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28 Sentences With "more strenuously"

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

Need to watch whether this muscle memory kicks in more strenuously.
Though Christina refuses food even more strenuously than ever, she doesn't weaken or sicken.
But Bush and Rubio, thanks to their fundraising strength, have deeper political organizations that could test Cruz more strenuously.
This could mean a political climate in which reservations about such multiculturalist policies as affirmative action are voiced more strenuously.
" This novel, like Bowman's other work but even more strenuously, tries to capture what Philip Roth famously called the "indigenous American berserk.
The three cases referred to prosecutors in New York appear to be another sign that the Justice Department intends to more strenuously enforce the law.
"The city has been doing it all along, but they've been doing it even more strenuously in this administration than in the previous one," he said.
But it is also something more: it symbolizes the burden many blacks in Missouri feel, as a result of Ferguson, to challenge opposition more strenuously than ever.
The reality, however, is that the more strenuously the marketplace rejects the ideas of speakers like Murray, the more valuable such speakers become on account of their rejection.
In multiple past studies, most people will work out longer, faster or more strenuously after they swallow a moderate dose of caffeine, but a few perform no better or even worse.
Every year during the NPC session, officials try even more strenuously than usual to prevent street unrest, lest it tarnish the image of political unity and national prosperity that they want the NPC to project (see article).
While calling the simulation on May 30 the "most difficult and challenging test MDA has done," Ellison said the system needs to be tested more strenuously against threats such as multiple warheads that employ devices to confuse missile defenses.
They are immovable, in his opinion, and impossible to convert: "We're seeing anti-party sorting — an increasing number of voters are rejecting at least one of the parties, and they are doing so more strenuously," he said by email.
Trump's negotiators want Beijing to more strenuously enforce American intellectual property rights, stop cyber-hacking of trade secrets, curb industrial subsidies and end policies that coerce U.S. companies to turn over technology to Chinese competitors as a price of doing business in China's vast market.
Democrats need to more strenuously attack this "tax reform" as more of the Reagan-era same, as a Trojan horse to lower taxes on the wealthy, some of which had been put back under Presidents Bill Clinton and Barack ObamaBarack Hussein Obama3 real problems Republicans need to address to win in 85033 Obama's high school basketball jersey sells for 0,000 at auction Dirty little wars and the law: Did Osama bin Laden win?
Other French colonies had the decision to switch sides enforced more strenuously.
In August 2014, Heck broke ranks with the Republican Party and voted against a bill that would have dismantled the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals. In 2015, he voted to more strenuously police immigration from Syria and Iraq.
He was appointed formally as Chancellor of the Exchequer as a temporary expedient on 8 March 1754, when Henry Pelham died, with his brother Sir George Lee as Under Treasurer of the Exchequer, until 6 April, his own death. Lord Campbell noted that Lee "certainly stood up for the rights of woman more strenuously than any English judge before or since his time".
She also differed with many suffrage activists in arguing more strenuously for the voting rights of unmarried women. Women connected to husbands and stable sources of income, Becker believed, were less desperately in need of the vote than widows and single women. This attitude made her the target of frequent ridicule in newspaper commentary and editorial cartoons.Liddington and Norris, p. 74.
B. Arnold, The Past as Propaganda: Totalitarian Archaeology in Nazi Germany, reprinted in Murray, T., Evans, C., Histories of Archaeology: A Reader in the History of Archaeology, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2008, 120 – 144 Schuchhardt was also instrumental in proposing an antiquities law (Denkmalschutzgesetz) that regulated and protected archaeological sites in Prussia. Although himself never a Nazi, Schuchhardt's role during the Third Reich has been controversial: in particular, he has been criticized for not more strenuously resisting Nazi efforts to marginalize and persecute scientists of Jewish background (Mason, Croitoru 2016, 93-99).
He objected and the next version of the script saw his character completely removed, with all of his actions given over to another character, Willard Alexander, Goodman's manager. Hammond objected even more strenuously, pointing out Willard Alexander did not, among many other things, host the party in the Hammond mansion where Goodman played Mozart publicly for the first time, nor did he introduce Alice to Benny. In the end, Hammond reluctantly agreed to leave his portrayal in the film, though he sued for $50,000 for being portrayed in what he thought was an unflattering manner.
