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824 Sentences With "by virtue of"

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

"I don't think I can by virtue of expertise, or should, by virtue of my role," he said.
Was she a "bright light" by virtue of her humanity, or by virtue of her association with Williams, which accepts about one out of five applicants?
Others are automatically considered citizens by virtue of their heritage.
Just by virtue of their ideology, they are causing harm.
Davis's fiction can seem light by virtue of its brevity.
There was a freshness just by virtue of our ignorance.
They were participating by virtue of being the host country.
We're significant by virtue of being here expressing our viewpoints.
She was found not guilty by virtue of temporary insanity.
By virtue of their names, these explorers exceed earthly expiration.
Jenkins possessed — perhaps by virtue of her birth name, perhaps by virtue of her fortune and standing in New York's complacent, high-society incubator — a self-confidence astronomically out of touch with her talent.
It runs disturbingly counter to what the 14th amendment gave us, which was a route to citizenship that could not be denied by virtue of race, by virtue of descent, religion, political party, health, wealth.
Trump may be shielded from criminal indictment by virtue of his status as president, and he may remain shielded from impeachment by virtue of the fact that his own party controls both chambers of Congress.
Those institutions are now corrupt and exist by virtue of deceit.
Bill Skarsgård, by virtue of existing, is a walking special effect.
"Several people were indicted by virtue of this law," she said.
" And "by virtue of his office, he speaks for the country.
By virtue of my being there, I am equal to them.
This is just something you will see by virtue of statistics.
By virtue of their size alone, AirPods are a risky purchase.
By virtue of their positions, those with power will be heard.
Painting was part of feminist discourse by virtue of its absence.
I think I probably found success by virtue of being a novelty.
By virtue of living in New York, J. did receive good care.
So by virtue of just lying there motionless, we become likely victims.
The geoglyphs survived the centuries by virtue of the area's dry climate.
And just by virtue of paying attention, they will probably eat healthier.
By virtue of your prominence, people will look to you for leadership.
Intel, largely by virtue of its success, has the most at stake.
And so by virtue of location we get all of these benefits.
That I should have known simply by virtue of my career choice.
Her success is commendable but it comes by virtue of her privilege.
But yet somehow, probably by virtue of our indomitable will, we endure!
She also normalized taking medication —again — by virtue of simply talking about it.
Trump, too, by virtue of his office, seemed to be beyond Drollinger's judgment.
The male—by virtue of his death—is providing nourishment to his offspring.
That I am not divided from Bernie Sanders by virtue of my background.
"There is a stabilization effect by virtue of last year's uniqueness," he said.
By virtue of what it is, The Disaster Artist is difficult to parse.
TV, by virtue of what it is, seems to reduce everything to entertainment.
By virtue of its user growth, theSkimm was able to attract some funding.
But just by virtue of being a Facebook venture, Libra immediately garnered controversy.
That's just by virtue of statistics—most everything is either average or below.
The thing you know is important by virtue of how terrifying it is.
But can that audience, by virtue of what they're doing, inform business intelligence?
They are entities that define themselves by virtue of what they are against.
I am more successful, by virtue of being six years out of college.
Lahiri continues to write in Italian, and enrich that language by virtue of her
Ultimately, they are women, excluded from other male spaces by virtue of their gender.
By virtue of being a P.O.S., he could be more Trump than Trump himself.
The first black president, by virtue of his very existence, only made things worse.
In contrast, cis women, by virtue of existing, get to be seen as women.
Titanfall 2 wins by virtue of the number of hours I put into it.
"She said, 'Just by virtue of testifying, you are condoning sexual assault,'" Fromme said.
By virtue of his ownership in The Weinstein Co. as a shareholder, and 2.
The Sublime was whatever exceeded human comprehension by virtue of its vastness and dynamism.
To be standing here by virtue of his and Lonnie's request, it's mind-numbing.
By virtue of this, bullshit is a greater enemy of truth than lies are.
"David, by virtue of being a white male, you have white privilege," Martin said.
By virtue of having been trained on past compositions, they can only be derivative.
Any viable system will work by virtue of staying within a narrow use case.
But Glover had made history even before Sunday just by virtue of his nominations.
Some 360° videos ask for attention, simply by virtue of being in 360 degrees.
O'Connor would appear to be the favorite, by virtue of his endorsements and fundraising.
I populate a lot of the intersections just by virtue of my actual experience.
It also doesn't hurt that, by virtue of his speedy ascension to All-N.
The central figure is illuminated by virtue of his faith and the artist's brushstrokes.
The star of the show, by virtue of sheer volume, was tout le lapin .
By virtue of their unvarnished nature, leaks have evolved into the realest of facts.
Now, Russia has to compete, just by virtue of having an option to import.
Photography appealed to realist sensibility by virtue of its seeming ownership of material appearances.
They had received a bye into the quarterfinals by virtue of their top-four seeding.
By virtue of running more tests each year, we're necessarily picking up on more STDs.
But by virtue of his opponent's fame, Bpaet was already making a name for himself.
It ends up just happening by virtue of the fact that people love the art.
Showrunner Veena Sud, by virtue of being a woman of color, can't ignore certain problems.
Are there games that you've found more compelling by virtue of being bad at them?
The beauty of owning is that it happens automatically, by virtue of paying your mortgage.
"By virtue of that, of using the Cézanne mechanism, eventually, you get it right." video
His Billboard Top 20 hit "Redbone" became a meme by virtue of its catchiness alone.
By virtue of being the champion, Woodley represents the spirit of things at 170 pounds.
And so, by virtue of this process, Arctic Monkeys became the biggest band in Britain.
It is so easy to be invisible, or inaudible, simply by virtue of being female.
It created an impression that France would emerge triumphant by virtue of its supreme ability.
By virtue of this, bullshit is a greater enemy of the truth than lies are.
I mean, that's by virtue of the fact that I'm a zombie slayer by trade.
The people at Winterfell, just by virtue of being there, have already made their choices.
We presume we know people by virtue of having known them for a long time.
He does not, however, want to get on by virtue of being a captain's pick.
McCain lies in state officially, while Franklin does so unofficially, by virtue of her admirers.
Not all pilots are equally skilled, by virtue of their natural talent, training, or experience.
"Lo and Behold" is, by virtue of its scope, one of Herzog's more scattershot endeavors.
We vote for the women who by virtue of the timing of their birth, couldn't.
Meanwhile, survivors can find themselves cast out of perfect victimhood by virtue of their identities.
Perhaps background checks are now better by virtue of having fuller data to work with.
The Apple Watch, by virtue of being Apple-made, is something of a fashion accessory now.
The Islamic State differentiates itself from its terrorist predecessors by virtue of its high-quality media.
By virtue of being the only superhero without a superpower, and therefore human, Batman is relatable.
In all three games, you piece together the game's narrative by virtue of your own wits.
Dubai comes top by virtue of having both a surfeit of shops and relatively cheap prices.
And just by virtue of me existing as I am, that is so cathartic to people?
The parts that don't make sense, you piece together by virtue of just understanding the formula.
The male is able to do this by virtue of special muscles that surround the penis.
Mr. Trump was to remain at center stage, by virtue of his lead in the polls.
Although both teams have 89 points, the Blues own the tiebreaker by virtue of total wins.
Grosfeld asserted he had notified the board by virtue of meeting with Dugas, who is chairman.
I saw a woman who qualified for free care by virtue of her husband's military status.
Djokovic and Federer, by virtue of playing on Centre Court, were already into the third round.
Despite the loss, Thiem won the group by virtue of his victory over Federer on Sunday.
Indeed, the computer, by virtue of its brittle nature, seems to require that it come first.
Team Europe also clinched a spot in the semifinals by virtue of the United States' loss.
Yet there are horrors that by virtue of their sheer scale and evil cannot be forgotten.
But it has been deemed a Halloween asteroid by some regardless, by virtue of its timing.
There is a practical problem posed by virtue of your environment: Where are the Muslim boys?
And video games, by virtue of being designed so as to be completed, are inherently safe.
By virtue of the medium, the videos feel more motivated by activism than Stockbridge's early photographs.
There's little evidence that women, by virtue of their gender alone, govern substantially differently than men.
One is that male specimens are possibly easier to fossilize by virtue of their larger size.
"Underrepresented groups come across additional challenges in workplace by virtue of race or ethnicity," Greenwood says.
That was simply by virtue of Kennedy's replacement, Brett Kavanaugh, who holds a more conservative record.
Mr. Nossiter believes they are tacitly associated with the Trump administration purely by virtue of nationality.
By virtue of skillful editing, we see and hear double, caught in a hypnotic aural trance.
As he notes, by virtue of his experience, he is in a good position to comment.
By virtue of circumstance, our Christmases went against typical traditions involving family dinners and stocking stuffers.
By virtue of being autistic, I'm highly likely to find myself inconveniencing people with the truth.
In the biblical lands of Nineveh, Christians -- by virtue of their beliefs -- found themselves living as refugees.
Many histories, interwoven by virtue of their taking place on the sea, are represented by the ships.
The resurgent Greens are probable kingmakers by virtue of an 18% share, according to the exit poll.
I immediately feared that I would soon find myself turning into them, by virtue of my proximity.
This growth presents huge market opportunities in a nearly untouched space, all by virtue of Internet connectedness.
It's important to say that LGBTQ Catholics are already in the church, by virtue of their baptism.
The Inglewood native takes the crown on "Wishing" by virtue of referencing R Kelly's sex music masterpiece.
Astroworld sets itself apart from Scott's previous straightforward rap albums by virtue of being a concept album.
He might, by virtue of his association with Mr Obama, win the backing of many African-Americans.
Yet her powers, just by virtue of existing, force Jessica to get involved in other people's lives.
She stands together with other black women who, by virtue of shared experiences she feels connected to.
It's a really humble music scene by virtue of it's size, yet it's so dense with talent.
It was the sound of music critiquing its own historical situation by virtue of its sheer ambivalence.
Trump will fix everything, overturn every obstacle, overrule every pesky fact, by virtue of his sheer Trumpiness.
But by virtue of their youth and relatively slight physical stature, both already read as vulnerable onscreen.
If you are friends with communists you must by virtue of your friendship be a fellow traveler.
The result was New England giving up the top seed by virtue of Denver's late afternoon victory.
We have to do it by virtue of what you highlighted, the fact that we are new.
Wilson's is original by virtue of being primarily an investigation into the extraordinary "palimpsest" of his mind.
And they've mobilized them not in spite of their presidential disadvantage, but often by virtue of it.
This is against the apartheid by virtue [of] nationality policy that offends human rights and human dignity.
By virtue of attempting a pure camp look, you've already failed at it — particularly if you've succeeded.
"Although it produces a similar effect, it produces it by virtue of a different mechanism," he said.
This one, like the first, is a body only by virtue of its clothing: shirt, pants, shoes.
New England owns the tiebreaker by virtue of its 27-24 win at Pittsburgh on Dec. 17.
At the campground, a young couple frightened me by virtue of being the only other people around.
Rotterdam is not particularly wealthy and houses a large migrant population by virtue of being a port.
