The phone's a piece of plastic, a piece of metal, a piece of glass.
|
|
"My pixel contains a piece of roof blurred in with a piece of the ground and a piece of the tree and a piece of the car sitting in the driveway," says Scott.
|
|
"A piece of something is better than a piece of nothing," he said.
|
|
I believe if you want a piece of cake, have a piece of cake.
|
|
You get to sit in front of a piece of work, a piece of art.
|
|
"A tablet the size of a piece of paper folds like a piece of paper," Nelson says.
|
|
They all want a piece of that Oval Office; they want a piece of the West Wing.
|
|
I eat a piece of a matcha coconut donut and a piece of a PB&J donut.
|
|
They all want a piece of that Oval Office; they want a piece of the West Wing.
|
|
"It's a piece of weed in there," says Snoop, showing off a piece of his fried chicken. 11.
|
|
Putting on a piece of eyewear should be just as important as putting on a piece of clothing.
|
|
They all want a piece of that Oval Office, they all want a piece of the West Wing.
|
|
They all want a piece of that Oval Office, they all want a piece of that West Wing.
|
|
Marriage was just a piece of paper and a piece of jewelry but our hearts will always be real.
|
|
It wanted a piece of Kesha's triumph without acknowledging that it had already destroyed a piece of Kesha's heart.
|
|
And if someone can own a piece of Mars on Earth, can someone own a piece of Mars on Mars?
|
|
All rooms showcased a piece of crystal outside the door like a piece of art that was encased in glass.
|
|
I down a bottle of cold water while making a piece of avocado toast and a piece of jam toast.
|
|
I'm not very strict with my diet: If I want a piece of pizza, I eat a piece of pizza.
|
|
But can it learn what it is that makes a piece of music listenable, or a piece of art perusable?
|
|
Even though Simon's gone, she has been "adopted" by 200 more of her Marine "sons," who are always welcome to claim a piece of her heart, a piece of her life and a piece of her love.
|
|
"We want to make people think of these as human stories rather than as a piece of dance or a piece of theater or a piece of music," Nigel Redden, the festival's director, said in a phone interview.
|
|
"They all want a piece of that Oval Office, they want a piece of the West Wing," Trump said in March.
|
|
It vaguely resembles a pot of gold, a piece of French toast, a kitchen sponge, a piece of cheese... take your pick.
|
|
An operator went after a piece of wallpaper, peeling off a piece of wall and she said, well, you&aposll need repair.
|
|
A piece of green felt and a piece of white felt, the colors of Franco Ontario, are pinned to the front of her jacket.
|
|
Camp is both an aesthetic mode, inherent to a piece of art, and a sensibility, inherent to the way we interpret a piece of art.
|
|
"Everyone wants to work in the White House, they want a piece of the Oval Office, they want a piece of the West Wing," he said.
|
|
Notre-Dame also holds a piece of wood believed to be a piece of the cross and a nail that some believe was used for the crucifixion.
|
|
But neither part — a piece of the interior panel in the main cabin and a piece of engine covering — provided significant information about the aircraft's final location.
|
|
The cathedral also contained a piece of wood believed to be a piece of the cross and a nail believed to have been used in the crucifixion.
|
|
"When Kobe Bryant died, a piece of me died, and as I look at this arena and across the globe, a piece of you died," he said.
|
|
My work "Untitled (Double Entendre)" [2019] is a series of objects — a piece of glass, a piece of wood, a stack of books — but I photograph them.
|
|
It would all bring up memories of us together, so I feel like in that way each photo has a piece of him and a piece of me.
|
|
"Buying a piece of this isn't like buying a diamond necklace from Cartier, you're actually owning a piece of Hollywood memorabilia," said Isabel Yeo, Julien's Auctions' jewelry specialist.
|
|
He picks the most appealing patterns and traces them with a marker on a piece of acetate, which he affixes to a piece of mirror-polished stainless steel.
|
|
"When you lose a leg, you don't just lose a leg — you lose a piece of heart, you lose a piece of mind, you lose a piece of self-confidence," Mr. Cairo said on Wednesday at the center in Kabul, one of seven rehabilitation centers that he leads across the country.
|
|
Previously, your query planner was a human being, not a piece of software, and a relational database is a piece of software that would just give you a database.
|
|
It's one thing to compute the structure of a piece of music, but another to compute a piece of music in terms of how music is perceived by humans.
|
|
But there's a difference between treating a piece of information as newsworthy even though it was hacked and treating a piece of information as newsworthy because it was hacked.
|
|
"At the end of the day the flag is just a piece of cloth and I am not going to value a piece of cloth over people's lives," he said.
|
|
Other Christian artifacts: Notre Dame also held a nail believed to have been used in the crucifixion and a piece of wood believed to be a piece of the cross.
|
|
"At the end of the day the flag is just a piece of cloth and I am not going to value a piece of cloth over people's lives," Kaepernick said.
|
|
When you buy a record, you get a piece of music and a piece of art, one that can be just as fascinating and evocative as the songs on the album.
|
|
"He's too big a piece of the team and too big a piece of something we don't have, which is somebody who can create runs without hitting a homer," Collins said.
|
|
"If your economic interests are aligned, and if we own a piece of their economy and they own a piece of ours, then everyone has skin in the game," he said.
|
|
" It calls the gun a "piece of American History.
|
|
I took a picture once ... A piece of tape.
|
|
And remember ... Kris gets a piece of that pie.
|
|
" She goes, "Do I get a piece of that?
|
|
It was huge and contained a double shot of vodka and all sorts of stuff on skewers: a small hamburger, a piece of cheese, a piece of meat, grapes, celery, and bacon.
|
|
The idea is that whereas a ne'er-do-well might crack your password, that action is futile without access to a piece of hardware you keep close, or a piece of your body.
|
|
I'M A PIECE OF _____ Regret is perhaps a strong word for what the Atlanta rapper Father is engaged in on his pleasantly wobbly new album, "I'm a Piece of _____" (Awful), but it's close.
|
|
Exclusive. Noun: "A piece of news, or the reporting of a piece of news, obtained by a newspaper or other news organization, along with the privilege of using it first," according to Dictionary.com.
|
|
"That's just a piece of the puzzle," Moore told PEOPLE.
|
|
Fidelity owns a piece of Lyft in addition to Uber.
|
|
As a piece of filmmaking craft, it's competent, if unremarkable.
|
|
A piece of bread in Venezuela costs about 500 bolivars.
|
|
"It's like bringing a piece of the 7th continent home!"
|
|
But she makes it sound like a piece of cake.
|
|
"The brain isn't just a piece of cortex," Sejnowski said.
|
|
All teams will get a piece of $13,000 for participating.
|
|
As a piece of cultural analysis, the argument still resonates.
|
|
Well, a piece of the pharmaceutical industry, to be honest.
|
|
A piece of the Turin Mummy used in the analysis.
|
|
CRANE: So, this is a piece of an asteroid, right?
|
|
Mirror is looking to take a piece of that pie.
|
|
Take out a piece of paper and grab a pen.
|
|
It was definitely a piece of cake for Lochte (duh).
|
|
We came and he was just a piece of meat.
|
|
Have you ever been trapped in a piece of jewelry?
|
|
I almost cut a piece of myself for your life.
|
|
He drops a piece of tasajo steak next to it.
|
|
Essentially, a piece of content is given a unique identifier.
|
|
But normally, a piece of Cabrales is much more affordable.
|
|
Stir, garnish with a piece of strawberry and serve immediately.
|
|
The first trainer gave the raven a piece of bread.
|
|
HopscotchGrab a piece of sidewalk chalk for some fitness fun.
|
|
Now, the hottest new display is a piece of wood.
|
|
Every year, every country wants a piece of the podium.
|
|
But as a piece of plot, it's a terrible cheat.
|
|
It was, in other words, a piece of fake news.
|
|
Mark Walker depicted it as a piece of flaming wreckage.
|
|
He also gave the judges a piece of his mind.
|
|
It's truly a piece of software, it changes over time.
|
|
All anyone wants is a piece of the vanilla pie.
|
|
Each of these things is a piece of the puzzle.
|
|
Pick up a piece of moss, and you'll find tardigrades.
|
|
I think this is a piece of this preexisting framework.
|
|
That's just a piece of her (can't stop, won't stop).
|
|
Everyone. Even Justin Bieber wants a piece of the spotlight!
|
|
It's a piece of political theater that isn't even entertaining.
|
|
Fine restaurants and trendy bars are a piece of that.
|
|
Just a piece of arm candy to make smartphones jealous.
|
|
You give me that stuff on a piece of paper.
|
|
But it's an art project, not a piece of history.
|
|
We had a piece of the railing that was dangling.
