Similar words: cut corners, corner, scorner, around the corner, cornea, ornery, attorney general, misunderstood. Meaning: n. 1. the fundamental assumptions from which something is begun or developed or calculated or explained 2. a stone in the exterior of a large and important building; usually carved with a date and laid with appropriate ceremonies 3. a stone at the outer corner of two intersecting masonry walls.
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(1) The mayor laid the cornerstone of the new library.
(2) The magazine became the cornerstone of McFadden's publishing empire.
(3) Hard work is the cornerstone of success.
(4) Research is the cornerstone of the profession.
(5) Wage control is the cornerstone of the government's economic policy.
(6) This study is the cornerstone of the whole research programme.
(7) The magazine became the cornerstone of MacFadden's publishing empire.
(8) The guidelines are the cornerstone of federal nutrition policy.
(9) In the Tokugawa period agriculture served as the cornerstone both of the economy and of society as a whole.
(10) The cornerstone of that ideology is the doctrine of judicial independence, to which we now turn.
(11) Cargill, however, hoped the area would become the cornerstone for the Willowbrook nature study area.
(12) The cornerstone of the new policies is a law piloted through parliament by Chevenement last July.
(13) Whatever his manias, his music remains a cornerstone of the classical repertoire.
(14) As a cornerstone, Galvin established the character and culture of the company he wished Motorola to be.
(15) Of course fitness is only one cornerstone in the triangle of physical health: the other two are diet and sleep.
(16) Footnote 4 has served as a cornerstone of contemporary constitutional law in the field of individual rights.
(17) A cornerstone of its manifesto in 1979 was to introduce policies which would release the wealth-generating powers of the free-market system.
(18) It became the conversation cornerstone for the couple of days leading up to it.
(19) The Liturgy for that Sunday was the cornerstone of both prayer and reflection.
(20) Rogue nations, it is clear(http://sentencedict.com), are the cornerstone of Mr Bush's still unstable foreign and security edifice.
(21) In most countries, the family unit is still the cornerstone of society.
(22) Perhaps an alliance with the East Angles was the cornerstone of Aethelbald's ascendancy.
(23) The bank has been trying to write off huge losses from its CornerStone credit card over several recent quarters.
(24) Frame Technology Inc believes the next generation of desktop publishing systems will utilise electronic document publishing as their cornerstone.
(25) Therefore, emotion, which can interfere with attention when it is extreme, is nevertheless the cornerstone of attention.
(26) Toledo hopes to promote a tourism industry that he wants to make a cornerstone of economic recovery.
(27) The prohibition of discrimination on grounds of nationality remains a cornerstone of unification.
(28) It will require more, but missile defense will be a cornerstone.
(29) The independence of the judiciary is rightly regarded as a cornerstone of our liberties.
(30) It must go on to professionalism in all things, but the quality mindset is the cornerstone of all professionalism.
More similar words: cut corners, corner, scorner, around the corner, cornea, ornery, attorney general, misunderstood, thunderstorm, learner's permit, borne, adorned, attorney, corn, unadorned, scorn, acorn, corny, hornet's nest, burner, mourner, garner, popcorn, stone, scornful, superstar, first of all, westerner, rest on, piston.