The rapid growth of the Order had often been accomplished with minimal training of its new members. Discipline had become a major concern of Munio's predecessors, who issued frequent appeals to the friars and nuns of the Order to maintain the spirit of the Rule. Men were joining who claimed to have already the gift of preaching, and demanded to do so without any restrictions on the part of the Order. In his first letter to the Order at large after his election, Munio issues a serious call to the friars and nuns to keep a spirit of poverty more strenuously, as well as an adherence to solitude and silence.
29#4 pp. 450–74 Nativism was not a factor because upwards of half the union members were themselves immigrants or the sons of immigrants from Ireland, Germany and Britain. Nativism was a factor when the AFL even more strenuously opposed all immigration from Asia because it represented (to its Euro-American members) an alien culture that could not be assimilated into American society. The AFL intensified its opposition after 1906 and was instrumental in passing immigration restriction bills from the 1890s to the 1920s, such as the 1921 Emergency Quota Act and the Immigration Act of 1924, and seeing that they were strictly enforced.
After he is anonymously tipped off about the location of the real culprit, Severin, Dowling appears at the scene of a battle where Buffy and Spike are having their powers drained; he shoots Severin three times, hospitalizing him. Subsequently, he and his partner begin investigating vampires more strenuously until she too is turned. He is trained by Xander and Dawn both in how to kill vampires, and in understanding the difference between who the vampires once were and who they now are, using which he is able to kill his ex-partner. Dowling subsequently attempted to quit the force, but was put in charge of an anti-vampire task force instead, working alongside Buffy.
In his later years, Diodotus went blind, but he nevertheless continued to teach: > The Stoic Diodotus, another man who lost his sight, lived for many years in > my house. It seems hard to believe, but after he became blind he devoted > himself more strenuously to philosophy than he ever had before. He also > played the lyre, like a Pythagorean, and had books read to him day and > night; he had no need of eyes to get on with his work. He also did something > which seems scarcely credible for a man who could not see: he continued > giving lectures on geometry, giving his pupils verbal indications of the > points where they should begin and end the lines they had to draw.
He also put at the disposal of Ernst Rüdiger Starhemberg, who spent a holiday in Venice, a plane that allowed the prince to rush back to Vienna and to face the assailants with his militia, with the permission of President Wilhelm Miklas.Richard Lamb, Mussolini and the British, 1997, p. 149 Mussolini also mobilised a part of the Italian army on the Austrian border and threatened Hitler with war in the event of a German invasion of Austria to thwart the putsch. Then he announced to the world: "The independence of Austria, for which he has fallen, is a principle that has been defended and will be defended by Italy even more strenuously", and then replaced in the main square of Bolzano the statue:de:Walther-Denkmal (Bozen) of Walther von der Vogelweide, a Germanic troubadour, with that of Drusus, a Roman general who conquered part of Germany.
All the principles of Romanticism are to be found in Blake's first book."Damon (1988: 332) Harold Bloom is also in agreement with this assessment, seeing the book as very much of its particular epoch; a period he dates from the death of Alexander Pope in 1744 to the first major poetry of William Wordsworth in 1789. Bloom sees Sketches as "a workshop of Blake's developing imaginative ambitions as he both follows the poets of sensibility in their imitations of Spenser, Shakespeare and Milton, and goes beyond them in venturing more strenuously on the Hebraic sublime [...] Perhaps the unique freshness of Poetical Sketches can be epitomised by noting Blake's first achievements in the greatest of his projects: to give definite form to the strong workings of imagination that produced the cloudy sublime images of the earlier poets of sensibility. In the best poems of Blake's youth, the sublime feelings of poets like Gray and Collins find a radiant adequacy of visionary outline.
These books do not display the apocalyptic style which, partly borrowed from Lamennais, characterizes Michelet's later works, but they contain in miniature almost the whole of his curious ethicopolitico- theological creed—a mixture of sentimentalism, communism, and anti- sacerdotalism, supported by the most eccentric arguments, but urged with a great deal of eloquence. The principles of the outbreak of 1848 were in the air, and Michelet was one of many who condensed and propagated them: his original lectures were of so incendiary a kind that the course had to be interdicted. However, when the revolution broke out, Michelet, unlike many other men of letters, did not attempt to enter active political life, and merely devoted himself more strenuously to his literary work. Besides continuing the great history, he undertook and carried out, during the years between the downfall of Louis Philippe and the final establishment of Napoleon III, an enthusiastic Histoire de la Révolution française.

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