|
|
She calls to give them a piece of her mind.
|
|
"It's like [a piece of] the Berlin Wall," said one.
|
|
Just how much would a piece of beauty history cost?
|
|
And, perhaps, think of it as a piece of theater.
|
|
Now Porsche wants a piece of Rimac's electric vehicle magic.
|
|
Now, you can buy a piece of the startup's history.
|
|
People always talk about getting a piece of the pie.
|
|
All jokes aside, Justin Bieber is a piece of shit.
|
|
The buyer will own a piece of Kardashian family lore.
|
|
My favorite keepsake is a piece of a goal post.
|
|
Poor Hercules: everyone just wants a piece of his dick.
|
|
Now it's a piece of cake — find out why, ahead.
|
|
Republicans crafted a piece of legislation that faced immense odds.
|
|
He shimmed the sword from a piece of oak baseboard.
|
|
They don't need a piece of paper to be patriotic.
|
|
And we just found Jesus on a piece of toast.
|
|
"You'll still get a piece of the prank," Jesse added.
|
|
When it's part of a piece of poetry and prose.
|
|
That's a lot of responsibility for a piece of dough.
|
|
Each piece is framed as a piece of online ephemera.
|
|
CAIRO — A piece of luggage adrift in the Mediterranean Sea.
|
|
But corn could also grab a piece of the pie.
|
|
A piece of fine art might not trade for decades.
|
|
"I was soft as a piece of kinmedai," he said.
|
|
But he was as unmoving as a piece of rebar.
|
|
She passed out and fell against a piece of furniture.
|
|
QUINTANILLA: AND THIS IS SORT OF A PIECE OF THAT.
|
|
It was like getting a piece of your heart back.
|
|
Of course, weight is just a piece of the puzzle.
|
|
The Lyft partnership fills in a piece of the puzzle.
|
|
He wanted me to have a piece of him forever.
|
|
Of course, underneath every home is a piece of land.
|
|
Our Lady of Loreto is a piece of that history.
|
|
The drugs were found inside a piece of checked luggage.
|
|
"Each one is a piece of art," Mr. Miller said.
|
|
On season one, Walt tosses a piece of fulminated mercury.
|
|
They did it with a piece of software called MapReduce.
|
|
I would love to own a piece of that trash.
|
|
There they were given a piece of paper to sign.
|
|
In reality, Birth was a piece of hateful, racist propaganda.
|
|
But ultimately, as a piece of "art," it makes sense.
|
|
One that, if this were a piece of fiction, or
|
|
Reserve Chair Janet Yellen, Shelby adopted a piece of Sanders's
|
|
I want a piece of paper signed that proves it!
|
|
A piece of it had already been recovered last week.
|
|
His jaw clicked as he chewed a piece of gum.
|
|
It read to me like a piece of political propaganda.
|
|
Everybody gets a piece of that money, except the athletes.
|
|
Why it matters: Everyone wants a piece of Silicon Valley.
|
|
So, naturally, Marvel wants a piece of the guy, too.
|
|
Finally, he slid a piece of paper across the table.
|
|
Armed groups don't disappear because of a piece of paper.
|
|
Would that change if Qatar owned a piece of American?
|
|
We have a piece of his life in our hands.
|
|
Would you mind if we borrowed a piece of yours?
|
|
A piece of waffle falls off and clogs the drain.
|
|
In a piece of poop lives a whole wondrous ecosystem.
|
|
Once upon a time there was … a piece of wood.
|
|
I think that speaks well to a piece of culture.
|
|
You should put a piece of scotch tape over it.
|
|
KS: Yeah, put a piece of scotch tape over it.
|
|
You write a piece of political music, then it's performed.
|
|
Gang members slid a piece of paper under the door.
|
|
Other tech giants want a piece of the pie, too.
|
|
Uber SoftBank wants a piece of Uber — at a discount.
|
|
Others may offer you a piece of candy in sympathy.
|
|
It's on a piece of paper with the right format.
|
|
"Antitrust is only a piece of this," Mr. Hovenkamp said.
|
|
Europe was a piece of cake to send people back.
|
|
I snack on some Popcorners and a piece of chocolate.
|
|
I didn't set out to write a piece of prophecy.
|
|
Now, if only he could buy a piece of Denmark...
|
|
Everyone should be welcome to "take a piece" of America.
|
|
He held a piece of meat right around my shoulder.
|
|
Really, it's just a painting on a piece of paper.
|
|
Well, I've seen it, and it's a piece of crap.
|
|
Now I could say I'd ridden a piece of history.
|
|
It's nice to get lost in a piece of art.
|
|
The fiber in a piece of fruit also increases fullness.
|
|
The article was, in fact, a piece of paid content.
|
|
Hamlet says: What a piece of work is a man!
|
|
Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota was chewing a piece of gum.
|
|
They're like a piece of toast — no butter, no jam.
|
|
Answer: When it is a piece of political performance art.
|
|
He and Renu want a piece of the new India.
|
|
But remember that a diploma's just a piece of paper.
|
|
Collectors can buy a piece of that legacy on Sept.
|
|
He also owns a piece of more than 3,500 units.
|
|
Ever hear a piece of chicken explode while it's microwaving?
|
|
That's like asking how long is a piece of string.
|
|
A piece of paper is glued against it and stamped.
|
|
London has been angling for a piece of the action.
|
|
I skewered a piece of chicken and some red pepper.
|
|
Suddenly encountering a piece of history can be a shock.
|
|
Does everyone get a piece of paper in the mail?
|
|
That's different from somebody picking up a piece of litter.
|
|
So what would such a piece of legislation look like?
|
|
I was just there as a piece of their puzzle.
|
|
He handed her a piece of bacon off his plate.
|
|
The NW want a piece of the fucking action yeno!
|
|
It's a piece of cartoon craziness whose fun goes nowhere.
|
|
What actually "spoils" someone's experience of a piece of entertainment?
|
|
If we were right, this was a piece of history.
|
|
Is there a piece of jewelry you aspire to own?
|
|
Amazon is looking for a piece of the audiophile market.
|
|
Now, Mr. Shefler wanted a piece of the bourbon boom.
|
|
DW: Well, and that is a piece of product feedback.
|
|
Craftsmanship A Boucheron artisan carving a piece of rock crystal.
|
|
She's got a permanent marker and a piece of cardboard.
|
|
So having a piece of technology that can detect that.
|
|
Morgan Stanley's richest clients are getting a piece of Uber.
|
|
"That lady is a piece of history," another chimes in.
|
|
Everyone wants a piece of CBD, and nobody is watching.
|
|
It's like a glitch in a piece of computer code.
|
|
With a tear-jerker trailer, we're tricked into mistaking a piece of advertising for a piece of art — a distinction it's possible to complicate but never, if the word "art" is to mean anything, undo.
|
|
"You're a piece of s—," Wirkus tells him at one point.
|
|
The package has more holes than a piece of Swiss cheese.
|
|
But simply as a piece of rhetoric, the budget is important.
|
|
"You will always own a piece of my heart," says one.
|
|
She was just like, 'Girl, he is a piece of work.
|
|
Here's a piece of hardware you won't break any time soon.
|
|
Sorry, this goat starts eating a piece of my expensive weave.
|
|
The N that folds over itself like a piece of ribbon?
|
|
Restaurant chains are hoping to get a piece of that pie.
|
|
This shift can be traced back to a piece of deregulation.
|
|
Up. You're a piece of shit who doesn't deserve this deal.
|
|
Each of us has a piece of the conversation to add.
|
|
I left the hotel feeling like a piece of luxurious velvet.
|
|
I'm a good person, R. Kelly a piece of fucking shit.
|
|
But as a piece of journalism, the interview was a failure.
|
|
The film works really well as a piece of 90s nostalgia.
|
|
A piece of political history is on the market once again.
|
|
And that village needs a piece of her at every turn.
|
|
Everyone wants a piece of Waititi's time, and for good reason.
|
|
EVERYONE would like a piece of the next Google or Facebook.
|
|
I feel like there is a piece of Ali in me.
|
|
It's like wandering through a piece of old-school vector art.
|
|
There'll be a hole or a piece of the puzzle missing.
|
|
The STATES Act, a piece of bipartisan legislation proposed by Sens.
|
|
All it takes is a piece of paper and a pin.
|
|
Schultz handed me a piece of cheese to buy Franklin's friendship.
|
|
After he arrived, Steve reportedly damaged a piece of moving equipment.
|
|
It's no wonder, then, that everyone wants a piece of YouTube.
|
|
"I licked the butter off a piece of toast," for example.
|
|
He may be unemployed, but he's still a piece of shit.
|
|
"It's a piece of shit," Ehrenreich told Rolling Stone in 2016.
