Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

40 Sentences With "most trenchant"

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

On Thursday, Imran Khan, the most trenchant political opponent of Mr. Sharif, also arrived in London.
He delivers some of his most trenchant criticism toward Barack Obama, particularly over Obama's handling of Flint.
The most trenchant criticisms of class inequality tend to come—not unsurprisingly—from those on (or who've completed) upward trajectories.
Perhaps most important, the World Bank's biggest benefactor and largest shareholder — the United States — has become its most trenchant critic.
Carter is marvelously quotable, and many of her most trenchant lines have to do with the relations between men and women.
He's one of the most trenchant critics of Silicon Valley's business model and the way it's screwed up both the internet and the world.
Arora's most trenchant criticism is when she analyzes the obsessive focus of Silicon Valley and its entrepreneurs on grand projects rather than on core needs.
I understand that, but I was really struck that John Kennedy, this Republican in Louisiana, if you watched him, asked the most trenchant questions possible.
And in the novel's final paragraphs, he offers one of the most trenchant calls for progressive action that I have read in a very long time.
MacLean's critics on the right also argue that there is little to no evidence supporting her most important arguments, and some of her most trenchant examples.
Using facial-analysis software developed by Microsoft, The Economist has sought to quantify Mr Trump and Mrs Clinton's emotions during some of the most trenchant moments of the debates.
The forty-three-year-old playwright is one of downtown's most trenchant, least crowd-pleasing talents, whose stubbornly genre-resistant work melds identity politics, Dadaist humor, and metatheatrical mind games.
" But it is perhaps no surprise that the most trenchant comment on American character comes from the best show of the lot, that perpetual coulda-been-a-contender "Mack & Mabel.
I could see this work being developed by a comedic ensemble, but then, in terms of provoking political awareness comedy currently offers some of the most trenchant analysis we have.
Perhaps the most trenchant insights concerning Texas politics were offered by a prominent Republican, Joe Straus, who is retiring after serving 10 years as Speaker of the state House of Representatives.
The prolific Knisley, 34, has been publishing autobiographical comics since her early 20s (like the recipe-dotted "Relish: My Life in the Kitchen"), and this book covers her most trenchant topic.
As in this lovely soliloquy, Mr. Posner's play is at its most trenchant and funny when it doesn't just collapse the distance between Chekhov and today, but also encourages us to forget Chekhov entirely.
This prompted an outraged response from one of the most trenchant and widely followed critics of Germany's political establishment, a 27-year-old, blue-haired YouTuber known only by his nom de plume, Rezo.
Its real subject, or at any rate the most trenchant theme to emerge from behind its abstractions and intangibles, is the one suggested by the title, borrowed from Stravinsky's book of études for young pianists.
As the opposition leader crusading to win back the House, Pelosi wants to do nothing to undercut the Democrats' most trenchant campaign argument: that the Republicans are simply too dysfunctional to govern the country effectively.
William Powhida, one of our most trenchant and acerbic political artists, used to work regularly as an art critic — and basically still does, in a continuing series of brilliant text drawings produced over the past decade.
In perhaps the most trenchant effort to deter leaks, White House spokesman Sean Spicer demanded that some aides there surrender their phones so they could be checked for calls or texts to reporters, Politico reported on Sunday.
Also helping to make her arguments slanted is that, particularly with the case of Schutz, D'Souza cites, but ultimately ignores one of the most trenchant insights into the meaning of the controversy given by Coco Fusco in Hyperallergic.
Peachum is an Otto Dix study in scarlet — with a deeply modern inclusiveness that finds among the cast the disabled performer Jamie Beddard, who has cerebral palsy and lands arguably the most trenchant one-liner of the entire show.
Killmonger's final line — "Bury me in the ocean with my ancestors who jumped from ships, because they knew death was better than bondage" — is among the film's most trenchant, and one of the hardest to believe actually exists in a Marvel movie.
I have in mind particularly the Scottish novelist and screenwriter Gilbert Adair, whose film criticism for The Independent was both witty (he was fond of puns) and profound; Pauline Kael, whose passion for film was palpable however wildly she often struck; and David Thomson, the British-born cinephile whose "Biographical Dictionary of Film" (now in its sixth edition) is one of the most trenchant and eccentric reference works ever conceived.
If The Big Sick is the potential crowd-pleasing wildcard in this year's awards season that was greeted by dead silence this morning, then Get Out—Jordan Peele's astounding horror film that doubles as the most trenchant social satire released on film this year—at least got its relative due: Along with nabbing a nom in the Best Picture - Comedy or Musical category, its lead Daniel Kaluuya scored a Best Actor nod as well.
In 1997, Wulli Constituency was divided into two constituencies (Wulli East and Wulli West) and he won Wulli West Constituency in the 1997 national assembly election. Subsequently, he became one of the most trenchant critics in the APRC government in the country's national assembly. He is also a member of the national assembly from Wuli West. Jatta is also the Secretary General of Wulli Adult Literacy Development Association.
Freedland wrote in The Jewish Chronicle: "Now, as it happens, I have multiple criticisms of IJV ... but even their most trenchant opponents must surely blanch at the notion that these critics of Israel and of Anglo- Jewish officialdom are somehow in favour of genocide—literally, eager to see the murder and eradication of the Jewish people ... it is an absurdity, one that drains the word 'genocide' of any meaning".
Hatchet Job of the Year was a British journalism award given annually from 2012 to 2014 to "the writer of the angriest, funniest, most trenchant book review of the past twelve months". It was awarded by The Omnivore, a review aggregator website, with the aim to "raise the profile of professional critics and to promote integrity and wit in literary journalism". The prize was a year's supply of potted shrimp.
