Use "tantamount" in a sentence

1. That is tantamount to insubordination.

2. 22 That is tantamount to insubordination.

3. With Harry, omission was tantamount to deceit.

4. 8 In safe seats selectionist tantamount to election.

5. 11 With Harry, omission was tantamount to deceit.

6. This invasion is tantamount to a declaration of war.

7. Journalists argued that the law was tantamount to censorship.

8. Her statement is tantamount to a confession of guilt.

9. 3 What Bracey is saying is tantamount to heresy.

10. 1 The King's request was tantamount to a command.

11. Poor parenting is tantamount to rejection of the child.

12. 7 The King's request was tantamount to a command.

13. Abilities are not tantamount to the individual’s knowledge and skills

14. 9 Journalists argued that the law was tantamount to censorship.

15. 13 The King's request was tantamount to a command.

16. Critics say the arrangement is tantamount to a dictatorship.

17. What Bracey is saying is tantamount to heresy.

18. 14 This invasion is tantamount to a declaration of war.

19. 21 Her confession was simply tantamount to a casual explanation.

20. 12 A simple error of judgement was tantamount to artistic suicide.

21. 4 This invasion is tantamount to a declaration of war.

22. 5 To leave a dog home alone is tantamount to cruelty.

23. Smoking is tantamount to squandering their health and shorten their lives.

24. In a Constantly changing world, inertia is tantamount to decline

25. To cancel the summit now would be tantamount to war.

26. 10 Critics say the arrangement is tantamount to a dictatorship.

27. 2 Her statement is tantamount to a confession of guilt.

28. 15 For campaign strategists, this was tantamount to spinning straw into gold.

29. 7 Her refusal to answer was tantamount to an admission of guilt.

30. That would be deliberate abortion, which is tantamount to murder. —Ex.

31. Covetousness is tantamount to having another "god" before the true God

32. Sharing a film with a third party, it implied, was tantamount to infidelity.

33. 25 Sharing a film with a third party, it implied, was tantamount to infidelity.

34. 13 Expressions of appreciation for a task well done are tantamount to bestowing honor.

35. 6 If he resigned it would be tantamount to admitting that he was guilty.

36. Forcibly settling the Jarawa would be tantamount to genocide, leading to them being wiped out.

37. She said that withholding was tantamount to lying and that your relationship was better than that.

38. 19 The corollary is that acquiring an addiction is tantamount to relieving oneself of personal responsibility.

39. Imputing wrong motives to others without just cause is tantamount to judging them.

40. 14 He considered it an impossible feat,[www.Sentencedict.com] tantamount to asking for eighteen miracles in a row.

41. 13 This has been distorted in the press as tantamount to planning violent attacks on the summit.

42. The entertainment industry has vehemently objected to the V-chip and ratings system as tantamount to government censorship.

43. The delivery of the goods as ordered shall be tantamount to acceptance in writing of the purchase order.

44. 17 Forcibly settling the Jarawa would be tantamount to genocide, leading to them being wiped out.

45. 24 A request that prosecution witnesses be tendered for examination was not tantamount to an objection under s

46. 23 The entertainment industry has vehemently objected to the V-chip and ratings system as tantamount to government censorship.

47. 16 In Michael's mind it was tantamount to mutiny and he would not stand for anyone disagreeing with him.

48. Can play, and your daughters situation is now tantamount to quiescent period, there is no great hindrance.

49. 18 Reaching a host is tantamount to survival in dodder and several features in its development enhance this ability.

50. Underlying the disquiet was a strong current of belief that the act of going tieless was tantamount to social chaos!

51. To do otherwise would have been tantamount to branding yourself an obscene, inhuman monster, an outcast from civilized society.

52. Frequently Cohabitation is described as a relationship with an unrelated person of the opposite sex in a relationship tantamount to marriage.

53. Black demonstrators picketed the court throughout the trial, alleging that the prosecution of the youths was tantamount to a judicial lynching.

54. 28 The selection of candidates Under any electoral system nomination as a candidate can often be tantamount to a guarantee of eventual election.

55. 30 Given that most seats are safe seats for one party or another, this selection is usually tantamount to election.

56. 26 At its worst, the life of faith is portrayed in a way that it is tantamount to spiritual repression.

57. 20 To do otherwise would have been tantamount to branding yourself an obscene, inhuman monster, an outcast from civilized society.

58. To have declined to participate on any grounds other than that of an absurdly and demonstrably unreasonable plan would have been tantamount

59. Tantamount comes from the Anglo-French phrase tant amunter, meaning "to amount to as much." This phrase comes from the Old French tant, meaning "so much" or "as much," and Amounter, meaning "to ascend" or "to add up to." When Tantamount

60. 27 Underlying the disquiet was a strong current of belief that the act of going tieless was tantamount to social chaos!

61. Hannah, for example, was “bitter of soul” because she was childless —a condition that she considered tantamount to being forgotten by God.

62. 29 Black demonstrators picketed the court throughout the trial, alleging that the prosecution of the youths was tantamount to a judicial lynching.

63. 30 At that time, being banned from trading in a bucket-shop was tantamount to the highest degree of flattery for any speculator.

64. Endorsing unconventional monetary policies unquestioningly is tantamount to saying that it is acceptable to distort asset prices if there are other domestic constraints on growth.

65. Palestinian fatwa bans Muslims from following 'modern Abrahamic faith' The council warned that calls to follow the “modern Abrahamic religion are dangerous and tantamount to apostasy.”

66. This would be tantamount to back-door abolition of the basic criterion that in the port area only infrastructure projects are eligible for support.

67. The Committee therefore calls on the Council and the Commission to strictly prohibit – or where necessary to abandon – any action tantamount to a beggar-thy-neighbour policy.

68. The Committee therefore calls on the Council and the Commission to strictly prohibit – or where necessary to abandon – any action tantamount to a beggar-thy-neighbour policy

69. Yet this is strange reasoning given that it is tantamount to accepting the deaths of those consumers who misread the labels and is clearly an unacceptable abdication of the State' s responsibilities.

70. When you have a larger Bust, finding a one-piece bathing suit or bikini that actually supports you is basically tantamount to bra shopping (and we don't need to tell you how much fun that is)

71. I pointed out that a declaration that NATO would stop its expansion with the Warsaw Pact nations would be tantamount to announcing a new dividing line in Europe, with a smaller Russian empire.

72. That is, unlike the empiricists who rejected knowledge of things as they are in themselves (in favour of knowledge merely of what appears to the senses), to think we can have a priori knowledge, knowledge of a world external from our sense perceptions, and, further, that this is tantamount to knowledge of God.

73. Brown-nose (v.) also Brownnose, 1939, American English colloquial, said to be military slang originally, from brown (adj.) + nose (n.), "from the implication that servility is tantamount to having one's nose in the anus of the person from whom advancement is sought" [ Webster, 1961, quoted in OED].

74. And this perfectly monstrous proposition, which is tantamount to the assertion of the divine right of politicians to be Absolutest despots, immune from criticism and censure, this immoral despotism is proclaimed with such an air of self-righteous virtue that it has almost come to be regarded as a truism—at least, when it concerns the mere Irish.