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How To Use In point of fact In A Sentence

  • Second, if a Palestinian state is recognized along the 1967 lines in point of fact, nothing more than the 1949 armistice lines, this undermines UN Security Council Resolution 242 and 338 and the Camp David Accords, which call for a negotiated outcome and do not predetermine final boundaries. David Harris: Support Peace: Oppose Palestinian UN Gambit
  • In point of fact, the context of di Giulio statement concerns an "extreme interpretation" (physicochemical determinism). Chunkdz Comes Out Smokin
  • But similarly, the matter of the liturgy itself, including its forms, as the Holy Father would continue to remind, is likewise no matter of inconsequence, and in point of fact, is also of significance and importance. Benedict on the Liturgy: "The Faith is not only thought"
  • Her proof that the Founding Fathers got the idea of separation of powers from the bible is a single verse that in point of fact says that all three powers are invested in God.
  • In point of fact, it is still possible to stroll unmolested in many neighborhoods, free of the odor of cinders and without fear of imminent incineration.
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  • He was well descended and well connected (there was an abeyant peerage in his family), but in point of fact, his social position was not better than that of some other boys in the school. Philip Gilbert Hamerton
  • But similarly, the matter of the liturgy itself, including its forms, as the Holy Father would continue to remind, is likewise no matter of inconsequence, and in point of fact, is also of significance and importance. Benedict on the Liturgy: "The Faith is not only thought"
  • Alabaster, mosaic glass, saffron, hibiscus tea, he helped us buy it allor in point of fact, purchased it for us from the merchants in question. A rolling stoic gathers no mosque
  • In point of fact, Weber's rationalization thesis can be understood with richer nuance when we approach it as, for lack of better terms, a dialectics of disenchantment and reenchantment rather than as a one-sided, unilinear process. Asthmatic
  • This last averment was a slight alteration in point of fact, for The Heart of Mid-Lothian
  • Well, in point of fact, there's very little difference from its ideological stance.
  • The zetetic faithful reason about this matter as though the impressions of the senses were trustworthy under all conditions, familiar or otherwise; whereas, in point of fact, we know that the senses often deceive, even under familiar conditions, and almost always deceive under conditions, which are not familiar. Myths and Marvels of Astronomy
  • Tragically poorly attended meetings, in point of fact. Times, Sunday Times
  • Such media should be referred to as _liquefiable media_; in point of fact, however, they are usually grouped together with the solid media. The Elements of Bacteriological Technique A Laboratory Guide for Medical, Dental, and Technical Students. Second Edition Rewritten and Enlarged.
  • To avoid these the ligature should be applied as low down on the vessel as possible, and, in point of fact, the operation called ligature of the third stage of the axillary is, anatomically speaking, really ligature of the brachial high up, and where there is room at all, there will be the less chance of secondary hæmorrhage, the greater the distance is between the ligature and the great subscapular branch. A Manual of the Operations of Surgery For the Use of Senior Students, House Surgeons, and Junior Practitioners
  • “I dinna ken whether I will or no — ad avisandum, ye ken — naebody should be in a hurry to make admissions, either in point of law, or in point of fact,” said Saddletree, looking, or endeavouring to look, as if he understood what was said. The Heart of Mid-Lothian
  • In point of fact, this may be all Don Gagliardi intends to suggest, and certainly one can agree that the attitude of rupture and discontinuity is a problem as well. Roman Professor, Priest and member of Papal Liturgical Office speaks on Benedict's New Liturgical Movement
  • Even foolhardiness, that is boldness without an object, is not to be despised; in point of fact it is the same energy of feeling, only exercised as a kind of passion without any co-operation of the intelligent faculties. On War — Volume 1
  • In point of fact his stomach suddenly felt hollow and echoey but with sadness, not hunger. PROSPECT HILL
  • In point of fact, no genuinely faithful screen adaptation of Red Harvest has ever been successfully attempted, but many loose adaptations have made their mark.
  • In point of fact, the clash between outmoded newsgathering and neoteric tech-wizardry is a long time coming. Rob Fishman: Old Dogs, New Media: Why J-School Apps Are Up
  • Those who didn't know him mistook him for a gawky teenager, though in point of fact he was twenty-nine.
  • In point of fact, he was rebuked for his support of bringing about a volunteer force, at least considering it.
  • We were assured that the prisoners were being well treated,(Sentencedict) when in point of fact they were living in terrible conditions.
