When more money comes into the space (in absolute dollar terms), it often comes into new funds.
|
|
"Sadie Sink, who plays our new friend Max from San Diego, she comes into town and sort of comes [into] our friend group," Finn explained.
|
|
Mikkel comes into their bedroom, sick — he has rubella.
|
|
This is where the strength of higher percentage cocaine really comes into play, and by "comes into play," I mean: has a high chance of stopping and/or seriously damaging your heart.
|
|
That is how Cordelia's apparent finale plan comes into focus.
|
|
Each child who comes into this world should feel special.
|
|
That's where the art for the single comes into play.
|
|
She comes into contact with Colonel Darcy (Sam Riley), a
|
|
When the haze dissipates, a steel platform comes into focus.
|
|
Where the genderqueer identity comes into play is more interesting.
|
|
It's here where the Sixers's cap sheet comes into play.
|
|
At this point, a crucial second step comes into play.
|
|
This is where a great deep conditioner comes into play.
|
|
This is where James "Smelly" Kelly comes into the picture.
|
|
"First, data comes into Kafka about the car," Kreps explains.
|
|
Which is where the feminist handwringing comes into play. Two
|
|
This is where the world wide web comes into play.
|
|
""He says whatever comes into his head at the moment.
|
|
And that's where Tandem's acquisition of Pariti comes into focus.
|
|
I am very selective with what comes into my home.
|
|
This is where natural language processing (NLP) comes into play.
|
|
That's where a tiny wearable by VERT comes into play.
|
|
That's where Federation of Quebec Maple Syrup comes into play.
|
|
A group of tents lit by torches comes into view.
|
|
That's where one browser extension, HTTPS Everywhere, comes into play.
|
|
That's where the body composition analysis feature comes into play.
|
|
That is where the Gradible acquisition comes into play, too.
|
|
He says whatever comes into his head at the moment.
|
|
From there, Louder Than Bombs' central story comes into focus.
|
|
This is where the strategy of Magic comes into play.
|
|
That's where something called "the Expectancy Theory" comes into play.
|
|
That's where the superior Oculus software library comes into play.
|
|
This is where Brayola's new marketplace really comes into play.
|
|
And that's where the controversial Steele dossier comes into play.
|
|
When money comes into play, gaming can understandably turn ugly.
|
|
"She comes into my arms and starts crying," Deutchman said.
|
|
I ID every single customer that comes into my store.
|
|
This is where the most interesting lesson comes into play.
|
|
This is also where autonomous vehicles comes into focus, too.
|
|
This is where Currys PC World comes into its own.
|
|
The tariff comes into play on top of those prices.
|
|
Where the RFI comes into play is around those discounts.
|
|
Well, that's where the Chase Sapphire Preferred comes into play.
|
|
"Nobody comes into my editing room, ever," she told me.
|
|
"It's what happens when a new administration comes into office."
|
|
That's where her recommendation for telecom stocks comes into play.
|
|
A lot of music comes into the way I dress.
|
|
Also, j comes into play if you were cheated on.
|
|
The path widens and Don Elias' farmhouse comes into view.
|
|
That is where this team really comes into its own.
|
|
Every time Anne comes into a room, she's so commanding.
|
|
A man eventually comes into frame, and the view swivels.
|
|
That's where this smart logo generator comes into play. Designs.
|
|
This is where the second major vulnerability comes into play.
|
|
It comes into force in the second half of 2020.
|
|
The rights plan comes into force immediately, First Quantum said.
|
|
Here's where the illusion of budget savings comes into play.
|
|
But that whole thing comes into our second food line.
|
|
Determine what kind of stuff comes into their news feed.
|
|
Thorny property law pertaining to the embryo comes into effect.
|
|
This is where the Conditional Approval Act comes into play.
|
|
God also comes into play during penetration, according to Burke.
|
|
This is where Milwaukee's length and tenacity comes into play.
|
|
The app is where the "machine learning" claim comes into play.
|
|
And it's here where Teads' acquisition of Brainient comes into play.
|
|
But it's also interesting because sometimes just inertia comes into play.
|
|
Then Andrew comes into the picture, three weeks later she's pregnant.
|
|
That's where Satechi's $30 Type-C Power Meter comes into play.
|
|
Kondo's passion for storage comes into play in this final category.
|
|
And this is where Funderbeam's nascent trading feature comes into play.
|
|
Just before, the integrity of his academic work comes into question.
|
|
Methylmercury is created when mercury comes into contact with some bacteria.
|
|
Where it gets confusing is when an -ing comes into play.
|
|
There's a lot of really practical ways that comes into play.
|
|
When it comes into contact with water, it turns into foam.
|
|
This is where wifey Kim Kardashian West comes into the mix.
|
|
Color comes into play when it comes to racking up bonuses.
|
|
The second part is where that shared information comes into play.
|
|
That's where their established position as beauty experts comes into play.
|
|
It comes into effect as of April 3, 2019, it said.
|
|
Wells says the question of employment comes into play here, too.
|
|
This is where the impact of global warming comes into play.
|
|
And this is where the lack of evenness comes into play.
|
|
That's where the SXSW Panel Picker (and you!) comes into play.
|
|
That's where building out the company's online assortment comes into play.
|
|
Darla comes into the house during all the festivities to cry.
|
|
Instead, their lack of chemistry comes into stark focus for viewers.
|
|
That's where Spectrm, a new Berlin-based startup, comes into play.
|
|
In The Last Jedi, however, she finally comes into her own.
|
|
I love that the question of truth comes into my work.
|
|
That's where Salesforce's latest Einstein artificial intelligence feature comes into play.
|
|
" President Trump comes into office and says, "We&aposre stopping it.
|
|
Maiduguri, Nigeria (CNN)As night falls, the curfew comes into effect.
|
|
This is where the group's machine learning proficiency comes into play.
|
|
A member's category comes into play significantly during the nomination process.
|
|
At certain points, the game's title, Hidden Agenda, comes into focus.
|
|
That's where the 'Start a Side Business' Bundle comes into play.
|
|
If the second cannot be changed, the first comes into question.
|
|
The countdown has begun; GDPR comes into effect in May 2018.
|
|
And that's where Time's Arrow's Micro Helene bag comes into play.
|
|
In some ways, Trump comes into the meeting at a disadvantage.
|
|
If someone comes into your office, you hear them out. Period.
|
|
It is just not something that comes into play a lot.
|
|
This is where director Roger Michell's ability really comes into play.
|
|
The code comes into effect for accounting purposes from next January.
|
|
If Trump loses, however, another set of calculations comes into play.
|
|
He comes into our bed and slaps me in the face.
|
|
" "When a call comes into the White House at 3 a.m.
|
|
She says politics comes into conversation with her clients a lot.
|
|
Now here's the part where social media comes into play again.
|
|
A man comes into my life and I have to compromise?
|
|
The second factor that comes into play is regional fat-shaming.
|
|
A map of connection comes into your head and doesn't leave.
|
|
But when a blacklight comes into the mix, things get trippy.
|
|
Usually my cat comes into my room and sleeps with me.
|
|
The Revised Payment Services Directive (PSD2) comes into force in 2018.
|
|
The narcissism of our era also comes into play, he said.
|
|
Scott has done martial arts so maybe that comes into it.
|
|
When pickpockets are arrested, however, a second advantage comes into play.
|
|
What to watch Wednesday: - Senate comes into session at 10 a.m.
|
|
However, clearly our faith often comes into conflict with secular culture.
|
|
The lubricant we use sometimes comes into contact with our product.
|
|
That's where The Videography Editing and Marketing Bundle comes into play.
|
|
"Any time that guy comes into Wrigley, standing ovation," Casey says.
|
|
Instead, rationality frequently wilts when the institutional imperative comes into play.
|
|
The microphone also comes into play with the new Alexa features.
|
|
With Rosenstein out, the Justice Department's succession plan comes into play.
|
|
"That's where the devil comes into the picture," Dr. Berns said.
|
|
"There's a simple math question that comes into it," Steffen said.
|
|
Here, the disparity between the two men comes into sharp relief.
|
|
But the man of many poses never fully comes into focus.
|
|
But when it finally comes into view, you can't look away.
|
|
A rival hacker comes into the shop and messes with Kelly.
|
|
An economist comes into the room and jumps into your imagination.
|
|
That's where his college pal (Yahya Abdul-Mateen II) comes into play.
|
|
My dad comes into my room and thanks me for the gift.
|
|
And as we emerge into the light, the Ring comes into view.
|
|
That's where the "Babes & Balls: Breakfast at Tiffany's" party comes into play.
|
|
The Point: Buttigieg comes into this debate under less than ideal circumstances.
|
|
This actually comes into play when you're actually driving it around, too.
|
|
This is where a term called "herd immunity" comes into the discussion.
|
|
Mrs Lam comes into office under the older, even more restrictive rules.
|
|
Whether or not these people love their children never comes into question.
|
|
That's where Tim Johnsen's new iOS app called Spectator comes into play.
|
|
Eye tracking also comes into play in how you interact with holograms.
|
|
But the court's interpretation of the rules once again comes into play.
|
|
All you need to know as hoops season comes into focus: KOBE!
|
|
Moments later, Hadid, 21, comes into view cozies up to her love.
|
|
Remember: a new Supreme only comes into power when her predecessor dies.
|
|
Their owners will have to surrender them after legislation comes into effect.
|
|
"I think Duterte comes into the presidency with this mindset," she said.
|
|
My boss comes into the room, too, and there is chocolate everywhere.
|
|
"When money comes into your life say 'arigato': thank you," Honda said.
|
|
Everything you've learned about letting your true self show comes into play.
|
|
The saving grace is that EEEV rarely comes into contact with people.
|
|
That's where a service like T-Mobile's BingeOn comes into the picture.
|
|
No one comes into having sex or any sexual relations knowing everything.
|
|
Obviously, there's a lot of incoming that comes into the White House.
|
|
Obviously there's a lot of incoming that comes into the White House.
|
|
I think being out of California in the 70s comes into this.
|
|
Whitaker comes into the role after serving as Sessions's chief of staff.
|
|
"The power comes into our body from the heels," Ms. Xin explained.
|
|
But the game comes into its own the more you play it.
|
|
This kind of humanity comes into it, which is really quite interesting.
|
|
This is where Trump's new phrasing, based on nationality, comes into play.
|
|
And here's where the warped morality of the NFL comes into play.
|
|
And that's something to consider when the MVP debate comes into play.
|
|
That's where the probe's sophisticated Thermal Protection System (TPS) comes into play.
|
|
I'll eat anything and everything that comes into sight, so personally, no.
