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"calling card" Definitions
  1. (North American English) (British English visiting card) (also card British English, North American English) (especially in the past) a small card with your name on it that you leave with somebody after, or instead of, a formal visit
  2. (figurative) a sign, such as an action or a piece of work, that identifies somebody or shows what they can do
  3. (North American English) (also phonecard British and North American English) a plastic card that you can use in some public phones instead of money
  4. (also phonecard) (both North American English) a card with a number on it that you use in order to pay to make a call from any phone. The cost of the call is charged to your account and you pay it later.

528 Sentences With "calling card"

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

To Ulivieri, that is its calling card — the absence of a calling card — and a source of immense pride.
Offense is Ramos's calling card: He is a career .
The gear that had become his calling card was gone.
"I had this calling card that was Juno," she said.
And these will be our calling card for future shows.
Being there for his diverse district is Coffman's calling card.
This season, the Hawks' calling card has been their defense.
But "Line of Duty" has long been Mercurio's calling card.
Montverde knows its sports teams are a powerful calling card.
That has been our calling card here for three years.
Curiosity may have killed the cat, but it's Mercury's calling card.
Climate change is not his only calling card for primary voters.
The loveliness of the F-PACE is its greatest calling card.
"Hartford doesn't really have much of a calling card," he said.
This kind of pamphleteering would, in essence, become Propagandhi's calling card.
Perhaps this picture's higher function is to be a calling card.
But the calling card of both teams is really the defense.
He called it "The Titanic," and it became his calling card.
That jeopardizes the uncertainty that has become the league's calling card.
Mourinho's calling card has always been that he is a winner.
Your pitch deck will be your main calling card right now.
Then Sorel, a Kate Middleton-loved brand, is your calling card.
The calling card of the villain of Season 2 of American Vandal.
If it was me, that would not have been my calling card.
At the Fashion Museum craft time today, she left her calling card.
Lately I've been playing this song "Calling Card (Razor Dub)" by Galleria.
And this was the guy who made "You're fired!" his calling card.
That was her calling card almost from the start of the race.
She's made that success her calling card in the 2020 presidential primary.
The song became Ms. Masuka's calling card, and Nontsokolo became her nickname.
If Tap Bio plays it right, it could become your digital calling card.
Cars are a calling card for the youngest of the Kardashian-Jenner clan.
Verisimilitude has become a calling card of video games in the new millennium.
The Smart Oven's real calling card is a feature called Scan To Cook.
It's a calling card and very few people get calling cards like that.
In journalism, your reputation is your main calling card with sources and readers.
It was a personal best payday of $3,23 and an immediate calling card.
That love is evident, and their curation effectively serves as Shudder's calling card.
Snapchat may be uber popular, but ephemerality is no longer its calling card.
Finding Nemo was a great calling card when it came to casting this movie.
To a pro like Zykan, every major distiller has its own unique calling card.
Of course, there will always be writers content to make trauma their calling card.
The caliphate became its calling card, the single best resource for growing its power.
Consider them the calling card of cool — especially when paired with a long shag.
El Indio raised a bottle of Bucanas—Buchanan's scotch, a calling card among polleros.
Trainspotting was the celluloid calling card for Cool Britannia, and it emboldened a generation.
Does he think volume scoring should be both his calling card and meal ticket?
I'll Have Another's calling card was his stamina, which corresponded with Belmont's major challenge.
It is almost as much of a calling card as their skills at design.
While he drew people in with his magnetism, Palmer's humanity was his calling card.
He can't resist going down such rabbit holes; indeed, it's become his calling card.
"Your wine by the glass is a weird kind of calling card," she said.
"The name Brooklyn has turned out to be an incredible calling card," he said.
Her calling card is crossing party lines, especially when it comes to presidential appointments.
"They only noticed anything was wrong because we left a calling card," Halderman said.
What made Cop Car a calling card for Watts was its smart use of resources.
And foie gras, the calling card of fine French dining, is about to follow suit.
"I have lost faith in humanity" Online dating sites are a calling card for scammers.
Throughout the conflict the crude explosives have been the calling card of Syrian government forces.
Strategic silence has been Murkowski's calling card throughout the most intense legislative debate this year.
"I Am the Best" is a calling card that can stop anyone in their tracks.
If we were an indie rock band making an EP it'd be a calling card.
Columns of black smoke tower on the horizon—the calling card of armed cattle herders.
Her home stands, although it reeked of the Thomas Fire's gagging calling card -- oppressive smoke.
Jim Gavin: The short version is that my book [Middle Men] became a calling card.
The scene became the show's calling card as a warning of Fascism's threat to intellectuals.
Her preoccupations were nostalgia and melodrama, and strategic falseness became a kind of calling card.
If "electability" is a candidate's biggest calling card, debates about missteps are natural and inevitable.
For the racist right, violence is not only a tactic, it is a calling card.
Ms. Meriwether's writing — honest, wacky, deeply character-specific — has always been the show's calling card.
The formula of deceptively sophisticated funk and sardonic philosophizing would become Steely Dan's calling card.
Critic's Pick Theater's calling card is that it's live, but there's plenty of counter-evidence.
"The biggest thing to look for is the camera; it's the Pixel's calling card," Llamas said.
But his calling card nationally is the fact that he's the leading Muslim-American in Congress.
But then the UK Independence Party (UKIP) led by Nigel Farage made Euroskepticism its calling card.
There are some ugly rocks from a mountain town in Colorado, my great-grandmother's calling card.
The first lady's independent streak is not new and has become something of a calling card.
Perhaps that's why Robbins zeroed in on her calling card: that greatest of crowd-pleasers, pasta.
Speed has always been a calling card for America's trials, and this year is no exception.
Love it or hate, that's LG's calling card and it certainly makes the phone stand apart.
As the Republican base grows ever whiter, Democrats have turned their diversity into their calling card.
Charm was Mr. Cunanan's calling card, masking a desperate need for acceptance that curdled into pathology.
But Hydra's biggest calling card is how it's crossed the digital realm into the real world.
"A novel should be like the calling card of an unknown killer," he writes — deadly and anonymous.
"Science by press release" was a calling card for kooks and people who imagined they were Galileo.
You spent a lot of time at the gas station on the payphone with your calling card.
Crutchfield's lyrics have always been her calling card — they're intimate and vivid and great at detailing emotions.
A single, shiny black feather hung from a small branch and fluttered, like some ominous calling card.
Wasserman describes Periscope streams as "Different, it's unedited" which is also a charming calling card for Twitter.
Another night's maccheroni alla chitarra with cooked uni and crabmeat, an Esca calling card, offered further redemption.
The dance-theater production "32 rue Vandenbranden," Peeping Tom's calling card, has a tone of weightless weirdness.
That is its calling card, the mark it leaves on all those who pass through its doors.
But a bullet-riddled sign at the entrance to their sprawling reservation now serves as their calling card.
This raw portrait of the realities of motherhood as a political calling card doesn't go over with everyone.
The arms that are her calling card also send balls over the net at 120-miles per hour.
Remember, she'd also been heavily spammed on all her social media with bee emojis -- the Beyhive's calling card.
Snuka's capacity to keep it together, however, was not, and this would be something of a calling card.
In docs obtained by TMZ, Taino says he's very picky about letting anyone use his musical calling card.
This is the calling card of someone who loves to infer pussy eating but never actually does it.
However, the difficulty of manufacturing the chemicals makes them practically the calling card of a government-sponsored assassin.
The app's core user demographic has become Kik's calling card when differentiating itself from the crowded messaging industry.
This kind of high-profile scoop became Breitbart's calling card, one the Big sites used to mixed effect.
Each of these songs is a calling card for its original performer, and each had been thoroughly Dionized.
Amazon Go's calling card is that customers don't have to wait in line to pay for their purchases.
There was no calling card campaign, no food pantry, no holiday shopping or school supplies for veteran families.
He made a calling card of Beethoven's Violin Concerto, playing it with startling new cadenzas by Alfred Schnittke.
Justin Bieber as Link LarkinLink's calling card is making the teen girls of Baltimore swoon over his every move.
Senator Elizabeth Warren, Democrat of Massachusetts, has made breaking up Big Tech a calling card of her presidential campaign.
But with Tapia, there are as many questions over his calling card—hitting—as the rest of his game.
"Intel Inside" has been the US chip maker's calling card since the slogan was introduced in the early '90s.
That renewed growth was the calling card the researchers needed to know they'd found an early-stage gene blocker.
And a woman with her body de-emphasized, with her conventional calling card scrapped — what a puzzle she is!
Approachability was her calling card, whether she was making bags, clothes (which her company later expanded into) or books.
A Palestinian state would most likely exist if Arafat hadn't adopted terrorism as the calling card of Palestinian aspirations.
Getting listeners to interact on platforms like TikTok requires a song to have a "calling card," according to Sylvester.
Instead, detainees must save up enough money for a calling card and hope to catch their lawyer by phone.
I have to say that Roe is a calling card for the left in this battle, not for the right.
Flashing the offensive balance that has become their calling card in a breakout season, the Saints dominated from the start.
"The difficulty of manufacturing the chemicals makes them practically the calling card of a government-sponsored assassin," writes Peter Apps.
In his first eight fights he scored three triangle choke victories, and the triangle became something of a calling card.
