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103 Sentences With "cosmopolitans"

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

Its adherents see themselves as honest folk fighting corrupt cosmopolitans.
In 1999, people in the US couldn't get enough Cosmopolitans.
Their ideology is shaped by being lone nationalists among cosmopolitans.
"The early '90s were just a blur of Cosmopolitans," Cecchini remembers.
Many self-styled cosmopolitans are just as tribal as their nativist opponents.
There are also two-for-one margaritas, cosmopolitans and mojitos on Sundays.
At times, these caricatures can be unhelpful, pitting thoughtless patriots against rootless cosmopolitans.
Sounds like these women need a round of Cosmopolitans and a long talk.
Analysts argued that the Brexit campaign revealed a chasm between locals and cosmopolitans.
The election of Emmanuel Macron as president of France delighted rootless cosmopolitans everywhere.
The division between cosmopolitans and nationalists is going to define the 21st century.
Cosmopolitans continually condescend to nationalism, but my patriotic pride is your nationalism, right?
Which Democrats will prevail this primary season — the cosmopolitans or the local-focused?
On the other side, successful educated cosmopolitans opt for Labour or the Liberal Dems.
"When I was growing up, it was mostly Long Islands, Cosmopolitans, vodka cranberry," he said.
When Tiffany Hall conducts tastings for her Empower Cocktails Cosmopolitans she's often asked the same question.
We also want to produce sparkling cocktails in a nonclassic way—no Cosmopolitans or strawberry daiquiris.
Successful big companies strike a balance between global scale and local roots to become "rooted cosmopolitans".
How could the president from Queens outsmart the think tankers, economists and cosmopolitans who predicted failure?
He talks about unfairness and loss, about the sovereignty supposedly ceded to Europe, immigration and elite cosmopolitans.
Is a thick community and the happiness it brings out of reach for rootless cosmopolitans like us?
Liberal professional-class cosmopolitans grew disgusted with urban graft and devoted themselves to good-government municipal reforms.
At the opposite end of the political spectrum from the AfD are the Greens, the party of cosmopolitans.
Conspiracy theories, some entering the mainstream, portray them as nationless cosmopolitans bent on undermining Western countries' racial purity.
Cosmopolitans are not just receptive to other cultures, but seek to develop and exercise a sense of intercultural mastery.
The pair visited a swanky bar and ordered not their trademark Cosmopolitans or White Russians but ... glasses of Stella.
Parts reminded me of the apartment rental app Airbnb, which allows young cosmopolitans to "go local" on the cheap.
He has said that choosing between different results in hard constitutional law cases is like choosing between margaritas and cosmopolitans.
The young cosmopolitans celebrated by Global Future are closed when it comes to giving a fair hearing to social conservatives.
"The Cosmopolitans" is a book of sighs, for dreams thwarted and for a city that has long since moved on.
A new internationalism was born; cosmopolitans looked with pleasure on the United Nations, alike in dignity, diverse in their national dress.
Cosmopolitans are perpetually surprised that, A, they're only 1 percent of the population, and, B, most people don't think like them.
She's also pro-environment, pro-LGBTQ rights, and pro-diversity, and thus in tune with the social concerns of well-off cosmopolitans.
The third problem is that the young cosmopolitans celebrated in the Global Future report are not quite as cosmopolitan as they appear.
None of this is very unique to people in MBA programs, rather the norm for any group of young cosmopolitans in 2018.
At the end of the podcast, they rate the episode from one to five cosmopolitans, a drink commonly mentioned throughout the series.
When compared with similarly-aged respondents on the mainland, British youngsters look far more like their Brexit-backing elders than like globalist cosmopolitans.
No hints are forthcoming from the cocktail list, either, which plays it close to the vest with daiquiris, Negronis, Cosmopolitans and so on.
Since its debut in 2003, the PSL has become loaded in much the same way rosé or avocado toast or cupcakes or Cosmopolitans are.
Two Pimm's Cups, six Cosmopolitans, two Mai Tais, two whiskey sours, four beers, and four shots of tequila, give or take a few sips.
Only if we deport, keep out, disempower, or imprison those people actively conspiring to keep America down—Muslims, Hispanics, the Clintons, free traders, cosmopolitans, etc.
But the greater ambition, Le Roux says, is to grow Orania into a small city that's attractive to young cosmopolitans in Pretoria and Cape Town.
