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86 Sentences With "taking for granted"

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

But there are even more neglected home products you've been taking for granted.
We are used to taking for granted the safety of the environment we inhabit.
It feels like a Democratic leader taking for granted the ongoing support of urban communities.
Mr. Trump's comments, she said, seemed to be taking for granted that mass shootings would continue.
During recovery [from brain surgery], I began realizing a lot of things I was taking for granted.
Granted, this assumes Bluesky will have any practical effect at all, which critics aren't taking for granted.
Abortion access is also a powerful motivator for liberals, a fact pro-choice groups aren't taking for granted.
But it's always important to take time out and ask: What am I risking or taking for granted?
Varadkar said, however, that Ireland was "not taking for granted" that corporate tax receipts would continue to exceed expectations.
We live day to day taking for granted that our relatives are safe, and we can call our mother.
We are so used to taking for granted that liberalism is an age-old and venerable Anglo-American tradition.
By staying home on November 8, you'd be taking for granted a right that many others never got to enjoy.
A Good Appetite This sheet-pan chicken dinner stars two ingredients, paprika and parsley, you may be taking for granted.
"Whenever I come into telling a story I always try to think about what am I taking for granted," Hawley explained.
We're taking for granted that presidents would not want to use the veto, but some clearly relish their fights against Congress.
We've been taking for granted the fact that Disney can successfully keep the servers running, but I don't feel bad about that.
I joined the military to defend the American way of life and the freedoms we seem to increasingly be taking for granted.
Until now, Germany — primarily its Social Democratic Party — and Russia have dominated the discourse, apparently taking for granted the pipeline's eventual approval.
The 24/7 news stream of communication and debate those of us on the outside were taking for granted was denied to her.
Instead, these regulatory battles are a product of an entrenched monopoly's taking for granted that a more efficient, more responsive service might emerge.
Are we taking for granted freedom of religion, free speech, a free press, what probable cause and due process mean to protecting our liberty?
Tipping won't solve this, but it will help improve a key element that Uber has been taking for granted: loyalty, from both riders and drivers.
"We're not taking for granted the fact that there are a lot of bad actors who want to try and [disrupt] the system," they added.
You need to watch her draw the threads linking her husband, her father, and the generations of women that men have been taking for granted.
But most agree that people need to be made aware of the issue rather than taking for granted that nothing bad will happen to them.
It should be: Our city's uniqueness comes from the little shops and restaurants many of us have been taking for granted for far too long.
One narrative pitches older feminists as the real activists who fought hard for rights that younger women now have the luxury of taking for granted.
Investors are overvaluing shares of Continental and other shale drillers by focusing too narrowly on certain metrics and taking for granted dubious accounting, Chanos said.
Five years ago, in an act of creative desperation, I decided to immerse myself in the classical Persian poetry I grew up taking for granted.
I have been taking for granted the progress my mother's generation made so that the women of my generation could benefit from their hard-won gains.
My generation studied, dated, lived and worked across borders, taking for granted the peace our grandparents had fought for and our parents had harnessed and amplified.
But, the fact that they gave their lives to those efforts, in fact, led to the forward motion that we then made the mistake of taking for granted.
I'd used the app in the way I do most of the technology in my life: not quite knowing how it works, but taking for granted that it does.
By highlighting the violent action of an everyday implement, it also asks us to consider what other brutality we may be taking for granted as we go about our lives.
All these years I'd been taking for granted that a good boot just needs a little breathing room; a cropped silhouette offsets the humdrum look of skinny jeans into black boots.
If global tax authorities come after more of the massive global cash stockpile, investors in many popular stocks will face a risk to profits they have long been taking for granted.
But he says Tehran may be taking for granted its ability to wage war on Israel's ground mainly through its Lebanese ally Hezbollah, whose southern stronghold straddles the northern Israeli border.
