Synonym: pertinent, to the point. Similar words: point, appoint, point to, point out, in point of, appointment, a case in point, to the life. Meaning: adj. having precise or logical relevance to the matter at hand.
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121. It got to the point that some of the burgers were served straight from the freezer, raw!
122. With our vast information resources we can get to the point quickly, to give constructive advice without juggling words.
123. Girls tend to internalize their fears, sometimes to the point of making themselves sick.
124. It got to the point where I just couldn't handle alcohol, it was out of control, so I quit.
125. By now the eaglets had developed to the point where they could fly a little.
126. They were both unconventional to the point of eccentricity, their actions incomprehensible to ordinary beings.
127. Also, and much to the point, it was farmed by the same obliging farmer, Mr Healey.
128. Individual properties have sometimes been made somehow dependent on general properties by these philosophers, but that is nothing to the point.
129. None of the supply routes go close to the point where Sunderby's aircraft ditched.
130. More to the point, they vote as proxies for private shareholders who typically deposit their shares in the bank's custody.
131. It got to the point where I couldn't remember any of the reasons I loved him.
132. I thought I might just as well come down to the point.
133. No side gives up its principles or priorities but no side pushes to the point of total victory.
133. Sentencedict.com try its best to collect and create good sentences.
134. They have taken to increasingly seductive gimmicks, to the point of thumbing down passing motorists.
135. School buildings have deteriorated to the point where they pose a health threat to both students and teachers.
136. But now it's come to the point, the supermarkets are not in favour.
137. Sometimes charming, he could also be egocentric to the point of megalomania.
138. Frankly, dear readers, I was getting bored waiting for the graphs to get to the point of maximum excitement.
139. Yet it is condemned by some as inflexible to the point where it can not be a curriculum for all children.
140. I never want to get to the point where it's all about my needs, and the hell with anybody else. Drew Barrymore
141. Or, more to the point, how they could live in peace and make money.
142. Both of them noticed with shock how alarmingly thin she was, frail to the point of vanishing.
143. Yet it s a one-joke play that teases out its central idea to the point of nervous exhaustion.
144. It was as if, having goaded her to the point of total capitulation, he'd opted for a wary cooling-off period.
145. Factors which correlate strongly with autonomy are: Strong goal orientation, even to the point of creating unnecessary hurdles.
146. More to the point, Labour's legacy from the 1970s and 1980s lives on.
147. I have fond memories of Sussex-playing pool and, much more to the point, the excellent discussions on science.
148. What was more to the point was that socialism in power meant economic conservatism in practice.
149. From B's perspective of obtaining his freedom the unresolved issues were equally fundamental to the point addressed.
150. Ignoring the excuse for hysteria, Charity came straight to the point.
More similar words: point, appoint, point to, point out, in point of, appointment, a case in point, to the life, to the full, to the limit, at other times, in the past, to the number of, to the contrary, joint, go into, totally, report, keep on, keep off, for the present, deposit, the proletariat, report on, reporter, keep out of, join, coin, take the place of, reporting.