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46 Sentences With "most intimately"

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

After all, inspiration often comes from the places you know most intimately.
The hippocampus is the portion of the brain most intimately linked with memory function.
But the people who know Roland Garros's crimson grounds most intimately rarely pick up rackets.
That concern might be most intimately felt by the workers who were on the front lines.
And Peter, who understands Rachel the most intimately, disrupts the game by cuddling with her mid-court.
For those most intimately involved with the Event Horizon Telescope, this couldn't be further from the truth.
And for my husband, the move would be a return to the country he knows most intimately.
These Southern black voters are in control of the power structure most intimately affecting their lives — local government.
The expectation should be this committee is the most intimately familiar with the candidates and have been actively cultivating them.
But certainly-- SECRETARY WILBUR ROSS: Right-- TYLER MATHISEN: Bears on-- U.S. businesses with which-- you are most intimately-- in-- involved.
And the man most intimately acquainted with the fool's errand that is DeAndre Jordan shooting free throws, is DeAndre Jordan.
This is because partners are, typically, who coupled-up people connect and share their daily lives with most intimately and frequently.
That cruelty is rendered most intimately in "Testimonies," in which the accounts of named women are arrayed in past-tense fragments.
The spirituality room is by far the largest portion of the exhibition; however, it is the space with the most intimately sized works.
Tillman is determined to locate humanity both in the perpetrators of this heinous crime and in the people who were most intimately exposed to it.
Russia is not among the countries most directly or most intimately affected by North Korea's nuclear ambitions, such as the United States, South Korea or China.
Notably absent, even though Boy Scouts of America Facebook posts confirmed his attendance at the jamboree, was the member of his cabinet most intimately connected to Scouting: Mr. Tillerson.
But as with the previous attempt to build a border wall, during the presidency of George W. Bush, those most intimately impacted by the plan are among its sharpest critics.
These are the people who most clearly understand what the costs of war with North Korea could be and who most intimately understand the balance of forces on the Korean Peninsula.
By one measure, bugs are the wildlife we know best, the nondomesticated animals whose lives intersect most intimately with our own: spiders in the shower, ants at the picnic, ticks buried in the skin.
"Another group of people arrived on these shores, and in the course of history, took everything from the first inhabitants who, on the land they have known most intimately, became displaced, foreign, non-mainstream and marginalized," Ms. Tsai said.
And now, Florida's devastating system of mass incarceration is significantly less empowered to shape the state electorate, while the people most intimately familiar with the far-reaching impact of that system have become significantly more empowered to shape it.
In recent days, top congressional Republicans who are most intimately involved in health care policy have urged moderation: Fearing the consequences of a rapid repeal, they have begun to speak of "repairing" the law and even preserving aspects of it that are working.
Nearly four years after those intial emissions, the trio is poised to release Things Our Bodies Used to Have; with it's dizzying vocal loops and Grateful Dead-gone-sci-fi guitar exercises, their most intimately plotted and deliriously propulsive release to date.
It's the three other dancers who commune most intimately with the theater, getting close to its architecture as they hold microphones to its worn walls (so much history in there), recline against its radiators and make a racket banging on the floor.
Trump, according to NBC, said the restaurant, the 21 Club, shut down for a year and lost a huge amount of money because its owners listened to the recommendations of a well-paid consultant instead of the waiters and kitchen staff who knew the establishment most intimately.
To watch Richard mush into Festus Ezeli at the rim, make an uncontested putback, hook around Harrison Barnes off the dribble, and draw fouls on fast breaks is to know, most intimately, the character of these first two games, and to experience the pure banal letdown that a mismatched series engenders in viewers and fans.
The one that speaks to me most intimately is the "you can't be what you can't see" meme, because that's truly why I got into venture capital, is I saw Mary and she was awesome and she was helpful and I loved working with her, both as a board member and as a partner.
In my case, as someone who often profiles candidates or tries to zoom in on meaningful chapters of their lives, there's an added category of interviewee that always fascinates me: the candidates' close friends, relatives, former classmates, former bandmates (hey, Beto) — the people who know the contenders most intimately, who have often seen them at their best and their worst.