|
|
Because seditious conspiracy is essentially speech, the First Amendment comes into play.
|
|
This is where the Microsoft Surface Pro 6 comes into its own.
|
|
Where the Nintendo Switch really comes into its own is its playability.
|
|
The Postal Service records images of mail that comes into its system.
|
|
But that only comes into play on half the profits gained overseas.
|
|
From time to time, a norm stops working or comes into dispute.
|
|
Learn how it works before it comes into play in this game.
|
|
Then Sid, a charming traveler from distant lands, comes into Nirrim's life.
|
|
A similar law in nearby West Hollywood comes into effect in August.
|
|
My father and I hand select everything that comes into the store.
|
|
The ghostly Bahia Honda Rail Bridge comes into view in the distance.
|
|
The new exemption threshold calculation comes into effect on 1 November 2019.
|
|
Tennessee comes into the postseason with one of the NFL's hottest offenses.
|
|
Once you do, the work comes into vivid focus, conceptually and visually.
|
|
This ultimately comes into conflict with the country's economy and its aspirations.
|
|
With the Ivanka Trump brand, another variable now comes into play: politics.
|
|
This is where the motivation behind "methane" advocacy comes into clearer view.
|
|
A second officer comes into the cell to help the first officer.
|
|
Charity funding comes into play when the person really needs a break.
|
|
Captain Bonilla comes into the hallway to speak with the woman's son.
|
|
This is where H.R. 4889, the Kelsey Smith Act, comes into play.
|
|
Occasionally, a girl comes into it — his youngest daughter Lula, a toddler.
|
|
And all of this really comes into play when you're planning a wedding.
|
|
They share a vision, and it comes into focus when they sing together.
|
|
More from Tonic: Unfortunately, Elist can't help everyone who comes into his office.
|
|
In this state, it's highly toxic when it comes into contact with skin.
|
|
This is where the power of framing the devices comes into full view.
|
|
It may be a while before the new, old KORUS comes into force.
|
|
Once a wedding cake or floral arrangement comes into play, support is mushy.
|
|
Jughead comes into the kitchen, but Betty doesn't tell him about the call.
|
|
I don't pay for Hot Pod, it comes into my inbox for free.
|
|
The EU's tough new data law, GDPR, comes into effect on May 25.
|
|
This is where Quentin Beck, aka Mysterio, aka Jake Gyllenhaal, comes into play.
|
|
But when the temperature system comes into play, it can feel eerily realistic.
|
|
But that's where the all-important caveat comes into play: It's still early.
|
|
Colorism comes into play with Riri's lighter complexion (Campbell was not the colorist).
|
|
The new National Security Council (NSC) Act, which comes into force on Aug.
|
|
DHS doesn't have to detain someone who comes into the US without papers.
|
|
The International Association of Athletics Federations' rule, which comes into force on Nov.
|
|
And this is where mobile AR's secret weapon comes into play: replacement cycles.
|
|
On April 6th a new tax on sugary soft drinks comes into effect.
|
|
Mississippi's will almost certainly be halted before it comes into effect in July.
|
|
A woman comes into the room and addresses the old man as Adam.
|
|
If this deal fails, the entire 2017 Washington policy timeline comes into question.
|
|
"When you're fighting in games like that, everybody comes into play," Melvin said.
|
|
And it's in the second series that he really comes into his own.
|
|
This bias also comes into play when companies name their products for children.
|
|
However, it'll take some before what Miner plans on building comes into focus.
|
|
That sort of balance comes into play in many of the Mace drinks.
|
|
And hey, this is fashion, after all, and practicality rarely comes into play.
|
|
"Anyone who comes into that category is absolutely a lion," Mr. Kebbell said.
|
|
This is where the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency comes into full play.
|
|
We take the dollar as an exogenous element that comes into our forecast.
|
|
Imagine you're a doctor, and a patient comes into your office one day.
|
|
"With some of these guys, that comes into play as well," Griffin said.
|
|
A beatific peace comes into her face; she looks, momentarily, like a martyr.
|
|
As soon as sex comes into a conversation, people are nervous of it.
|
|
The conservation community is where Internet of Elephant's business model comes into play.
|
|
For the Mem Aleph material, improvisation comes into play in a couple ways.
|
|
Masha Gessen When a perfect metaphor is born, the world comes into focus.
|
|
But that could change when a Polish law comes into force on Jan.
|
|
Find tracks you associate with good memories Pavlovian reflex comes into play here.
|
|
So the foliage comes into the space, and then it builds from there.
|
|
When he speaks of Erda, a ghostly image of her comes into view.
|
|
But both will face a second renewal before the changes comes into force.
|
|
The Trump administration has threatened sanctions against Europe if Instex comes into force.
|
|
This is where the second reason to use cost-sharing comes into play.
|
|
"You already have video before the pitcher comes into a game," Verlander said.
|
|
But you'd be surprised how seldom the speed limit actually comes into play.
|
|
Someone comes into the ER, you don't blame them, you try and understand.
|
|
Your friends and anyone who comes into your home will thank you (seriously)!
|
|
"We're being very careful with what comes into the collection," Ms. Ingrassia said.
|
|
Later, a more specific response geared to a particular virus comes into play.
|
|
Until the prohibition comes into effect, he asked that people reconsider the climb.
|
|
"The idea of stopping the apocalypse in itself comes into question," Gamble said.
|
|
Things get even more intriguing when Wokuni's seafood comes into contact with heat.
|
|
But if you look more closely, a second picture comes into clearer relief.
|
|
When you contribute regularly, dollar-cost-averaging comes into the equation, she added.
|
|
Three beers later, N. is finally done chatting and comes into the house.
|
|
When the assets are transferred to the beneficiary, estate tax comes into play.
|
|
It can be a threat to anyone who comes into contact with it.
|
|
So President Hillary Clinton comes into office and proposes a $15 minimum wage.
|
|
The problem comes into play when users can buy the loot boxes outright.
|
|
My boss comes into the office today and wants to take us to lunch.
|
|
Change is a part of the territory when new leadership comes into a business.
|
|
Soon another point of light, this one red, comes into view and gives chase.
|
|
So those are some dizzying stats, but here's where the inevitability comes into play.
|
|
And this is where the immensity of the #NeverTrump burden comes into clear focus.
|
|
However Captain Marvel comes into the MCU via Endgame, we're excited to see it.
|
|
And the better cameras get, the sharper each of those flaws comes into focus.
|
|
Often times, the website manager never even comes into contact with the physical server.
|
|
So it's all the legacy based stuff as well, that comes into play here.
|
|
That bet really comes into focus when you see the price on these headphones.
|
|
The agony of setting monetary policy only gets worse when politics comes into play.
|
|
Out in the less-populated reaches of Alaska, a different calculation comes into play.
|
|
"Everything that comes into it validates this a little bit more," the trader said.
|
|
Everything that comes into the platform will sound and be on the same level.
|
|
It's a tricky question and there's a lot of speculation that comes into it.
|
|
As such, Ward's race is conveniently neutralized in moments where power comes into play.
|
|
When this biosensor comes into contact with glucose, the enzyme oxidizes the blood sugar.
|
|
That body now automatically comes into actual existence, and will commence its operations forthwith.
|
|
Maximilian comes into the line of succession in sixth position behind his brother, Sasha.
|
|
Screenshot: GizmodoOur old friend IFTTT (If This Then That) comes into play as well.
|
|
First it was a little tough — the whole sleep-regression thing comes into play.
|
|
He said the burden is significantly worse when a medical condition comes into play.
|
|
A woman comes into the room where George sits and whispers in his ear.
|
|
This is where Trump's involvement in drafting Don Jr.'s statement comes into play.
|
|
Eisenhower comes into office in 1953, and they don't touch an element of it.
|
|
In Lister's time, when he comes into medical school, bodies aren't really being stolen.
|
|
With all that behind us, it's almost then that Bloc comes into its own.
|
|
Samsung's bigger aperture really comes into play when you're taking photos in low light.
|
|
After you do however, the once opaque intent of the album comes into focus.
|
|
That's where the Precision Concept comes into play, introduced at NAIAS in Detroit today.
|
|
And as modernity comes into the region, it also seeks to take something out.
|
|
WikiLeaks' "transparency challenge" comes as Clinton's health comes into focus after a pneumonia diagnosis.
|
|
That concept of loss comes into sharper focus for me thinking about my son.
|
|
That's where the tenderness that is fundamental to this show's ethos comes into play.
|
|
Woolf novel by the same name comes into the story and leavens it with
|
|
For many that's probably the last piece of the puzzle that comes into play.
|
|
One: Special counsel Robert Mueller's spending comes into public view in the days ahead.
|
|
Expect 2019 to be the year 3D printing really, really comes into the mainstream.
|
|
This is where sima, a sweet and slightly fizzy drink, comes into the picture.
|
|
That's where the President's insinuation via Twitter that there were "tapes" comes into play.
|
|
That's where the Wageningen University and Research Center in the Netherlands comes into play.
|
|
For me, the first thing that comes into my head is one-night stands.
|
|
Then ClickSoftware comes into play with intelligent scheduling, based on rules the customer defines.
|
|
Bit by bit by bit, the picture comes into focus from a blurry mess.
|
|
But it's when we venture deeper into space that Earth comes into spellbinding focus.
|
|
When it comes into contact with human skin, it causes extremely painful chemical burns.
|
|
Then comes the stretching, which is where the reformer really comes into its own.
|
|
One night while Willie is working, Robert comes into the club with his colleagues.
|
|
Imagine an American president who comes into office with the requisite four-year term.
|
|
The ban comes into immediate effect and will apply at least until 15 March.
|
|
The stock's 200-day moving average comes into play just above the $240 level.
|
|
Irakli Chikovani told a briefing that the measure comes into force from March 20.
|
|
Balloons, trains, planes and spaceships - whatever comes into your imagination, continue to dream big.
|
|
Irakli Chikovani told a briefing that the measure comes into force from March 20.
|
|
With that in mind, an entirely different set of emotional responses comes into play.
|
|
There is only one answer, and that's where artificial intelligence really comes into play.
|
|
It is harmful if swallowed or if it comes into contact with a cut.
|
|
Another element often comes into play: the notion that the abuser can be reformed.
|
|
Look past the photo ops, however, and a deeper economic reality comes into focus.
|
|
No new religion comes into being fully made, like Venus on her half-shell.
|
|
Roskam comes into the final month of the campaign with an equally sizable bankroll.
|
|
After the prologue, a ramshackle hospital on the outskirts of Washington comes into view.
|
|
Viewed in that light, the true intent of Mr. Sessions's decision comes into focus.
|
|
That's changing, and quickly, as the scope of the disaster comes into clearer focus.
