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115 Sentences With "takes pains"

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

But Clinton takes pains to end on a positive note.
When she wants to perform, he takes pains to ensure that ticket
Throughout the book, Hytner takes pains, periodically, to explain his natural reticence.
The company also takes pains to say that Even isn't a medical device.
FEMUA takes pains to span every generations' taste, while keeping it pan-African.
Phantom Thread takes pains to make it clear that Reynolds Woodcock is not revolutionary.
The account takes pains to emphasize that the Fed is planning a slow retreat.
The film takes pains to cast Marta as an outsider in other discomforting ways.
One, the study takes pains not to say with any certainty that it proves causality.
Guardian Firewall also takes pains to avoid becoming another cog in the data machine itself.
Whenever Sonos releases new updates, it takes pains to make sure older hardware still works reliably.
He offers the pretense of impartiality, and takes pains to admonish "both sides" for being uncivil.
Aides say his economy-themed stump speech takes pains to acknowledge the pain of nonwhite workers.
Politics figure front and center in the lyrics, but the group takes pains not to be didactic.
The proposal takes pains to say that homeowners will face few changes in a reformed mortgage market.
And so the anthology takes pains to show how leaders react to the ambiguities of their roles.
Greengrass's script takes pains to unpack not only Breivik's ethnic nationalism but the monstrous, banal narcissism behind it.
David Pepper, chairman of the Ohio Democratic Party, takes pains to not take sides in the 22020 primary.
And Wagner takes pains to distinguish her project from the Design Reform movement in both spirit and tone.
"Frantz" takes pains to show both sides' lingering hostility after a devastating and (the movie implies) senseless war.
In it, he takes pains to stress that these results have not yet been verified by direct observations.
Describing the design process, Schiller takes pains to note the collaboration between the esoteric studying and the raw tech.
Indeed, everyone involved takes pains to contradict the popular rumors that The Dark Knight pushed Ledger to the edge.
Today, the show often takes pains to acknowledge the humanity of even suspects who turn out to be guilty.
Ban takes pains to spell out the influences that marked Tezuka's path along the way, both Japanese and multicultural.
The video takes pains to present visiting Dubai as a distinctly local and specifically — if superficially — Arab cultural experience.
The novel takes pains to pierce the bubble of liberals who dismiss Fox News and condescend to its viewers.
Chikara Sono at Kyo Ya, for instance, takes pains to import traditional ingredients from Japan the minute they're available.
As the report takes pains to point out, "collusion" has no legal definition and is not a federal crime.
While he takes pains to hide it from his supporters, Mr. Trump's public churl is often followed by private charm.
Also, a quick shoutout here to Mr. Robot's carefully curated aesthetic, which takes pains to reflect where the story's going.
Edward is a rational, ethical creature — "responsibility" is one of his favorite words — and the movie takes pains to be reasonable.
This dynamic is a high-wire act that Ms. McCain takes pains to use to her advantage as often as possible.
But the movie doesn't just settle for focusing on them; it takes pains to depict weakness in the men who abandoned them.
The campaign takes pains to survey irregular voters, even those who say they are unlikely to vote, sources inside the campaign said.
Kinsley takes pains to distinguish his use of the word "fascist" from that of an all-purpose epithet roughly equivalent to "bum".
Thomas Virgets, one of the four AIBA officials who vets referees and judges, said that the organization takes pains to avoid favoritism.
Often a book-to-screen adaptation will take pains to be as literal as possible, but this one takes pains to avoid it.
The second season of Santa Clarita Diet, filmed after the 2016 election, takes pains to show that it's not afraid to take sides.
A conservative lobbyist takes pains to distinguish his blue-chip clients from small-time coal firms seeking cronyistic carve-outs from the EPA.
His action resulted in Jude's death, but the movie takes pains to emphasize that it was an accident and the student is contrite.
Despite the radical claims of the movement, Asian American artists and activists had plenty of blind spots, as the exhibit takes pains to demonstrate.
All this technology, as Apple takes pains to note, is opt-in; its technology is only as distracting as we allow it to be.
The chef Alfred Portale takes pains with the Thanksgiving turkey he has been serving at Gotham Bar and Grill in Manhattan since the 1980s.
When Meghan Markle is in the royal spotlight, she shines, but she takes pains to fly under the radar when she's not on official duty.
Along the way, Mr. Shteyngart's narrator takes pains to point out — but not engage with — two visibly transgender women, but it's not exactly clear why.
