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in a sense造句
(31) With the departure of Reich, the president loses an important voice. In a sense, he is losing his conscience. (32) In a sense we have already gone too far with the boy, exposed too many of our methods. (33) In a sense, dealing with complaints is one of the after-the-sale services provided by suppliers. (34) The riots were in a sense a foretaste of the Gordon Riots of the summer of 1780. (35) In a sense, owning the benefits your organization achieves is the opposite of blaming consequences on forces beyond your control. (36) In a sense, the social worker is responsible for the emotional and material well-being of the patient. (37) In a sense the inclusion of an implied term of correspondence with description is a little surprising. (38) In a sense, one can only be delighted that Leapor and other poets like her are receiving such serious attention. (39) In a sense, the flattening of businesses in Workplace 2000 is a two-edged sword. (40) Atomic theory explained chemical change as the rearrangement of unchanging atoms, and therefore in a sense as superficial. (41) In a sense it can be thought of as a direction of time that is at right angles to real time. (42) Derry were the last county to retain their Ulster title in 1976, so in a sense history is against Donegal. (43) But it bewildered him and, in a sense, made him resentful. (44) In a sense, Van Gogh's life is itself an artistic creation. (45) In a sense this was false, as recent historians have been at pains to prove. (46) In a sense it was inevitable that Kelly should cover himself in glory. (47) In a sense, the very institution of literary criticism is concrete testimony of this assumption. (48) The adolescent, in a sense, is possessed by his or her new-found powers of logical thought. (49) Three more use the verb legare in a sense which might be similar, although it is less clear. (50) Part of the reason commercials are effective is that they are, in a sense, invisible. (51) Such a person lived and, in a sense floated on the air, without a solid foundation. (52) In a sense, this criticism is an extension of the issue of causation discussed earlier in relation to the statistical correlation studies. (53) In a sense, one should rejoice at such good fortune. (54) But it demonstrates something much more astonishing: that in a sense all matter is illusion!/in a sense.html (55) Steiner and Sontag are in a sense correct about the centrality of homosexuality to modern culture. (56) Any culture, because it has to retain traditional customs and beliefs, has to be in a sense a conservative institution. (57) In a sense this is true. but on closer analysis they are also prone to gaps and inconsistencies. (58) Life, in a sense, spread across the globe by a form of networking. (59) Singles may be peripheral in a sense; but their experience is central to the enigmas of modern life. (60) Megan and Morag in a sense are genetically identical twins, but their significance is greater than that.