How To Use Lose sight of In A Sentence

  • The ESPNs of the world make it so easy to lose sight of life for the relative unimportance of sport.
  • It is all too easy to lose sight of what is happening on our own doorstep.
  • If you hit any roadblocks or speed bumps along the way, don't lose sight of what matters most—your friends and fam.
  • We must not lose sight of this fact.
  • Anger and jealousy can no more bear to lose sight of their objects than love. George Eliot 
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  • It is all too easy to lose sight of what is happening on our own doorstep.
  • The individual who can take setbacks as well as frustration in stride and not lose sight of the ultimate objective in the process is a person to keep an eye on - destined to go places.
  • But I find it too easy, almost natural, to become so immersed in that reality that I lose sight of the small consolations and foretastes of glory that ordinary life also offers. Archive 2006-04-01
  • But it's easy amid this depressing news to lose sight of some good things going on.
  • Under no circumstances should we lose sight of our main objective.
  • If you lose sight of your goals and objectives, everything goes haywire.
  • But it's easy to lose sight of things, what with the noise of the crowd and the adrenalin. Times, Sunday Times
  • I was, in short, "elected," by an obsession equal to a conviction; and what with her insistently obtruded as a bonus I never was permitted to lose sight of the ghastly prize of skill added to merit. Desert Dust
  • Man cannot discover new oceans unless he has the courage to lose sight of the shore. Lord Chesterfield 
  • It's easy to lose sight of what really matters in life when success is measured by wealth and self-worth is based on how much you earn. The Sun
  • The fixation of educators with reading as a skill, and with the more readily measurable and thus "fundable" strategies associated with testing and achievement, has caused us to lose sight of the importance of the pleasures of reading. October 2008
  • In a heated argument we are apt to lose sight of the truth. Publilius Syrus 
  • Man cannot discover new oceans unless he has courage to lose sight of the shore.
  • The fetishism of facts has, as the author argues, led history to 'lose sight of its origins in the literary imagination'.
  • Man cannot discover new oceans unless he has the courage to lose sight of the shore. Lord Chesterfield 
  • Under no circumstances should we lose sight of our main objective.
  • At times we lose sight of Jem, as he is buried beneath the politics.
  • That is not to say we won't fail, falter or lose sight of our intentions.
  • The only drawback to this truly engaged show is a handful of moments in the script where we lose sight of the larger theme and intellectual subtexts.
  • Yet under the storms of insignificant daily struggles, we lose sight of the finiteness and fragility of our own existence, one with which we were never comfortable from the moment we came squalling out of the womb.
  • An “eight straight” two-term governorship would lose sight of what it means to be a modern commonwealth instead of a mere state. Does Virginia Need A Two-Term Governor ?
  • Until we reach Melzarr," he had said with passion to the two gentlemen, -- "until I can stand before my Master and behold him embrace his son -- _behold_ him -- I implore that I may not lose sight of him night or day. The Lost Prince
  • Don't try to walk in a heavy snowstorm as you may lose sight of your vehicle.
  • A teacher of the deaf cannot lose sight of the fact that in the term deaf, or deaf-mute, there are included at least four sub-classes, namely, the semi-mutes, who have lost their hearing after they had acquired more or less perfectly the use of language; the semi-deaf, who retain some power of hearing, but yet cannot attend with profit schools for hearing children; the congenitally deaf, possessing some ability to perceive sound; and the totally deaf from birth, who are unable to perceive sound. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 5: Diocese-Fathers of Mercy
  • The weapon is very accurate at close range and you can go through a whole clip of 30 with very little recoil, ensuring that you don't lose sight of your target.
  • As he proceeded, he seemed to lose sight of his present aim at doing good in the hope of release from termless life, and become the Jew he was born. The Prince of India — Volume 01
  • Man cannot discover new oceans unless he has the courage to lose sight of the shore. Lord Chesterfield 
  • The particular concern for biblical translators is how not to lose sight of the richness of indigenized English.
  • You can lose sight of the essentials when you look down at the stats. Times, Sunday Times
  • Man cannot discover new oceans unless he has courage to lose sight of the shore.
  • First of all, I entirely agree with Officer and a Lady when she writes that police officers are members of society and perhaps part of the problem that I have tried to identify is that both the police and civilians can lose sight of this important feature of our policing system and the philosophy of consent which always used to underpin it. Question: When Is Crime a Good Thing? « POLICE INSPECTOR BLOG
  • Nature impels us to lay hold of the ideas alone; and in proof of this we find, that we have only to attempt to concentrate our attention upon the _words_ he uses, and then we are sure to lose sight of the _ideas_ which the words were intended to convey. A Practical Enquiry into the Philosophy of Education
  • The beautiful glow in the west died out, where the sun had been ripening his harvest-field of sheafy gold and awny cloud; and the pulse of quivering dusk beat slowly, so that a man might seem to count it, or rather a child, who sees such things, which later men lose sight of. Springhaven
  • The obsession with size - or the diminution thereof - seems to lead some people to lose sight of what really matters, which is profitability.
