How to Use expediency in a Sentence

expediency

noun
  • The defendants' lack of expediency was a breach of the standard of care.
    Christina Hall, Detroit Free Press, 2 Apr. 2024
  • The Democrats should thank their stars that some people still put the rule of law ahead of political expediency.
    WSJ, 17 Dec. 2020
  • Then a court that valued expediency over the children’s safety moved them to a place they could never be loved.
    Kevin Fisher-Paulson, San Francisco Chronicle, 12 Oct. 2021
  • That expediency is leading Johnson into the arms of the White House.
    Luke Reader, The Conversation, 24 July 2019
  • But your husband and mother-in-law are both choosing expediency all the way to misery.
    Carolyn Hax, Washington Post, 11 Feb. 2024
  • As a result of that frenzy to catch up, little attention is paid to what is moved and how it’s moved, opting for expediency over the right way to do it.
    Ramesh Shurma, Forbes, 8 Mar. 2023
  • Those who opt for expediency can wager $5 on any fighter to win their bout at UFC 278 this weekend.
    Xl Media, cleveland, 16 Aug. 2022
  • Which is to say, it was born out of expediency, rather than religious passion.
    Aatish Taseer Richard Mosse, New York Times, 3 Nov. 2022
  • Some of the people who know Mr. Bezos said his new public face was for business expediency.
    Nick Wingfield and Nellie Bowles, New York Times, 12 Jan. 2018
  • Ibrahimi approached a medic and told him, for expediency’s sake, that the girl with a broken thigh bone was his sister and that the boy in the next room with a broken clavicle was his brother.
    Washington Post, 17 Dec. 2021
  • The chain will squeeze expediency from other corners as well.
    Brian Barrett, Wired, 9 Nov. 2020
  • This is hardly the worst example of playing fast and loose with election laws for the sake of partisan expediency.
    Jay Cost, National Review, 9 Oct. 2017
  • The judge will walk both parties through the strengths and weaknesses of their cases, provide advice and, in the event there is a trial, help to narrow the focus for the purposes of expediency.
    Courtney Shea, refinery29.com, 23 Aug. 2019
  • Satire was always a point of the show, but the fact that the family was tied together by something more than expediency, something that might on a good day be called love, was key to its success.
    Robert Lloyd, Los Angeles Times, 26 Aug. 2021
  • In any political partnership with the rich, even one undertaken out of expediency, it’s the rich who are likely to get their way in the end.
    J.c. Pan, The New Republic, 30 June 2020
  • For expediency, the default access control list can be quickly changed to grant the world read access — and then it can be returned to the default just 30 minutes later.
    Steve Riley, Forbes, 23 Sep. 2021
  • For the sake of expediency, our 42 choices do not include performances that are already sold out.
    George Varga, San Diego Union-Tribune, 26 May 2024
  • To be sure, Americans have had small families for quite some time, and life expediency has increased.
    Steven Camarota, National Review, 8 July 2019
  • But expediency was kicked to the curb in favor of perfection, as both designers chased quality to the nth degree.
    Robert Ross, Robb Report, 16 Jan. 2022
  • Yet Grotian had been urging expediency for weeks, writing four times to the chancellery and asking it to take charge of an expedited process.
    Washington Post, 20 Aug. 2021
  • But critics of the company claim that expediency is a self-serving rationale that ignores wider harms to the internet as a whole.
    Brian Barrett, Wired, 31 Aug. 2020
  • Voters are pretty cynical themselves and aren’t shocked when politicians veer to the low road for expediency.
    George Skelton, Los Angeles Times, 6 Mar. 2024
  • Such lessons in expediency boil down to keeping their job while facing wrath from all sides, including Congress.
    Noëlle McAfee, Scientific American, 13 June 2024
  • Chirac never shed an image as an old-school party boss driven less by ideas and ideals than expediency and self-preservation.
    Sebastian Rotella, Los Angeles Times, 26 Sep. 2019
  • Likewise, the expediency and efficiency of her training course to equip Zoe with handy survival skills.
    David Rooney, The Hollywood Reporter, 12 May 2023
  • But did the state learn from James’ harrowing case to conduct Miller’s execution with grace and expediency?
    Krista Stevens, Longreads, 5 Oct. 2022
  • The bike can also learn your routine by analyzing your calendar and plotting the best routes, whether for scenery of expediency.
    Darren Orf, Popular Mechanics, 29 May 2017
  • Pace said the space council opted for a bottom-up process in the name of expediency, rather than trying to create an international treaty.
    Eric Berger, Ars Technica, 18 June 2018
  • Instead it was rushed for political expediency, approved along strict partisan lines and, in my opinion, has severely missed the mark.
    Erin Stewart, Hartford Courant, 4 Feb. 2024
  • The good news is that Rubio’s Ukraine vote appears to have been merely an act of contemptible political expediency rather than a conversion to isolationism.
    Max Boot, Washington Post, 5 July 2024

Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'expediency.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

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