Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

29 Sentences With "more voluntary"

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

With India, the transfers are more voluntary and intensively negotiated.
Now there would be no more voluntary returns, everyone was getting formally deported.
The Italian retail bank signed a trade union agreement on 2300 more voluntary redundancies, it said on Tuesday.
In the end, however, that could lead to net neutrality rules that are more voluntary in nature — an idea Pai himself has explored.
He wants to see more voluntary civic actions, like mentoring young people, donating to food banks, or shaming employers into keeping jobs in America.
In the face of new rules, they'll simply add more voluntary practices, with the tacit understanding that if athletes don't go to those voluntary practices, they won't play.
According to the union, Engle said GM Korea may consider more voluntary redundancies for the remaining 680 workers at the Gunsan factory which will face a shutdown by May.
"Ball-sucking is a more voluntary act to add an extra dimension to oral sex," Knight says, while teabagging requires that the partner getting their testicles sucked play a more active role.
If Internet companies want the benefit of a uniform federal privacy law, then it's time for them to respect user privacy and follow real, meaningful privacy rules, not more voluntary industry standards.
It's not that they're not doing their jobs — it's that they're not going the extra mile and being proactive, which engenders more voluntary, subjective encounters with the populace that can always go sideways.
A. The silence on the Cultural Revolution has been more voluntary than enforced, and it is because the memory of the time is very painful to the victims and shameful to those who victimized.
"This is obviously a more voluntary nudge approach to improve corporate governance, but I think there is no magic bullet," said Ben Willmott, head of public policy at the Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development.
"This is obviously a more voluntary nudge approach to improve corporate governance, but I think there is no magic bullet," said Ben Willmott, head of public policy at the Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development.
The government has promised to encourage the creation of more voluntary-aided schools: this category of school falls under local authorities' purview, but has the right to allocate 100% of its places on a religious basis.
Sweden, where a generous refugee program attracted tens of thousands of people, also had far more voluntary deportations than forced deportations after it toughed rules last year, at 16,000 compared with 2,500 forced to return home.
Now that he's the agency's chairman, Pai said Wednesday that he plans to kick off a process next month to replace the net neutrality protections currently on the government's books, possibly with something that's perhaps more voluntary in nature.
The Rev. Rossouw and congregation members repaid Human nearly £150, then sent for morevoluntary” donations, raising £350 to repay the bulk of the debt by the time the Rev. Rossouw left.
Men and women of all ages practiced their exercising routines for the event. Appearance was originally mandatory for students and servicemen of the armed forces and police. During the Normalization years, it became more voluntary.
Novak finds "dark illumination" in a political economy "differentiated and yet one... [where] each tames and corrects and enhances the others."(p339) All sorts of communities flourish, less rooted in kin, more voluntary and fluid, but communities for all that. It is mediating communities that make the life of individuals and states possible. When these are broken, the state is broken.
So far as I can now tell, the high plateau-experience > always has a noetic and cognitive element, which is not always true for peak > experiences, which can be purely and exclusively emotional. It is far more > voluntary than peak experiences are. One can learn to see in this Unitive > way almost at will. It then becomes a witnessing, an appreciating, what one > might call a serene, cognitive blissfulness.
That increased the government's burden of proof; since 1966, there have been no successful criminal prosecutions under FARA. However, a civil injunctive remedy also was added to allow the Department of Justice to warn individuals and entities of possible violations of the Act, ensuring more voluntary compliance but also making it clear when the law has been violated. This has resulted in a number of successful civil cases and administrative resolutions since that time.
Another case that use Quizizz is in Sultan Idris Education University Malysia, an Arabic Class. For non-native speaker Arabic is quite hard to learn, researchers use this method to test around 90 students in three sections, educators by using Quizizz to test students' measurement of the knowledge and enhance their interests of the new language during the period. According to the survey, educators found students are more voluntary to answer questions and pay more attention on the curriculum.