By virtue of his committee responsibilities, Tester played a pivotal role in upending the Veterans Affairs nominee.
By virtue of the 1944 Bretton Woods Agreement, European allies conferred economic leadership on the United States.
No, it is much better than that by virtue of the ECB's supranational institutional and operational structure.
But the U.S. still has a seat on the GCF's board by virtue of its previous contributions.
Many of us already live with the risk of arrest and criminalization by virtue of our background.
The Bulls own the head-to-head tiebreaker by virtue of winning the season series 13-1.
The flip side of this is that kids can be super dynamic by virtue of social media.
But there is no excusing ourselves from wrestling with national memory by virtue of our personal geography.
By virtue of their insider status, they have a long-term interest in having parties govern responsibly.
Ahmad, by virtue of his position as leader of African football, is automatically a FIFA vice president.
We all have a body, and by virtue of having a body, we are all prone to illness.
Second, the GOP is not only practically (by virtue of their funding) but ideologically opposed to federal regulation.
By virtue of the plan you will almost surely get a good pick, but correlation and causation, etc.
Rather than promote human rights, however, the council demeans them by virtue of its membership and its activities.
A lottery mindset is the idea that there's a shortcut to instant wealth by virtue of random luck.
And HTC is only technically still in the mobile business by virtue of producing that zany blockchain phone.
But onion soup, in spite of or by virtue of its simplicity, remains—an echo of the past.
The central characters are all Catholic — at least loosely so — by virtue of the Catholic school they attend.
The revolutionary assumes that we're not fallen creatures, that we're made wicked by virtue of our social conditions.
"The decision to 'fire' him was yours and yours alone by virtue of your own misstep," it reads.
Headliners 311 and Sublime are crossover acts, and are here by virtue of them being big, influential names.
"People do not lose their human rights by virtue of crossing a border without a visa," he said.
But now, it suffers purely by virtue of Grande's impressive catalogue and her continual growth as an artist.
Whoever sat behind you in homeroom became your best friend by virtue of sharing last-name first letters.
Similarly, don't prey on speculators expecting your coin offering to appreciate simply by virtue of being a coin.
Contemporary spaceflight is impractical by virtue of being unsustainable; it's a pursuit for governmental agencies and rich visionaries.
They may seem only tangentially related by virtue of their LGBTQ themes, but they share the same DNA.
And they're the ones who shape the culture, purely by virtue of being plugged in at all times.
"Firstly, just by virtue of the impact that they have, one views them with respect," de Nysschen said.
"We will turn a new page by virtue of our neighborliness," Mr. Saleh said in a televised speech.
US spies have tremendous powers available to them, by virtue of who they are and what they do.
Simply by virtue of the color of their skin, Earn and his friends can't occupy a Frasier episode.
I'm also required, by virtue of having great taste, to tell you not to sleep on this one.
Oklahoma edged Ohio State for the fifth spot by virtue of its early season win over the Buckeyes.
Nunes ascended to the top spot in Brazilian soccer almost accidentally, and by virtue of his advanced age.
Along the way, she also became wealthy by virtue of her second marriage to a St. Louis developer.
The idea that presidents, by virtue of their unique constitutional powers, are above the law has surfaced before.
By virtue of their shared playoff dominance, both teams arrived for Thursday's game as fresh as organic produce.
By the end of the quarter, the Heat — by virtue of its 65.2 shooting percentage — led 42-32.
Essentially, prosecutors might argue, the President -- by virtue of his position -- hides from the law, in plain sight.
Some are married in, some are born in, some are grandfathered in by virtue of their own ambition.
Some are married in, some are born in, some are grandfathered in by virtue of their own ambition.
As she says, by virtue of being a musician, you are going to experience that in some form.
Tyga then becomes an uncle to Cairo's new half sibling ... by virtue of Rob and Kylie's sibling relationship.
Senator Sanders is appealing by virtue of a progressive message that resonates deeply with younger people of both sexes.
Ms. Wolfe's health gradually improved not by virtue of drastic interventions, but from careful attention to every possible detail.
My point is that the Everyday Backpack lives up to its name primarily by virtue of its aesthetic versatility.
By 2022 that program expires by virtue of the existing law, and at that point it will go away.
Meanwhile, by virtue of fortuitous timing, events unfolding in Italy will greatly influence the European political and economic agenda.
He also led the Steelers in rushing by virtue of one 217-yard end-around in the first quarter.
He lived there to qualify of UK citizenship, by virtue of the island's status as a British Overseas Territory.
Where is this magical, rhinestoned chair that, by virtue of supporting Kawakubo for years, Lady Gaga has rightfully earned?
Rime, by virtue of leaning on its influences with such visible prominence, ultimately has little to say for itself.
Instead, he was unapologetic about any financial windfall that might come his way by virtue of winning the presidency.
I believed I was a bad person by virtue of my identity, and I struggled to repress my femininity.
It's ridiculing the hateful tweets that celebrities surely get plenty of by virtue of being in the public eye.
The latter by virtue of its enormous middle class will be a global consumer superpower in the foreseeable future.
It was, at least seemingly, low stakes, and by virtue of that very carelessness became a look in itself.
After the Battle of Trafalgar, Britain, though victorious, found itself at sea by virtue of not being at sea.
The reality is that most cities can't simply become great tourism hubs just by virtue of hosting the Olympics.
Everyone gets the same amount by virtue of being a human with material needs that money can help address.
Gaetz argued he should be present at the deposition by virtue of his membership on the House Judiciary Committee.
You felt the volume of the histories that had been lain upon her, simply by virtue of her birth.
His rise came by virtue of his opponent, Representative Chris Collins, being indicted in August on insider trading charges.
By virtue of owning a place of work, private property, an employer has something any would-be employee needs.
By virtue of its size and diverse programming, Coachella, more than any other festival, is a cultural melting pot.
They have access to knowledge, by virtue of their geographic location and language skills, that US agencies simply don't.
In 2012, Obama outperformed his standing in the polls by virtue of his superior get-out-the-vote operation.
I'm distinguishing myself by virtue of the fact that I actually have a forward-thinking vision for the community.
And we understand, by virtue of the book we hold in our hands, that she has become a writer.
Members of the caravan were doubtless violent, simply by virtue of the countries they're fleeing being violent, he alleged.
The tradeoff is that Oscars put Kimmel under a microscope, simply by virtue of the size of the stage.
BlackRock and Vanguard are Sturm Ruger's and American Outdoor's biggest shareholders by virtue of their large index fund businesses.
Its devotees, drawn to the group by virtue of its opacity, carve whole identities out of the band's transgressions.
It's the region's central power by virtue of the subcontinent's central geographic position, size, large population and economic resources.
But it unfolds from a place few other shows could touch, just by virtue of who's telling the story.
He says that Parker's opinion, by virtue of his lack of experience as a player, is a loser's opinion.
It's not unlike Serpas' reclamation of furniture, which seems violent only by virtue of the objects' state of rot.
Watch the video above to see which car has appreciated most by virtue of its famous former (or current) owner.
By virtue of their entrenched position between automaker and consumer, dealers aren't just responsible for selling new cars to people.
Basketball, by virtue of its players and fans, is a community, and one that has always been rooted in possibility.
Not bad for the discovery of a few bones, but the study is limited by virtue of this very fact.
It'll still be painful, but simply by virtue of learning to touch type you'll almost certainly end up typing faster.
"The players recognize that often, I'm in an adversarial position from them, just by virtue of my job," Silver said.
You have to wonder, though, about whether Deezer is being pushed into these expansions by virtue of other market movements.
"Mars, by virtue of its chemistry, was doomed from the start," study author Jon Wade, of Oxford University, tells Axios.
Feminist pundits have argued that Clinton, by virtue of her power as a positive role model, will uplift all women.
But you know, at this stage, we're in a unique position by virtue of having the spectrum portfolio we have.
By virtue of winning the Western Conference title, the Sharks advance to their first appearance in the NHL's ultimate series.
What risks have been posed to American national security by virtue of contacts between the Trump people and the Russians?
They should therefore reach larger audiences and, in turn, be more influential simply by virtue of being more widely read.
Employees and employers owe expensive duties to each other that independent contractors, by virtue of their autonomy, do not face.
Both the House and Senate bill would also impact affordable housing production by virtue of lowering the corporate tax rate.
But some destinations — by virtue of language, ease of transportation, expense or level of hospitality — offer easier going than others.
That's quite a feat given that congressional leaders (by virtue of leading an unpopular branch of government) are usually unpopular.
His other restaurants included Roc and Henry's, an unusual departure by virtue of its location, on the Upper West Side.
They maintained that majority by virtue of their position as the party of the extremely popular and effective New Deal.
"Superdelegates" have the right to vote at the nominating convention by virtue of being elected officials or elected party leaders.
And by virtue of his newness as a phenomenon, he is able to withstand what could otherwise be withering scrutiny.
But at what point does ignorance cross into malice, by virtue of tacitly ignoring what you know to be wrong?
Are Tan and Tim famous in the Muay Thai community just by virtue of being the sons of Thailand Pinsinchai?
But Far Cry 5, by virtue of being set in Montana, has the chance to be a lot more cohesive.
"It's never been our experience that people were evicted by virtue of a government shutdown," a HUD official told CNN.
The choice of Ms. Sherald adds a tantalizing element of risk to the commissions by virtue of her relative obscurity.
Over the years, Dr. Gianotti has become a role model for women by virtue of her position, not by design.
In this case, labor that by virtue of being illegal circumvents minimum wage laws and virtually all worker protection laws.
Simply by virtue of her age and background, Ms. Trump will project a more accessible image than Mr. Pence, 58.
Facebook, by virtue of the fact that it made $16.6 billion in advertising revenue last quarter, is a media company.
But an Iceland goal puts them ahead of Argentina by virtue of goal difference, so then Argentina would need another.
By virtue of the draw, the Americans remain in control of their own fate in qualifying in the Concacaf region.
It's no exaggeration to say that just by virtue of your birth, you are giving us a peek at eternity.
Nootropics were destined to join this list, just by virtue of what they are and what they claim to do.
Science was being told that I had failed but had been gifted a pass by virtue of who you are.
Players could tackle the big main plot, but were also forced – by virtue of mechanics – to take on side-quests.
Perhaps by virtue of living near San Francisco, Ramos said she rarely encounters resistance to her support for LGBTQ people.
Memes about being Vietnamese, Filipino, or even just Asian, presume shared experiences by virtue of shreds of shared cultural background.
They bring about a reality, or seek to, but they are not producing a falsehood by virtue of their performativity.
Each side hoped that it would "win" by virtue of domination -- a superior number of warheads and lethal delivery systems.
By virtue of being a for-profit company, however, no one is there to make sure it actually does so.
These harms extend to the states by virtue of their roles as parens patriae of the residents living within their borders.
An additional six countries automatically get spots in the final by virtue of covering most of the bill for the event.
Sorority culture itself, by virtue of being young, female, and increasingly tech-savvy, seems to inhabit the center of this vortex.
By virtue of [their] intimate relationship with men, they are so gentle that you can often catch them with your hands.
