Pamphlet
in sentence
42 examples of Pamphlet in a sentence
And it used to be, back in the '50s, a very slim
pamphlet.
By recognizing that momentum, naming it and claiming it, they inevitably caused more live music venues to open, existing spaces to add live music to their repertoire, and they created a swell of civic buy-in around the idea, which meant that it wasn't just a slogan in some tourism
pamphlet.
RNG: The prohibition in our constitution of cruel and unusual punishments was a response to a
pamphlet
circulated in 1764 by the Italian jurist Cesare Beccaria.
RM: It's more of a pamphlet, really, it's about 16 pages.
In the 1800s, English economist William Forster Lloyd published a
pamphlet
which describes the following scenario.
They have a
pamphlet
that says, "Here's what Jesus said about homosexuality," and you open it up, and there's nothing in it.
So she traveled to New York, where that same year she re-published her research in a
pamphlet
titled Southern Horrors: Lynch Law in All Its Phases.
With this in mind, it’s possible to read the
pamphlet
he wrote from exile not as a defense of princely rule, but a scathing description of how it operates.
Back in the '70s, they would write pamphlets to raise awareness on the dictatorship, and because they couldn't afford to make copies, they would reproduce the same
pamphlet
500 times each and distribute them.
It's a
pamphlet
published by Samuel Gompers, hero of our American labor movement.
A creationist
pamphlet
has this wonderful page in it: "Test Two: Do you know of any building that didn’t have a builder?
She gives everyone a pamphlet, and when she gets to kid A, she runs out and tells the boy next to him to share.
But they end up in Asbury Park because one finds a
pamphlet
in a restroom that trumpets the opening of the Dark Ride, a boardwalk attraction that shut down many years ago after twin sisters got killed.
This movie is notable for perpetuating a collection of tired marijuana myths often found in any garden variety anti-drug
pamphlet.
It's interesting watching a feature that you have been years reading about; in this case much more to knock it down as a an anti-communist
pamphlet
with no interest.
The title of one widely distributed Nazi
pamphlet
was “The Jew as World Parasite.”
The whole point of his 1940
pamphlet
How to Pay for the War was that higher taxes were needed to avoid the kind of inflation Britain had experienced during World War I. Toward the end of World War II, he fretted about the high level of military spending, and was depressed by the loss of power that came with Britain’s large external debts.
The goal of this North Korean-style
pamphlet
is not to turn a profit.
In Unfair Trade, a
pamphlet
published in 2008 by the Adam Smith Institute, Mark Sidwell argues that FAIRTRADE keeps uncompetitive farmers on the land, holding back diversification and mechanization.
This dramatic statement introduces a new
pamphlet
whose subtitle, “Renaissance or Decay,” I have borrowed for this reflection.
The name alludes not to Thomas Paine’s famous 1776 pamphlet, but to the capacity of “normal” people to judge what is right for themselves, without having to rely on experts – a message with strong Catholic undertones.
Thomas Paine’s
pamphlet
Common Sense, a huge bestseller in the Thirteen Colonies when it was published in January 1776, marked another such revolution, which was not identical with the Revolutionary War against Britain that began later that year (and had multiple causes).
Of course, I should not overstate the influence of my
pamphlet.
In September 2010, four months after the official Greek bailout was put in place, the IMF issued a
pamphlet
asserting that “default in today’s advanced economies is unnecessary, undesirable, and unlikely.”
The decisive intellectual battle, we now know, was won by the English-born printer Thomas Paine’s
pamphlet
Common Sense.
Keynes recognized this in his 1940
pamphlet
How to Pay for the War.
The case against the policy was made most forcefully in the South Carolina Exposition and Protest, a
pamphlet
later attributed to then-Vice President John C. Calhoun, which rejected the Tariff of 1828 as unconstitutional.
pamphlet, shaming the country’s complicit elites for their lies and corruption.
Soon after the parting with his wife he began writing a
pamphlet
on the new legal procedure, the first of an innumerable series of unwanted pamphlets on every administrative department which it was his fate to write.
"First, having at the time of the cholera distinguished myself by a boundless devotion; second, by having published, at my expense, various works of public utility, such as" (and he recalled his
pamphlet
entitled, "Cider, its manufacture and effects," besides observation on the lanigerous plant-louse, sent to the Academy; his volume of statistics, and down to his pharmaceutical thesis); "without counting that I am a member of several learned societies" (he was member of a single one).
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