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"wriggle room" Definitions
  1. the chance to change something or to understand it in a different way

46 Sentences With "wriggle room"

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

So they are trying to leave wriggle room as they devise economic policy.
Museums in China have barely any wriggle room to question the official line.
It is in both sides' interest to use whatever wriggle room there is.
On one hand, the country appears to be running out of financial wriggle room.
With Trump in the White House, Budapest expects it will have more wriggle room.
Moreover, the polarising effect of her election may not leave her much political wriggle-room.
How much regulatory wriggle room will the prime minister secure for the City of London?
A senior EU diplomat echoed the view that there could be wriggle-room for further delays.
That infuriates many, who equate wriggle-room in the rules on resolution with licence to ignore them.
The fall in the price of oil, which Jamaica imports, has given him a little wriggle room.
Even if the one pot dries up, there might still be some wriggle room in the other!
So it's not going to run out of wriggle room for at least a couple of years.
The United States and its allies in the region have no wriggle room where this is concerned.
There's his rookie deal, which is a fairly standard mix of salary and bonuses without all that much wriggle room.
He hopes that China's negotiators are signalling toughness to the public in order to leave themselves wriggle room in talks with America.
There is wriggle-room: the rules allow a "precautionary" injection of state money to preserve financial stability without putting banks into resolution.
Candidates would then receive delegate support in each state proportionate to the result of the primary vote, with no wriggle room whatsoever.
That is already beginning to look like a mistake Wimbledon — which allows itself some 'wriggle-room' — would be wise to avoid repeating.
The only wriggle-room that optimists in Europe can see would involve America granting case-by-case waivers as part of that process.
France and Germany oppose a ban, for now; but they want states to agree a code of conduct with wriggle room "for national interpretations".
A government source said these two schemes might end up costing less than initially forecast, giving the government potential wriggle room on the deficit.
But countries usually have fiscal wriggle-room as long as they grow, in nominal terms, at a rate higher than the interest on their debt.
But Basel III will limit big banks' wriggle room in assessing the risk in their lending portfolios and therefore how much core capital they need.
But others argued it was a close call, with Michael Ingram, chief market strategist, WHIreland Wealth Management, saying the ECB had given themselves "wriggle room".
Sina Weibo, however, has said that only "programmes" were covered by the licence requirement—implying that wriggle-room still existed for individuals to stream themselves flirting.
At this stage the proposal is no more than that and there is likely plenty of wriggle-room for such a big industrial powerhouse and employer.
John Bercow, the outgoing speaker of the House of Commons, said late Thursday that he would work to prevent any such wriggle room for the government.
But spending rises from Babis' government have been criticized by many economists and the opposition for leaving little wriggle room in budgets during times of downturn.
No country adheres more faithfully to the EU's many rules and regulations than Norway, despite having an amount of wriggle room in our European Economic Area agreement.
He added that the financial consequences would not kick in until June, which, in theory, could allow Pakistan the wriggle room to fix the terrorist financing issues.
In an analysis note, UBS said bond markets are increasingly reflecting the potential for growth to accelerate in the U.S., thereby giving the Fed more wriggle room to resume tightening.
However, they also pointed out instances when North Korea had faked damage to its nuclear weapons infrastructure in an effort to win wriggle room from the international community on sanctions.
Governments usually give themselves some additional wriggle room on budget day through small hikes in excise duties on tobacco and alcohol and ministers have said they are examining revenue raising measures.
Some policymakers, largely in Europe, are pushing for standardised disclosures to help investors better gauge the risks, something which will leave less wriggle room for companies and make scores even more reliable.
Some policymakers, largely in Europe, are pushing for standardized disclosures to help investors better gauge the risks, something which will leave less wriggle room for companies and make scores even more reliable.
For those who imagine all that leaves enough wriggle room for benevolent parents or teachers to exert an influence, Mr Plomin has bad news: these environmental factors are themselves substantially influenced by genes.
"We have got to believe, and have faith in the organizers," said Scotland coach Gregor Townsend, who added that the rules have a 'force majeure' clause that gives the tournament some wriggle room.
Hammond said he already had wriggle room in his existing tax and spending plans and stressed he would not abandon the overall thrust of the ruling Conservative Party's approach to fixing the public finances.
Mr Brunson's release has also bought Turkey some wriggle room in an explosive dispute with Saudi Arabia, which is suspected of murdering Jamal Khashoggi, a journalist, inside its consulate in Istanbul on October 2nd (see article).
But in the context of the deposition, it appears that Trump was trying to give himself wriggle room to explain why his off-the-cuff estimates might be so far at odds with more rigorous assessments from business associates.
As the Brexit crisis goes down to the line, however, EU officials indicated there might be wriggle room if May came back with a clear, and viable, request for changes that she - and the EU - believe will secure a final ratification.
It could be argued that befriending your professor is more work than just turning in your paper on time, and this is true, but you get so much more out of the experience than wriggle room to turn your papers in late.
But at other times this week he has struck a more flexible tone, suggesting that there is wriggle room on exactly what kind of structural barrier he would accept on the border and how much money he wants to see provided to build it.
The era of smartphones, apps and connected devices (like an internet-connected car or a thermostat) generate so much data about a customer and their usage history that interactions are now highly efficient, which allows us the financial wriggle room to bring customer service jobs back stateside.
That's a lot tighter, and allows for a lot less mis-selling and over-selling of expensive self-defeating financial products, than the alternative "suitability standard" which allows advisors considerable wriggle room to argue that heavy financial engineering or risk taking is in line with what the client is seeking.
The alternative is for Mr Johnson to renege on those Eurosceptic commitments, get some wriggle-room from the EU on the backstop—putting lipstick on the pig, as a putative attempt to improve on the deal his predecessor did with the EU is widely described—and use his undoubted charm to sell to Parliament the porker that it refused three times to buy from his predecessor.

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