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74 Sentences With "more galling"

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

It was all the more galling, advisers said, because Mrs.
That should make it all the more galling if you're a Denver fan.
What is more galling than that is that all of this was entirely avoidable.
The unfairness is all the more galling because of the fierce competition for jobs.
More galling, perhaps, was the implicit rebuke to their own collective marital-bed deaths.
What makes this all the more galling is that Apple didn't use to do this!
This misstep has only proved to be more and more galling as years have passed.
Here, mounting aggravations are all the more galling in light of the talent on screen.
It's all the more galling for Russians because it seemed, for a while, so tantalizingly close.
Which makes the LGBTQ representation to be found in 2017's studio tentpoles even more galling.
What is even more galling is that it was taxpayers who paid for much of Amazon's growth.
This being true makes it all the more galling that Pelosi opposed impeachment so strenuously for so long.
But in the context of Perry's "purposeful music" statement, it feels even more galling, and harder to ignore.
However, the lack of goodbye or any mention of Goldberg's departure on the UFC 207 broadcast was more galling.
Even more galling, City's great rival — Manchester United — is the team that could grab the Champions League qualification berth.
That makes the notion of an organ becoming less healthy during transit all the more galling, Dr. Scalea said.
It's all the more galling for the House GOP leadership that it's a senator who's playing hardball on their turf.
Anticorruption activists say the revelations of wealth held by the political elites are all the more galling because of widespread poverty.
That the umbrella remains a default weather accessory and also total crap is all the more galling when you consider its context.
Flynn perhaps should've held off, but Trump himself flouted the one-president-at-a-time convention constantly, and in much more galling ways.
Even more galling, the new company would not have to pay anything to acquire the towers, equipment and other assets of the existing system.
Even more galling: Brown was able to receive the credits that reduced her 60-year-sentence as a result of her own model behavior.
But we sometimes go too hard on lesser actors and episodes, potentially sacrificing the credibility and authority that we need for more galling moments.
He wasn't, which makes it all the more galling was that Anderson's Rice University teammate, Lance Berkman, was right there on the draft board.
But even more galling than the ad was his response to an NBC reporter when asked to explain his opposition to free college for all.
These expectations may have been dashed, as opposition to Mr Assad has been taken over by extremists; but such memories make Mr Assad's successes more galling.
More galling still, reports continue to come in of overheating problems that leave Prius owners in limp-home mode or stranded in traffic unable to move.
More galling: when Thorne asked for Obama's favorite Star Wars -- "one through six" -- Obama chose "number one," which he said he saw when he was 14.
Add in Mr. King's frequent support for President Trump and his policies, and Mr. Schumer's comments seemed even more galling — and divisive — to some on the left.
What is even more galling is that Mueller said in his press conference that he believed Barr acted in "good faith" in wanting to release the full report.
Then the White House got involved when Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders made a ridiculous statement about Hill's comments and, even more galling, called on ESPN to fire her.
This little bit of self-congratulatory detail, though, is all the more galling when compared to the half a billion Yahoo customers who have not, until now, been notified.
Yet even if Mr Durant chose a far more dignified means of announcing his choice—a brief online article—his choice is actually more galling than Mr James's was.
But that lack of consideration is far more galling when race enters the picture; the phrase white privilege was invented to describe their behavior in both of these cases.
This is all the more galling given that China promised Hong Kong a "high degree of autonomy" from 1997 until at least 2047 under the "one country, two systems" arrangement.
This is made all the more galling by the fact that the economy, as Trump frequently reminds everyone, is doing very well, particularly for the people at the very top.
The fact that we're probably inside a bubble and yet fail to recognize it is more galling because we've been talking about this kind of irrational exuberance for well over 150 years.
That the result of such work is created specifically for public consumption makes these patterns of abuse, and the systemic framing of abuse as necessary to the work, all the more galling.
What makes the lurch to the hard right all the more galling for Democrats is the fact that Hillary Clinton won the popular vote by more than 2.5 million votes (roughly 2 percent).
He and they are disgracing our country in ever more galling ways, with support from a fringe of white nationalists whose reprehensible ideology warrants all of the attention that it receives and more.
What makes it all the more galling is the Beijing government's feigned umbrage whenever the camps are mentioned, and its absurd efforts to depict them as China's contribution to the war on terrorism.
That abdication of responsibility was one of the more galling examples of Republicans and Democrats alike refusing to take a hard line against the dictatorship that has fueled the largest refugee crises in history.
Perhaps even more galling is that the European Union knows all this, but prefers not to see or hear about the corruption for fear of upsetting the precarious bonds that hold the union together.
The rarity of their victories against Liverpool wasn't even the worst of it as far as Everton fans were concerned, with the significance of a select few defeats far more galling than the overall disparity.
Of the many canards that Trump tells, nothing is more galling or untrue than when he or some of his supporters say he is as good a president as — or even better than — Ronald Reagan.
And so few things are more galling to many residents of a residential complex there than the big letters that greet them at their building: T-R-U-M-P P-L-A-C-E.
