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23 Sentences With "puts down to"

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

He's a natural communicator, which he puts down to having moved so much as a child.
Overseas is currently 15 percent of revenue, a figure that the CEO puts down to the Indian diaspora globally.
Some of Schwarz's clients travel for miles just for the experience—something she puts down to the quality of her dolls.
Meanwhile Chongqing rappers such as GAI tend to be more aggressive—something Bridge puts down to the city having a harder edge than its neighbor.
Roughly 80 percent of Chicago police video is missing audio, a statistic that the department puts down to a combination of officer error and intentional destruction.
The 40-year-old has been missing in action since he won in Memphis two years ago, a slump he puts down to too much tinkering with his swing.
Despite his advanced years, Filaret says he is fit enough to lead the new autocephalous church if chosen, something he puts down to a moderate diet and looking after his health.
He uses Notting Hill Carnival as a perfect example of how, in the right context, cannabis and dance music can work together, which he largely puts down to it's daytime, outdoors setting.
His occasional anxious fits of wheezing he puts down to allergies, and he's not at all self-conscious about the staggeringly offensive jokes he tells at the wrong time to the wrong people.
Shiffrin reeled off five consecutive World Cup victories to start 2018, but has since managed to only stand on the podium once in her last four outings, something compatriot Miller puts down to fatigue.
The club has received plenty of support from local sides according to Mark, something he puts down to the sense of camaraderie in grassroots football, as well as a general resurgence in the popularity of non-league.
The Institute's modeling forecasts forests around Oslo may see just 50 days of snow deeper than 30 cm in 2050, down from 80 days today and 140 days in 1900 - a slump it puts down to climate change.
"Compared to a few years ago, it's definitely gotten harder to get noticed," which Grissom in part puts down to the rapid rise of Instagram, ensuring an infinite supply of on-demand, cute pet photos that are merely a hashtag away.
Of 23 English regions analysed, almost all saw a rise in the number of such crimes in the ten months after Mr Salah's arrival, part of a long-term trend that the Home Office puts down to better recording by the police.
RL Record Keeper's Club Barry Philbin (14 July 1950) is an English former professional rugby league footballer who played in the 1970s. He played at representative level for England, and at club level for Swinton and Warrington (Heritage № 750), as a , i.e. number 13, during the era of contested scrums. He subsequently broke his leg, which he puts down to playing in jersey number unlucky 13.
His colleagues view Beau as an annoyance, his superiors view him as a loser without hope of promotion, having failed his sergeant's exam no fewer than eighteen times. This Beau puts down to a "slight lack of composure" during moments of stress. On one occasion, when confronted with a difficult question, he ate the exam paper. According to his file, which Beau secretly reads while supposedly cleaning up the sergeant's desk, he is an "utterly brainless idiot" and suffering from "terminal ugliness".
David Simeon began his acting career after being accepted into RADA, the Rose Bruford College and the Guildhall School of Music and Drama. Ultimately he chose the latter and completed his training in 1964.British Library Theatre Archive - David Simeon After years working in Wiltshire rep and Birmingham rep, Simeon began working extensively in theatre and television from the late 1960s. His first television role was as a murderer in Sexton Blake, which Simeon puts down to his honest face being the reason for his casting.
By contrast, Gus became very rich when all of his property was appropriated for private or public purposes. The Squire and Gus have not spoken to each other in over fifty years. Don - Another of Walt's neighbours and a successful dairy farmer, something Walt puts down to the fact that Don has in excess of half-a-million dollars in capital equipment for the purpose. Don is probably the neighbour who is the most exasperated by Walt's attempts to farm with antiquated equipment and is always urging him to at least work with equipment that is not clearly obsolete.
As all the thoughts sent from Brainy's 'suggestion box' appear to "our Man" as his own he little suspects the existence of the numskulls. Much of what he reflects on is actually a consequence of the Numskulls' free will, rather than his own. In the story above the Man notices the bags under his eyes, which he puts down to a normally bodily reaction to tiredness, when they are in fact the bulges caused by Blinky's bedding. The man has bags under his eyes, not because he chose to have a late night but because Blinky chose not to get out of bed.
The two released a second demo in June 1994 in a pressing of 400 copies, which included a cover of Hellhammer's "The Third of the Storms". The band changed their name to Diaboli in summer 1995, apparently due to Ilvespakka's annoyance at misspellings by journalists and fans, and the two members decided to part ways, for reasons that Ilvespakka puts down to ego clashes. Ilvespakka signed to Greek label Unisound in 1995 and recorded the debut Diaboli album late that year, in approximately 30 hours. The result, Mesmerized by Darkness, was released that summer; Ilvesparkka cites the likes of Slayer, Venom, Celtic Frost, Bathory and Darkthrone as influences.
Take40 comments that "although the single … was one of the group’s most accomplished recordings it failed to become a worldwide hit on the scale that they had been used to". The song was only a minor hit (for example only charting #32 in the UK, breaking "a string of 19 consecutive top 30 hits" which started in 1975 with "S.O.S."), something that Ulvaeus retrospectively puts down to the song being "too different and ahead of its time for the ABBA fans [or] too much of a change for a lot of ABBA fans." He also commented that "the energy [in their music] had gone".
It Came from Beneath the Sea... Again! is a 2007 (delayed until 2011) four-issue comic book miniseries created by Clay Griffith, Susan Griffith, Chris Noeth and Todd Tennant, based on ideas developed by Ray Harryhausen in his film It Came from Beneath the Sea (1955). The story by Griffith and Griffith is described by Jake Thomas, writing for Fanbase Press, as "well-paced" and wasting "no time getting to the action," while James Ferguson, writing for Horror Talk, compliments the "outrageous and always funny" dialogue. The artwork by Noeth in the first two chapters is complimented by Thomas as "highly illustrated, bright, and bold," while dismissed by Ferguson as "very uneven," which he puts down to tight deadlines.
50 By 1974, this immunity excluded situations where the danger came from premises that the landlord occupied and where the landlord actively created a danger, and only included the landlord, not associated people.Spencer (1975) p.54 The Defective Premises Bill was introduced to the House of Commons as a private member's bill by Ivor Richard on 1 December 1971, and was not debated at all in the Commons, something the academic lawyer Peter North called "remarkable". There was some debate in the House of Lords, with questions and amendments covering Section 1, but the bill was not substantially amended, something North puts down to the quality of the draft prepared by the Law Commission.

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