|
|
As a piece of action filmmaking, the episode is ruthlessly efficient.
|
|
Looking to finish off a piece of timely Star Wars cosplay?
|
|
"The Sun actually spits off a piece of itself," says Jones.
|
|
As a piece of hardware, the Analogue Nt is undeniably impressive.
|
|
"A Piece of the World" - Christina Baker Kline (Morrow, $27.99) 9.
|
|
Deputies also seized a piece of a bedroom wall, WRAL reports.
|
|
The Affordable Care Act is not just a piece of legislation.
|
|
A piece of fried chicken from Harold's will change your life.
|
|
" "That's a piece of hope that we're actually clinging on to.
|
|
"You are truly a piece of evil," said a third woman.
|
|
Officers found a piece of duct tape with suspected blood there.
|
|
She felt like he treated her like a piece of trash.
|
|
But visitors can also take home a piece of the event.
|
|
There is just a piece of land with heaps of people.
|
|
She shared a piece of the pie with half-sister Kylie.
|
|
Misalignment as thin as a piece of paper can cause jams.
|
|
Aunts, uncles, cousins and Grandmom all want a piece of Anthony.
|
|
"This bill I think is a piece of crap," Graham said.
|
|
And she said, 'Could I give you a piece of advice?
|
|
How many mothers have offered you a piece of their placenta?
|
|
The Obama family has officially bought a piece of D.C. property.
|
|
For years, everyone has tried to take a piece of him.
|
|
Cautious computer users put a piece of tape over their webcam.
|
|
These are significant, generally beneficial results for a piece of legislation.
|
|
"Corey Lewandowski, you are a piece of s—," wrote Anna Kendrick.
|
|
"Do you want a piece of me?" whoever it is screams.
|
|
And companies are rushing to get a piece of that pie.
|
|
Maybe ... but Edelman's face fuzz was a piece of Patriots history.
|
|
His picture on a piece of paper just sold for $1,200,000.
|
|
And so I'm going to give you a piece of advice.
|
|
You shoot and have a piece of pizza," she says. "Baywatch?
|
|
They beamed when a peacekeeper offered them a piece of bread.
|
|
The wreckage is a piece of skin from a horizontal stabilizer.
|
|
If you want a piece of her… the clock is ticking!
|
|
Well, Coulter even gave them a piece of her mind, too.
|
|
Still, "it's like a piece of your heart's missing," says Pinson.
|
|
I see a piece of myself in each and every story.
|
|
They write it down on a piece of paper for you.
|
|
In 2008 a piece of Fukang was valued at $2 million.
|
|
And I just pretty much felt like a piece of crap.
|
|
As a play, it's very much a piece of its time.
|
|
To serve, place the pita on a piece of parchment paper.
|
|
A piece of the aircraft landed near the driveway, she said.
|
|
Or use a not so techy solution... a piece of tape.
|
|
Wolff is here to sell us on a piece of entertainment.
|
|
Agents also found a piece of a vehicle near the area.
|
|
All it takes is a piece of paper and a pen.
|
|
One example is a piece of malware Symantec previously dubbed Corentry.
|
|
They would also like a piece of the lucrative casino industry.
|
|
It's accurate and it's a piece of jewelry that you have.
|
|
Others say they want to buy a piece of farming machinery.
|
|
Now Mr. Icahn says he has taken a piece of Allergan.
|
|
Returning, she handed me a piece of paper with a number.
|
|
Read More: eBay wants a piece of Amazon's giant advertising business.
|
|
And many states take a piece of the action as well.
|
|
It's putting back a piece of the ecosystem that was lost.
|
|
"Dreamers" are American in every way except a piece of paper.
|
|
He turns over a piece of fetid pizza with his nose.
|
|
"And it's served with a piece of grilled salmon," Crewdson says.
|
|
"Here's a piece of wood with bark-beetle traces," he said.
|
|
They also flagged a piece of demonstrably false intelligence he provided.
|
|
Even a piece of what I have found can change lives.
|
|
They had people write their choice on a piece of paper.
|
|
LANGE It is like a piece of music, theme and variation.
|
|
It was largely perceived to be a piece of opposition research.
|
|
A piece of paper with writing on it was found nearby.
|
|
"I'm giving him a piece of my body," Ball told WJLA.
|
|
I've known Harvey Weinstein is a piece of shit for years.
|
|
As a piece of art, it can seem a bit simplistic.
|
|
You want to stick a piece of cake in your milkshake?
|
|
Here we want to give you a piece of the steak.
|
|
Do they know they're standing on a piece of musical history?
|
|
It's not a piece of art you view from one position.
|
|
No, everybody is going to get a piece of the pie.
|
|
A piece of the Berlin Wall resides in Ein Hod, Israel.
|
|
One bird had a piece of flesh hanging off its beak.
|
|
I feel that this is a piece of pop-culture history.
|
|
He wanted to show a piece of himself in the movie.
|
|
Let's humanize this guy, who's basically just a piece of background.
|
|
As a piece of scientific research, Biosphere 2 had its problems.
|
|
And talked to her mother, who is a piece of work.
|
|
This dish is particularly delicious with a piece of crunchy tahdig.
|
|
Here is a piece of advice for newcomers: Forget about getting.
|
|
"She grabbed the door with a piece of tissue," he said.
|
|
"She grabbed the door with a piece of tissue," he said.
|
|
Kennedy owns his team and also a piece of the league.
|
|
I discovered I have a piece of New York history here.
|
|
There was a piece of metal that you could sit on.
|
|
And they'll fight each other for a piece of the action.
|
|
Choosing to walk solo, you might jostle a piece of furniture.
|
|
A piece of software called Xupiter had infected their web browsers.
|
|
"For me, the watch is a piece of art," he said.
|
|
Eventually, autonomous vehicles will demand a piece of the space, too.
|
|
The culprit was a piece of IoT-focused malware called Mirai.
|
|
" As for Lazarus's sonnet, he said: "It's a piece of poetry.
|
|
"A piece of Nestle History," read the inscription on the brick.
|
|
Every time I create a piece of jewelry, I ask this.
|
|
Virtually every construction company would have a piece of the action.
|
|
And, well, in the end, they're just a piece of paper.
|
|
Or a piece of quartz on hand to help them meditate.
|
|
Adtech companies are clamoring for a piece of connected-TV advertising.
|
|
Western companies are angling aggressively for a piece of the action.
|
|
Enter the PIRATE Act, a piece of legislation produced by Rep.
|
|
Russia is here, Russia is picking out a piece of meat.
|
|
A wallet is a piece of software required to hold cryptocurrencies.
|
|
Unwrap a piece of chocolate and place it in your mouth.
|
|
If you have a piece of crap, obviously no one does.
|
|
Some smaller delivery companies received a piece of the action, too.
|
|
"A Piece of My Mind" reflected Mr. Nichols's own mental state.
|
|
Can we raise a child purely through a piece of technology?
|
|
"Want a piece of my spider roll?" he asked, and grinned.
|
|
It's a piece of furniture useless to everybody except its reader.
|
|
"A piece of the tail is down the hill," she said.
|
|
In his eyes, that is more than a piece of trivia.
|
|
At stake is a piece of a booming $100 billion market.
|
|
A PIECE OF THE WORLD By Christina Baker Kline 309 pp.
|
|
"There's a piece of their story in the movie," she added.
|
|
A piece of mold is up for auction in London today.
|
|
"I feel like I lost a piece of me," she wrote.
|
|
But that case was only a piece of a larger picture.
|
|
Pick a piece of quality, delicious chocolate (yes, I said chocolate!).
|
|
"It's a piece of property that we found interesting," he said.
|
|
Losing them, we lose a piece of our own past too.
|
|
And that's what I would give as a piece of advice.
|
|
As a piece of political theater, the white was strikingly effective.
|
|
There's arguably no dessert more comforting than a piece of pie.
|
|
Once you open it up, everybody wants a piece of it.
|
|
I just pushed a piece of legislation about women in prison.
|
|
People could be taking a piece of you all the time.
|
|
But as a piece of silly summer entertainment, it's often good.
|
|
I think that public benefit corporation is a piece of it.
|
|
"This isn't just a piece of legislation on paper," she says.
|
|
"The Girl Scout cookie is a piece of Americana," Goodbody says.
|
|
But as a piece of vintage Windows bricolage, it works nicely .
|
|
"It's not just a piece of paper," he warns the artist.
|
|
Everyone wants a piece of your today, Virgo— family, lovers, employers.
|
|
Fix yourself a piece of cake and a cup of coffee.
|
|
"I wanted to see why the sighted world was so interested in looking at images on a piece of paper or a piece of canvas," he said in a recent interview with the website Australian Musician.
