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19 Sentences With "strenuousness"

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

Riding in the open was therefore practiced only by those who had the strength and daring to endure its strenuousness.
The app got a major redesign earlier this year and in the process, Google introduced Heart Points as a way of tracking not just the length but also the strenuousness of your activities.
" After the 1903 football season concluded, the D.C. school board issued a warning: "The board has had its attention directed to a growing strenuousness and carelessness in inflicting injury in the football games and the schools.
The next morning, when I went for a run on the beach, I ran, barefoot, with a heightened sense of purpose, for miles, almost completely unaware of the bright sun beating down on me and the strenuousness of running on hard-packed sand.
In light of the strenuousness of Obama's denial, and Comey's extraordinary interest in clearing the FBI's name publicly, it is likely that Nunes' inquiry will either reveal serious probable cause for investigating Trump or that Trump's accusations don't have even tenuous connection to reality.
The high levels of depression during the 3 to 6 months postpartum period is also similar amongst women. These results could be explained by the strenuousness of 3 to 6 months newborn care.
There is generally almost no overlap between white, yellow and orange controls. The requirements of each are fundamentally different. However, for brown, green, red and blue courses, the control requirements are basically the same. The advanced courses differ in length and degree of strenuousness.
Cumulative elevation gain, along with round-trip distance, is arguably the most important value used in quantifying the strenuousness of a trip. This is because hiking on flat land (zero elevation gain) is significantly easier than hiking up and down a large mountain with the same round-trip distance.
The French numerical system (distinct from the adjectival system, described later) rates a climb according to the overall technical difficulty and strenuousness of the route. Grades start at 1 (very easy) and the system is open-ended. Each numerical grade can be subdivided by adding a letter (a, b or c). Examples: 2, 4, 4b, 6a, 7c.
The prognosis for a horse with navicular syndrome is guarded. Many times the horse does not return to its former level of competition. Others are retired. Eventually all horses with the syndrome will need to lessen the strenuousness of their work, but with proper management, a horse with navicular syndrome can remain useful for some time.
As a result of her tea connection, she was known as "Hornibags". She held court at the Midland Hotel, wearing exotic clothing and openly smoking cigarettes, which was considered scandalous at the time. She introduced Manchester to what was called at the time "the play of ideas". The theatre critic James Agate noted that Horniman's high-minded theatrical ventures had "an air of gloomy strenuousness" about them.
He was described as an indefatigable worker and endured all sorts of hardships and privations. In his zeal, he went beyond the Sz Yap District, as far as Yeungkong City, 200 miles south-west of Canton, and into San Hing and Tung On, north of the Hoi Ping District, into the "regions beyond." His itineraries were generally made on foot and in all kinds of weather, and attended by great hardships. This strenuousness resulted in a complete breakdown in 1910.
This section ("less forceful and at a moderate pace") is a complete change of character from the formal fugue that preceded it and the one that follows it. It is a fugato, a section that combines contrapuntal writing with homophony. "After the strenuousness of the B Fugue [first section], the effect is of an almost blinding innocence," writes Joseph Kerman.Kerman (1979), p. 287 Analysts who see the fugue as a multi-movement work rolled into one view this as the traditional Andante movement.
All the while the crowd resounded with shouts of Out of bounds, Too far, Right beside him, Over his head, On the ground, Up in the air, Too short, Pass it back in the scrum." Galen, in On Exercise with the Small Ball,P.N.Singer, "Galen: Selected Works" (1997), pages 299-304 describes Harpastum as: :"better than wrestling or running because it exercises every part of the body, takes up little time, and costs nothing."; it was "profitable training in strategy", and could be "played with varying degrees of strenuousness.
The novel received mixed reviews from critics. "The Washington Post said that while the novel is dark, it's strenuousness pays off with an ending that provides a useful solution to all of us who are struggling. Strout cradles her characters - with all their weaknesses - in a level of understanding that 'somehow.. feels like a foretaste of salvation.' Atlantic Monthly said that "this lovely second novel confirms Strout as the possessor of an irresistibly companionable, peculiarly American voice: folksy, poetic, but always as precise as a shadow on a brilliant winter day.
During World War II Hodgkins served as a Lt. Comdr. in the U.S. Navy. In 1946 Hodgkins became professor of ergonomics and Skubic of physical education, both of them at the University of California, Santa Barbara. In the 1960s they co-wrote articles on health and physical education such as Relative Strenuousness of Selected Sports as Performed by Women, Anticipatory, exercise, and recovery heart rates of girls as affected by four running events and Cardiac Response to Participation in Selected Individual and Dual Sports as Determined by Telemetry.
N.Singer, "Galen: Selected Works" (1997), pages 299-304 describes harpastum as: > better than wrestling or running because it exercises every part of the > body, takes up little time, and costs nothing."; it was "profitable training > in strategy", and could be "played with varying degrees of strenuousness." > Galen adds, "When, for example, people face each other, vigorously > attempting to prevent each other from taking the space between, this > exercise is a very heavy, vigorous one, involving much use of the hold by > the neck, and many wrestling holds. An anonymous poetLaus Pisonis, verses 185-187 (translated by J.W. & A.M.Duff).
There were several tours: from 1828 to 1830 to Paris, and from 1831 to 1832 to London; he was in St. Petersburg in 1835. In London in 1832, Haizinger, with a German opera company brought to the King's Theatre by Joseph August Röckel, played Florestan in Beethoven's opera Fidelio. The Earl of Mount Edgcumbe wrote that his voice was "very beautiful", but the critic Henry Chorley described him as "a meritorious musician with an ungainly presence; an actor whose strenuousness in representing the hunger of the imprisoned captive in the dungeon trenched closely on burlesque". Haizinger retired in 1858, and afterwards appeared only occasionally.
Little versed in coloratura, but decidedly powerful of voice, he had a dark timbre, a firm accent, great phrasing and passionate acting. Despite criticisms of his voice's strenuousness and lack of agility, Donzelli can be held to represent the junction between the old neoclassic style of baritone-type tenor and the romantic "forceful tenor". He was the model for the real founder of the latter category of singers, Gilbert Louis Duprez, who was to become famous as the first practitioner of the high C from the chest. Stories are told that an attempt to emulate Donzelli's robust singing style might have been the cause of the demise of a young colleague of his, Americo Sbigoli, who had been engaged, together with Donzelli, in 1821, to execute the première of Donizetti's Zoraide di Granata at Rome's Teatro Argentina.

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