Brunt in a sentence as a noun

The "average Greek" should bear the brunt of it.

I can assure you the US is feeling the brunt of the IPv4 crunch.

The worst part is we have to take the brunt of the rage while we get on the bus to make more money for these people.

But they are sometimes at odds since they place the brunt of what they demand of a language at different places.

As you said, they benefit from the goodwill disproportionately and they also took the brunt of the PR damage.

Continental philosophy gets most of the brunt of this because of the prolixity and verbosity of their texts.

While a generation lived under this leader's direction, their children suffered the brunt of the eccentricity and thoughtlessness that the era inculcated.

It might be of benefit to neighbors he is bothering, and by extension anyone else who will be forced to bear the brunt of externalities he similarly ignores in the future.

The US should bear the brunt of the cost of defending Europe against whom now, exactly?The Federal Reserve came into being the same year as the income tax, and the US dollar has lost 99% of its value since then.

The cynical side of my concern is that search engines under pressure due to spammers will let niche/indie content bear the brunt of the cost, because that content is not "high quality" from the search engine perspective of "we have valuable ad inventory that lets us monetize these searches.

At least in Julie's eyes, since she received the brunt of TPWs inappropriateness?I'm sure that if I was under that kind of stress from one of the Founder's of the company I was working for, it would most likely contribute to me seeing other encounters as something that it wasn't...

Guaranteed funding, especially with only the masking of "democracy," was a fast path for a super power that thinks itself a "super hero" in the world's eye -- and largely was seen as such to those who didn't face the brunt of its violence -- to guarantee its continued exploits and an accelerating industry of war. Elections put little if any checks/balances upon a congressional network of plunderers who mostly serve the same corporate and violent interests, policies, and strategists, but through lightly varying vocabulary come election.

Brunt definitions

noun

main force of a blow etc; "bore the brunt of the attack"