The presumption on my part was taking for granted that, hypothetically, I would be acceptable to Canada as a legal resident rather than as a relatively harmless and easily jettisoned summer person.
But taking for granted the breathless media coverage that will accompany — CNN has scheduled an entire hour of programming to its release — the polling industry is urging everyone to take a deep breath.
Clinton, who spent the last year warning against taking for granted average people who 'work hard and play by the rules,' appeared in his first days in office to be doing just that.
Lizzie is still a romantic heroine, but we can also detect the ways she might be self-centered and taking for granted her sister Jane's good nature, even while admonishing her for it.
"We're almost getting to the point now where the efficacy is taking for granted," said Timothy Caulfield, who studies health and public policy at the University of Alberta and is skeptical of the research.
When they launch strikes, the union's office is bombarded with calls from businesses, conservative groups and others criticizing them for taking for granted their high wages, benefits and job security, some union members say.
A finalist for this year's Pulitzer Prize, "The Wolves" is perfectly attuned to this moment — taking for granted that young women are whole human beings, and aware that not everyone sees them that way.
Investors are taking for granted accounting methods that mask problems with the fundamental business model in the U.S. shale patch, Chanos warned during a speech Tuesday at CNBC's and Institutional Investor's Delivering Alpha conference.
There's a persistent longing that threads through this book — not so much for the consumerist dream represented by Sherman Oaks, but for the secure relationships she saw her wealthy, white classmates taking for granted.
After years of taking for granted his wife's ability to run their household smoothly, he suddenly realized that her demanding new job as a lawyer meant chores didn't magically get done like they once did.
Signs of fragmentation between these links and correlations suggest investors should be wary about taking for granted the benign conditions that have driven relentless gains in stocks and other assets over the past two years.
But taking for granted the fact that the President of the United States is engaged in a historic assault on the idea of facts, truth and neutral arbiters isn't something any healthy democracy should do.
This Memorial Day, let's pledge to honor the sacrifice of the fallen by no longer taking for granted how we maintain our rights, whether they be the right to protest or the right to bear arms.
Normally, it takes quite a bit to excite my neighbors under the languid southern sun, but as one horror has followed another, I am no longer taking for granted that they will put up with this much longer.
His ads, the way he parries with Clinton in general, convey an ambivalence about his own strength that make it hard to imagine him pressing his advantages and making Clinton work for delegates she's probably taking for granted.
They were grappling with the things people deal with every day — getting the kids to school, planning a vacation, or tending to larger matters of life and career — and taking for granted a future potentially full of possibility.
She was worried that Western nations were forgetting the lessons of history from the 20th century and taking for granted the institutions of a rules-based global order constructed over decades under the leadership of the United States.
"I do believe that Trump was elected for a reason, to show us how lazy and un-unified and lackadaisical and taking for granted we've become of our freedom and the rights that we have as Americans," she said.
An event like entering seventh grade can turn a kid's world upside down, and it's natural to be selfish, to not realize who you are taking for granted, and to have the desire to be told you're doing just fine.
CHANTILLY, France (Reuters) - U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said on Thursday that there are some "very good" European candidates to head the International Monetary Fund, but he is not taking for granted the tradition of European leadership at the institution.
Now, he's on double diaper duty with he and his wife's newborns — something the new dad told the Associated Press in August is "my job," along with "walking them around a little bit" It's not a life he's taking for granted.
A decade from now, when McDavid is swimming in trophies and Oilers fans are taking for granted all the playoff berths with someone else between the pipes, Talbot's 2016-17 will probably look like just another decent season by an NHL goaltender.
And by failing to sufficiently provide consistent park maintenance funding, Congress is also taking for granted the record 2628 million visitors welcomed by the National Park System in 28503 — and the significant economic benefit they bring to the communities surrounding the parks.
And this is one of the greatest dangers that we are facing and it really is the result of a kind of philosophical impoverishment of just taking for granted philosophical ideas from the 18th century and not updating them with the findings of science.
