Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

13 Sentences With "wherefores"

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

The whys and wherefores of are too bizarre to cover here, but suffice to say I wasn't carrying any chemical samples.
We had both reached a point at which we had understood the whys and wherefores of addiction and the appalling fallout that follows.
American debuted "Tell Me Why," little bites of corporate wherefores, in January, in response to an internal survey that found employees wanted to hear more about rationale behind the company's decision-making.
As both a work of art and a proposed environmental ordinance, Alicia Grullón's Percent for Green project throws into relief some of the wherefores and whys behind Percent for Art legislation and public art more generally.
On this episode of Too Embarrassed to Ask, our hosts Kara Swisher and Lauren Goode invited Brad Bao, the president of bike-sharing startup LimeBike, into the studio to explain the whys and wherefores behind sharing bikes.
WATCH: Inside Chrissy Teigen's Cookbook, Cravings "If the book was so right for me, there were bound to be maybe thousands like me who really wanted to learn the whys and wherefores of good French cooking," Jones wrote in her memoir.
"Here was the cookbook I had been dreaming of — one that took you by the hand and explained the whys and wherefores of every step of a recipe," Ms. Jones recalled in an article she wrote in The New York Times in 2004, a few months after Ms. Child died.
Building odors and contaminants would be suitably controlled by this dilution methodology. ASHRAE codified a level of 1,000 ppm of carbon dioxide and specified the use of widely available sense-and-control equipment to assure compliance. The 1989 issue of ASHRAE 62.1-1989 published the whys and wherefores and overrode the 1981 requirements that were aimed at a ventilation level of 5,000 ppm of carbon dioxide, (the OAHA workplace limit), federally set to minimize HVAC system energy consumption. This apparently ended the SBS epidemic.
Literary part - the spirit of a living girl linked with the spirit > of Death. Night and Day. This genèse is written for those who always have to > know the whys and wherefores. Otherwise the picture is simply a study of a > Polynesian nude. ;Noa Noa Le Conteur Parle (Louvre manuscript), 1893–97, Louvre Noa Noa was originally conceived as a travelogue to accompany Gauguin's 1893 Durand-Ruel exhibition. Gauguin wrote the first rough draft (now in the Getty Center) in 1893 but could not complete it in time.
In addition to its use in recovering silver in lead refineries, the BBOC has been used to treat anode slimes from copper electrolytic refineries. Anode slimes are composed of the solid particles that do not dissolve in the electrolyte in the refining cells.C R Fountain, “The whys and wherefores of penalty elements in copper concentrates,” in: MetPlant 2013, Perth, Western Australia, 15–17 July 2013 (The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy: Melbourne, 2013). This includes the gold and silver present in the copper anodes that are being refined. T Robinson, “Electrolytic refining,” in: W G Davenport, M King, M Schlesinger and A K Biswas, Extractive Metallurgy of Copper, Fourth Edition (Elsevier Science Limited: Oxford, England, 2002) 265–288.
Jenkins also became identified with opposition to the policies of the Thatcher and Major governments and subsequently was a critic of New Labour. He argued that what these governments shared was a dogmatic faith in the market which had many pseudo-religious elements to it. This led him to write at length about what he saw as the intellectual deficiencies of economic theory and market theorising and its pseudo-theological character. His book Market Whys and Human Wherefores: Thinking Again About Markets, Politics, and People was an extended layman's critique of economic theory and its application to policy, in which he described himself as an 'anxious idiot' using the latter term in its original meaning of an ordinary person with no professional expertise.
He was awarded the Royal Society's Hughes Medal in 1967 and the Simon Memorial Prize in 1968. In 1974, he published The Riddle of the Pyramids, in which he sought to explain the whys and wherefores of the earliest Egyptian pyramids. Though Mendelssohn himself was not an Egyptologist, the book builds on advice from experts like Sir Robert Mond and Walter Emery, as well as his own visits to Egypt and Mexico. His principal thesis was that the pyramid at Meidum had collapsed during construction, a conclusion he arrived at using his knowledge of physics and which was sparked in 1966 by images of the Aberfan disaster, where Mendelssohn saw similarities to the rubble mound surrounding the Meidum pyramid, a primary destination for his travel to Egypt the year before.
Gardner was an uncompromising critic of fringe science. His book Fads and Fallacies in the Name of Science (1952, revised 1957) launched the modern skeptical movement. It debunked dubious movements and theoriesThere's One Born Every Minute review by Ed Regis, The New York Times, June 4, 2000; "Martin Gardner's 1957 book Fads and Fallacies in the Name of Science is the classic put-down of pseudoscience. Nobody who read it will soon forget its stellar roll call of mid-20th-century cranks and crackpots" including Fletcherism, Lamarckism, food faddism, Dowsing Rods, Charles Fort, Rudolf Steiner, Dianetics, the Bates method for improving eyesight, Einstein deniers, the Flat Earth theory, the lost continents of Atlantis and Lemuria, Immanuel Velikovsky's Worlds in Collision, the reincarnation of Bridey Murphy, Wilhelm Reich's orgone theory, the spontaneous generation of life, extra-sensory perception and psychokinesis, homeopathy, phrenology, palmistry, graphology, and numerology. This book and his subsequent efforts (Science: Good, Bad and Bogus, 1981; Order and Surprise, 1983, Gardner's Whys & Wherefores, 1989, etc.) provoked a lot of criticism from the advocates of alternative science and New Age philosophy;Friedel (2018): This book and his subsequent efforts earned him a wealth of detractors and antagonists in the fields of “fringe science” and New Age philosophy.

No results under this filter, show 13 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.