In Spook, her 2006 book on how scientists have studied the afterlife, she takes pains to explain her lack of knowledge while reporting on a subject.
The actor (and the script he wrote) takes pains to show James's capacity for both empathy and cruelty, and he commits fully to James's colorful personality.
Capital, and with it cultural capital, floods to the place where it can most efficiently reproduce itself, places that Monocle takes pains to identify and share.
The hospital has said that it takes pains to wall off any employee involved with a given outside company from the hospital's dealings with that company.
Sarah Goodes's production takes pains to make her look as visually close to Arbus's photos as possible, with a very similar white négligé and blonde wig.
Several well-known politically conservative actors in Hollywood have been in Hallmark films—Bure, Dean Cain, Jon Voight—but, Abbott said, Hallmark takes pains to be apolitical.
Inspired by the Flannan Isles mystery of 1900, when three keepers disappeared without trace, Joe Bone and Celyn Jones's script takes pains to differentiate the three leads.
Devastating Details: This episode, while hinting at the way other ways Dee Dee allegedly abused Gypsy, also takes pains to offer a human side to the late woman.
The report takes pains to say that it is hard to assess the impact of airstrikes by a United States-led coalition ostensibly aimed at Islamic State targets.
In Mr. Willis's case, if a lodger brings a problem to his attention while the guest is still at the inn, he takes pains to make things right.
As the play, by Cusi Cram, takes pains to point out, it was a hospital that began in poverty, served in poverty and ended in poverty as well.
Even though the draft court filing takes pains to outline her efforts to make inroads in conservative political circles, it also waters down other allegations prosecutors made in court.
Dakin Hart, the Noguchi Museum's senior curator and this show's organizer, takes pains to point out that Noguchi's experience was not representative of Japanese-Americans' time in the camps.
He always says he feels the games are tough but fair and that he takes pains to design a game accessible to a wide range of playstyles and skills.
Director Steven Zaillian even takes pains to underline how differently he walks, to say nothing of the drug addiction he now struggles with thanks to his time behind bars.
Certainly, the erotic appearance of many is undeniable despite her protestations, though the Tate takes pains to argue how other factors including spiritualism, music, and form fed into her practice.
The treatment, which may not be unusual for the retail sector, is at odds with Trader Joe's reputation for positivity, and with the image the company takes pains to project.
The NRA's secretary and general counsel John Frazer insisted in a mid-March response that the NRA takes pains to ensure money from foreign nationals isn't injected into political spending.
Guariglia pays his own way, as the agency takes pains to point out, but if art isn't seen as necessary to the scientific process, he might find continuing the collaboration impossible.
In between the ferocious chemistry and the hilarious banter, it takes pains to earn that loaded glance, that hesitant kiss, even that somewhat contrived declaration of love in the third act.
President Trump takes pains to glower at the camera, boasts about the size of his hands (and not just his hands) and recently tweeted a mock video of himself wrestling CNN.
But what's key about all of the show's battle scenes is that it takes pains to establish the situations and strategies employed by all the various players before each sortie begins.
But Peterson takes pains to draw these parallels, at a high cost: relegating the narrative on Cota Street — which is both a tragic love story and a gritty drama — to the background.
The plan, which draws heavily on previous legislation he has introduced and passed as a senator, takes pains to address the vast racial inequalities wrought by the so-called war on drugs.
While the Mother Jones article reported that Harris's plan "takes pains" to ensure that teacher hours won't be stressed, there was little by way of concrete plans that would actually avoid this inevitability.
A self-described fan of his work with Trap Them, which incidentally will play a handful of farewell shows later this year, Woods takes pains to describe what made their sound so special.
Facebook says it takes pains to ensure developers who use its APIs do so appropriately, but as the Cambridge Analytica story shows, companies with negative intentions can still find ways around the policies.
Magic Leap also takes pains to avoid calling it a "next-generation" headset or even a major update — the company said today that it's planning to release a Magic Leap 2 in 2021.
She takes pains to highlight diverse school districts that have succeeded, mostly by directly or indirectly implementing the "quality management" philosophy of W. Edwards Deming, the subject of one of her previous books.
Beyond curbs on the Uighur population, it has also provided subsidies for some Uighur workers and affirmative action programs for students to attend top universities, and takes pains to recruit them into government jobs.
While the bombings have repeatedly hit homes, schools, hospitals, bridges, markets and other civilian infrastructure, the coalition says it takes pains not to target innocents and blames the Houthis for deploying in civilian areas.