|
|
When a factory comes into a developing country, it by definition creates new jobs.
|
|
When Campbell comes into the bathroom, he finds her having body convulsions on the floor.
|
|
Suddenly, an insect-like springtail comes into the view of a trap-jaw's compound eye.
|
|
BROCK: Well here&aposs where the importance of John Solomon&aposs article comes into play.
|
|
If Johanna comes into contact with one of these triggers, her body goes into anaphylaxis.
|
|
"It comes into deep conflict with what consumer expectations are in this space," Verdi said.
|
|
"Every college or university comes into compliance before it gets to that stage," he said.
|
|
Criticizing the "coercive" approach to the drug war, López Obrador, who comes into power Dec.
|
|
I don't know if it gets harder when a second child comes into the mix.
|
|
That's where Statespace, a new Expa-backed startup launching out of stealth, comes into play.
|
|
She comes into the rocky creek and wades up it, her feet numb with cold.
|
|
But soon she's under his spell, like every other woman he comes into contact with.
|
|
He goes back home, comes into work the next day, and pulls up another lead.
|
|
She comes into town following the death of her son, and she's looking for answers.
|
|
Live streaming alone isn't a money spinner — that's where the business mode comes into play.
|
|
The firm comes into its own when simple contracts of this kind will not suffice.
|
|
If a spaser comes into contact with such a cell, it therefore tends to stick.
|
|
Once a lovable underdog goofball, Kyle comes into FR as a heartless, lying, manipulative… pirate.
|
|
A turnaround in the gloomy mood happens when a young girl comes into their orbit.
|
|
To do all of this, the service continuously monitors new data that comes into S3.
|
|
When the train comes into the station, it causes dust and particles to become airborne.
|
|
And Laura Benanti is thankful for each and every person who comes into her life.
|
|
But in Little Labors, Galchen's latest book and first memoir, motherhood comes into intimate view.
|
|
This is where Trump's strategy of going after four very progressive congresswomen comes into play.
|
|
Lutfi comes into play because he seems to be taking part in the #FreeBritney campaign.
|
|
Psychology comes into play just in understanding where somebody is at in their sexual journey.
|
|
That's where "zero trust" comes into play — where you don't trust, but you certainly verify.
|
|
Hilariously, Betty comes into this inhospitable, rustic world pretending to be an airy landscape painter.
|
|
She nearly loses it every time she comes into contact with the soft, monstrous beast.
|
|
That speaks to a very crowded market, which is where Sennder's specialization comes into play.
|
|
Things get even more confusing when Good Bones' general contractor Lenny comes into the picture.
|
|
At this stage, the heart of the problem with the clemency process comes into view.
|
|
That is where the other side of the equation — higher worker compensation — comes into play.
|
|
This, then, is when the moralizing rationale that draws on dehumanizing propaganda comes into play.
|
|
He comes into his own at campaign rallies, where his rhetoric is becoming increasingly unhinged.
|
|
This phenomenon of interacting galaxies comes into play when their gravitational fields overlap and attract.
|
|
It's a bit of an uphill now, and the finish line finally comes into sight.
|
|
When the ferryboat comes into the wharf, automatically it pulls all the garbage in, too.
|
|
Outbreaks may begin when a sick harp seal comes into contact with a gray seal.
|
|
This is when the deformed-rotation model comes into play, and local deformations are fixed.
|
|
The blockchain comes into account because of its nature as an irrefutable and immutable record.
|
|
And here's where Warner Bros.' lack of a Feige-like figure again comes into play.
|
|
Aaron: I'm sure we'll have more to discuss as President Trump's administration comes into power.
|
|
That is where the use of X-rays and data from sensors comes into play.
|
|
He comes into contact with Australia's indigenous people, a group maligned by colonists as uneducated.
|
|
The fact that Hammer shot the film in the "Third World" also comes into play.
|
|
And that really comes into its own with Bill Clinton — the incredible hatred of Clinton.
|
|
When it comes into contact with bacteria, it uses its "feet" to grab onto it.
|
|
Friday also comes into play in this example because Jesus was crucified on a Friday.
|
|
The red roof of ABC Supply comes into view, overlooking Beloit from a slight hill.
|
|
When Fernando comes into the garage you see everyone stand up a little more upright.
|
|
Time is also the first thing we lose when chronic illness comes into our lives.
|
|
Then Kroeger — singing Nickelback's song "Photograph" — comes into the picture holding, well, a picture frame.
|
|
Most remarkable, it comes into the 21st century little changed from when it was born.
|
|
But as their villainy comes into relief, the humanity of their hostages begins to blur.
|
|
Some of the submerged ice comes into view when the berg is seen from above.
|
|
As a result, the team comes into the office on Wednesdays for a group meeting.
|
|
And I think there is that, you know, risk apprehension which also comes into play.
|
|
MS-13 comes into the country, we're liberating towns in Long Island and other places.
|
|
As all this comes into view, the climate change debate continues to reach absurd lows.
|
|
Only around 1% of everything that comes into the center cannot be recycled at all.
|
|
This comes into play when people despair of their future, or especially that of their children.
|
|
Ships will have to use compliant fuel once the IMO 2020 sulphur cap comes into force.
|
|
When Obama comes into power in 2008, it's right after the conflict between Russia and Georgia.
|
|
At the end of the day when brass tacks comes into play, what do you say?
|
|
Beijing has set strict quotas for electric and hybrid cars that comes into effect from 2019.
|
|
Even if nothing else comes into our detectors, we are going to own black hole astronomy.
|
|
Proximity comes into the condition too: The closer people are, the harder it is to go.
|
|
And officials are warning anyone who comes into contact with the species to kill it immediately.
|
|
And there could be a flurry of activity when it comes into effect on Oct. 15.
|
|
The tax only comes into effect if you make a purchase with a Pennsylvania billing address.
|
|
The meteor shower happens when Earth comes into contact with the 16-mile-wide comet's tail.
|
|
"Life is about opening doors," Hadid intones in voiceover as Lil Miquela comes into the frame.
|
|
But not all consumers are concerned with speed, which is where the marketplace comes into play.
|
|
They fulfill that to a DoorDash Dasher that comes into the door, and it goes well.
|
|
Ms. Hellman comes into her own here, spitting enmity as she plots to have Marina killed.
|
|
That may be another apparently-remote risk that comes into the spotlight after this pivotal vote.
|
|
That's where the most dramatic, and now most potent current anti-war factor comes into play.
|
|
But when there are no good responses to a criticism, the reverse attack comes into play.
|
|
But as the background comes into focus, it becomes clear that this a political scene, too.
|
|
If a second person comes into view, Portal will widen the frame so you're both visible.
|
|
He comes into the room, his sleeves rolled up, he has a watch around his wrist.
|
|
So this where most important part of our shiny new autonomous car policy comes into play.
|
|
Now, we don't know exactly how each wight comes into being, what the specific process is.
|
|
Intel's processing power itself comes into play with the amount of data required for autonomous driving.
|
|
The convent's nuns worry they will forsake their vows if the property comes into Perry's possession.
|
|
I find that the majority of what comes into my timeline is related to social issues.
|
|
Through the fog of alcoholism and self-destruction, what comes into focus is his remarkable output.
|
|
Soon, the landmark Ferry Building comes into view, its scaffolding offering a clue to the date.
|
|
That's where the Dot's new ability to hook up to a larger speaker comes into play.
|
|
But viewed as a whole, on a larger scale, their great majesty truly comes into focus.
|
|
Too bad we gotta wait til next season to see if the training comes into play.
|
|
"Generally, Amazon comes into a market and very quickly is able to dominate," Hosam Arab said.
|
|
Jake comes into his own as a detective and is able to show maturity and growth.
|
|
Worgull: Homesickness comes into play when you're at home and then have to leave, to go.
|
|
If the truck comes into contact with other cars, it will knock them off the track.
|
|
This being hurts people, against Ada's will sometimes, and comes into conflict with Ada's Christian faith.
|
|
When the suit comes into contact with contaminants, it "activates" and offers protection from the threat.
|
|
He now intends to leave the country before the new government comes into power in January.
|
|
It's only in the latter half that the episode comes into focus because of Randall's reappearance.
|
|
If the tariff comes into effect, they would upend Haberman's components supplies from China, he said.
|
|
That's where old-school human evaluation comes into play, courtesy of the service's enhanced content team.
|
|
"But we want them to report any unfamiliar vehicle or person that comes into their neighborhood."
|
|
He's prone to say whatever comes into his head, alternating between bracing honesty and complete outrageousness.
|
|
As a result, AMLO comes into office with a strong mandate to enact major policy reforms.
|
|
That's where Heisenberg, the founder of the uncertainty principle, comes into the picture, but don't worry.
|
|
I want a system where the government is able to decide who comes into the country.
|
|
She comes into his office and propositions him, in a very forward matter, we might add.
|
|
Either way, when it's time to start getting results, the fully connected layer comes into play.
|
|
It's this incredible thing that comes into being, is a universe unto itself, then winks out.
|
|
Yes, and he's an example of how the outside world comes into the Bolshoi as well.
|
|
How would you deal with someone who comes into the ER and is going through withdrawal?
|
|
The directive comes into effect on 25 March 2017 and is valid until 14 October 2017.
|
|
Although she comes into regular contact with the medical system, she does not necessarily trust it.
|
|
He said he was not sure what he would do once the law comes into effect.
|
|
But as the Vermont law comes into effect July 1, companies are beginning to break ranks.
|
|
Because it comes into your house every week, these people become very much like your friends.
|
|
Thus does she depict an internal resilience that comes into being through the act of aspiration.
|
|
Next June, when the change in policy comes into effect, I plan to make that drive.
|
|
Tech layoffs rise as cost-cutting comes into vogue 23andMe and Mozilla are not alone, however.
|
|
That means the House managers will start making their case when the trial comes into session.
|
|
"[When a] customer comes into my restaurant -- they trust our quality of food," Matsuhisa told CNNMoney.
|
|
With this "Rusalka," though, Ms. Zimmerman comes into her own as a director at the Met.
|
|
The draft law comes into effect from the date it is published in Argentina's official Gazette.
|
|
" Boeing suggested that compromise can be reached if Airbus comes into "full compliance with its obligations.
|
|
Accounting is not a hard and fast science, and subjectivity comes into play in many areas.
|
|
McCowan comes into the round of 16 off a 30-point, 11-rebound performance against Clemson.
|
|
Once lunchtime rolls around, however, Chris' secondary character trait comes into play: She really loves Subway.
|
|
Walking down a second pathway that runs alongside Yingshan, the village of Sanjia comes into view.
