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31 Sentences With "more unforgiving"

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

Because this world is getting more savage, more unforgiving, every fucking day.
It becomes more unforgiving when the monsoon rains turn the dirt to mud.
The reality, however, is that the Premier League is more unforgiving than ever before.
It's a little bit more unforgiving, for some reason you're not allowed to change.
The confrontation between Brazil's government and its judiciary has just got weirder and more unforgiving.
With 0% stretch, leather is way more unforgiving than even denim (which I end up unbuttoning after every meal).
With the stakes higher than ever before, The Banner Saga 3's narrative likewise feels more unforgiving than ever before.
Their eldest child, Max, had grown up with a more unforgiving and volatile father, and right after college Max had moved to Singapore.
He said he had not reduced his practice time on the game's more unforgiving surfaces, like the hard courts he grew up on in Madrid.
Over the past three years, immigration policies and procedures have been in a state of flux and the process has become more unforgiving for even the smallest mistakes.
Sekiro is probably the hardest FromSoftware game yet, one that demands (even more) unforgiving precision and timing from players to advance past even the most basic of enemies.
Personally, I've never had an issue with AirPods' fit, but I recognize that the hard plastic is a lot more unforgiving with various ear sizes than a silicon tip.
Six years between album releases isn't unheard of, but it is a rarity at a moment when pop cycles are more unforgiving than ever and require near-constant output.
Several other studies have isolated Staphylococcus aureus and organisms associated with more unforgiving hospital-acquired infections like methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), Pseudomonas, Klebsiella pneumoniae and Acinetobacter baumannii from the neck accessory.
I caught up with Zeichner at SXSW to talk about her interests, SXSW and managing a small print publication in a media environment that is more and more unforgiving for such efforts.
We hope these releases encourage people to find those communities again and feel strength in knowing queers and women were exercising personal liberty and freedom of experimentation in much more unforgiving times.
The story of the British twin brothers Alex and Marcus Lewis in the documentary "Tell Me Who I Am" might have been concocted by the novelist Ian McEwan in one of his more unforgiving moods.
As we reexamine cases that were first addressed or settled long in the past — whether it's Parker's, Roman Polanski's, Bill Cosby's, or Bill Clinton's — we're inevitably going to be looking at them through a more unforgiving lens.
But when they step up to accept their party's nomination, candidates move into an arena where the stakes are higher and the bar for mistakes is much more unforgiving than the rough-and-tumble of a primary campaign.
What everyone at a startup needs to know about immigration Over the past three years, immigration policies and procedures have been in a state of flux and the process has become more unforgiving for even the smallest mistakes.
But her most treasured persona — Taylor the avenger — remains alive and more unforgiving than ever on "Look What You Made Me Do." Ms. Swift's songs have been settling scores — and showing her fans that wronged women can speak up — ever since her music had country trappings and her (ex-)boyfriends weren't necessarily famous.
Presenting herself as a journalist, a Roman Catholic lay woman and a mother, Ms. Alazraki warned the clerics that unless the church began to come clean and publicly admit its sins, getting ahead of the scandal instead of covering up or "playing ostrich," the faithful and public opinion would become ever more unforgiving.
"affected," or "copious."Margaret Drabble, ed. "Della Cruscans,"The Oxford Companion to English Literature(OUP, 1985) 265. The previous generation was even more unforgiving: "[T]his epidemic" of Della Cruscanism "spread for a term from fool to fool."Rev.
He further confesses to plagiarizing a poem from his own son, a moral failing for which Dina is even more unforgiving. She throws him out and tells him she doesn't want to have anything more to do with him. He confesses the plagiarism to the school board and hands in his resignation. He asks only to continue for the rest of the year and put on the War on Words and Pictures assembly program.
The field hunter may be of any breed, but should possess stamina, a level head, and bravery. The horse should have a safe jump, so as not to get caught on any of the solid obstacles found in the hunt field. The type of terrain is also an important factor: wide open, flat land is generally best for horses of a Thoroughbred type, while rockier, more unforgiving land may be best suited by a draft-cross or tougher breed.
Pete Newell Still The Footwork Master , scout.com, accessed October 9, 2010.Ortiz, Jorge L. Another legacy at Newell Many coaches with links to Heathcote, December 28, 2001, accessed October 9, 2010.Chin. pg. 135Mandelbaum. pg. 329 In private practice, however, he could be an intense, unforgiving teacher, and he was even more unforgiving than usual with Washington as he felt that if he were to offer his services for free he would only do so if the player was willing to train maniacally.
There is little screening for psychological fitness for recreational diving, and not much more for commercial and scientific diving. Technical diving exposes the diver to more unforgiving hazards and higher risks, but it is a recreational activity and to a large extent participation is at the option of the participant. Psychological profiles indicating intelligence and below average neuroticism tend to correlate with successful diving activity over the long term. These divers tend to be self-sufficient and emotionally stable, and less likely to be involved in accidents unrelated to health problems.
The KC-135R has four turbofan engines, mounted under 35-degree swept wings, which power it to takeoffs at gross weights up to . Nearly all internal fuel can be pumped through the tanker's flying boom, the KC-135's primary fuel transfer method. A special shuttlecock-shaped drogue, attached to and trailing behind the flying boom, may be used to refuel aircraft fitted with probes. This apparatus is significantly more unforgiving of pilot error in the receiving aircraft than conventional trailing hose arrangements; an aircraft so fitted is also incapable of refueling by the normal flying boom method until the attachment is removed.
The Potter-Blocker Trail (sometimes called the Potter-Bacon Cutoff), and also just the potter-bacon trail was a trail blazed by Jack Potter used to move cattle to market, starting around 1883. It was a collateral branch of the Great Western Cattle Trail, but was shorter and crossed more unforgiving land. The trail went at least from Hebbronville, Texas up to Albany, TX, intersecting the Western Trail at Alice, Texas. It was likely never a widely utilized trail, since it sprang up so late--by 1889, trail drives had fallen out of use as rail lines increasingly connected distant states with the rest of the country.
Wahid is in a predicament; torn between a verbal agreement to sell the station and tracks under his care to the mafia – including his brother, Zahir (Shabbir Rana), and gang leader, Lalu (Sultan Hussain) – and the last wishes of his deceased wife, Palwasha (Samiya Mumtaz). She vehemently opposed the deal, based on a strong conviction that this land keeps her family rooted. Meanwhile, Wahid's son, Ehsaanullah Khan (Shaz Khan), has set out to turn his fortunes in Karachi, Pakistan's troubled megacity, only with the memory of his mother's guidance to use time to his advantage. Yet the city, which appeared to be a sweet promise of success from a distance, is more unforgiving than Balochistan's treacherous landscape; here, time is at no one's mercy.
Some forms of motorsport use removable, high-visibility bollards on road courses and street courses to mark the apex of certain corners. They are used to deter cutting a corner too tightly and violating track limits: in most racing series, drivers may incur a penalty for colliding with or driving inside these bollards. Racing bollards are very lightweight and built to break off at the base when hit so as to not damage the vehicle; this feature of bollards makes them favored over "sausage kerbs"—also used to prevent cutting corners—which are elevated rigid structures that run along the inside of a turn. In contrast to bollards, sausage kerbs are much more unforgiving, and vehicles that hit them can be severely damaged or launched airborne upon contact.

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