Awarding in a sentence as a noun

He shows promise but, like awarding Obama the Nobel peace prize, this is just too soon.

What should really happen is for hackathons to stop awarding prizes.

That's what the gp is implying might be exceptional and worthy of awarding fees.

It has not said how much stronger than "sanctionable" a case can be before awarding fees is an abuse of discretion on the part of the District Court.

Seems to me that's awarding a really dangerous amount of power to sexist loons on the Internet.... I suppose I should defend the "sexist loons" label.

The case was about something very specific, and the justifications for awarding damages were also specific.

* Quotes because it is becoming less and less common to work for a company for decades, so the traditional system of awarding vacation based on length of tenure is becoming more and more insane.

> Governments should use the helpfulness of ISPs as a criterion for awarding public contractsIt's almost impressive how even the most innocuous public projects can be turned against us by the governments.

How can cardiac surgeons afford to save half of these people if they know they will probably be sued by many of the other half with Texas juries awarding millions in damages for many of these statitically unavoidable deaths?

This isn't just a joke; many, many professors have reported their deans bearing down on them for awarding too many bad grades, often to students who are so incompetent that they cannot write basic English sentences or perform long division.

"Staying at 499 shareholders or fewer is something Facebook has worried about since at least 2007, and sidestepped by creating a special kind of restricted stock unit for new employees and making small talent acquisitions that avoided, when possible, awarding start-ups and their investors with Facebook stock.

Awarding definitions

noun

a grant made by a law court; "he criticized the awarding of compensation by the court"

See also: award