You're likely to see several finessed passing plays in each game—it's really become the new G2's calling card.
"I don't think they could have done a better job of advertising a calling card to the area," Almond said.
At the same time, Trump can't afford to lose his own base, which sees immigration as their candidate's calling card.
The Kale Fortress (free entry), Skopje's calling card, was built upon the city's original settlement, likely from the Bronze Age.
The RAM 1500's calling card has always been its four-wheel independent suspension, which contributes to a smooth ride.
At that point, the band—completed by guitarist Nick Zinner and drummer Brian Chase—had developed a clear calling card.
So "Don't Bother Me," like "Songs for a New World," was a calling card — one with a lot to say.
As a former chief executive of Exxon Mobil, Mr. Tillerson's management chops were supposed to be his chief calling card.
If his victory speech seemed to double as a calling card for a possible presidential run, there was good reason.
A brownish spider tracked down the vibration and deftly delivered his lethal bite, the calling card of most true spiders.
In this video, he detailed how he coached a former student to take on the environment as her calling card.
Lowe wasn't going to make a profit from his tomb replicas, but they were a calling card for his technology.
But even though those forehead-grazing waves are his calling card, the young star also likes to take some style risks.
Institutional critique, with its now historical status as counter-establishment, is the aloof calling card of the resultant lite light show.
It's fitting that a movie as vibrant as candy should be the global calling card of the emerging genre of AFROBUBBLEGUM.
For those familiar with Chandra's work, the upfront declaration—I want to tell you a story—is a multimedia calling card.
A calling card of Rønnenfelt's as a lyricist has always been his eagerness for juxtapositions—abstractness and specificity, beauty and ugliness.
For a certain type of person, whether you've been to Paris or not, it became a kind of cultural calling card.
The Sharks are perhaps the strongest-skating team in the playoffs while the Blues have made tight checking their calling card.
"The calling card of being from Bain is really strong in the progressive movement right now," Tasini said sarcastically of Deval.
Sending Democrats snarky gifts intended to draw the spotlight has become something of a calling card for the Republican campaign arm.
Aggression became his calling card at the plate, his blend of rangy athleticism and precocious strength inviting comparisons to Giancarlo Stanton.
Since the 2008 financial crisis, Glass-Steagall has become a calling card for politicians eager to crack down on Wall Street.
Early on, women who wanted to participate were often ostracized; today, images of Tom of Finland hunks remain its calling card.
Yet in Harbaugh's three full seasons at Michigan, the Wolverines' calling card has been on the defensive side of the ball.
Her calling card has been a kind of open-tone, nonverbal singing that can't be pinned to any one big influence.
"Sexy if tragic love story" has pretty much been the calling card for "Romeo and Juliet" since the late 16th century.
That band became known for its balance of pop sensibilities and jazz sophistication, a calculus that has remained Brecker's calling card.
A pan is the fledgling critic's calling card; and the second review I published remains the most negative I've ever written.
Biden presses electability case Biden's calling card in the race has always been simple: he's the best candidate to defeat Trump.
It's not an insignificant calling card when millions of Americans are convinced all politicians lie and don't hold any real beliefs.
It's all presented in a flat paper box with Battelle's customized calling card under the lid ... which he dated June 14, 1959.
Let's go with moon fans—know the moon's real calling card is its wild topography, visible almost nightly with the right telescope.
While producers feel those ear-splitting, glass-cutting attempts at singing make the show seem fake ... William says it's AI's calling card.
I was desperate for a calling card, my "thing", something to give me a raison d'etre in the wilderness of state education.
Using art to challenge censorship and to rewrite a history that has been tampered with or forgotten has become Badiucao's calling card.
Instagram is increasingly becoming a calling card or internet home, especially for younger users who shun Facebook, which previously held that role.
But the problem for Trump's team in relying on this argument is that his calling card is that he's a straight shooter.
His calling card -- the cotton Bailey flat caps that he wears each day -- has drawn criticism as well from Georgia power brokers.
Her willingness to bad mouth just about anyone is the calling card that has sustained her career in both radio and television.
Fun Fact: "Game over" is also the calling card of Jigsaw from the "Saw" horror movies ... not that we're making any comparisons.
The company says this was intentional, at least in part, as these devices have become a kind of calling card among musicians.
His secret weapon of being able to deliver an absurd joke in a way that felt genuine became his new calling card.
By far the weightiest contribution is Steven Stucky's "August 4, 1964" (DSO Live), a calling card for him and his Dallas orchestra.
"Vagina," track one on CupcakKe's debut mixtape Cum Cake, is about as succinct a calling card as any debut in recent memory.
It's sort of that engineering and technology that has allowed brisket to become sort of the calling card of Central Texas barbecue.
Nor does the big-buck finagling rival smarter versions of this material, leaving the '80s excesses as the program's main calling card.
It hasn't been the best calling card for the Italian capital, especially as cabbies are often the first locals tourists interact with.
Gone is her ancient viola da gamba (until now, a calling card); on this LP, her voice is the only earthly sound.
They reject overt appeals to racism that have been Trump's calling card and an approach to politics based on dividing the nation.
Since then the show has become a calling card for the troupe across the globe and has been performed by other companies.
One source familiar with the campaign said Trump may highlight hitting all 50 states as a calling card of her campaigning message.
" The flyers listed programs to help Indiana and Kentucky veterans, from calling card campaigns to supplies for "those who defend our freedom.
That one doesn't bother him so much, as his political calling card at home is using his power and connections for Kentucky.
Then the cult-favorite Slip Silk Pillowcase that claims to be an "eight-hour beauty treatment every night" is your calling card.
The extra-base hit has been Bradley's calling card of late, as 10 of his last 16 hits have been of that variety.
Adds a source: "I don't know what they talk about on private about this stuff, but contradiction is very often Kanye's calling card."
Though she gained mainstream notoriety as a telegenic athletic who always spoke her mind, her calling card remained her invincibility inside the Octagon.
Instead of covering them, the singer embraced his party boy calling card and had the words "Always Tired" permanently inked under each eye.
The extra-base hit has been Bradley's calling card of late, as 73 of his last 16 hits have been of that variety.
This movie is about those acid-trip visuals, which are the biggest risk Marvel took here and the calling-card of Doctor Strange.
But he also wants that humming economy as his re-election calling card, and a prolonged trade war could put that at risk.
It's also more than just a calling card for Fede, because it announces him as a director with a strong point-of-view.
"The documentary is more of a calling card to a much bigger story and a much deeper community than is portrayed," he said.
"This is certainly not the best calling card Vivendi could show to re-propose itself as industrial partner for the group," Berlusconi said.
CEO Park says the Flyer's release doesn't necessarily mean Fitbit will be making more hardware outside of the company's calling card, activity tracking.
"We will make efforts to build the ARJ-21 as a new calling card for China's high-end equipment manufacturing industry," he said.
Zagorac was a late-first, early-second round level prospect whose calling card is his creativity and ability to score from the wing.
It was this deep immersion in European Modernism, supplemented by trips to Paris, that became Graham's calling card to his new American friends.
In this election cycle, Biden's perceived electability against President Donald Trump - and now against Bernie Sanders - has always been his best calling card.
Theatrical takes on classics — like the Gatsby Sazerac, which involves a fiery torching of a vintage coupe glass — are the boîte's calling card.
"It's a horrible calling card for the city," Enrica Tattamanti, 65, said as she watched her granddaughter, Benedetta, play next to Lake Como.
Previously, Playboy had done away with nude photos, causing many to speculate on how it would remain relevant without its signature calling card.
The opportunity not just to celebrate but also to reinvestigate classic musicals without shrinking them into dollhouse replicas is Ms. Feore's calling card.
Dress shirts, now in about 2250,13 varieties, have long been the calling card of Brooks Brothers, accounting for 21 percent of its sales.
A success since its 193 premiere, "The Taming of the Shrew" has become a calling card at home and abroad for the Bolshoi.
Republicans made stopping the agenda of former President Barack Obama their calling card, capitalizing on what appeared like hopeless gridlock to regain power.
The Green Mountain Project, named for Monteverdi, has made a calling card of his great 1610 Vespers, one performance better than the last.
Snack shops, calling card stalls and other small businesses catering to factory workers pervade the narrow streets and alleys surrounding the Changshuo plant.
Carrington is worthy of a roster spot, though he doesn't have the calling card that will make him stand out as a free agent.
The reputation he'd garnered from "Requiem" and other scripts gave Serling the calling card he needed to get his own series on the air.
The bar's calling card is its weird and beautiful cocktails and shooters, which look like they've been beamed up from a Star Trek set.
That simplicity became the workstation's calling card, with FruityLoops quickly gaining a reputation as an entry-level program that won the pros over anyway.
Neither President Trump nor his family was in the building, a Fifth Avenue skyscraper that is the calling card of his real estate business.
The album feels like it encompasses different genres, which seems to be the band's calling card as you can't lock down the band's genre.
A new snapshot of Baldwin sporting a sleek and polished blunt bob, a shift from the blonde bends that have become her calling card.
Knott's Berry Farm in Buena Park owes its success directly to the boysenberry, a hybrid berry that would soon become the family's calling card.
Percussion turned out to be the calling card, she said, and soon the project's initiators found themselves jamming with refugees and running music workshops.
