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47 Sentences With "more expansively"

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

Isn't it time to look at men — and gender — more expansively?
Why might thinking about scarcity lead people to view their resources more expansively?
Americans once dreamed more expansively, she says, invoking ideas of social democracy and social justice.
More expansively, it serves as a portal to both history and the otherworldly writ-large.
But Mr. Joel said that change was not because analysts were using their powers more expansively.
Rather, he uses them as entry points to think more expansively about how inequality permeates our lives.
In the 1990s, a liberal-minded court began interpreting Basic Laws — Israel's partial substitute for a constitution — more expansively.
As I've written this column, I have come to think more expansively of what it means to write something called Postscript.
Warren has long pushed the Education Department to more expansively interpret its powers to provide debt relief to student loan borrowers.
The paintings in "Blue" show Mr. Wong working bigger and more expansively than before, with a sense of real if unearthly light.
The takeaway is that, not surprisingly, the more expansively women's groups — and Congress — interpreted women's policy authority, the more often these groups testified.
That would mean national regulations like the hovercraft ban could be interpreted more expansively to cover land within a conservation area not federally owned.
Now, however, customers conceive of it much more expansively, and include evaluations of such diverse factors as:How difficult is your organization to work with?
Book Entry Although Adam Smith had no children, he has been identified as either the father of economics or, more expansively, of modern capitalism.
So The Loving Story is valuable as a fuller, more expansively humanized portrait of the couple than you could get from the newsreels and history books.
It is not declaring Somalia an "area of active hostilities," which would free up the American military to carry out airstrikes targeting low-level militants more expansively.
Many of the justices' questions on Tuesday indicated they agreed that the text of the law is clear, leaving little room for them to interpret it more expansively.
More expansively, the report advocated for billions of dollars in new resources promoting jobs, education and health care to be directed toward urban centers and high poverty communities.
The Koch network has also been bolstering its ground game and will be knocking on doors and hitting phones even more expansively than it has in past cycles, the official said.
"(for example, pictures of empty sky)" continues her early publishing practices that interrogated technology's relationship to the structure of the book, and more expansively, technology's relationship to public and private narratives.
Stepping back from an analysis of the funding and science — and politics — that shaped the Apollo Program, I asked NASA's chief historian to weigh in more expansively on its accomplishments and legacy.
"If we ever did again get technical indicators that an adversary was trying to do something, we would be able to move more quickly and much more expansively across the country," she said.
For right now, I'm happy to stan a girl from Houston who is not only rapping better and loving herself harder; she is, arguably, dreaming bigger, and more expansively, than anyone else in hip-hop.
But the FTC has interpreted the law more expansively than that: because YouTube channel owners benefit from YouTube's collection and use of kids' cookies, the FTC claims that they are subject to COPPA as well.
"There are more fires that are burning more expansively over longer periods of time, and there are fewer resources available to respond, especially to respond quickly," said Carroll Wills, a spokesman for the California Professional Firefighters, a statewide union.
While most lower court judges embrace a framework that is fairly permissive of gun regulations, there is a faction of conservative judges who reject this framework and who have argued, mostly in dissenting opinions, that the Second Amendment should be read more expansively.
Yet the series format allows creator Billy Ray to more expansively look at the studios during the gilded mid-1930s, weaving in real-life personalities like mogul Louis B. Mayer (Saul Rubinek) and director Fritz Lang (Iddo Goldberg) -- the latter a notorious "pervert," we're told.
In one repeated phrase (13 seconds to 24 seconds), her torso leans forward as she gives special emphasis to one small step (petit développé); then another step (a turning relevé grand développé) opens her body up more expansively; and there follows a bigger, quicker jump.
Mr. Hajdu, the juror, said that in recent years, those behind the Pulitzers have sought to "assertively think and listen more expansively, with more open ears," pointing to wins in the music category by the experimental jazz musicians Ornette Coleman in 2007 and Henry Threadgill in 2016.
Mr. Hajdu says that in recent years, the people behind the prize have "sought to assertively think and listen more expansively, with open ears" since the prize has been awarded primarily to classical artists and later onto Jazz and now in the genre of Hip-hop to Kendrick.
