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16 Sentences With "one wishes that"

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

One wishes that were enough to motivate greater federal action.
One wishes that they could come out from under the Cold War's overhang and work this out together.
And one wishes that such critics reserved more heartbreak for people who suffer because of the status quo in the online environment.
And you know, looking back, one wishes that a variety of institutions had raised capital from the private markets and then we hadn't had to get involved with the whole TARP thing.
"Naturally, one wishes that DNA was present in that specimen," Katerina Douka, an archaeologist at the University of Oxford who's not affiliated with the new study, wrote in an email to Gizmodo.
One wishes that the creative team — the same one behind "Ragtime" — of Terrence McNally (book), Stephen Flaherty (music) and Lynn Ahrens (lyrics) had found a way to make it cohesive and more balanced.
One wishes that, rather than let it all run into the ocean, we could attempt to capture and transport it, by a combination of barge and pipeline, to some of the parched areas of the world.
On the other hand, one wishes that there were a four-flavor option, because the restaurant actually offers two "all-red" versions: one vegetarian and one with beef tallow, which tends to monopolize the flavor with its pungent gaminess.
This is of course true, though one wishes that the Senate majority leader, Mitch McConnell, could have had the same perspective before the 2016 election when he rejected an opportunity to sign on to a bipartisan statement about Russia's election interference.
At certain points, one wishes that Kirsch, elsewhere an incisive critic, had devoted more space to a critical assessment of his writers, as, for example, when he notes in passing that Yehuda Halevi's philosophic argument for Judaism may be in some ways troubling but then says nothing about the intellectual scandal of Halevi's theology-based racism.
One wishes that the editor had gone easy with the flashbacks and not subjected the viewer to so many repeated shots.
At Allmusic, Scott Yanow wrote, "but the results of this 1958 session are relaxed rather than explosive. Carter and Hines explore a dozen tunes with respect and light swing, but one wishes that there were a bit more competitiveness to replace some of the mutual respect".
One wishes that more schools and colleges > and universities throughout the county would have the courage to set their > standards high, but to eliminate two questions that all too often one finds > on a request for admission: What is your race and what is your religion? It > seems to me that these questions have no bearing on one's right to an > education in whatever field of learning one has chosen to follow. They > should have no bearing, either, on one's success in whatever profession that > he or she is preparing for.
Woodley needs a foil but Pierce spends the first half of the film being a stick in the mud. One wishes that she was given more to do." On the other hand, Ari Drew of Dread Central said: "On the surface, Don't Kill It has all of the makings of a standard Syfy original action-horror offering; the dialogue is often ridiculous, the action sequences outrageous, and the characterization is relatively thin. However, the plus side here is that Mendez’s film most definitely knows what it is and how to have a blast with it.
She doesn't seem particularly real." Tom Shales of the Washington Post wrote: "Three generations of an African American family share—sometimes—what looks like an enormous house in the Atlanta suburbs, and things sort of happen to them. Some things happen repeatedly, such as the patriarch of the family telling everybody to 'get out' or 'go home,' apparently desiring the company of none of them...At times one wishes that, yes, House were Payne-less...(T)he program has a long way to go before jelling as a believable unit...(T)he acting styles conflict or seem barely to exist." Shales also criticized the program for some of the subject matter, such as Janine's crack addiction, stating that "It's commendable to try to introduce serious and topical material in sitcoms, but the way it's done here is awkward and cringe-inducing.
" Hannah Forbes Black from Channel 4 rated the film 2½ out of five stars, calling it a "soft-focus, chocolate-box fairytale." She continued: "The whole thing is vaguely reminiscent of post-war domestic dramas aimed at a daytime audience of housewives – like a photo-negative of Brief Encounter ... Miller's self-adapted script is no more strained and compromised than the average book- to-film adaptation, but one wishes that she'd seized this amazing opportunity to take liberties with her own work ... Toured rapidly around Pippa's life, we can see the outline of the traumas and choices that have shaped her personality, but the film doesn't seem to know what it wants to say about any of it."Channel 4 review Darren Amner of Eye For Film rated it three out of five stars and called the script "very wry, funny and emotionally charged." Peter Brunette of The Hollywood Reporter called it "the kind of film that most critics desperately want to like" and added: > "Unfortunately, writer-director Rebecca Miller's script tries so hard to be > nervous and edgy that it ultimately succeeds only in making its viewers > nervous and edgy.

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