Of course, Trump is far from the only man who treats female reporters with disrespect just by virtue of their gender.
By virtue of its size, even a tweak such as complicating the opt-in sound option on Facebook is potentially fraught.
" Whether by virtue of luck or planning, Kate del Castillo, who helped Sean Penn interview El Chapo, guest stars on "Telenovela.
He doesn't hold any elected office, but he has inherent power over the political system by virtue of his prodigious wealth.
Before the McDonnell case, every phone call answered or meeting arrangement was potentially criminal — just by virtue of the conversation itself.
Never, however, has a whole country had an Olympic mat pulled away by virtue of being exposed as untrustworthy and dishonorable.
It offsets her argument that Trump is uniquely unqualified for the presidency by virtue of his recklessness and lack of discretion.
Perhaps the allegations against Marquis-Boire were more believable simply by virtue of coming in the midst of revelations across society.
The industrialization of space has begun, and by virtue of this development, we're making it a very dangerous and precarious place.
"Rio Tinto's exposure to commodity prices is diversified by virtue of its broad commodity base," it said in its results statement.
Purely by virtue of what I did beforehand, the demos and all, people would know I wasn't some sort of neophyte.
Ah, yes, the brief period in which dancehall moves infiltrated American clubs, mostly by virtue of this and Sean Paul videos.
By virtue of this regulation, the Social Security recipient's name is added to the National Instant Criminal Background Check System (NICS).
Booker said it was by virtue of being "100% present" as mayor of Newark that opportunities arose for his congressional campaign.
The Wing was likely bound to get a certain amount of pushback simply by virtue of the gender of its founders.
And honestly, this trailer is surprisingly good by virtue of it just being itself and not trying to do too much.
Wendi captured it all, making our town feel like we were more like family than neighbors by virtue of geographical circumstance.
Like just about every successful small business in the city, the Co-op has survived by virtue of real-estate luck.
The latest rules could set a new standard for computer manufacturers everywhere by virtue of California's size as a consumer market.
That is because large businesses can inoculate themselves from the weaknesses in American competitiveness by virtue of their size, Porter explained.
But, let's be frank, it's impossible to gauge true intellect or a kind heart by virtue of an online donor search.
But the property, which was unveiled just a month ago, looks to deliver by virtue of its design and location alone.
"It's one of those dreamy destinations that by virtue of its appeal can turn goose bumps of delight into nightmarish shivers."
But Strange's coffers have been boosted by virtue of being the incumbent, while Brooks's time in the House has elevated his.
The question becomes whether that means his fate is preordained by virtue of his blood, his faith, or his skin color.
It's one of those dreamy destinations that by virtue of its appeal can turn goose bumps of delight into nightmarish shivers.
What was most powerful was that just by virtue of his intelligence, he could face this world and not be afraid.
Toronto advanced by virtue of having more away goals, having won, 2-1, in the first leg at Red Bull Arena.
With two wins each, the Finn is ahead by virtue of a point for fastest lap in the Australian season-opener.
"It's like one twin that lives three times longer than the other"—all by virtue of a change in epigenetic information.
John is a regular on cruises by virtue of both a plane phobia and a book he is researching in Greece.
Yoenis Cespedes and Asdrubal Cabrera each drove in two runs, but Conforto's home run stood out by virtue of its context.
City clubs, by virtue of their long history, can charge low room rates because most are exempt from federal income tax.
These printed pages have been turned into singular objects by virtue of the museum collecting, framing, and putting them on display.
Which is to say that a novel is perishable only by virtue of being stored in such a leaky cask: our heads.
In the same 20/20 special, Carman claimed police targeted him because he is "low-hanging fruit" by virtue of his diagnosis.
That court concluded Stein was not an aggrieved party since she had no reasonable chance of winning by virtue of the recount.
Her work follows beauty, which by virtue of its strangeness, asks us to reorient ourselves and find whatever is at its source.
The idea that each human being possesses inherent natural rights by virtue of one&aposs humanity is not just an academic argument.
Undue focus on what is missing by virtue of MacPhee's decision making, or his vinyl-purchasing budget, however, misses the point entirely.
They also might trip up and injure others on the path by virtue of stopping and causing traffic jams or sudden movements.
This is probably the easiest part of the build, and it's only time-consuming by virtue of how many keys there are.
They represent archetypal Bong characters: socially marginal, loyal to each other, but not necessarily heroic or noble by virtue of their poverty.
From the beginning, Google was seen as having an edge by virtue of its deep pockets and ability to attract top talent.
The Looming Tower, by virtue of its ultimate endpoint, knows that every case solved just leads to more suspects to track down.
Publishing a fictitious work about a real person cannot mean the author, by virtue of writing fiction, has acted with actual malice.
By virtue of being who she was, and by documenting herself and those around her, her personal bravery resonates through her images.
But by virtue of being a relatively new concept, the same does not go for social networking in the enterprise world, yet.
The FCC had demanded most of the highest-profile ministries by virtue of its sizable majorities in Democratic Republic of Congo's parliament.
By virtue of that, he was taken into custody on the spot and remains at the Essex County Correctional Facility in Newark.
By virtue of its theme, it evokes the feeling of pornographic websites, but nudity is blurred and adult content is hinted at.
Although the unofficial ringleader by virtue of being its founder, Adam is wary of assuming any sort of authority over the group.
The fear is that the PKK, by virtue of its tacit alliance with the West in Syria, will have gained international legitimacy.
"If you stopped all immigration today, just by virtue of birth rates, this is going to be a browner country," he said.
In recent decades, New Hampshire voters have held outsized power in presidential politics by virtue of their first-in-the-nation primary.
World number one Chen, 27, has underlined his top seed status by virtue of his six Superseries wins on tour last year.
It is thus tempting to believe that Democrats will rise from the ashes of 2016 by virtue of President Donald Trump's vices.
Welsh football was, by virtue of its failings, a niche interest that only those with an emotional attachment ever became involved with.
By virtue of the tremendous damage suffered in the war by all the other powers, the United States became a global hegemon.
Also consider that just by virtue of being publicly traded, a bank becomes subject to the risk of large securities fraud lawsuits.
It already ranks second in snacks, behind PepsiCo, by virtue of being the nation's largest chocolate company, argues its CEO, Michele Buck.
Simply by virtue of tying together a decade's worth of blockbusters, its place in the pantheon of movies appears all but assured.
You may be eligible to join a credit union by virtue of where you live, where you work, or your family connections.
Debut novelists can prove intoxicating in shallow ways — by virtue of their youth and precocity, their big advances, their buzz and hype.
The Mets earned the home-field advantage in the game by virtue of their 4-3 season-series win over the Giants.
We deserve no merit for the luck that dealt us the gold of American citizenship simply by virtue of being born here.
Fast food chains have, by virtue of their scale, a capacity for exploratory food science that independent restaurants cannot typically compete with.
Okafor suffers from none of those problems, and his face-up footwork and finishing ability are made elite by virtue of strength.
"You in fact can make a difference in how people feel about something by virtue of what you call it," Sherman says.
Sure, those teammates are no slouches, but additionally, you're already pretty decent at basketball by virtue of being on an NBA roster.
Rhonda's 16-year-old daughter and Garcia's 2-year-old son are citizens by virtue of being born in the United States.
New York City F.C. also claimed a first-round bye by virtue of its 4-20083 win over the visiting Columbus Crew.
Her history with fossil fuel companies, by virtue of where her career has taken her, is long, complex, and not always pretty.
And the Netherlands, which was not even in the race, was handed the bronze by virtue of winning the consolation race earlier.
By virtue of providing increasingly critical services, tech giants wield immense leverage over the sellers and buyers that rely on their platforms.
And you often have to make the plot progress paramount just by virtue of being a small part of a bigger whole.
"By virtue of his abilities, Lighthizer's profile is rising," said Gary Hufbauer, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics.
Plum's San Antonio team in 2017 was no different, landing that top selection by virtue of a 7-27 record in 2016.
The exhibition coheres by virtue of Wolkoff's eye for texture, light, and form, as well as her instinct for barely subdued drama.
Yet just by virtue of her design eye and thrift-shopping prowess, it could easily have been mistaken for a movie set.
Since 1917, by virtue of the Jones Act, we can move freely to and from the United States with our blue passport.
The idea that presidents, by virtue of their unique constitutional powers, are above ordinary law has surfaced from the White House before.
We all know what stress feels like — even if you're the most zen person in existence — simply by virtue of being alive.
This is speech that attempts to limit the free speech rights of entire categories of people by virtue of their ascribed identities.
By virtue of being a game, it also has a lot of interactive segments and scenes that have different potential end states.
"This great nation will continue to move forward by virtue of the collective of American people," Garrett said, according to the report.
By virtue of his new leadership post, Ryan is chairman of the Republican National Convention, which kicks off July 85033 in Cleveland.
Many are nervous that Trump's confidants will be given key roles irrespective of their qualifications, by virtue of their loyalty to Trump.
For the past several years, Bounce Patrol's videos, by virtue of being on Youtube, have also collected data on millions of children.
Life is short and messy, but the project, by virtue of its mission, consistency and narrative shape, smooths out the metaphoric wrinkles.
By virtue of this background, she is not someone who has been historically well represented in the cozy corridors of Canadian power.
Most of the artworks to be featured aren't specifically about advertising, but they indirectly address its ubiquity by virtue of their placement.
You don't have to look far to find someone who assumes female-identifying musicians are less capable by virtue of our gender.
Their views are treated as legitimate by virtue of their religion; they are Muslim or formerly Muslim themselves, so they must know.
Thus, as Facebook rolls out the new features, many users will be automatically enrolled by virtue of simply never having changing their settings.
When you say, as you often do, that bugs rule the world, what does that mean—just by virtue of their sheer numbers?
Some of those records will be unlocked on day one by virtue of the fact that you've been playing Destiny for however long.
Past Supreme Court decisions which have had international repercussions by virtue of shaping the future course of America include the Citizens United v.
By now, by virtue of these individual stories, it's hard to disbelieve sexual harassment happens, with all its attendant personal and professional consequences.
Markle — who was 22006's most googled actress — may be the key to modernizing the monarchy, simply by virtue of who she is.
They're queer cis women who, by virtue of their race and class, have avoided many of the difficulties that other marginalized communities face.
They develop strong ties to IPO underwriters by virtue of being prolific IPO investors and providing the banks' brokerage business with trading fees.
This porous and ungoverned area presents a major problem by virtue of the ease of movement for militants and terrorists across these borders.
In this new era, every woman, by virtue of her lived experience, is now a walking hub of multi-million dollar business ideas.
He was a prodigy, a child born with a rare artistic gift that was nurtured and allowed to flourish by virtue of patronage.
Kylie Jenner has been stepping out with a new man, and many people assume he's an upgrade, by virtue of not being Tyga.
Panasonic's opted for a busier look that promises to nevertheless be faster in operation, simply by virtue of having more immediate physical controls.
These are party leaders from across the country who serve as convention delegates by virtue of the positions they hold or have held.
The 17-foot-tall stone slab is inscribed with a message that, by virtue of the medium, could outlast the civilization around it.