Even though the company indicated it may not institute the price hikes more expansively, or even permanently, it seems likely that it'll be forced to — if not now then soon — given the rising competition within the streaming audio space, and its investment in more original podcasts and expansive licensing agreements.
These books are used as a more expansively Catholic context in which to celebrate the liturgical use found in the Book of Common Prayer and related liturgical books.
The Convention set up the Committee for the Prevention of Torture to oversee compliance with its provisions. ;Inter- American Convention The Inter-American Convention to Prevent and Punish Torture, currently ratified by 18 nations of the Americas and in force since 28 February 1987, defines torture more expansively than the United Nations Convention Against Torture.
The Ninjago Monastery was a new Lego Universe world added to the game within a new build of the game on September 20, 2011. It featured more expansively than Crux Prime the Lego theme Ninjago. The world in comparison to the other worlds was one of the largest. It included the Ninjago Monastery, Skeleton Battlefields and the Ninjago Caves.
Fingleton, p. 154. After reaching his century, Washbrook began to play more expansively, driving in a manner that prompted Arlott to compare him to Frank Woolley. Washbrook and Edrich batted until late in the first day, when the former was dismissed by Johnston for 143 in the last over before stumps, hitting a catch to Lindwall in the slips.Arlott, p. 101.
Algebraic combinatorics has come to be seen more expansively as an area of mathematics where the interaction of combinatorial and algebraic methods is particularly strong and significant. Thus the combinatorial topics may be enumerative in nature or involve matroids, polytopes, partially ordered sets, or finite geometries. On the algebraic side, besides group and representation theory, lattice theory and commutative algebra are common.
They contain meditations for the presiding celebrant(s) during the liturgy, and other material such as the rite for the blessing of palms on Palm Sunday, propers for special feast days, and instructions for proper ceremonial order. These books are used as a more expansively Catholic context in which to celebrate the liturgical use found in the Book of Common Prayer and related liturgical books.
Sitting more expansively may also signal dominance and sexual attractiveness for males. Tanya Vacharkulksemsuk, a UC Berkeley post-doctorate researcher recently published studies that found spreading out legs and arms is more sexually attractive when males do it. Using photographs, she found that images of men spreading out got 87% of interest among female viewers. Expansive poses were not as effective for women, who appeared "vulnerable" and "starfish-like" according to other researchers.
The core distinction between the U.S. Bill of Rights and the Canadian Charter is the existence of the limitations and notwithstanding clauses. Canadian courts have consequently interpreted each right more expansively. However, due to the limitations clause, where a violation of a right exists, the law will not necessarily grant protection of that right. In contrast, rights under the U.S. Bill are absolute, thus a violation will not be found until there has been sufficient encroachment on those rights.
In the last ten overs, England played more expansively, and eventually finished with 151 runs, meaning that Australia would need to score 152 to win. Australia lost three wickets early in their chase, but were steadied by a partnership between Karen Read and Sharon Tredrea. Quick scoring from Jen Jacobs and Marie Cornish late-on in the innings helped Australia to their target with six balls remaining, securing a three-wicket victory, and their second World Cup title.
An uran khatola (Hindustani: उड़न खटोला, اُڑن کهٹولا) is a fictional flying vehicle in the traditional folktales of North India and Pakistan.The popular dictionary in two parts: English and Hindustani, and Hindustani and English, Thomas Craven, pp. 203, Methodist Publishing House, 1889, ... Uran khatola, n. the flying car of Indian fairy tales in which mortals are conveyed through the air ... The term literally means 'flying bedstead' or 'flying cot' but in folklore the term is used more expansively to cover any flying vehicle.
L'Olimpiade is an 18th-century Italian opera in 3 acts by the Czech composer Josef Mysliveček. It was composed to a libretto by the Italian poet Metastasio that was first performed in 1733. For a performance in the 1770s, it would only be expected that a libretto of such age would be abbreviated and altered to suit contemporary operatic taste; some of the original aria texts would be omitted or substituted, and the remaining aria texts would be set more expansively. In this case, only 14 of the original 18 aria texts of Metastasio were newly set to music.