In the mid 1990s, violence-related offences surged sixty percent.Junger-Tas, J. (2004) Youth Justice in the Netherlands, p. 296\. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2004. Most citizens, including those most intimately involved in the criminal justice system—specifically, police officers, prosecutors, and judges—believe that violent crime has increased in the Netherlands.
Afro-Venezuelan musical traditions are most intimately related to the festivals of the "black folk saints" San Juan and St. Benedict the Moor. Specific songs are related to the different stages of their festivals and processions, when the saints start their yearly "paseo" – stroll – through the community to dance with their people.
An open secret is a concept or idea that is "officially" (de jure) secret or restricted in knowledge, but in practice (de facto) may be widely known; or it refers to something that is widely known to be true but which none of the people most intimately concerned are willing to categorically acknowledge in public.
By 1868, those who had been most intimately connected with its founding had nearly all died. The character of the collection was fixed and was known throughout the United States. Schroeder served for 10 years, his resignation being accepted on June 7, 1871. His successor was Edward R. Straznicky, who had been employed in the library since 1859.
Chacma baboons (Papio ursinus) are the mammals most intimately associated with the Cape of Good Hope. Baboons inside the Cape of Good Hope section of the park are a major tourist attraction. There are 11 troops consisting of about 375 individuals throughout the entire Cape Peninsula. Six of these 11 troops either live entirely within the Cape of Good Hope section of the park, or use the section as part of their range.
They became the German version of John Lennon and Yoko Ono."Even hippies need a toilet door" by Will Hodgkinson, The Guardian, 16 November 2007. Accessed 10 December 2018 Kommune 1 was the first politically motivated commune in Germany, and Obermaier's name is most intimately connected with the 1960s student rebellions in the minds of many Germans. However, she later said that she had no particular interest in politics, and that she moved into Kommune 1 simply to be close to Langhans.
It has been suggested that Arthur's account is biased.Wardley (2004) However it is an account of how Samuel (and others) thought and acted, written by the man with the best access to those who knew and it is now the only account we have. Arthur himself wrote, “... an effort has been made to insert, with a firm hand, every real scar. Some will say they are too slight; others will say they are too deep, and these they who most intimately knew the original.
Rahel Antonie Friederike Levin was born to a Jewish family in Berlin. Her father, a wealthy jeweler, was a strong-willed man who ruled his family despotically. She became close friends with Dorothea and Henriette, the daughters of the philosopher Moses Mendelssohn. Through them she got to know Henriette Herz, with whom she would become most intimately associated throughout her life, moving in the same intellectual spheres. Together with Henriette Herz and her cousin, Sara Grotthuis née Meyer, she hosted one of the most famous Berlin salons of the 1800s.
This pamphlet is considered as one of the works of Acuña, since it contains, in addition to works of other writers, eleven poems and an article in prose of his own. He was only 24 years old when he had made a name for himself. On May 9, 1871, a dramatic work that he wrote called El pasado (The Past) was released. This work was well received by the public and critics recognized him as an outstanding poet. Rosario de la Peña was the woman that was the most intimately related to Acuñas’s last years.
He had the old manor house at Mansergh, called Rigmaden, rebuilt (1828), to a design by George Webster. An enclosure act was passed in 1837 for Mansergh, where Wilson built and endowed a school. Thomas Chalmers, who encountered Wilson in the 1820s socially, described him as "banker, with £10,000 a year, a great landed proprietor, a magistrate, and most intimately and intelligently acquainted with pauperism". He later quoted correspondence with Wilson, on the select vestry principle, in his work on poor relief, in The Christian and Civic Economy of Large Towns (1823).
The poet, Alexander Duval (1767-1842), wrote a complimentary article in the Decade Philosophique, concerning the young artist, and a few years later the two were most intimately associated. Duval mentions that one of his personal friends, to whom Della Maria had been introduced, requested him to write some poem for the musician. Duval acting upon the earnest suggestion of his friend, made an appointment with Della Maria. This interview proved to be the commencement of a productive friendship; in Duval's words, Della Maria's classical, soulful countenance and his natural and original demeanor inspired a confidence in the poet that was found to be entirely justified.
