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87 Sentences With "more generously"

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

Or perhaps, more generously still, to signify we've got their backs.
"Uh, the woman at the bottom is more generously proportioned," one said.
But our children may judge us more generously than we judge ourselves.
On the other hand, the better-off can contribute more generously to Church coffers.
For example, notice your own bias so you can grapple more generously with others.
Homes in woodsier neighborhoods near the county parks sit on more generously sized lots.
Both bills increase the child tax credit, but the Senate does so more generously.
They have been very generously compensated for their losses, much more generously than first responders.
The latter would be treated more harshly than ordinary domestic transactions; the former, more generously.
Venezuelans are being treated more generously; they can get a "democratic responsibility" visa allowing them to work.
If you cook sweet potatoes is the slow cooker, be sure to season more generously than normal.
All cover more people, in more kinds of circumstances, more generously than they did at their creation.
But I was after a bigger question: Have we finally found the bottom, or more generously, the limit?
At 425bp over Euribor, with a 1% floor, it is also one of the more generously priced credits.
"There may be alternative treatments that have lower costs or that your insurer covers more generously," Dusetzina said by email.
Men are more likely to tip than women (17% v 1.33%) and give more generously ($3.13 v $3.07 on average).
One solution would be to rescue the word, by applying it more selectively to men and more generously to women.
That's going to mean tough sledding for private plans that pay doctors and hospitals like Medicare does, only more generously.
After several months of this practice, people reported greater empathy, understood others' feelings more precisely and acted more generously to strangers.
Birmingham council was successfully sued for rewarding male-dominated work like street-sweeping more generously than female-dominated work like cleaning.
Right now, a company that spends more on its employees' health insurance gets something in exchange — happier, more generously compensated employees.
At least we can all thank the football gods that Rose opted for a more generously cut iteration of Cam's skintight trousers.
This means people who are older — regardless of income — are covered more generously (though the tax credits phase out for wealthy people).
However, not everyone who tells a pollster that pedagogues should be more generously paid will vote for higher taxes to make that easier.
Nine successive governments funded him, none more generously than that of Chávez, so to keep the orchestra afloat he dared not cross him.
The fact that participants donated more generously when primed to think about reasonableness may have implications for fields like education, politics, advocacy, and marketing.
"Countries like Japan will need to continue to invest generously, actually even more generously than they currently are," the 63-year-old Gates said.
His sixth recommendation is that the European Union, along with the international community, must support foreign refugee-hosting countries far more generously than it currently does.
" He added that "you might be inclined to view this differently and more generously if the White House had shown a stronger commitment to ethics enforcement.
And a share of baby boomers, at least online, see Gen Z and millennials as entitled, participation-trophy-toting snowflakes, or, somewhat more generously, poor office workers.
A company like Polycom, with dubious prospects, is rewarded more generously for facing its struggles in private than embarking on a money-saving merger with another public company.
In this episode, the host Sam Harris and Mr. MacAskill discuss radical altruism, moral illusions and existential risk, and you may come away wanting to live more generously.
But Trump's apparent intention to sabotage Obamacare shows that his campaign's empathetic populism was always a sham—or, more generously, that he lacks the power to rule his party.
We could simultaneously support the Legal Services Corporation and other social services more generously and inhibit the expenditure cascades that have made it more difficult to afford these services.
Photo: GettySpend time talking to someone who considers themselves an anti-vaxxer—or more generously, a vaccine skeptic—and something becomes apparent pretty soon: The conspiracy well usually runs deep.
" Or, "Let us increase the wealth of America so that we can provide more generously for the aged and for the needy and for all those who cannot help themselves.
Advocates seeking to challenge restrictions on choice might find state courts willing to view their state constitutional commitments to due process and equal protection more generously than the Supreme Court.
That instead of repeating himself, he really would have been able to evolve his sense of form into something new; something that spoke more generously to those with multidimensional lives.
The recent outperformance of dividend plays and mega-cap growth stocks says yield vehicles and dominant secular-growth companies are being rewarded more generously than smaller, financially riskier and more cyclical names.
Guests from the Northeast are also more than twice as likely to spend more generously on a wedding gift for a member of their family or a good friend, the survey found.
Wells Fargo's ability to sell several products to the same customer is one reason investors value it more generously than banks like J.P. Morgan Chase & Co, Citigroup Inc and Goldman Sachs Group Inc.
In particular, debaters often ask, should European states have responded differently to the emergence of large, discontented Muslim minorities, either by accommodating cultural difference more generously or (as some advocate) by suppressing it?