|
|
The political utility of stifling political expression and critique within Muslim American communities comes into view.
|
|
And this is where The Revenant's BAFTA Award and its Directors Guild Award comes into play.
|
|
Cultural appropriation also comes into play when considering who gets to access wellness products or practices.
|
|
Being in front of 80 million people on live TV and saying whatever comes into my mind.
|
|
The U.K.'s online junk food ad ban for children comes into effect on 1 July 2017.
|
|
Contrast MPK 21 with Apple's famous spaceship headquarters and the contrast of corporate cultures comes into relief.
|
|
But not all countries are so lucky, and this is where enhanced geothermal electricity comes into play.
|
|
Obviously easier said than done but that is a strategy which comes into its own over rounds.
|
|
The European General Data Protection Regulation, which comes into force next year, covers privacy issues fairly comprehensively.
|
|
As it pulls away, the advertising slogan on this tourist bus comes into view: "Follow your dreams".
|
|
Osaka comes into the event off the back of a successful run during the WTA's Asian swing.
|
|
Facebook has restricted crypto-related adverts, while Google announced a ban that comes into force in June.
|
|
When another woman comes into the department, I would warn them about what you're gonna deal with.
|
|
All masked protesters risk being arrested from midnight on Friday, once the emergency law comes into effect.
|
|
For that they can thank a vaguely worded law which comes into effect in October next year.
|
|
When hydrochloric acid comes into contact with the skin, it can cause severe burns, ulcers and scarring.
|
|
"No rat comes into my house without getting tased," he says, while his on-screen companions scream.
|
|
Think about how many people in the ecosystem each shipper, driver, and broker comes into contact with!
|
|
IFRS 9, which comes into force on January 23st, obliges them to provide for expected losses instead.
|
|
A lobbed bomb that sticks to the first surface or enemy hero it comes into contact with.
|
|
Ozzy comes into every challenge with the burden of his amazing Survivor challenge history dragging behind him.
|
|
It'll be interesting to see how else he comes into play on this season of the show.
|
|
"Overhead and infrastructure cost is where strategy comes into play," explained Pete Madden, a director at AlixPartners.
|
|
S&P Global Platts estimates that roughly 400,000 to 500,000 bpd of that total comes into Europe.
|
|
Then, my inner best friend comes into play and says DIFFERENT is SEXY, and she always wins.
|
|
The driver carries on their merry way fucking on the road when a person comes into frame.
|
|
By the time it comes into force, it will be the country's 20th constitution in 85 years.
|
|
However, threats are not recognised by individual bacteria but by biofilms, where quorum sensing comes into play.
|
|
And then a bright red child's life jacket comes into view, snagged on top of the wire.
|
|
But when the registrant is the school rather than the student, the federal PPRA comes into play.
|
|
Claire searches the grounds, her eyes moving across the women in conversation until Randall comes into focus.
|
|
But once landing on the moon or other cosmic bodies comes into play, things get more complicated.
|
|
" In that interview, with CNN, she added: "He says whatever comes into his head at the moment.
|
|
If somebody comes into the building with malicious intent, the teacher can potentially swiftly end the threat.
|
|
In Shavings, the final work of the exhibition, the unpredictable aftermath of Bonilla's practice comes into play.
|
|
However, the irony comes into play when we take an honest look at what Coachella has become.
|
|
"Songwriting usually comes into play for me when I get really burned out on humanity," he says.
|
|
Sarah Burns: The place where it comes into play is when we're all sitting together, during editing.
|
|
I stare at the floor, palms and arms open, willing to welcome whoever comes into the room.
|
|
A new government comes into office in the next week, arriving on a wave of popular support.
|
|
As day edges into night, each character's life comes into crystalline view, and the ordinary becomes profound.
|
|
" He continues: "Everybody who comes into this building, I have different ways of greeting each of them.
|
|
But it all comes into play; the actual differences between men and women physically aren't that different.
|
|
By thinking about those numbers as something other than money, the scale of spending comes into range.
|
|
A versatile guard, Grimes joins a strong returning squad that comes into the season ranked No. 1.
|
|
There is a whole industry that makes money every time a new teacher comes into the country.
|
|
When asparagus first comes into season, it's criminal not to make it the star of the meal.
|
|
In the episode's most maudlin story line, the cause of Farid's repressed trauma finally comes into focus.
|
|
It comes into focus slowly at first, then all at once, just the way it's supposed to.
|
|
Public officials have to learn not to say the first ignorant thing that comes into their head.
|
|
The silver lining is my little sister comes into town in a few hours for the week.
|
|
When you factor in its weight-to-warmth ratio, the value of the Hyperion comes into focus.
|
|
He did not suggest that we impose 100 percent tariffs on everything that comes into our country.
|
|
The same amount of money comes into the United States that goes out of the United States.
|
|
"Some of the commissioners' minds are made up before the guy comes into the room," he said.
|
|
Lockhart's warning comes six months before the European Union's Revised Payment Service Directive (PSD2) comes into force.
|
|
Person-to-person transmission can occur if an uninfected person comes into direct contact with another person.
|
|
They were announced ahead of a stringent European Union data law which comes into force in May.
|
|
"An FBI investigation is only as good as the information that comes into the FBI," Campbell said.
|
|
There's also a whole lot of destiny, which comes into play at the core of the story.
|
|
One or the other comes into focus depending on what sort of questions we ask about ourselves.
|
|
It comes into play when you consciously try not to do something you'd otherwise do without thinking.
|
|
For foreigners, the legal residence time includes that which has elapsed before the law comes into force.
|
|
I weigh, hang, and keep a journal on each piece of meat that comes into my restaurant.
|
|
But the second tranche that comes into effect three months later could be more harmful to Moscow.
|
|
The dirty room has some sort of monsters inside and the word demon comes into my head.
|
|
"Ladies and gentleman, I present Noah's Ark," says the bus driver when the gargantuan structure comes into view.
|
|
But for really large storage requirements a second ratio also comes into play: gigabytes stored per cubic metre.
|
|
BT: If it doesn't, that's when the notion of dealing with cities and states really comes into play.
|
|
It comes into force next year, and the activists hope next to push for similar EU-level legislation.
|
|
In the conviction stage capital comes into the market because of the fundamental valuations created by fiscal growth.
|
|
The new rule comes into effect in November unless overturned by the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS).
|
|
My thought of the day… everyone comes into our lives for a reason, a season or a lifetime.
|
|
Its demon-haunted world comes into focus slowly, as your retinas make sense of the batcave light levels.
|
|
Automata is following its predecessor's lead, and getting wilder—which is where the bullet hell comes into play.
|
|
When machine learning really comes into its own, it could hold tremendous power over our dumb monkey brains.
|
|
When a child comes into the Office of Refugee Resettlement, they're provided with a know your rights presentation.
|
|
Of course, anonymized chat could also lead to abuse, which is where the Safety Center comes into play.
|
|
From the front seat, Lucid Motors' desire to combine ultra-luxury with cool gadgetry comes into sharp focus.
|
|
The beloved Saint Bernard comes into the lives of the Newton family and makes himself right at home.
|
|
PS: Also, I wrote the whole story on a train, so I think that also comes into play.
|
|
Brock, an investigative journalist, comes into contact with an alien symbiote, Venom, that imbues him with superhuman abilities.
|
|
"Firstly, these people are super-communicators, each of them comes into contact with patients and parents," he explains.
|
|
With this cleared up, Zuckerberg's potential to make changes through government service, not just software, comes into focus.
|
|
They had split the first two, so the Bulls will have the tiebreaker if it comes into play.
|
|
Like fentanyl, carfentanil is dangerous not just to users but to anyone who comes into contact with it.
|
|
If the person comes into a place like that, people come in because they want to do this.
|
|
In March, China fast-tracked legislation for its first foreign investment law, which comes into effect on Jan.
|
|
She is awkward and stilted as the demure bride but comes into her own as the warrior queen.
|
|
Refunds will be issued for any purchases made up to 90 days before the announcement comes into effect.
|
|
Digging into those areas takes time and trust, something that's even more difficult when judgment comes into play.
|
|
From there, you'll learn how to play with both hands, which is where split concentration comes into play.
|
|
I think that's a real danger, particularly if the way in which they're passing it comes into play.
|
|
The catch is that this whizzbang tech only really comes into play when the CPU is extremely taxed.
|
|
Rex Ryan, of course, always makes it entertaining when he comes into Gillette, for good or for ill.
|
|
A few seconds later, Toler presses pause, as the sign advertising the gas station's prices comes into view.
|
|
It comes into force on Saturday after its approval by President Andrzej Duda, a close ally of PiS.
|
|
"When the fruit comes into the U.S., it could bring things we don't want with it," said Pidduck.
|
|
Dubbed 'Ola Offline', the feature comes into play when a customer doesn't have good (or any) data connectivity.
|
|
I think as Americans we have a right to decide who comes into this country and who doesn't.
|
|
The truth is that being less culpable becomes a minor factor when the trial penalty comes into play.
|
|
Roy Moore, the controversial former state Supreme Court judge, comes into Election Day with the edge over Sen.
|
|
PSD2, which comes into effect on September 19, will require banks to up their verification processes for payments.
|
|
The problem comes into stark relief when comparing the Cold War with the Global War on Terrorism (GWOT).
|
|
Instead, it is a decision about whether Trump has the power to limit who comes into the country.
|
|
When it comes to style, sometimes less is more — and that's where the minimalistic sneaker comes into play.
|
|
There is a thin a line, and this is where the social platform's real problem comes into play.
|
|
As CVS starts to focus its physical presence more on health, the stores' other inventory comes into question.
|
|
The crisis demonstrated the difficulties of putting public health first when it comes into conflict with economic growth.
|
|
Pretty much everyone does this for the love of it, but everyone comes into it with some experience.
|
|
Moran said electric vehicles are another key driver, which is where Mahendra & Mahendra comes into the strategic picture.
|
|
I think sex comes into the episodes, but I don't think we've done one which is about that.
|
|
And one night, this man comes into the bar, and he's very properly dressed, and it was Norwood.
|
|
Zuora comes into play because these companies don't have systems to deal with these new types of revenue.
|
|
Fast-tracked for approval at this month's annual session of parliament, the law comes into effect on Jan.
|
|
The guys share not only the garret, but also clothes and food and whatever money anyone comes into.
|
|
He comes into my dreams almost exclusively as a disembodied voice on the other end of the line.
|
|
With a near constant barrage of such reports, the legality of these bombings comes into question once again.
|
|
The most recent addition to the legislation — which also comes into force on Friday — takes those tests nationwide.
|
|
Indulin can burn the eyes, skin and respiratory tract if a person comes into contact with concentrated amounts.
