Similar words: to the point, in point of, point of view, get into the habit of, point out, into the bargain, point, in toto.
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31. His time of 3 mins 59.4 sec had left him exhausted to the point of collapse.
32. His failed attempts in seducing the young woman angered him to the point of incarcerating her.
33. Muhlenberg came to the point of urging lay people not to give gratuities at all, even to the licensed pastors.
34. They resist school procedures and rules but not to the point of risking outright confrontation with teachers.
35. In situations like this, when you are receptive to the point of rawness, you become acutely aware of it.
36. We worked with one hotel chain that avowed to the point of dementia its commitment to customer service and comfort.
37. And despite the censorship, some letters were bold to the point of foolhardy.
38. He is loved to the point of becoming a cult figure.
39. Within our immediate group we can learn to reconcile personal and group differences to the point of rejecting personal values and beliefs.
40. Girls tend to internalize their fears, sometimes to the point of making themselves sick.
41. They were both unconventional to the point of eccentricity, their actions incomprehensible to ordinary beings. Sentencedict.com
42. Pascoe threw a punch and missed, then threw another and felt the connection travel to the point of his elbow.
43. No side gives up its principles or priorities but no side pushes to the point of total victory.
44. They have taken to increasingly seductive gimmicks, to the point of thumbing down passing motorists.
45. Sometimes charming, he could also be egocentric to the point of megalomania.
46. He always saw straight to the point of an argument.
47. Frankly, dear readers(sentencedict.com), I was getting bored waiting for the graphs to get to the point of maximum excitement.
48. Both of them noticed with shock how alarmingly thin she was, frail to the point of vanishing.
49. Yet it s a one-joke play that teases out its central idea to the point of nervous exhaustion.
50. It was as if, having goaded her to the point of total capitulation, he'd opted for a wary cooling-off period.
51. Any area distal to the point of maximum width contributes only drag, which is proportional to total tail area.
52. Factors which correlate strongly with autonomy are: Strong goal orientation, even to the point of creating unnecessary hurdles.
53. Conviction to the point of resignation Always be prepared to resign Organizations fail because managers compromise their principles.
54. This seems distinct from the earlier image of a crowd being roused to the point of demanding blood.
55. In the decades before Emancipation only a few isolated individuals had carried dissent to the point of revolutionary commitment.
56. The standard deviation can usefully be visualized as the distance from the mean to the point of inflection of the bell-shaped curve.
57. And he had always been so meticulous about his appearance, almost to the point of vanity.
58. He laid siege to the fortress and gradually weakened it to the point of collapse.
59. Although the Benedictine rule imposed specific obligations upon each individual, it was rarely severe to the point of austerity.
60. Up to the point of overload and pressure, you might say that the inexorable logic of the Hay Fever Theory does hold.
More similar words: to the point, in point of, point of view, get into the habit of, point out, into the bargain, point, in toto, points, in total, point to, appoint, pinpoint, significant other, viewpoint, appointed, standpoint, pointless, go into, focal point, checkpoint, disappoint, point-blank, appointment, pointillism, counterpoint, selling point, disappointed, a case in point, by dint of.