"China...was the one that more generously opened its doors to finance this project," Carlos Oehler, president of Jujuy's energy agency JEMSE, told Reuters in an interview in the provincial capital of San Salvador.
But the critics of the Ghost in the Shell adaptation make a series of presumptions that end up obscuring a more complex tale of cultural appropriation, or what we might more generously call hybridization.
He knew, too, that the nation had grown stronger the more widely it had opened its arms and the more generously it had interpreted Thomas Jefferson's assertion of equality in the Declaration of Independence.
Maybe because they wanted to avoid a Matt Damon foot-in-mouth situation, or perhaps more generously, to allow women to shine and be heard on a night when their voices were truly being amplified.
Trump had even joked during the summit that an anchor on North Korean state television, which broadcasts propaganda on behalf of Kim, praised Kim even more generously than Fox News did for Trump, according to Washington Post reporting.
But when, as was more likely under the Obama-era doctrine, a wealthier company employing a contractor or conferring a franchise is considered a joint employer, it must join the bargaining and could in principle compensate workers more generously.
For example, very small nudges in language can influence behavior: If a laboratory task is called The Community Game, people play more generously and cooperatively than they do if the exact same task is called The Wall Street Game.
The company may be hoping that the legal clarity provided by the CJEU's ruling on ride-hailing apps pushes cities and local authorities to accelerate reforms of existing rules to more generously accommodate the new generation of app-based players.
One might call that a ruthless greed, a self-assured defiance toward Trump's America or, more generously, a rational response to America's decades-old apparent indifference to one-third of its economy, where China's trade surpluses were slashing growth, jobs and incomes.
More generously, it is possible to see commonalities among many of these offerings nowadays, because so much of the equipment is made up of computer software, which can be adjusted on the fly, or used to make diverse things act in concert.
Human Rights Watch and others have repeatedly called for other countries to increase their assistance to Jordan, resettle greater numbers of Syrian refugees living in Jordan, and respond more generously to the U.N. refugee agency's budget in Jordan, which is currently only funded at 29%.
LEARN TO LOOK MORE GENEROUSLY AT ONE ANOTHER AND OURSELVES Instead of muttering "What the hell happened?" at the face in the mirror, how about taking a minute to recall some of the things that did happen, and how remarkable a lot of them were?
"I am today more interested also to encourage other donors to step up to the plate and to finance neutral humanitarian organizations and operations more generously and this certainly is true for some Europeans states, Gulf states as well as other important countries," Maurer added.
Viewed more generously, the votes of the deniers are votes for the underdog — why use the Grammys to celebrate someone who sells oodles of albums and gets ample radio play when the show can shine a light on a deserving artist generally ignored by the spotlight?
More generously, it is because for the first time, a piece of interactive fiction is strong enough in its storytelling, character writing, and setting, and its ludonarrative dissonance is sufficiently muted, that I'm compelled to play in a manner consistent with what optimizes the game's coherence.
It was, ultimately, "something that spoke more generously to those with multi-dimensional lives" (as opposed to, as she compared with a slight jab, the "pouty, infantilizing" looks by Slimane.) Slimane's collection for the label instigated not just an aesthetic shove but a psychological one: sophisticated women were bulldozed for a more juvenile look.
In the recent low-price gas world, I've found myself dreaming about replacing my miserly compact — a little Subaru Impreza — with a more generously sized model, one with enough space for skis and boots and boxes and luggage and other assorted pieces of paraphernalia that I might want to cram into the vehicle one day.
In Germany, Beamte have permanent tenure, i.e. they cannot normally be dismissed, receive certain privileges, and are usually remunerated more generously than ordinary employees. In addition, they are exempt from all social security contributions such as pension or unemployment insurance. Dismissal is permissible for prolonged periods of illness, i.e.
Natural gas consumption patterns, across nations, vary based on access. Countries with large reserves tend to handle the raw-material natural gas more generously, while countries with scarce or lacking resources tend to be more economical. Despite the considerable findings, the predicted availability of the natural-gas reserves has hardly changed.
Despite the maneuvering of the Williams family, Jonathan Edwards became the successor to John Sergeant and became the resident minister on August 9, 1751.Learning, p. 87. Timothy, as clerk, wrote up a land deed for Edwards the following April. A man named John Wauwaumpequunnaunt served as translator for Edwards, and also assisted Timothy in his school, and Edwards lobbied that he be compensated more generously.
