Similar words: point, point out, appoint, in point of, to the point, appointment, a case in point, amount to.
Random good picture Not show
121. There are no cut-and-dried rules or regulations that will guarantee success or unfailingly point to the one correct decision.
122. This is a familiar point to those who know anything of Freudian theory.
123. It is not the present intention to point to inconsistencies, in order to undermine the revolutionary claims.
124. The five-year yield fell 1 basis point to 6. 91 percent.
125. We are very pleased to be able to point to increased co-operation and liaison with other Service charities.
126. The practical critics of scientific management Point to the impossibility of meeting the strict demands of the rational model of decision-making.
127. The former can point to the great difference between doubt and unbelief and the latter to the great similarity.
128. Republicans will point to the failure as proof of the administration's lukewarm commitment to missile defense during the past seven years.
129. But all these successes point to a deep hunger for experiences that are urban but still manageable.
130. One point to clear up immediately is the widespread confusion between wrongful dismissal and unfair dismissal.
131. No point in inviting a rooster to a hen party, especially if he has a valid point to make.
132. They simply point to the fact that language is being produced and do not involve any questions of psychological reality.
133. The point to recognize is, of course, that it is futile to waste time classifying studies into neat little boxes.
134. Finally, there are plans to provide custodians a sore point to enable the churches to open for two hours a day.
135. Many point to her act of defiance as the birth of the civil-rights movement.
136. First he threw down his training bib, then he tried to make a point to coaches Dino Zoff and Giancarlo Oddi.
137. A string of economic figures published after the rate cut point to an economic slowdown.
138. It is this later Holiday which most recognise and her admirers point to her last years as her most compelling.
139. Alas, there is no point to all this suffering, no greater meaning to this tale of romantic woe.
140. This emphasises a further point to which domestic competition authorities need to apply their minds.
141. I think it may be pertinent at this point to raise the question of how the new department will be funded.
142. Now, I try to make it a point to get out in the boardroom to recognize something or some one.
143. If you have an important point to make, don't try to be subtle or clever. Use a pile driver. Hit the point once. Then come back and hit it again. Then hit it a third time - a tremendous whack. Winston Churchill
144. We can point to your huge increase in military spending and then continue on with our own.
145. The answer seemed to point to substantial cuts in price support together with a better re-distribution of budget towards smaller producers.
146. That is the very point to which I am referring.
147. So the geographical distribution of the disease in older women is more likely to point to dietary pathogens.
148. To point to only the most glaring contradiction: What kind of literacy would they be eager to advance?
149. This is an essential point to which I return in the concluding chapter.
150. The first thing I would point to is that our training costs for last year averaged out at £5,[Sentencedict]100 per trainee.
More similar words: point, point out, appoint, in point of, to the point, appointment, a case in point, amount to, joint, go into, coin, join, join in, go in for, enjoin, put to, fit to, button, ongoing, next to, cotton, ought to, button up, get together, admit to, react to, adapt to, subject to, attorney, be subject to.