The song was a favorite of the American military around the start of the 20th century, particularly during the Spanish–American War and the Boxer Rebellion. "The witchery of this tune was such, that during our brief war with Spain, the Spaniards in Cuba were quite convinced that our National Anthem was named 'There'll be a Hot Time in the Old Town To-night.' At all events, the frolicsome tones of this unpretentious popular song are the most intimately associated of any, with the already dimming recollections of that 'whirlwind campaign'." The tune became popular in the military after it was used as a theme by Teddy Roosevelt's Rough Riders.
The Scottish philosopher David Hume wrote: > "When I enter most intimately into what I call myself, I always stumble on > some particular perception or other, of heat or cold, light or shade, love > or hatred, pain or pleasure. I never catch myself at any time without a > perception, and never can observe any thing but the perception"Hume, David. > A Treatise of Human Nature, Book I Part IV Section VI: Of Personal Identity According to Hume then there is nothing that is constantly stable which we could identify as the self, only a flow of differing experiences. Our view that there is something substantive which binds all of these experiences together is for Hume merely imaginary.
In 1852 he premiered (and became the dedicatee of) a Sonata Duo for cello and piano, Op. 32, by William Sterndale Bennett, having been given the original manuscript of the music in the morning, studied it on a train then played it at the concert that same evening with the composer as pianist playing from memory. In 1859, on the foundation of the Popular Concerts, he took up the work with which he was most intimately connected for thirty-nine seasons. He retained until 1897 the post of first cello at these famous chamber concerts, during the latter half of each series. He played a Stradivarius which now is named after him Piatti and is owned by the Mexican cellist Carlos Prieto.
George > McDougall, Wesleyan Missionary Notices, May 1, 1869, 59 In addition to this, Thomas Woolsey – a former mentor of Maskepetoon – was given the news of his fate he also expressed a deep sense of loss. > I can assure you that the mournful intelligence we have received regarding > my old friend, the Cree Chief (Maskepetoon) and his family, has been persued > with feeling of unutterable grief. I had the honor of being most intimately > acquainted with the aged chieftain during my lengthened sojourn in the > Saskatchewan Valley.Thomas Woolsey, July 23, 1869, cited in Dempsey, Heaven > is Near the Rocky Mountains, 180-81 These words about Maskepetoon show the impact it had on his people as well as the impact on people who were not Cree.
Bolts' book revealing the EIC's business practices in Bengal. He fell foul of the East India Company in 1768, possibly because diamonds were a favorite means for Company employees to secretly remit to Britain the ill-gotten gains of private trade in India, which they were officially forbidden to engage in. He announced in September of that year that he intended to start up a newspaper in Calcutta (which would have been India's first modern newspaper), saying that he had "in manuscript many things to communicate which most intimately concerned every individual", but he was directed to quit Bengal, and proceed to Madras and from thence to take his passage to England.William Bolts, Considerations on India Affairs, London, 1772, Part II, Vol.
Referring to paragraph 64 of Haurietis aquas, John Paul II wrote: "If through Christ's humanity [his] love shone on all mankind, the first beneficiaries were undoubtedly those whom the divine will had most intimately associated with itself: Mary, the Mother of Jesus, and Joseph, his presumed father". In a letter on May 15, 2006 Benedict XVI wrote: "By encouraging devotion to the Heart of Jesus, the Encyclical Haurietis aquas exhorted believers to open themselves to the mystery of God and of his love and to allow themselves to be transformed by it. After 50 years, it is still a fitting task for Christians to continue to deepen their relationship with the Heart of Jesus, in such a way as to revive their faith in the saving love of God and to welcome him ever better into their lives."Letter of His Holiness Benedict XVI on the 50th anniversary of Haurietis Aquas As the encyclical states, From this source, the heart of Jesus, originates the true knowledge of Jesus Christ and a deeper experience of his love.

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