How To Use On the face of it In A Sentence

  • This sounds on the face of it a strong argument, but it is unlikely to carry any practical weight.
  • On the face of it, the move appeared to be a disaster for May. Times, Sunday Times
  • If the anti-abortionist can show that the foetus is a person, then ‘you mustn't kill people’ becomes a good reason not to allow abortion - although it's also, on the face of it, a good reason not to allow capital punishment.
  • Yet their slide towards obscurity - Liverpool supporters have been starved of silverware - has not only been halted, but looks, on the face of it, to be making a swift volte-face.
  • However, the principals' lyric voices are not, on the face of it, weighty enough for the roles of Leonora and Manrico.
Linguix Browser extension
Fix your writing
on millions of websites
Linguix writing coach
  • The metric imperial system is, on the face of it, simpler than imperial. Times, Sunday Times
  • On the face of it, this brave little dwelling of wood and reeds is a complete contrast to a gleaming penthouse overlooking Hyde Park, but they're both among the fussiest residences of their eras. £140m for a flat? Perhaps the buyer would like to see my Kilburn des res
  • And I think that we found that they are not as dissimilar as they seem on the face of it.
  • On the face of it, this is an unlikely film to wield such influence. Times, Sunday Times
  • On the face of it that question had to be answered in the affirmative. Times, Sunday Times
  • What on the face of it seemed a perverse limitation had its own logic, faulty though it proved to be. VOYAGES OF DELUSION: The Search for the North West Passage in the Age of Reason
  • On the face of it, some of its key findings are inarguable.
  • On the face of it, the series only made sense as some sort of tax scam. Times, Sunday Times
  • On the face of it, it would seem that Canadian society is moving in a positive direction.
  • It looks, on the face of it, like a minor change in the regulations.
  • On the face of it, coming up with and implementing these changes is dull, unglamorous work. Times, Sunday Times
  • On the face of it, Vladimir Putin, the macho fixer, and Dmitry Medvedev, the dorkish lawyer, are polar opposites. Vladimir Putin, Dmitry Medvedev: So which of the old allies is truly in charge? | Tom Parfitt
  • On the face of it, there does seem to be something amiss here.
  • What on the face of it seemed a perverse limitation had its own logic, faulty though it proved to be. VOYAGES OF DELUSION: The Search for the North West Passage in the Age of Reason
  • Anyway, the finny denizens for which Orkney is renowned are these odd trout; brown trout on the face of it but happy enough in the brine.
  • On the face of it, the practice of contingency fees could very well be tortious, contrary to the torts of champerty and maintenance.
  • On the face of it, leading a multinational force of peacekeepers to Guadalcanal should be a relatively uncontroversial exercise.
  • On the face of it, the matter is decided by the President of the Tribunal in consultation with judges.
  • A contractual obligation, such as an exchange rule gives rise on the face of it to strict liability.
  • What may, on the face of it, seem obvious often turns out to be far more complicated.
  • I wouldn't do it because of the problem noted (and other issues like the endogeneity of the state-level minimum wages used to identify the effects in many of the available studies) but it is not stupid on the face of it. The Minimum Wage, Con't, Arnold Kling | EconLog | Library of Economics and Liberty
  • On the face of it, the ad for Belvita breakfast biscuits seems pretty elementary, with two vaguely faded celebs – Lisa Snowdon and Johnny Vaughan, palpably wondering where those halcyon Big Breakfast days went – bantering about the product, in this case an oaty, grainy biscuitty thing. The Hard Sell: Belvita Breakfast Biscuits
  • On the face of it, Diageo's decision to change its Cardhu single malt into a vatted or pure malt seems no big deal.
  • On the face of it, this is an unlikely film to wield such influence. Times, Sunday Times
  • On the face of it, he's the kind of clogger who scales up to coaching well. Libertarian Blog Place
  • We went for a weekend, which on the face of it sounds like an extravagant waste of time, but was actually painlessly good fun.
  • On the face of it, the National Student Number system is used for fairly benign purposes, but the Greens have always been concerned that these unique personal identifiers could be readily misused.
  • On the face of it, it seems equally clear that the country continues to benefit both economically and culturally. Times, Sunday Times
  • On the face of it, this is an absurd claim and nothing in the piece justifies the headline.
  • On the face of it the golden goal is the fairest and cleanest solution to a deadlock.
  • On the face of it, it is a little undiplomatic for a Foreign Office Minister to suggest that the British have a monopoly on rational and civilised behaviour.
  • A contractual obligation, such as an exchange rule gives rise on the face of it to strict liability.
  • A ghazal is a song that sounds secular on the face of it. The Qawwals and Qawwali « bollywoods most wanted photographerno1
  • The first two authors, on the face of it, simply parody a genre, a technique at least as old as Jane Austen's Northanger Abbey.
  • On the face of it, if the recommendations made by this report were adopted as Government policy, there would be clear benefits for infrequent road users.
  • On the face of it, the move appeared to be a disaster for May. Times, Sunday Times