|
|
" Adds Antonious: "To me, it's that feeling you get when you see something — be it a piece of art or a piece of fine jewelry — that is completely perfect, nothing needs to be added or removed.
|
|
That which is yet to be born — be it the world, a person, a piece of furniture or a piece of writing like this one — may be nothing, but at this stage it is at its utmost.
|
|
With a piece of duct tape and an otherwise unremarkable supermarket banana, Maurizio Cattelan turned a piece of fruit into a six-figure payday at Art Basel Miami Beach—and then he did it two more times.
|
|
"They all want a piece of that Oval Office, they want a piece of the West Wing," Trump said in March amid one of the unending bevies of stories about chaos and dissension in the West Wing.
|
|
An original 21th-century map would have been made by gouging an image into a piece of wood, removing anything not to be printed, and then inking it and pressing a piece of paper onto the relief.
|
|
"Today I feel like a piece of trash," she told the newspaper.
|
|
I love that every bottle almost looks like a piece of art.
|
|
Get yourself some musicians and a piece of music, and just conduct.
|
|
CAESAR will hopefully bring a piece of the comet back to Earth.
|
|
Would you ever wear a piece of clothing covered with your face?
|
|
"I just wanted to have a piece of her with me here."
|
|
Lyman also shared a piece of automotive lore about car maker Acura.
|
|
At the time, Butler said he wanted to add a piece of
|
|
And do you have a piece of paper to verify that vote?
|
|
At $149.50, there isn't a piece of equipment this kit doesn't have.
|
|
A piece of North Randall's identity was lost along with the structure.
|
|
And bigger companies like Nestle (NSRGF) want a piece of the market.
|
|
A cake is, at least in some sense, a piece of art.
|
|
It is, in short, a piece of jewelry, albeit imbued with smarts.
|
|
Luckily I got a piece of it before the net came off.
|
|
" Miller stuck hers in a piece of styrofoam covered in cotton "snow.
|
|
Everybody wanted a piece of the future king on the rugby field!
|
|
Was there a piece of the feedback that can help you grow?
|
|
And all the advertising executive they wanted a piece of the action.
|
|
A hash is essentially a digital fingerprint of a piece of data.
|
|
"Your Blade Runner gun is totally a piece of art," he says.
|
|
Even Saudi Arabia wants to get a piece of America's LNG boom.
|
|
That doesn't seem like the best outcome for a piece of satire.
|
|
"People can't make a decision on a piece of artwork," Cormican says.
|
|
This, you just stick it on a piece of velcro and shoot.
|
|
"We were sold a piece of junk," said a senior Sterling employee.
|
|
Anywhere you go in London, you can find a piece of history.
|
|
But that's just a piece of a more complex CEO performance matrix.
|
|
You are a piece of shit and you don't have a plan.
|
|
"I felt like a prop, like a piece of meat," he said.
|
|
They're locked to a piece of concrete that's lodged in the vehicle.
|
|
Hernandez holds up a piece of paper explaining why she left Honduras.
|
|
Disliking a piece of content will prevent it from being recommended again.
|
|
"It's a piece of piss to bring down the government," he says.
|
|
He hesitantly picked up a piece of clothing and asked the price.
|
|
"Wow you look like a piece of cake," Cohen told her afterwards.
|
|
It's only a piece of cloth — it doesn't change who I am.
|
|
People huddle together under a piece of clear plastic in the rain.
|
|
The measles virus is a piece of RNA coated with a lipid.
|
|
Write that number on a piece of paper, or even your arm.
|
|
The guy that makes the fanzine is a piece of it, too.
|
|
"Everybody that follows me on TikTok wants a piece of my work."
|
|
Maybe she'll incorporate a piece of it into her own wedding dress.
|
|
But more happy than sad because I got a piece of him.
|
|
But is it completely flawless as a piece of visual effects work?
|
|
I wanted to make a piece of audio that operated in vignettes.
|
|
It was a piece of public relations more than it was journalism.
|
|
We used to do lobotomies, cutting out a piece of people's brains.
|
|
Gilles Marini: "I became a piece of meat for many Hollywood executives."
|
|
It's a part of the system, and a piece of the puzzle.
|
|
Is it a piece of paper, a butterfly, or some tire debris?
|
|
It was like a piece of game history from an alternate timeline.
|
|
Another opportunity to own a piece of Apple history is coming soon.
|
|
The information was exposed by a piece of malware impacting [24]7.
|
|
Now, it appears that North Korea wants a piece of streaming video.
|
|
When I look at a piece of corn, I don't see corn.
|
|
The team at UCL tested it on a piece of unused fiber.
|
|
Also, it let us consciously start with a piece of original material.
|
|
They are rewarded with a piece of meat after each successful foray.
|
|
Luckily, however, he isn't the only fighter Rockhold wants a piece of.
|
|
It is a fresh take on a piece of stock gothic imagery.
|
|
It feels heftier and denser like a piece of high-quality watchmaking.
|
|
We had sold a piece of our business a few months earlier.
|
|
At six years old, nothing was cooler than a piece of chalk.
|
|
But her road to entrepreneur hasn't always been a piece of cake.
|
|
"Kalanick: "It seems like a piece of cake because I've beaten them.
|
|
Everyone wants a piece of the Internet of Things, and why not?
|
|
So I say, just take a piece of paper and start counting.
|
|
Want to turn an enemy into a piece of candy with Buu?
|
|
"Sexuality" just meant a woman as an object, a piece of meat.
|
|
It's a piece of graffiti made for your wrist, priced at $800,000.
|
|
If marriage were just a piece of paper this would not matter.
|
|
One group criticized the decision to sell a piece of space history.
|
|
I just wanted a piece of my bad dream in there somewhere.
|
|
I was proud to display those as a piece of VR history.
|
|
I don't see airplanes as anything other than a piece of transportation.
|
|
You could right now make this site into a piece of software.
|
|
Periodically, a piece of fruit appears at the center of the screen.
|
|
This is Rachel's chance to literally own a piece of her idol.
|
|
A piece of paper that could change the course of your life.
|
|
Everyone wanted a piece of a player on the path to stardom.
|
|
He hands her a piece of paper with questions he approves of.
|
|
Kylie didn't leave without also getting a piece ... of art, that is.
|
|
Pretty much everybody thinks of an EHR as a piece of software.
|
|
You can now own a piece of the story for $3.7 million.
|
|
A piece of meat that at that moment looks like a shoe.
|
|
Each of these smaller efforts represent a piece of a broader solution.
|
|
It catches the sun and flash photography like a piece of jewelry.
|
|
The actor first shared a piece of Trump-related artwork in Aug.
|
|
As a piece of the Star Wars mythos, though, it's unusually ambitious.
|
|
It was about the preservation of a piece of history, he explained.
|
|
But it is clear that everyone wants a piece of Auto Chess.
|
|
I remembered not being myself, just being a piece of a cloud.
|
|
Their objective: to snap up a piece of China's hottest real estate.
|
|
What's more "Uncarrier" than giving customers a piece of their mobile network?
|
|
And that's a piece of culture we should all be grateful for.
|
|
"Talking about these issue is a piece of the puzzle," she says.
|
|
"So here we are with a piece of disruptive technology," said Gifford.
|
|
This is a piece of you, but it's not all of you.
|
|
If it's a piece of gear, you know its level of rarity.
|
|
It was a piece of geopolitical trolling that won Sweden many fans.
|
|
"It's not going to look like a piece of granite," said Levin.
|
|
Apparently, Trump wanted a piece of those global special interests for himself.
|
|
It is not natural to be talking to a piece of machinery.
|
|
On raw numbers, the winning machine is quite a piece of engineering.
|
|
Everyone from ESPN to Turner Broadcasting wants a piece of the pie.
|
|
Bigger commercial interests were trying to capture a piece of the market.
|
|
It, too, was a piece of performance art with its own message.
|
|
Do you have a piece of spring apparel that's old-school masculine?
|
|
Apple Pay takes a piece of each transaction; Samsung Pay does not.
|
|
Was putting David Letterman's face on a piece of toast too creepy?
|
|
When a piece of equipment would fail, it would simply be left.
|
|
"It was like getting a piece of your heart back," Smith said.
|
|
He sketched out the hefty multiplication problem on a piece of plastic.
|
|
A piece of tech that will solve all your Internet connectivity problems
|
|
And who is willing to destroy a piece of his own heart?
|
|
LONDON (Reuters Breakingviews) - Investors, regulators, customers – everyone wants a piece of Tesco.
|
|
No way, I decide: a piece of cake, in contrast to cancer.
|
|
For a souvenir, like they wanted a piece of the Lord's cross.
|
|
It's a piece of cake to operate, using the touch-screen interface.
|
|
But there is a chance to take a piece of it home.