  • But she was under the impression that there was a magic in her name and station which would overcome what she described as shyness, but which was in point of fact the frank dislike of her neighbours. Jack O' Judgment
  • Tragically poorly attended meetings, in point of fact. Times, Sunday Times
  • If in point of fact; Christianity is a myth, consider the enormity of the intellect which has disproven a diety which is everywhere at all times, knows everything, and cannot be stopped. Texas Faith will return on July 14 | RELIGION Blog | dallasnews.com
  • In point of fact, the _pesah_ points back to the sacrifice of the firstlings Prolegomena
  • In point of fact, he was remarkably ineffectual at anything but promoting a sort of genteel cronyism.
  • Stop a bit, Carr; I had not come to it," interrupted Lord Hartledon, who in point of fact had been holding back what he called the climax, in his usual vacillating manner. Elster's Folly
  • There was _no_ other monitor who did not try to be of some use to his fags; many of the monitors, by quiet kindnesses and useful hints, by judicious help and unselfish sympathy, were of most real service to the boys who nominally "fagged" for them, but who, in point of fact, were required to do nothing except taking an occasional message, seeing that the study fires did not go out, and carrying up the tea and breakfast for a week each, in order of rotation. St. Winifred's, or The World of School
  • Kierkegaard wished to demonstrate that the Hegelian metaphysic, considered on its own and judged in terms of its declared ambition to afford a comprehensive account of reality, was in point of fact flawed, and irreparably so.
  • In point of fact, what I am conceding is my disappointment in discovering that Ayers does not appear to be familiar with even the most rudimentary theoretical perspectives found throughout Capitalists and Conquerors. A Review of Capitalists and Conquerors, and an exchange
  • Dr. Priestley founds, not on the _resemblance or analogy, _ but on the _essential difference_, between created and uncreated intelligence; but, in point of fact, the _difference_, great and real as it is, has no bearing on the only question at issue; it is the _resemblance or analogy_ between all thinking beings and the Modern Atheism under its forms of Pantheism, Materialism, Secularism, Development, and Natural Laws
  • I dinna ken whether I will or no -- _ad avisandum, _ ye ken -- naebody should be in a hurry to make admissions, either in point of law, or in point of fact," said Saddletree, looking, or endeavouring to look, as if he understood what was said. The Heart of Mid-Lothian, Complete
  • In point of fact, their tactile umwelt is almost certainly different than ours. INSIDE OF A DOG
  • I also thought that our hero would inject a little modern/alien thinking into Old Norse and let the heroine, who, in point of fact, saved her people, become the queen, but no, he totally accepts the badge of kingliness and rules happily ever after, I guess. Day in the Life of an Idiot
  • But this was controversial, not only for the question of when is the actant body, in its exploitation phase, atrophied (when is everything built up, so as to continue forever without man power), but more sinisterly, because it made clear that soon only one man alone would be quite sufficient to maintain the Universal body of Pulse or, in point of fact, to continue on to the realization of an actually 'domesticated' universe. The Pulse-Soldier
  • In point of fact, the broad "stole" is really not a stole at all then, but is worn over the stole proper of the deacon -- similar to how it was wound up with it before. Use, History and Development of the "Planeta Plicata" or Folded Chasuble
  • '60s much as they do not now ... did want to "immolate" American style, coolness and in point of fact America itself. My Left Wing - Front Page
  • Tragically poorly attended meetings, in point of fact. Times, Sunday Times
  • Certain Israelite money-lenders, who hated him because he would not wink at their sweating and extortions, saw in this an opportunity to overthrow him; so they reported to some leading Jews in England that he had tortured the boys, whom he had not, in point of fact, punished in any way beyond reproving them. The Romance of Isabel, Lady Burton
  • Also, while Congress can impose a national capitation or property tax [ "direct tax"], to do so it must be "apportioned" which in point of fact means that the tax cannot be imposed. California Progress Report
  • B. however supports Rossetti, and in point of fact Shelley usually wrote lightenings, even where the word counts as a dissyllable (Locock). The Complete Poetical Works of Percy Bysshe Shelley
  • I was even rather touched by memory of his insistence last night on another glass of that water which just might give him typhoid; rather touched by memory of his unsaying that he "never" touched alcohol -- he who, in point of fact, had to be always gambling on something or other. James Pethel
  • In point of fact, the Soviet Union did develop what might best be called a preponderance of familiar weapons. Conservapedia - Recent changes [en]

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