Watching the quivering of the five-foot-high 1941 stabile "Aluminum Leaves, Red Post," whose clawlike base recalls the gargantuan Calders in public plazas from Seattle to Grand Rapids, Michigan, is like seeing a new side of an old friend you've been taking for granted.
Victims from the past who met that fate stand like signposts along the city's timeline, those killed by the Son of Sam as unknown to their attacker as a tourist from Utah or an aspiring actress taking for granted the safety of every street.
I think taking on some of the tasks that would typically be thought of as stereotypical mom things, and not taking for granted that you're just going to be able to have the baby and continue to live your life as if you didn't have the baby.
Their continued support is not something O'Rourke seems to be taking for granted, even after his candidacy: He held a call with former California-based volunteers Sunday evening, appearing with his wife Amy via video chat — post-candidacy beard and all — to thank them for their work.
Space news has become so ubiquitous in tech culture, that it's easy to scroll right past, maybe leaving a Like in your wake, taking for granted the creative and financial cost that goes into sending an object into space — and attempting to bring it back to repeat that journey.
SNL can't have it both ways — it can't be a beloved cultural institution with bragging rights about carrying the country through hard times, and then pass the buck when we most need bold, incisive satire to upend the status quo and expose the ridiculousness of the things we're taking for granted.
"All of the conceptual and linguistic back flips being done here in trying to explain that the virtual world interacts with the real world could be circumvented by instead taking for granted that digital connection is new and different but that it's also part of this one social reality," Mr.Jurgenson wrote.
Our problems aren't as simple as Elementals or sky portals, and yet there are powerful people in our world who seem to believe they are, who argue earnestly that the only thing that can stop a bad guy with a gun is a good guy with a gun, all the while taking for granted that they are obviously the good guys.
In both offers Finland would cede the Terijoki area to the Soviet Union, which was far less than the Soviets had demanded. The Finnish delegation returned home on November 13, taking for granted that the negotiations would continue in the future.
As femininity and masculinity are not fixed concepts, their style of talking can also be as a result of power relations in society regulating social standards. In each society, the notion of gender is being learned from early childhood through conversation, humor, parenting, institutions, media, and other ways of imparting knowledge. Hence, gender seems a natural and even scientific concept to all the individuals of a society. Many scholars have been trying to not only find the truth behind this common sense but also understand why this concept is taking for granted.
Witherspoon was raised as an Episcopalian, and has said she is proud of the "definitive Southern upbringing" which she received. She said that it gave her "a sense of family and tradition" and taught her about "being conscientious about people's feelings, being polite, being responsible and never taking for granted what you have in your life". At the age of seven, Witherspoon was selected as a model for a florist's television advertisements, which motivated her to take acting lessons. At age eleven, she took first place in the Ten-State Talent Fair.
" Wootton criticizes Hayek for claiming that planning must lead to oppression, when, in her view, that is merely one possibility among many. She argues that "there seems hardly better case for taking for granted that planning will bring the worst to the top than for the opposite assumption that the seats of office will be filled with angels". Thus, Wootton acknowledges the possibility that planning may exist alongside tyranny, but claims that it is equally possible to combine planning with freedom. She concludes that "A happy and fruitful marriage between freedom and planning can, in short, be arranged.
Yves Bot, general prosecutor of Paris, came to the trial on its last day, without previously notifying the president of the Cour d'assises, Mrs. Mondineu-Hederer; while there, Bot presented his apologies to the defendants on behalf of the legal system--he did this before the verdict was delivered, taking for granted a "not guilty" ruling, for which some magistrates reproached him afterwards. All six defendants were finally acquitted on December 1, 2005, putting an end to five years of trials, which have been described by the French media as a "judicial foundering" or even as a "judicial Chernobyl".
