Since taking the helm in 1991, he's cultivated a .
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Some cultivated varieties are more susceptible to cracks than others.
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Prion protein fibers, seen above, cultivated in E. coli bacteria.
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For decades, car executives cultivated friendly relationships with German lawmakers.
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Liberals simply haven't cultivated the same appetite for ideological news.
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The collection of debts is where that image is cultivated.
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It's cultivated, mixed, pressed, formed, and often left to age.
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We asked her about how she's cultivated her decorating style.
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We've cultivated hobbies and become knowledgeable about our specific interests.
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Using the inroads forged by WP and cultivated by Pope.
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He used to live in California, where he cultivated plantain.
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Rather than getting angry, though, she's cultivated her own strategy.
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"What's been cultivated here is really, really special," Chantelle says.
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Humans have cultivated the opium poppy for five thousand years.
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That's why we're releasing Cultivated every Friday in your inbox.
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They haven't gained quite the following that Chobani has cultivated.
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He also cultivated relationships with Mayor Edward I. Koch, Gov.
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And the Kremlin has cultivated ties with WikiLeaks for years.
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They had embraced their otherness, and they had cultivated it.
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But Bannon cultivated Ulmer, who was struck by his persistence.
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They cultivated creative, yet arbitrary, brand identities to stand apart.
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Why do you think England cultivated such a strong movement?
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Ms. Hicks never cultivated a life outside the White House.
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Avocados have been cultivated in Mexico for around 22017,000 years.
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That's how assets are cultivated in the world of intelligence.
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His parents have cultivated nearly 21,201 followers in 220 posts.
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He gave speeches about the economy and cultivated government relationships.
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To this end, an aesthetics of resistance has been cultivated.
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I was mesmerized by the atmosphere cultivated in gay bars.
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He cultivated it, certainly, in his long decades as a
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But Weinstein also cultivated an inside line to NBC itself.
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Some of these oligarchs went into politics; some cultivated politicians.
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The grandparents of his wife, Rut Domènech, 39, cultivated hazelnuts.
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Mr. Tillerson has, however, energetically cultivated one person: Mr. Trump.
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S. alliances across the region cultivated for years by Soleimani.
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Tunisia's bilingual, coeducational system cultivated critical thinking and reasoning skills.
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But the ethos cultivated by Belichick demands an uncommon fortitude.
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He has cultivated a network of supporters around the country.
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In response, Hanoi has cautiously cultivated closer ties with Washington.
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In response, Hanoi has cautiously cultivated closer ties with Washington.
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Historically, farmers cultivated at least 7,000 different plants to eat.
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Apple and Samsung have cultivated a fanbase over the last decade.
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That fear is being cultivated by a group of killer clowns.
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Have you always had that confidence, or have you cultivated it?
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We have cultivated palm for decades, (and) it has brought development.
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Consequently, almost every religion in India cultivated its own caste system.
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But cultivated truffles are not hunted: they are simply dug out.
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The cultivated blindness that we humans have become so good at.
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The taglines aren't the only things that have become more cultivated.
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The spine that Mourinho cultivated was the basis of that success.
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Whips have over the years cultivated an air of secretive menace.
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The best ideas had to be cultivated, and weaker specimens removed.
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That only added to Guzman's legend, cultivated after his 2001 escape.
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I never found him having cultivated the man in power anywhere.
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Rather, he's cultivated versatility and kept his entire team in games.
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Just look at the Chia Pet garden she cultivated this week.
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Ayers has cultivated key allies, including Ivanka Trump and Jared Kushner.
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Mr. Voinovich cultivated an image as a proponent of fiscal discipline.
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But the image originated with, and was cultivated by, Freud himself.
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Bloomingdale shared her sedulously cultivated fashion sense with the first lady.
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As he cultivated political connections, Mr. Andreas was courted in return.
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To him, cultivated land was the mark of a civilized society.