It was not to say that white judges, by virtue of their whiteness, are incapable of standing in judgment of certain minorities impartially.
By virtue of today's market-based truth metrics, if enough people click on a writer's Hot Take, it becomes codified into Objective Fact.
By virtue of its status, the assets and liabilities of HUS cannot be liquidated or transferred to entities other than the French State.
The only way any of Israel's [government] discourse makes sense is if you accept that Palestinians, by virtue of existing, are being violent.
By virtue of NITs being unwanted programs, users have no agency to choose not to install, which generally fits the definition of malware.
Like a peacock's tail, in other words, it is an ornament that, by virtue of being expensive to own, proves its bearers' fitness.
And we think now, by virtue of that transition, we get more games on the PS4 and Xbox One than any other publisher.
That argument is totally wrong, because the vast majority of adult illegal aliens are committing felonies by virtue of being active in America.
This newly discovered, oblong-shaped projectile was characteristically different than the other two by virtue of a single hole drilled into one side.
"There are people who will be leaving by virtue of the tax hit that they're taking due to the tax change," Silverstein said.
"Are nominees disqualified by virtue of the clients and the causes that he or she has represented as a lawyer?" he asked. Sen.
Besides the idea that, just by virtue of her complexion, she is more entitled to something as simple as spinning on the playground.
Most senior officials in this administration have become polarizing just by virtue of working for Trump, but not Haley — at least so far.
Many people confuse legality with morality, and view cannabis as "bad" simply by virtue of the fact that it's illegal in many places.
Once that happened, even wrestlers who were jobbers by most definitions became something more simply by virtue of having character and personal drama.
The "chosen one" is chosen because they are mythically wise, noble, and just, and heroes win the day by virtue of being heroes.
Bokeh is actually one of the hardest things for mobile cameras to achieve, by virtue of the physics of their smaller sensor size.
"White Trash" is at once informative, painful and enlightening in how complex our obsession with social-standing-by-virtue-of-color has evolved.
By the way, Hillary Clinton won the popular vote by virtue of overwhelming support from two of 85033 states — California and New York.
"The tools might be compliant, but no responsible vendor is saying, 'By virtue of using our tool, you will be compliant,'" he said.
Organizations like the Russian government and Cambridge Analytica were taking advantage of them simply by virtue of using social media for political communications.
At first blush, the technology appeared interactive, or two-way, by virtue of users' ability to call up teletext "pages" at their whim.
Lindsey Graham, by virtue of his chairmanship of the Judiciary Committee, will be tasked with just how far to go on background checks.
The subway system is a little like Social Security: ingenious, necessary, expensive, historically robust, yet, by virtue of demographics, shadowed by future collapse.
And in fact, most American foods that are commonly eaten today have foreign origins, by virtue of America being a country of immigrants.
"It's the ultimate commentary on shit television by virtue of being head and shoulders above everything else," she wrote in an e-mail.
By virtue of being on a red carpet, the couples on it often look unnatural — albeit very well groomed — when posing for photos.
A loss would leave Kansas City and Oakland tied, with the Chiefs owning the tiebreaker by virtue of having swept the season series.
He's raising a young black man in America, realizing that people see him as a threat just by virtue of who he is.
Just by virtue of owning the legendary racing machine, the owner is invited to vintage racing events, shows and parties around the world.
By virtue of his position, Collins helped write the laws of this country and acted as if the law didn't apply to him.
"We are seeing women becoming more independent, by virtue of being so active economically," she said from her office in Nouakchott, the capital.
Jessica earned entry by virtue of her position on last year's L.P.G.A. money list, but Nelly, ranked 95th, had to go through qualifying.
First and foremost, this experience belongs to her, but by virtue of our participation, these works come to represent our experience as well.
Most of my colleagues had been similarly indoctrinated by virtue of our proximity to white, western epistemologies, regardless of our individual identity markers.
Have groups like ISIS made a strategic blunder or have they've been forced into this scattershot approach by virtue of their battlefield losses?
While Nike will be the biggest brand by virtue of a 20-year head start, their narrative softens a bit with each passing season.
The looping six-second video clips, by virtue of their short time frame and focus on capturing individual moments of humor, are almost timeless.
The only person who might be able to stop Mr. Trump is Mr. Trump, by virtue of an eruption or provocation so far unforeseen.
These are companies in the enterprise space that, by virtue of their go-to-market strategies, are unlikely to need more than $10 million.
On the first episode, Kevin Wendt won the biathlon competition by virtue of having some skiing experience, and so he received a date card.
But the deck of the San Shan hovers by virtue of 360 degrees of cables, which stabilize it from the top, bottom, and sides.
She also took comfort in knowing that just by virtue of being multiracial, and having a multiracial child, she's already gotten back at him.
By virtue of their win and a Yankees loss, the Red Sox cut their magic number for winning the American League East to four.
By virtue of not being in Washington, he was able to more credibly deride Republicans in Congress and paint himself as a political outsider.
More than 100 footballers currently in England by virtue of their European passport would not qualify for work permits, according to a BBC survey.
Sanders, meanwhile, has genuinely become the candidate of the young and cool simply by virtue of not trying to be anything other than himself.
The priest gets to be designated as someone closer to God by virtue of his maleness; he has the privilege of believing in forever.
And many authors have spent years, even decades, writing books that push mainstream commercial boundaries simply by virtue of the authors' (and characters') identities.
Beyerdynamic touts 18dB of ambient noise attenuation just by virtue of the design, which has been inspired by the company's work on pilot headsets.
Bonkers gadgets will always get coverage just by virtue of being weird, but don't reporters also look for stuff that people will actually use?
By virtue of his success, the late monarch has left behind a modern country that now has to come to terms with his passing.
"There is no evidence that people who are U.S. citizens are prevented from voting by virtue of the Kansas law," Kobach said in closing.
"It's reasonable to question whether there was at least implicit fundraising solicitations by virtue of his fundraiser being present at these meetings," Fischer said.
By virtue of their skin, black people in the US are no strangers to police brutality or the conversations about race that surround it.
On the BBC, he reiterated his conviction that readers have "a right" to know about her personally by virtue of purchasing her (fictive) work.
And while the other plantations burned, died, or were harvested, this little patch of 220 trees has survived by virtue of being largely forgotten.
Carson appears to keep surviving -- and at times, climbing -- just by virtue of not being involved in the fights the other candidates are waging.
When I ran for City Council in 1975, at 27 years of age, I knew a lot of people by virtue of working there.
To me, the Pokémon mapping services weren't cheating by virtue of the fact they were easily available to everyone (Pokévision, for instance, was free).
By virtue of that, we can try to tailor an offering where we can provide types of games experiences that might be more relevant.
The more than 200 institutions in the Smithsonian's Affiliations program can borrow and loan works among themselves more freely by virtue of the partnership.
Whether the FCC reclassified termination (by virtue of reclassifying BIAS) or did not (leaving it an "information service") remains unclear and is still debated.
Given that the armpit tattoo is naturally concealed, just by virtue of being in an armpit, it fits right in with the current craze.
We are WAY past the idea that anyone could assume anyone else is only dating us, by virtue of us going on a date.
Each person has a right to be free from torture simply by virtue of their humanity, and it's a right that requires constant vigilance.
His underlying assertion is that they—and other nonwhite Americans—can never be full members of the American nation by virtue of their race.
Thus, while policy defenders are correct in stating that RPBs themselves won't issue regulations, regulatory impacts will result by virtue of the implementation requirement.
It operates simply by virtue of the fact that most men prefer to work with, hang out with, coach, mentor, and sponsor other men.
What about if they turn out to be truthful, and harmful to the President or his campaign (read, "family") by virtue of their truthfulness?
Unquestionably qualified by virtue of his intellect, education and experience, Bork was stridently conservative in his long paper trail of judicial opinions and scholarship.
British boxer Joshua Buatsi defeated third seeded Elshod Rasulov of Uzbekistan by virtue of a knockout in their men's preliminary light heavyweight category bout.
Being at the bottom of the ocean is frightening simply by virtue of where you are and the conditions you're having to exist in.
Bean acted as if the whole state belonged to him by virtue of that fact and chose to obey whichever laws he saw fit.
We met through stand-up, but I think the show has brought us closer together just by virtue of shooting and doing full shows.
Hawley argues that McCaskill is rich, by virtue of being married to Joe Shepard, and powerful—a United States senator with a private plane.
Most importantly, did Burr and his wife trade on valuable insider information that he gained by virtue of his position as an elected official?
In an earlier time, "The Other Side of Hope" might have been cited as an example of realism, by virtue of its subject matter.
I reject the idea that by virtue of being friends with you, I am somehow condoning the beliefs you have that I disagree with.
I think by virtue of the world that we inhabit [on the show], it's a hostile environment that people are trying to win over.
"The great butlers are great by virtue of their ability to inhabit their professional role and inhabit it to the utmost," Stevens tells us.
First is what epidemiologists call "herd immunity," or the degree to which the population develops immunity by virtue of having been infected and survived.
"He will make his mark by virtue of his humanity and the craftsmanship with which he enshrined that humanity in music," Mr. Fanning said.
For some soldiers, those comments seemed to equate Iraqi soldiers — by virtue of their nationality and religion — with the very terrorists they were fighting.
He leads by virtue of religious credentials and connections rather than military credentials, and is known as a consensus builder unlikely to take risks.
Just by virtue of being the most visible person in the country, you can help or harm so many people in so many ways.
"Growth will be double digits for years just by virtue of how small of a place that [hemp] holds in the marketplace," Clark said.
By virtue of their status, the assets and liabilities of the obligors cannot be liquidated or transferred to entities other than the French state.
In the documentary, he credits Ms. Rubenstein with helping to bring the genre increased prominence by virtue of her stature as a rock photographer.
There is also an expectation that men, by virtue of their physical size, can fend for themselves during unwanted advances, despite imbalances in power.
He was an extraordinary force in the Senate by virtue of his public career and his intellect and his will to move issues forward.
Had the Mets lost, they would have been eliminated by virtue of their defeat and wins earlier in the day by Washington and Milwaukee.
The only way to win is not to play, and by virtue of "losing" the competition for being the Queen's favourite, Lady Marlborough wins.
Both of us had been the fattest kids in our high school classes, held at a distance from classmates by virtue of our bodies.
Can you begin to move those numbers to look more like what we do in the DirecTV content by virtue of using the data?
Photography incarnates that impulse to travel, documents and legitimates it as an agent of our existential wonder, by virtue of its great pictorial capacity.
Like Seattle, Green Bay finished 10-6, but the Packers got the No. 5 seed by virtue of a win over the Seahawks this season.
And Marriott says that synced up nicely with its goal of reducing the friction that travelers experience by virtue of being in a new place.
But by virtue of having the nutso DNA of a Black Mirror theme, "Bandersnatch" works in the only way our conflict hungry selves can enjoy.
It is the idea that there is a shortcut to wealth, that it is possible to become instantly wealthy by virtue of random good luck.
" When Webb, who is black, responded, asking how he had white privilege, Martin said, "By virtue of being a white male you have white privilege.