The other side—the globalists, the diversity-lovers, the cosmopolitans, the blue-coastal urbanites—thought that by electing Barack Obama, they had won back their country.
Carrie Bradshaw made Cosmopolitans famous on Sex and the City, but now Sarah Jessica Parker is releasing a line of her own signature alcoholic drink — wine!
Distance and separation force encounter and immersion, which is why the age of empire made cosmopolitans as well as chauvinists — sometimes out of the same people.
I only hope the demographic analysis that underpinned my call also proves correct about Britain's long-term future, and that this will indeed belong to the cosmopolitans.
The "cosmopolitans" he speaks of are well known to those who embrace population management less for economic reasons than as a means of saving white Christian society.
Between frothing about "cosmopolitans" or getting escorted out of CNN by security, it's rare to capture Senior White House policy advisor Stephen Miller in a humanlike moment.
I think the category of people that you're calling liberal cosmopolitans, really the upper and upper middle class of America, are increasingly disconnected from working-class America.
Grossman still finds ways to spotlight the Holocaust—even though, as Ms Popoff notes, he completed the book as "Stalin's campaign against 'rootless cosmopolitans' was picking up steam".
But Judis, like Goodhart, too easily caricatures Anywheres as unmoored citizens of the world (both writers eschew the phrase "rootless cosmopolitans," with its unhappy history, but that's the idea).
He wrote two novels "Spin" (2009) and "Waxed" (2011), and also wrote with his mother, Jane Rave, a memoir, "Conversations and Cosmopolitans" (2006), all published by St. Martin's Press.
The machine, which is a collaboration between Anheuser-Busch and Keurig, retails for $299.99 and will allow consumers to make alcoholic beverages like margaritas, cosmopolitans, and Moscow mules at home.
Noting the Parisian pretensions of the characters in "The Cosmopolitans," Ms. Young and Mr. Stillman said emphatically that Paris wasn't exactly home for them, but it was certainly home base.
It has been hard even for rootless cosmopolitans like me to focus on their woes while we have our local freak show, but things are going amazingly wrong over there.
As such, the coming crackdown could alienate not just cosmopolitans—a group likely to grow, given young Britons' relaxed stance on immigration—but also those nativists it is meant to placate.
Democrats who fancy their party to be the natural home of sophisticated cosmopolitans might be cheered to learn that their political fellow-travellers have slightly more exotic palates than Republicans do.
The mission behind the cocktails Tom Geniesse, owner of Bottlerocket Wine & Spirit in New York, met Hall about three years ago when she came into his store to pitch Empower Cosmopolitans.
Trump was far better than Marco Rubio or Jeb Bush or Ted Cruz at expressing his distaste for Democrats, for immigrants, for Black Lives Matter protesters, for condescending cosmopolitans, for President Obama.
Bill Clinton broke up the previous partisan alignment when he proposed more conservative economic policies, like those of the cosmopolitans, moving the Democratic coalition from the liberal position more to the cosmopolitan one.
After the vows and exchange of Sam Rafidia-designed rings, guests joined the newlyweds for a cocktail hour featuring Cape Codders (a signature drink made with cranberry and vodka) as well as Cosmopolitans.
They're cosmopolitans who welcome a diversifying America and embrace immigrants as cheap labor and potential consumers — while many Republicans are deeply concerned that American culture is under threat and needs to be protected.
Rootless cosmopolitans, we were told to look to the past for significance, so we did — to the Sinatra Rat Pack ("Swingers," 1996), to Kennedy-era Madison Avenue ("Mad Men," created by Matthew Weiner, b.
Such firebrands emerged out of economic and political crises in almost every major European country in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century, distracting angry citizens with the demonization of minorities, cosmopolitans and liberals.
Knowing that the Sex and the City franchise is officially over has caused both the show's stars and fans to offer up reasons as to why the fab foursome can't keep on sipping Cosmopolitans forever.
When a senator rails against "elite cosmopolitans," he knows the longtime political reporter will think, Upper East Side snobs, while another audience thinks of George Soros conspiring with the United Nations to turn Minnesota brown.
Those on Poland's religious and nationalist right have long been hostile to Mr Walesa, whom they view as having been in cahoots with a cabal of secular cosmopolitans who took over the country after communism fell.
