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11 Sentences With "utmost degree"

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

It's weight they intend to use to the utmost degree.
It's subtly great design, where both form and function are served to the utmost degree.
He was emotionally unavailable to the utmost degree, bluntly closed off in all the ways I was desperately open.
Musk, describing the "thousands and thousands and thousands of requirements," said Falcon 9 Block 5 is built to sustain multiple failures during a launch in order to ensure the utmost degree of safety possible.
The verse, which is considered as the essence of Theravada spirit, bears testimony to the fact that Buddhism flourished to an utmost degree in Vesali. The relationship of Vesali with foreign countries especially Ceylon would be established for Buddhism. The stone inscriptions are of Sanskrit in Brahma script, Pali, Rakhine, Pyu languages. Anandachandra Inscriptions date back to 729 originally from Vesali now preserved at Shitethaung indicates adequate evidence for the earliest foundation of Buddhism.
Both sea turtles and dugongs were essential components of the Aboriginal diet. The transformation from bark canoes to dugout canoes greatly increased the ability of the tribal hunters to catch and kill both of these types of sea creatures due primarily to a more formidable structure. Dugout canoes included a stronger and better platform for harpooning that greatly increased the stability of an upright hunter by providing essential footing. In order to capture dugongs and sea turtles, the hunters needed to maintain the utmost degree of stealth.
Siege engines are also in use in the game of Darkon for specialized battle campaigns. Siege weapons include ballistae, catapults, and trebuchets. While there are currently few specific rules governing the construction of a siege engine in Darkon, all siege engines must be built with the utmost degree of safety in mind. Ballista bolts are built much like javelins, while catapult/trebuchet stones are cloth balls filled with cotton fiber, known as "spellballs" (please see the Magic section of this article for more information about spellballs.)The Darkon Wargaming Club Official Rulebook, pp. 37-44.
Abbad II al-Mu'tadid (1042–1069), the son and successor of Abu al-Qasim, became one of the most remarkable figures in Iberian Muslim history. He had a striking resemblance to the Italian princes of the later Middle Ages and the early Renaissance, of the stamp of Filippo Maria Visconti. Abbad wrote poetry and loved literature; he also appears as a poisoner, a drinker of wine, a sceptic, and a man treacherous to the utmost degree. Though he waged war all through his reign, he himself very rarely appeared in the field, but directed the generals, whom he never trusted, from his "lair" in the fortified palace, the Alcázar of Seville.
In 1937, he was summoned before the War Ministry and accused of ignoring a draft notice from the Italian Royal Navy—one day before he was to write a final examination on Italy's participation in the Spanish Civil War, based on a quote from Thucydides: "We have the singular merit of being brave to the utmost degree." Distracted and terrified by the draft accusation, he failed the exam—the first poor grade of his life—and was devastated. His father was able to keep him out of the Navy by enrolling him in the Fascist militia (Milizia Volontaria per la Sicurezza Nazionale). He remained a member through his first year of university, until passage of the Italian Racial Laws of 1938 forced his expulsion.
Depiction of a Jewish High Priest wearing Hoshen and Ephod included as an illustration in a Christian Bible; the Holy of Holies is in the background (1890, Holman Bible) The construction "Holy of Holies" is a literal translation of the Hebrew (Tiberian Hebrew: Qṓḏeš HaQŏḏāšîm) which is intended to express a superlative. Examples of similar constructions are "servant of servants" (Gen 9:25), "Sabbath of sabbaths" (Ex 31:15), "God of gods" (Deut 10:17), "Vanity of vanities" (Eccl 1:2), "Song of songs" (Song of Songs 1:1), "king of kings" (Ezra 7:12), etc. In the Authorized King James Version, "Holy of Holies" is always translated as "Most Holy Place". This is in keeping with the intention of the Hebrew idiom to express the utmost degree of holiness.
If by this is meant that a railroad > may in some instances carry freight at or below actual cost, the truth of > the statement may be conceded, but before arriving at a conclusion that such > is the fact it is necessary to know what the cost is. And furthermore they cited Whitmore about the uncertainties in cost accounting, and how to deal with it: > It should be unnecessary to point out that if cost accounting can be > successfully applied to the varying business activities in connection with > which it is now an established fact, it can with equal success be applied to > railroad accounts. No one pretends that in any case the showing is correct > to the utmost degree of mathematical accuracy; that the accounts are not > balanced with the accuracy of an engineer's instrument or of the scales > which register the weight of a hair will be admitted by all. > Mr. John Whitmore in an article on “Factory accounting as applied to machine > shops,” vol.

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