How To Use Aspire In A Sentence

  • In developing countries like India, it is the wealthier and better-educated who tend to be aspirational; the poor are not yet in a position to aspire to much of anything.
  • I was talking about people who aspire to have their ideas influence the public debate.
  • We cannot eliminate all risk, and we should not aspire to do so.
  • Wealth is something that we are all encouraged to aspire to, rightly or wrongly. Times, Sunday Times
  • Frank, who felt a little provoked over the accident, since he aspired to be a capable canoeman at all times. The Outdoor Chums After Big Game Or, Perilous Adventures in the Wilderness
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  • I think the policies are a good step towards finding common ground with the European Union, which is I think a vision that all Greeks should aspire to," a bystander told reporters. Rough Road Ahead for Greece Despite Austerity Measures
  • The play aspires to the weight and import that American theatre had in the glory days of Arthur Miller, Elia Kazan and Tennessee Williams.
  • When you concentrate your energy purposely on the future possibility that you aspire to realize, your energy is passed on to it and makes it attracted to you with a force stronger than the one you directed towards it. Stephen Richards 
  • Onyx also has initiated a Phase III trial, known as ASPIRE, to study carfilzomib in combination with Revlimid and a low dose of dexamethasone, which is used to counteract some chemotherapy side effects, in patients with relapsed multiple myeloma. San Antonio Business News - Local San Antonio News | The San Antonio Business Journal
  • For even in those most ungenial days he aspired to literary fame, and as the by-product of laborious years issued, at his own expense, the ‘Poems of a Journeyman Mason’.
  • He himself had aspired with eminent success: the conception was a self-educator's dream.
  • Both monarchs aspired to be father figures to their people in a dark age. Times, Sunday Times
  • Street hustlers and gang members, far from rejecting traditional roles, continue to aspire to a situation where they can raise their children in economic and emotional security.
  • If the model democratic citizen is active, participating, and influential, is this what the ordinary man aspires to be?
  • We should aspire, along with being world champions in the sporting arena, to being the most humane and compassionate people on this planet.
  • Is this truly the test of moral propriety you would have us aspire to?
  • Governor-aspirer asks why that is, in the tone that this is one of those stupid, useless regulations he's going to get off the books if elected. Grouse Diary Entry
  • You must mark out your territory as an artist, so that others learn to envy you and aspire to what you are doing.
  • Britain, France, the United States and Japan all aspired to hegemony after the end of World War I.
  • From this elementary iconography may be derived the whole metaphysic of sexual differences - man aspires; woman has no other function but to exist, waiting.
  • ‘Through abstraction I aspire towards the infinite rather than the specific,’ she observes.
  • Officers who had for years aspired to command destroyers, cruisers, and aircraft carriers likely did not relish the thought of becoming truck drivers.
  • The two loved movies and aspired to be filmmakers.
  • With high-quality, fashion-forward tees, American Apparel aspires to be the "Starbucks" of the T-shirt world.
  • The student who aspires to a law degree may attain it by working hard. Between Worlds: A Reader, Rhetoric and Handbook
  • You aspire to do great things? Begin with little ones.
  • Of this mighty Order I am no mean member, but already one of the Chief Commanders, and may well aspire one day to hold the batoon of Grand Ivanhoe
  • Now the universities to which they aspire may be available. Times, Sunday Times
  • Wife and Governor-aspirer prop the ladder against the tree to get to higher branches, and I climb up. Grouse Diary Entry
  • Also look at the Acer Aspire One with the 6-cell battery, which additionally is available in the US with either Windows XP or a lightweight form of Linux that can be customized if you wish to do so. Read My Lips: Apple Is a Netbook Maker - Bits Blog - NYTimes.com
  • At the other end of this conversation is the principled position that there objective indicators of goodness in writing, that we know what they are, and that we need to help students interiorize and aspire to those standards. Archive 2006-12-01
  • To interest my heart and soul in my work, and aspire to the highest efficiency in the achievement of results. To be patiently receptive of just criticism and profit from its teaching.
  • Certain middle-class commentators and activists have long looked down their noses at those who aspire to make loadsamoney or who want to leap up a class or two.
  • ‘Rather than being contracted to create an adequate response to today's situation, we've been asked to create designs that aspire to being future-proof,’ he says.
  • The house was altogether superior to the kind of thing most men of Adam's age could aspire to.