Gibson, Ian (1997), pp 267-74 Summarizing the impact of these two films on the Surrealist film movement, one commentator has stated: "If Un Chien Andalou stands as the supreme record of Surrealism's adventures into the realm of the unconscious, then L'Âge d'Or is perhaps the most trenchant and implacable expression of its revolutionary intent."Short, Robert. "The Age of Gold: Surrealist Cinema, Persistence of Vision" Vol. 3, 2002.
Warner, Denis, Not Always on Horseback: An Australian Correspondent at War and Peace in Asia, 1961–1993; St Leonards: Allen and Unwin; 1997; pp. 196–197. However, the notion that Burchett originated the "hoax" has been decisively refuted by one of his most trenchant critics, Tibor Méray.Méray, Tibor; On Burchett; Kallista, Victoria, Australia: Callistemon Publications; 2008; pp. 73–76. Méray worked as a correspondent for Hungary during the war but fled the country after the abortive uprising of 1956.
Those attempts which had a permanent and stable success, like democratization in Austria, West Germany and Japan after World War II, mostly involved countries which had an advanced economic and social structure already, and implied a drastic change of the whole political culture. Supporting internal democratic movements and using diplomacy may be far more successful and less costly. Thus, the theory and related research, if they were correctly understood, may actually be an argument against a democratic crusade (, , ). Michael Haas has written perhaps the most trenchant critique of a hidden normative agenda .
Rigorous views of divine simplicity were championed by the Mu'tazili, which resulted in a radically apophatic theology. By postulating a distinction between Existence and Essence for all created beings, which was perceived to be uniquely absent in God, Al-Farabi established another model of divine simplicity. Ibn Sinā supported and elaborated this position, Al-Ghazali contested this identification of Divine essence and existence, but still saw all Divine attributes and acts as enveloped in and indistinct from the Divine Essence, this latter view of divine simplicity was shared with some of the most trenchant critics of the Muslim philosophical writers, like Ibn Taymiyyah.
Webster described The Memory Wars as one of the most trenchant and significant contributions to the debate on recovered- memory therapy. The psychologist Jennifer Freyd wrote that Crews made incorrect claims about Cheit's case and that Cheit himself had objected to Crews's account of how he remembered being sexually abused as a child. She also argued that Crews's understanding of repression was confused and that he was mistaken to claim that Cheit's case was irrelevant to the repressed memory debate. The philosopher John Forrester described Crews's article "The Unknown Freud" as a celebrated and widely-read article.
In 1833, Cooper returned to the United States and published A Letter to My Countrymen in which he gave his criticism of various social and political mores. Promotional material from a modern publisher summarize his goals as follows: > A Letter To My Countrymen remains Cooper's most trenchant work of social > criticism. In it, he defines the role of the "man of letters" in a republic, > the true conservative, the slavery of party affiliations, and the nature of > the legislative branch of government. He also offers her most persuasive > argument on why America should develop its own art and literary culture, > ignoring the aristocratically tainted art of Europe.
In Blair's second ministry, Stuart was appointed as one of the UK Parliamentary Representatives to the European Convention, which was tasked with drawing up a new constitution for the European Union. In this capacity, Stuart also served as one of the thirteen members of the Convention's Presidium - the steering group responsible for managing the business of the Convention. When the draft Constitution emerged, Stuart was one of the most trenchant critics of the proposal, stating that it had been drawn up by a "self-selected group of the European political elite" determined to deepen European integration. She subsequently expounded these views in a 2004 Fabian Society pamphlet, The Making of Europe's Constitution.
Ironically, he wrote one of the most trenchant critiques of analytical philosophy, Fashionable Nihilism (2002), while teaching in a department that was rated the number one analytic department in the United States by the end of his career. Every August for many years he hiked in the high Sierra Nevada mountains. Wilshire authored seven books, among them Wild Hunger (1999), a theory of the roots of addictive behavior as traceable to the lack of experiencing open landscape in modern times, and Get ‘Em All, Kill ‘Em! (2004), an exploration of the nature of genocide that was a grief response to the accidental death of his adult daughter Rebekah after she was thrown from a horse.
Audiences surveyed by CinemaScore gave the film a grade B+ on scale of A to F. Ty Burr spoke positively about the film in his review for The Boston Globe, calling it "silliness at its most trenchant" and declaring it the funniest film of the year. Michael Medved gave it 3.5 out of 4 stars, calling it "...simultaneously hilarious and cringe-inducing, full of ingenious bits that you'll want to describe to your friends and then laugh all over again when you do." Peter Travers of Rolling Stone wrote: "You won't know what outrageous fun is until you see Borat. High-five!" In an article about the changing face of comedy, The Atlantic Monthly said that it "may be the funniest film in a decade".
It reaches for the organic independence > of inventive fiction but stays with the training wheels of the biographical > format.... So a play that can't make up its mind whether to be a potent > family saga or an episodic comedy worthy of a laugh track ends up ignoring > what it has: a potentially bruising and affecting drama about the tough life > of a woman in Hollywood in the 1940s and 50s. Instead, I found myself > thinking more than once that Hollywood Arms is what would have resulted if > television executives had gotten their hands on a script by O'Neill." Lawrence Frascella of Entertainment Weekly graded it B and commented, > "[W]hile it's not the most trenchant piece of writing you'll ever > experience, under Harold Prince's expert direction some very harsh material > takes on a warm, appealingly nostalgic glow . . . This moving production may > kick off a new media subgenre: the Broadway-bound star autobiography.

No results under this filter, show 40 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.