During the civil war, rebels troops would attack civilians, and their calling card would be hacking off a limb as a warning to others.
" For some editors and designers, the magazine is part of a larger brand strategy, or what Ms. Chou called "a very expensive calling card.
The first piece that Ms. Bulsara bought for her collection was a frosted rock crystal calling card case by the French maker Lacloche Frères.
Ms. Horn does not have a conceptual calling card on the level of Ms. Salvant's archival excursions or Mr. Porter's sage and nostalgic songwriting.
Two deliver to varying degrees, but not "Walking Mad," the 2001 calling card of the Swedish choreographer Johan Inger, new to the Ailey repertory.
But the folksy, hardscrabble wisdom that has become his calling card in this year's tournament is only one piece of the complete Frank Martin.
But the chant has become a regular part of the circus-like atmosphere at Trump rallies, a sort of calling card for the movement.
One particularly Victorian design was a long ivory dress, whose sleeves alone might have served as the calling card for a seamstress seeking employment.
And, as is Trump's wont and calling card, he oversold his voters a bill of goods that he would never be able to deliver.
This 10-year-old gallery's calling card is provocative artwork by the likes of Oddly Head, Nina Saunders, David Shrigley, Harland Miller and Banksy.
Reliability has been WhatsApp's calling card since its founding, and it's one of the reasons that WhatsApp has stayed so simple for so long.
This low-slung, hip-exposing, functionless phenomenon became the ultimate calling card in deciding the lay of the land on the savagest of social strata.
However, there is also some fear that as they diversify into new areas they could dilute their unique calling card and hurt their core business.
Scouted on the street in England, the 17-year-old met success so quickly that the orthodontics his agents prescribed unexpectedly became his calling card.
It's the calling card of a legendary establishment and an Easter egg—a secret wink from drink slingers to sippers who are in the know.
Teste's calling card is a technique he calls "filmic performance," which strives to expand the experience of theatre-going with the technical possibilities of cinema.
With success comes a spotlight, scrutiny of her sometimes vague and vacillating positions on issues, and questions about her calling card: her prosecutorial record. Sen.
He took control of Dalian's soccer team in 1994 at a time when Bo elevated the sport as an important calling card for the city.
Ms. McKenna's calling card is the mundane yet illuminating detail — gleaned, perhaps, from her life as the married mother of five children in Stoughton, Mass.
Devices with more RAM can smoothly run more apps at once, so it's extra-important in a phone for which multitasking is a calling card.
His starring role on "The Apprentice," where his calling card was to say, "You're Fired!" is a more fitting image of Trump than the developer.
While other candidates have been lampooned for robotic redundancies or caricatured as cut-and-paste campaigners, Mr. Sanders has made oratorical consistency his calling card.
The third story in that book, "On the Town," is her most accessible (and therefore not an ideal DeWitt calling card) but God, it's funny.
In shrieking vocals, Mr. Hernandez developed a new calling card, wailing Mr. Jordan's "Treyway!" catchphrase as a battle cry in songs and live-streamed videos.
Her caption "he no like vegetals" became Smudge's calling card, bringing in more than 120,000 likes and reblogs to date, but that's just the beginning.
"I think that's the calling card of the drink," said Jerram Rojo, the head bartender at the Capri, a restaurant and bar in Marfa, Tex.
The issue holds outsize political importance for senators like Mr. Portman, who has made advocacy for treatment legislation a calling card with voters at home.
That blog, which later became Peas & Carrots, was also his calling card, connecting him to other young musicians, like Mac Miller, a rapper from Pittsburgh.
Below their signatures, tucked into a corner at floor level and usually hidden by a pedestal table, is the most delightful calling card of all.
In both a domestic and European context, Ancelotti's calling card — that air of serene stability, managing both upward and down — now seems a little outdated.
But it still maintains the tongue-in-cheek humour that's become Speelburg's calling card in the past couple of years, since he debuted in about 2014.
Even people with a passing knowledge of his comedy know that, since the jerking-off motion basically became a calling card of his stand-up routine.
And of course, in true Marvel style, it ends with the Defenders in a hallway fight scene — the signature calling card of the Marvel Netflix universe.
A suit that makes players look like John Wick, for example, is the infamous calling card of the bone-headed players with a lust for killing.
The guard comes back with the calling-card of the quest: Threatening a guard is a fine of 50 gold pieces, so Othran better pay up.
Bush commonly touts his gun record as governor of Florida, and it is a calling card in South Carolina, which holds its Republican primary on Saturday.
The 65-year-old, whose black crew neck sweaters have become his calling card, took the unusual step of wearing a tie to celebrate the milestone.
But it's the crowd-sourcing of information—from construction, to road hazards, to police speed traps—remains Waze's calling card, and it's flawless in Android Auto.
It works as a calling card for his consulting firm, McChrystal Group, which brings "lessons from the battlefield to the boardroom," as the company's website says.
But even if they had not been, the importance of parties is hardly a secret to political scientists; in fact, it is their discipline's calling card.
Tweedy's opening lines, "When you're back in your old neighborhood/The cigarettes taste so good/But you're so misunderstood" couldn't be a better outcast calling card.
He said this was often a calling card of people who have committed drive-by shootings and have attempted to conceal the ownership of a vehicle.
Jaroslav Jezek's "Bugatti Step" was, when it was written, a calling card for its composer — including with the "jazz orchestra" that he led at the time.
But in the decade since the completion of the landmark opera house, Norway's forward-thinking capital has worked to make compelling architecture its new calling card.
The vehicle, for which she paid the princely sum of $700, is more than just a means of transportation for Ms. Villarreal — it's her calling card.
By 2001, when China joined the World Trade Organization, opening its doors to the global economy, the government understood that art could be China's calling card.
There was once a day when I wanted the opening riff to "Snakes For The Divine" to be my ringtone and therefore my audible calling card.
For the past 403 years, U.S. News & World Report has ranked it the nation's most diverse university, and the school has made diversity its calling card.
This 1996 piece has become a calling card for Mr. Hardink, who played Mr. Eckardt's score not just with command, but with abandon and remarkable clarity.
But then in a move that would soon become his calling card, he escaped from custody in 2001, hidden in the bottom of a laundry cart.
The unnamed Liverpool Domino's delivery person has apparently been leaving their calling card among the pizzas and cinnamon sticks, offering "various illegal substances" reports the Liverpool Echo.
The common goal — the elimination of choice, and the confusion that can accompany it, thus challenging the very calling card of massive retailers like Amazon and Walmart.
In season 1, we see Moira (Samira Wiley) being given a brown paper bag, along with a calling card and some cash — in that bag is clothing.
But aside from those artistic, decorative objects — which have become a bit of a calling card for the collection — there are also glassware, dishes, gifts, and more.
Here are some things to consider: Donald Trump's main calling card, his prowess as a hard-charging businessman, is a double-edged sword in the United States.
Donald Trump was the anti-Obama in every way… If it's a change election, someone whose calling card is experience is not going to be the answer.
As Americans, our free-wheeling creativity and fearless inventiveness have always been our calling card, features of our national enterprise, which distinguish us on the world stage.
The perpetrators, whose collective calling card was the symbol of a black hand, migrated from Italy to America and kidnapped people to extort money from their families.
Put some of the young collective creative genius that is the calling card of Silicon Valley to create digital tripwires that could identify and block repeat offenders.
The Middle Kingdom's public image lacks the reek of desparate farce that clings to its neighbor North Korea, or the batshit insanity that's become Japan's calling card.
His candidacy for the White House would likely focus on the need to remove Trump, a calling card he has focused on essentially since Trump took office.
They were there to provide insights for the next issue of Humanly, Culture Co-Op's calling card, a more or less yearly distillation of the company's research.
In 1992, Mitchell Modell said he paid $25,000 to a New Jersey-based marketer for the "Gotta Go to Mo's" jingle that became the chain's calling card.
But I don't know what a calling-card project that demonstrates that its maker can semi-successfully mimic artistically vital but uncommercial directors is supposed to prove.
On his calling card were three names — Don Giovanni, Leporello and Figaro — those wonderful Mozartian roles that demand both good acting and a resonant yet lyrical voice.
It's a role she is not entirely comfortable with, in part because her biggest calling card is the one she is most apprehensive about appearing to exploit.
It's both a challenge and a calling card, in which Ms. Fargeat at once exposes what's wrong with her chosen genre and demonstrates her mastery of it.
But Mr. Rattle has made a calling card of the Cooke completion throughout his illustrious career and claims now to have conducted it more than 100 times.
It was about the size of a hotel key, and it could potentially be the organization's calling card, key, or the device used to monitor Piper's tracker.
Only in his 20s, he undertook missions behind enemy lines, the sort of irregular warfare that would one day become the calling card of the Quds Force.
His first prominent calling card was the saxophonist Harold Land's 1960 album "The Fox," an outstanding example of hard bop from a city not known for it.
Anna Aurilio, Environment America Aurilio is an active voice against President Trump's environmental policy, harnessing the grass-roots organizing power that has been Environment America's calling card.
Defense, though, has been the Golden Bears' main calling card, asthey lead the Pac-229 in field goal-percentage defense (1163) while allowingonly 2116 points per outing.
Less celebratory is the Marquess of Queensberry's calling card, on which the Marquess wrote, "For Oscar Wilde posing somdomite (sic)," and had it delivered to Wilde's club.