|
|
She said she felt "like a piece of meat" at the gathering.
|
|
It's pretty much just a piece of chicken between two squished buns.
|
|
They were fed a piece of bread with a slice of ham.
|
|
A piece of history Earth's oldest rock was found -- on the moon.
|
|
You destroy a piece of property, you destroy it for a lifetime.
|
|
There's a lot to consider when looking at a piece of legislation.
|
|
He knelt over an object that resembled a piece of smooth firewood.
|
|
It looked as if a piece of the moon had dropped there.
|
|
GDPR is a piece of legislation that was approved in April 2016.
|
|
Inevitably, he said, someone asks to keep a piece of the statue.
|
|
"You've earned a piece of bread, you've earned it," he said, laughing.
|
|
"I need a piece of that cake right now," one person wrote.
|
|
Would you wear a piece of clothing with a uterus on it?
|
|
What a wonderful symbol for love, a piece of meat like that.
|
|
She's mad that Marcus didn't give her a piece of the company.
|
|
The border is a disaster, it's like a piece of Swiss cheese.
|
|
A piece of Islanders history has been in Brooklyn for a while.
|
|
Environment, opportunity, economic pressure, a piece of bad luck, a wrong friend.
|
|
A.L.T.'s story is at heart a piece of existential psychological horror.
|
|
See, somebody is actually auctioning off a piece of David Bowie's hair.
|
|
Why it matters: Sure, Amazon's competitors want a piece of this business.
|
|
This wouldn't be a piece of Apple hardware without Siri built-in.
|
|
With names like that, who wouldn't want a piece of the action?
|
|
But we're trying to make this a piece of our own cinema.
|
|
As legend has it, kuman thong originated in a piece of necromancy.
|
|
He graffitied a piece of art right above this, like, ancient monument.
|
|
Once I saw a piece of pencil art drawn by an inmate.
|
|
The agent looked through my passport and found a piece of paper.
|
|
Does it need to be easily recognizable as a piece of furniture?
|
|
His hook snagged a piece of clothing, and then another, and another.
|
|
If you spot a piece of political disinformation online, let us know.
|
|
It's making a piece of information more sophisticated but also simplifying it.
|
|
You give us a piece of cardboard, and we breakdance on it.
|
|
I thought, I will treat this stone like a piece of paper.
|
|
"Here," he said, setting a piece of sheet music on the stand.
|
|
" It's "about as thrilling a piece of musical theater moviemaking as exists.
|
|
But it's in this otherworldly room that is a piece of art.
|
|
" A piece of onscreen text vows: "The saga comes to an end.
|
|
We created a piece of art that's very truthful and very beautiful.
|
|
Without the freedoms our flag represents, it's only a piece of cloth.
|
|
And it is a think piece itself — a piece of finished thought.
|
|
It began as a slice, a piece of the sun cut away.
|
|
Yet the outside world has long wanted a piece of their paradise.
|
|
I'm starving, so I grab a piece of cheese to munch on.
|
|
Critic's Notebook DETROIT — Everybody wants a piece of Aretha Franklin's artistic legacy.
|
|
A piece of plastic polymer about to be destroyed under ultraviolet light.
|
|
Each man vying for a piece of Fox is an accomplished dealmaker.
|
|
"I could do that eating a piece of pizza," Ms. Hardy said.
|
|
Moments later, Breyer could be seen passing Thomas a piece of paper.
|
|
Once you catch on to that, driving is a piece of cake.
|
|
He tore off a piece of paper and handed it to me.
|
|
A report introduces a piece of technology with terrifying, privacy-eroding implications.
|
|
So when you see the blue bucket share a piece of candy.
|
|
What looks like a piece of metal flaps from the door area.
|
|
He fiddled with a piece of paper, folding it into a rectangle.
|
|
Formerly, it was a piece of cardboard floundering on my fridge door.
|
|
One caveat: As a piece of writing, Germano's book is a mess.
|
|
Siwa's room may actually be a piece of a real-life rainbow.
|
|
Shia militias in Iraq likely still want a piece of the action.
|
|
A 45-foot shipping container mangled like a piece of aluminum foil.
|
|
Then I'll have an orange, coffee, an egg, a piece of toast.
|
|
Take a piece of paper and draw a horizontal line halfway down.
|
|
Once peeled, the banana revealed a piece of paper with coaching tips.
|
|
Someone had smashed her skull with a piece of a tree branch.
|
|
The nurse gave him a piece of advice he would forever remember.
|
|
It turned out to be a piece of dirt, not a tick.
|
|
They'd give you a piece of paper with the guy's info. 'O.
|
|
A piece of legislation that deprives 2628 million Americans of health insurance.
|
|
But Mukherjee's primary bulwark against patness is a piece of formal daring.
|
|
BRIAN NICCOL: Look, delivery is a piece of our off-promise business.
|
|
I picked up a piece of balsamic-drenched lettuce and ate it.
|
|
"Do we have a destiny?" he writes on a piece of paper.
|
|
It can deepen the connection you have with a piece of art.
|
|
An address for a pawnshop found scribbled on a piece of paper.
|
|
Has there been a piece of art that has affected you politically?
|
|
A piece of Princess Diana history didn't find a buyer at auction.
|
|
Trump will turn each debate into a piece of reality show television.
|
|
But like a piece of Wonder Bread, toasted, with butter on it?
|
|
The video also shows the woman feeding him a piece of food.
|
|
It just seemed like an object, not a piece of a person.
|
|
"Mug shots are still a piece of the puzzle," Chief Shea said.
|
|
"My only dream is to have a piece of bread," she said.
|
|
I even once picked up a piece of jewelry I'd had engraved.
|
|
Reward yourself with a piece of chocolate or some other meaningful treat.
|
|
"Basically the sun burps a piece of itself into space," he said.
|
|
Irwin gave him a piece of advice that has become McCarron's mantra.
|
|
"A piece of America's heart is buried on these grounds," Trump said.
|
|
What's the difference between a "meme" and a piece of "viral content"?
|
|
If a piece of art succeeds — whether it's literature, film, painting, etc.
|
|
To fix the issue, Boeing decided to use a piece of software.
|
|
Actually it ties, perfectly dovetails ... You can do a piece of advice.
|
|
"Africa" is less a piece of music and more of a feeling.
|
|
I wanted a piece of that magic while it was still around.
|
|
"I felt like a piece of meat in a market," Braden said.
|
|
Every few decades, a piece of art comes along that changes everything.
|
|
Mac's Club DeuceThis 1926-built bar is a piece of goddamned history.
|
|
I drink a homemade green juice which is made from vegetables that I grow year-round at the farm in Bedford: mint, spinach, celery, cucumbers, carrots, maybe a papaya, maybe a piece of pineapple, definitely a piece of ginger.
|
|
Heisz replaces his buzzsaw with a piece of plain printer paper with "no special treatment," he writes on the woodworking website I Build It. He begins small, cutting a piece of paper with another piece of paper (paper-ception?).
|
|
"He's stuck on this thing where he wants a piece of the ownership and if you look at basketball, Michael Jordan didn't own a piece of the league," White told 8 News Now, a Las Vegas broadcaster, this week.
|
|
A metal hoop could be traded for a piece of dry corn, the lowest value food, a metal bracket for a medium value sunflower seed and a plastic ring for the highest value food, a piece of shelled walnut.
|
|
"I am a control freak and wanted a piece of everything," he said.
|
|
At their core though, there'll always be a piece of LA within them.
|
|
The trouble is that plenty of rivals want a piece of it, too.
|
|
What looks ephemeral on digital would become permanent on a piece of wood.
|
|
Intel is hoping to get a piece of that cloud and IoT action.
|
|
You can't give a piece of clothing a gender; it's literally just clothes.
|
|
And, you know, posts of her just chilling with a piece of corn.
|
|
While dancing, Stone says she cut her foot on a piece of glass.
|
|
" "It is certainly a piece of good news in a very turbulent time.
|
|
I could write the bill in 15 minutes on a piece of paper.
|
|
John Collins knows how to make a piece of paper go the distance.
|
|
We'll get a piece of plastic to cover ourselves if it rains again.
|
|
But then a piece of each them began to get on my nerves.
|
|
But there's a piece of me that says, maybe it's just for us.
|
|
I'm pretty starving, so I add a piece of sausage to each burrito.
|
|
Glad I have a piece of paper to certify how boring I am.
|
|
Limited in scope, their sweep isn't as broad as a piece of legislation.
|
|
In February 2017, a piece of the glacier approximately 1 mile wide separated.
|
|
Whatever it is you're putting off suddenly looks like a piece of cake.
|
|
Everybody knew he was a piece of crap, and it was a joke.