|
|
Cover image: The ONG Aquarius comes into the Port of Catania on May 10, 2018 in Catania, Italy.
|
|
"When you have your panic attacks, what is the first thought that comes into your head?" said Neo.
|
|
While Bonnie's past is still a blur, that of Gordon Klein (Jeffrey Nordling) suddenly comes into sharp focus.
|
|
He sometimes comes into contact with people when they sail past on boats or stop to buy fish.
|
|
Which is why it matters to all of us when a go-to sales strategy comes into question.
|
|
Lawmakers also approved funding for Hurricane Harvey relief, as the scope of the enormous cleanup comes into view.
|
|
The show unravels rather distressingly in Greene Naftali's eighth-floor space, where a glaring problem comes into focus.
|
|
That's where the increasingly toxic relationship between Mr. Trump and Senator Bob Corker of Tennessee comes into play.
|
|
Moreover, a bystander or emergency medical worker who comes into contact with such drugs can be gravely harmed.
|
|
He said some people go without renter's insurance, because they don't understand how much it comes into play.
|
|
A Rev spokesperson said they are "exploring ways" to better identify sensitive content that comes into the platform.
|
|
A sophomore, he comes into this season leading the No. 4 Trojans on a nine-game winning streak.
|
|
Here is what to look out for next: MONDAY-TUESDAY ** The Senate comes into session at 1 p.m.
|
|
So, I think, you know, there needs to be careful consideration before something like that comes into play.
|
|
Power comes into being only if and when human beings join together for the purpose of deliberative action.
|
|
"I draw inspiration from every person with a spinal cord injury who comes into this program," Harkema said.
|
|
" Without the antidote, "If a kid comes into school and he overdoses, they don't have the proper tools.
|
|
And Pressley's history in Massachusetts, where Warren is the senator, also likely comes into play in her endorsement.
|
|
Kasyouhanan said Marotta often comes into the station with loose change to pay for small amounts of gasoline.
|
|
The burqa ban, which still requires parliamentary approval before it comes into force, has Muslim groups deeply concerned.
|
|
Someone comes into the hospital in distress, and it's their job to help that person however they can.
|
|
Then a number of things really soured in the relationship—and this is where Hillary Clinton comes into play.
|
|
Gun owners have six months to hand in their weapons, from the time the buyback scheme comes into effect.
|
|
If this system ever comes into being, it might not look at all like Bitcoin or even Ethereum's blockchain.
|
|
AUSTRIA&aposS &aposBURQA BAN&apos LAW COMES INTO FORCE First-time offenders risk a fine of 1,000 kroner ($156).
|
|
But right now nobody really sees anybody out there, so that's when the Rock or whoever comes into play.
|
|
Mississippi State comes into the game ranked 227th in the nation in third-down conversion rate at 47.3 percent.
|
|
Blair, Toronto's former police chief, has also helmed the government's legalization of cannabis, which comes into effect in October.
|
|
In the next clip, the woman is no longer visible when a man carrying a child comes into view.
|
|
It's a bit like playing sudoku; the more words you uncover, the more the big picture comes into focus.
|
|
The new rule, if it comes into being, is part of the Republican strategy of undoing Obamacare in bits.
|
|
"Just out of curiosity, is this how you treat every girl that comes into your comp games?" she asks.
|
|
But right now nobody really sees anybody out there, so that's when The Rock or whoever comes into play.
|
|
When Reggie Love comes into the diner to holler at his employee, Leon grabs a gun and shoots him.
|
|
When he comes into the room I show him the treat, holding it up in exchange for a handshake.
|
|
It's the Presets panel where HandBrake really comes into its own (click Toggle Presets if you can't see it).
|
|
Of more concern, 23 percent said their organisation would not be fully compliant when the regulation comes into effect.
|
|
By the end of the first season, when everything comes into focus, it's clear it was worth the ride.
|
|
From June 2018, however, travellers' frustrations should ease when the International Air Transport Association's Resolution 753 comes into effect.
|
|
AR comes into play in a couple of ways here, although it doesn't look as impressive as it sounds.
|
|
"Say your boss comes into the room and you look up—you have an immediate familiarity response," Zeman says.
|
|
After some debate, Privacy Shield was approved by national representatives on Friday, and comes into force on Tuesday — today.
|
|
A law change that comes into force in the UK today makes the highly intrusive practice of 'upskirting' illegal.
|
|
How all that works, and to what end, is where the murkiness of Instagram modeling really comes into focus.
|
|
These discoveries have taken place as our understanding of what's really happening during a TDE comes into sharper focus.
|
|
In any case, the possibility that an anti-establishment government comes into power is slim, said Mai of PIMCO.
|
|
Instead, Amazon manages it all and the underlying infrastructure only comes into play when an event triggers a requirement.
|
|
The agreement comes into effect starting in December 2017, placing limits or prohibiting certain human activities in the area.
|
|
If that ever comes into question, the market is going to react very negatively," Kovacevich said on "Power Lunch.
|
|
Or, because of where the broadband connection comes into the house, the router is not easy to locate centrally.
|
|
The real target is humans, and that is where the power of an internet-connected rover comes into play.
|
|
A worn-out sign announcing its start only comes into view after a journey down a small dirt path.
|
|
We wanted to create a grounded, familiar world, so that the craziness that comes into it [wouldn't overpower everything].
|
|
He really comes into his own in series three, and Joshua McGuire's acting in the scene above is impeccable.
|
|
Jeb comes into South Carolina having struggled for months and trailing in the national polls by a significant amount.
|
|
Sometimes, we want to toe the line between subtle and bold — and that's where this look comes into play.
|
|
Video game modifications have always been a little tricky, legally-speaking, but particularly once money comes into the equation.
|
|
In fact everyone who comes into contact with Vitas seems gripped by a strange, God-like adoration of him.
|
|
They also make him listen whenever a homeless person comes into his store and tries to sell him something.
|
|
"The father's firstborn son comes into the world to work through the issues of his maternal grandfather," she said.
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Now, as Europe's new data protection law comes into effect this week, activists are looking to turn the tables.
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I attempt to nap throughout the day, but my aging beagle comes into my room and snores for hours.
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CNN is a publicly traded company under the umbrella of Time Warner, so immediate disclosure comes into play here.
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Under its rules, once the deal comes into legal force, no country can withdraw from it for four years.
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The GOP leader is expected to address the schedule change once the Senate comes into session at 3 p.m.
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"What critics said: "The OA truly comes into its own when you stop attempting to piece together the storyline.
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The ban, which was introduced as part of an amendment to an existing law, comes into effect on Tuesday.
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In Rio, he again comes into a big meet having raced little and with lingering doubts about his health.
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Once the onions are translucent, turn down the heat to low; this is where the patience comes into play.
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KATZ: This phalanx of cops comes into the back of the crowd and just is whaling into the crowd.
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There's a flicker onscreen whenever López connects, then a blur of pixelated color as his face comes into view.
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So when Ronald Reagan comes into office, there's all this intellectual energy on the right, not on the left.
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Cultural drag comes into play as well, and it often benefits the individual at the expense of a community.
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So I think the vintage aspect comes into effect in the costume, in the wardrobe and the production design.
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The wide-open ruggedness of the American West comes into startling focus at the highest waterfall in North America.
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As each possible couple comes into the picture, the subsequent chapter illuminates how Ivy's life might have turned out.
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And right now the number that comes into public television, public radio is 445 million. Mm-hmm. Small. Small.
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The Southern Company, based in Atlanta, comes into the partnership because it has unregulated businesses that sell power nationwide.
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This is where Avogadro's number comes into play, with a value of around 22019 x 27 particles per mole.
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Passage of the law, which was also reported by local RBB broadcaster, means the freeze comes into effect immediately.
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The global migration crisis comes into intimate view in this documentary about an Afghan family's arduous journey toward asylum.
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A poem has its own body — it comes into the world and I feel most often like a midwife.
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Because nothing turns you on more than when your lady comes into the room and says, 'Honey, I'm ovulating.
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Fentanyl isn't just dangerous to users; it can be a threat to anyone who comes into contact with it.
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Why else would Mr. Beatty name a fictional aspiring singer and actress who comes into Hughes's orbit Marla Mabrey?
|
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There is also a deep learning element to Phrasee, and that is where the AI technology comes into play.
|
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As a result, the generations pile up, carping, criticizing and advising, and no one ever comes into their own.
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The doubling of child benefits will cost an additional 300 million euros when it comes into effect in 2021.
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Another man, apparently an officer in plainclothes, comes into view and stands over him, appearing to check on him.
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It comes into effect next May and will require businesses to adopt stricter standards for dealing with customer data.
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Instead, he comes into the hospital with us, and he's telling funny stories now to the both of us.
|
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My grandfather called roads like these pig trails, and three miles down this one the park comes into view.
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The revision is designed to dovetail with a new foreign investor law which comes into force on Jan. 1.
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Substantial tax cuts require significant spending reductions that will not be reversed when a different party comes into office.
|
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Reagan comes into office in 1981 not supporting the idea of a holiday for Martin Luther King at all.
|
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" The justice made headlines this week when she called Trump a "faker" who says "whatever comes into his head.
|
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That's where Tom's of Maine comes into the picture — the brand's Long-Lasting Natural Deodorant is less than $5.
|
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The subject matter comes into sharper focus, and the book gains in speed and strength, in the next century.
|
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When the means develop for uniting people in support of a nominee, the essence of party comes into being.
|
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A young girl slowly paddles her rowboat into the ocean until she comes into contact with a giant whale.
|
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Up to 80 percent of Yemen's humanitarian aid, including food, fuel, and medicine, comes into the country through Hodeidah.
|
|
So I'm not sure the Blue Lives Matter bill here really does anything or comes into effect for that.
|
|
Previously, when that pitch comes into the room of a VC, I think it may have sounded kind of boring.
|
|
Singer Brandon Blaine comes into his own with gusto, his voice carrying swagger and attitude that was hinted at prior.
|
|
Much of what being a fan of Frank Ocean means trusting in his plan, even before it comes into fruition.
|
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As the next phase of tech comes into the market, that kind of power and control become even more important.
|
|
Most significantly, though, Susie's sway comes into focus when she manages to upend one of Buffett's core tenets of investing.
|
|
The former president also had some advice for people who get in trouble for tweeting whatever comes into their head.
|
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What spook the traders is once the NASDAQ comes into bear market; there will be more downward pressure to sell.
|
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This reduces risk significantly, said Roche, since when blood comes into contact with foreign materials, it can lead to stroke.
|
|
Now, they're among the thousands of Brits who have applied for German citizenship before Brexit comes into force next year.