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Importantly, she has also cultivated a decent working relationship with Guterres.
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That's the consensus among a certain type of cultivated television watcher.
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Even the most carefully cultivated public image can't protect you forever.
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|
Well, a sativa means it's been cultivated, which is all cannabis.
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|
So he chose the proper name of an anciently cultivated cannabis.
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It wasn't being cultivated in a field or anything like that.
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|
Mr. Ye also cultivated the image of someone with political connections.
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I think it's a perspective we have cultivated for so long.
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|
The defense firm has also cultivated ties to the Saudi government.
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|
Smuts carefully cultivated a persona as a warrior, statesman and philosopher.
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|
Charm, she points out, can't be Googled; it must be cultivated.
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|
We grow about 50,000 pounds of organically cultivated produce each year.
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Qatar cultivated ties with Iran and established trade relations with Israel.
|
|
Others were worried about the ties that Mr. Zhang cultivated, too.
|
|
Subscribe to our weekly cannabis newsletter Cultivated for more cannabis news.
|
|
Now historians believe that Catherine cultivated those rumors to discredit Peter.
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|
He cultivated relationships with billionaires like Bill Gates and Leslie Wexner.
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|
Before this scandal, Ms. Park had cultivated an aura of rectitude.
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He's cultivated an enormously complex web of agriculture groups and constituencies.
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|
It's a reputation — and a brand — that the league has cultivated.
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|
Ajo morado, cultivated in the region, is the garlic of connoisseurs.
|
|
They hunted, foraged and cultivated farms that stretched for miles upriver.
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|
George Washington cultivated it at Mount Vernon to mend fishing nets.
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That figure has exploded from 50,000 acres cultivated nationally in 2012.
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|
They're all erudite and fiercely opinionated artists with finely cultivated skillsets.
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Even the hip-hop Asian auntie personality she's cultivated is partially calculated.
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There really is a sense of shame that's cultivated in the system.
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|
Since then, Ms Sinema has assiduously cultivated a moderate image and record.
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It's been cultivated so widely we don't even know where it originates.
|
|
We intentionally cultivated this idea of like 'Look at this beautiful family.
|
|
What's more, the franchise has been almost perfectly cultivated by its studio.
|
|
Or did you get the sense that the concern was being cultivated?
|
|
It's enough to ruin the vibes that you had so carefully cultivated.
|
|
So her latest push may seem in contrast to that cultivated image.
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|
Because he's not only cultivated them, he's fashioned robots out of them.
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|
Just think of the number of Twitter followers some celebrities have cultivated.
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|
It's cultivated, processed, consumed, and peed out all under the same roof!
|
|
He had a jolly, exuberant presence, and he easily cultivated confidential informants.
|
|
Wild myths, like imminent Turkish membership of the European Union, were cultivated.
|
|
For much of the last century, America's infrastructure cultivated innovation and progress.
|
|
My experiences have cultivated life lessons essential for me as a WOC.
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|
Club Blu cultivated an image that often veered from homespun to risqué.
|
|
Nominally Sunni, the Seljuqs cultivated a remarkably tolerant, progressive and pluralistic culture.
|
|
Somroo said that until 2012 his father cultivated a traditional cotton variety.
|
|
Post has cultivated an aesthetic that resembles something simultaneously broke and rich.
|
|
Do you feel like cultivated that when you were in high school?
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|
ZS: Do you think the art world has cultivated a thinking culture?
|
|
Democrats can take a partial lesson in the opposition Trump has cultivated.
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|
And he cultivated a following with bracing lyrics about struggling with depression.
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|
Some, judging by their orderly arrangements, had once been cultivated in orchards.