And then when, at last, even the cosmopolitans became alarmed, he took their anxiety as a partisan insult, and lapsed into "hoax" accusations, pulling a certain percentage of his co-partisans into irresponsibility along with him.
In the world of air travel, they could be cosmopolitans and professionals: business executives, fur-clad film types, journalists, dealmaking lawyers, wealthy hobbyists—people we might now think of as standard-bearers of the information economy.
HP: Do you think that liberal cosmopolitans like myself need to find a different way to relate to people like those you spoke with for your book — to reach out in a different way to them?
As Democrats came to rely less and less on union voters, and more and more on affluent urban cosmopolitans, their rhetoric and policies increasingly came to reflect the interests of a more highly educated and diverse constituency.
" The group's aim—according to its website—is to harness the "great radicalism of Jewish tradition, a tradition of dreamers, subversives, cosmopolitans, and counter-culturalists" by "putting loyalty to ideas of international justice over tribalism and parochialism.
Graydon Carter, the former editor of Vanity Fair, is starting Air Mail, an all-digital international news platform intended for worldly cosmopolitans, with Alessandra Stanley, who was a longtime critic and reporter for The New York Times.
The promise of unlimited alcohol is what draws many people to book with an all-inclusive resort, and it does come in bottomless supply: Basic cocktails, like piña colada or cosmopolitans will be included, in addition to house wine.
But it's a problem that our tribe of self-styled cosmopolitans doesn't see itself clearly as a tribe: because that means our leaders can't see themselves the way the Brexiteers and Trumpistas and Marine Le Pen voters see them.
We've come a long way from the early 63s, when bawdy women of "Sex and the City" swilled rose-colored cosmopolitans as a symbol of female emancipation — at last, the girls could party just as hard as the boys.
The undismissible truth is that many people prefer a life of violence and impoverishment if they feel that it is necessary to the triumph of their tribe, particularly if they feel their tribe has been insulted by the cosmopolitans.
To celebrate the tenth anniversary of the Sex and the City movie this weekend, I revisited the fashionable universe containing bottomless cosmopolitans, enough handsome and eligible bachelors to guarantee a lay every other night, and very few people of color.
"When women attain positions of political power usually reserved for men — or when Muslims, blacks, Jews, homosexuals, or 'cosmopolitans' profit or even share the public goods of a democracy, such as health care — that is perceived as corruption," he wrote.
At the same time it will be right-wing in the sense that, as the Brexit negotiations intensify, it will demonise British cosmopolitans who identify more firmly with "foreigners" than "ordinary Britons" while at the same time finding common cause with nationalists abroad.
Between the fall of the Berlin Wall in 20073 and the subprime crisis some 20 years later, a few thousand corporate cosmopolitans became ever more powerful, acting as the brains of the global economy, controlling intellectual property as well as international supply chains.
He read the Daily Worker as well as the "bourgeois press," and knew about the campaign that Stalin's henchman Andrei Zhdanov had launched in 1948 against "rootless cosmopolitans," Stalin's way of saying "Jews" when he wanted to shoot a few more of them.
David Goodhart, whose book "The Road to Somewhere" examined the differences between Remain-voting urban cosmopolitans and Leave voters who emphasize local community ties and traditional values - groups which he called "Anywheres" and "Somewheres", senses that the World Cup has had an impact.
Less remarked upon is how the show spurred a generation of young, ambitious and single professionals to move to New York to chase their own "Sex and the City" dreams — whether that meant finding Mr. Big or sipping cosmopolitans in the Hamptons.
The two authors' work is a study in contrasts, depicting the cleavages that haunt Europe in these days of ideological wrangling among far-right nationalists, neo-Nazis, anti-fascists and cosmopolitans, in part over whether all moral positions are indeed equal and similarly laudable.
It's hypocritical, she believes, for independently wealthy cosmopolitans to sneer at the working capitalists who power the economy (sure), and so the solution is for her to marry a man who patronizes and restricts her, with whom she has almost nothing in common (huh?).
But generally speaking, the brands that are left are premium ones that appeal to well-heeled cosmopolitans, customers who are willing to fork over $300 for some pairs of Red Wing boots and $165 for an handsomely cut oxford-cloth shirt from Gitman Bros. Vintage.
Civil society is but a thin veneer over a more animal reality, The Square seems to say, backing it up with an excruciating scene in which a performance artist (Terry Notary) breaks down the barriers between man and animal in a room full of black-tied cosmopolitans.