|
|
That system really comes into being in the late 1600s in Europe and is spread around the world through colonialism.
|
|
"It comes into this idea of modesty rhetoric that any level of skin showing is immodest and sexual," she said.
|
|
A levy to finance apprenticeships comes into force in April 203; it will cost firms about £220bn ($217bn) a year.
|
|
Photo: GitHub Photo: GitHub Should the developer choose to install Cloud Build, that's where the tight integration comes into play.
|
|
But at certain occasions and seasons, the Church of England comes into its own as a focus of national emotion.
|
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It is designed and built by Rafael Advanced Defense Systems, an Israeli weapons company, and comes into service this month.
|
|
Under Spain's constitution, a two-month deadline to form a government comes into effect once this first vote takes place.
|
|
That's where Launcher, an app that lets you slip app shortcuts into the pull-down 'Notification' center, comes into play.
|
|
It risks pulling on a thread to the point where the Meiji narrative of national redemption itself comes into question.
|
|
It's here that the spot pricing comes into play, and this is pointing to a weak back-end of winter.
|
|
But the power and utility of the iPad Pro comes into highest relief when you pair it with a Pencil.
|
|
LONG HALL:Tigers receiver Emanuel Hall comes into the game averaging more than 28 yards per catch, tops in the country.
|
|
Any red-blooded human who comes into the orbit of Rinna and that legendary coif would do the same, right?
|
|
Symptoms can appear within seven to 21 days after a person comes into contact with a person who is contagious.
|
|
And the barrier between the male gatekeepers of wealth and ambitious women is easily traversed when desire comes into play.
|
|
This often comes into play when someone admits they stan celebrities or fictional characters who display abhorrent or petty behavior.
|
|
That's where Starlink's other edge on earlier toys-to-life games comes into focus: you don't actually need the toys.
|
|
Fund managers are putting their money on an initial rally in WTI versus Brent if the tax comes into force.
|
|
"Everyone comes into our theater sort of thinking they know what they're going to get," Levy said on Thursday's GMA.
|
|
EU lawmakers spent four years cooking up the General Data Protection Regulation, or GDPR, which comes into force on Friday.
|
|
It can also spread if someone comes into direct contact or shares germs by touching the same objects or surfaces.
|
|
When you are always on the go, you're depleting your glutathione stores, which is where this supplement comes into play.
|
|
Barbara comes into Gotham's police scene with a sweeping plan: Work with Batman, instead of just projecting the bat signal.
|
|
This is one of those situations where Samsung's and Google's expertise with HDR and AI photo tuning comes into play.
|
|
It is likely to be weeks or longer before a clear sense of Trump's actual Russia strategy comes into view.
|
|
A lot of the self-doubt that comes into your head, the slower songs kind of internally instill self-belief.
|
|
The recession lowered the amount of new capital investment, a main way that better, more productive technology comes into use.
|
|
She comes into the house well-informed on my feelings and past and sleeps with him on night one anyway.
|
|
" Justice Ginsburg has publicly labeled then-candidate Trump a "faker" who "says whatever comes into his head at the moment.
|
|
As new money comes into the market, it's probably going through brokers who must follow their analysts' recommendations, he said.
|
|
The BBC reports that the company has a month to challenge the decision before it comes into force in Germany.
|
|
Every single component that comes into contact with the customer's senses must reflect the highest possible quality for the price.
|
|
Some analysts also expect home sales to slow in Vancouver as a new tax on foreign buyers comes into effect.
|
|
But many involved illicit versions of the highly addictive synthetic painkiller, most of which comes into the country from China.
|
|
It is here that the connection between free speech, political spending, and our form of government comes into sharp focus.
|
|
Steve Bannon who comes into the campaign as the new CEO, is a bomb-thrower in the Roger Stone mold.
|
|
Only when better opposition comes into view for Brazil, however, can the current state of Brazilian soccer be properly assessed.
|
|
The new rate is 1 pound above the government mandated National Living Wage increase which comes into effect April 1.
|
|
These sales are "exports" in the sense that money comes into America from overseas and is used to buy things.
|
|
She said Mr. Trump "says whatever comes into his head at the moment" and has no consistency in his thinking.
|
|
He acts as if he doesn't care if the state comes into being or not, and mocks the upright townsfolk.
|
|
DeLay cautioned that the party may not choose Trump if he comes into the convention with a plurality of delegates.
|
|
But when you choose to prosecute every single person who comes into the US illegally, you are creating this crisis.
|
|
This crisis comes into sharp relief on Lake Mead, the largest reservoir in the U.S., located just outside Las Vegas.
|
|
From now on, before anything new comes into the house, resident buyers will need to answer a series of questions.
|
|
Article: "As Louisiana Floodwaters Recede, the Scope of Disaster Comes Into View" Before Reading: Imagine your home is in danger.
|
|
Facebook restricted crypto-related adverts in February, while Google announced a ban this month that comes into force in June.
|
|
And some of them just come into, you know, a letter comes into Warren Buffett chairman – it's usually not signed.
|
|
"There's a choice issue that comes into it," said Lynn Elliot, the chief executive of the Vegetarian Society in Britain.
|
|
"If achievement of the target comes into sight, the BOJ could of course reduce or stop ETF purchases," he said.
|
|
The ban on funding comes into effect a year later than originally proposed after lobbying by European Union member states.
|
|
Plus, when someone comes into my office I'm offering them counseling, I'm reminding them about condoms and good partner choices.
|
|
Turns out that just because a new way of doing things comes into being, it's no guarantee of future profits.
|
|
This is where cuffing season comes into play: If anything, at least you'll have someone to get drunk with. What?
|
|
For Artie, the deeper interactions between the avatar and characters is really where they hope the magic comes into view.
|
|
When this power comes into our lives, it might just as well be carrying a cappuccino and wearing a smile.
|
|
Transmission between people happens when someone comes into contact with an infected person's secretions, such as droplets in a cough.
|
|
State constitutions also typically guard against viewpoint discrimination, a principle that comes into play when a political party is gerrymandered.
|
|
In Allen's eyes, Michael is soft, sensitive and flawless; it's no wonder that he never quite comes into full view.
|
|
The White House, though, has started taking the temperature of anyone who comes into close contact with Trump and Pence.
|
|
Those babies might be saved if a diplomatic solution comes into play — but that seems extremely unlikely as of now.
|
|
As far as the cult thing is concerned, everybody that comes into work there comes in to do their job.
|
|
Something is troubling Lena, whose personal life comes into focus over a series of flashbacks that are entirely too banal.
|
|
As that possibility comes into view, anti-abortion lawmakers are showing us what a post-Roe world might look like.
|
|
A world comes into focus that explains how the killing of an innocent black man could happen with no consequences.
|
|
We feel a tingle when Bruce Wayne comes into the picture; he's there less as a force than an omen.
|
|
If the complainer comes into your office, a good way to limit the conversation is to stand up, she added.
|
|
And here's where the Donald Trump we've seen for the past three years comes into play: He gets things wrong.
|
|
She, too, had passed hundreds by the time she topped out at Cardiac, where the Pacific Ocean comes into view.
|
|
And in the blink of an eye with software on your handheld device or whatever, then espionage comes into play.
|
|
Then there's a further 12 month transition period after it comes into force — to "give online services time to conform".
|
|
Amazon comes into its first earnings report of 2020 in need of something to jolt the stock into high gear.
|
|
This is where the tetanus shot comes into play.. since I didn't get one on Friday, I'm due for one.
|
|
Nearly every woman he comes into contact with, past and present, is leggy and wants to wrestle him into bed.
|
|
The shiny trophy that my favorite Phillies team won in 1980 when I was 10 years old comes into question.
|
|
"When further opening up comes into conflict with that priority, the argument for stability tends to win," the diplomat said.
|
|
I&aposm here today to figure out what it would be like when a VIP client comes into your store.
|
|
As you climb out of your car and step out of the car park, a familiar logo comes into view.
|
|
Huston, too, comes into the role with a lot of industry experience as the former CFO at Comscore and LiquiBox.
|
|
Anyone who comes into contact with someone infected with the virus should notify their health care provider, the CDC says.
|
|
WEISBERG: I think the other way that editorial filter really comes into play is the way we work with brands.
|
|
It is still unclear how these restrictions will manifest in reality when the GDPR comes into effect in May 2018.
|
|
Although the circumstances are dire, Georgia comes into her own thanks to a new lease on life and evolved attitude.
|
|
The decision suspends American obligations under the treaty, and terminates the accord unless Russia comes into compliance within six months.
|
|
If you think getting the money is the hard part, balancing it is where the true skill comes into play.
|
|
That's before the onerous process of applying for jobs, or seeking benefits, or managing your health comes into the picture.
|
|
"The world comes into being in our gaze all the time," Knausgaard writes, more than enough reason for art-making.
|
|
Eventually a new competing product comes into the marketplace that is generally cheaper, simpler, and, in an abstract sense, inferior.
|
|
But if you trace the money that comes into startups through their venture capital firms — and trace the money that comes into those venture capital firms from their so-called limited partners — one can see the makings of a great gold rush, financed by overseas investors eager to overstuff money into hungry young companies.
|
|
This is where Descartes Labs's processing engine comes into play to convert into composites the petabytes of geospatial data it has.
|
|
And then the whole idea was to create a community around the brand — so "society" is where that comes into play.
|
|
If someone comes into this already upset and agitated, there's a much higher risk they're going to have a bad reaction.
|
|
That famous mood lighting familiar to those who have flown Virgin America (now part of Alaska Airlines), also comes into play.
|
|
But that doesn't hold if a possible redenomination comes into play, because a new Italian currency would probably fall, fuelling inflation.
|
|
An abridged version: The X-Man known as Jean Grey comes into contact with the cosmic force known as the Phoenix.
|
|
There is a moment in the sixth chapter of the ultra-popular podcast S-Town when something unexpected comes into focus.
|
|
Kamala Harris, Amy Klobuchar and Kirsten Gillibrand — are compared to Clinton in any way and whether their "likability" comes into question.
|
|
The Senate needs to adopt the bill and the king sign off on it before it comes into force, both formalities.
|
|
"If a guy comes into my office and says I'm going to build a sportsbook, the answer is no," Martino said.
|
|
"Jessica comes into our bedroom and asks me if I believe in God," she told police, according to the interview transcript.
|
|
The Ohio Legislature could also have enough votes to override Kasich's veto if the bill passes before DeWine comes into office.
|
|
The law, which comes into effect next year, requites foreign technology firms to set up offices and store data in Vietnam.
|
|
Apple's clampdown seems to be related to the General Data Protection Regulation, which comes into effect on May 25th in Europe.