If he really is speaking for "the vast majority" of Senate Republicans, then the fact that they have done nothing meaningful about Trump's abuses of power and dangerous foreign policy is all the more galling.
It was all the more galling in light of the fact that per student spending in OECD member countries had risen more than 15% over the past decade, the organization said in a report presenting the study.
February 16, 2016 Even more galling was the Screening Passengers by Observation Techniques (SPOT) program: a six-year-long TSA pilot project that placed officers trained to detect deception using "micro-expressions" in 161 airports across the country.
The income disparity between electric-vehicle owners and the average American taxpayer is stark, but it is even more galling that the industry considers the tax credit to be a "successful incentive so far" given the demographic disparity.
More galling for the pro-EU Cameron was the fact that many of the most prominent "Brexiteers" had come from his own ruling Conservative Party, chief among them the former Mayor of London, Boris Johnson, and Justice Minister, Michael Gove.
Egypt has been plagued by poverty — one-third of Egyptians now live in poverty, an increase during Sisi's rule, according to The Journal — and a decline in tourism due to instability, making the extravagant spending all the more galling for many.
Greg LeRoy, executive director of Good Jobs First, described HQ2 as the "fourth largest megadeal in US history," made more galling by the fact that, through his organization's research, it seems Amazon has averaged around 20 subsidy deals annually in recent years.
The 21 months of Brexit talks so far have failed to reach a solution to this issue, and it's made all the more galling to the EU that most Brits didn't think about it when they voted to leave on June 23, 2016.
The tradition of saying one thing while doing another isn't new or unique to Hollywood, but it does come across as more galling in the light of #MeToo — all that talk, and the pins and T-shirts and marching, looking especially cheap without accompanying action.
At a certain point—I would nominate the scene in which he comes upon a disused fairground, in need of repair—it becomes clear that the film is one long act of therapy, and that, more galling still, it is heading remorselessly toward a happy ending.
It can be painful to face the fact that some of the men we revere for their bravery, Enlightenment views, and political genius also owned slaves, a sin that's made all the more galling because our democracy was founded on novel ideas of individual liberty and personhood.
Unlike the 1970s, when subways covered in graffiti became emblems of urban decay and the city faced a financial meltdown, the current problems are all the more galling to riders and advocates because they come at a time when the city is booming and flush with tax revenues.
As a Washingtonian from northern Indiana who transits Breezewood for family visits, I have often wondered the same thing — a question that became more galling after my younger son, jolted by our sudden deceleration into the area's stop-and-go traffic, threw up all over the back seat.
But perhaps even more galling is that, having thrown their fiscal caution to the wind and having decided that now, with a Republican in the White House, debt is no longer a concern, their best idea for spending hundreds of billions of dollars is to give it all to the rich.
There's a maturity to his language that makes his choices all the more galling: He may have once been a brainwashed child or a lovestruck teen, but at the time he sits down to recount (and perhaps atone) for how he's treated Elsa, the reader cannot help but see a full-grown adult.
The timing of the announcement was all the more galling, critics say, coming shortly after a controversial meeting between Lynch and former President Bill ClintonWilliam (Bill) Jefferson ClintonThe magic of majority rule in elections The return of Ken Starr Assault weapons ban picks up steam in Congress MORE on the tarmac at Phoenix's international airport.
That reckoning came a big step closer on Wednesday, when a federal appeals court in Florida dealt a major setback to one of the more galling G.O.P. anti-voter measures of recent years — a modern-day poll tax in Florida aimed at keeping hundreds of thousands of people with criminal records away from the ballot box.
It's all the more galling, the new suit contends, because Watts Guerra and the other defendants deceived their clients about the relative merits and drawbacks of filing their own suits and then supposedly made sure the farmers they represented would not be notified about developments in the federal case in Kansas City or a statewide class action in state court in Minnesota.
This forger was a careless bumbler. That makes it all the more galling how readily the media fell for the scam.Jim Davila, Fake Metal Codices Watch, Paleojudaica, 8 April 2011. On 11 April the Daily Express reported Thonemann's comments together with a response by David Elkington that Thonemann was not a biblical scholar but a Greek scholar.
Even a delighted Eagle Keys went > on record that he had never seen Walker play a better game than he did last > night. Art handled Ed Kotowich and Fred Cole as if he owned them. Another writer described Walker's performance in the same game as follows: > Thursday night Walker, who seemed bent on some personal vendetta, simply > refused to let Winnipeg run anything to the left side of the Edmonton line. > Mostly it was sheer ability, but to make his performance even more galling > to the Winnipeg offensive unit, every time he guessed right.
The 4th armada left India in early 1503. Da Gama left behind a small squadron of caravels under the command of his uncle, Vicente Sodré, to patrol the Indian coast, to continue harassing Calicut shipping, and to protect the Portuguese factories at Cochin and Cannanore from the Zamorin's inevitable reprisals. Vasco da Gama arrived back in Portugal in September 1503, effectively having failed in his mission to bring the Zamorin to submission. This failure, and the subsequent more galling failure of his uncle Vicente Sodré to protect the Portuguese factory in Cochin, probably counted against any further rewards.
