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36 Sentences With "takes a dim view"

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

This generation also takes a dim view of the wisdom of experience.
The government takes a dim view of any organised effort to put pressure on it.
There is only one group of voters that consistently takes a dim view of renewable energy.
It also takes a dim view of government assistance — unless the money passes through churches first.
When it comes to America's technology industry, Donald Trump takes a dim view of foreign workers.
ET with additional context about how the professional healthcare community takes a dim view of "conversion therapy."
Hong Kong takes a dim view of short sellers — investors who bet that stocks will go down.
The state takes a dim view of entertainment wagers generally, said Ed Wong, an official with the Mississippi Gaming Commission.
At someone who has felt shamed for having an abortion, Marie takes a dim view of the bans sweeping the country.
Mr. Trump's assertion is based on research published by the Mercatus Center at George Mason University, which takes a dim view of regulation.
The EU also takes a dim view of other countries that use visa-free access to the EU as an inducement to investment migrants.
A Denver native who toured with Second City, Mr. Miller, who lives in Los Angeles, takes a dim view of some Silicon Valley mainstays.
He now takes a dim view of the show, which has also regularly featured an unflattering portrayal of him by Alec Baldwin wearing orange make-up.
"How long until the most widely read book in the world is banned because it takes a dim view of homosexuality?" the author asks, referencing the Bible.
While "the values are factors that are taken into consideration, not hard limits," the Emoji Subcommittee generally takes a dim view of prospective emoji that aren't in this ballpark.
China says it adheres to a policy of non-interference in other countries internal affairs, but it generally takes a dim view of independence or secessionist movements around the world.
Fruhstuck, though, takes a dim view of ossan rental as a means of increasing respect: "I'd doubt that this is of benefit to anybody [other] than the individuals directly involved."
BlackRock CEO Larry Fink said today at the DealBook Conference that he is intrigued by blockchain and distributed ledger technologies, but takes a dim view of such tech's most famous application:
But now, if he tries to expand his message beyond red-meat issues for the right, Mr. Trump may feel caged in by a platform that takes a dim view of self-restraint.
By extension, the government takes a dim view of the PYD, which it has prevented from forming a contiguous entity along the border in Syria by bombing Kurdish fighters—and by tacitly helping IS, claims the PYD.
If Mr. Wu goes through with it, an appeal will be a high-profile test of a court system that convicts nearly everyone prosecutors accuse and that often takes a dim view of open confrontation to its rulings.
The country's position has been complicated by its recent national election; Chancellor Angela Merkel is still trying to put together a government, one that is expected to include the Green Party, which takes a dim view of glyphosate.
Ceferin takes a dim view of President Trump's hard-line stance on immigration, and he is troubled by the slow-motion fragmentation of Europe, but he knows that he has, to some extent, been moved into position by similar tectonic shifts.
In a more measured (and members-only) post, Ben Thompson still takes a dim view of Facebook's plans for the default encryption of its messaging apps: Evil folks will always be able to figure out the most efficient way to be evil.
After exhausting himself with (hilarious) riffs on pop culture — as did the characters in "The Boys in the Band" — Mr. Droege's character, who takes a dim view of gay marriage as a step backward in the fight for happy gay flag-flying, reveals that (sigh) under the bitchy bravado beats a heart yearning for connection.
It is involved in the discussions of guidance for surgeons in the United Kingdom. It takes a dim view of penis enlargement surgery.
Relations between Sophie and Matteo are only described as rather primal and at times aggressive. The sexual repression (or lack of sexuality) adds a dark undercurrent to this rather sinister tale which takes a dim view of the search for enlightenment.
Their relationship is strained: Uncle Benjy, a wealthy clothing manufacturer with socialist sympathies, has always favored Duddy's brother Lennie, who wants to become a doctor. Uncle Benjy takes a dim view of Duddy's commercial ambitions, seeing them as avaricious and crass. During the summer after high school, Duddy takes a job as a waiter at a hotel in Ste. Agathe. He stumbles upon a beautiful and secluded lake while out with his soon-to-be lover and "Girl Friday" Yvette.