In Gortyn, epikleroi were also called patroiokos, and they were more generously treated than in Athens.Pomeroy Families in Classical and Hellenistic Greece p. 53 footnote 87 The term patroiokos can be literally translated as "having the father's property", and was a description of the condition of the heiress. She was considered a patroiouchoi if she had no father or brother by her father living.
Modern writers have generally treated the piece more generously; the music may be of uneven quality and over-reflective of the works of Bizet's contemporaries, says Dean, but there are interesting hints of his mature accomplishments.Dean (1980), pp. 754–55 Others have given credit to the composer for overcoming the limitations of the libretto with some genuinely dramatic strokes and the occasional inspiring melody.
18 people received death sentences for their participation in the 1935 Suvalkija farmers' strike, but majority received presidential pardons and only five were executed. In other instances the presidential pardon was used more generously. For example, three men, including General Petras Kubiliūnas, received pardons for their role in the 1934 anti-Smetona coup and five men received pardons for their conviction of murder during the Neumann–Sass case.
The products that were delivered by the serfs—usually with great pageantry as part of an extravagantly prepared celebration—were distributed yet again. This served as a means of self- promotion; the more generously a chief behaved, the higher his prestige was. The preparation of dances, dramas, and song for these celebrations was essentially the Arioi's responsibility. Then again, they also profited from the gifts that they gave out and were rewarded with bast fiber tapa as well.
Glasgow led the way and others followed. Tower blocks became the preferred model. The councils visited Marseille and saw the results of Charles Édouard Jenneret's (Le Corbusier's) vision. The argument was advanced that more generously sized dwellings could be provided this way, that communities could be re-housed close to existing employment opportunities and there would be far less disruption to local shopping and leisure patterns. During the 1950s and 1960s, the number of high-rise dwellings rose significantly.
In In Search of Wonder, Damon Knight is critical of the novel's coherence, scientific accuracy and style: Groff Conklin, however, more generously termed The Blind Spot an "honored classic" despite being "overwritten [and] leaning a little heavily on the pseudo-metaphysical.""Galaxy's 5 Star Shelf", Galaxy Science Fiction, January 1952, p.119. Forrest J Ackerman described it in Astounding as a "luxuriantly glorious Merrittesque [fantasy] of dimensional interstices" and "a highly philosophical work.""Book Reviews", Astounding Science Fiction, September 1951, p.
In the 1920s "ideal direction" was interpreted more generously as "wide-hearted humanity", and writers like Anatole France, George Bernard Shaw and Thomas Mann were awarded. In the 1930s "the greatest benefit on mankind" was interpreted as writers within everybody’s reach, with authors like Sinclair Lewis and Pearl Buck being awarded. From 1946 a renewed Academy changed focus and began to award literary pioneers like Hermann Hesse, André Gide, T. S. Eliot and William Faulkner. From this era, "the greatest benefit on mankind" was interpreted in a more exclusive and generous way than before.
Other developers also built similar houses along the same block. The historic district extends for most of a city block, extending along the south side of Elm Street between Hudson and Russell Streets. The nine buildings in the district are of wood frame construction, and follow the typical forms of three-deckers elsewhere in the city, albeit on a more generously sized scale. Front porches on several of the buildings extend across the entire front, and some wrap around to one side; several of these retain original elaborate balustrades.
Readers of the Historia Francorum must decide whether this is a royal history and whether Gregory was writing to please his patrons. It is likely that one royal Frankish house is more generously treated than others. Gregory was also a Catholic bishop, and his writing reveals views typical of someone in his position. His views on perceived dangers of Arianism, still strong among the Visigoths,J Burrow, A History of Histories (London 2007) p. 204 led him to preface the Historia with a detailed expression of his orthodoxy on the nature of Christ.
The style of development of the shops along Green Lanes mirrored that of the residential areas in that almost the whole of the eastern side was built as a single development whilst building on the western side was rather more piecemeal. Completed in 1899, the eastern side was developed almost entirely as the architecturally unified Grand Parade by J. C. Hill. It had more generously sized shops than those to the west and smart accommodation above. The single break in Grand Parade is created by the National Provincial Bank (now Barclays Bank), built in 1894.
Both Chaney and Lynch noted what she called "inexplicably high production values"; the fact that "these two looked great together", danced the merengue "beautifully" and "sounded smooth" drew a "B+" grade from her, while his "B" was given because "the dancing wowed but their voices just didn't connect for me on this empty club version". The two songs performed by Will Schuester received the most negative reviews. Chaney described "La Cucaracha" as "mercifully brief", and Slezak gave it an "F" for being not only "intentionally awful" but "awful- awful". Chaney was more generously inclined toward "A Little Less Conversation".