|
|
These same employees need to understand the products they are developing and selling and that is where Propel comes into play.
|
|
" Ginsburg was critical of Trump this summer, calling him "a faker," who "says whatever comes into his head at the moment.
|
|
It remains to be seen whether Trump comes into Sunday more prepared or looks more comfortable in the town hall format.
|
|
" It comes into play in hiring conversations, where interviewers debate whether candidates have sufficient "cognitive ability" or "a brain for engineering.
|
|
An overwhelming majority voted in favor of the contract, which comes into effect on Thursday, the Independent Pilots Association (IPA) said.
|
|
It's often a not-so-simple task to pinpoint when an artist's work finds its stride and comes into its own.
|
|
I keep my eyes low and make sure the blurry blob of a person on the screen never comes into focus.
|
|
These sea surface temperature changes were coupled with an increase in radiative forcing, which is where climate change comes into play.
|
|
The Jabra Elite 285h performed well for these needs, and moving between activities is where the AI technology comes into play.
|
|
Basically I try to give an insight into what happens to me when the music takes shape and comes into existence.
|
|
If you put everything into your training and you leave no stones unturned, I don't think ring rust comes into it.
|
|
Crude distillation units refine crude oil as it comes into the refinery and provide hydrocarbon feedstock for all other production units.
|
|
But then stress about charging and having enough battery comes into play, especially when each day is filled with unpredictable trips.
|
|
Britain now has two years to negotiate the terms of the divorce before it comes into effect in late March 2019.
|
|
Once a candidate seeks the confidence of parliament a two-month deadline for the formation of a government comes into effect.
|
|
But the mirror tool — which reflects whatever you're drawing along an axis of your choosing — really comes into its own here.
|
|
The measure, which comes into force on Thursday, has been widely welcomed as a milestone in introducing much needed data privacy.
|
|
This, of course, is also where Stripe comes into play by handling all the needed rerouting, and processing the card payment.
|
|
Once a candidate seeks the confidence of parliament, a two-month deadline for the formation of a government comes into effect.
|
|
By learning to make new friends and to trust in her friendships, Raymie comes into a powerful sense of self-knowledge.
|
|
Surface tension keeps the droplet of water together, while the hydrophobic paddles repel the water when it comes into contact. [YouTube]
|
|
KAYLA TAUSCHE: LARRY, THERE'S ALWAYS A FEAR THAT THE RETAIL MONEY COMES INTO THE MARKET RIGHT BEFORE THE BEAR MARKET BEGINS.
|
|
The woman swings a mallet at the balloons popping a few of them and Harley Quinn (Margot Robbie) comes into view.
|
|
Alexa comes into play by notifying you through your Echo device when motion is detected by one of the Ring products.
|
|
All three parties are due to sign it at the end of November, before a new Mexican president comes into office.
|
|
While addressing this at detention facilities is important, the best way to address it is long before incarceration comes into play.
|
|
That only comes into play with a small percentage of players, of course, but you want to keep these guys happy.
|
|
By having this legislation, it means that we'll have to open up the options for which priest comes into our temple.
|
|
Because the restaurant is attached to the Ace Hotel, there is this certain type of customer that comes into the restaurant.
|
|
When Parsifal comes into their midst, and they remove those garments, they're wearing cheesy-looking outfits, like storybook exotic Arabian dancers.
|
|
The ceasefire, that would allow humanitarian groups access to civilians caught in the fighting, formally comes into force on Sunday morning.
|
|
Health officials believe the risk of getting the virus is highest when one comes into contact with someone who is symptomatic.
|
|
When it comes into contact with anything containing iron — like water — avobenzone will convert to what is, essentially, a rust stain.
|
|
Where this really comes into relief is in 1882, with the Chinese Exclusion Act [which prohibited immigration of laborers from China].
|
|
And this is when the suit — which during warmer weather can feel overly formal and conservative — really comes into its own.
|
|
Indeed, since Reagan, every Republican president has reinstated the rule when he comes into office, and every Democrat has rescinded it.
|
|
"Don't underestimate the ritual of eating seasonally, the pleasure one can have as fruit comes into the market," Mr. Pollan said.
|
|
The law comes into force on January 1st and will affect many startups and firms that rely on low labour costs.
|
|
It's not obvious that you would be restrained by democratic norms, when the president comes into your district and shreds them.
|
|
It will have no effect on whether or how a Palestinian state comes into being, whatever the current histrionics in Ramallah.
|
|
Social media and propagandistic outlets like Fox News let Trump drive the story before any independent editorial judgment comes into play.
|
|
That could eventually end the by-now annual drama in which the government's ability to pay its debt comes into question.
|
|
Sanders comes into the debate with a substantial delegate deficit and a slate of tough contests ahead of him on Tuesday.
|
|
It also matters how many people one of the infected comes into contact with, and how long they are actually contagious.
|
|
The air in the car can feel incredibly stifling and harsh, which is where this triple-duty humidifier comes into play.
|
|
A generalized terror comes into view as the white citizens of Wilmington mobilized to seize power through violence and outright fraud.
|
|
For the first year, the annual fee is waived, and then for each year thereafter a $95 fee comes into play.
|
|
Lynch comes into the job with no front-office experience, having gone straight from the playing field to the broadcast booth.
|
|
The larvae burrow through human skin that comes into contact with sand or soil that has been contaminated with animal feces.
|
|
"When a new person comes into your home, it's hard making space and giving them their own space," Ms. Axelrod said.
|
|
Unfortunately, much of the pleading cycle in this notice will be complete by the time the Trump administration comes into office.
|
|
There's an interrogation a few hours into Heavy Rain where a lot of what the game's going for comes into focus.
|
|
Now she finds herself back in the cross hairs as her handling of intelligence involving President Trump's associates comes into question.
|
|
"When high volatility comes into play, or there's major stock-specific events, that's when you're going to see the big difference."
|
|
That law, which comes into force this summer, will restrict the materials government contractors can use for state-funded infrastructure projects.
|
|
Take a few minutes before your team member comes into the room, and think through what you talked about last time.
|
|
But the New York Times, CNN, and others lose their sense of perspective when the Trump administration comes into the equation.
|
|
In June Illinois became the 11th state to legalise recreational use—the law comes into effect at the start of 2020.
|
|
We're big fans of Ortega at TMZ Sports, where he regularly comes into our office and chokes out various staff members!
|
|
This week, Democrats invoked a rarely-used rule to stop committees from meeting two hours after the Senate comes into session.
|
|
The ink-sopped thread comes into contact with the wound, and voilà, you have a tiny ink dot under your skin.
|
|
In it, the curved surface of a mirror reflects light back to a central point, where an image comes into focus.
|
|
A 0.5 percent sulfur content cap in shipping fuel set by the International Maritime Organisation (IMO) comes into effect in 2020.
|
|
Will Meghan Markle have a special guest on hand as she comes into her own as a member of the royal family?
|
|
The difference comes down to whether or not a value-added-tax increase, which has already been legislated for, comes into effect.
|
|
Because it's a top predator, an eagle is quite fixed into flying and food and not a lot else comes into it.
|
|
The General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), which comes into force on Friday, has tight requirements on how companies deal with personal data.
|
|
You can also see who is currently online, and see who is nearby, which is where the dating aspect comes into play.
|
|
Twice a year, this peer feedback comes into play in so-called calibration meetings, where employees are given one of seven grades.
|
|
Earlier, the government issued a decree adjusting Turkey&aposs laws to the new presidential system that comes into effect with the elections.
|
|
Republicans who had condemned the original order fell in line to support the new ban, which comes into force on March 26.5th.
|
|
One's energy is translated into painting and I feel the speed, energy and flowing movement of the board comes into the painting.
|
|
Warren comes into the debate with an earned confidence, one that has been on display at well-attended rallies across the country.
|
|
In fact, much of the illicitly produced fentanyl that comes into the US from China is believed to ship through the mail.
|
|
The gaming giant comes into Thursday afternoon's report down nearly 4% in 2020 despite a 5% run higher over the last week.
|
|
"A lot of these issues are domestic spillover, where a person comes into a workplace to solve a domestic issue," Shaffer said.
|
|
An electrical signal is activated when the sensor comes into contact with stomach acid — the sensor then passes through the body naturally.
|
|
And this is where the Balloon Effect comes into play: Without expanded access to treatment, the demand for opioids hasn't gotten smaller.
|
|
Jalen comes into my room to get complimented on how nice he looks, and to say goodbye, and that he loves me.
|
|
But, check out this alternate view of the rocket as it comes into port yesterday:Yep, there's a definite tilt to the rocket.
|
|
After losing her re-election bid, Heitkamp won't be back in the Senate when the 116th Congress comes into session in January.
|
|
This comes into effect in May, and will make it harder for companies to give information to third parties for unauthorised use.
|
|
Since autumnal temperatures can vary, especially from day and night, layering is key — and that's where this versatile topper comes into play.
|
|
It is here that the mayor's combination of bully pulpit and real powers, such as compulsory-purchase orders, comes into its own.
|
|
Photo (c) Manifesta11/Wolfgang Traeger All of a sudden, a hierarchy comes into play... Oh yeah; just because I had the opportunity.
|
|
But once you start to delve deeper into how everything is more connected underneath the surface, the entire picture comes into focus.
|
|
If the molten silicon comes into contact with even the tiniest amount of the wrong substance, it causes a ruinous chemical reaction.
|
|
One segment is filled with bacteria bred to be luminous when the culture comes into contact with mercury in laboratory swim tests.
|
|
A pact with South-East Asian neighbours, which comes into full force in 2018, could see cheap cars pour in from Thailand.
|
|
Not all of them make us sick, but if something new comes into our body that we haven't seen before, that might.
|
|
Under Spain's constitution, a two-month deadline for the formation of a government comes into effect once this first vote takes place.
|
|
Avery, while looking for them, comes into contact with a woman in labor and stops looking for Stephanie to carry them out.
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It will flesh out one element of an EU markets reform known at MiFID II that comes into force in January 2018.
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Their main goal before the next Congress comes into session is for the proposal to be include in the Democratic caucus' agenda.
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But the game's most interesting mechanic comes into player just after, when you're shown the character's end result through their Facebook profile.
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Several other states like New York and Louisiana, have been granted extensions until REAL ID comes into full effect on October 2020.
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When the GDPR comes into effect, tech companies will be forced to ensure that users are notified when personal data is breached.
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Or Ann's outfit, which feels like a counterproductive design decision when appreciated in the context of how it comes into her possession.
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Your foes can also chain attacks together, and that's where the natural ebb and flow of For Honor's swordplay comes into focus.