  • Never on a lead, it waddles beside him as macho, musclebound and menacing as its scrawny owner aspires to be. Times, Sunday Times
  • Coarse and mischievous - but never too much - his is the good-natured rebellion we all aspire to in our dotage.
  • Le jeune homme ne tarda pas à partir, que Dieu conduise ses pas pour sa plus grande gloire, la seule chose à laquelle nous devons tous aspirer. The Letters of St. Teresa
  • Better, far better aspire to deserve this name, than to repose indolently on a rank and a title deduced from monarchies, to say to thyself, "I shall be a lady forever. The Young Maiden
  • Few people who aspire to fame ever achieve it.
  • How many people can sensibly aspire to that? Times, Sunday Times
  • We could do with some healthier people to aspire to. The Sun
  • She took the figure that may not have been the one people aspired to and turned it around. The Sun
  • Is this really a future that people aspire to? Times, Sunday Times
  • They aspire to provide other women with information about choices surrounding menstrual health, especially about alternatives to commercial pads and tampons.
  • We could do with some healthier people to aspire to. The Sun
  • Commons, that "their remonstrance was more like a denunciation of war, than an address of dutiful subjects, and that their pretension to inquire into state affairs was a plenipotence to which none of their ancestors, even during the weakest reigns, had ever dared to aspire. A Modern History, From the Time of Luther to the Fall of Napoleon For the Use of Schools and Colleges
  • It is the story of four African American girls who aspire to be recording artists.
  • Good style is honest, because it is consistent in the application of its principles - it aspires to integrity of diction, of discursive attitude.
  • But then, he was gaining in popularity, and what did it matter if his office was filled to overflowing with exotic paraphernalia, he was reaching that apex to which he had aspired, and the emolument was a mere bagatelle. Skookum Chuck Fables Bits of History, Through the Microscope
  • Let us hope that more and more people aspire to and even realize the Christos, or at least understand that it is within us potentially, and that Christhood, Buddhahood, Avatarhood, etc., is available to us all. Capricorn Solar Eclipse, January 14-15, 2010: Planting the Vision of a People's New World Order
  • Before the many rubrical uncertainties and excessive options within the new Missal, having the form of the older Mass before us can make an enormous contribution to Catholic liturgical life, serving as a standard to which the ordinary form liturgy can aspire. How Important Is Ceremony?
  • But the ends to which it aspires are neither moderate, nor reasonable, and it gives me a squirmy feeling to contemplate them.
  • Once we aspired to be rich and famous. Times, Sunday Times
  • “Happy ferry-man, ” thought Grainier, “thou aspirest not to fame; thou composest no epithalamiums. I. From Scylla to Charybdis. Book II
  • One was that the alien who aspired to burghership had to produce a certificate of continuous registration for The War in South Africa Its Cause and Conduct
  • At 16, she rebelled against her parents and aspired to become a comedian.
  • The most ambitious aspired from a filial to a fraternal relation with the image of The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire
  • To aspire to people like that is awesome. Times, Sunday Times
  • Now, it seems, in order to cease being politically led nonentities, councillors aspire to become politically led somebodies by virtue of paying themselves more and more.
  • I DO aspire to use my noggin as something other than a hatrack, although all too frequently I fail, here and elsewhere. Bush Slanders Freedom « Antiwar.com Blog
  • Merchants cannot become armiger, armigers cannot become noble, and nobles could not aspire to the monarchy. Pathfinder
  • Is this really a future that people aspire to? Times, Sunday Times
  • Like Donna, if I met an author whose work I love and aspire to but appeared to exhibit 'arsehole' behavior I'd shrug and still read it and maybe wish I hadn't met h/her. Dirty Lives and Times
  • You must mark out your territory as an artist, so that others learn to envy you and aspire to what you are doing.
  • This is precisely the condition of perception and insight to which telematic networking aspires .
  • Many programmes aspire to being informative and lively, but this series manages to be informative and consistently funny. Times, Sunday Times
  • It stirs us to strive for the goal, achieve the target and aspire to something beyond our comfort zone.
  • It's a novel of stories within stories that aspires to the condition of the imaginary book at its shifting centre - infinitude.
  • In the indeterminate fluxations of a cosmos in which ‘things happen’ and it is futile to ask about whence or wherefore, he accepted responsibility for nothing except the poem he aspired to be.
  • To aspire to people like that is awesome. Times, Sunday Times
  • The psi-trickster element in ufology renders that field of inquiry even more marginal, dangerous, and repulsive to anyone who aspires to rational and intelligible forms of life and thought.
