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41 Sentences With "porousness"

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

Shakespeare for his receptiveness and curiosity, his flexibility and porousness.
Can you embrace your inherent porousness as an earthly organism?
Perhaps the porousness and malleability of online activist groups thus needs
The permeability or porousness of the human body is stressed throughout the novel.
Smells are reminders of the body's defenselessness and porousness; they come from the inside.
What a moment of crisis like this unveils is our porousness to one another.
"Rocks are always good, but I think it's the porousness of limestone that explains its power," he added.
That porousness also lends the pathways some color-changing charm: "When it's wet it's almost red," Volz says.
For all the American political system's porousness, Medicare and Medicaid do restrain costs compared to the private sector.
Instead, she bends and blurs them, to explore both the porousness of social boundaries and the pervasiveness of guilt.
The ambiguous humanity of zombies — the porousness of the boundary between us and them — is a staple of the genre.
To him, almost all that ails the United States is caused by the supposed porousness of that thousand-mile strip of land.
The artist locates herself between power and victimhood, knowing that creativity has to survive the porousness that is the essence of artistic individuality.
"Definitely a happy coincidence for her," he said, as he vented against what he described as the porousness of the criminal justice system.
A cave revealed by roadbuilding related to dam construction indicates the porousness of the rock that will underlie the lake created by the dam.
Hinduism has always resisted any universally satisfactory definition, and syncretic sites like Baba Budangiri are the religion's frontiers, where Hinduism's porousness is most evident.
Given the speed and porousness of the Internet era, we may soon be able to assess and comprehend Mr. West in much the same way.
Greenbaum underscores the porousness of boundaries by pushing the black and red shapes beyond the edges of the smaller canvases and onto the larger one.
There is a porousness to the human condition that the artist sloughs open, conflating internal and external worlds in fairytale landscapes fraught with life and sweat.
An interesting thought which struck this writer while reviewing Gaethje's tape regards Gaethje's defensive porousness out in the open, and his reliance on catch-and-pitch counters.
We not only conduct but also induct people into such conversations, and this means that we are interested in the porousness of the boundary that surrounds them.
He's still hectoring layabouts, chronicling toilers, and mocking nouvies, although these days he's also skewering the bogus trappings of Irish patriotism and the porousness of the Ulster border.
More understated — but just as interesting — is how the show talks about the porousness of identity in an age when we have seemingly constant access to strangers' innermost thoughts.
Ms. Scheer, a young playwright out of Boston, cannily exploits the porousness of that divide within adolescents, who still half-believe that thinking hard enough can transform fictions into facts.
And yet the porousness between "nature" and the city means that there's no boundary to draw, no genre conceit to keep sacred, other than the ones that are in your head.
Portraits of patients suffering from traumatic brain injury or dementia open up to reveal larger aspects of clinical practice, the brain and the kind of porousness Benjamin believes his profession requires.
However, Poling said obstacles remain in eradicating the group completely, including the weakness of the Philippine military across much of the south, the porousness of the region's borders with Malaysia and Indonesia, and its remote geographic location.
The porousness of the border between well and sick — the possibility that one might be well and sick at once, straddle good days and bad, or perform against type — calls into question how we define wellness and normalcy generally.
The porousness of time in Grossman's work — the way the year 2010, when she completed the series, infiltrates and ultimately reforms 1940 — in some ways mirrors that of all art, which is necessarily retrospective the moment it is made.
Both Klingner and Lee were highly skeptical of North Korea's assertion that it has zero cases of coronavirus, with Lee noting the high volume of North Korean workers in China and the porousness of the North Korea-China border before Pyongyang closed it in January.
At the University of Iowa's Writers' Workshop — a bastion of literary purity for aspiring novelists and poets, which, not coincidentally, has been featured on the TV show "Girls" — evidence of this porousness is sometimes subtle: "It happened a few years ago," said the workshop's director, Lan Samantha Chang.
Many observers believe that the great firewall's porousness is a feature, not a bug—that its architects see benefit in a barrier that does not completely alienate entrepreneurs, academics and foreign residents, but which most Chinese web-users will not have the energy, or the finances (VPNs usually require subscriptions), to surmount.
