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145 Sentences With "more glaring"

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

And then there are the more glaring criminal justice concerns.
Perhaps no neighborhood's enforcement disparity is more glaring than Brownsville.
The need for more pumped storage hydropower couldn't be more glaring.
That makes the left's foreign policy vacuum all the more glaring.
Another was more glaring: "Black girl, plus harp," she said wryly.
But it is India that has suffered the more glaring contradictions.
That leaves the missteps of the finale feeling all the more glaring.
If Hillary had a normal opponent, her vulnerabilities would be more glaring.
Were "Strong Island" a strict procedural, that exclusion would be more glaring.
The zero-tolerance atmosphere made last week's mistake all the more glaring.
For no automaker is that hypocrisy more glaring than Ford Motor Company.
That's why it's even more glaring when they don't choose them at all.
However, his conflicts in this matter have only become more glaring with time.
In the less forgiving silence of "Period," subtlety without substance is more glaring.
A more glaring deficiency, however, is Mr. Petrenko's apparent allergy to contemporary music.
Bolton's differences with Trump were never more glaring than on Iran and North Korea.
The removal of the media conglomerate's glossy cover made its troubles even more glaring.
Rival big banks have been tightening their belts, making Wells Fargo's expense problems more glaring.
As China's internet firms get bigger, the unfairness of this will become ever more glaring.
Even more glaring is the preemptive effort to undermine future charges of corruption against Trump.
There's nothing more glaring than an American on the streets of Europe, especially during Fashion Week.
Many see it as attempting to fix a non-issue while ignoring bigger, more glaring problems.
The only thing more glaring than Sean Spicer's ignorance is the policy incoherence it now highlights.
Anticipation for the service's Tuesday launch was high, making Day One technical problems all the more glaring.
Nowhere are the problems more glaring than in the care of the elderly and those with disabilities.
Look at the physical investment ties between China and America and the mutual vulnerabilities are even more glaring.
When compared to large-scale international problems, the pettiness of the art world becomes that much more glaring.
"The smaller the numbers get, the more glaring the reality is that this is a competition," she said.
One of the more glaring examples of how strong pessimism has become is Gallup's U.S. Economic Confidence Index.
Nowhere are those flaws more glaring than over the actual preferences of the residents of these cities themselves.
One of the more glaring decisions regarding maintenance was made following the emergency of Southwest Airlines flight 3472.
More glaring is the emphasis placed on "other" whenever the word is used to describe non-German Jews.
Their family's legacy in the business only made the white homogeneity of the industry that much more glaring.
And the show's persistent issues with race, which we outlined last week, just make that failure even more glaring.
A lack of racial diversity is even more glaring of an issue in the industry than is gender diversity.
And there may have been an even more glaring telltale that the F.B.I. did not mention in court filings.
With fewer weapons, the offensive line regressing and Brady showing his age, the Patriots' weaknesses have grown more glaring.
A third set of problems with "Die Zauberflöte" seems more and more glaring: the specters of racism and misogyny.
But even among all those questions, there was one omission that seemed even more glaring: Where the hell is AirPower?
She was also featured in promos for the show, which made her absence Sunday night more glaring for some viewers.
That pledge makes the company's activities in China all the more glaring, since they did not involve the old guard.
Sizing inconsistencies in women's clothing are all the more glaring when pointed out (or, rather, modeled by) a guy, apparently.
"Bikini Moon" is better in separate scenes than as a whole, where Manchevski's overreaches and plot lapses become more glaring.
He has written a 50-page summary of the more glaring problems, scheduled to be published soon in Tax Notes.
That silence is made more glaring by the increasing significance housing affordability has taken on for Democratic voters headed into 2020.
"The partisan asymmetry is more glaring than it's ever been," said Jennifer Lawless, a politics professor at the University of Virginia.
In the hands of a less talented cast, the show's warts might be even more glaring and these scenes even duller.
Even more glaring is the alarming rate of suicidality in the veteran community—the estimated stat is 20 suicides a day.