Though the film doesn't let those running the school, including the headmistress (played by Jennifer Ehle) and her brother (John Gallagher Jr.), off the hook, it takes pains to paint a morally complex picture.
There is a whole phalanx of former Salzburg players at RB Leipzig, the German arm of the Red Bull project (though one that Freund takes pains to say is entirely autonomous from his club).
Aware of the pushback that has shuttered a number of location-tracking services in higher-end retail outlets, Sense360 chief executive Eli Portnoy takes pains to highlight the care with which Sense360 approaches customer data.
The movie takes pains to show that some (not all, but definitely some) of his blatant bigotry and general awfulness comes from his upbringing, particularly his mother (Sandy Martin), who denigrates him at every turn.
He takes pains to point out that ultra is not a synonym for hooligan: Though their credo dictates "nenhum passo atrás" (no step back), the Super Dragons do not exist solely to fight, he said.
On its webpage, for instance, the Centre takes pains to describe itself as a spiritual organization, not a religious one, as it has for many years: "We teach spirituality for the modern world," it reads.
Glance at the date and you see that af Klint effectively ventured into the principles of abstraction well before its more famous exponents (Kandinsky, Mondrian, and Malevich), something the publicity material takes pains to emphasize.
So far, 70 percent of Strive's applicants didn't have a college degree and 70 percent were also minorities, Houghteling said, but he takes pains to stress that the company isn't intended to be a diversity strategy.
But Waititi, who is seemingly possessed by the desire to make sure his audience gets it, lest his "let's laugh at the Nazis" gambit be deemed garish or tasteless, takes pains to double-underline the jokes.
In his appearance and manner, he takes pains not to come across as a suit, the money guy in a bohemian world of waiters and food runners who have scraped, sweated and auditioned their way onto Broadway.
Whitmore takes pains to emphasize that Tyson is continuing to invest in its traditional business lines, but acknowledges that the company believes "in exploring additional opportunities for growth that give consumers more choices," according to a statement.
For instance, the documentary takes pains to show her father repudiating the idea, floated by a journalist, that Knox would publish her story for money, while failing to mention that Knox reportedly received $4 million for her memoir.
In the present tense, the battles aren't all won, either: "Is This How You See Me?" also takes pains to show that the streets of Huerta can still be a dangerous space, especially for queer women in public.
The episode's final scene — one that director and writer Thomas Schnauz takes pains to visually rhyme with the opening — involves Jimmy settling into his new office, where he sees a light switch with a note taped over it.
The museum takes pains to include the roles played by women; slaves such as Washington's valet, William Lee, who was freed in Washington's will; Native Americans; and, later, immigrants in the tale, a story that continues to this day.
The panel — which includes representatives of donor governments, corporations and civil society — takes pains to point out that despite the growing needs, what the world needs to pony up for emergency relief is a fraction of the $78 trillion global economy.
Clinton takes pains to explain why Mr. Trump's promises and policies do not add up, or are too risky, she runs a risk of her own: that she will sound as though she is instructing or talking down to her audience.
He takes pains to argue on "originalist" grounds, hoping to appeal to the conservative majority of the Court, who attempt to cleave closely to the meaning of words as they are found in documents at the time of the Constitution's drafting.
The documentary also takes pains to humanize Lee, quoting at length from her diary and bringing her to life as vividly as possible, all while revisiting Lee and Syed's school, their Baltimore neighborhoods, and their classmates' memories of them both.
She takes pains not just to talk about her own experiences, but to connect the larger epidemic of violence against women — especially trans women of color — to the pervasive lack of respect that can lead to this kind of harassment and assault.
Just outside Chicago, the Simkins Funeral Home in Morton Grove, Illinois takes pains to comply with the law, not just out of fear of getting in trouble with authorities, but to protect a reputation built over more than 75 years in operation.
Although Obaid-Chinoy often professes to be indifferent to what others think, she takes pains to avoid controversy: she rarely talks about her husband or her family and seldom appears with them in public, and she normally declines interviews with local media.
I'm left with the awkward hope that Garcia versus Kandori is a work on the order of Make Coleman versus Nobuhiko Takada or, if it's on the level, that Garcia takes pains to make it a quick, no-trauma exhibition of the gentle art.
The movie shows the great variety of Murray's always vivid, colorful work, and culminates with a triumph not just for Murray but also, as the film takes pains to point out, for women in American art: a retrospective at the Museum of Modern Art.