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|
Huawei has cultivated political friendships and invested heavily in places like Britain.
|
|
All that alert vigilance has cultivated a genuine pleasure in simply observing.
|
|
Of the 124 known wild species, most are not cultivated or consumed.
|
|
This has muddied public discourse and cultivated a populist attitude toward democracy.
|
|
Here was a highly cultivated poet reworking Andalusian folk culture and myth.
|
|
Phil Griffin, the executive who cultivated Ms. Maddow and her 8 p.m.
|
|
He cultivated a swaggering persona, accentuated by bursts of obscenity-laced anger.
|
|
Qanon followers have cultivated connections over social media with key Trump allies.
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|
It has the same look, taste and texture as cultivated green asparagus.
|
|
For decades, he has cultivated a reputation as a defender of principle.
|
|
He cultivated a new look: paisley shirts, drainpipe jeans, black suède winklepickers.
|
|
Happy Friday,Welcome to an extra special year-end edition of Cultivated!
|
|
From there, the media mogul and champion athlete cultivated an unlikely friendship.
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|
It's an old and favored trope in fashion, once cultivated by many.
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|
For nearly six years you have cultivated a reputation for capricious brutality.
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|
Like Jackie, she had cultivated passions for painting, music, dance and poetry.
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|
These are the kinds of relationships he cultivated from the very beginning.
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|
It's also an image Clinton actively cultivated as he ran for president.
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|
It was my second day on 28th Street, and I was contemplating my fate with the combination of curiosity and detachment I have cultivated as assiduously in myself as my bloom has been cultivated by the gardeners in Islip.
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|
Depending on whom you ask, Ailes either cultivated or destroyed American conservative politics.
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|
But hope remains for podcasts that have cultivated a small-but-mighty audience.
|
|
It was a jaw-dropping counterpoint to Trudeau's carefully cultivated image of calm.
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|
The affair has dented the wholesome image that the devout Catholic has cultivated.
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|
He built a carefully cultivated community in a comprehensive and labor-intensive way.
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|
The vegetables it uses are cultivated in the most natural way possible, too.
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|
So, I think a lot of that friendship can be cultivated that way.
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|
The Texas Senator had cultivated his image as the ultimate outsider in Washington.
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|
Similarly, Ace Hotels has cultivated the culturally curious with art exhibitions and concerts.
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|
Some countries have cultivated an educational environment that is welcoming to gifted children.
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Experts say Dung has cultivated support among business groups and the wider party.
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Meanwhile, the reformist image cultivated by Crown Prince (MBS) is also in jeopardy.
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|
Beijing has cultivated close commercial links with Tehran, especially in the energy sector.
|
|
This must be how Don cultivated his strong and good sense of humor.
|
|
Families who may have cultivated land for generations rarely hold any formal title.
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|
But I have always cultivated their interests through other activities, not just iDevices.
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|
They have cultivated bitter-tasting sorghum, which birds don't like but brewers do.
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|
"We obviously cultivated something and it was rewarding for a while," she said.
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|
You cultivated this sound together, that analog 70s vibe is really strong here.
|
|
Ice roads like the Tibbitt to Contwoyto aren't so much paved as cultivated.
|
|
In France the most affluent and cultivated people support and love the cinema.
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|
Admittedly, Bismarck was a hundred times more clever and cultivated than the Nazis.
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|
Afriflora produces over 1.1bn roses a year, cultivated from its farmland in Ethiopia.
|
|
Within weeks they had cultivated a bumper crop of new music between them.
|
|
Buttigieg has cultivated ties with executives at companies like Facebook, Google, and Uber.
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He had a cultivated voice and was polite without being like an icicle.
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|
This has cultivated the perception that we are walking targets for terrorism's seizing.
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|
Poetry's system of cultivated sounds was, she grew to feel, a patriarchal racket.
|
|
At times, they have cultivated U.S. states as counterweights to the White House.
|
|
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|
He cultivated a passion for American art, particularly from the early 20th century.
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In general, he cultivated a "mordant persona" and was genuinely captivated by gruesomeness.
|
|
Mr. O'Leary cultivated a brash image, poking competitors, pilots and Ryanair's own customers.