|
|
Do not write them down on a piece of paper on your desk.
|
|
"We just got a piece of American rock n' roll history," Wolfe said.
|
|
As a piece of graphic design ephemera, the manual is hard to beat.
|
|
Sometimes women are told they're weaker, they're a piece of crap, or whatever.
|
|
What's a piece of advice you wish someone gave you in your 20s?
|
|
Don't think for a moment that we're saying it's a piece of cake.
|
|
In one bite, you take away both a piece of fat and meat.
|
|
"For me it was just a piece of aluminum and silicon," Casani says.
|
|
"There's a piece of bone missing from my head right now," Dakessian said.
|
|
A robotic arm, for example, could be made from a piece of foam.
|
|
Why do the Koch brothers want to own a piece of Time Inc.?
|
|
What Verizon wants, more than anything, is a piece of Google's ad business.
|
|
A smiling Netanyahu then breaks off a piece of bread and eats it.
|
|
There's a piece of her soul on every record: She's with us forever.
|
|
And how, exactly, did he lose a piece a piece of his finger?
|
|
You can't put a name to a face to a piece of data?
|
|
To do so, he used a piece of apparatus called a torsion balance.
|
|
First, trace a piece of paper to line the bottom of the box.
|
|
Nobody wants to pay for a piece of the leaning tower of Frisco.
|
|
Right: A piece of metal is scanned for quality control at Jones Metal.
|
|
So I felt like I was missing a piece of my own education.
|
|
When you cut through it, it's like cutting through a piece of steak.
|
|
He had used a piece of sophisticated software to monitor his wife's computer.
|
|
Just stick it to your doorway like a piece of hi-tech gum.
|
|
Top with ginger infused whipped cream and a piece of candied ginger. 4.
|
|
Then it slapped a piece of carpet on top to spice it up.
|
|
First, he throws down a piece of wood that floats in the water.
|
|
"He told me, 'My dad is a piece of shit,'" Ralph told me.
|
|
For the bowls: Place a piece of parchment paper over a baking sheet.
|
|
I was a piece of paper with a single word on it: Yes.
|
|
"They're taking a piece of freedom from that person to travel," she said.
|
|
But this is something that you cannot prove with a piece of paper.
|
|
Jeff Bezos is reportedly the new owner of a piece of Hollywood history.
|
|
Land is the underlying asset, not a piece of paper endorsing fractional ownership.
|
|
But the letter was so much of a piece of art in itself.
|
|
I get a piece of salmon, a freekeh salad, and a cauliflower salad.
|
|
Now, a piece of bark may not seem like much of a tool.
|
|
" — she gave a piece of advice: "His tattoos always have too many colors.
|
|
I love it…I feel like a piece of me has really died.
|
|
And it would satisfy the swarming investors who want a piece of it.
|
|
But mall and fashion brands want a piece of this lucrative market too.
|
|
But even after the final curtain, Vegas will have a piece of her.
|
|
I feel like you just threw me away like a piece of trash.
|
|
A piece of the plane can also be seen shaking in the clip.
|
|
Millennials only got a piece of sheepskin with some Latin scribbled on it.
|
|
Boutique lenders, by contrast, will accept a piece of art as sole collateral.
|
|
How did a piece of questionable academic merit get so much media coverage?
|
|
Just press and hold on a piece of content to open the editor.
|
|
He slashes Negan's throat with a piece of shattered glass from the ground.
|
|
Palmieri was just grabbing a piece of apple pie and vanilla ice cream.
|
|
"The phone is just a piece of metal, plastic and glass," he said.
|
|
However, that is not true for a piece of Microsoft software, he said.
|
|
You've done nothing with your life other than throw a piece of leather.
|
|
Gently knead a piece of the dough a few times until it's smooth.
|
|
Tent chicken with a piece of aluminum foil if skin begins to burn.
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"Imagine real estate — not everyone can own a piece of it," said Rubin.
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De La Herran said a piece of shrapnel hit him in the head.
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These networks are once in a lifetime networks to own a piece of.
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You could just go across the street and borrow a piece of equipment.
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There's only so many ways you can tap on a piece of plastic.
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This sounds like a piece of legislation that actually addresses a serious problem.
|
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The news had spread: Anyone who throws a piece of fruit gets suspended.
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Photo: GizmodoWhen Apple kills a piece of tech, it's typically gone for good.
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Your sergeant tells you that a piece of flying rebar broke your face.
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Alternatively, the epididymis or a piece of testicular tissue can be frozen whole.
|
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Richard Blumenthal on a piece of legislation, although nothing has come of it.
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"Donald Trump is a piece of sh**!" a young man shouted from shore.
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And that's a piece of advice that I gave to the incoming president.
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"The Lemons," a piece of fan fiction published on Wordpress yesterday, is art.
|
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Alpha turns out to be a piece of artificial intelligence gone horribly wrong.
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Just write your size on a piece of paper and strike a pose!
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"It gave us a piece of something back after losing everything," Marc said.
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I felt like this was a piece of the conversation that was missing.
|
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They begin to root around, and Jassim draws out a piece of clothing.
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But for a powerful quantum computer, they will be a piece of cake.
|
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Teams will be competing for a piece of the $3 million prize pool.
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PK: Because we're going to give you a piece of the profits. Exactly.
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A steak, a piece of chicken, or ribs is usually what I do.
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Klan clash The KKK wants a piece of Georiga's "Adopt-A-Highway" action.
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I also believe that marching isn't a solution, it's a piece of it.
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Whether and how a piece of misinformation is dangerous depends entirely on context.
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The piano itself is a piece of history ... it dates back to 1872!!
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Is it very financially rewarding to own a piece of history like that?
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"It's a piece of legislation that protects all of Alabama history," he said.
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Whatever the calculation is, I will write it on a piece of paper.
|
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Cramer expects the bank, which he owns a piece of in his ActionAlertPlus.
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A few weeks later in the same dressing room, a piece of poop!
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The wreckage is a piece of horizontal stabilizer skin, the U.S. official said.
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"A work of art is itself a piece of criticism," Mr Scott asserts.
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Have a piece of toast in the morning; have some quinoa at lunch.
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I'd chew on a piece of fish and then I'd spit it out.
|
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I know that a piece of her will always be stored within them.
|
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What's a piece of style advice that you've passed along to your sisters?
|
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Tor is a piece of software and a related network run by volunteers.
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When that happens, the resolving the money dispute is a piece of cake.
|
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A piece of shrapnel missed my eye by a fragment of a millimeter.
|
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"It's a piece of cake until you get to the top," Nixon confessed.
|
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Even if it's a Disney Channel film, it's still a piece of art.
|
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Does a body rot faster than a piece of paper, or just differently?
|
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In fairness, it was less a piece of commentary than a job application.
|
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"We've got an arms deal that everybody wanted a piece of," he said.
|
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"This is a piece of American history," Mr. Zimmerman wrote on the listing.
|
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Who would sell a piece of her heart unless they really have to?
|
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But "Evening — 1910" is more a song cycle than a piece of theater.
|
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What began with a piece of guttering results in riots on the streets.
|
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Coverage is a piece of that, but we need to transform the system.
|
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Sometimes, though, a piece of jewelry is just too fine to turn down.
|
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Which is to say, it's a piece of cake for the first week.
|
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Cause I'm just not a piece of crap, but they started the fight.
|
|
Instead, Ingram died choking on a piece of steak, Christopher told The Times.
|
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Designing a piece of art for a lunar gallery is a daunting prospect.
|
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I've walked through hell and still carry a piece of it inside me.
|
|
And that would be a pie everyone wants to grab a piece of.
|
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I don't care if it's a bone, a piece of hair, a nail.
|
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And simply covering the microphone with a piece of tape wouldn't solve it.
|
|
Rose Wilder Lane (her married and professional name) was a piece of work.
|
|
To understand why, consider the standard "recipe" for a piece of federal legislation.
|
|
But perhaps all three players will carve out a piece of the pie.
|
|
The Whitney, which bought a piece of his, appears to have lost it.
|
|
Can also be used to refer to a piece of pubic hair, obviously.
|
|
And the tax investigations are just a piece of Google's problems in Europe.
|
|
It's a piece of software that changes people's behavior in the real world.
|
|
A clammy paper shred stuck to my tongue, plus a piece of popcorn.
|
|
If you want a piece of the Rockefellers, be prepared to pay up.
|
|
They look super cute as a piece of decor, but are undoubtedly practical.
|
|
"We've each got a piece of this, but they're all distinct," said Sen.
|
|
A piece of the pyro equipment erupted in flames during the pregame ceremonies.
|
|
Not a used car, a piece of land, or an item of furniture.
|
|
"No way do I actually have a piece of the moon," he said.