It would be easy enough for Gloria to simply stop killing people by virtue of avoiding the playground portal, but Oscar emerges as a foe.
It's as if these people, by virtue of being born into these American dynasties, automatically led lives that were interesting and ripe for story-telling.
Defending someone's humanity in no way requires leniency — in fact, it was by virtue of their personhood that Christ held them responsible for their sins.
The agreement has 19 parties, of which some are multi-member organisations like the EU. Britain takes part only by virtue of its EU membership.
A song catches on often because it's an earworm, or it suits a particular meme, not necessarily by virtue of how "good" the music is.
In the demon-haunted world that we inhabit by virtue of being human, this may be all that stands between us and the enveloping darkness.
By virtue of the anabolic nature of these compounds, they are not allowed, nor is a Therapeutic Use Exemption granted for such use for anyone.
Even without selling tens of millions of phones every quarter, Google has an influence on the smartphone market purely by virtue of those phones' existence.
"Airports are run like football stadiums; you pay more just by virtue of being there," RewardExpert CEO and cofounder Roman Shteyn said in a statement.
"By virtue of that privilege, you're more likely to break through, but you also have the shortcomings of and the blinders of privilege," she said.
For many popular creators, merchandise is a significant and possibly even larger portion of the income that they make by virtue of being a YouTuber.
I reckon Sampha, by virtue of being the most sensitive lad on the line-up that day, became the emotional safety net for most people.
By virtue of earning profits in dollars and paying domestic costs in rubles, Russia's energy giants have fared better than many of their international peers.
It was specifically designed to be the go-to jam for any uplifting occasion by virtue of avoiding any characteristics that might limit its reach.
And, let's face it, putting one's hopes in the basket of gaining leniency by virtue of a president's clemency power is often a fool's errand.
"By virtue of economic weight alone, Trump has the overwhelming leverage to force open the protected Canadian dairy sector," said Canadian trade lawyer Larry Herman.
By virtue of its status, the assets and liabilities of CHU of Rennes cannot be liquidated or transferred to entities other than the French State.
I thought that the "other future" might be Miami in the same time, but more futuristic by virtue of being where the rich folks live.
We are born into a family, and by virtue of how it receives and relates to us, we become manifest to ourselves and to others.
"That argument is totally wrong, because the vast majority of adult illegal aliens are committing felonies by virtue of being active in America," he wrote.
It is one of the biggest electronic payment companies in the world by virtue of Alipay, a payment service that is commonly used in China.
CdT's ratings are equalised with those of PAT by virtue of the guarantee it provides for CdT's debt under provincial law 13/1973 art. 8bis.
But Sanders has clear momentum in the race, by virtue of winning three out of four contests over the weekend and surpassing Clinton in Michigan.
Indeed, connected cars, and eventually self-driving vehicles, by virtue of being the primary beneficiaries of intelligent city design, are bound to do it again.
Love them or hate them, cranberries may have been the original Thanksgiving side dish by virtue of the fact they grew natively on American soil.
By virtue of his position as Speaker, Ryan will be the chairman at the Republican National Convention, which will kick off July 85033 in Cleveland.
Unlike any previous experiments, a man who is nearly completely paralyzed -- or tetraplegic -- regained his ability to reach and grasp by virtue of a neuroprosthetic.
Offerup is bigger, by virtue of being in the market for longer, "but we are growing a lot faster and will catch up," he said.
The plan is eventually for UAVs to be operated by health workers by virtue of a password and a GPS signal on their mobile phone.
Business owners, on the other hand, are by virtue of their standing better suited to guide the economy -- and, on a moral level, more deserving.
"I'd been raised to think that any anger I felt was legitimate, merely by virtue of the fact that I was lower-class," he said.
Everything that makes the Black Panther the Marvel hero that he is comes from black unity, by virtue of Wakanda, an entirely black-lived city.
While a novel might sprawl off in any number of directions, short stories tend to be more schematic, by virtue of their tightly controlled brevity.
But they have never faced a challenge like Mr. Trump, who by virtue of his background and experience, views the intelligence agencies with deep skepticism.
He is a spirited downhill writer, capable of creating energy by virtue of his own pace and verve, and that is certainly the case here.
Already, by virtue of a since-repealed law that permitted prisoners to stand as electoral candidates, Mr. Sands had been voted into the British Parliament.
But by virtue of its premise and its history, Will & Grace has never been in the same class as, say, a deliberately bland Fuller House.
I don't want to die, but it's only by virtue of being mortal, of running the risk of death, that things can matter at all.
It's easy, of course, to see a company like Amazon as a nefarious force simply by virtue of its size and Bezos' staggering personal wealth.
That means that Marion, simply by virtue of their repeat encounters, gets an opportunity she might not have had in the normal course of things.
What's happening: "Bigger guys, just by virtue of their size, can weather the storm better," says Tom Duesterberg, a trade expert at the Hudson Institute.
Some of them have succeeded by virtue of being conventionally attractive, or good at video games, or in possession of some other surface-level attribute.
But you can't deny, by virtue of that strong GOP showing in the Senate, that Trump's allure endures for a big swath of the country.
Their new phones are big deals by virtue of the fact that they've sold more than 2.2 billion iOS devices since their debut in 2007.
Zumret had grown up to be beautiful, one of the girls in school who was cool by virtue of looks and a cultivated haughty attitude.
His enduring moral prestige remained largely undented, however, both through charisma and by virtue of having negotiated with most of the powers in the world.
A person born in the United States is entitled to citizenship by virtue of the 14th Amendment, often described as the right of birthright citizenship.
"There are folks who, just by virtue of winning seats in places that Donald Trump won, needed to engage with their new constituents," said Rep.
By virtue of tradition and archaic gender assignments, the complex work of managing food for the White House has always fallen to the first lady.
Lady Bird McPherson (also known, to her great annoyance, as Christine) is typical only by virtue of the circumstances over which she has no control.
The bad news, according to the experts, is that you will most likely get some strains of HPV simply by virtue of being sexually active.
According to data released by Synergy Research last week, IBM remains the number three cloud infrastructure provider by virtue of its strength in private cloud services.
The major quibble with Storm is that by virtue of being outside the Wolverine-Jean Grey-Cyclops love triangle, she's been relegated to a supporting character.
By virtue of this proposal, the EU is responding to rapid advances in robotics and AI, and the potential risks imposed on humans and human property.
With enough elevation or distance from foot traffic, many other sites will be safe for a relatively long time, by virtue of staying dry or hidden.
Elliott Sadler and Brendan Gaughan know they will race in the 500 by virtue of being the fastest among the six drivers running for open teams.
By virtue of his country's unfortunate place in history, he is keener than most to make sure Iran's theocratic leaders never get their hands on nukes.
" Bantjes goes on to argue that her treatment of the type and layout is "very conservative" by virtue of the fact that is it "ultimately readable.
They say the foundation's contributors appear to have gained a greater ability to make their voices heard by Clinton's State Department by virtue of their donations.
By virtue of dumping vast quantities of sand into the sea, Singapore is now over 20% larger than it was when it became independent in 1965.
He also knows a thing or two about being the most adorable dog ever, by virtue of his personality, drooping tongue, and perfect little nugget body.
But the DC Circuit, by virtue of its location in the nation's capital and specific jurisdiction, hears a narrower docket tied mainly to how government works.
"Most Texas citizens might agree that Steinbeck's Lennie should, by virtue of his lack of reasoning ability and adaptive skills, be exempt", Judge Cathy Cochran wrote.
Moonlight's Mahershala Ali fares a bit better, by virtue of a plot quirk that has him alternately playing sports mogul Vector, and Zalem's maniacal ruler Nova.
Ervin, who is biracial, even became a reluctant social figure by virtue of becoming the first African-American swimmer in history to win an Olympic medal.
Anybody who decides to do it, or decides to go to Mars, by virtue of that means they're disqualified to be president or go to Mars.
Are certain kinds of people, by virtue of who they are and where they were born, more entitled to live in the United States than others?
" White House Chief of Staff Denis McDonough called it "present" -- only able to prove its relevance through destruction and "by virtue of its nefariousness and threat.
The Googlers' work here offers a reminder of how much power tech workers — by virtue of the high demand for their skills — have over their companies.
Apple was targeted in the latest protest by virtue of its country of origin, which in turn was regarded as the root of a perceived affront.
Sometimes called Haz, Styles is the perpetually tousled hunky one, often inaccurately portrayed as the band's lead singer mainly by virtue of being deemed the hottest.
The conundrum, of course, is that advanced driver assistance systems like Autopilot can often lull drivers into a state of inattentiveness by virtue of their effectiveness.
"The symbols we use to communicate with one another can become contaminated and elicit disgust by virtue of their association with bodily functions," he said.[PlosOne]
Furthermore, by virtue of having these long-lasting and detailed memories of significant events, we can demonstrate and reinforce our membership in these important social groups.
"If a deal materializes, then the pound, by virtue of its large undervaluation, can benefit quite strongly," said Joel Kruger, market research analyst at LMAX Exchange.
Despite sustaining a fourth consecutive loss, Vegas still clinched a Stanley Cup playoff berth by virtue of Colorado's 222-23 shootout victory over the Arizona Coyotes.
The transaction gives Bertelsmann greater control over a key part of its operations by virtue of its enlarged stake and new ability to appoint PRH's Chairman.
The FCC's demands that it control of most of the highest-profile ministries by virtue of its sizable majorities in parliament had held up the talks.
Like the Englewood Four, the Dixmoor Five had been locked up as teens on false confessions and won their release by virtue of new DNA evidence.
In fact, what we've realized, mom, is that bold hues — like this gorgeous turquoise — actually work on every tone by virtue of being so out-there.
The NBA and MLB have been doing this for longer than the NFL and, by virtue of their seven-game series formats, more rigorously to boot.
So EMC increased its equity stake in Pivotal, when it owned a majority stake by virtue of its own investment and its ownership stake in VMware.
Yet, I was attacked for holding tobacco stocks in the portfolio, by virtue of the fact that we owned an S&P 500 stock index fund.
By virtue of said decision, the applicants imposed a provisional seizure upon certain of our Company's bank accounts up to the amount of 1.8 mil. EUR.
But Hizbullah is unique by virtue of the special role its conflict with Israel plays in affecting strategic thinking and decision-making in Israel and elsewhere.
Games, by virtue of us spending exponentially more time with them than any given film, have the ability to drive that character-to-character relationship home.
Brianna, the founder of Pregnancy & Postpartum Athleticism™️, has little patience for coaches who, by virtue of having a child, consider themselves experts in postpartum fitness.
In this new world economy, the United States does not have a competitive advantage by virtue of high productivity based on superior organization and advanced technology.
Furthermore, since the first lady is eligible for office by virtue of being married to the president, greater politicization inevitably bumps up against charges of nepotism.
Since then, Edmunds has steadily climbed the rankings, and, by virtue of a solid clay court season, will be the No. 16 seed at Roland Garros.
Ainge secured the No. 21980 pick in the 22 draft by virtue of a deal with the Nets in 276 that still remains hard to believe.
