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12 Sentences With "most strenuously"

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

She would be doing exactly the thing that she's avoided most strenuously throughout her career.
If Baraboo took pride in looking after its own, who did the town recognize first and most strenuously as its own?
But when he presents this option to his family at the all-important meeting where they snipe over who should get fired, his children immediately reject the idea, with Kendall objecting the most strenuously.
Martin O'Malley of Maryland, who has argued most strenuously for more Democratic debates, is at risk of not qualifying for the next one under criteria laid out by NBC, the network hosting the Jan.
Delegate David Rice, a Presbyterian minister, was the leading voice against the inclusion of slavery protections in the new constitution, while George Nicholas argued most strenuously in favor of them.Harrison and Klotter, p. 63 Garrard encouraged his fellow ministers and Baptists to vote against its inclusion.Everman in Governor James Garrard, p.
Though he objected most strenuously to military conscription by the Confederate government in Richmond, Brown also protested the army's impressment of goods and slave labor and was critical of Confederate tax and blockade-running policies. In time, other Confederate governors followed Brown's example, undermining the war effort and sapping the Confederacy of vital resources.
Life-size statue at Asbury Theological Seminary in Wilmore, Kentucky, United States As the societies multiplied, they adopted the elements of an ecclesiastical system. The divide between Wesley and the Church of England widened. The question of division from the Church of England was urged by some of his preachers and societies, but most strenuously opposed by his brother Charles. Wesley refused to leave the Church of England, believing that Anglicanism was "with all her blemishes, [...] nearer the Scriptural plans than any other in Europe".
The authorship of the poem is disputed, with a number of people claiming to have written it. In 2008, Rachel Aviv in a Poetry Foundation article discusses the claims of Burrell Webb, Mary Stevenson, Margaret Fishback Powers, and Carolyn Joyce Carty. Later that year, The Washington Post, covering a lawsuit between the claims of Stevenson, Powers and Carty, said that "At least a dozen people" had claimed credit for the poem. The three authors who have most strenuously promoted their authorship are Margaret Powers (née Fishback), Carolyn Carty, and Mary Stevenson.
Internet Broadway Database entry for The Theatre Guild The debut of Allegro was avidly awaited. Richard Watts, Jr. of the New York Post called it "the most strenuously anticipated musical show of the post-war era"New York Post, October 11, 1947 and advance ticket sales for Allegro were reported as unprecedented by longtime New York Times theater reporter Sam Zolotow.The New York Times, October 10, 1947 Battles's role as Allegro's protagonist Joseph Taylor, Jr. was apparently among the first to be cast. On July 4, 1947 Zolotow reported in the Times that as of that date "only John Battles and John Conte are definite for the cast".
In the United States, applied linguistics also began narrowly as the application of insights from structural linguistics—first to the teaching of English in schools and subsequently to second and foreign language teaching. The linguistics applied approach to language teaching was promulgated most strenuously by Leonard Bloomfield, who developed the foundation for the Army Specialized Training Program, and by Charles C. Fries, who established the English Language Institute (ELI) at the University of Michigan in 1941. In 1946, Applied linguistics became a recognized field of studies in the aforementioned university. In 1948, the Research Club at Michigan established Language Learning: A Journal of Applied Linguistics, the first journal to bear the term applied linguistics.
It still complained that the Administration had not done enough to protect southern blacks and civil rights workers from physical violence by whites in the Deep South.Full Text of John Lewis' Speech ~ Civil Rights Movement Veterans Deleted from his original speech at the insistence of more conservative and pro-Kennedy leaders were phrases such as:Great Hall of the Library of Congress on the 50th anniversary, August 28, 2013 Lewis' speech was distributed to fellow organizers the evening before the march; Reuther, O'Boyle, and others thought it was too divisive and militant. O'Boyle objected most strenuously to a part of the speech that called for immediate action and disavowed "patience." The government and moderate organizers could not countenance Lewis's explicit opposition to Kennedy's civil rights bill.
Monson's administration was informed by his Christian principles, which led him to lead prayer meetings, teach some of his prisoners reading and writing, and (most unusually at the time) to abstain from the use of flogging. He set out his philosophy in an official report: > The punishment of vengeance or anything else which is calculated to embitter > the life of a Prisoner, beyond that of Barrs and Fence, I most strenuously > condemn…A Criminal of any "Class" cannot be improved by any mode of > severity; he may, and generally will be, by an enlightened spirit of > humanity.Elsie Locke The Gaoler (Palmerston North: Dunmore Press, 1978) p. > 85 This liberal policy, which was continuously opposed by his immediate superiors in the Provincial government, was found by a delegation of Visiting Judges in 1855 to produce encouraging results: > Mr. Monson the Gaoler appears to have stood nearly alone in all efforts > hitherto to improve the moral status of the prisoners…It is but just a > tribute of praise to say that he has evinced great zeal, and that his system > of "moral suasion" coupled with firmness appears to have succeeded where, > perhaps, under the circumstances, no other would.

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