"Citizen Khan" sculpted a campaign that appealed to the anxious, the less affluent and those uneasy about London's more glaring inequalities.
Every time the Pacers ran up against their own limitations in the playoffs, Hibbert's own limitations seemed that much more glaring.
" Even so, the chasm between my new friend and me was no more glaring than when he said, "Dating is fun.
The overall decline is even more glaring in the wake of the #metoo movement afflicting media, technology, entertainment and political circles.
At times like these, Scorpio, the pointlessness of what passes for "news" in the art world becomes all the more glaring.
Phillips said that the lack of coordination reflected the more glaring absence of coherent U.S. strategy when it comes to Syria.
It demanded the player's attention with a cymbal crash, and as a result its constraints and redundancies were all the more glaring.
The lack of tech expertise on Capitol Hill has never been more glaring than in the wake of the Edward Snowden leaks.
The 11th-hour decision to split its "second headquarters," as Amazon is expected to announce shortly, makes the pattern only more glaring.
But it was still an absence, made even more glaring by the inclusion of Marcus Walker (Cornelius Smith Jr.) as Olivia's work bestie.
As Time's Up battles for women's equal pay, advocates can't ignore that the wage gap is even more glaring for women of color.
"In light of Mueller's letter, the misleading nature of Barr's 85033/10 testimony & 4/18 press conference is even more glaring," Schumer tweeted.
"In light of Mueller's letter, the misleading nature of Barr's 4/10 testimony & 4/18 press conference is even more glaring," he tweeted.
The gender ratio is that of a rooster and his hens, and in this setup, Mr. Siddi's recessive mediocrity is all the more glaring.
The absence of a coronavirus campaign was more glaring given that other public service advertising has continued, some of it striking a discordant note.
This included fixing several technical issues, with some of the more glaring problems having to do with thumbnail sizes on larger screens and devices.
In one of its more glaring misrepresentations, the book depicts Chicano activists in the civil rights era as separatists intent on overthrowing the United States.
And as the economy grows ever more complex, the inadequacies of the institutions that underpin it, especially the rule of law, will become more glaring.
A more glaring example was NBC's overhyping of Sydney McLaughlin as the "17-year-old sensation from New Jersey" before the 400-meter hurdles semifinals.
My experience as a waitress was one more glaring reminder that to be Chinese in America is to be always on the outside looking in.
Was there ever a more glaring contrast in a presidential election than the difference between Bill Clinton's happy smile and Bob Dole's scary resting expression scowl?
He's an important puzzle piece, but also a player whose deficiencies will became more glaring if he's earning $100 million-ish over a long-term deal.
There's one more glaring question: Are audiences willing to watch lengthier content on Facebook as opposed to YouTube, where people are used to watching longer videos?
From what she called "nothing," she forged something big and bold and every bit as brilliant as the woman who raised her, less glittering, more glaring.
And the gender disparity is far more glaring when looking at the temporary employment authorization for high-skilled workers, who are favored by the Republican immigration proposal.
There is no more glaring example of the House Republicans' indifference to the inequities embedded in the tax code than the treatment of so-called carried interest.
And with the surge of female and non-white superheroes on the comic book side of Marvel's business, it made Marvel Studios's lack thereof even more glaring.
His case became even more glaring when FBI officials, such as fired former acting director Andrew McCabe, were accused of lying to investigators but were not prosecuted.
The failures of President Trump's latest budget request are even more glaring in light of the bipartisan agreement funding the federal government for the current fiscal year.
For men: "In general, the rules that apply to formal dressing for men are stricter and more straightforward and therefore more glaring when not followed properly," says Fenoli.
The potential for conflicts of interest are all the more glaring given the prominent role his children have played in his political operation, both as surrogates and advisers.
The the omission is all the more glaring as Trump has previously implied that Putin is central to his much-vaunted aim to destroy ISIS and make Americans safe.
For Democrats, that problem was unique: Their pro-woman rhetoric gave them a higher standard to hold themselves to, and would have made their failure all the more glaring.
The banner of cultural appropriation, though, may be too strong in this particular instance, considering the more glaring, uncomfortable, and pervasive blind spots the industry has exhibited towards race.