Milwaukee also fell three games behind the St. Louis Cardinals in the NL Central by virtue of the Cardinals' 63-1 win over the Washington Nationals.
I answer: Can you not see how, by virtue of the fact that I have written it, "The Inheritance" is a reflection of a Latinx perspective?
So with the power vested in us by virtue of having watched HGTV more than once: Whose mansion is more hellish, Dr. Phil's or Jeffree Star's?
Rules to fight financial crime require banks to identify such people because they present a higher risk of bribery or corruption by virtue of their position.
Both the Islanders and Rangers have 23 points, but the Islanders own the tiebreaker by virtue of having two games remaining while the Rangers have one.
By virtue of its status as New York City's least-populated borough, Staten Island has only three members on the 51-person New York City Council.
Aristotle argued that "the meaner sort of workman," by virtue of his lack of possessions, was "too degraded" to participate in politics and contribute to society.
"Just getting the meeting, getting the access, getting use over government [and] public service employees by virtue of your contributions, that is special access," he said.
A rainmaker is usually a senior partner at a law firm whose role is to drum up business by virtue of who he or she knows.
Rules to fight financial crime require banks to identify such people because they present a higher risk of bribery or corruption by virtue of their position.
The Warriors also earned a potential tiebreaker by virtue of their third straight win over the Nuggets after an October defeat, claiming the season series 3-453.
Having said that, the BJP, by virtue of its organization, access to high finance and possibly access to inside information, is better situated to weather the storm.
So, even though his '68 trophy was sold at auction to pay the Goldman family -- Simpson still gets a vote, by virtue of being a former winner.
An inmate facing death is not a patient by virtue of being connected to an intravenous device and having a doctor in a lab coat standing by.
CdT's ratings are equalised with those of PAT by virtue of the guarantee provided by the sponsor for CdT's debt under provincial law 13/1973 art. 8bis.
By virtue of having potential playoff-hunt determinants like Jonathan Lucroy and Will Smith, the Brewers hold in their hands the keys to half the league's futures.
"Puerto Rico's authority to prosecute individuals is derived from its delegation by United States Congress and not by virtue of its own sovereignty," the court's majority said.
But, Oprah (!) had many of them thinking about an alternate universe in which she is not their preferred candidate simply by virtue of the person she is.
However, the yen, seen as a haven by virtue of Japan's position as the world's largest creditor, halted its decline by morning, suggesting investors are still cautious.
New Orleans (230-227) won earlier Sunday in Tampa Bay, and owns the top seed by virtue of a 250-313 win over the Rams on Nov.
She also comes with a network of marketing heads at big businesses and brands by virtue of AmEx's many connections through to those businesses for payment services.
But it's also pushing them to own their own stuff by virtue of the fact that the advertising revenues are challenged, and the affiliate fees are challenged.
And by virtue of its many, sometimes contradictory missions , it represents a design compromise, meaning it's okay at lots of tasks but excels at none of them.
"Minority teachers, by virtue of their experiences negotiating the United States with identities that fall outside of the mainstream, can likely understand their students' struggles," he said.
"Even with all his problems, Trump still has enormous advantages simply by virtue of being the Republican nominee," said Brigham Young University political science professor Chris Karpowitz.
The Open internet Order also established the position that the FCC could regulate the internet by virtue of its authority under Title II of the Communications Act.
But by virtue of splitting 4-4, the justices affirmed a 2014 lower-court ruling that allowed California to compel non-union workers to pay the fees.
The Warriors also earned a potential tiebreaker by virtue of their third straight win over the Nuggets after an October defeat, claiming the season series 3-1.
Each makes sense in its way; genre fans were presumably likely to find the newcomers in their suggested new releases, simply by virtue of their viewing habits.
Stanton got the top seed by virtue of his win in last year's contest, and then the rest of the seeding is based on home run totals.
Oakland and Houston have a larger Mexican following than most NFL teams, though Oakland certainly has the advantage by virtue of existing for longer than 14 years.
"What happened was, we knew some basics just by virtue of precedent ... but we really had to sit down among ourselves," Durbin said, recounting the 2628 effort.
Dads double down at work, and moms then become President of Parenting Forever, just by virtue of having to do the most, first, when they have leave.
It has become abundantly apparent that Didga and Boomer are going to take over the world by virtue of their friendship, agility and inventive modes of transportation.
Within the Norton Lectures' tradition of wisdom, and among its tellers, Morrison represents a novelty by virtue of her gender, her race, and her American subject matter.
"And they come away thinking they've gained some deep knowledge, understanding of the nature of the regime by virtue of their own charisma and intelligence," Lee said.
So there is little basis for an argument of implicit delegation by virtue of the inclusion in these agreements of clauses allowing the member countries to withdraw.
Sure. It's also probable that, by virtue of earned media attention and money, this first tier crystalizes, and, based on caucus rules, votes get spread among them.
For instance, if you're already a SoFi member by virtue of your student loans, it may be easier for you to qualify for a SoFi mortgage vs.
This is a love story and the play's surprising center, by design and by virtue of Ms. Cheek's and Mr. Howard's standout performances: quiet, intense, funny, affecting.
By virtue of random assignment, Curiel came to preside over two civil lawsuits in a California federal court against Trump and Trump University brought by former students.
Athletes will be able to qualify for the next Olympics either by meeting entry standards or by virtue of their position in the new IAAF world rankings.
"Peace" sounds hypnotically peaceful — but an actual peace by virtue of credible U.S. military deterrence has been maintained in the Korean Peninsula since the armistice of 85033.
SugarCRM, meanwhile, has also been a longstanding partner of IBM's both integrating and reselling its CRM solution, but also by virtue of IBM being a key customer.
The Flyers enter Tuesday's action in the East's second wild-card spot by virtue of having a game in hand on Detroit, which plays Tuesday in Montreal.
This is your grand opportunity to take a position on an author, your stance apparent by virtue of his or her name's comprehensive omission from your bookshelves.
Japan, in contrast, stumbled into the second round by virtue of having received fewer yellow cards than Senegal in Group H, a hitherto unseen World Cup tiebreaker.
By virtue of his dominance and a near resurrection in last season's opener, Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers might as well be a bleep word for Bears fans.
By virtue of being the sort of artist she is, Flohio inherently pushes back against any stereotypes of what a Nigerian-born woman 'should' be or do.
The Bulldogs (20-11, 11-7 SEC) hold the tiebreaker over Florida by virtue of their 78-71 win over the Gators in Gainesville on Jan. 28.
Where boys have been told that their misbehaviors will be rewarded, girls have been reminded over and over that they are imperiled by virtue of being alive.
A win would have bumped the Yankees' lead to five and a half games and also given them the tiebreaker by virtue of winning the season series.
Throughout, she retains the palpable loneliness of an only — someone who, by virtue of being so outnumbered, is judged as a stand-in for an entire population.
By default, as well as by virtue of his surname, Elliott, the son of the Nascar champion Bill Elliott, has emerged as the face of this generation.
Are there still going to be folks who by virtue of their biology or circumstance or environment are able to be resilient in the face of adversity?
Trump has operated at times like an Oval Office double agent -- a conservative by virtue of his rhetoric, but one whose actions tend to hurt his cause.
He is not a princeling, the rank that confers privilege on Chinese leaders by virtue of being a descendant of the revolutionary leaders of the Mao era.
"By virtue of its historical, geographical and cultural difference, Hong Kong is a truly separate entity from the so-called Chinese nation," Chan said during the talk.
But let's broaden it out — not just to identify with one character selected by family lineage, but with all the characters by virtue of our common heritage.
It's the least disturbing of all the Quibi ads, by virtue of being a cartoon, which puts us at the furthest remove from the finality of death.
But Trump's legal team sued to block their release, arguing that the president, by virtue of his station, cannot be subject to criminal investigations of any kind.
To earn a place in the hate index, an organization must publicly espouse the idea that a class of people is inferior by virtue of its characteristics.
But Dublin has said it accepted the right of Ms. Smith and her daughter — an Irish citizen by virtue of her mother's nationality — to return to Ireland.
The president undermines our secretary of State, raises tensions in the area by virtue of the tweets that he sends out," Corker told ABC's "Good Morning America.
In short, the framers of the Fourth Amendment could not have "plainly" intended that modern-day result by virtue of the "plain" language of that constitutional amendment.
KEY RATING DRIVERS Autonomy Underpins Ratings: VdA is eligible to be rated above the sovereign (BBB/Stable) by virtue of its institutional strength and high financial autonomy.
Perhaps conservatism endures by virtue of adherence to its governing principles (a preference for free markets, federalism), which can moderate and modulate whatever agenda Trump is pushing.
The stratollite travels by virtue of two balloons, one filled with helium to provide lift, and the other with pressurized air, which functions as a steering system.
It's problematic that by virtue of their strangleholds on the Apple and Android operating systems, Apple and Google have control over huge swaths of the tech industry.
If she's otherwise healthy and has no heart problems, then the coughing could lead to fainting just by virtue of the vigor with which the person coughs.
Possibly all of the above — and also, I suspect, by virtue of Noé's commitment to an idea of cinema at once visceral and analytical, sensual and cerebral.
"I think it is both wrong and a mistake to somehow represent women in politics as somehow being better by virtue of our X chromosomes," she said.
This led Schlemmer to create a proto-robotic art by virtue of a relocation of embodied and mechanic consciousness — now commonly known as the post-human condition.
" Yet Khan still faced being banned from the US by virtue of his faith, he said, adding: "Clearly [I'll visit] before January in case Donald Trump wins.
Of the so-called Big Three, however, only Ford continues to get hit with mesothelioma lawsuits; GM and Chrysler are immune by virtue of their 2009 bankruptcies.
Accor's profitability should be more resilient by virtue of the recurring profit stream derived from management contracts, despite its increasing exposure to luxury hotels which are inherently cyclical.
Wong Kim Ark, the court ruled that a child of Chinese parents who was born in San Francisco was a U.S. citizen by virtue of his California birth.
Nor is it very useful to have your city hall reporter taking shitty video of the Pumpkin Festival that nobody will watch by virtue of its very shittiness.
Britain is a member of the GPA, whose members open up their combined $1.7 trillion government procurement markets to each other's firms, by virtue of its EU membership.
Even when she goes away (most recently while married to Qatari businessman Wissam Al Mana), she's around, relevant to the zeitgeist, by virtue of her art and life.
Together with his wife, Tashfeen Malik, a legal U.S. resident by virtue of her marriage to her American husband, he killed 14 in San Bernardino, California, in 2015.
The OnePlus approach of leaner and cleaner has been a winning one, helping it produce devices that just feel faster by virtue of having nothing slowing them down.
They then examine whether the federal recusal statute requires in death penalty cases the recusal of a Catholic judge, merely by virtue of his or her church membership.
But what stood out to me, precisely by virtue of it not being noticed or widely recognized, was the role that Twitter played in that explosive news moment.
Elevating Schiff was made easier by virtue of the fact that the issue at hand -- the President asking Ukraine's leader to investigate Joe Biden -- fit under Schiff's portfolio.
