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16 Sentences With "bolt out of the blue"

How to use bolt out of the blue in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "bolt out of the blue" and check conjugation/comparative form for "bolt out of the blue". Mastering all the usages of "bolt out of the blue" from sentence examples published by news publications.

In an environment after the Cold War, a "bolt out of the blue" scenario is unlikely.
None of this means that a bear market is on the immediate horizon, or that a recession will come like a bolt out of the blue.
These are good questions, maybe less about the new proposal than about the system as a whole, which, apparently, requires a bolt out of the blue, or Albany, to shake things up.
The original Echo came as a bolt out of the blue and even after the business was well established, the company just last September saw fit to unveil literally dozens of new Alexa products and features to an unsuspecting world.
" Haass II: "Preemption ... would place the onus on NK not to do something that would trigger a preemptive strike [put missiles on alert, or launch them] rather than on us to undertake a preventive, bolt out of the blue attack.
The US has been focused on North Korea's denuclearization, "but a 'bolt out of the blue' North Korean nuclear attack on the United States, which would be suicidal for the Kim dynasty and his country, has always been a fantastical scenario," Sokolsky wrote.
Although the pandemic feels like a bolt out of the blue, it comes after other major disruptions to overseas supply chains, such as Trump's trade war, the 2011 earthquake and tsunami in Japan, and Chinese quotas on exports of rare earths used in batteries and motors in 2010.
Chamberlain said the legal problems were a "bolt out of the blue", and said "I don't see that I've broken any copyright laws or any other such thing." Wilding moved from New Zealand to the United States at the age of 16 to pursue an acting career.
None of these films were made. He produced and directed Lemmon, Fred Astaire and Novak in The Notorious Landlady (1962), co written by Edwards. He was going to make A Bolt Out of the Blue and Fair Game with Holden and direct Sherlock Holmes on Broadway. None of these projects happened.
If so, the new provisions are said to be, in a colorful legal phrase, a 'bolt out of the blue' rather than a reasonable course correction during the rulemaking process. Frequently, agencies will vet several options during the proposed rule phase to allow for comment on the full spectrum of rules under consideration.
Public perception was driven in the opposite direction of military thinking by articles in the press and invasion literature such as The Riddle of the Sands and The Invasion of 1910. These raised the spectre of a surprise 'bolt out of the blue' attack which could evade naval interception. Invasion fears were also stoked by the alarmist rhetoric of former Commander-in-Chief of the Forces, Lord Roberts.
Two months later, on the day his Iowa State team lost at Drake, John was told he had an inoperable malignant tumor at the base of his esophagus. "It was a bolt out of the blue for someone who lived his life free of smoking or drinking," His son John said later. "There was high stress. But he was always healthy." John was optimistic about returning to Iowa State in 1974-75, but his health worsened and he resigned on July 30, 1974.
If a law instructs an agency to issue regulations to ban a chemical, but the agency issues a rule that instead sets levels for safe use—or vice versa—a court may order the agency to issue a new rule. Bolt out of the blue. Occasionally, interested parties argue that the final rule contains provisions that were never vetted during the public comment period. A court may intervene if it finds that there was no way that the commenting public could have anticipated the new provisions and provided comments.
Franklin believed Ford was, at heart, a good man and an ally; he wrote: "Such venom could only some from a Jew-hater of the lowest type, and here it was appearing in a newspaper owned and controlled by one whom the Jews had counted among their friends. It was veritably a bolt out of the blue." Franklin was a member of the local Anti-Defamation League. As a friend of Ford's, and having easy access to his office, Franklin was delegated to discuss the matter with Ford.
Jake Burns of Stiff Little Fingers, the first major punk band from Northern Ireland, explained the record's impact: > [T]he big watershed was the Clash album—that was go out, cut your hair, stop > mucking about time, y'know. Up to that point we'd still been singing about > bowling down California highways. I mean, it meant nothing to me. Although > the Damned and the Pistols were great, they were only exciting musically; > lyrically, I couldn't really make out a lot if it ... [T]o realise that [the > Clash] were actually singing about their own lives in West London was like a > bolt out of the blue.
Following the destruction or loss of communication with the "B" team, authority for the operation of the agency would transition to the "C" team. Should the "C" team no longer be able to function, administrative control of the agency could diffuse to regional offices. Mobilization and dispersal of emergency teams to the Federal Relocation Arc may require several hours to complete, so its utility would be susceptible to a "Bolt Out of the Blue" attack (known by the military acronym "BOOB"), a sudden, decapitating nuclear strike against Washington, D.C. by a foreign state that occurred with no warning and was not preceded by any period of rising tension or intelligence indicators. Military planners consider the likelihood of such an attack to be low.

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