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The site shows example sentences for English words. How the word or phrase could be used in a sentence?
" ... Again, fair quotation of the numbers but I would still stoutly insist that the conclusion is wrong. The reasons being as follows. From the first report: ... "
" ... Age 9, I put my foot down and demanded the return of my dear departed dresses. If my mom had only known what she was unleashing by saying yes. Gone were pants! I refused to even look at those grubby things and stoutly wore dresses every day for a year. I wore them to gym practice. I climbed trees in them. And they weren’t just ordinary dresses. They were long and pretty and covered in ruffles, as many as I could pile on. Looking back, I imagine other kids must have thought I was crazy, out there on the soccer field running flat out in a floor length gown, but I never saw their looks, if indeed there even were any. I was flying and alive in my magic kingdom of beautiful clothes. Eventually, I came to love pants again and to give them equal time in my wardrobe. ... "
" ... Earlier, I referred to the prioritization in risk-based security in terms of “less is more.” That is actually only half true. Yes, you’ll stoutly defend a smaller number of business assets. But think about what it takes to safeguard just one valuable thing in a world where everything is connected to ever more things. ... "
" ... Just lowering the tax rates of the rich isn't going to get any of us anywhere very much. But looking properly at the supply side to see where we really should be having lower marginal rates is a very useful and important consideration. For example, in the US, I would argue that FICA taxation should be done in the same manner as the equivalent is in Britain. You pay FICA from $ one of income. There probably should be an exemption of some amount. I would argue that whatever the level of the minimum wage is should be that exemption (as it was for income tax in my British argument above). But, of course, paying FICA gains you access to things like Social Security later in life. In The British system we "deem" it paid. That is, we grant the accumulation of future rights to people on very low incomes without actually charging them the premiums. This has the effect of making national insurance, or Social Security, more progressive--the poor are paying less in and getting the same out. Which could be construed as a little odd if you think that supply side is all about just lower taxation for the rich. But it isn't, it's about lower marginal tax rates where those would do some good. And I've no problem at all with the idea that the poor shouldn't have a marginal tax rate at all, not while they're still under minimum wage income for the year. Which is how we end up with a stoutly supply side argument for a more progressive FICA taxation system--all in favour of lowering the marginal tax rate on the poor. ... "
" ... Last year former Microsoft CEO Bill Gates took the stand in an antitrust civil law suit filed against Microsoft by Novell. The charges were familiar even if the particulars of the case were not—back in the day Microsoft and monopoly seemed to go hand in hand—with Novell claiming that Microsoft abused its OS position when it released Windows 95, allowing Novell’s then-popular applications Word Perfect and Quattro to die an ignominious death. Gates handled himself well, stoutly maintaining that Novell was not deliberately shut out of the market. ... "