  • the coal miner's son aspired to a white-collar occupation as a bookkeeper
  • Partnerships differ in scope, purpose and specific orientation and in the nature of relationship they aspire to.
  • To interest my heart and soul in my work, and aspire to the highest efficiency in the achievement of results. To be patiently receptive of just criticism and profit from its teaching.
  • They generally aspire only to the sorts of jobs done by their parents and close relatives.
  • Both monarchs aspired to be father figures to their people in a dark age. Times, Sunday Times
  • The tissue sample should be aspired either with a Novak cannula or with a plastic Cornier's Pipelle around the time when nidation normally takes place, which means between day 20 to 22 of the cycle.
  • If the model democratic citizen is active, participating, and influential, is this what the ordinary man aspires to be?
  • Jets wide receivers Braylon Edwards and Santonio Holmes recently christened themselves the " Flight Boys, " a nickname befitting teammates who have aspired to reach the height of their profession this season, if not the height of hubris. '
  • With respect to decision and action, the strategy of objective tolerance is appropriate in areas where I do not aspire to the highest degree of self-command.
  • It's the insuperability of Roosevelt's hundred days that has confirmed it as the benchmark to which later presidents aspired. The Folly of the 'Hundred Days'
  • Eight photos and nine short videos come loaded on the Acer Aspire.
  • The discussion concerns postulants and candidates for holy orders, more particularly those who aspire to ordained ministry as vocational or permanent deacons.
  • Although her perception of her hero Ingres and his Renaissance predecessors was conditioned by her own bizarre personality, she aspired to paint in their naturalistic but imaginative manner.
  • After a year, the Ford Aspire had minor changes done in that included new front and rear bumpers, headlamps, turn signals, tail lamps, and wheel covers.
  • Their starter home: They may aspire to a normal and unroyal life, but the newlyweds 'home will be the grandest of any of Queen Elizabeth's offspring. When Sophie Weds Edward
  • One of the principal theses of Isaiah Berlin, the English philosopher, was that most of the cardinal values to which human beings aspire clash.
  • From Baudelaire's Journaux Intimes 2:ii: 'Le Dandy doit aspirer à être sublime sans interruption; il doit vivre et dormir devant un miroir.' Archive 2007-11-01
  • Presented in a stylish diamond black case, the thin and light Aspire 1410 also features a full-size keyboard and Acer's ComfyTouch technology, which uses an innovative Laminar Wall Jet Engine design to air-cool the processor and notebook case. Dealspl.us
  • What's more, many blogs aspire to be much more than online diaries.
  • In the Bible, St Paul says that those who aspire to leadership 'must be serious, not double-tongued, not indulging in much wine, not greedy for money, they must hold fast to the mystery of faith with a clear conscience. ANC Today
  • The execution is sometimes clumsy and story threads occasionally fumble about but the sheer determination to go further with the premise, pushing beyond the barricades of mediocrity and aspire for at least some of the weightiness of the source material, that kind of relentlessness ultimately made it a success. Row Three » Review: Blindness - Where Cinema is more than just $100 Million productions
  • In life what you aspire will transpire - be it loss or gain, sun or rain, joy or pain. RVM 
  • Carry the ladder back to the hotel, and the Governor-aspirer helps me set it up. Grouse Diary Entry
  • It had that quality which all pharmaceutical products aspire to - purity.
  • This perverse attitude says more about their blinkered view of what the country should aspire to be.
  • Minutes before a Chesterfield County judge sentenced him to 40 years in prison for strangling a former flight attendant-turned prostitute, the man who once aspired to be a police officer delivered a 10-minute rant on what he described as the injustice of his prosecution. News for Richmond Times-Dispatch
  • Ford, in short, aspired to a kind of benign totalising control. Travel news, travel guides and reviews | guardian.co.uk
  • Here is, literally, a national platform for a politician who aspires to be a national leader.
  • A third email quoted a line from the Tunisian national anthem, written by Aboul-Qacem Echebbi: " Lorsqu'un jour le peuple veut la vie, force est au destin d'obtempérer, force est aux ténèbres de s'évanouir, et force est aux chaînes de se briser" When a people aspire to live, destiny is doomed to comply, darkness is forced to dissipate and chains are forced to break loose. Judie Fein: Why You Should Travel to Tunisia
  • We should support everyone who's willing to work; and every risktaker and entrepreneur who aspires to become the next Steve Jobs. Gizmodo
  • The fame to which he aspires was beyond his reach.