Michigan's defense has been its calling card this year thanks to a new assistant coach, Luke Yaklich, who was in the high school ranks as recently as 2013.
This week, Israel, who is in charge of messaging strategy for House Democrats, delivered a closed-doors briefing on why national security should be Democrats' 2016 calling card.
Posts on his own personal Facebook and Twitter pages reveal a man wholly devoted to Trump, a signature calling card of the early adopters of his presidential campaign.
Los Angeles' calling card has long been its defense, and Jonathan Quick continued his stellar play after turning aside 24 shots in Sunday's 33-1 win over Chicago.
Once you find the treasure, you leave a "calling card" in the real world — thus setting up your final visit to that Palace and its attendant boss fight.
The intruder who was shot at Miranda Kerr's home left a bizarre calling card/love letter at the house 2 days before his bloody confrontation ... TMZ has learned.
While CLOs seem to be the calling card, the presentation and earnings call left open the possibility of new hedge funds being launched if an opportunity is there.
And that has been the UFC's calling card throughout its trips to Brazil—throw in some old, far past it Brazilians and the fans will still love it.
When she returned on Saturday, shortly after the water receded, she found its telltale calling card, a black horizontal line, some 250 inches up the whitewashed garage wall.
Aztecs coach Rocky Long spent four seasons as UCLA's defensive coordinator in the 1990s, crafting the 143-3-5 odd stack scheme that has become his calling card.
Franz von Holzhausen&aposs calling card was that at Tesla he hadn&apost created wild, futuristic vehicles that evoked spaceships or impossible constructions of curves and contorted lines.
And then, of course, there's Munich's calling card: beer by the liter, served in giant, glass Masskrugs that the superhero waitstaffs improbably carry by the dozen-strong handfuls.
She said the short was never meant to be a calling card for a feature, but more of a counterweight to depictions of unplanned pregnancies in other movies.
Two Trump rallies -- one in Mississippi and one in Kentucky -- filled with the now-familiar rhetorical excesses and outright lies that have become the President's calling card 2.
Territorial control used to be ISIS's calling card, the thing that distinguished the group from its rival al-Qaeda in the eyes of jihadist foot soldiers around the world.
Restrictive policies toward immigrants that had once been the calling card of far-right parties like the Front National or the British National Party have migrated to the mainstream.
Any move by Mrs May to restrict strikes in "critical" sectors could hand Mr McCluskey, whose calling card is windy talk of fighting the government, victory on a plate.
It sounds a bit gimmicky, and it does feel that way sometimes when you accidentally trigger the alarm on a crowded sidewalk, but theft protection is VanMoof's calling card.
Glitter lips are their calling card — and they know how to wear them in a badass way that won't smudge or smear, regardless of where the night takes them.
The news comes weeks after the ADL designated hateful versions of Pepe a "calling card of racists," earning him a spot in the ADL's online database of hate symbols.
His performances are legendary: off-the-cuff, spontaneous, sometimes insane, and (naturally) they became an insider calling card of hipness within an informed urban audience both black and white.
The photograph for auction is in the form of a carte de visite, a 19th-century custom in which people would leave photos of themselves as a calling card.
Hygge or not, Gigi's hair looks great — and at least now we'll be able to tell her and sister Bella, whose dark hair is her calling card, apart again.
Potentially sacrificing some of their constituents' lives on the altar of "repeal and replace" isn't an outlier of cowardice shown by Bacon, it is the modern Republican calling card.
Not only does Trump suffer lower approval for his handling of foreign policy than all presidents back to Ronald Reagan, but majorities of Americans oppose Trump's calling card issues.
Web series can be a calling card for new creators, and they also allow for more experimentation since they don't have to fit the more structured mold of television.
Ntilikina looks unlikely to ever become a true point guard, but his ball-handling looked improved, his jumper smoother, and his defense — his NBA calling-card — aggressive and consistent.
Back in the 224s, before YouTube, a lot of aspiring filmmakers created short videos as a sort of calling card to be distributed on VHS tapes all over town.
The warmth that is Ms. DuVernay's calling card encounters a Kubrickian chill as the power of the IT starts to mess around with Meg's mind and Charles Wallace's personality.
"We're a good company," Fraley says, a comment that goes surprisingly untouched given that the calling card of skepticism is viewing blanket statements like these with a critical eye.
Numbers have been Mr. Trump's calling card throughout his career, and his rallies in 2016 put him on the map as a contender in a packed Republican primary race.
Since taking over the design of Marni from the label's founder, Consuelo Castiglioni, in October 2016, Francesco Risso has made his calling card a free-spirited, almost obdurate naïveté.
Though his works sometimes carried references to African-American spiritual music and jazz, they were not his main calling card, and he was wary of tokenism in his field.
These days, whales are its primary calling card for half the year, but the nearby valleys make up the increasingly popular Hemel-en-Aarde — "heaven on earth" — wine region.
But The News still swings for the fences, with jeremiads against political hypocrisy and a renaissance of the sassy front-page headlines that had long been its calling card.
Vocalist Eddie Vedder's distinctive growl was Pearl Jam's calling card in the early 90s, becoming the affectation every post-grunge band would gleefully steal less than a decade later.
Battle-hardened pragmatism, which is Clinton's calling card, is not always easy to get excited about, even for those who believe it is well-suited to the political moment.
Breaking from the straight ahead folk songs that had dominated his debut album, the series of rhetorical queries and metaphysical shrug of a refrain have become Dylan's calling card. 2.
A lot of times in the movies you see an offender leaving a calling card of some sort and everybody knows right away it's the same offender all the time.
The game changed for Hammer with the success of its 1955 film The Quatermass Xperiment, a science fiction feature whose alien antagonists presaged the studio's true calling card: monster movies.
The phrase "nevertheless, she persisted" immediately went viral in liberal circles and has become a calling card for the Massachusetts Democrat, who is considered a possible 2020 White House candidate.
With the Devils relying on a tight-checking system that has become a team calling card, even the speedy Hall conformed to a team philosophy that favored substance over style.
The gun that had been created to mow down combatants in the Vietnam jungles was now a de facto calling card of some of the country's most heinous mass shooters.
Since debuting with 2013 mixtape Trillingo, then following up with 2015's Risk Is Proof and last year's Better Versions EP, Che's thus decided his calling card is being honest.
In the end, the only two viable contenders were Ted Cruz, whose calling card was calling his own leader, Mitch McConnell, a liar on the Senate floor — and Donald Trump.
"Good, clean fun" used to be the calling card for "The Music Man," Meredith Willson's musical from 1957, about a con artist who sells clarinets and trombones to credulous rubes.
" She has made a calling card of Poulenc's "La Voix Humaine," including in New York, and next week adds his "Le Travail du Peintre" and "La Dame de Monte-Carlo.
With his lanky build and physical agility, he has incorporated elements of dance into some performances, notably of Anders Hillborg's "Peacock Tales," a piece that has become a calling card.
Instead, Trump appears content to wait out the emergency in order to downplay any need to resuscitate the economy, which he considers his strongest calling card for reelection (Bloomberg News).
Rickie Fowler was "scripted" to wear dark blue during the first round, but switched to a yellow shirt in honor of Lyle, whose yellow bucket hat became his calling card.
The house was lacking in modern conveniences — he had to hang rugs over the windows to survive the winter — but it became a sort of calling card for his design.
It's the calling card, the hype man, the well-crafted record of your skills and experience that can make or break your chances of landing a coveted internship or job.
" Hamid Al-Shaeri, who popularized the Egyptian pop genre jeel, also clocked up sales in the millions; his calling card in the funk world is the modern soul-influenced "Ayonha.
TGS: Of course, once you've had Toni Morrison sit for you, when you call up Faye Wattleton or Colin Powell or Susan Rice or whomever, you have a great calling card.
The dead have left a calling card: The young Lord Umber, nailed to the wall in the same pattern as the little wildling girl in the opening sequence from the pilot.
Clearing a palace is a multi-step, multi-day process that requires you to locate its treasure, send a calling card to its owner, and then return to enact your plan.
Caldwell-Pope, Pistons pound Celtics BOSTON — Defense has been the Detroit Pistons' calling card for most of the season, but their offense carried them past the Boston Celtics on Wednesday night.
Even at 0.93 points per possession, the Warriors' above-average isolation scoring is much less efficient than the frenetic screen, pass, and cut of offense that has become their calling card.
The style has been Groening's calling card since well before The Simpsons — prior even to Life in Hell, which finally drew to a close in 2012 after a 32-year run.
Millsfield in 2016 is looking to horn in on what has been a calling card for Dixville Notch since 1960, when Richard Nixon shutout John F. Kennedy 9 votes to nil.
Tanowitz's dance returns on Sunday afternoon, concluding the season alongside the charming, peculiar "Diggity," from 1978 (complete with cutout dogs), and "Esplanade," from 1975, which endures as Taylor's exuberant calling card.
This is not the first time the President's wife has publicly expressed views or taken action that demonstrated an independent streak that has become somewhat of a calling card for her.
He had his hardcore supporters, without doubt, but he also turned lots and lots of Republicans off with the brand of in-your-face social conservatism he made his calling card.