  • But on the face of it there was a seamless transfer with rents being paid by the same system and services unaffected.
  • On the face of it, this was not an unreasonable reaction from a man accustomed to making economies. Consuelo & Alva: Love and Power in the Gilded Age
  • On the face of it, this plan of campaign did not seem very innovative.
  • On the face of it what she was saying was perfectly reasonable. The Glasgow Girls
  • On the face of it, this does seem like a mystery: global hegemons don't usually declare war on the status quo.
  • On the face of it the government is adopting a belt and braces approach to business lending. Times, Sunday Times
  • On the face of it, their marriage seems an improbable alliance.
  • Strangely enough, on the face of it, an amateur literary stylist is less likely to do that than a professional scholar. No Way, Madame Bovary
  • on the face of it the problem seems minor
  • On the face of it, It'seems quite reasonable.
  • On the face of it this claim about certainty seems plainly false. Philosophy at the Limit
  • On the face of it, he seems to be telling the truth though I suspect he's hiding something.
  • On the face of it, the move appeared to be a disaster for May. Times, Sunday Times
  • On the face of it, his new role does not sound like the sort of thing that one might imagine LeBlanc - who played the dim-witted Joey Tribbiani in Friends - would instantly have been attracted to.
  • This may on the face of it sound a little dull. Times, Sunday Times
  • His most recent memories seemed to be of lying on a trolley in the Landau Clinic, while technicians prepared him for the scan — on the face of it, a bad sign — but he'd been overwrought, and he'd spent so long psyching himself up for “this”, that perhaps he'd forgotten coming home, still hazy from the anaesthetic, crashing into bed, dreaming … Free Science Fiction, Fantasy, Horror: Permutation City Prologue - Greg Egan
  • If this be denied him, then must he have acted wholly by instinct -- which would seem more marvellous on the face of it than if, in dim ways, he had performed a vague thought-process. CHAPTER XXII
  • He was, on the face of it, no more than an accessory to the theatrically gifted and great, an attendant lord but never Hamlet.
  • On the face of it, then, life would be peachy. Times, Sunday Times
  • It is, in my judgment, difficult on the face of it to fault any of the inspector's reasoning.
  • On the face of it, our lives have improved beyond recognition.
  • This may on the face of it sound a little dull. Times, Sunday Times
  • On the face of it this claim about certainty seems plainly false. Philosophy at the Limit
  • On the face of it, our lives have improved beyond recognition.
  • It is, on the face of it, a mute slab of pinkish grey meat sweating lightly in its clingfilm wrapper, a lacklustre staple of our English diet with nothing much to say for itself.
  • On the face of it, it's just ordinary, day-to-day business.
  • On the face of it this claim about certainty seems plainly false. Philosophy at the Limit
  • On the face of it, then, life would be peachy. Times, Sunday Times
  • On the face of it, the “not” s in (1) and (2) are not external to the deontic operators, as it were, nor are they directly operating on p; rather they pertain to Jane Doe's agency with respect to p. They come “between” a deontic element and an agential element, so reading OB as an amalgamation of a deontic and agential operator does not allow for the Deontic Logic
  • On the face of it, biographical and contextual approaches to a writer need not conflict. The Times Literary Supplement
  • On the face of it, the mesh network could grow instantly.
  • On the face of it, this seems inconsistent with that policy. Times, Sunday Times
  • On the face of it, the auguries are not encouraging.
  • On the face of it, the cards seem stacked against him.
  • Therefore, on the face of it, the recent directive is a praiseworthy effort to control the costs of healthcare that ordinary people have to bear.
  • An attempt by parliament to predetermine the outcome of judicial activity is, at least on the face of it, in contravention of the doctrine of separation of powers which is in fact enshrined in our Constitution.
  • On the face of it, it makes sense that governments, through their export credit agencies, need to finance and underwrite big projects that wouldn't otherwise happen.
  • The star is, on the face of it, a coquettish flirt.
  • On the face of it that argument is logical. Times, Sunday Times
  • On the face of it, this is an unlikely film to wield such influence. Times, Sunday Times
  • The Respondent, on the face of it to further his own ends but also in his view to further the wishes of the assignors, dealt with the matter in such a way that he simply cut out the input of the assignors' solicitors.
  • He was prominent among the apostles, though James, as bishop of Jerusalem, had the chief authority there (Mt 16: 18). abode -- or "tarried" [Ellicott]. fifteen days -- only fifteen days; contrasting with the long period of three years, during which, previously, he had exercised an independent commission in preaching: a fact proving on the face of it, how little he owed to Peter in regard to his apostolical authority or instruction. Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
  • On the face of it, this was not an unreasonable reaction from a man accustomed to making economies. Consuelo & Alva: Love and Power in the Gilded Age
  • Simplicity is also certainly central to Raimonds Staprans 'compositions, which are still lifes set in uncluttered domestic environments, at least on the face of it. ArtScene: Whatever It Looks Like Is Never Quite What You Think