In culinary and fishery contexts, fish may include shellfish, such as molluscs, crustaceans and echinoderms; more expansively, seafood covers both fish and other marine life used as food. Since 1961, the average annual increase in global apparent food fish consumption (3.2 percent) has outpaced population growth (1.6 percent) and exceeded consumption of meat from all terrestrial animals, combined (2.8 percent) and individually (bovine, ovine, pig, other), except poultry (4.9 percent). In per capita terms, food fish consumption has grown from 9.0 kg in 1961 to 20.2 kg in 2015, at an average rate of about 1.5 percent per year. The expansion in consumption has been driven not only by increased production, but also by a combination of many other factors, including reduced wastage, better utilization, improved distribution channels and growing demand, linked with population growth, rising incomes and urbanization.
A quince: one of the six fruits featured in Good Things The sections of the book deal with fish, meat and game, vegetables and fruit, with a miscellany to conclude. In some of Grigson's later books she dealt exhaustively with specific ingredients: her Fish Cookery two years later covered more than fifty varieties of fish. Here she deals with five: kippers, lobster, mussels, scallops and trout, writing about her few chosen subjects more expansively than in the later book, and discussing the pros and cons of various recipes. She says of lobsters that there is nothing more delicious, so sweet, firm and succulent, discusses the most humane way of killing them, and although advancing the proposition that they are best eaten hot with only lemon juice and butter on them, she gives the recipes for homard à l'Americaine (quoting Édouard de Pomiane's view that it is "a gastronomic cacophony") and Thermidor, as well as bisque, which she calls "without qualification ... the best of all soups".
Some Anglo-Catholic parishes use Anglican versions of the Tridentine Missal, such as the English Missal, The Anglican Missal, or the American Missal, for the celebration of Mass, all of which are intended primarily for the celebration of the Eucharist, or use the order for the Eucharist in Common Worship arranged according to the traditional structure, and often with interpolations from the Roman Rite. In the Episcopal Church (United States), a traditional-language, Anglo-Catholic adaptation of the 1979 Book of Common Prayer has been published (An Anglican Service Book). All of these books contain such features as meditations for the presiding celebrant(s) during the liturgy, and other material such as the rite for the blessing of palms on Palm Sunday, propers for special feast days, and instructions for proper ceremonial order. These books are used as a more expansively Catholic context in which to celebrate the liturgical use found in the Book of Common Prayer and related liturgical books.
The purpose of the chapel was, as with other New Kingdom chapels, to “experience a sense of communion with spirits”. Weatherhead and Kemp elaborate as follows: > The Workmen's Village chapels... show that people really did prepare and eat > meals in spiritually charged locations... At the Amarna Workmen's Village > (and at Deir el-Medina) the local combination of a small and prescribed > house size and abundant external space allowed people to think more > expansively and to build separate places - the chapels - which satisfied > both the desire to express spirituality and the convenient accommodation of > the feasting element of honouring the spiritual essence of family headship, > that included ancestors... By this view, the Workmen's Village chapels are > the product of contingency: the isolation of the village and its cramped > interior, the unusual closeness of its cemetery, and the existence of much > open space brought out within the villagers a fuller architectural > expression of spiritual communion, combining meals with commemoration, than > was open to people of similar or even higher social standing within the city > proper.
The nucleus of the villa property, the Villa Vecchia or ‘old villa’, already existed before 1630, when it was bought by Pamfilio Pamfili, who had married the heiress Olimpia Maidalchini, to enjoy as a suburban villa. Thereafter he set about buying up neighbouring vineyards to accumulate a much larger holding,This larger estate was sometimes referred to by contemporaries as the Vegna Panfili, the "Pamphili vineyards" of the western part of the property which was often known as the Bel Respiro or 'beautiful breath' as it stood on high ground, above the malarial areas of Rome, and offered spectacular views which were a desirable feature of Baroque villa settings.The Pamphili preferred to call it the Villa dell'Allegrezze or ‘villa of joy’-- ignoring the stricture in Ecclesiastes 7:4 that gave rise to Edith Wharton's House of Mirth The giardino segreto parterre today In 1644 Cardinal Giambattista Pamphili became elected to the papacy and took the name of Innocent X. In accordance with this change in status, the Pamphili aspired to a grander and more expansively sited new villa. Early designs were made, possibly by Virgilio Spada rather than the traditional attribution to Borromini, but these were rejected.

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