Her armament was carried in a midships armoured compartment which, when used in subsequent designs, became known as a box battery. The designed armament of seventeen guns was discarded, and the offensive power of the ship was concentrated into four 100-pounder Somerset smoothbore cannon, which were at the time the most powerful guns afloat. While these guns were certainly much more effective against armour than smaller pieces, whether a two-gun broadside would have prevailed against more generously armed ironclads is open to question. For the first time, in this ship, a degree of axial fire was possible from broadside guns.
During the Russo-Japanese War the situation was very delicate, but the Christians, at least the greater number of them, did not abandon him. Even during this time he continued all his undertakings unmolested, his house being guarded by Japanese soldiers. Prior to that, he received from the Holy Synod 95,000 yen yearly, but during the Russo-Japanese War, these and other resources from Russia were greatly diminished, while on the other hand the price of everything in Japan increased. The bishop was compelled to diminish his expenses, to dismiss part of his staff and to exhort the Christians to contribute more generously to support their church.
The conference decided to expand the Lithuanian Information Bureau and establish a permanent institution, the five-member Council of the Lithuanian Nation () in Switzerland, to unite Lithuanian activists in Lithuania, Russia, and United States. The conference expressed its disappointment over infighting among Lithuanian Americans due to political differences and called for a unifying Supreme Lithuanian American Council. It also urged Lithuanians, particularly those living in the United States, to donate more generously towards Lithuanian causes and rebuilding after the war. The conference prepared a memorandum to Pope Benedict XV requesting creation of a Lithuanian archdiocese with the seat in Vilnius and a Lithuanian diocese in the United States.
Makers and Takers is a book by Peter Schweizer. It was published by Doubleday in June 2008. The book's thesis is summarized in its subtitle: Why conservatives work harder, feel happier, have closer families, take fewer drugs, give more generously, value honesty more, are less materialistic and envious, whine less … and even hug their children more than liberals. Where Schweizer's book Do as I Say (Not as I Do): Profiles in Liberal Hypocrisy portrayed liberal icons and leaders in America as less virtuous than their conservative counterparts, Makers and Takers expands this thesis to the general populace, implying conservatives in general are more virtuous than liberals.
The free-spending Buckingham paid Jonson the unusual sum of £100 for his work on the masque, double the usual sum of 40-50 pounds; but Lanier was even more generously rewarded for his music, receiving £200. One of the masque's songs, which begins with the line "Cocklorrel would needs have the devil his guest," was a popular hit, both in its own time and well into the Restoration era. (A musical setting for the song survives, though it is anonymous and not certainly Lanier's; other song settings for the masque, by Robert Johnson and Edmund Chilmead, also exist, testifying to the work's popularity.)Walls, pp. 273-4.
Eliot first envisioned today's river design in the 1890s, an important model being the layout of the Alster basin in Hamburg, but major construction began only after Eliot's death with the damming of the river's mouth at today's Boston Museum of Science, an effort led by James Jackson Storrow. The new dam, completed in 1910, stabilized the water level from Boston to Watertown, eliminating the existing mud flats, and a narrow embankment was built between Leverett Circle and Charlesgate. After Storrow's death, his widow Mrs. James Jackson Storrow donated $1 million toward the creation of a more generously landscaped park along the Esplanade; it was dedicated in 1936 as the Storrow Memorial Embankment.
The Hills District is not a formally defined region, and definitions as to the suburbs and localities that comprise it are variable. For example, the Hills District Historical Society restricts its definition to the Hills Shire local government area. More generously, the term Hills District is applied to the area generally west of New Line, Old Northern, and Pennant Hills Roads, north of Kissing Point Roads, and James Ruse Drive, east of Sunnyholt , Old Windsor, and Windsor Roads, and extending as far north as the Hawkesbury River. Expanded definitions may include Seven Hills, Kings Langley and Glenwood, as these have historical connections with the district, although these suburbs are usually considered part of the Greater Western Sydney general region.
Later Micromoogs also gained an extra potentiometer on the back to adjust the keyboard output tracking. There were also internal changes to the keyboard. The Micromoog has an audio input allowing external audio to be run through the filter and VCA. The connections on the rear connection panel are as follows: Outputs: LO Audio -10 dbm, HI Audio +12dbm, S-trig, KBD, Access(ory) power ± 15 VDC, 50 MA Inputs: filter, oscillator (0.95Volts per octave), S-trig, Audio Modulation The Micromoog served as the basis for the Multimoog, a similarly styled, but more generously equipped synthesizer featuring two VCOs, a larger 44 note keyboard, greater modulation options and an early implementation of keyboard aftertouch functions.