And they look mighty foreign to other white people, the ones who've never entirely considered themselves "white people" — the urbanites and cosmopolitans, the white people who feel they belong to a different "we," who work with and talk to and live among a more varied nation.
It is best understood as a new fusion of pre-existing political forces: anti-Western nationalists in the small-town east, politically alienated Russian Germans and bourgeois anti-cosmopolitans on the CDU right who are alienated by Mrs Merkel's liberalism (for decades Mr Gauland was a CDU stalwart).
But the question is important to a lot of people — maybe not to wealthy cosmopolitans who frequently travel overseas, but certainly to people who don't feel all that connected with the rest of the world and have always heard that being an American carries with it certain special advantages.
At this point, I still hadn't said I was gay out loud to anyone except myself, which seems unbelievable, since I was a twenty-year-old man who listened to Lady Gaga, obsessively watched the Bachelorette, and purchased a set of martini glasses to make cosmopolitans in his dorm room.
If the new cleavage line in American politics has moved from one that separates liberals from conservatives to one that separates populists from cosmopolitans (or is at least shifting that way) then Sanders and Rubio's losses make sense; they're not maximizing the most voters they can along the dominant dimension.
Back in the real world, it's true that even in the midst of a populist movement, wealthy cosmopolitans are pursuing the same old goals of power and longevity — like billionaire Peter Thiel "desperately sucking on the veins of the world's teenagers, like a kind of upmarket Dracula," as Snowden vividly put it.
Less remarked upon is how the show spurred a generation of young, ambitious and single women to move to New York to chase their own "Sex and the City" dreams — whether that meant finding their Mr. Big, landing a fashion P.R. job or sipping cosmopolitans in Manolo Blahniks while summering in the Hamptons.
Huntington, who was a Harvard political scientist, argues that the defining division in American politics is not economic but cultural, between people who give different answers to the question of national identity: cosmopolitans who argue that America is defined by its universal values and middle-class nationalists who argue that it is defined by flag, family and American exceptionalism.
While Trump delivers concrete material benefits to wealthy business executives in the form of tax cuts and industry-friendly regulation, what he's offering his working-class backers is that cracking down on foreigners will solve their problems and that his willingness to suffer the condemnation of cosmopolitans is a token of his dedication to their interests.
They're potent because they have become a dog whistle that taps into the most powerful culture war in America — that between suburban and rural white Americans who feel that the culture and values of the America they grew up with are being undermined, and progressive cosmopolitans who feel that marginalized groups are being attacked and left vulnerable.
Similarly, in fleshing out the supposed outlook of these cosmopolitans, a category that he estimates makes up "perhaps, 15 to 20 percent of the electorate," he cites a poll taken of the founders of internet start-ups in Silicon Valley, as if that tiny, rarefied group reflects the views of one-fifth of the American population.
A STUDY OF attitudes towards immigration in Germany, published in July last year by More in Common, a campaigning organisation, identified five distinct groups of broadly similar size: liberal cosmopolitans (all in favour), humanitarian sceptics (for an open-border policy, but concerned about integration), economic pragmatists (supporting it when it pays), moderate opponents (advocating full repatriation in due course) and radical opponents (strongly against).
Walker: Triumph of past over future The Brexit vote has been a victory of the past over the future; of the old over the young; of the less educated over the university graduates; of the less skilled over the nimble who could adapt to the post-industrial age; of The Sun and Daily Mail over the FT and The Guardian; of the nativists over the cosmopolitans; of little England over Great Britain.
In a blog post yesterday, he compared Bitcoin to previous currency experiments that replaced dollars with tokens for hours of work or units of electricity: The cryptocurrencies are a statement of faith in a new community of entrepreneurial cosmopolitans who hold themselves above national governments, which are viewed as the drivers of a long train of inequality and war … None of this is new, and, as with past monetary innovations, a compelling story may not be enough.
But I fear that Bannon is manipulating Trump into a more messianic mission — that his "new political order" is not just about jobs, but culture, an attempt to recreate an America of the 1950s: a country dominated by white Christians, not "cosmopolitans"; where no one spoke Spanish at the grocery store; where America's biggest C.E.O.s weren't named Satya or Sundar; where every worker could have a high-wage middle-skilled job; and where trade walls and the slow pace of automation meant you didn't have to be a lifelong learner.

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