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Sloes are native to Europe, where they are generally cultivated in autumn months.
|
|
He adored and cultivated American women, considering them less stuffy and better dressed.
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|
In the past few years, he's cultivated more than 200 California pipevine plants.
|
|
They cultivated the first class of investments by the end of that year.
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|
It was beautiful, and wild too, although most of the land was cultivated.
|
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The European ditches being incompatible with our needs, we were cultivated in nurseries.
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For his part, Mr. Netanyahu has cultivated relationships with Central European populist leaders.
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As such, he has cultivated unusual allies, including Kanye West and Roger Stone.
|
|
Chicago was more interested in how feminism could be cultivated within a community.
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"For a European, you are exceptionally cultivated," enthuses Tiger Tanaka, a Japanese spymaster.
|
|
The specificity of the performances also helps prevent the cultivated tone from cloying.
|
|
"We had a lot of land, some cultivated, some quite wild," he continued.
|
|
She has cultivated a large following that has brands reaching out for collaboration.
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Though the two are not in constant contact, Gretzky has cultivated a relationship.
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At the same time, Mr. Trump has cultivated Mr. Orban as an ally.
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|
Over the next several weeks, he cultivated a friendship with her, she said.
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Along the way, he cultivated political and business relationships, including with the Trumps.
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It's a skill she has long cultivated through her relationship with her mother.
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To allow arable land to be cultivated safely, land mines must be removed.
|
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The two friends from Stanford University had first cultivated their network in classrooms.
|
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Past administrations, both Republican and Democratic, have cultivated Riyadh as a strategic ally.
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But like many dynamic things, it must be cultivated to realize its potential.
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Question: What is one skill you wish you'd cultivated before starting your business?
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Steve Jobs had cultivated a strong and pervasive culture among its 7,000 employees.
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During their travels they cultivated a sound that bridges funk and electro-trap.
|
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What you see is relationships getting cultivated many years in advance of the IPO.
|
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Yet through all of this, Kim Il Sung cultivated a powerful cult of personality.
|
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And she offers a good example of how Buttigieg has cultivated Silicon Valley relationships.
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However, he cultivated just enough support in key states to win the Electoral College.
|
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Or even at 30, having created and cultivated a community of over 500,000 women.
|
|
Background: Trump has never cultivated a close working relationship with Prime Minister Theresa May.
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This new age of cultivated data has created and will create new data aggregators.
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It means someone cultivated change in a space where newness wasn't encouraged or welcomed.
|
|
His father cultivated plantain, yucca, and avocados on the family's small plot in Urabá.
|
|
She has also cultivated an image of a moderating force inside the White House.
|
|
Unable to go head-to-head against big producers, Burkina Faso instead cultivated quality.
|
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They may have been one of the first animals cultivated by humans for food.
|
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From early on, colleagues say, Comey carefully cultivated a reputation for integrity and nonpartisanship.
|
|
It was also an ability that Paul Le Roux had cultivated his whole life.
|
|
This year the field nearest to his house has been cultivated with military precision.
|
|
The religious hatred it represents has been assiduously cultivated in Pakistan for many years.
|
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The hemp and cotton fabrics are all organic, locally raised and cultivated in California.
|
|
How this tiny, impoverished shantytown has cultivated such talent depends on whom you ask.
|
|
Daucus carota describes both the familiar orange cultivated carrot and its unkempt feral twin.
|
|
Sailors said Giordano's "ferocious temper" and "bullying leadership style" cultivated a toxic workplace environment.
|
|
In almost every shot, Denis acknowledges the cultivated ignorance and cruel indifference of whiteness.
|
|
He is believed to have cultivated broad support among businessmen and the wider party.
|
|
VSCO girls are social media-savvy teen girls with cultivated aesthetics and social awareness.
|
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She began writing at his suggestion and then cultivated relationships with well-known authors.
|
|
Happily, the same tools that have cultivated the cancerous zeitgeist can also reverse it.