" In the February 1925 issue of Theatre Magazine, Aileen St. John-Brenon wrote that "the persons in the photoplay are not characters, but types—they are well selected, weighed and completely drilled. But they did not act; they do not come to life. They perform their mission like so many uncouth images of miserliness and repugnant animalism." Mordaunt Hall of the New York Times gave the film a mostly positive review in regards to the acting and directing while criticizing how it was edited, writing that MGM "clipped this production as much as they dared ... and are to be congratulated on their efforts and the only pity is that they did not use the scissors more generously in the beginning.
A shame Lennon didn't listen more generously." According to Williams, writing in his book Phil Spector: Out of His Head, Spector's mistake was in "taking McCartney at his face value" and emphasising the sentimental qualities that George Martin's orchestral arrangements for the Beatles had successfully tempered. Williams added: "Some might say that this track, above all others, epitomises Paul McCartney, and that when Spector sent the saccharine strings sweeping in after the first line of vocal, he was merely highlighting the reality." In a 2003 review for Mojo, shortly after the announcement that McCartney planned to issue "a string-less Let It Be", John Harris opined: "As someone who experiences a Proustian rush every time the orchestra crash-lands in The Long And Winding Road, I can only implore him to think again.
The greater the variety of color and the more conspicuous the "resonance", the more generously he calculated the geometrical figures and the colored rectangles. He also "portrayed" the objects by their color-values and "sounds" - whether it was paint on house walls or fishing boats, whether olive or pine groves, mountain ranges or beaches. Ultimately, Nebel compiled a "psycho-historical" catalogue by classifying certain colors according to personal optical impressions, and with the resulting scales he laid the basis for his future work. How important the color atlas would be for the artist from now on when he was designing or composing pictures can be not only seen in works such as Rivoli, Pompejanisches ("Pompeian"), Camogli, Recco or Arkadisches ("Arcadian"), but already in the sheets Siena I to III.
54-58 Churchill Street is single-storeyed rendered masonry building with pitched corrugated iron roofs, comprising four internally disparate shops which are united by a common parapet and awning. The building is similar in materials, scale and parapet features to other commercial buildings on Churchill St. It is located on a bend at the eastern end of the street, and contributes significantly to the picturesque townscape of the street. The building sits on a wedge-shaped block, and has a truncated eastern frontage. The different shops reflect their different uses: no 54 is a small shop with a single display window; no 56 comprises two shops, a former bank, more generously proportioned than its neighbour, which has a rendered masonry street facade, and a narrow shop with a two display windows and a central entrance; no 58 is a large skylit cafe with two entrances and three display windows.
The protective language law outlawed the public display of English, making French signs obligatory, regulations that would later be overturned in the course of court challenges. A first referendum on sovereignty was held in 1980 (under the leadership of Lévesque the YES side lost with 40.44% of the votes), and a second in 1995 (with Lucien Bouchard, Jacques Parizeau and Mario Dumont as leaders, when the YES campaign narrowly lost at 49.42%). The historian and sociologist Gérard Bouchard, co-chair of the Bouchard-Taylor Commission, has suggested that, as the francophones of Quebec or French Canadian descent consider themselves a fragile and colonized minority, despite forming the majority of the population of Quebec, they have found it difficult to accept other ethnic groups as also being Quebecers. He thinks that an independent Quebec with a founding myth based upon un acte fondateur would give the Québécois the confidence to act more generously to incorporate all willing ethnic communities in Quebec into a unified whole.
The characteristic of Cambridge is small companies (as few as three people, in some cases) in sectors such as computer-aided design. Over time the number of companies has grown; it has not proved easy to count them, but recent estimates have placed the number anywhere between 1,000 and 3,500 companies. They are spread over an area defined perhaps by the CB postcode or 01223 telephone area code, or more generously in an area bounded by Ely, Newmarket, Saffron Walden, Royston and Huntingdon. In 2000, then Chancellor of the Exchequer Gordon Brown set up a research partnership between MIT and Cambridge University, the Cambridge–MIT Institute, in order to increase international collaboration between the two universities and to strengthen the economic success of Silicon Fen. In February 2006, the Judge Business School, Cambridge University reported estimates that suggested that at that time, there were around 250 active start-ups directly linked to the University, valued at around US$6 billion.

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