When atrocious past behavior is brought up outside the show and then ignored during opportunities like the "Men Tell All," it just makes those controversies more glaring and weird.
Editorial It would be hard to imagine a more glaring judicial conflict of interest than the one the Supreme Court considered in a case out of Pennsylvania on Monday.
But the more an agent presents a property to him as a "paradise on Earth," free from cons, Mr. Chen said, the more glaring its faults tend to be.
Salah missed more glaring opportunities than that as Liverpool, just as it had last week, visited a team desperate to see it fail and left with a goalless draw.
The omission was even more glaring because his speech was delivered at the dedication of a memorial to the only time NATO has ever invoked Article 5 — after the Sept.
The absence of a clearly defined Democratic leader, someone with the sway to push back or rein in this kind of potentially self-defeating behavior, has rarely been more glaring.
He is always aware of being an interloper — a commoner promoted to "one of us" ironically or in emergencies — and his attempts to fit in make this strangeness more glaring.
As the 'great wealth transfer' accelerates — the oldest boomers are now 70 years old — the strengths of some business models will become more apparent and the weaknesses of others more glaring.
Medical schools don't spend much time teaching students how to recognize and respond to patients suffering from addiction — and that shortcoming is becoming more glaring in light of the opioid crisis.
Photo: Jesse Burke for GizmodoPerhaps it's no surprise that the first offshore wind farm to succeed where Cape Wind failed is much smaller, and addresses a much more glaring energy issue.
This is a complicated problem for Niantic and The Pokémon Company, and it's only going to become more glaring as the game becomes more popular and officially expands around the world.
Less noted at the time of Mr Xi's 2013 pronouncement about market forces, but more glaring now, was his declaration that SOEs should continue to play a dominant role in the economy.
McDonagh, whose relationship with Phoebe Waller-Bridge — the actress and creator of "Fleabag" — has made the spotlight all the more glaring, was gracious and good-humored in acknowledging his distaste for interviews.
But nowhere is their inaction more glaring than on the issues that threaten the safety of people everywhere and especially millennials and members of Generation Z: first guns and now climate change.
The oversight is arguably a more glaring problem for Sanders, who voted against the welfare bill and harshly condemned it in his 1997 book, but hasn't made it an issue in the primary.
But beneath all this basic bad behavior, a far more glaring issue is at play: Annie is allowing Ryan to bypass condoms during sex despite the fact that she isn't on birth control.
In Bogut's absence, Coach Steve Kerr had little choice but to shift Draymond Green to center from power forward, but the team's perimeter play was the more glaring issue — and it was evident early.
In doing so, however, they sidestep a more glaring inequality in admissions: Harvard applicants who are recruited athletes or children of alumni enjoy significant advantages, and these candidates are disproportionately white and well-off.
Last week, Noisey took notice of the limited range of artists represented from the African diaspora, but after seeing the movie, the lack of representation of women the film's music is even more glaring.
The good news is that Apple is getting better at it, with iOS 12 fixing one of the more glaring issues with iOS 11's bizarre notification strategy by finally grouping together notifications by app.
But choosing advisers who do not make money based on the sale of a product and are instead compensated for their time, similar to how lawyers are paid, eliminates some of the more glaring problems.
Beyond key fingerprints, anyone who backs up their data may face an even more glaring issue: those backups often aren't encrypted—or at least not using an encryption system for which only you control the key.
But the more glaring proof is that the wealthy already enjoy an outrageous amount of control over our politics and are careening the planet toward catastrophe, doubling down on investments in the stuff that's killing us.
Thanks to an exploding NBA salary cap and a wild NHL postseason that saw many of the league's highest-paid players sent home early, the salary disparity between the two leagues has never been more glaring.
A more glaring example took place back in March, when Comey was read and disputed tweets from Trump about the current President's conspiracy theory that President Barack Obama had ordered him "wiretapped" during the 2016 campaign.