Taking for granted that the next 18-inch putt was conceded, Lee picked up her ball. However, Pettersen pointed out that it was not conceded, and the Europeans won the hole. Koch and Sörenstam tried to convince Pettersen to change her mind and concede the putt, but as it was a fact that Lee had picked up her ball without the putt being given to her, it was not a possibility within the rules of golf, for the players to agree on the outcome of the hole and change the sequence of events afterwards. Pettersen/Hull eventually won the match.
Therefore the characters who appear in both novels, such as Lucien Wilbanks and Harry Rex Vonner, have matured in A Time to Kill. Harry Rex Vonner also appears in the novel The Summons, published in 2002, as an adviser of the protagonist Ray Atlee. Some references in the book are clearly hinting at things known to readers of A Time to Kill. For example, in 1970 most blacks in Ford County don't take part in elections - taking for granted that since whites are the great majority in the county, no black candidate would have chance of being elected to local office.
Some, taking for granted the alleged fall of Liberius, would overcome this difficulty by stating that, at the request of Liberius, who resented the zeal of the priest, the secular power interfered and imprisoned Eusebius. It is not at all certain whether Eusebius died after the return of Liberius, during his exile, or even much before that period. Sant'Eusebio, the basilica-style church on the Esquiline in Rome dedicated to him, is said to have been built on the site of his house. It is mentioned in the acts of a council held in Rome under Pope Symmachus in 498, and was rebuilt by Pope Zacharias.
Greece also cites as evidence for a former Turkish acceptance of Greek sovereignty the diplomatic procedures around the original delimitation of Flight Information Regions (FIR) within the framework of the ICAO, in 1950. The relevant treaty states that, in the Aegean zone, the boundary between the Athens and Istanbul FIRs was to follow the boundaries of the territorial waters. This implies, according to the Greek view, that both parties at that time were taking for granted that a mutually agreed border did indeed exist, which would contradict the claims of persisting "grey zones" made today by Turkey. The maps of the air zones published after that agreement (e.g.
As an investigator, Dalton was often content with rough and inaccurate instruments, even though better ones were obtainable. Sir Humphry Davy described him as "a very coarse experimenter", who "almost always found the results he required, trusting to his head rather than his hands." On the other hand, historians who have replicated some of his crucial experiments have confirmed Dalton's skill and precision. In the preface to the second part of Volume I of his New System, he says he had so often been misled by taking for granted the results of others that he determined to write "as little as possible but what I can attest by my own experience", but this independence he carried so far that it sometimes resembled lack of receptivity.
The interpretation as a female warrior in battle is due to Griffith (in keeping with Sayana), the interpretation as a horse race is due to Karl Friedrich Geldner. As is often the case in the Rigveda, especially in the young books 1 and 10 (dated to roughly 1200 BC) a myth is only alluded to, the poet taking for granted his audience's being familiar with it, and beyond the fact that the Ashvins gave Vishpala a new leg, no information has survived, neither about Vishpala herself nor about "Khela's battle", or indeed the character of Khela (the name meaning "shaking, trembling"). Nevertheless, the allusion qualifies as the earliest reference to the concept of a prosthesis, while in Sayana's interpretation it can also be taken as an early reference to a female warrior.
In Heterosyncracies: Female Sexuality When Normal Wasn't (2005), English scholar Karma Lochrie argues for a measure of epistemological humility to "correct the tendencies of medieval scholars to assume heteronormativity of the past based on the presumption of widespread agreement about what heterosexuality means in the present." In this instance, Lochrie uses the concept of epistemological humility as a corrective for anachronism in historico-theoretical scholarship on gender and sexuality. Lochrie uses the term interchangeably with "hermeneutic humility," which they define as "a hermeneutic of epistemological uncertainty." In the context of queer history, Lochrie elaborates that this entails a twofold commitment to (a) avoid taking for granted the meaning of heterosexuality in the present, and, by extension, (b) avoid assuming a priori heteronormativity as a fundamental organizing principle of the past.