But while a footprint is a relatively clear calling card of a living creature, biomarker compounds like oxygen, methane, or hydrocarbons could be produced either by life, or by abiotic processes.
In short order, Mr. Netanyahu's ties to the White House became a calling card for him with other world leaders seeking an in with the Trump administration, according to Israeli officials.
Last week, eBay announced plans to launch its own fulfillment service next year, which will provide its sellers with the two-day delivery service that Amazon long considered its calling card.
But magazine editors say they are still a brand's calling card, a billboard that drives sales of what is often the biggest, most ad-packed and competitive issue of the year.
At Pier 17, Folds will be joined by the brash folk rockers Violent Femmes, whose 263 song "Blister in the Sun" has remained their calling card for more than three decades.
In the pilot, we get both the dark, acerbic humor that has always secretly been this show's calling card, and the corny, unabashed musical spectacle that made Crazy a niche hit.
Researchers said the Shamoon 2 hackers also left a calling card: a disturbing image of the body of three year-old Syrian refugee Alan Kurdi, who drowned in the Mediterranean last year.
We can do this armed with the knowledge that we are defending core American values -- because e pluribus unum is literally the opposite of "Us against Them," the demagogue's eternal calling card.
The cool-girl calling card for every 12-year-old hosting a slumber party was to pop a Mary Kate and Ashley Olsen movie or The Parent Trap into the VCR player.
I don't see myself in the implied white and perhaps male position of the viewer that many of Piper's works, such as "My Calling (Card) #193" (1986–90), assume or even force.
But even in the now-retooled digital presence, Cruz's Hispanic background continues to be a calling card for his candidacy -- at least in the eyes of his big-money super PAC backers.
" Though this snowman is a serial killer's calling card—wherever he is, a dead woman is nearby—the effect is of a cheeky gangster throwing out his forearms and saying, "Eyyy, fuhgeddaboudit.
Since its premiere in Beijing in 2013, the 90-minute show has become a cultural calling card for China as the country seeks to bolster its efforts to project soft power abroad.
Not even mutton, smoked the better part of a day, then sauced with a Worcestershire-and lemon-based "black dip" — the barbecue calling card of Owensboro, Ky. OHIO 80 miles Ind. Ill.
Sure, the broad strokes of history may be too powerful for him to change, but charisma is his calling card — those trustworthy leadership vibes have carried him through a lot of trouble.
But the country has also had a very recent and well-remembered run with a president who made populism his calling card and then proceeded to drive the economy into the ground.
This romantic comedy, about a journalist (John Belushi) and a reclusive scientist (Blair Brown), wasn't made until 303, but it became a pivotal calling card when Steven Spielberg acquired it in 1977.
For much of Mr. Wilber's career his affiliation with Bechet would be both a calling card and a cross to bear; he would never fully escape his identity as Bechet's top protégé.
For much of Mr. Wilber's career his affiliation with Bechet would be both a calling card and a cross to bear; he would never fully escape his identity as Bechet's top protégé.
Roy Moore at a rare public campaign event Roy Moore's evangelicalism is his calling card, but on the Sunday before the special election that could send him to the Senate, he skipped church.
My calling card would have been something, would be as close to my version of "Game of Thrones" or my version of a "Silicon Valley" so that I can set the example. Right.
The Spurs' unselfishness, ball movement, and fundamental play have been their calling card since reinventing themselves back in 2010, but the extent to which they pass and cut is perhaps still under-appreciated.
"Wonder is like our calling card – it shows what we can do, not only on the tech side in terms of discovery, recommendation and the backend, but also the front end," he says.
Published 2000 years ago this fall, the book has long served as his calling card—evidence that he's the greatest negotiator ever to live, and proof positive that he's fit to be president.
INDOORS Restored millwork is the house's calling card, beginning at the front entrance, where the wood surrounds panels of leaded glass, and continuing to the grand coffered staircase and coffered ground-floor ceiling.
After switching allegiance to the Islamic State, many of them boasted of engaging in acts of extreme barbarism that are that organization's calling card, such as beheadings and the use of child soldiers.
The show's true calling card isn't agitation, it's aesthetics — and that aesthetic, with the red dresses and the grayed-out Marthas and the teals for Serena, and so forth, is powerful and important.
Without the pedigree of a successful playing career, the calling card for most professional soccer coaches, Osorio's rise has been fueled by an obsessive quest to master the tactical aspects of the game.
Biden shows he's still in the mix The former vice president's weak fourth-place finish in Iowa called into question how a candidate whose calling card is his electability could withstand losing elections.
The red balloon is essentially Pennywise's calling card, and her desperation to pass it off shows how the adult Losers Club must finish the fight that was beyond their years in Chapter One.
The one cool thing they had is they had this five-word acceptance speech concept that you only get a five word acceptance speech which has been sort of like the calling card.
Calling out sexism and sexual misconduct in all corners — including her outspoken critiques of former President Bill Clinton and former Senator Al Franken — is a political calling card that she feels distinguishes her.
A jailed Russian hacker claims he can prove he broke into the computers of the Democratic National Committee on behalf of Russian intelligence — because he left a secret calling card inside the system.
I know it's weird to ask for realism in an epic fantasy series, but that's always been Game of Thrones' calling card, and losing it now in the penultimate season seems like a shame.
Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders) and the establishment, pragmatic wing (represented by Obama's former Vice President Joe Biden.) Biden started the 2020 race using his ability to get deals done as his calling card.
The second, "My Calling (Card) #235 Double Meta-Performance" (228–27), edits together footage from two meta-performances based on Piper's use of calling cards that alert recipients to the fact that she's black.
The pic of you and the pup gets more overall right swipes than any other picture, and is served up as the first picture (or, calling card) of your profile most of the time.
Shocking, unexpected deaths were the calling card for Game of Thrones for several seasons, beginning with the demise of its primary character, Eddard Stark, lord of the castle of the fictional locale of Winterfell.
The philosophy that anything short of a championship is a failure defined the organization, and was a personal calling card of none other than the Captain, and the team's most boring superstar, Derek Jeter.
Given that drinking is widely enjoyed by folks all over the gender spectrum, feminizing wine and making it the calling card for basic-ness is rooted in a sexism that is impossible to ignore.
The image of his scruffy beard and starred beret became the calling card of romantic revolutionaries around the world and across generations, seen everywhere from the jungle camps of militants to college dorm rooms.
His main calling-card was his pleasant personality and personal diligence, not his talent level, and much of the headlines surrounding after the trade were related to the fact that he had a knighthood.
Yes, ordering traveler's checks or getting a calling card may seem like advice more suited for your parent's generation, but they can really save you when technology fails you — which happens more than you think.
A subtly dewy complexion, even on makeup-free days, is the calling card of good skin, but we don't always think to compliment it the same way we'd compliment someone's flashy highlight or shimmering cheekbones.
Cathay has typically held up its premium service as its calling card, but business has faltered with state-backed mainland Chinese and Gulf carriers as well as budget airlines luring away passengers with cheaper fares.
More than two years later, the fight to force the White House's hand to defund Obamacare that left both Republican leadership and federal employees seething has faded into the background, rather than Cruz's calling card.
The new fringe hit a little bit above her signature calling card brows, curving down at each end to create a soft curve, though the effect still had the high impact of a blunt bang.
More and more directors are using long takes — scenes unspooling in real time, free of edits — as a sobering reminder of temporality, a virtuosic calling card, a self-issued challenge or all of the above.
Mr. Saar's main calling card is his clean image and the predictions, backed up by opinion polls, that with Mr. Netanyahu at the helm, the March election may do nothing to resolve Israel's political logjam.
The Bruins' calling card is their fast-paced offense, which, according to most statistics, is college basketball's best: in points per game, field-goal percentage, points per possession and adjusted offensive efficiency; according to Kenpom.
There is an eternal hope for tourism revenue — a sense that the event once known as the trial of the century is the town's great market differentiator, its calling card, its giant ball of twine.
A friend characterized Sleight to me as J.D. Dillard's calling card movie, designed and shot for him to drop it straight onto Marvel's doorstep in the hopes of getting a big-budget superhero movie to direct.
Over the past couple of decades, I've seen stupid trends come and go, and the ultimate sign that a metal subculture has begun its descent into washed-up cliché is when haircuts become its calling card.
Minnesota was dominating on defense, as has become the calling card of these Vikings, holding Chicago to 343 yards of offense — most of it in the second half when the result was no longer in doubt.
Earnest warbling about street activities has been a calling card for rappers over the past few years, with more new artists opting to use their singing voices just as equally, if not more, than spitting bars.
These many snowmen are the calling card of a serial killer who seems intent on killing people, mostly women, preferably through various sorts of dismemberment, though it seems like a gun will work in a pinch.
If we see relatively few cases and no more than a small number of deaths here in the U.S., Pence will have a strong calling card if he does choose to seek the presidency in 2024.
Painstakingly perfected versions of iconic specialties are a Court Street Grocers calling card, but this one, made with duck, hand-cut pasta, and aged Cheddar, reads more like a condescending attempt at elevation than an homage.
The director of "Kong: Skull Island" is Jordan Vogt-Roberts, whose calling card for the task was "The Kings of Summer" (2013), a wistful teen-age pastoral, wittily handled and, if memory serves, entirely gorilla-free.