  • On the face of it, he might seem to have the cred to do it.
  • What may, on the face of it, seem obvious often turns out to be far more complicated.
  • I know that you have no desire to celebrate war on the face of it, like Owen's "poetess" - nor do I begin to presume to know the challenges or "virtus" of military life and warfare. The Full Feed from HuffingtonPost.com
  • Rosenborg should, on the face of it, offer little resistance to Madrid's progress to the quarter-finals.
  • On the face of it, the simplicity of the concept may sound unattractive, but flesh in some details and the picture changes significantly.
  • This may on the face of it sound a little dull. Times, Sunday Times
  • If the couple are mere cohabitants, the MWPA 1964 is inapplicable and on the face of it the common law rules will apply.
  • On the face of it what she was saying was perfectly reasonable. The Glasgow Girls
  • On the face of it, they have taken a couple of unrated late substitutes to replace fancied fighters, but neither of the new opponents is a mug.
  • On the face of it that question had to be answered in the affirmative. Times, Sunday Times
  • On the face of it, the experience appeared a fairly predictable example of wish fulfilment. Dictionary of Mind, Body and Spirit
  • They would have seen themselves as intellectually kin to men who do not figure in these lists - priests or scholars who had on the face of it no great philosophical interest.
  • On the face of it this claim about certainty seems plainly false. Philosophy at the Limit
  • ART: Tim Kennedy “On the Face of It”: The object of Reggie†™ s affections is compromised†¦ when his own beloved face gets a zit! Archie Comics for February 2010 | Major Spoilers - Comic Book Reviews and News
  • On the face of it, their marriage seems an improbable alliance.
  • On the face of it, the decree seemed reasonable and justified. Times, Sunday Times
  • On the face of it what she was saying was perfectly reasonable. The Glasgow Girls
  • On the face of it, the document seemed genuine.
  • On the face of it Scott has enjoyed a remarkably uneventful life.
  • This may on the face of it sound a little dull. Times, Sunday Times
  • On the face of it, the series only made sense as some sort of tax scam. Times, Sunday Times
  • On the face of it, the move appeared to be a disaster for May. Times, Sunday Times
  • On the face of it, it seems like a bargain, but I bet there are hidden costs.
  • On the face of it, this overlooked possibility has a great deal of explanatory power. 1066: and the Hidden History of the Bayeux Tapestry
  • That seemed pretty bad news on the face of it, but Mayor Glenn Everready, always one to seek the most positive side of a situation, suddenly realized that there was an upside to this downturn.
  • Cowen had resigned_, he says something which to be sure would look "_like that_," _as the citizen says_, upon the first impression; but which on being critically examined, contradicts the fact on the face of it. A Review and Exposition, of the Falsehoods and Misrepresentations, of a Pamphlet Addressed to the Republicans of the County of Saratoga, Signed, "A Citizen"
  • On the face of it, the objection of any surviving relative, however remote, bars any transplant.
  • On the face of it, his suggestion makes sense.
  • On the face of it, the document seemed genuine.
  • Again, the word istoria (enquiry) bears upon the face of it the stopping (istanai) of the stream; and the word piston (faithful) certainly indicates cessation of motion; then, again, mneme (memory), as any one may see, expresses rest in the soul, and not motion. The CRATYLUS
  • On the face of it, he seems to be telling the truth though I suspect he's hiding something.
  • This may on the face of it sound a little dull. Times, Sunday Times
  • It is, on the face of it, difficult to see how the West could radically change its position.
  • Ergo, on the face of it, fossil or no fossil, definitely NOT a "crinoid," agreed. Posthuman Blues
  • On the face of it the statements made in the beginning were clear enough: their closely-argued variations, though complex, could certainly be followed with full acceptation, and they were not particularly hard to play; yet at one point, after a curiously insistent repetition of the second theme, the rhythm changed and with it the whole logic of the discourse. Did You Know Bach Had a Father?
  • If the anti-abortionist can show that the foetus is a person, then ‘you mustn't kill people’ becomes a good reason not to allow abortion - although it's also, on the face of it, a good reason not to allow capital punishment.
  • (enquiry) bears upon the face of it the stopping (istanai) of the stream; and the word piston (faithful) certainly indicates cessation of motion; then, again, mneme (memory), as any one may see, expresses rest in the soul, and not motion. Cratylus
  • On the face of it, he seems to be telling the truth though I suspect he's hiding something.
  • On the face of it, this is an unlikely film to wield such influence. Times, Sunday Times
  • Although the bill looks quite good on the face of it and is a little tougher than the current legislation, that legislation is inherently soft.
  • On the face of it that argument is logical. Times, Sunday Times
  • This may on the face of it sound a little dull. Times, Sunday Times
  • On the face of it, the industry is global, borderless and unregulated. Times, Sunday Times

Report a problem

Please indicate a type of error

Additional information (optional):

This website uses cookies to make Linguix work for you. By using this site, you agree to our cookie policy