Use "militate|militated|militates|militating" in a sentence

1. Her background militates against her.

2. Facts militate against this opinion.

3. 29 His underweight militated against his ever becoming a good sprinter.

4. Increased costs militate against further enlargement of the buildings.

5. The dispersal of pupils militates against the neighbourhood school.

6. Two factors may well militate against these benefits.

7. All this did not militate our success.

8. The marked liquorice aftertaste militates against its use as a sweetener.

9. Environmental factors militate against building the power station in this area.

10. The high risks involved in such a business venture militate against finding backers.

11. These fundamental dissimilarities will surely militate against the two communities coming together. Sentencedict.com

12. Several factors combined to militate against the success of our plan.

13. It militates against everything that the United Nations Charter and its principles stand for

14. Rather, it is an examination of constraints which militate for or against plural reference.

15. These fundamental dissimilarities will surely militate against the two communities coming together.

16. The invisible powers of heaven seemed to militate on the side of the pious emperor.

17. We can never promise to sail anywhere in particular, because the weather might militate against it.

18. However, shortage of physiotherapy and other services, together with rapid hospital discharge, militates against such results being achieved.

19. The two approaches are not mutually exclusive, though efficiency does tend to militate against combinations.

20. 22 We can never promise to sail anywhere in particular, because the weather might militate against it.

21. This would certainly militate against good bonding between the resin matrix and the glass.

22. Even the humdrum tasks are varied enough to militate against a sense of monotony.

23. These provisions are likely to militate against repeat applications and unduly long orders except where strictly necessary.

24. This traditional organisation characterised by individualistic, vertical clienteles militates strongly against the horizontal group-formation typical of modern politics.

25. The problem with this Cheerful notion is that circumstances militate against nature in the big city

26. In general, illiteracy and lack of motivation militate against reliability of figures from Third World countries.

27. A person’s own skin color may militate against him in the case of those of another skin color.

28. The very size would seem to militate against action on closure, with the point of non-viability being some way off.

29. Sufficient they must take; but too many would be counter-productive and would militate against surprise and secrecy.

30. Equally, the extension of the traditional practice of periodic redistribution of the land between households continued to militate against individual initiative.

31. Finally, Park suggests that certain aspects of these Bondholder lawsuits arguably militate in favor of treating Bondholder class actions differently than shareholder class actions.

32. It is this aggregate of state and non-state actors that encourages extremism, indoctrinates youth into violent acts, and militates against attempts to create space for peace.

33. ‘Convection is militated against by the large-scale geometry of the layering, which dips Concentrically towards the centre of the granite and is incompatible with the existence of convection cells.’

34. The national heroes, who include former political figures, labour leaders, a slave, a sportsman and an abolitionist widow, militated against the racial, economic and social inequality that existed during their respective eras.

35. Confusable a word or phrase that is easily confused with another in meaning or usage, such as mitigate, which is often confused with militate

36. Those arguments would, therefore, militate in favour of establishing territorial scope and the costs of an investigation as decisive criteria for finding that there is a Union interest in opening an investigation in disregard of the abovementioned case-law.

37. Nevertheless, given that the difference between the two methods is not apparent to the viewer and that the health protection considerations apply to both digital and analogue display processes, there are factors which militate in favour of reaching a common solution, by analogy if necessary, as regards those two image processing technologies.