Carte in a sentence as a noun

The service could help take care of those issues but it'd have to be on an a la carte basis.

They had carte blanche to create a wonderful new interface and they mostly just copied Sublime Text.

If "traditional" cable TV is to survive they are going to have to offer a-la carte channel choice.

You're giving people carte blanche to keep focusing more and more on racial characteristics as being essential to them as people.

If you present something as fighting foreign evildoers, though, you basically get carte blanche.

It's not carte blanche for Microsoft to go through your email, but it seems to allow them to do it for a very particular purpose.

It isn't reasonable to expect that signal to recur on every repost; that would amount to carte blanche for reposts.

Amazon, Apple, and Netflix are doing a fine job of figuring out what a la carte TV show delivery will eventually mean.

Their government has employed a different system to ensure wage levels meet workers needs and is nothing like giving companies carte blanche to pay poverty wages.

The government's assertions of the need for secrecy as a matter of national security in virtually everything have essentially given it carte blanche to do as it pleases AND without true oversight.

Subsequent revisions have made it seem that if the NSA doesn't have the immediate ability to query the companies' backends, then they have some kind of carte blanche ability to ask for data and immediately receive it.

However, it strikes me that bundling them with logins is an exceptionally bad idea, and as you need them you can either implement them ala carte or plug in a provider who would let you keep control over the most important 30 seconds of a customer's relationship with you.

One regularly repeated meme of the era was that people didn't want to pirate music, they just wanted it "as easy" or "no drm" or "ala carte" or "all you can eat".While statistically these were all guaranteed to be true for at least some users, in aggregate they were red herrings.

The first elite university to break up the monolithic credential into an a la carte system of finer-grained credentials, with high standards backed by the reputation of the institution but open to all, regardless of how they learned the material, will change the world of education forever.

Carte definitions

noun

a list of dishes available at a restaurant; "the menu was in French"

See also: menu card