Shortly after first meeting him, Howell wrote to her mother: > I do not know whether this Mr. Jefferson Davis is young or old. He looks > both at times; but I believe he is old, for from what I hear he is only two > years younger than you are [the rumor was correct]. He impresses me as a > remarkable kind of man, but of uncertain temper, and has a way of taking for > granted that everybody agrees with him when he expresses an opinion, which > offends me; yet he is most agreeable and has a peculiarly sweet voice and a > winning manner of asserting himself. The fact is, he is the kind of person I > should expect to rescue one from a mad dog at any risk, but to insist upon a > stoical indifference to the fright afterward.
Another possible solution is, taking for granted that the household belongs to the private realm, to 'democratise' it in the sense that household relationships should take on the characteristics of democratic relationships, and that the household should take a form which is consistent with the freedom of all its members. But for the ID project, the issue is not the dissolution of the private/public realm divide. The real issue is how, maintaining and enhancing the autonomy of the two realms, such institutional arrangements are adopted that introduce democracy at the household and the social realm in general (workplace, educational establishment etcetera) and at the same time enhance the institutional arrangements of political and economic democracy. In this sense, an effective democracy is only conceivable if free time is equally distributed among all citizens, which requires ending the present hierarchical relations in the household, the workplace and elsewhere.
In September 1984 she became vice-president of the national Committee for entertainment art, a post she held till 1989 The Distel Cabaret Theatre in East Berlin and its "Intendantin" negotiated the reunification transition much more successfully than many East German institutions: Oechelhaeuser remained in charge till 1999, promoting a positive left-wing brand of political cabaret that resonated with Berlin audience members, especially those from the former east, during a decade when some were surprised to discover that western freedoms involved forfeiting many of the eastern certainties - not all of them disagreeable - that comrades had grown up taking for granted. She also, during the 1990s, worked on television, notably as moderator on the ORB-Television programme "Am Tag, als ...". Part of the programme's mandate was to "shed light on under-exposed chapters from the history ofd the German Democratic Republic". In 1999, following research involving the Stasi Records Agency, it became known that for three years between 1976 and 1980, during her time in Leipzig, Gisela Oechelhaeuser had signed up to operate as one of approximately 200,000 Stasi informants ("inoffizieller Mitarbeiter)").
S. Rajanayagam writes that the scene in which the jailer advises Raja not to visit the jail again, and Raja asks why he should have to come to the jail if those outside are good, mirrors many films in which Rajinikanth's character submits himself to the law and gets punished as a routine but does not generally feel guilty about his petty crimes and is depicted as taking for granted that minor offences are a part of daily living. Writing for Firstpost in 2014, S. Srinivasan said the film says people with "families and reputations and clean linen shirts to protect" should normally "avoid messing up with the poor, who have nothing to lose, or the rich, who can swat us like a fly". In another Firstpost article, Apoorva Sripathi noted that the hand gestures Jayaram makes in one scene in which he is in deep thought were actually symbols of the AIADMK, Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam and the Indian National Congress. She called this an example of Ramaswamy making references to politics in his films.
Being perfectly aware of the fact that bacteria and viruses are one of most variable elements in nature, prone to unlimited mutational events, and taking for granted that it is impossible to manage all the external factors that can influence the development of a pathogenic virus, nobody is talking about defeating a new possible outbreak of plague or any other infective agent of the past: here the aim is to define a strategy, a "guideline", to be more prepared when a new dangerous pathogen will come. The contribution of the environment in infections is to be defined and factors such as human migration, climate change, overcrowding in cities or animal domestication are some of the major causes that contribute to the emergence and spread of disease. Of course, these factors are unpredictable and this is a reason why researchers are trying to bring relevant information from the past, that can be useful, today and tomorrow. While they continue to develop strategies to defeat emerging threats using diagnostic, molecular and advanced tools, they are still looking back at how ancient pathogens have evolved and adapted through historical events.

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