Perhaps more glaring was the discrepancy between the Walmart chief executive, C. Douglas McMillon, who made $19.4 million, nearly the average among the Equilar 200, and his workers, who reported a median salary of just $24,600.
Much more glaring visions of death arrive in the form of a human skull hanging from the ceiling, a dead canary lying in a hole in the wall, and one glass pane, cracked by a bullet.
Read more " _____ • Robert Barnes in Law Newz: "Trump-critics cannot demand Sessions' recusal on the one hand, and then ignore the more glaring conflict at the center of Mueller's role in this now Comey-dominated matter.
Another factor that made the switch in method even more glaring was how quickly it came, and how it seems to have been precipitated by one data point in particular: The meager 38,000 gain in May payrolls.
The presidential election has attracted non-stop attention and the choice between the two presidential candidates couldn't be more glaring, especially when it comes to their stances on the issues of climate change and clean energy development.
McConnell and Ryan aren't going to get the job done, but Trump's failure to even try to work across party lines on health policy is staggering — and his anger at Republican leaders only makes it more glaring.
That Klinsmann did not make any substitutions at halftime — leaving the group on the field unchanged until he inserted Christian Pulisic and Darlington Nagbe after 66 minutes — seemed to allow the problem to fester and become more glaring.
There is maybe no more glaring case study of this than the 2016 matchup between Hillary Clinton, with her reputation as an overachieving wonk incapable of connecting with voters, and Donald Trump, with his know-nothing, visceral demagogy.
But nowhere are his shortcomings more glaring than in his symbolic, but very real, role, as our national consoler in chief — the person the public looks to in times of tragedy, whether natural or man-made, for healing.
The affront is all the more glaring given that a muscular foreign policy is one of the electoral planks of India's prime minister, Narendra Modi, whose party just won a hard-fought election in his home state of Gujarat.
Which only made the ongoing race-baiting of alleged criminals at the border—which flared up again when the president argued with Nancy Pelosi and Chuck Schumer about it in front of the press Tuesday—all the more glaring.
Worse yet, the criminality of Clinton, along with the absence of real accountability, has only become more glaring with time, as shown by the recent interview of former White House intern Monica Lewinsky in the new A&E docuseries.
By the end of Act I, in a departure from the novel and the beginning of the opera's more glaring politics, she speaks of sexual abuses against children in Victorian-era Britain and vows to rewrite history for women.
But those imbalances have become far more glaring, thanks to a filter bubble more pronounced than anything on Facebook: the "big sort" that has concentrated Democrats in cities and inner-ring suburbs, and Republicans in exurbs and rural counties.
Included in this alternative exhibition were canonical artists such as Romare Bearden and Jacob Lawrence, who were exhibited at the Whitney in the 1930s and part of the museum's collection, making their absence in The 1930s all the more glaring.
One more glaring incident of our far-left overreach occurred immediately after Justice Brett KavanaughBrett Michael KavanaughLewandowski on potential NH Senate run: If I run, 'I'm going to win' Cook Political Report moves Susan Collins Senate race to 'toss up' Sen.
Not every venture firm has senior women at the top of the org chart, but for Kleiner, the male-heavy line-up is a bit more glaring, given that it was sued in 2012 for gender discrimination by former partner Ellen Pao.
Anthony's performance was all the more glaring as he frequently found himself isolated on the wing or elbow, trying to break down Oklahoma City's defense but finding himself caught in a forest of burly Thunder big men or clanging shots off the rim.
When the stage is smaller in future debates, these weaknesses will be more glaring: His competition will be stronger, and it'll be harder for Biden to wriggle out of traps like Gillibrand's when there aren't eleventy-billion candidates demanding time and attention.
And in few places are the political complexities of health care more glaring than in this poor state with crushing medical needs, substantially alleviated by the Affordable Care Act, but where Republican opposition to the law remains almost an article of faith.
In the United States, of course, the disparity in wealth has only become more glaring as Donald J. Trump occupies the office of the president of the United States, accompanied in the executive branch by a small army of billionaires and multimillionaires.
