Constituency in a sentence as a noun

Hard to fault him for publishing where his constituency goes to every day.

I've seen no reason to believe that he is, other than the projections of his constituency.

People tend to be happier, and more work gets done, when the government listens to and reacts to the concerns of its constituency, than when it doesn't.

All of the ballot boxes in a constituency are counted together in a secure, but open area.

The protests say, so a political system otherwise ill-disposed to address those issues, that they _matter_, and that there is a constituency to fix them.

I think the mature thing to do, as cynical as this might sound, is to realize that the government is obscenely out of touch with its constituency, and stop going to them for help.

"I think that he has to realize he's bringing investors in as a new constituency right now, and I think he's got to show them the respect that they deserve because he's asking them for their money.

Long story short, every politician who had a contractor working on the project in his constituency started making noise about all the jobs that would be lost if we were to shut down the program.

Another way to put it, cities should be doing great things like this to increase property value, while simultaneously fostering new construction, as a balanced approach to serve their constituency.

Kerr does a good job reminding readers that what happened to Swartz was absolutely standard for federal prosecutors, and the outrage is triggered largely because he has a powerful constituency looking for redress on his *******.

The "one-representative-per-constituency" link doesn't mean much to those of us who end up getting "represented" by a parliament where none of the elected MP's have views remotely like our own because our views are uncommon enough in every constituency.

Constituency definitions

noun

the body of voters who elect a representative for their area