Candidates now construct their own face masks by virtue of whatever quotient of shamelessness they can abide in themselves — which would seem to be a lot and increasing.
Very shortly after starting work there, I discovered that I could get on the guest list at the Fillmore Auditorium by virtue of my employment at the newspaper.
Everything I see on the iPad is better simply by virtue of the big screen, from managing email to browsing the Web to typing on the virtual keyboard.
Ismail added Maryam has Sharif's ear by virtue of being his daughter, but has not been involved in government policy in economics or other areas outside her interests.
Catholics and Protestants quarrelled bitterly and bloodily over doctrinal matters, such as the Protestant doctrine that humans are saved by virtue of their faith, not their good works.
Just by virtue of his age and not hitting like Willie Mays from the get-go, Buhner's name was prick'd to the point that he was Gregg-bait.
The researchers say it's possible that the killifish were primed for this evolutionary shift by virtue of a shared genetic quirk that drove the rapid adaptation to pollution.
The Florida primary has received less national attention this year, but by virtue of his blackness and his age, Gillum has always stood out as Someone to Watch.
What makes daddy so appealing is that daddy belongs to everyone, by virtue of the fact that we all have dads, and thus, we all have daddy issues.
It may be in beauty, but it's a problem that's very attractive to the team it's built by virtue of the data and the complexity of the operation.
I concluded that Nawaz can claim that he's somehow responsible for the deaths of gay men by virtue of being Muslim, but he doesn't speak for all Muslims.
Ryan was well aware that the Republican Party -- and his own reputation -- would suffer by virtue of remaining silent in the face of some of the President's indignities.
There is no particular pleasure in noting that Jessica James stands apart by virtue of her race — not least because this is not a film about her blackness.
And these Gulf states, by virtue of their longstanding relationships and presence in Washington, have great ease communicating this message to members of the American foreign policy community.
"By virtue of his talent and experience, Edward is supremely prepared to assume the responsibility of British Vogue," Condé Nast's Jonathan Newhouse said in a statement released today.
The adult entertainment star, by virtue of her second innings in Bollywood, is not only the most searched personality on Google India, but also a rage-driver offline.
The second is that all lesbians are likely to be psychopaths and/or narcissists, by virtue of the fact that we're good at staying friends with our exes.
If I go to soccer practice in the afternoon, by virtue of internet-enabled soccer boots, that might give me juice or new cards in my FIFA product.
China, Japan, South Korea and Taiwan remained on a list for special monitoring of currency practices, China by virtue of a massive trade surplus with the United States.
If Donald Trump becomes the president, I'll be stopped from going there by virtue of my faith, which means I can't engage with American mayors and swap ideas.
Indigenous people are also systematically disenfranchised from data ownership and data control, by virtue of their being left out of advanced STEM education and formalized degrees, she said.
It would be terrific to have a simple, seamless system where, solely by virtue of living in America, you know that you will get the care you need.
"Congressman Collins, who by virtue of his office helps to write the laws of our nation, acted as if the law did not apply to him," Berman said.
"Most Texas citizens might agree that Steinbeck's Lennie should, by virtue of his lack of reasoning ability and adaptive skills, be exempt" from the death penalty, she wrote.
While the U.S. sees mostly a convergence of national interests between South Korea and Japan by virtue of the growing North Korea threat, the reality is very different.
But Senate Republicans, who control the committees and the floor by virtue of their majority status, have said repeatedly they will take no action on Judge Garland's nomination.
Division 1 coaches, MLB scouts, and agents—the people who draw the prep athletes to showcases by virtue of their attendance—haven't done much to stop this shift.
He was a diminutive player, maybe 3433-foot-10 tops, who by virtue of his lack of stature didn't hit much but could pick 'em on the infield.
Or you could say the dynamic changed when the Monsters won the Calder Cup eight days earlier, by virtue of a four-game sweep of the Hershey Bears.
They will ask themselves whether they feel it's safe to travel, or whether they think, by virtue of their president, they will be targets of anti-American sentiments.
Why not volunteer at a shelter, some consulted wondered, instead of playing with dogs that, by virtue of being at Biscuits & Bath, are by definition well cared for?
The United States is the most important country in the world and will remain so for many years by virtue of its strong economy and prodigious military capabilities.
Am I a believer in something old or something new, just by virtue of spending as much time as we do in the making and consuming of television?
By virtue of scale, their collective donations would counteract the massive contributions from wealthy donors, while also forcing candidates to reach out to a wider base of voters.
And also, by virtue of the fact that you're living life that way, you trick yourself into thinking there isn't a system, when there really very much is.
"Congressman Collins, who by virtue of his office helps write the laws of our nation, acted as if the law did not apply to him," Mr. Berman said.
Stoddard was certainly a buffoon, and his belief that he was racially superior to the erudite Du Bois, by virtue of his germ-plasm, is absurd and repulsive.
I could understand that — that they somehow would feel, by virtue of being in the presence of another stepmother, as if they had been granted permission to speak.
The second, also a shed, stood "upright by virtue of a few iron nails and a liberal plaster of fish oils," according to the seaport historian Ellen Rosebrock.
By virtue of her selection by colleagues as the House Speaker, which occurred for a second time in 2019, she is the highest female officeholder in U.S. history.
Kyle Larson and Ryan Blaney began the day already locked into the Round of Eight by virtue of their Round-of-12 victories at Dover and Talladega, respectively.
By virtue of their vintage nature, they force us in the present to consider the past, and all the things that led us to where we are today.
Notwithstanding his archaeological credentials, which Ms. Keller, the curator, goes to pains to emphasize in the fine catalog, Greene enthralls us now by virtue of his aesthetic sense.
The message is that bitcoin, by virtue of its technical underpinnings, is something that sits outside of our world—a tool for people left out of the system.
By virtue of meeting this modestly higher capital requirement, banks would be exempted from many rules involving issues that leverage capital alone – especially at these levels – cannot address.
In the past, "by virtue of building a bridge, you could get the economy growing," said Fraser Howie, co-writer of three books on the Chinese financial system.
Perhaps more interesting than the correspondence itself is the fact that the complaint also makes frequent reference about how susceptible Claiborne was by virtue of her low pay.
By virtue of geography, the naval bastion for the Soviet Pacific Fleet happens to be the Sea of Okhotsk, bordered by the now suddenly more interesting Kuril Islands.
"There must be a limit to the consequences to which motorists may be deemed to have consented by virtue of a decision to drive on public roads," Alito wrote.
There's almost always an outwardly facing sense of bravado, their resolve strengthened by virtue of those fabricated avatars and handles protecting their true identities from behind masked IP addresses.
It's often remarked rather abstractly that the rather abstract power of future quantum computers will nuke our most fundamental layer of digital security by virtue of their very existence.
By virtue of augmented reality, the gallery itself was invisible to the naked eye, requiring interested parties to download an app and then view the artwork through their screens.
Just look at how easy it is to repair a smartphone, by virtue of some creative handiwork in markets and souks like the one at Derb Ghallef in Morocco.
Charlie Angus, a Canadian Parliament member from Timmins-James Bay, says that the problem is systemic in his region, and that his constituents suffered by virtue of their background.
Let's recap: Wax believes that nonwhite immigrants are flawed by virtue of who they are, and nothing can be done to change their character and allow them to assimilate.
The moment the election is won, half of your state (or nation, in the case of Melania) detests you by virtue of the man to whom you are married.
The Saints (13-2) clinched the No. 1 seed in the NFC playoffs by virtue of their regular-season win over the Los Angeles Rams (223-3) in November.
Most of the early manuscripts were produced by monks by virtue of their education, and monsters were a medium through which the divine and the unknowable could be visualised.
So, we invest in and work with startups in regulated industries where we think that, by virtue of our work, we can really move the needle for the company.
Hardware systems such as radar warning receivers, sensors, avionics and weapons systems can all change measurably in nearly real-time by virtue of the current pace of technological change.
By virtue of its typographic design, it is continuous with Draw it with your eyes closed: the art of the assignment and I like your work: art and etiquette.
What's beautiful about these applications is that simply spending time in them can feel like a minor act of resistance, just by virtue of their function being fundamentally useless.
Those getting back on the lead lap by virtue of the wave-around restarted at the tail end of the field, giving the front-running cars a significant cushion.
He's a CEO, this alpha dominant businessman that has succeeded by virtue of his will and willingness to occupy that position of operating as an artist in that way.
Except for Elizabeth "Liz" Smith of Norwalk, Ohio, who seems to be perfectly happy to be freed of the Trump presidency by virtue of passing into the Great Beyond.
His story from there follows predictable lines, but is saved from feeling clichéd by virtue of Reynolds's sleek, clean writing and his clear-eyed empathy for all his subjects.
Honduras claimed the second qualifying spot by virtue of a superior goal difference over Argentina, who missed a penalty in their match, with both sides finishing on four points.
Now, after having graduated from medical school in 2014, she is considered a medal contender in Rio by virtue of her fourth-place finish at the worlds last year.
You can argue that Bob Baffert was more intriguing, by virtue of having trained American Pharoah, the horse that broke thoroughbred racing's 37-year Triple Crown drought last year.
By virtue of U.S. dominance in the international financial system, it is a given that sanctions imposed by Washington will have a significant economic impact on a target country.
"Cornillie also said Oracle may have failed to win the JEDI contract, but "by virtue of its partnership with Microsoft, Oracle will maintain a foothold in the federal market.
His opponent Monday, 23rd-ranked Illya Marchenko, reached the fourth round, his first at a Grand Slam, by virtue of 14th-seeded Nick Kyrgios's retirement because of an injury.
This video will go down in history purely by virtue of bringing together three of pop's most important women — and putting them in absurdly perfect outfits in the process.
"Turkey, by virtue of its geography, bridges Asia and Europe, the Balkans and the Caucasus, but to benefit from this position, we need arteries and corridors," he told Reuters.
The notes issued under the MTN programme represent direct, general, unconditional and unsecured obligations of BOCOM by virtue of the deed of guarantee given by the bank's Macau Branch.
People seem to think that by virtue of having the experience to a potentially traumatic event, that you'll have these particular realm of symptoms that include hypervigilance, there's impulsivity.
How people become smarter as they age is not so much about increasing intellectual knowledge or accumulating more wealth (although both will happen by virtue of making good choices).
Some members of Congress, who are superdelegates by virtue of their role in Congress, have met with Perez previously to protest the changes proposed that led to Wednesday's vote.
The government says going cashless could alleviate other major economic headaches, such as a labor shortage and the falling profitability of banks, simply by virtue of being more efficient.
He attempted a comeback in 22004, striking a deal with MLB to reduce his suspension to 2150 games by virtue of the entire year he had missed in 22005.
In a moment of media polarization, the AP has stuck to the center by virtue of its diverse ownership structure—which is to say, the structure of its accountability.
"In these states where everything's regulated so tightly from seed to stem, essentially you've built the feds a case for them by virtue of these federal regulations," Connor said.
Kitaev, now Preskill's colleague at Caltech, presented a design that protects the computer from errors by virtue of the hardware itself, without the need for extra error-correcting code.