  • So what is this Englishness to which so many foreigners have aspired? Times, Sunday Times
  • Much of what she aspires to is not "out of the camera" but had been shopped a little.
  • A recent poll in the magazine underlines this, claiming that 75 per cent of under-25s aspire to a job in the state sector.
  • I doubt that many young internists in training will aspire to this role, especially because its many components can be done better and more efficiently by nonphysician personnel. posted by james gaulte @ 7:36 AM Would internists be better off without the ABIM?
  • We need to ask ourselves, what kind of success do we aspire to achieve and at what cost?
  • It was a golden age for poets and panegyrists, koranists and literati, preachers and rhetoricians, physicians and scientists who, besides receiving high salaries and fabulous presents, were treated with all the honours of Chinese Mandarins; and, like these, the humblest Moslem — fisherman or artizan — could aspire through knowledge or savoir faire to the highest offices of the Empire. The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • For those families who aspired to a nice car, a comfortable house, and private schools for their children, the new government promised economic and political tranquility.
  • There are now predictions that the British may aspire much less in future to become owner-occupiers. Times, Sunday Times
  • The architecture of the modern era aspires to evoke an air of ageless youth and of a perpetual present.
  • Mostly we aspire to write, and reaching toward something mysterious and elusive is where the work actually lives. January « 2008 « Bill Ayers
  • From its inception there had been a committed Protestant minority who aspired to complete a full Protestant reformation - the Puritans.
  • It's the kind of business that many self-employed people aspire to, but few manage to achieve.
  • Cities in general are no longer offering a lifestyle that many young people aspire to. Times, Sunday Times
  • Partnerships differ in scope, purpose and specific orientation and in the nature of relationship they aspire to.
  • How shabby and disreputable is this party which aspires to wrap itself in the British Flag. Labour's Falkland's Shame
  • The overall effect aspired to evoke the atmosphere of a Cambridge college, with some degree of success.
  • The tough New Hampshire landscape produces men who aspire to a model of masculinity predicated on violence, and here it is concurrent with an American history which goes back to ‘Gun Smoke’.
  • These days artists aspire to come up with an idea for something new to put on an arts grant application.
  • We aspired to something ridiculous with this. The Sun
  • In the Buddhist tradition, bodhisattvas aspire to enlightenment, dedicating their transformed minds and actions to the liberation of all beings.
  • A glorified secretary for the local police department, Marvin aspires to be a cop.
  • UK businesses aspire to be leaders in this new world, and want a clear regulatory framework on which to base investment plans. Times, Sunday Times
  • An old steed in the stable still aspires to gallop a thousand li.
  • She aspired to a scientific career.
  • Its Norman characteristic is found in the young _ecuyer_ or squire, of Chaucer, who aspires to equal his father in station and renown; while the English type of the man-at-arms (_l'homme d'armes_) is found in their attendant yeoman, the English Literature, Considered as an Interpreter of English History Designed as a Manual of Instruction
  • The winter season suspended his progress: with the return of spring he again aspired to the conquest of Constantinople; but, instead of traversing the hills of Epirus, he turned his arms against Greece and the islands, where the spoils would repay the labor, and where the land and sea forces might pursue their joint operations with vigor and effect. The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire
  • As a go-between of Gods and men, Hermes may be a _doublure_ of Apollo, but, as the Hymn shows, he aspired in vain to Apollo's oracular function. The Homeric Hymns A New Prose Translation; and Essays, Literary and Mythological
  • Few people who aspire to fame ever achieve it.
  • South London Gallery, SE5, Thu to 18 SepSkye SherwinAn exhibition of art that changes and disperses throughout the gallery during its summer-long run, these are art objects that aspire to states of next-to-nothingness. This week's new exhibitions
  • It ` s so amazing seeing that one woman just going somewhere, this beautiful sex kitten who ` s basically a pinup, which is what I ` ve always aspired to be. CNN Transcript Aug 8, 2006
  • In the palmy days of work, before the firm smashed, they had aspired to what might properly be called diggings; and, moreover, had "digged" in respectable surroundings. The Sorcery Club
  • March 25, 2008 at 1:24 am cheir kitteh aspires 2 be ceeling cat Sriosly - Lolcats 'n' Funny Pictures of Cats - I Can Has Cheezburger?
  • Once we aspired to be rich and famous. Times, Sunday Times
  • All we are saying is that we aspire to be the finest de luxe hotel in the city.
