Uniformity
in sentence
42 examples of Uniformity in a sentence
People agree that paintings or movies or music are beautiful because their cultures determine a
uniformity
of aesthetic taste.
We have codes and standards that tell us that the lights should be so much Lux and of great
uniformity.
We're interested in perfect color
uniformity.
And he referred me to this lovely quote from the Japanese "Essays in Idleness" from the 14th century, in which the essayist wrote, "In everything,
uniformity
is undesirable.
And I will always come back to this quote from the Japanese "Essays in Idleness": "In everything,
uniformity
is undesirable.
His bald head is a mark of
uniformity
in the disease-ridden future world, yet makes him recognizable in the 1996 world.
Economists who become policy advisors are great fans of simplicity, uniformity, and arm's-length relations between government and the private sector, not because of economic theory or empirical evidence, but because of unexamined and untested assumptions.
Rigid, top-down
uniformity
is essential in the specification of weights and measures and the issuance of currency and coin.
Chinese cities seek to counter
uniformity
via campaigns to recover their unique “spirit.”
All this is not only fostered by the state, but also requires the kind of
uniformity
that only a centralized state can impose.
There are plenty of other false dichotomies: centralisation or decentralisation;
uniformity
or diversity; rigidity or flexibility.
Strict
uniformity
of regulatory practices may not be necessary.
It also risks exposing the IMF to even heavier political pressure, accentuating legitimate questions about the
uniformity
of its treatment of member countries.
Indeed, even Russian
uniformity
is different nowadays.
For in this
uniformity
Russia has the hope of becoming a “normal” country, a place where the
uniformity
of slogans is replaced by uniform commercial services.
I believe that across the globe, America is a symbolic concentration of all the good and bad within our civilization -- from the fantastic development of science and technology, to civil liberty and strong democratic institutions, to the cult of perpetual economic growth and never-ending consumption, to the dictates of materialism and the voiding of human uniqueness by the
uniformity
of the round-the-clock noise of TV banality.
Such obscurantism only creates a culture of stultifying
uniformity.
French civil servants must recognize that equality – that cardinal French value – does not mean uniformity, but rather more adaptability and decentralization.
This lack of
uniformity
is a major motivation for China to negotiate a single treaty: it wants to ensure that its enterprises have equal market access in all EU member countries and avoid the costs and complications associated with adhering to different regimes.
This is surprising in an era when treatments that work should supposedly be used with some
uniformity.
The global public-goods paradigm also implies some commensurability, if not uniformity, in the way we respond to various global collective-action challenges.
That unity need not mean a
uniformity
of tactics or views, but rather a union of purpose.
This split obscures the underlying
uniformity
of thought.
Similarly, so-called time translation symmetry encodes the
uniformity
of physical law in time: Even as the universe ages, the laws remain the same.
In China, however, such
uniformity
is unattainable today because the actions of local governments frequently diverge from central government policy.
As Bertrand Russell pointed out, “The man who has fed the chicken every day throughout its life at last wrings its neck instead, showing that more refined views as to the
uniformity
of nature would have been useful to the chicken.”
This lack of
uniformity
is preventing both banks and consumers from doing more cross-border business, and it is where policymakers must act; only harmonized rules and EU-wide standards will eliminate costly and time-consuming compliance with different national regimes.
While India celebrates its diversity, China seeks to impose cultural and linguistic uniformity, although it officially comprises 56 nationalities.
Our civilization, for example, is pressured toward uniformity, but the fact that we are drawn ever closer to one another gives rise to an urge to emphasize our otherness, which can grow into callous ethnic or religious fanaticism.
What is needed are mechanisms that recognize and accommodate differences, rather than new top-down efforts to impose
uniformity.
Related words
Which
Views
Their
State
Rather
Member
Institutions
Impose
Government
Different
Countries
Wrings
Would
Where
Useful
Universe
Unity
Undesirable
Treatment
Top-down