Similar words: take for granted, granted, granted that, warranted, unwarranted, taken, take note, mistaken. Meaning: adj. 1. evident without proof or argument 2. accepted as real or true without proof.
Random good picture Not show
(31) They are the generators of the material prosperity which is now taken for granted in the West.
(32) His mother - whose preference for himself, devotion to himself, he had always taken for granted.
(33) In the world's largest economies, that is taken for granted.
(34) In a country that has seen six presidents in five years, political chaos is taken for granted.
(35) Too often taken for granted, the campaign against all-seater stadia is gathering pace and is uniting fans around the country.
(36) Alongside the other strategic arguments in its favour, the economics of the uranium fuel cycle had been taken for granted.
(37) Economic chaos of the first period of freedom nearly destroyed education and social services that had been taken for granted.
(38) It is surely a question of maintaining an appropriate balance, and is not something that can be taken for granted.
(39) Remember, remember, this is now, and now, and now. Live it, feel it, cling to it. I want to become acutely aware of all I've taken for granted. Sylvia Plath
(40) This is taken for granted.
(41) His will and capacity to choose wisely are taken for granted.
(42) It may be taken for granted that they were sincere.
(43) An indirect request implies the request but does not directly say it These indirect requests make a man feel taken for granted and unappreciated .
(44) Plato, as a dualist, portrays Socrates as being a dualist and that's just taken for granted.
(45) Becuase it is true that nothing can be taken for granted.
(46) It is taken for granted that everyone is equal before the law.
(47) Partners unable to enter into a civil marriage, and their children, lack basic legal protections taken for granted by married couples, " Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver said.
(48) Nowadays, I believe, bed-wetting in such circumstances is taken for granted.
(49) Though severely and repeatedly strained, the deal has come to be taken for granted as a linchpin of the fragile Middle Eastern order. But new stresses may test neighbourly relations as never before.
(49) Sentencedict.com is a sentence dictionary, on which you can find nice sentences for a large number of words.
(50) In production code, this probably shouldn't be taken for granted, but for a simple example like this, it's going to be OK 99.99 percent of the time. Caveat emptor.
(51) I became somewhat embarrassed , for I was used to being taken for granted by my elders.
(52) Customers who feel unimportant, unappreciated or taken for granted that their business elsewhere.
(53) "The Europeanisation of political elites was largely taken for granted," says Alina Mungiu-Pippidi, a Berlin-based Romanian academic.
(54) California is so reliably Democratic that its votes are taken for granted.
(55) Along the way, many core assumptions about the merits of globalization, markets, risk, and debt, long taken for granted in business, government, and academia, have come into question.
(56) It was taken for granted that they would come and join us.
(57) God could never be taken for granted; even by the just.
(58) It was envied abroad and taken for granted at home.
(59) Due to the differences in threading models offered by RHEL3 and SLES8, complete binary compatibility cannot be taken for granted.
(60) The long - established order of society was no longer taken for granted.
More similar words: take for granted, granted, granted that, warranted, unwarranted, taken, take note, mistaken, partaken, take note of, undertaken, take notice of, if I am not mistaken, grant, take advantage, grantor, vagrant, emigrant, fragrant, flagrant, wanted, take advantage of, immigrant, planted, slanted, integrated, grant-in-aid, block grant, antedate, guarantee.