  • Charities seem so convinced of their own virtue they lose sight of basic standards. The Sun
  • We rarely lose sight of the connection between the two. The Times Literary Supplement
  • I wonder if the fact that we have become a political constituency and force has caused us to lose sight of the main thing. Christianity Today
  • If you become too obsessed with something you lose sight of things and it leads to your own undoing. The Sun
  • But at what point do so many lose sight of basic human decency? The Sun
  • We must not lose sight of this fact.
  • Man cannot discover new oceans unless he has courage to lose sight of the shore.
  • This Greek form is commonly believed to be connected with monos, lonely or single, and is suggestive of a life of solitude; but we cannot lose sight of the fact that the word mone, from a different root, seems to have been freely used, e.g. by The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 10: Mass Music-Newman
  • The danger with satires of this sort is that film-makers, in trying to make their production a viable entry into the genre as well as a spoof of it, lose sight of the initial goal.
  • Policeman can lose sight of you as you drive through their roadblock, and criminals on foot don't actually come looking for you as a rule.
  • He says the talking drivers twist their necks as they talk and so lose sight of their road horizon.
  • Through all of these evaluations, assessments and hagiographies, commentators sometimes lose sight of the fact that Tocqueville was, by training and choice, an attorney, and what is more, a civil law trained attorney, a magistrate, a member of the Legislative Assembly, a drafter of the Constitution of France's Second Republic and a member of Louis-Napoleon Bonaparte's Cabinet. Archive 2008-02-01
  • First of all , they lose sight of their core range. Secondly, they start drowning in complexity. Many business people do not understand the cost value equation of increasing sophistication.
  • In elephant polo, however, your mallet is an unwieldy nine-feet long, and it's easy to lose sight of the ball under the massive animals. A Very Big Game
  • When I'd slip and lose my footing, he'd momentarily lose sight of me, and a worried expression would cross his face.
  • Man cannot discover new oceans unless he has courage to lose sight of the shore.
  • If you learn only the names of techniques and kata, then you would cling to them and lose sight of their true meaning.
  • Fortunately, this volume does not lose sight of the strangeness of the poetical perspective; neither is it entirely devoted to the tangible and the earthy.
  • We should never lose sight of the fact that it is engagement in a real economy that underpins reciprocity in society.
  • We should not lose sight of the fact that there has to be a sense of proportion in our debates.
  • Man cannot discover new oceans unless he has courage to lose sight of the shore.
  • Anger and jealousy can no more bear to lose sight of their objects than love. George Eliot 
  • In our euphoria over the public demonstration of airpower's considerable abilities and accomplishments, we should not oversell it or lose sight of its limitations.
  • We should never lose sight of its sometimes violent and unforgiving nature.
  • In the rarefied atmosphere of Davos, amid the snow-covered Swiss mountains and the distant sound of yodelling and alpenhorn, it is easy to lose sight of more down-to-earth issues.
  • We must not lose sight of our original aim.
  • Governments and international bodies can then lose sight of the objectivity and "inviolability" of rights. Spero News
  • We must never lose sight of the fact that man must work in harmony with nature.
  • If we focus on employment, we lose sight of the subtle but very real benefits that commerce and free trade bring.
  • She waved at him over her shoulder before they followed the young man through the streets, desperately trying not to lose sight of him while weaving in and out of the rowdy crowd.
  • This means that batsmen can often lose sight of it against the background of the umpire. Times, Sunday Times
  • It probably assuages some people suffering from extreme paranoia but we must not lose sight of the fact that prevention is always a far better and more effective course of action than control. Global Voices in English » Southeast Asia: Reactions to the H1N1 virus
  • We must not lose sight of our original aim.
  • But with all the close horrors of the Venusian climate let's not lose sight of the view from earth, of the herald of the dawn and the evening star of lovers.
  • We must not lose sight of our original aim.
  • We must not lose sight of this fact.
  • Delegate or eliminate non-essential tasks. Sometimes we get mired down with minutia and lose sight of what we really need to be doing.
  • Under no circumstances should we lose sight of our main objective.
  • As we look into these issues it is important that we never lose sight of our basic values.
  • The beautiful glow in the west died out, where the sun had been ripening his harvest-field of sheafy gold and awny cloud; and the pulse of quivering dusk beat slowly, so that a man might seem to count it, or rather a child, who sees such things, which later men lose sight of. Springhaven
  • We must never lose sight of the fact that man must work in harmony with nature.
  • Man cannot discover new oceans unless he has courage to lose sight of the shore.
  •            But also let's not lose sight of the body and the skin of Creamcheese that came with that dress, in all its creamy lusciousness, even if the head above those creamy shoulders was normally filled with air. The Great San Francisco Poetry Wars, 13

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