Viewers who've been along for this ride have probably known for a while that this series about family secrets and inherited violence — the calling card of every true Southern gothic — wasn't going to go down easy.
Still in an experimental phase, quantum technology uses entangled particles of light to transmit messages (at a slower rate than radio signals) over long distances and detects the calling card of anyone trying to tamper with them.
Mr. Cooper's rakish quality proves a necessary calling card for his part here as the eponymous libertine John Wilmot, the second Earl of Rochester — the notorious courtier-poet who died in 1680 at the age of 33.
Among the 10 extra-virgin olive oils from five countries is grass-green Chilean Arbosana, with assertively spicy notes that leave a delicately bitter calling card, making it useful for that final drizzle on fish or vegetables.
In 2005, Liberian women, fed up with the widespread rape and indiscriminate killing that was a calling card of the civil war, staged a democratic coup, using means both fair and foul to put in place Mrs.
After the past few weeks, it's safe to say that the GOP has built a better turnout operation than Sanders, the Democratic candidate whose organization was supposed to be his calling card in a race against Trump.
The amendment can be put to use only if the vice president agrees, and few can imagine Mr. Pence, who has made public loyalty to Mr. Trump his calling card, going along without a more extreme situation.
Now, Biden -- for whom electability was a calling card, until he started losing elections -- has to figure out how to stop his stronger numbers among non-white voters from cratering in the wake of his poor start.
Art Cullen, editor of The Storm Lake Times and a prominent figure in Iowa news media, said he did not envy the paper's decision to cancel a poll that is a national calling card for the publication.
Its calling card is bold and complex suicide bombings, including high-profile attacks on US and foreign personnel and assassinations of high-level people in Kabul and northern Afghanistan, the Institute for the Study of War reports.
In a race that has constantly been dominated by the idea that Democrats at all costs want to nominate a candidate who they think will beat Trump, the Biden team thinks this remains his strongest calling card.
In time, Prospect — like the short film it emerged from — is likely to be seen as a calling card, an example of what a talented filmmaking duo can do with limited resources and a specific, big-picture vision.
But the biggest hit seemed still to be the Four Seasons' most classic calling card, an off-menu tower of pale-pink cotton candy, reserved for guests celebrating special occasions, of which there were apparently quite a few.
He doesn't quite solve the defensive issues the team has in some spots—he's passable, though it's not his calling card—but he's a great addition, given how limited their ability to add looked a few days prior.
This move should not surprise anybody: Quantity, after all, is the calling card of the company that turned binge watching into a business model — and besides, when is there a better time to indulge in a little excess?
"Wonder Woman is our calling card at the moment," said Keir Malem, 52, sitting with his partner, Paddy Whitaker, also 19973, in the loft-like ground floor of their two-story home and atelier in Dalston, East London.
With episodes running about 30 minutes each, the show pretty much flies by as a 10-episode binge, and gives YouTube -- still feeling its way in the series game -- its most credible calling card in the crowded streaming arena.
The character is known for carrying a spiked baseball bat he calls "Lucille," which is more or less his calling card; it's not unlike the Phantom of the Opera's mask, the Joker's painted face, Dracula's cape, or Loki's horns.
While New Order's sonic calling card nowadays may very well be its synth sounds, it's been said that the band's apparent caginess towards the instrument is what drove Sumner to starting the early stages Electronic as early as 1984.
The band's calling card—beyond its firm grip on traditional heavy metal glory—is its fiery, incredibly talented performances onstage, especially from dual guitar shredders Eli Santana (also of Huntress) and Alex Lee, and soaring vocalist James Paul Luna.
Overeem has shown himself happy to hold opponents on their backs if they don't have much to offer from the bottom, but again—ground and pound from the closed and half guard are something of a Miocic calling card.
The closest thing to a calling-card single she has is called "Always Get Me High," and its blend of twinkling electronics and eerie sparseness is both pretty and unsettling, especially once you factor in her helium-pitched vocals.
Battling complacency has long been the band's calling card, and as co-frontman Mark Perro looks back on his own discography, his sentimental favorites have more to do with the dynamic of the band than of the songs themselves.
And yet, somehow, a guy from Stretford whose calling card is pairing elaborate headgear with bootcuts and a tracksuit jacket, singing in the vaguest possible terms about the universe, has become a sensation that transcends all the usual demographics.
It's both a dazzling calling card for the film (one it struggles to match for a while) and a gauntlet of sorts: If you can't get with scenes like this, then maybe you and this movie shouldn't be friends.
One attacker posted about how Jewish people controlled the government and referred to Jewish people as being part of the "synagogue of Satan," a phrase derived from the Book of Revelation that has become an anti-Semitic calling card.
Maybe the grifters kept on ordering margaritas and burritos or whatever until they hit $420, then dipped before the bill went any higher—leaving behind a kind of weed-inspired calling card to rival the dine-and-dash dater's.
Proctor noted that in addition to devices being intentionally engineered to make repair difficult or impossible (a calling card of former Apple designer Jony Ive), there's a universe of warranty restrictions that make sanctioned repair cumbersome, lengthy, and often expensive.
"It is the ultimate calling card of a coward to ― under the guise of night and behind a keyboard ― use the kind of language that in person would cause most decent people to respond in anger and frustration," Sims said.
"Fille" used to be the calling card of the Royal Ballet, a signature work that defined both choreographer and company, but Tuesday's performance showed, as other Ashton revivals of recent years have, too, that American Ballet Theater is no less fine.
Teen Dream maintains the palpable, mellifluous aura which had been becoming the band's calling card, but it complicates it, too—here, there is also warmth and expansiveness; "Lover of Mine" and "Walk in the Park" are veritable sun on the face.
Clearly, they have no real choice in the matter, but the reward is a heightened travel schedule in their new status as a "calling card" for Polish culture in the broader USSR, which means trips to places like Berlin and Moscow.
It had been a game of fine margins, not quite one of those wild rides the Premier League imagines is its calling card, but a high-speed, high-caliber occasion, the first meeting of genuine peers in the early season.
While he'll be looking for a bounce-back season at the plate, his defense remains his calling card, as he threw out 38.6 percent of attempted base stealers (17 of 44) last season, the third-best mark in the majors.
While he'll be looking for a bounce-back season at the plate, his defense remains his calling card, as he threw out 38.6 percent of attempted base stealers (17 of 20123) last season, the third-best mark in the majors.
Archaeologists haven't found hominin fossils at the site so far, but in the oldest layers of artifacts, they've unearthed oval and pear-shaped hand axes in the Acheulian style—a stone calling card of Homo erectus or their descendants, Homo heidelbergensis.
And the calling card she used to signal a break with the stuffy Tory past — the eye-catching footwear, the leather trousers — has now returned to haunt public life with unsavory, sexualized expectations of women at the highest level of politics.
His famous expression Favor Atender (please see to this) followed by a mention of a high-level minister or official was his calling card to government to get directly involved in resolving citizen complaints brought to his attention through Twitter.
Schumer's calling card during his three years as minority leader has been unity: No defections on Obamacare repeal or tax cuts, just a handful on Supreme Court nominees and little party infighting compared to the Republicans and President Donald Trump.
Uranium One has been a calling card for right-leaning Clinton skeptics since Peter Schweizer wrote about it in his Steve Bannon–backed takedown Clinton Cash in 2015; the New York Times built on his reporting and lent the case heft.
That meme was the calling card of "VoiceoverPete," an actor who delivers lines with such an impressive command that people were willing to pay him for custom videos — that is, until the website that hosted his services terminated his account for promoting scams.
It took officials two days to realize there had been a hack, which spotlights yet another concerning element of online voting: a system could be hacked and, without a calling card like a university theme song, officials could be none the wiser.
Instead, CEO Mark Zuckerberg has hinted at the company's Snapchat envy by commenting on the success of Snapchat-inspired products like Stories or opening the app directly into the camera versus, say, a user feed, which has been Snapchat's calling card since launch.
And while that may seem like the kind of thing that would give most actors a short half-life, it's actually turned into a sort of calling card for McBride who has proven, time and again, that even dickheads can have depth (maybe).
"If I ever get to a point where I feel there's nothing more I can do, or that the party decides that being anti-trans is a calling card for how they think they will win elections, that's another issue," she said.
Image: Erol Ahmed/Unsplash/GizmodoTouring around the pages of the web isn't always the one-way street you might think it is: most sites are eager to leave a calling card or two on your local machine in the form of cookies.
By avoiding the scrutiny of broadcast television censors, OVAs allow the type of excess that became Urotsukidōji's calling card; in fact, the animation features additional horror and violence — including the scene of tentacle rape — not featured in the prior manga from Toshio Maeda.
Cruz, speaking at a fairground here in a state that is expected to be one of Tuesday's most competitive contests, was in rare form as he held nothing back in assailing his chief rival's calling card: his success as a world class businessman.
But defense was supposed to be his calling card, and after two "close but no cigar" seasons in which inept play on that end was the primary reason why the Nuggets didn't make the playoffs, it shouldn't surprise anyone if he's let go.
Rick's narcissistic assholery was the show's calling card, and the idea of a self-destructive genius whose ultimate assessment of the universe is that nothing matters and everything sucks propelled him to destroy everyone who even attempted to get close to him.