Harry J. Sonneborn was able to raise the money for him, and Kroc bought the founding brothers out. This purchase laid the groundwork to positioning the company for an IPO and furthering the aim at making McDonald's the number one fast-food chain in the country. The exact process of how the company was sold is not well-recorded; it is depicted as hostile takeover sides Ray Kroc in the movie The Founder but that portrayal is disputed, and interviews of the time speak of a more voluntary transition. In 1965, McDonald's Corporation went public.
After World War II the International Visitor Program (IVP) brought in an annually increasing number of foreign visitors to the United States. As it became difficult for the United States Department of State to facilitate the research and logistics of the program, they turned to private sector organizations such as the Institute of International Education (IIE) and the Governmental Affairs Institute (GAI). These national program agencies (NPAs), funded by the Department of State, would work in collaboration with more voluntary, locally established centers for international visitors (CIVs) to map out an itinerary for incoming international visitors. A number of issues became evident as these private organizations functioned together.
KordaMentha partners undertook the first Voluntary Administration in Australia, the largest Voluntary Administration in Australia (Ansett Australia with 42 companies, 15,000 employees and >$1 billion assets), the largest Group of Voluntary Administrations in Australia (Stockford Limited with 84 companies) and more Voluntary Administrations than any other insolvency firm in Australia in 2003. By 31 March 2003 KordaMentha had expanded its business with licensed offices in Perth, Brisbane and Adelaide. In 2005 KordaMentha grew its Perth and Sydney practice with senior partners and staff joining the firm from Ernst & Young. KordaMentha now has 400 staff throughout Australia and internationally, with offices in Auckland and Asia as well as international affiliates in the United Kingdom and United States.
From 1 to 10 July, the Germans had against a British total of about from 1 to 13 July. The effect of the battle on the defenders has received less attention in English-language writing. The strain imposed by the British attacks after 1 July and the French advance on the south bank led General Fritz von Below to issue an order of the day on 3 July, forbidding any more voluntary withdrawals ("The enemy should have to carve his way over heaps of corpses.") after Falkenhayn had sacked , the 2nd Army Chief of Staff and , the commander of XVII Corps, for ordering the corps to withdraw to the third position close to Péronne.
They include hand movements such as flapping or twisting, and complex whole-body movements. These are typically repeated in longer bursts and look more voluntary or ritualistic than tics, which are usually faster, less rhythmical, and less often symmetrical. However, in addition to this, various studies have reported a consistent comorbidity between AS and Tourette syndrome in the range of 8–20%, with one figure as high as 80% for tics of some kind or another, for which several explanations have been put forward, including common genetic factors and dopamine, glutamate, or serotonin abnormalities. According to the Adult Asperger Assessment (AAA) diagnostic test, a lack of interest in fiction and a positive preference towards non-fiction is common among adults with AS.
Followed by further Macedonian setbacks in the Second Macedonian War (200–197 BC), the Cycladic islands, already bound individually to Rhodes by treaties of alliance, were soon after—an exact date cannot be ascertained—formed into a "Second Nesiotic League" under the hegemony of Rhodes. The motivations for Rhodes' move are unclear, but the historian Kenneth Sheedy has suggested that they stemmed at least partly from a desire to preempt other powers, whether the Kingdom of Pergamon or the Roman Republic, from establishing control over the area. Unlike the original League however, the Second League appears to have been a more voluntary association. The Second Nesiotic League is commonly held to have lasted until the end of Rhodian independence at the conclusion of the Third Macedonian War in 167 BC, but Sheedy suggests that it may have started to disintegrate earlier, as the Rhodians focused their attention on maintaining their grip over their Asian holdings and could no longer afford to maintain the costly hegemony over the Cyclades.
During the American intervention, the role of the ARVN was marginalised to a defensive role with an incomplete modernisation, and transformed again following Vietnamization, it was upgeared, expanded, and reconstructed to fulfill the role of the departing American forces. By 1974, it had become much more effective with foremost counterinsurgency expert and Nixon adviser Robert Thompson noting that Regular Forces were very well-trained and second only to the American and Israeli forces in the Free World and with General Creighton Abrams remarking that 70% of units were on par with the US Army. However, the withdrawal of American forces by Vietnamization meant the armed forces could not effectively fulfill all of the aims of the program and had become completely dependent on U.S. equipment since it was meant to fulfill the departing role of the United States. At its peak, an estimated 1 in 9 citizens of South Vietnam were enlisted and had become the fourth-largest army in the world composed of Regular Forces and the more voluntary Regional and Village-level militias.

No results under this filter, show 29 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.