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How to use by virtue of in a sentence

Looking for sentences with "by virtue of"? Here are some examples.

Sentence Examples
Access to city spaces should be guaranteed by virtue of citizenship, but it is increasingly becoming a privilege conferred by status.
Most blog software imbues the end result with a blog format purely by virtue of its use.
In reply he claims that he and his fellows hold their elevated position by virtue of a number of qualities which they enjoy simultaneously.
As the recitals to the Policy make clear, the appellant by virtue of the Policy is entitled to be a member of the Society.
Tattersall's has been able to withstand severe pressure on costs by virtue of a blessed business environment.
Well, we are a world power, by virtue of history, and by virtue of our military power.
On the contrary, it is only by virtue of the irrational and anarchic nature of the profit system that such a development could take place.
An existing use simply exists, by virtue of long user or the implementation of some past planning permission.
One says that our rights come by virtue of our humanity because we are created in God's image and likeness.
Informants lost to historical representation by virtue of the aporia or oversights of historical conventions were not my primary concern.
Pop music is attractive to advertisers by virtue of its popularity with the audience.
Because when we're emotionally bankrupt by virtue of having burned ourselves out, then we have nothing to give.
The 'masstige' brand commands a premium by virtue of sound branding and mass appeal.
Heat, or thermal energy, is transferred from one body to another by virtue of a temperature differential.
He was easily recognisable not merely by virtue of his profound bass baritone voice, but because of his girth.
With this approach, only particles visible by virtue of their tinctorial characteristics were counted.
When immigrants express such extremist views, they feel the land belongs to them by virtue of their ethnicity.
He picked up four late wickets by virtue of keeping the ball up in the blockhole.
And Shaitan will be left miserable and alone by virtue of both our prayers and our actions in the way of Allah!
For a time, he simply continued by virtue of the powers he had won as a triumvir.
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Examples from Classical Literature
In his own pocket he dropped the 85 cents accruing to him by virtue of his chemical knowledge.
Nevertheless, in France, the barnacle goose may be eaten on fast-days by virtue of this old belief in its marine origin.
The barnacle goose is a well-known bird, and is eaten on fast-days in France, by virtue of this old belief in its marine origin.
The diffidence of his tone proved startling to her by virtue of its unusualness.
If valid it is enforceable by virtue of s. 12 of that Act as a final judgment of the High Court in its civil jurisdiction.
Attention was drawn to the fact that by virtue of the laws which Darwin himself had discovered isolation leads to etiolation.
Do they not sometimes get called waspish and shrewish by virtue of their very chastity?
She studied the friendly, jesuitic wrinkles in his face, by virtue of which he managed to conceal his real thoughts.
He assumes the shape of any animal at will, or flies in the air, all by virtue of the karakia or incantation.
The Fathers of the Sulpician Order, by virtue of a grant in the year 1663, were proprietors of the whole of this rich district.
He was bound to service in war by virtue of his landholding instead of by his relationship to the king.
Bidache was made a duch-pairie for the family De Grammont, who, by virtue of their letters patent, were absolute sovereigns.
Walton, by virtue of its unburned pine woods, seemed the least hurt of any place along the line.
More than two could not attack him at once by virtue of the narrowness of the passage.
She had the pallidly dusky skin of a Eurasian, but, by virtue of nature or artifice, her cheeks wore a peachlike bloom.
I answer, he may, by virtue of his office, reprehend any person or persons that walk the streets too late at a seasonable hour.
The barcarole is one of the few which by virtue of its serene and classical beauty has still been able to survive it.
God alone is the real existent, all else is an existent by virtue of him.
So promotion had come to him tardily, and by virtue of the slowly-working laws of seniority.
The police officer, by virtue of his knowledge of the valley, led the way.
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