The health and financial crises are unlikely to topple the Saudi government, but they surely endanger the expensive, ambitious modernization program that Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman has made his calling card, and which he argues is vital to the kingdom's future.
Which is why it is strange, in 2019, to see socialism coming back into German mainstream politics: Kevin Kühnert, the leader of the Social Democrats' youth organization and one of his party's most promising young talents, has made it his calling card.
Perspective: Kevin Kühnert, the leader of the Social Democrats' youth organization in Germany and one of his party's most promising young talents, has made socialism his calling card — but not the "wannabe socialism of American Democrats," writes Jochen Bittner of Die Zeit.
"The way these guys are picking each other up, rallying around each other up and rallying around the adversity we've had, it's kind of become a little calling card," Boone said, adding later, "They're very close, they're very resilient, they're very tough."
City of Daughters is oftentimes too smart for its own good, but when Bejar tones down the vision of himself as poet laureate, his words are beautiful and simple while still retaining the air of fablistic morality that has been his calling card.
It's a potent form of cultural capital, a calling card that helps you get jobs, readings, the attention of agents or publishers, and/or (if you're lucky enough to teach full time) some breathing room away from the pressures of academic life.
Scenes like these have become the Champions League's calling card, every spring: intense, engrossing games, games that seem to twist and turn and defy prediction, hour upon hour of live-action, cliffhanger drama, denouements that quicken the pulse and draw the breath.
Delivered at the time as a reprimand to a petulant player, the phrase has become a personal calling card of sorts for Owens, a tidy encapsulation of the stern-but-funny style that has made him rugby's most respected, and most recognizable, referee.
In the first episode, a charismatic provocateur emerges on TV—a gleaming-toothed Emma Thompson , playing a faux-feminist Trumpette, Vivienne Rook, whose calling card is saying rude things on talk shows, in a familiar "I'm just saying what everyone thinks!" vein.
So, yes, when a cartoon frog is usurped and becomes the digital calling card for the worst elements of our society, we are not only proud to join with its creator in fighting back, we say it is something we all must do.
The dish is the calling card of C. Ellet's pastry chef, Jennifer Yee, who makes desserts that are not only visually arresting but purposeful — where every shape and cut serves to build an ideal bite, to create a sense of wonder and surprise.
I know it's one of those things I'm expected to rave about — after all, every model with artfully tousled hair I've ever interviewed has always waxed lyrical about the stuff, and it's the calling card of the aesthetic we know as cool-girl beauty.
" Domino had been scoring in local clubs with the original, but for his record he rewrote the lyrics as a cheerful calling card, "The Fat Man," singing that he weighed 200 pounds and the women all loved him, "cause I know my way around.
Part of her calling card has been a willingness to eschew capital-f Fashion statement-making for real life statement-making, focusing on clothes that allow a customer to move seamlessly from breakfast waffles to power meeting to margaritas in Ibiza with seemingly effortless aplomb.
But even though he wore the medal to Trump's inauguration and signed his dissertation with a "v." middle initial—a calling card of members—Gorka says he's not a member but merely does that stuff to honor his father, who was tortured by Communists.
Mitchell blossomed with the City before his senior year of high school, displaying the head-turning athleticism that has earned him notice from the N.B.A. His length — he has a 6-10 wingspan and wears size 17 shoes — has always been a calling card.
They tend to be acutely aware of being Vaishya, the merchant caste, not Brahmin — the highest-ranking of the four Hindu castes — though they will not admit as much; and thus their homes are social currency, a calling card throughout India and its diaspora.
Soleimani began his rise to power following the 1979 Iran revolution, joining the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps and conducting guerrilla-style attacks during the bloody Iran-Iraq War of the 1980s — a style of warfare that would become the calling card of the Quds Force.
Minimalism has long been an Ivy League calling card; most teams still don't print players' names on the back of their jerseys, and home teams still wear their road uniforms on the Saturdays after Friday night games to spare their visitors a laundry crisis.
She arrived in the city laser-focused on developing her songwriting skills, and she already had an enviable calling card: Kara DioGuardi, the producer, songwriter, publisher and former American Idol judge who was also Andress' pop-songwriting instructor at the prestigious Berklee College of Music in Boston.
If some of Cahn's images are unexpected or unsettling, it is because, quite simply, they are the expressions of a very self-aware woman's unapologetic point of view; their freshness is their calling card, and their curiousness, along with their honesty, a large part of their allure.
Its calling card has always been that it is sales software designed to serve first and foremost the needs of sales people not their managers — built by sales people, for sales people, if you like — but has since matured into a more comprehensive CRM platform play.
On the surface of things, one would think that getting hammered on a first date and destroying hundreds of thousands of dollars' worth of art at your host's house, including two of his original Andy Warhol paintings, is pretty much the calling card of an unrepentant villain.
I mean the reality is he is governing as if he is the President of a Third World country: power is held by family and incompetent loyalists whose main calling card is the fact that Donald Trump can trust them, not whether they have any expertise.
The battle to replace him could precipitate the beginning of the end of the Netanyahu government as the prime minister, whose calling card has been national security, faces increasing criticism from his right-wing rivals who say he was too quick to agree to the cease-fire.
Michael McKean's calling card is his versatility, which has carried him from his breakout as the greaser doofus Lenny on "Laverne & Shirley" to acclaim in beloved musical mockumentaries (Rob Reiner's "This Is Spinal Tap" and Christopher Guest's "A Mighty Wind") and weighty plays (Tracy Letts's "Superior Donuts").
A member of the old left — he dropped out of Harvard in 1964 to fight for civil rights in Mississippi and for California farmworkers with Cesar Chavez — Dr. Ganz was teaching the unity clap, the audible calling card of the United Farmworkers of America 50 years earlier.
He set up 10 tables on sidewalk space he'd rented in front of a building, walked his cart in circles to attract attention, and of course worked on his recipes, developing the condiment that became his calling card: light, crunchy, slippery boiled duck intestines, or sai kaew.
On Facebook's last earnings call, executives started to sound a lot like executives from another social site up the road: Twitter, which has made live events its calling card over the past decade and appears to be boxed out of the livestreaming fun from a partnership standpoint.
Space is the city's calling card and can be found everywhere, from the names of local beers (try the Straight to Ale Monkeynaut) to novelty menu items (I heard about, but did not seek out, a supercharged pig-in-a-blanket called the "Werner von Brat").
He also felt it was a lousy calling card at a time when self-publishing was on the rise, Amazon was breathing down the industry's neck and many authors were questioning whether they even needed a traditional publishing house to get their work out into the world.
" That third point has been a calling card of the Sanders campaign of late, which released a viral ad last month simply called "Together," which draws from a stump speech in which the senator says "our job is not to divide, our job is to bring people together.
More than any singular policy position, her calling card is the no-holds-barred way in which she has engaged voters from traditionally marginalized backgrounds — calling voter interactions her "comfort zone," where she feels most free to rail against "corporate PAC money" and the uselessness of traditional representatives.
He and his new team had made a list of the governments S.P.G. wanted to work for — NATO allies mostly, nothing iffy like Ukraine or Pakistan — and with New Zealand as his calling card, they pitched S.P.G. as the go-to foreign lobbying and advisory firm in Trump's Washington.
And they are lacing the strong economy into much of their messaging and policy plans: Mr. Trump himself sees the economy as his calling card and is monitoring fluctuations in stock market closely, and his team thinks the economy is one of their best selling points in the suburbs.
I could live with it if I had simply gone to a public university somewhere in the Midwest, but how do I get over my insecurity of my having a calling card from a state which is synonymous with slavery in the past and retrograde policies in the present?
But Looper was a comparatively big-budget ruckus that served as a calling card for Johnson's role overseeing the upcoming Star Wars: Episode VIII; made with its plot and its heart on its sleeve, Brick is sleeker, smarter, and almost better than it has any right to be.
Try Simon Rattle and the London Symphony Orchestra in May, as part of their Mahler mini-festival at Lincoln Center, which also includes "Das Lied von der Erde," boasting Stuart Skelton and Christian Gerhaher as vocalists, and Deryck Cooke's completion of the Tenth Symphony, a Rattle calling card.
Not because Arsenal — with its new manager and its handful of new players and its new dawn after years of elegant decline under Arsène Wenger — is still, at heart, the most generous and most accommodating of opponents, but because that goal is now City's hallmark, its calling card.
"When you've got gray hair, every move you make seems 'young' and 'spry,'" Andy Warhol said in his 1975 book "The Philosophy of Andy Warhol (From A to B & Back Again)" to explain his decision to dye his hair gray in his early 20s, a look that became his calling card.
Patronage has been the calling card of Shakespeare and Company from its earliest days, whether through the lending of books to the penniless or letting travelling writers stay in the shop for free (an estimated 34.953,000 young writers and artists have slept in the shop since it opened its doors).
This becomes clearest in his 2014 essay "The Case for Reparations," which became Coates's calling card, and rightly so: It provides a remarkable pocket history of the financial toll of white supremacy, from disenfranchisement to land grabs to redlining, offering a harrowing account of the economic injustices imposed on African-Americans.
His latest record, "Universal Beings," collects performances in four cities across the United States and Britain, each with a different band; after the shows, using an approach that's become his calling card, McCraven sliced up the recordings and created original tracks that, at their best, feel as fresh as the live performances themselves.