Other examples are even more glaring, as when Gelfand accounts for limited upward mobility in the United States by pointing to the ostensibly tight culture of the working class, incapable of the flexibility needed to find a place in the new economy.
The omission of Rey in particular became even more glaring once the movie came out, and in the past week, the #WheresRey campaign has kicked up another notch, as people slowly realized that Hasbro's Force Awakens Monopoly set also failed to include the character.
But in many ways, privileging Serena Joy's perspective compounds many issues that have become more glaring as the series has continued — namely the show's inability to fully consider how the inclusion of racial minorities and the thorny politics of resistance movements affect its story.
More likely, given the state of the G.O.P. under Trump, who is no one's idea of a wonk, is that Republicans will simply decline to pursue the issue with any force, and the shabbiness of the party's current non-position will become even more glaring.
Given the constant barrage of insults from President Donald Trump directed at Amazon as part of his ongoing and mostly unrequited feud with company founder and Washington Post owner Jeff Bezos, Amazon's absence in the pilot program is all the more glaring though certainly not surprising.
"The issue is we've seen oversold bounces before in the KRE, and it hasn't done anything with it," Cappelleri said Tuesday on "Trading Nation," adding it's even more "glaring" that it has not managed to rally in the face of a rising 10-year Treasury note yield.
The drama's initial delicacy makes the subsequent emotional and physical violence feel even more brutal — and the weaknesses of other characters appear all the more glaring (Kena's father, separated from her mother, has shied away from telling his daughter he's about to have another a child).
Those choices only make it all the more glaring how many of the female characters in the show's original cast have been sidelined or written out altogether: Hannah appears only in a flashback to her rape, and other characters like Courtney are there only for the briefest of cameos.
Plus, the script's lack of subtlety makes it all the more glaring that it pretty much ignores the issue that has dominated so many discussions of the film — namely, the fact that this is a Japanese story with Japanese characters that's been adapted into a Hollywood film with white leads.
Though getting involved in Syria's civil war was not the intention of this weekend's strikes by the US, France and the UK, having placed the conflict under the glaring scrutiny of international attention, the absence of a way of dealing with the core problem of Assad is now even more glaring.
You can peg any number of moments in recent history when the objective seemed to change for the members of the religious right, where they swallowed all pride and principle to secure power and vent anger, but for me there is none more glaring than the embrace of Donald Trump.
I didn't ask him about his views on race and religion, or the site's approach to those things, an oversight that now seems more and more glaring, given what's been reported about Bannon's film projects and the racist and Islamophobic stories (and transphobic and homophobic and misogynist stories) that Breitbart helped push.
"Speculation as to whether and how the timing of these actions might affect Vietnam's leadership succession misses the more glaring point that Beijing appears not to care about international norms or Vietnamese claims and sensibilities," Jonathan London, a Vietnam expert in the Department of Asian and International Studies at the City University of Hong Kong, said in an email.
To enjoy the twists and turns of those episodes, one had to ignore how unbelievable it was for a first lady to seek the vice president's seat while still actively serving as first lady, but anyone who has gotten this far in "House of Cards" has probably grown accustomed to overlooking the show's more glaring breaks from reality.
New Zealand was the first country to request a takedown for The Bridge, a documentary about suicides off the Golden Gate Bridge One of the more glaring instances of government overreach was Saudi Arabia's request to takedown an episode of Patriot Act With Hasan Minhaj that criticized Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman and his connection to the murder of Washington Post journalist Jamal Khashoggi.
The notion of risk as being essential to the creative process is palpable throughout her work — her 2017 film "In the Jungle" metaphorizes the artist's journey as a scientist's lonely and dangerous fieldwork in an endearingly kitschy jungle — and the city allows her and others to enact that risk in ways that would be impossible in a city with a more glaring national spotlight.
While I'd be the first to agree that some of his more glaring gaffes (like suggesting that the President was "staging" mass shootings in 2012, or especially his disgusting remark that starving women in Africa should stop having children and "put a plug in it") are inexcusable for a public figure of his stature, I do kind of admire his dogged insistence on (literally) sticking to his guns, even when the whole world is against him.

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