If the canvases of Ringgold and Thomas embody a counter-narrative representing a clean break with Modernism's colonizing obsessions, the Kenyan-born artist Michael Armitage has adopted, up to a point, the aesthetic heritage of Western art history, answering its theft of African forms and signifiers with a hybrid vision that affirms the porousness of ethnocultural borders and, in effect, co-opts the traditional hierarchies of power.
Instead of recoiling over the scale of migration, you might recoil instead from the types of control, intimidation and violence dedicated to preventing it and the conditions apparently condoned by authorities to facilitate that control — just as the family-separation policy that had these people clutching children's wrists made many Americans wonder about not the porousness of the border but what level of cruelty was an acceptable means of dissuading people from crossing it.
The smooth-skinned, giant mushroom-like structure floating atop sloping pylons is made of concrete, aluminium, steel and stone on the exterior, and finished inside with plaster reinforced with synthetic fibre, acoustic tiles, acrylic resin, and stainless steel and polished stone on the interior. Hadid wrote that the principal characteristics of her design were "transparency, porousness, and durability." It also features many ecological features, including a double skin, solar panels, and a system for recycling water.
In southern Florida, the composition of strata was anhydrite, with interbred dolomite and fossiliferous chalky limestone. One of the major differences in the strata samples from each location was the difference in the porousness of each layer. It was observed that there were minor signs of poorly developed porosity in the Florida sample, while the sample collected in Andros No. 1 showed large, thick areas of well-developed porosity. This information allowed geologists to conclude that at approximately 14,500 ft.
Grove, 1 Fired terracotta is not watertight, but surface-burnishing the body before firing can decrease its porousness and a layer of glaze can make it watertight. It is suitable for use below ground to carry pressurized water (an archaic use), for garden pots or building decoration in many environments, and for oil containers, oil lamps, or ovens. Most other uses, such as for tableware, sanitary piping, or building decoration in freezing environments, require the material to be glazed. Terracotta, if uncracked, will ring if lightly struck.
According to Hadid, the fundamental features of her design were "transparency, porousness, and durability." Many ecological features, double-skin facade, solar panels, and recycling water system are included in the building. The construction project for replacing Dongdaemun Stadium with a public park had been discussed since 2000 in the media, and the city of Seoul established a basic master plan for alternating the function of Dongdaemun Stadium in 2005. Upon the advice of architects, and in order to secure a high- quality design for the new landmark of Seoul, the city invited architects in February 2007 to participate in a design competition.
In this way, taken with the porousness of experimental music with respect to the plastic arts, notation came to be more and more influenced by a dialogue with painting, installations and performativity. As J.Y. Bosseur mentions in La musique du XXè siècle à la croisé des artes, the score progressed towards representing the management of space, a graphic space that allows us to know the multiple connections enclosed within it. Graphic notation in its modern form first appeared in the 1950s as an evolution of movement of Indeterminacy as pioneered by John Cage. The technique was originally used by avant-garde musicians and manifested itself as the use of symbols to convey information that could not be rendered with traditional notation such as extended techniques.
The trafficking policy seemed more aimed at the porousness of borders than at actual criminals, while migrant sex workers appeared to be particularly discriminated against, since they were simultaneously 'rescued' and deported without in any way addressing their vulnerability. Calls for aiming trafficking policy at traffickers rather than sex workers came from the Senate Law Commission, the Delegations for Women's Rights in the Senate and National Assembly, as well as from the opposition. In the Senate hearings into prostitution that year, Claude Boucher of Bus des Femmes, a sex worker support group, described how sex workers sell sex to survive, unable to make ends meet on social security or the minimum wage. To treat them as criminals, she argued, would just make them more vulnerable.
Immigration from Mexico was not formally regulated until the Immigration Act of 1917, but enforcement was lax and many exceptions were given for employers. In 1924, with the establishment of the U.S. Border Patrol, enforcement became more strict, and in the late 1920s before the market crash, as part of a general anti-immigrant sentiment, enforcement was again tightened. Due to the lax immigration enforcement, and porousness of the border, many citizens, legal residents, and immigrants did not have the official documentation proving their citizenship, had lost their documents, or just never applied for citizenship. Prejudice played a factor: Mexicans were stereotyped as "unclean, improvident, indolent, and innately dull", so many Mexicans did not apply for citizenship because they "knew that if [they] became a citizen [they] would still be, in the eyes of the Anglos, a Mexican".

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