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13 Sentences With "taken on trust"

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

The apparent sageness of Trump's foreign policy is to be taken on trust, it seems.
Presearch's claim not to be storing or otherwise tracking users' searches has to be taken on trust for now.
Other people's sicknesses, as bodily phenomena, must be imagined or taken on trust, since they can never quite be transmitted across the gap.
Alasdair Breckenridge, then-chair of the MHRA, told Panorama that the GSK briefing document caused "a very dramatic change in our thinking about Seroxat and children".Joffre, Shelley (3 October 2004). "Taken on Trust", BBC Panorama. The MHRA asked GSK to submit the full clinical data, which they did on 27 May 2003.
Scottish reporter Shelley Jofre presented four investigative programmes on paroxetine for BBC Panorama between 2002 and 2007, including one devoted to study 329, "Secrets of the Drug Trials", in January 2007."The Secrets of Seroxat", BBC Panorama, 13 October 2002 (transcript)."Emails from the edge", BBC Panorama, 11 May 2003 (transcript)."Taken on Trust", BBC Panorama, 3 October 2004 (transcript).
No trace of the Nantlle Railway can be discerned on or north of St Helens Road in the lower town. Most if not all was obliterated when standard gauge lines were installed in the 1870s. Modern day road works have completed the job. The most northerly clear remnant is Coed Helen tunnel, with embankment traces between there and the river and bridge abutment traces having to be taken on trust as being of railway origin.
Evans and his two assistants spent more than two years examining Irving's work. This research found that Irving had misrepresented historical evidence to support his prejudices. In his report and testimony, Evans suggested that in his view, Irving had knowingly used forged documents as sources, and that for this reason, Irving could not be regarded as a historian. His conclusions were that > Not one of [Irving's] books, speeches or articles, not one paragraph, not > one sentence in any of them, can be taken on trust as an accurate > representation of its historical subject.
Since 2002, Panorama has made four programmes about the anti- depressant Seroxat (paroxetine / Paxil): "The Secrets of Seroxat" (2002); "Seroxat: Emails from the Edge" (2003); "Taken on Trust" (2004) and "Secrets of the Drug Trials" (2007). "The Secrets of Seroxat" elicited a record response from the public as 65,000 people telephoned the BBC helpline and 1,300 people emailed Panorama directly. The major mental health charity Mind collaborated with Panorama in a survey of those who emailed the programme. Anonymous findings from the 239 responses were sent to the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA).
Evans, Richard Lying About Hitler, London: Perseus Books, 2002. Evans subsequently proved to be a powerful witness in Lipstadt's ultimately successful defence. In his expert witness report he wrote: > Not one of [Irving's] books, speeches or articles, not one paragraph, not > one sentence in any of them, can be taken on trust as an accurate > representation of its historical subject. All of them are completely > worthless as history, because Irving cannot be trusted anywhere, in any of > them, to give a reliable account of what he is talking or writing about.
Some have argued that Christianity is undermined by the inability of Christians to agree on matters of faith and church governance, and the tendency for the content of their faith to be determined by regional or political factors. Schopenhauer sarcastically suggested: : To the South German ecclesiastic the truth of the Catholic dogma is quite obvious, to the North German, the Protestant. If then, these convictions are based on objective reasons, the reasons must be climatic, and thrive, like plants, some only here, some only there. The convictions of those who are thus locally convinced are taken on trust and believed by the masses everywhere.
The committee concluded that in the circumstances, the British government had done all it reasonably could in the light of what little was known at the time. 7 August 1984 The Libyans allowed family members to visit the hostages. These visits brought unofficial news of the, as yet, publicly undisclosed involvement of Terry Waite, the Special Envoy to the Archbishop of Canterbury, of the Church of England.Terry Waite, Taken on Trust, 1993, Hodder and Stoughton, UK 1 September 1984 Doug Ledingham and George Bush, another prisoner, arrested and detained on bona fide charges unrelated to the Libyan hostage situation, were freed and allowed home.
The recommendations of the Royal Commission were incorporated into the Mental Treatment Act 1930 which opened the way to many developments in mental health services over the next thirty years. Nonetheless, much of what Lomax described could still be seen in parts of Prestwich Hospital in the 1960s and 1970s. The book ensured Lomax a place in the tradition of British social reportage. It was an important book because it directed public attention to the defects of the Asylum system which had hitherto been taken on trust. Lomax’s vivid descriptions of patients' behaviour and mental state in asylums and of the institutional process produced insights which were to be rediscovered 30 years later by researchers who themselves went on to influence mental health care from 1959 onwards.
The other is in the British Museum manuscript Cotton Titus xvi. (Midland dialect, about 1410–1420?), representing a text completed, and revised throughout, from the French, though not by a competent hand. The Egerton text, edited by George Warner, has been printed by the Roxburghe Club, while the Cotton text, first printed in 1725–27, is in modern reprints the current English version. That none of the forms of the English version can be from the same hand which wrote the original is made patent by their glaring errors of translation, but the Cotton text asserts in the preface that it was made by Mandeville himself, and this assertion was till lately taken on trust by almost all modern historians of English literature.

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