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A new statewide minimum wage comes into effect today, January 1, and high school students will now be taught about sexual consent.
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He said though it was too early to forecast how the law, which comes into force in its full extent from Oct.
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But Nimmo says the region needed even more mass to fully reorient Pluto — and that's where the subsurface ocean comes into play.
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"This guy comes into Goodwill today, he's a big dude," she shared in a submission to the Love What Matters Facebook page.
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Suddenly, this other lady comes into the room that looked very smart, with a big hat and a cigarette in her mouth.
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Player-controlled characters have specific abilities to help with certain objectives, so as the game gets harder, more strategy comes into play.
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When the elevator starts its ascent and the city comes into view, the people inside either fall silent or gasp out loud.
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When the deal comes into effect, some tariffs will fall to zero immediately, while others will be phased out over 15 years.
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The actual capacity of the U.S. port and river system also comes into play, and this is a bit harder to pinpoint.
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But then, when a reliever comes into the game, he will pull up his report on an iPad to provide a refresher.
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When a partnership with a well-established winery comes into play, Siciliano hopes this opportunity will open doors to even bigger sales.
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Accenture comes into play because it understands how to connect to legacy backend systems that are lurking inside every large enterprise organization.
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Similar to State Street, BK's more binding capital ratio is the Enhanced Supplementary Leverage Ratio (ESLR), which comes into effect on Jan.
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But just about everyone agrees that, eventually, the kinks will get worked out as the political risk of inaction comes into focus.
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As beauty editors, we're among the first to experience every new skin/hair/makeup potion that comes into existence on our watch.
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The image of a lone Chinese protester confronting a column of tanks comes into focus in a reflection on his camera lens.
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What do you think voters need to know about a vice president, on a personal level, before that person comes into office?
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I found out through my security camera that my landlord comes into my apartment without notice and I confronted him about it.
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"Bohème," the other Zeffirelli, comes into intimate focus when the singers are strong and specific; on Wednesday it seemed looming and drafty.
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Thomas reserves most of his emotion for Newt (Thomas Brodie-Sangster), whose immunity to the virus comes into question, prompting an outpouring.
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Brindle hopes that Westfield's efforts will inspire other local cities to do the same thing until more federal support comes into place.
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So when he comes into town and he wants to take me out, they're like, 'Wait a minute, aren't we all going?
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"In those languages, you don't have the kind of institutional, anonymous exchanges, which is where politeness comes into its own," he said.
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When religion reporting moves beyond myopic focus on the political power dynamic, a better picture of Democrats and faith comes into view.
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Every instrumental flaw you might have comes into a glaring light, and, of course, it demands everything of you emotionally, cerebrally, instrumentally.
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It is after nine o'clock, but when he comes into the kitchen Ross is still at the table, stuck on his phone.
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"The public comes into the park and sees how beautiful it is, but they may take it for granted," Mr. Blonksy added.
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The representational style that Ms. Dodd has since explored comes into focus with paint handling and abbreviation yielding their own abstract forms.
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With enormous amounts of patient health data being collected and digitized each day, the other piece of the puzzle comes into focus.
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Now, I'm not knocking anyone who comes into a relationship and the other person, the sugar daddy, has more than the woman.
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He said the medical students that he comes into contact with today are "far more cautious" about prescribing opioids than their mentors.
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Men and women do think a little differently, and that comes into play, because the show is such an internal, visceral experience.
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Here's where Mr. Starnes (Timothy Simmons) — who's nicknamed The Eagle — comes into play because he immediately removes the kids from the school.
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But all of a sudden, a person of color comes into the royal family and everyone just jumps and goes after her.
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The Madrid meeting is the last gathering of the COP group before 2020, the year when the Paris agreement comes into effect.
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Figuring out what to name the new beast, if it comes into existence, could be one of the toughest points of negotiation.
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Since one cannot get an outside perspective on one's own body, it instead becomes the vehicle through which perspective comes into being.
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The private sector is the default system, and the public sector comes into play only when the private sector doesn't want to.
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Every president, however, comes into office with some blind spots and ends up relying on a wider team of aides and advisers.
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One could also imagine a recess appointment being used if the seat is still vacant when the next president comes into office.
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After all, this one of the first things Trump will do once he comes into office, according to vice-president elect Mike Pence.
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But Trump comes into office with a series of campaign promises that include the possibility of ordering illegal action by the US military.
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In other instances, it is clearly a vocal minority that comes into the street, and larger crowds that come out to counter them.
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JG: I think there is a quality of the domestic in my work that comes into play, especially since I work at home.
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JS: You've said you have a rule about your studio, that you have to enact what comes into your mind by making it.
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Amazon's warehouses choreograph workers to the rhythms of robots who move products as far as they can before human dexterity comes into play.
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Wade, the 1973 landmark case that established a woman's right to terminate her pregnancy.. The Georgia law comes into effect on Jan. 1.
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Sometimes a dead battery just isn't an option — a sentiment that can prove to be impossible when a faulty charger comes into play.
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As a result, we encounter image after image of sublime strangeness, drifting like stray dreams until the context they adumbrate comes into focus.
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Ultimately, this is where the true digitalization of products comes into view, a powerful notion that has the potential to redefine materialism altogether.
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Very wealthy men are very protective about who comes into their fold because they do not want to be taken for a ride.
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As spring finally comes into bloom, it's important to make sure your pets are protected against the pests that come with warmer weather.
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"The longevity of the deal comes into question if the United States is taking specific actions to undermine it, even decertification," Maloney warns.
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While it's that color it will pass through the character that hit it, but damage any other characters it comes into contact with.
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The ban comes into effect for ad uploads in June this year, and existing Flash ads will refuse to run from next January.
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Police ask that anyone who comes into contact with Odom refrain from engaging him, as he is believed to be armed and dangerous.
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Turns out that while being organized and quickly handling every message that comes into your inbox results in heightened anxiety and greater pressure.
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Before you can build an application you need the data that will drive it, and that's where the storage component comes into play.
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It is a risky move if a flood hits, because if water comes into your house, all of your stuff will be soggy.
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Once hyaluronic acid comes into contact with water, it knows what it's doing and your skin will end up supremely hydrated and plumped.
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The first of these reforms, a Market Stability Reserve (MSR), comes into effect in 2019, which will take excess permits from the market.
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"Usually what happens is when some time goes by, they either forget about it or something new comes into the picture," Goldberg said.
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An intersectional critique of how sexuality and race connect with gender comes into play in the work of several artists in the biennial.
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The sensor, which is the size of a grain of sand, activates an electric signal when it comes into contact with stomach acid.
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Since then, he's been charming anybody that comes into contact with his music, creating a timeless R&B experience that anybody can enjoy.
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The company foresees a day when the system will warn drivers of motorcycles miles before the motorcycle comes into the car&aposs view.
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But eventually, all hot companies run out of eager buyers who rely on nothing but momentum and the real test comes into play.
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His dad comes into town and he has the quintessential 'how do I get a relationship like you and mom's?' conversation with him.
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So despite all your hard work and color-coded references, you're off-track the second that first urgent message comes into your inbox.
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The nine episodes that precede it are a compassionate study in alchemy: how a relationship expands and contracts and ultimately comes into being.
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Bardem's character is no exception when he suddenly comes into popularity with his new book and becomes a little too comfortable with it.
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They invoked a procedural rule Tuesday that allows them to object to committees meeting beyond two hours after the Senate comes into session.
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"The new administration comes into office with, shall we say, a degree of skepticism about the value of the multilateral organizations," Hammond said.
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Taking on the Infinity gauntlet comes at a cost, however, and that's where Garden Warfare 2's new Quest Board comes into play.
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Instagram has introduced a new feature to let users download their data, one month before Europe's strict new privacy law comes into effect.
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This principle also comes into play with the tote bags, T-shirts and sheets of return address labels you get in the mail.
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A specially-designed layer of hydrophilic polymers coats the condom's surface, which activates and becomes slick when it comes into contact with moisture.
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Marquette has plenty of offensive firepower at its disposal, and comes into Saturday's home game against Georgia off a school-record shooting display.
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Both federal and state legislatures must pass three laws setting the rate and scope of the GST before the tax comes into effect.
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"A lot of bad things happen when piece rate comes into play, because you're trying to rush to get things done," she says.
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Anyone who comes into contact with this excreted virus also gains immunity, and can pass it on to others who are not immune.
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The manufacturer advises to "drench affected area with water for at least 15 minutes" if the glue comes into contact with the skin.
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The law comes into effect May 25, and over the past several weeks many companies have begun to detail how they will comply.
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Even if Trump comes into the convention with a plurality of delegates, subsequent ballots could put his claim to the nomination at risk.
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Light has now flooded into every corner, and each detail that comes into focus is one no longer left up to the reader.
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It's at the intersection of healthcare and identity management where the notion of curtailing the third leading cause of death comes into play.
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It's easy to reduce Trump to caricature: a blabbermouth who is his own worst enemy and says whatever insult comes into his head.
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That duty only comes into effect if the Northern Irish assembly, which collapsed in 2017, has not been re-established by Oct. 21.
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To prove how comfortable he is, he doesn't bat an eyelid when Tom comes into the kitchen the next morning after sleeping over.
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December 2015 - A legislative amendment comes into force giving the PiS-dominated parliament the right to choose replacements for five constitutional court judges.
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Any person who comes into close contact with someone who is infected is at risk for contracting the virus, according to the CDC.
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Sometimes he discovers workarounds — a trampoline comes into play — but just as often the intensifying gravity of age gets the better of him.
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Maybe a year and a half of that, getting on TV every once in a while, Hulk [Hogan] comes into the company now.
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The blowtorch comes into play with a starter of Wagyu, which is cut thin and dramatically scorched at the table by your waiter.
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Yet, continue down the concrete walkway, noticing perhaps the security camera watching your approach, turn a corner, and Newtown Creek comes into view.
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Apple has often touted "Liam," its recycling robot, but Liam only comes into play when phones are turned into official Apple recycling channels.
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When she's been traveling for a week, she comes into the office, looks for shoes under desks, plastic knives and forks in drawers.
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It seems obvious to me that when the Parkland students' generation comes into power (and into Congress) such measures will inevitably be enacted.
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In Malaysia, where a similar lockdown comes into force on March 18, the securities regulator said all capital markets will operate as usual.
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There's a final turn where the Apple Barrel comes into sight, a steady line of traffic on Route 30A going east and west.
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Beginning on July 1, when the new law comes into effect, a prosecutor will need simply show that explicit consent was never given.
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And in the video, every square person who comes into the frame ends up a licentious reveler — Big Freedia's powers remain undimmed. J.C.
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