Conclusions
in sentence
395 examples of Conclusions in a sentence
I watched this in the early days of cable so it has a certain nostalgia; it truly is amazing how these brilliant and tiny number of scientists can swiftly interpret the data at hand to come up with staggering
conclusions
to reshape mankind as we know it.
Great documentaries can have social messages and come to
conclusions
about society (Bowling for Columbine, Fog of War) while others are great but on a much simpler and human level (Spellbound, Winged Migration).
I enjoy films that don't spoon-feed me the answers, but rather allow me to draw my own
conclusions.
in the dating game, perceptions of cute and creepy are in the eye of the beholder--and in this case, the eyes and minds of the viewers of the film as they are allowed to draw their own
conclusions
and create their own definitions of two seemingly different words in our vernacular.
would, at the same time, find material to support their nurture-not-nature
conclusions
in Ned Kynaston's background (implicit victimization at the hands of an implicit pedophile), the bigoted comments of the king about effeminate boys, and most of all the actor's eventual orientation "reversal" at the hands of the "right woman."
I didn't care for the homosexual twists and conclusions; it could have been quite good without going into that territory.
The film really allows the viewer to draw their one
conclusions
based their own individual moral compass.
'Silkwood' the movie doesn't give us the glib
conclusions
of a conspiracy thriller (it refrains from giving an opinion on her cause of death), but it does give an excellent portrait of life at the bottom, and the mounting sense of claustrophobia and paranoia that accompanied Karen's perilous voyage of discovery.
And come to their own
conclusions.
The problem here is that lesbianism is not just a theme of these stories, it is the theme, and a single (and predictable) prevailing attitude provides each drama with both premise and
conclusions.
I was mostly caught up in watching how supposedly reasonable people in the grip of panic, impatience, and uncertainty make assumptions, point fingers, cast blame, and jump to
conclusions.
After watching this, I have two conclusions: the time period in which this was made, immediately after the 50s, was not as idyllic a society as many seem to grieve.
But if the US meets bullets with words, tyrants will draw their own
conclusions.
But the
conclusions
drawn from such experiments are specific to the stressed animals and cannot necessarily be extrapolated to healthy animals.
This proposal was discussed at last December’s European Council meeting and rejected, resulting in a reference to “open-ended negotiations” in the Council’s
conclusions.
Obama is right to boast of his success in enlisting China to join serious sanctions on North Korea, but he might be wrong to draw
conclusions
from this about Iran, a vital strategic partner for the Chinese.
Clive Crook, for example, argues that “the limits of the data [Piketty] presents and the grandiosity of the
conclusions
he draws...borders on schizophrenia,” rendering
conclusions
that are “either unsupported or contradicted by [his] own data and analysis.”
Someone may legitimately want to remain anonymous, but we can draw our own
conclusions
about their reasons.
An extraordinary, if underappreciated, feature of the IPCC’s reports is that, though many different scientists have worked on them over the past 23 years, the fundamental
conclusions
have not changed.
Yet these
conclusions
need to be reaffirmed in the face of efforts by well-funded special-interest groups to sow doubt among the public.
This is the moment for
conclusions
and perspective, the always-fascinating moment when the actors in the drama, who have sometimes operated in secret, turn up their last cards.
But it is facile to jump from individual corporate scandals to broad
conclusions
about the supposed rottenness of the American economy.
Experts who disagreed with their
conclusions
were denigrated as “idiots” and “garbage.”
They based their
conclusions
on new research for the Copenhagen Consensus project by Australian economist Kym Anderson.
Applied to market societies, Kant’s idea yields fascinating
conclusions.
The Gordon-Kasparov-Thiel thesis is extremely interesting, though I have challenged their negative conclusions, both in print and in a debate at Oxford.
Their
conclusions
are fascinating.
For one thing, all economic reasoning is contextual, with as many
conclusions
as potential real-world circumstances.
Many of the IEO’s
conclusions
will be familiar.
This uncertain response partly explains Western governments’ lack of will to draw tangible
conclusions
from the systemic failure of the financial sector.
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