How to Use cherry-pick in a Sentence

cherry-pick

verb
  • Even the politicians who attended the rallies cherry-picked which parts to respond to.
    Em Readman, refinery29.com, 7 May 2024
  • Her job: monitoring Western broadcasts to cherry-pick news that showed the West in a bad light to air on the network’s shows.
    Constant Méheut, New York Times, 24 Mar. 2023
  • Our favorite way to play that growth isn’t by trying to cherry-pick which retailer will win at the online game.
    Brett Owens, Forbes, 16 Oct. 2024
  • There, shoppers could cherry-pick from different eras to curate their looks.
    Boutayna Chokrane, Vogue, 30 Oct. 2023
  • Many Ivy League students have learned to cherry-pick easy-grading professors.
    Karin Klein, The Mercury News, 13 Nov. 2024
  • What to watch: The trend could widen health disparities as doctors flee to cash-pay businesses and cherry-pick patients.
    Tina Reed, Axios, 7 Oct. 2024
  • Threads is a brand extension versus a totally new product, and the early joiners (like me) were easy to cherry-pick at launch.
    Jennifer Jolly, USA TODAY, 11 July 2023
  • Programming isn’t only about cherry-picking the best film.
    Zac Ntim, Deadline, 3 Nov. 2024
  • Boston even cherry-picked some strategy from the Warriors.
    Danny Emerman, The Mercury News, 18 June 2024
  • As the genre turns 50, its most rewarding songs wisely cherry-pick from the past while staying true to rap’s reputation as a harbinger of what’s next.
    Pitchfork, 11 Dec. 2023
  • Democrats warn that Trump supporters would cherry-pick clips of the video to spin conspiracy theories.
    Scott MacFarlane, CBS News, 20 Dec. 2023
  • Fox said Dominion had mischaracterized the record and cherry-picked quotes stripped of key context.
    David Bauder, Anchorage Daily News, 18 Feb. 2023
  • The speed at which the Saudi league has been able to cherry-pick such familiar, if fading, names from Europe’s elite clubs has made the country’s ambition feel like an inevitability.
    Ahmed Al Omran, New York Times, 13 July 2023
  • His peers criticized him for cherry-picking data, and his comments drew backlash from healthcare providers who were overwhelmed by the strain on U.S. hospitals.
    Claire Bugos, Verywell Health, 27 Nov. 2024
  • The San Sebastian film festival has cherry-picked the best of Cannes’ competition lineup for its Perlak section this year.
    Scott Roxborough, The Hollywood Reporter, 16 Aug. 2024
  • Taxpayers deserve an independent and complete review — not cherry-picking topics and then putting a thumb on the scale.
    Daniel Borenstein, The Mercury News, 29 Mar. 2024
  • Enck accused the plastics industry of cherry-picking research, too.
    Emily Le Coz, USA TODAY, 1 May 2023
  • Prosecutors, however, said Trump’s defense had cherry-picked two of Chutkan’s statements out of context and misapplied the law to wrongly argue that the judge was biased against him.
    Rachel Weiner, Washington Post, 27 Sep. 2023
  • Well, and speaking of which, some of your Republican colleagues have cherry-picked some of the images to frankly further some conspiracy theories.
    Nbc Universal, NBC News, 26 Nov. 2023
  • In its second year under Hitchcock’s leadership, the festival seems to be settling into a role of cherry-picking highlights from the year and bringing them to audiences in L.A.
    Mark Olsen, Los Angeles Times, 1 Oct. 2024
  • But potential 2027 election rivals like Ruffin are also cherry-picking elements of her rhetoric to make their own case to voters.
    Ania Nussbaum, Bloomberg.com, 2 June 2023
  • The Biden administration pushed back on the findings by Republicans, calling it a partisan effort that sought to cherry-pick facts ahead of an election.
    Anne Flaherty, ABC News, 8 Sep. 2024
  • Ruth Holton-Hudson mischaracterizes the Exxon lawsuits, cherry-picks the stock data and blames the fossil fuel companies for climate change.
    Letters To The Editor, The Mercury News, 9 May 2024
  • Fox News, which denies any wrongdoing, has accused Dominion of cherry-picking emails to present a self-serving narrative about what the right-wing network did after the 2020 election.
    Oliver Darcy, CNN, 29 Mar. 2023
  • Protasiewicz has said her opponents are cherry-picking cases in her record, and defense attorneys note some defendants are in jail for as long as two years awaiting trial or a plea deal.
    Molly Beck, Journal Sentinel, 27 Mar. 2023
  • Defense attorneys have long said there was never a plan to attack the Capitol and prosecutors' case was largely built on online messages cherry-picked out of context.
    Lindsay Whitehurst, BostonGlobe.com, 3 June 2023
  • The drafters based this assertion partially on a tendentious and cherry-picked misreading of a study of Oregon Medicaid enrollees published in 2012.
    Michael Hiltzik, Los Angeles Times, 9 Mar. 2023
  • The governor cherry-picks data that supports his grand proclamations and excludes data that presents a different picture.
    Fred Medinger, Baltimore Sun, 5 Nov. 2024
  • But somebody cherry-picked a few passages from an 800-page training manual and now Ivey is more than willing to junk the state’s one educational success story to appease the anti-woke crusaders.
    Kyle Whitmire | , al, 25 Apr. 2023
  • Horowitz remembers the Merwin transaction as a vital moment in his growth, but Merwin and his wife always believed, without any proof, that Horowitz had cherry-picked his library for his own benefit.
    Tad Friend, The New Yorker, 21 Oct. 2024

Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'cherry-pick.' 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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