The rest of Miss Americana takes pains to show us all the ways that fame, in turn, has put pressure on Swift: pressure to starve herself, to reinvent herself, but also to remain forever stuck at the same age she was when she first became famous.
The researchers attribute it to the fact that while Don't Be a Sucker takes pains to show the extent of the Nazis' cruelty, it only shows one parallel to 1947 America: a man on a soapbox in a square, ranting about foreigners and "negroes" to a skeptical crowd.
Mr Trump also takes pains to point out when protesters wave the Mexican flag, a gesture that feeds his habit of questioning the loyalty of American Hispanics (including Gonzalo Curiel, an Indiana-born federal judge whom Mr Trump, disgracefully, dubs a biased "Mexican" and who is hearing a lawsuit against him).
It sounds like shipping will be a relatively slow-moving process, as the company takes pains to note that it's focused on quality assurance for new customers, but hopefully some early users will get their hands on the L16 very soon, and can share their impressions of the novel photographic device.
Where to watch: NetflixTravis Scott might be one of the most well-known figures in hip-hop right now, but "Look Mom I Can Fly" takes pains to emphasize that he's just a kid from Houston who loves his family, his then-girlfriend Kylie Jenner, their daughter Stormi, and... amusement parks.
" The commercial is full of on-point asides like that — van Tol thinks he needs "some modern logo with an 'X' in it or some arrows;" he describes a cow as his "secret barista;" and he takes pains to explain the various types of plants that go into the animals' "grass blend.
And while the Fed does not set, and Powell takes pains not to comment on, U.S. trade policy or the value of the U.S. currency, escalating trade tensions boost the odds that what Powell called a "mid-cycle" interest-rate cut may end up being the start to a deeper, longer episode of policy easing.
Most recently an on-the-rise enterprise investor at Bessemer Venture Partners in Silicon Valley, Harder these days takes pains to stress the more homegrown parts of his biography: His ancestors' peach farm in Manteca; his years as a paperboy at the local Turlock Journal; and his decision last year, energized by Donald Trump's presidency, to move home and run for Congress.
Larry isn't the main character in Detroit, because Detroit takes pains not to have one, but the film is at its best when it crystallizes around him in its final chapter, no longer standing back at a remove but becoming personal, grounding its perspective in the singular point of view of a man who makes it through the horrors of the Algiers Motel alive, but not unscathed.
" But Gordon correctly takes pains to distance Carter from the radical feminism of the 1970s, arguing that her view of women was of a piece with the rest of her politics: "She never saw the oppression of women as categorically different from other forms of oppression, and believed that if femininity was a cultural construction, forcing the individual into a cramped and demeaning role, then so was masculinity.
The documentary does little to carry this point further; in fact, even though McKee is on record as saying that "individuals with CTE — and CTE of this severity — have difficulty with impulse control, decision-making, inhibition of impulses for aggression, emotional volatility, rage behaviors," Killer Inside, after spending three episodes painting Hernandez as aggressive, impulsive, and emotionally volatile, takes pains to debunk the idea that CTE played any part in Hernandez's decisions.
Schwartz's inspiration for The OC was his own culture shock and outsider status as an East Coast Jewish kid going to college in southern California, which shows in his framing of Newport Beach as a foreign country; with every element of the show, he takes pains to emphasize just how far removed Chino (and thus Ryan) is from Newport Beach, even though the two cities are literally less than an hour apart.
The most careful setups can go terribly wrong, even when choreographed by as seasoned a spy actor as David Harewood (who played the C.I.A. chief David Estes on "Homeland," with a far better American accent.) Jonathan takes pains to assure that things seem "real" — an effort for which he's rewarded with a big dose of verisimilitude that lands him in a private hospital ("Our one," Roper says, "not the death trap on the main drag"), and ultimately in a bedroom in Roper's kingly compound by the sea.
The episode about the Hasid, like many in the show, takes pains to faithfully replicate reality: Baruch was played by Luzer Twersky, an actual defector from an ultra-­Orthodox sect in Brooklyn; his character's story contains details seemingly pulled from a Tablet podcast episode about Twersky's life outside the wire; the apartment he lives in is recognizably a North Brooklyn railroad, complete with a living room as wide as a broom closet; the nightclub is clearly House of Yes in Bushwick, the kind of place that would host the sort of fine-art drag performer who saves Baruch's life — in fact, Darrell Thorne, who plays the dancer-­doctor, has performed at House of Yes.

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