Sentences with phrase «whole crux»

The phrase "whole crux" refers to the main or central point of an issue or problem. It represents the essential or most important aspect. Full definition
In fact, that's the whole crux of the debate on campaign finance reform.
Well yeah, the whole crux of doing a movie is mixing things together like that.
Everything you could utilise for a final epic war vs demons, which is the whole crux of the game and you find yourself being given the bum's rush out of the door by Cullen»cause some bad tempered girl scout came up to your house and knocked on your door looking for a fight.
«For Mario, the game is the whole crux of the situation, that's the whole point of his existence.
The whole crux of the CO2 issue is that it crystallises our fears for the future and provides a pressure point which might force political action if CO2 can be linked to something as potentially disastrous as a runaway unnatural change in global climate.
But the logical deduction from the German experience and precedent, and the whole crux of the matter is that if a state can extend or expand and remain legally the same, with all its laws and obligations and duties and privileges intact, then surely it is logical to state that if a state diminishes or reduces itself or separates itself, then similarly all its laws, rights and obligations will also remain intact.
But there's the whole crux: a great feature that might've factored into the initial buying decision for some is just gone and now requires a workaround to maintain.
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