She is worried that, by virtue of staying, she is somehow undermining the women who have so bravely spoken up to say #MeToo — of which she is also one.
An industry that's still working out how track the location of truck drivers isn't likely to going to be able to eliminate their roles altogether by virtue of technology.
This wave of endorsements likely mattered in ways that they normally wouldn't, by virtue of their sheer overwhelming volume doled out in a short and opportune period of time.
And so they suffer and breathe, this procession of living women and men, alive by virtue of their longings and their defeats and their schemes and their truncated hopes.
About an hour south of Jerez lay a town that, while not famous for any particular alcoholic beverage, burned itself into my memory by virtue of its sheer elegance.
In 1980, as in 73, the Celtics held the No. 1 pick in the N.B.A. draft, not by virtue of having the worst record, but because of a trade.
By virtue of being Bosnian, I am not as European as the wise Swedes on the Nobel Committee, who awarded Mr. Handke the Nobel Prize in Literature on Thursday.
Sweden qualified for the World Cup by virtue of a playoff win against Italy and has proved it is worth its place by topping a group that included Germany.
They are "adults" by virtue of their willingness to resolve the terrible disparity between the rich countries' self-proclaimed moral authority and the damage they wreak on smaller economies.
But unlike in the physical domain, perpetrators of cyberattacks enjoy significant plausible deniability by virtue of the use of proxies and the inherent veil of obscurity afforded by cyberspace.
"We live and die by these books by virtue of what we write in them," said Officer Shaun McGill, 47, who is assigned to the First Precinct in TriBeCa.
Hollywood's most prestigious awards can exert some pressure on American politics, by virtue of the topics the movies tackle, the conversations they provoke, or the speeches the winners make.
By virtue of those wins, he also comes to the 215 presidential race with a stable of experienced political hands, an asset that self-financing rookie candidates usually lack.
By virtue of its status, the assets and liabilities of HCL cannot be liquidated, and in case of the hospital's dissolution, they must be transferred to the French state.
And the "indict or shut up" theory should have no application to a sitting president who, under DOJ policy, should never be indicted purely by virtue of his position.
"By virtue of its historical, geographical and cultural difference, Hong Kong is a truly separate entity from the so-called Chinese nation," Chan said, describing China as an empire.
Trying to survive just being poor and living in a dangerous neighborhood is hard enough without an arbitrary system that marks you for punishment by virtue of your existence.
"I think the whole idea of uncontrolled female power and female sexuality translates into this illicit sexiness, and cats are part of that, by virtue of association," she says.
"By virtue of not having any significant product evolution in years, users end up doing a lot of things and figure out how to subsist on their own," he says.
Well before he became president, Madison had earned the nickname "Father of the Constitution," by virtue of his speeches, effective negotiations and successful compromises at the Constitutional Convention in 1787.
The table lamp really impresses in two ways, including sound quality and — this might seem obvious — by virtue of it also being a great lamp as well as a speaker.
On Saturday night, a three-legged goat named Byron was born, and he is already melting hearts around the world by virtue of his strength, determination and adorable goat face.
CUNNINGHAM Earlier this year, the documentary "If the Dancer Dances" suggested that video, by virtue of being in two dimensions, was limited in its ability to capture Merce Cunningham's choreography.
"I live in the investment world, where I am a unicorn just by virtue of being a black woman," Hobson said at the Upfront Summit outside Los Angeles on Wednesday.
My sons could tell instantly in their new school which kids came from families of the opposite party just by virtue of the way they treated them: kindly or derisively.
This new book, by virtue of its canine subject and maybe even that image on the book jacket spine, is likely to open their writing up to a wider audience.
But those who are apparently deemed equipped to handle Trump's genius by virtue of their loyalty have let him walk into an impeachment investigation, just like Kelly said they would.
"Nominees for president and vice president receive these classified briefings by virtue of their status as candidates and do not require separate security clearances before the briefings," the official said.
At that time, it was kind of just dawning on me how I was, as a woman, immediately introduced to a feeling of owing something by virtue of my sex.
Deepfakes, by virtue of the fact that they are fake, present a whole new set of challenges for lawmakers, but they are ones that need to be addressed, and fast.
Formally, it sets out to overwhelm by virtue of abundance, rarity, opulence, and strangeness; it floods the eye with sensory impressions and hints at an inter-relational realm of unknowing.
Emboldened by professional lobbyists for the Iranian regime, these policy "experts" suggest that simply by virtue of upsetting the mullahs, any assertive policy will drastically increase the risk of war.
In an ideal city and situation, an entertainer would not be expected to heal severely fractured and underserved artistic communities by virtue of existing and having the audacity to succeed.
So to be invited into that is a special thing, there is some degree of communing in their egalitarian vision, just by virtue of opening your mind to their music.
Beware the Slenderman is primarily a true crime documentary, but it has more ground to cover than most of its ilk, simply by virtue of its crime being so unique.
By virtue of creating this hypothetical CCDM monopoly, an aggregated destination for the crème of the crème, the producers would benefit through an added install base leading to content monetization.
After launching its first service a decade ago, AWS has dominated by virtue of being a first mover, but competition has toughened recently as Microsoft and Google strengthen their offerings.
Such is the nature of whiplash politics, when a bad guy becomes a good guy simply by virtue of the utility he serves in whatever argument you wish to make.
By virtue of his title — he's a deputy assistant to the president rather than an assistant to the president — Stepien is often not even in the room for important meetings.
There is something about it that reflects the ideal of what college sports are supposed to be: Imperfect and flawed, and therefore beautiful by virtue of those imperfections and flaws.
Male Privilege on Display Both Donald and Bill are examples of male privilege; they have access to social, economic and political advantage by virtue of their position and their gender.
Now Nokia the mobile phone brand is back — by virtue of a company called HMD, backed by Foxconn, and staffed by a huge number of alums from the old Nokia.
Campa-Najjar, a contributor to The Hill's opinion section, believes that the travel ban is "immoral and unconstitutional" by virtue of Trump's December 2015 campaign promise to ban Muslim immigration.
" In North American society, where most people still identify as white, Marino said, some people might see other races being portrayed in porn as "exciting [by] virtue of being 'exotic.
" He continues, "By virtue of that story, there are amazing discussions to have that clearly on the most bizarre election cycle of my lifetime, that discussion needs to be had.
"Nominees for president and vice president receive these briefings by virtue of their status as candidates, and do not require separate security clearances before the briefings," Clapper wrote to Ryan.
It's a dazzling picture, but Delacroix's open competition with Rubens, who was denied a riposte by virtue of being two centuries deceased, gives it the air of an elephantine bagatelle.
"By virtue of being the only company doing this, we're also learning faster," said Rinaudo, whose vision is to lead the logistics industry into an instant, automated drone-delivery future.
"If Donald Trump becomes the president, I'll be stopped from going there by virtue of my faith, which means I can't engage with American mayors and swap ideas," he added.
Abu Dhabi National Energy (TAQA) tumbled 6.4 percent, having been one of the standout stocks on the Abu Dhabi bourse this year by virtue of its price more than doubling.
"The world has definitely shifted on its axis, and we've taken a step into the abyss," said Michael Steel, an establishment Republican by virtue of having worked for former Gov.
The responsibility that each of us have to play a part in our nation's destiny, and by virtue of being Americans, play a part in the destiny of the world.
Men don't get to his position by virtue of modesty and self-deprecation, but Chuck takes a big step by acknowledging that confidence and bravado are not always virtues, either.
The argument may be made by some that this edition is representing "pioneering" DJs, and therefore by virtue of dance music being male dominated, the pioneers are naturally male figures.
Thing is, Smith was still recovering from a knee injury when he did so, while Wiley, by virtue of being born in 1999, wasn't eligible for the NBA Draft anyway.
It's basically the same as the other True Body bras by virtue of its identical smooth, buttery soft fabric, but it also has a mesh back so it's extra breathable.
Part of what happened is by virtue of its success, it became a generic practice that people didn't think was anything special anymore, so it didn't need a special name.
Just by virtue of the calendar, American soccer leagues are better off than their counterparts in basketball, hockey and other sports if the prohibitions on mass gatherings last significantly longer.
Sure: Outside of the music, there's not much to Purple Rain, which starred Prince as a pre-famous version himself who becomes a sensation by virtue of being … well, Prince.
By virtue of another disastrous record in 2017, the Aces landed another top overall pick, and used the selection on A'ja Wilson, the multi-talented forward out of South Carolina.
BW: It's interesting that the Kardashians, who are perceived as being so stupid or silly by the general public, can still have that power just by virtue of being women.
In 2900, the territorial sea of Greece was set at 220006 nautical miles from the natural coastline by virtue of Law 2202/2628 as amended by Presidential Decree 28500/6900.
"Our choir and our actors — by virtue of who they are and their commitment to the work — they all mean every word that they sing and say," Mr. Doerries said.
The responsibility that each of us have to play a part in our nation's destiny, and, by virtue of being Americans, play a part in the destiny of the world.
An opposing school of thought holds that surfers do discover deep truths, presumably by virtue of their spending a lot of time in the ocean and emerging stylish and unscathed.
The yen, regarded as a haven in times of turmoil by virtue of Japan's status as the world's biggest creditor, had leapt as much as 0.8% to 107.63 per dollar.
But I do know, by virtue of being online and working in media, that much of what happens within Waystar Royco, the Roys' conglomerate, mirrors our tense, ulcer-inducing industry.
The stories I edit tend to focus on race in America and this is not only by virtue of the fact that I am an editor on the National desk.
"By virtue of his experience, he has almost impossible-to-replicate, case-specific knowledge," said Peter D. Feaver, who worked with Mr. McGurk in the Bush-era National Security Council.
But it's definitely different by virtue of the fact that we are an American family in Europe, so we have to deal with that element right out of the gate.
Like Spencer's Cookham villagers in China, they are global by virtue of being local and cannot easily be fitted to simple stories of race and nationality, of us and them.
They are exerting a powerful drag on global economic growth and, by virtue of their excessively high trade imbalances, they operate as a hugely destabilizing factor for the world economy.
The stories I edit tend to focus on race in America and this is not only by virtue of the fact that I am an editor on the National desk.
Beth (Eliza Scanlen) is the only March girl who's managed to avoid getting swept up in marriage madness, by virtue of her weakened heart after a spell of scarlet fever.
But generations of young Americans have found themselves—by virtue of their race and money, among other things—in a position to break the law and get away with it.
This might not seem so risky: Trump is more likely to lose than not in 2016, and Cruz, by virtue of finishing the runner-up, is already the 2020 frontrunner.
All of us find ourselves utilizing narratives, stories, accounts that we take for granted, that we just assume by virtue of the place that we were born and raised in.
These women, by virtue of paying attention to an election in which they have a heavy stake, have been forced to listen to someone who sounds oddly familiar: their abuser.
Refugees from war-torn corners of Africa and the Middle East are fleeing to its shores, by virtue of the country's geographic proximity to those regions, desperately trying to survive.
"By virtue of those 110,000 votes, we're now going to have the conversation in the Democratic Party that we thought the Republicans were going to have in their party," Rosen said.

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