1969 - Page 59 "Says Rock Singers Untrained, Have No Knowledge - Tiny Gerri Granger, in Mexico for a ' nightclub engagement, takes a dim view of the hippie, teen-ager and Beatle-type, so- called "singers" who have soared to prominence throughout the ..." Her song "I Go To Pieces (Everytime)" became massive on the U.K.'s Northern Soul Scene, despite only being released as a promo in the U.S.A. on the Bell Records label in 1971. Billboard listed it for release in February, however it was not officially released.
As a result, they market themselves aggressively, even purchasing advertisements in local South Korean expatriate newspapers. However, the South Korean government takes a dim view of their own nationals who visit the restaurants, and warns them that they may be charged with violating the National Security Act. The first Okryu-gwan branch in China opened in Beijing's Wangjing district in 2003; by 2010, its revenues were estimated at more than US$6,000 per day. The waitresses are graduates of the Jang Chol Gu University of Commerce or culinary schools in Pyongyang.
Born to Steal (2003) focuses on Mafia-linked stockbroker Louis Pasciuto and Wall Street firms infiltrated by organized crime in the 1990s. Wall Street Versus America (2006) is an "attack, using humor and ridicule" on the morality of Wall Street, its regulators and the financial press. The book is critical of hedge funds, mutual funds, the Wall Street securities arbitration process, the New York Stock Exchange, and former Securities and Exchange Commission chairmen Arthur Levitt and William H. Donaldson.Publisher's Weekly, Reed Business Information The book is also critical of campaigns against naked short selling, and takes a dim view of much financial journalism.
The authenticity of the Holy Lance and of Peter's visions is a major theme of his work, although he admits that Peter did not unambiguously pass the ordeal by fire. His account is partial to the poor crusaders and takes a dim view of those who deserted or abandoned the expedition (and their vows). He had access to the Gesta Francorum, of which he made some use, and his Historia was used as a source by Fulcher of Chartres for the work he completed in 1101. Eschatological elements in his account may have been influenced by his access to the famed Le Puy Bible..
It also takes a dim view of the state of Christianity of Muhammad's age. The book fell out of print, but became briefly controversial in Egypt in 2004. "Reconsideration: George Bush I", Ted Widmer, New York Times Magazine, July 22, 2007 In 1844 Bush published a book entitled The Valley of Vision; or, The Dry Bones of Israel Revived. In it he denounced “the thralldom and oppression which has so long ground them (the Jews) to the dust,” and called for “elevating” the Jews “to a rank of honorable repute among the nations of the earth” by restoring the Jews to the land of Israel where the bulk would be converted to Christianity.
Widower Harry Keach is a construction worker in Southern Florida who was raised to appreciate the importance of working for a living. He takes a dim view of his sensitive son Howard's lackadaisical and sometimes hedonistic lifestyle, in his early twenties and devoted to a dead-end part-time job, surfing, chasing girls, and hot-tubbing while he dreams of becoming the next Ernest Hemingway. Harry also has a strained relationship with his daughter Nina because he dislikes her husband, an insurance salesman, and he thinks Nina has become stuck up now that she has married a more affluent man. When intense headaches and impaired vision cause Harry to lose control of the wrecking ball on his crane, he loses his job.
Pennies From Heaven is a 1936 American musical comedy film directed by Norman Z. McLeod and starring Bing Crosby, Madge Evans, and Edith Fellows. Based on the novel The Peacock Feather by Leslie Moore and a screenplay by Jo Swerling, the film is about a singer wrongly imprisoned who promises a condemned fellow inmate that he will help the family of his victim when he is released. The singer delays his dream of becoming a gondolier in Venice and becomes a street singer in order to help the young girl and her elderly grandfather. His life is further complicated when he meets a beautiful welfare worker who takes a dim view of the young girl's welfare and initiates proceedings to have her put in an orphanage.
The new parents were casual, even negligent in their care, but their children would benefit from better financial circumstances after Mathews received an inheritance. Saint Phalle rejected the staid, conservative values of her family, which dictated domestic positions for wives and particular strict rules of conduct. Poet John Ashbery recalled that Saint Phalle's artistic pursuits were rejected in turn by relatives: her uncle "French banker Count Alexandre de Saint-Phalle, ... reportedly takes a dim view of her artistic activities", Ashbery observed.According to John Ashbery, Alexandre de Saint-Phalle was the brother of Niki de Saint Phalle's father and also married to her mother's sister, the former Helen Georgia Harper, as explained in "Jacqueline Harper Marries Count: American Lawyer's Daughter Marries Andre de St. Phalle at Château de Fillerval", The New York Times, 7 June 1927.

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