That star-centered system has been the Galaxy's calling card and winning business model, and after missing the postseason in 2017, the team has doubled down on it, signing Zlatan Ibrahimovic, a swaggering Swedish striker with the crowd-pleasing habits of scoring stunning goals and talking about himself in the third person.
Nearly everything Cohen wrote was unabashedly intimate, personal and often political, and though social commentary was in his DNA, snarling protest songs were not his calling card; instead, he dove deep on matters of the heart and spirit, a vein that would define his artistic voice — and way of living — across six decades.
He has performed his calling card so often since he first joined Bayern Munich 10 years ago that it now bears his name — not just in Germany, but also in France, where the act of cutting in from the right wing to shoot with the left foot is known as Le Robben.
Science Fiction is not only a stunning album, filled with haunting lyrics and melodies on tracks like "Same Logic/Teeth" and "No Control" — it's also a road map for how a band whose calling card is naked emotion can age and evolve without losing their raw-nerve connection to their most ardent fans.
Each of Marvel's Netflix series has a signature style or calling card: Daredevil boasts acrobatic fight scenes; Jessica Jones is sardonic, sexual, and dark; Luke Cage is an allegory about power that's laced with hip-hop; and the mess that is the first season of Iron Fist is all about mystical martial arts.
But the jacket usurped the intended good she had wanted to do by visiting the border for herself, the first Trump family member to have done so -- it would become the calling card for her critics, a moment of sheer tone-deafness that Trump later chalked up to sending a message to the meddling media.
The late surge of aggression has become a calling card for the welterweight champion and should he ever be pushed into a deciding round like that in the future, we can only hope that his body is able to keep up with his truculent mindset as he enters his 15th year of prize fighting.
Maggie Haberman at the New York Times reported that Trump's conspiracies and blame game tactics are going on behind closed doors as well: Mr. Trump has repeated the claims in private discussions with aides and allies, insisting that his critics are trying to take away what he sees as his calling card for re-election.
The band members have been experimenting with noise, pop and punk music for over two decades, but at this point — nearly nine years after their last new album, and with two members locked into a regular gig on "Late Night With Seth Meyers" — Les Savy Fav's raucous, unpredictable live shows remain their calling card.
But Mr. Iglehart's calling card is the strength and resilience of his robust baritone, whether the material is a pop standard like "All the Way" or a sexy provocation like Barry White's "Never Never Gonna Give You Up." It is the kind of large, steady instrument that in the long run is trend-resistant.
He scored five TDs receiving, four rushing, and one on special teams last year, a menagerie that befits his quickness as a player, but given that he's such a small guy and red-zone scores aren't likely to be his calling card, a reasonable mind will probably cut that total in half for '16.
If you've heard the 22-year-old Richmond, Virginia singer's debut, 2016's No Burden, you know why—the album opened with Rolling Stone's 17th best song of the year, "I Don't Wanna Be Funny Anymore," an exceptionally apt calling card for her songwriting personality, winking yet grounded by some small, sad and unspecified weight she's carrying.
If you've heard the 22-year-old Richmond, Virginia singer's debut, 2016's No Burden, you know why—the album opened with Rolling Stone's 17th best song of the year, "I Don't Wanna Be Funny Anymore," an exceptionally apt calling card for her songwriting personality, winking yet grounded by some small, sad and unspecified weight she's carrying.
Can you imagine some poor startup founder who's been running around so excited that they have one of these funds on their cap table and that's been their calling card, and now they try to do that and everybody's like ... If it's a meritocracy, sorry, guys, you proved your merit that you don't deserve to be here.
His grandfather, Jan van Aken, from the town of Aachen, Germany, was a painter, and four of his own sons took up the profession; this is also where the young Hieronymus learned to paint, and probably where he adopted his artistic pseudonym, Bosch, taking the name of his own city as a kind of calling card.
The veteran EDM pop producer began his career as a dependable hitmaker without a sonic signature (scroll through his discography and it's guaranteed you'll find at least one inescapable radio single from the past five years you didn't realize he had his hands in), but now he's finally got a calling card of punchy bass lines and tropical synths.
Ten years after his first hit work, "Concerto for Turntable and Orchestra" (2006), which has acted as a "calling card" since he performed it at the Royal Albert Hall in 2011, Prokofiev prepares to debut his first stateside symphonic work (co-commissioned by the glass artist Dale Chihuly) with the Seattle Symphony Orchestra at the end of the month.
Before he could even step into the Octagon on Saturday, the Ontario Athletic Commission and the UFC were conspiring to strip the man called "Valhalla" of his most cherished and recognizable affectations: the long beard and two-bladed axe that have been Meek's professional calling card and his talismanic connection to the warmongering legacy of his country's Viking past.
This highly unorthodox, high-wire way of working has been Mr. Irwin's calling card since he abandoned a studio in 1970 and began creating mostly site-specific, or what he calls "conditional," pieces, which tend to require Job-like patience on his part and immense faith on the part of those hoping he will "catch lightning in a bottle," as he describes it.
He also has one of the most "Now That's What I Call 90s MMA" moments on his résumé: in 1995, Vovchanchyn advanced deep into the 32-man Absolute Fighting Championship tournament in part by knocking out the same opponent twice in two consecutive fights, before eventually getting submitted via "chin in the eye," that calling card of the no-holds-barred era.
Early in my reporting that unraveled the origins of the Trump-Russia collusion probe, tying it to Hillary Clinton's campaign and possible Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) abuses, I started to see patterns just as in the old mob meetings: FBI or intelligence-connected figures kept showing up in Trump Town USA during the 2016 campaign with a common calling card.
MORE. Instead of talking about a red line in Syria, President TrumpDonald John TrumpTrump pushes back on recent polling data, says internal numbers are 'strongest we've had so far' Illinois state lawmaker apologizes for photos depicting mock assassination of Trump Scaramucci assembling team of former Cabinet members to speak out against Trump MORE sent 59 Tomahawk missiles as a calling card.
The work, an imposing bronze sculpture of an eerily polka-dotted pumpkin, an alter-ego motif that has become Ms. Kusama's calling card, was unveiled recently in the building's motor court after workers installed it, along with two lacy white "Infinity-Net" paintings by Ms. Kusama (versions of which were for sale at Art Basel last year for $450,000 each) flanking the lobby.
The self-evident calling card is the appearance of the great Simon Russell Beale in the title role, a part for which he might seem too old on paper — Richard II was 33 when he died and Mr. Russell Beale will soon be 58 — but that he inhabits with the naturalness and ease with verse that are his long-cherished trademarks.
I wasn't present, scene-wise, until the late 1970s, but even then there were pretty white boys around, boys whose calling card was their beauty and their insolence, a sort of at-least-I'm-not-you spiteful arrogance that got them pretty far, or as far as your looks ever get you, which is to say not very long in Manhattan, where there's always someone new.
He now has more than 70 published books, many of which have become cultural icons, and his achievements extend so far beyond a single genre at this point that it's impossible to limit him to one — even though, as the world was reminded last year when the feature film adaptation of It became the highest-grossing horror movie on record, horror is still King's calling card.
And while Smoak has a reputation as a good defensive first baseman—the metrics generally say otherwise, but don't include players' ability to handle throws from other infielders, which is Smoak's calling card—he offers little defensive value compared to Bautista at the same age, who at that point could passably man right field, third base, or first base, and also had spent at least a little time at both second base and in centre.
And while "Somebody Loves You" may have been her calling card, the now-25-year-old had a slew of songs to back up her talent on her debut record, Take Me When You Go. From "High Society" (a song dedicated to Gossip Girl's Dan Humphrey) to the cinematic 80s synth-pop ditty "A Night To Remember," the former cellist and Berklee School of Music alum struck a chord within the pop community.
Yet, like many things with Trump, there remains a screen of privacy around her visits down here, an oblique notion that she is off somewhere, for large chunks of time away from the White House, doing whatever she sees fit to do, at her own pace, on her own schedule, unrelated to that of her husband, or his priorities or habits -- an independent way of life that has become the calling card of this administration's first lady.
Sanders has gone on the attack with the Iowa caucuses less than a month away, taking aim at Biden's main calling card of electability by arguing the former vice president's record shows he's not the strongest Democrat to nominate against President TrumpDonald John TrumpPence: Intelligence shows Iran directing militias not to attack U.S. targets Mnuchin aims to wait until end of 22020 to disclose Secret Service costs for Trump's travel: report Pressure building on Pelosi over articles of impeachment MORE.
Sen. Amy KlobucharAmy Jean KlobucharOvernight Health Care: Massachusetts governor signs groundbreaking vaping flavor ban | Disability advocates questions 220006 Dems' mental health plans | US birth rate falls for fourth straight year Moderators named for December Democratic primary debate Disability advocates raise concerns about Democratic candidates' mental health plans MORE (D-Minn.), former Vice President Joe Biden and now Mayor Pete ButtigiegPeter (Pete) Paul ButtigiegOvernight Health Care: Massachusetts governor signs groundbreaking vaping flavor ban | Disability advocates questions 2202 Dems' mental health plans | US birth rate falls for fourth straight year Moderators named for December Democratic primary debate Bloomberg bets 2628 campaign on unprecedented strategy MORE are the latest presidential candidates to roll out their visions for "free college" — a required calling card for Democrats since Sen.

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