  • Abolitionists thus aspired to make their actual metropolitan and colonial societies conform more closely to these underlying ideas of order.
  • The cultivation of creativity is the most important requirement of men who aspire to the highest reaches of the transcendent world.
  • They aspire to the authority of the whiteface, but wind up like the auguste. Making Light: Maybe next year
  • When you concentrate your energy purposely on the future possibility that you aspire to realize, your energy is passed on to it and makes it attracted to you with a force stronger than the one you directed towards it. Stephen Richards 
  • To hold such a cure, a man must aspire to the crown of humanity.
  • passman", who does not aspire to honours, has to pass (1) the The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 3: Brownson-Clairvaux
  • Police earnings in the 1920s were substantial by comparison with most other occupations to which a working man could aspire.
  • For that gigantine state of mind which possesseth the troublers of the world, such as was Lucius Sylla and infinite other in smaller model, who would have all men happy or unhappy as they were their friends or enemies, and would give form to the world, according to their own humours (which is the true theomachy), pretendeth and aspireth to active good, though it recedeth furthest from good of society, which we have determined to be the greater. The Advancement of Learning
  • Rather than abjuring claims to poetic vision, her poetry pretends not to aspire to authority even as it quietly seizes it.
  • So Labour should be prepared to reduce income tax levels to encourage all taxpayers to aspire to become high-income earners.
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  • Instead, it surely refers to a state of total stillness and even abnegation, an ideal that religious adepts of all disciplines have long aspired to.
  • She's a dance and drama teacher at a Catholic high school, and aspires to age graciously without selling out to the complacent middle class.
  • It was a two-wheeled vehicle, which claimed none of the modern appellations of tilbury, tandem, dennet, or the like; but aspired only to the humble name of that almost forgotten accommodation, a whiskey; or, according to some authorities, a tim-whiskey. Saint Ronan's Well
  • Our music is French, our cuisine is an agglomeration, and we all aspire to look American. FLOATING CITY
  • If a man aspires towards a righteous life, his first act of abstinence is from injury to animals. Albert Einstein 
  • Certainly from my point of view, I admire their success and aspire to be part of an organisation that could achieve that as well.
  • While many of his peers aspired to be club DJs, Costello exchanged his record decks for a synthesiser after only a week.
  • The article is inspiring and it is to be hoped that we all aspire to live our lives in this way.
  • Most of us live in stone houses and aspire to live in converted stone barns, we walk on stone pavements and often drive on roads where beneath the black bitumen lie beautifully dressed stone setts.
  • She took the figure that may not have been the one people aspired to and turned it around. The Sun
  • If you are practicing compassion and loving kindness toward beings, there is no need for you to aspire to be born in a noble or influential family.
  • His wisdom leaves the viewer with something to aspire to, something to chase after.
  • It is not unattainable, it is within the reach and grasp of all who strive and aspire to have it.
  • But so cool is the blue minimalist card that one style magazine editor aspired to name his baby son Sony.
  • In the contest for position that you must wage with these, all your powers will be taxed; and if you reach the topmost rundle to which you aspire, success will be, indeed, a proud achievement. The Allen House
  • The British presidency should aspire not to be the relaunch of the European project but to prepare the ground for that relaunch.
  • We need positive role models for young women to aspire to.
  • If you want to aspire to any sort of academic achievement you need to be able to express yourself clearly.
  • Some circled in the air and occasionally swooped down towards the ground only to rocket up again affrightedly to the sky; for the tiger lay by its kill and resented the approach of any daring bird that aspired to share the feast. The Jungle Girl
  • Why should a bodybuilder aspire to striated glutes if his midsection is distended?
  • We need positive role models for young women to aspire to.
  • If its range staggered his contemporaries, now it seems inconceivable that any one scholar could aspire to encompass it. The Times Literary Supplement
  • They aspired to be gentlemen, though they fell far short of the ideal.
  • To interest my heart and soul in my work, and aspire to the highest efficiency in the achievement of results. To be patiently receptive of just criticism and profit from its teaching.
  • FUMER, jeter de la fumée; aspirer du tabac et en rejeter la fumée. French Conversation and Composition
  • But the ends to which it aspires are neither moderate, nor reasonable, and it gives me a squirmy feeling to contemplate them.
