated production budget of $20 million. In 2013, after reading the screenplay for the film, Scott Spencer - the author of the novel on which the film was based - wrote that "It’s about one hundred pages, and the only ones that were not dreary were sciatica inducing". In 2014 he wrote that his novel "has been even more egregiously and ridiculously misunderstood" in making the remake than in the 1981 film. Film historian Leonard Maltin was actually kinder to the remake, giving it two out of a possible four stars (he declared its 1981 predecessor a "BOMB").

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