What was more galling for the Navan club was the fact that the illegal player failed to even touch the ball late on in their two-point win. Having been advised by the Meath County board officials of the infraction at the game, Dunboyne left the decision to the Meath County Board who then asked Dunboyne to offer a replay following a campaign from the O'Mahony's club. O'Mahonys appealed their expulsion to the Meath County Board and later to the Leinster Council. On 6 October 2005, the GAA's Disputes Resolution Authority (DRA) upheld the ruling of both boards after a 4 hour meeting at Navan's Ardboyne Hotel.
Galling is distinct from gouging or scratching in that it involves the visible transfer of material as it is adhesively pulled (mechanically spalled) from one surface, leaving it stuck to the other in the form of a raised lump (gall). Unlike other forms of wear, galling is usually not a gradual process, but occurs quickly and spreads rapidly as the raised lumps induce more galling. It can often occur in screws and bolts, causing the threads to seize and tear free from either the fastener or the hole. In extreme cases, the bolt may seize without stripping the threads, which can lead to breakage of the fastener or the tool turning it.
The previous season a defeat to the same opposition had deprived Ireland of a triple crown and the championship, a situation made all the more galling by the fact that Wales had previously lost to both England and Scotland. The Belfast defeat was to be Sugden's final international, as it was for other Irish stalwarts – Jack Arigho (qv), Jimmy Farrell, and ‘Jammie’ Clinch (qv). With their departure, the great Irish team of the late 1920s began to break up. All told, in twenty-eight internationals Sugden finished on the winning side sixteen times, lost ten games, and drew two, scoring three tries in the process; a record that would compare favourably with any other Irish player before the professional era.
In addition to down grading military pensions, the government, without assigning reason, down graded the status of soldier by equating "infantry soldier with less than three years' service" with a "semi-skilled/unskilled labour". These decisions were all the more galling for the armed forces as these were based on the recommendation, and endorsement of Defence Secretary K B Lall, ICS, whose job it was to ensure the well being of the armed forces. The decision was announced two months after Field Marshal Sam Manekshaw, who led the army in the victorious 1971 war, retired from service. The reason for depressing the armed Forces pensions, which continues to rankle veterans and servings personnel, given by the Congress I government was that it wanted to ensure ‘equivalence’ of Armed Forces pensions with civilians.
In the 18th century, there were still examples of Austrian officers who moved into rooms more spacious than the ones they had been assigned; others would bring girls of low repute to their house at night, to the alarm of their civilian landlords. This was all the more galling given that, under the Spaniards and Austrians, the city's inhabitants received no compensation for all this: they were to provide housing to the soldiers free of charge. The government claimed that since the garrison's presence brought trade and business which benefited the city's merchants and artisans, it was only fair for citizens to contribute by lodging the troops. Nor was the burden of quartering troops shared equally, by any means: there were many exemptions, reflecting the social inequality of the Ancien Régime society.
Most of the volunteers were low- ranking soldiers or even simple artisans, who in Greece found themselves promoted to officers; many of the recruits were adventurers, while others were the dregs of society in their home countries. In the words of the official Hellenic Army history, "the Hellenic Army benefited in no way from the Bavarians who took service as trainers and organizers", as the Bavarian officers, rapidly promoted from junior positions to higher ranks, lacked the experience necessary to properly organize the new army, and were unable to take into consideration the country's peculiar circumstances, climate, or the character of its people. It is telling that almost the only drill and exercises carried out during this period were at the company level, which was what the Bavarian officers were familiar with. This lack of skills made the retention of so many Bavarian officers after 1837 even more galling to the Greeks.
Vidmar, The Catholic Church Through the Ages (2005), pp. 107–11Duffy, Saints and Sinners (1997), p. 78, quote: "By contrast, Paschal's successor Eugenius II (824–7), elected with imperial influence, gave away most of these papal gains. He acknowledged the Emperor's sovereignty in the papal state, and he accepted a constitution imposed by Lothair which established imperial supervision of the administration of Rome, imposed an oath to the Emperor on all citizens, and required the pope–elect to swear fealty before he could be consecrated. Under Sergius II (844–7) it was even agreed that the pope could not be consecrated without an imperial mandate and that the ceremony must be in the presence of his representative, a revival of some of the more galling restrictions of Byzantine rule." In 1095, Byzantine emperor Alexius I appealed to Pope Urban II for help against renewed Muslim invasions in the Byzantine–Seljuk Wars,Riley-Smith, p. 8 which caused Urban to launch the First Crusade aimed at aiding the Byzantine Empire and returning the Holy Land to Christian control.Bokenkotter, pp. 140–141 In the 11th century, strained relations between the primarily Greek church and the Latin Church separated them in the East–West Schism, partially due to conflicts over papal authority.

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