|
|
And now he still puts a piece of paper next to his bed.
|
|
When I peel back a piece of skin, drawing blood, I feel satisfied.
|
|
He placed a piece of West African cloth in the upper left corner.
|
|
As a piece of political rhetoric then, "lock her up!" was brutally effective.
|
|
All they get is a software upgrade and a piece of plastic tubing.
|
|
When AIM died in 2017 a piece of our childhoods went with it.
|
|
Zero came to sniff his hand; he fed him a piece of salami.
|
|
CNN: The Supreme Court today hears a piece of the Russia-probe puzzle.
|
|
The Arctic Refuge is not just a piece of land with oil underneath.
|
|
And this wouldn't be a piece of Apple hardware without Siri built-in.
|
|
This occasion was less a basketball game than a piece of basketball theater.
|
|
So this is a piece of legislation that isn't necessary in my judgment.
|
|
The narrator's tone turns rueful, tender; a piece of gossip has become literature.
|
|
"Dump them on a piece of paper and identify those feelings," she says.
|
|
He wrote some notes on a piece of scrap paper, then looked up.
|
|
Everyone was trying to grab a piece of this country or that country.
|
|
We can't stop doing it, even if it's clearly a piece of technology.
|
|
She had a childhood that made mine look like a piece of cake.
|
|
A piece of wood is preventing the heavy, 440-pound piece from fitting.
|
|
Seeing my ancestor's perceived value written on a piece of paper changed me.
|
|
The report we referenced for that claim, however, was a piece of satire.
|
|
It may be a piece of original content that'll get us 16,000 subscribers.
|
|
Once victims enabled macros, a piece of malware called BlackEnergy3 infected their computers.
|
|
You'll see a piece of recently slaughtered chicken touch a nice lamb chop.
|
|
Meanwhile, place the tofu in a piece of cheese cloth and squeeze thoroughly.
|
|
Each mound had a piece of wood marked with a number on it.
|
|
Wrap it all together and wrap a piece of the lardo around it.
|
|
And the fact that it looks like a piece of medieval orthodontic equipment.
|
|
It loves to make meta statements, as befitting a piece of fan-fiction.
|
|
It's hard to believe this sculpture started out as a piece of fruit.
|
|
But a piece of advice from an expert helped me make a choice.
|
|
That's right — a piece of information is being deliberately withheld from the public.
|
|
Sandra Oh said she took a piece of decor from Cristina Yang's apartment.
|
|
Maisie Williams said she took a piece of clothing from Arya Stark's wardrobe.
|
|
" He ate a piece of corn bread and said, "I love this place.
|
|
BLANKFEIN: WELL, THE STATEMENT, IT'S LIKE LOOKING AT A PIECE OF IMPRESSIONIST ART.
|
|
This is a piece of political theater, political vaudeville, really it was pathetic.
|
|
It's the size of a piece of carry-on luggage, according to NASA.
|
|
But that doesn't mean landing a new job is a piece of cake.
|
|
And companies have been jockeying for a piece of the multibillion-dollar industry.
|
|
The ice sheet looked like a piece of paper burning from the edges.
|
|
Customers could browse, select a design and then order a piece of furniture.
|
|
It was ideal with warm tortillas, and on a piece of grilled bread.
|
|
Then they were able to trade the ring for a piece of walnut.
|
|
However, humans cannot pinpoint what exactly makes a piece of text feel receptive.
|
|
"Our national anthem is a piece of history itself," Ms. Kramp-Karrenbauer said.
|
|
"We are not fighting against a piece of cloth," Ms. Alinejad told me.
|
|
That lackey soldier who used to tote around a piece of trash Klobb?
|
|
A piece of furniture dedicated solely to drinks might seem like an extravagance.
|
|
"I didn't know that Joel had a piece of this deal," he said.
|
|
The engineer's kid is given a problem and sees a piece of paper.
|
|
That needs to be a piece of the Democratic policy in equal measure.
|
|
Check. Can the second word in ALL phrases denote a piece of clothing?
|
|
They also provided a piece of plastic to physically sheathe the camera's eye.
|
|
Starting at $2,999, it's a piece of premium hardware that's not for everyone.
|
|
While I was eating a piece of the steak, my little mind exploded.
|
|
One of the first people to respond called me a piece of shit.
|
|
But Thursday indicated that investors remain eager to get a piece of them.
|
|
Then the warden walked in with a piece of paper in his hand.
|
|
This umbrella is more like a patio centerpiece than a piece of furniture.
|
|
Does it look like a piece of art or one in the making?
|
|
His son Christopher said he died after choking on a piece of steak.
|
|
As if I was just one more of many, a piece of meat.
|
|
Crystal's husband, John Holcombe, was injured by a piece of shrapnel, but survived.
|
|
Global financiers say they want a piece of the action wherever it occurs.
|
|
At this point, it was a piece of me that had come loose.
|
|
It's when I'm watching a piece of content but not exactly consuming it.
|
|
It seemed over the top — all that labor for a piece of ice?
|
|
He also came back with a tile panel and a piece of calligraphy.
|
|
We're not set up to display a piece of art of this value.
|
|
There's a foot chase and the theft of a piece of ostensible evidence.
|
|
But a piece of rocket would move differently through space, Dr. Chodas says.
|
|
The work had white shirts, and a piece of iron in the center.
|
|
"For all of us, Rio Market is a piece of our Brazil," Mrs.
|
|
Shenmue III is a piece of that foreign land imported onto domestic soil.
|
|
Then Dr. Koster added a piece of tape to keep my eye open.
|
|
A piece of Mr. Koh's license plate was later found on the street.
|
|
Write your name in the middle of a piece of paper or document.
|
|
Visitors love to be able to take home a piece of the fair.
|
|
It was: 'We'll have a glass of Beaujolais and a piece of cake.
|
|
It's as if a piece of each of them lives on inside me.
|
|
My family gave me a piece of paper and a pencil to communicate.
|
|
I have some ice cream and a piece of dark chocolate before bed.
|
|
" ― Louisa May Alcott "Everyone has inside of her a piece of good news.
|
|
"A piece of me went up in that rocket that day," she said.
|
|
Then they did something formerly impossible: They gleefully shared a piece of pie.
|
|
And a piece of advice, if you're invited, don't offer her any help.
|
|
They add emotional context and non-verbal communication to a piece of text.
|
|
I grab a veggie sandwich from Potbelly and a piece of cheese pizza.
|
|
I munch on a piece of dark chocolate while the smoothie is blending.
|
|
So feel free to enjoy a piece of dark chocolate after a meal.
|
|
In other words, economics is only a piece of a broader, societal problem.
|
|
That was because of a piece of paper signed without warning in Washington.
|
|
A piece of the bombshell lodged in my head, and I lost consciousness.
|
|
Throughout, Mr Ryrie takes a piece of conventional wisdom and then challenges it.
|
|
Feinstein wanted a piece of legislation that could pass and be paid for.
|
|
A piece of Burmese amber yielded up a dinosaur's tail, complete with feathers.
|
|
A chatbot is a piece of software that responds to text or speech.
|
|
We cannot sanction a child's death without losing a piece of our decency.
|
|
I wanted a piece of that, and didn't have the best home life.
|
|
You don't just put a piece of theater onstage because that seems fun.
|
|
That process is carried out with a piece of software made by Cellebrite.
|
|
They want to sell me a piece of ass, they've got the right.
|
|
The conversation-starter lipstick mimics a piece of artwork with flowers embedded inside.
|
|
And yet, as a piece of agitprop, the ad is a master class.
|
|
Is it a piece of property, or an entity that has a personality?
|
|
This is a piece of boneless fried chicken sandwiched between two glazed doughnuts.
|
|
The coolest part was that each bag was like a piece of art.
|
|
That's not all—she definitely tweeted a piece of tasteless Sandy Hook Trutherism.
|
|
Heart Book Box to present a piece of jewelry or to store some.
|
|
You go ... What people don't realize, they think it's a piece of art.
|
|
I'd say that every writer who contributed has a piece of themselves onscreen.
|
|
Each is a piece of sexy, soulful pop; Lovato sounds fiery and untethered.
|
|
That is, everybody had a piece of the publishing of Lou's songs, of all the songs we did for The Banana Album, the idea was that we all got a piece of the publishing as long as we were a band.
|
|
"You can imagine that instead of giving you a piece of paper saying the Bank of Israel on it, I can send you a piece of digital code that was issued by a central bank," a source told the outlet.
|
|
Those of you who've felt crystals work, consider this 2001 experiment: Researchers at the University of London had 80 participants meditate for five minutes, some holding a piece of quartz, and some holding a piece of glass they believed was quartz.
