Tenaciously
in sentence
16 examples of Tenaciously in a sentence
Once in the air however the RAF
tenaciously
disrupts the paradigm by blowing the enemy out of sky air at a seven to one rate.
But the transition from autocracy to democracy is far from assured: those who in power cling
tenaciously
to it.
After all, what good is credibility today when it means sticking
tenaciously
to a policy that deprives you of the ability to do your job properly tomorrow?
The report should address,
tenaciously
and honestly, key questions about democracy’s vitality today.
This raises a key question: what happens to these Arab “baby boomers” if the generation now coming to power clings to it as
tenaciously
as the generation of Mubarak, Assad, and Hussein?
The press fought back tenaciously, despite casualties.
In Zimbabwe, Mugabe hangs
tenaciously
to power after 23 years.
And while critics may argue that the melting pot is a national myth, it has
tenaciously
informed the America’s collective imagination.
In a democracy, the party of the majority is most likely to be constituted by those “who cling most
tenaciously
to the exclusive class interest.”
The Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) has
tenaciously
fought for its place as the geopolitical hinge between East and South Asia, and an important player in Asia-Pacific economic and security diplomacy.
These voters’ voice has been relatively subdued, but now Mattarella is
tenaciously
channeling it.
First, the fight for human dignity and respect for life, as with any struggle for human rights, is set in motion and
tenaciously
pursued by members of civil society, by individuals more than by states.
As little sensitive as was the heart of d’Artagnan, he was touched by this mute sorrow; but he held too
tenaciously
to his projects, above all to this one, to change the program which he had laid out in advance.
At the moment of leaving the harbour, my uncle, who was
tenaciously
fond of naming his new discoveries, wanted to give it a name, and proposed mine amongst others.
The instruments, the tools, our guns, are clashing and clanking violently in their collisions with each other; the nails of my boots cling
tenaciously
to a plate of iron let into the timbers, and I cannot draw my foot away from the spot.
Don't cling so
tenaciously
to ties of the flesh; save your constancy and ardour for an adequate cause; forbear to waste them on trite transient objects.
Related words
Cling
Power
Today
Fought
Democracy
After
Years
While
Which
Waste
Wanted
Voters
Voice
Vitality
Violently
Uncle
Trite
Transition
Transient
Touched