  • Polyphony 4 makes it clear enough that a spirit of experimentation exists among those writers who have chosen to work within the uber-genre of science fiction/fantasy, much more so, if this anthology is at all representative, than among those who still aspire to the putative respectability of "literary fiction. Genre Fiction
  • The contemporary poet has largely eschewed any claim to the “vatic,” a mantle many poets a generation or three ago aspired to. 2007 November : Harriet the Blog : The Poetry Foundation - Part 2
  • I think there is no school of fundamentalism that remotely approximates to this level of dominance, or even aspires to it.
  • Both monarchs aspired to be father figures to their people in a dark age. Times, Sunday Times
  • In my own area, I am sure we would all agree about the sort of journalism we all aspire to.
  • January 6th, 2010 at 1: 55 am anonymous @291: Moralistic “my wang is bigger” contests don’t strike me as the highest of pursuits to aspire to either. Matthew Yglesias » The Real Torture Debate
  • You can always aspire to the mediocre and attain less, or you can aspire to the great and hope that you get somewhere close.
  • But there is another truth, equally in. disputable, which is that a man who aspires to govern mankind ought to bring to the task generous sentiments, compassionate sympathies, and noble and elevated thoughts. On Affairs in Greece
  • The need to turn around his public image and erase the memory of past misdemeanours is not the only requirement of a man who aspires to return the Conservatives to government.
  • When he had thus disburdened his conscience, Sir Launcelot introduced the subject of the new occupation at which he aspired. The Life and Adventures of Sir Launcelot Greaves
  • Could I aspire to become a 21st Century Nick, as I looked at the unruffled picture post card water?
  • For that gigantine state of mind which possesseth the _troublers_ of the world, such as was Lucius Sylla, and _infinite other in smaller model_, who would have all men happy or unhappy, as they were their friends or enemies, _and would give form to the world according to their own humours_, which is the true _theomachy_, pretendeth and aspireth to _active good_ though it _recedeth farthest_ from that _good of society_, which we have determined to be _the greater_. ' The Philosophy of the Plays of Shakspere Unfolded
  • One can easily get into a verbal mess at this point, and my own experience with pragmatism 'makes me shrink from the dangers that lie in the word' practical, 'and far rather than stand out against you for that word, I am quite willing to part company with Professor Bergson, and to ascribe a primarily theoretical function to our intellect, provided you on your part then agree to discriminate' theoretic 'or scientific knowledge from the deeper' speculative 'knowledge aspired to by most philosophers, and concede that theoretic knowledge, which is knowledge _about_ things, as distinguished from living or sympathetic acquaintance with them, touches only the outer surface of reality. A Pluralistic Universe Hibbert Lectures at Manchester College on the Present Situation in Philosophy
  • So she introduced a pirate-themed awayday and four pillars for staff to aspire to: creativity, citizenship, new business and bravery. Times, Sunday Times
  • In a review that aspires to be no more than a compatibility assessment for populists it basically translates to “smarty-pants”, stands as a marker of a philistine grudge against the audacity of ambition. Ethics and Enthusiasm
  • Antipop obviously aspires to pick up electro-hip-hop where Afrika Bambataa left off - analog synthesizers are practically fetishized on this album, and the beats are all curt drum machines.
  • The need to turn around his public image and erase the memory of past misdemeanours is not the only requirement of a man who aspires to return the Conservatives to government.
  • Abolitionists thus aspired to make their actual metropolitan and colonial societies conform more closely to these underlying ideas of order.
  • We live in an era which aspires to absolute freedom, absolute self-fulfilment and absolute equality. Times, Sunday Times
  • I long for the "golden days" of our country as well, but my wishes harken back to times when civil rights were being granted, not questioned; when attending college was not seen as being elitist, but rather something to which one aspired; when my ideological opponents knew that I was not their enemy, but just someone striving toward the same American dream via a different path. Martin Maidenberg: Defying Gravitas -- Season of the Witch
  • Who thinks being the turd in a punchbowl is something to aspire to be? Think Progress » After warmest January in history, Vancouver airlifts in snow for Winter Olympics.
  • She took the figure that may not have been the one people aspired to and turned it around. The Sun
  • Quite a coup for a guy who once aspired to be a trumpet player in a jazz band.
  • But enough of these meanderings, here are some of the series, films, miniseries, specials and, yes, game shows that aspired to leave their imprimatur on the pundits.
  • They sought to offer women confirmation of their status and position in the social world and models to which they could aspire.
  • None has aspired to any political office or served in the military. Times, Sunday Times

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