|
|
Bellabeat Leaf Urban and Leaf Chakra, available at Amazon, $93.90If your mom cares more about style than high-tech features, but she still wants a piece of tech to track her activity, she may love a piece of smart jewelry.
|
|
This is a piece of trim I got from Materials for the Arts, too.
|
|
This is your chance to own a piece of Italy — but there's a catch.
|
|
But for Cristina Gómez, her dark-colored strands were a piece of her identity.
|
|
It's going to hurt your soul, it's going to take a piece of you!
|
|
She's a [piece of work], but she gives the show a lot of energy.
|
|
Has someone offered big bucks for a piece of Betty Cooper's genius sleuthy mind?
|
|
As a work of nonfiction, it's stunning; as a piece of storytelling, it's heartbreaking.
|
|
Downstairs, a 17-inch image of the star appears on a piece of paper.
|
|
They're both relatively new product categories, and everybody wants a piece of the action.
|
|
"This was the day that a piece of me died," Hayes wrote on Facebook.
|
|
No one has yet attempted to reconstruct a piece of brain at this scale.
|
|
And the Congress is finding it impossible to move a piece of legislation forward.
|
|
I drew every single one of of these glasses on a piece of paper.
|
|
In front of the altar, we have a piece of Photini's skull on display.
|
|
A piece of clothing that doesn't make me any less able than my colleagues.
|
|
Justin Timberlake owns a piece of the Memphis Grizzlies, his own hometown's NBA squad.
|
|
Fellow party guest Janne Schaffer added, "We witnessed a piece of music history tonight."
|
|
The beam of positrons strikes a piece of target material, a thin diamond film.
|
|
This is just a piece of syntax useful for outputting data to the screen.
|
|
"Dodd-Frank was a piece of massive government overreach," a senior administration official said.
|
|
The victim said Felder spat a piece of his nose out onto the floor.
|
|
On a piece of scrap paper, I pooled a few drops of Nails Inc.
|
|
A piece of the galaxy in return is just a drop in the universe.
|
|
I top it with some feta and eat it with a piece of toast.
|
|
That's a lot for a piece of hardware that just runs a web browser.
|
|
A bigger boy comes barging in, taking a piece of chocolate, then runs away.
|
|
In know it's ... Why is Amazon buying a piece of a local sports network?
|
|
And yeah, it feels more indulgent on your hands than a piece of jewelry.
|
|
If our immigration laws are merely words on a piece of paper, they're meaningless.
|
|
Michigan State has at least a piece of the Big 10 regular season championship.
|
|
Instead she read her address from a piece of paper she carried with her.
|
|
As a piece of storytelling, the live-action Pokémon movie Detective Pikachu fails spectacularly.
|
|
That we will not be guilted into passing on a piece of birthday cake.
|
|
You can do good things with a piece of lettuce if you're an illustrator.
|
|
Just like that, in a piece of popular fiction, American atrocities become Russian atrocities.
|
|
"I want Notion to be as flexible as a piece of paper," Zhao says.
|
|
The ban is to stand for 90 days as a piece of emergency legislation.
|
|
"It's a drawing on a piece of paper until somebody proves it," he said.
|
|
After this whole debacle, Oxley has a piece of advice for fellow college students.
|
|
Because I was just a piece of meat, just the caregiver, I was nothing.
|
|
It's a piece of tech Google has been developing for years called Project Soli.
|
|
It was a piece of crap that he had clearly cobbled together from scraps.
|
|
It's not a piece of malicious Russian propaganda or the work of 4chan trolls.
|
|
Ordinarily, this isn't something I would do, unnecessarily handing over a piece of information.
|
|
I think they very much see it as a piece of long-form reporting.
|
|
Here is a piece of internet history: I spent yesterday evening remixing David Cameron.
|
|
Stuff each with a piece of mozzarella string cheese and pinch them closed. 2.
|
|
The mosquitoes are being fitted with a piece of DNA called a gene drive.
|
|
Disruptions Every few decades, a piece of technology comes along that alters political campaigning.
|
|
It was snagged on a piece of bark, and trembling in the delicate breeze.
|
|
But sending an e-mail is far cheaper than sending a piece of paper.
|
|
That provided people a chance to "contribute a piece of themselves," he told CNN.
|
|
Not even into the building, just a piece of land they think is theirs.
|
|
It recently debuted a piece of design software called MakeVR for the HTC Vive.
|
|
Fearful and barking loudly, it responded to a piece of sausage by backing away.
|
|
A piece of Kennedy family history is up for grabs — for a presidential price.
|
|
As a piece of hardware, the MK3 is beautiful and delightful in its restraint.
|
|
That's a piece of equipment inside devices to help them connect to mobile internet.
|
|
To prevent slipping, cut a piece of sandpaper and glue it to the sole.
|
|
I pick up a pencil or a piece of charcoal and start doing stuff.
|
|
We can take a piece of your mind any time you make a call.
|
|
The next president might be Donald Trump or a piece of bread named Allison.
|
|
Have a piece of matzo with cream cheese and a couple of pot stickers.
|
|
Here's a piece of advice: don't get into an argument with a tiny tot.
|
|
When you left in that car – a piece of my life is now gone.
|
|
The city offered a piece of land originally intended to be a dog park.
|
|
Every year, thoughtful new solutions come online to solve a piece of the problem.
|
|
Name a piece of clothing more versatile than a pair of leggings — we'll wait.
|
|
All the contouring is thanks to some Bondo scraped over a piece of wood.
|
|
And she had a childhood that made mine look like a piece of cake.
|
|
In this one, they just tied a piece of garland around a statue's waist.
|
|
Yes, bezel-less screens look fantastic, but that's only a piece of the puzzle.
|
|
Looking for a piece of wall art that doubles as lighting for your home?
|
|
I love that she was able to take home a piece of the date.
|
|
It's tasty, and I pop a piece of gum before heading into the afternoon.
|
|
Earlier this year, Gibson found a piece of plane wreckage off the Mozambique coast.
|
|
Just in case you're a piece of candy, this may be difficult to watch.
|
|
In China, striving for accuracy in a piece of facial recognition software isn't enough.
|
|
Mercury retrograde meets the sun, bringing you a piece of information you previously missed.
|
|
Each time they deliver a piece of trash, the box dispenses a tasty treat.
|
|
In the year 2017, it's hard to come by a piece of good news.
|
|
Rubber dome keyboards have a piece of dome-shaped rubber underneath the individual keys.
|
|
Notice some cool angle on a piece of artwork — take a selfie with it.
|
|
As a piece of conventional Hollywood cinema, Green Book has plenty to recommend it.
|
|
Russell Brown explains his installation titled The Elements, a piece of kinetic AR art.
|
|
Specifically, it introduced a piece of its own code called Metal for app developers.
|
|
When using an actual pencil, your strokes appear instantly on a piece of paper.
|
|
It takes about a week to produce a piece of mushroom-and-seashell furniture.
|
|
"It's more like a piece of fabric you would be attentive to," she says.
|
|
It's a piece of matter with colors, mass, and electricity interacting with your brain.
|
|
This longing to try to keep a piece of someone who was so important.
|
|
You could get a piece of the largest payout this country has ever seen.
|
|
"We usually take three weeks to write a piece of authoritative content," he said.
|
|
Trap Muzik was kind of crystallizing this black experience into a piece of music.
|
|
Jones lives on a piece of his family's farm in a sheet metal structure.
|
|
That's all the time you can own the rights to a piece of music.
|
|
Some things are meant to be eaten sloppily off a piece of parchment paper.
|
|
"Feedback is really a piece of information or observation you are sharing," said Murphy.
|
|
Among other things, this bill: This bill represents more than a piece of legislation.
|
|
You should not hear crunching teeth when you bite into a piece of meat.
|
|
But trying to grab a piece of the fresh-food trend isn't that easy.
|
|
I used a piece of blocking software on my phone and laptop called Freedom.
|
|
"I got a pond and a piece of land for 10 years," said Akter.
|
|
Cillizza: Let's talk about Pence's actual speech as a piece of political rhetoric. Effective?
|
|
Price: $28.68 on Amazon Who doesn't love a piece of furniture as a gift?
|
|
Then, wrap a piece of hair around the elastic and pin it in place.
|
|
This whole thing is more than just having a piece of arm candy, though.
|
|
In 2013, he choked on a piece of food and fell into a coma.
|
|
When you come back a piece of you dies... Asshole Jon is coming y'all!
|
|
Wrap a piece of hair around the base and you're A-list level glam.
|
|
So, Apple made the rocket out of a piece of its own iconic logo.
|
|
MySpace just happens to be a piece of the ad-tech colossus called Viant.
|
|
Even when I wandered behind a piece of greenery, the acoustics weren't discernibly changed.
|
|