|
|
Mushrooms are cultivated three times a year and the varieties depend on the season.
|
|
You can buy hundreds of strains, specially cultivated to produce different flavors and highs.
|
|
Over the course of his career, Gordon has cultivated that combination to great success.
|
|
On Borikén, the Taínos originally cultivated pineapples, cassava and sweet potatoes, supplemented by seafood.
|
|
He has long cultivated relationships with social conservatives and with the so-called establishment.
|
|
Ancient and native strains of beans and pulses are being unearthed and cultivated anew.
|
|
There is a growing market for peppers that have been cultivated expressly for pungency.
|
|
The problems infuriated Mr. Landrieu, who has cultivated a reputation as a pragmatic manager.
|
|
For the past two years, he cultivated a close relationship with President Donald Trump.
|
|
Belgium has cultivated warmer economic and diplomatic relations with China in the past year.
|
|
We all know that lives are easily cultivated online to look a certain way.
|
|
But the freewheeling, flamboyant style he cultivated may be coming back to haunt him.
|
|
Jeff Branzburg has cultivated the habit of clicking Forward, not Reply, when answering messages.
|
|
Part of the problem is that cultivated bananas are a single variety, the Cavendish.
|
|
In its early forms at least, rock music certainly cultivated this kind of ethos.
|
|
Since 1947, the festival has cultivated a loyal audience open to just about anything.
|
|
Mr. Najib said he was thinking about whether quinoa could be cultivated in Malaysia.
|
|
Francis Spufford is a highly cultivated English writer who possesses vast stores of curiosity.
|
|
He cultivated an image as an abrasive, but honest politician with a clean record.
|
|
Laure, Comtesse de Chevigné, cultivated her persona as a sophisticated intellectual and swaggering rebel.
|
|
Drug makers have long cultivated doctors to promote brand-name medicines to their peers.
|
|
Mr. Flynn believed that Moscow could be cultivated as an ally against Islamist militants.
|
|
It has cultivated an image as the trusted brand of doctors, nurses and parents.
|
|
Mr. Paul's cultivated friendship with the president has paid dividends in other policy areas.
|
|
Perhaps Mr. Pence can still break away from the chaos President Trump has cultivated.
|
|
Iranian officials also cultivated networks of informants who had once worked for the Americans.
|
|
Internal demand there has been very carefully cultivated and developed by organized crime groups.
|
|
Rather, he knew the caricature of me that I had created and meticulously cultivated.
|
|
Barneys has cultivated a vaunted status as the place to see and be seen.
|
|
Barneys has cultivated a vaunted status as the place to see and be seen.
|
|
I was raised on the land my ancestors had cultivated for over a century.
|
|
Happy Friday Cultivated readers,We&aposre back in the office after an extended break.
|
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Huawei cultivated an aggressive "wolf culture" that encouraged its employees to work extremely hard.
|
|
Over the last eight years, our party has cultivated, and benefited from, such energy.
|
|
The yogurt industry says that has cultivated confusion and left it vulnerable to lawsuits.
|
|
Cohen, whose family was both prominent and cultivated, had an ironical view of himself.
|
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TPG, for example, has long cultivated an image as a progressive and trustworthy institution.
|
|
Common clothing flattened distinctions of class and rank and cultivated equity among the monks.
|
|
Modi has, however, cultivated a clean image as the son of a humble tea seller.
|
|
An ex-Theranos employee revealed to Elle that she cultivated the fallen scammer's signature style.
|
|
This image, which he cultivated, has made him the premier image of the seafaring pirate.
|
|
In 2014, he started approaching local shopkeepers and restaurant owners and cultivated them as partners.
|
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Olivier Rousteing, creative director of Balmain, has cultivated quite the social media presence (and following).
|
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In reality, the images of top leaders are carefully cultivated by the Party's propaganda arm.
|
|
In order to not get grassed up, a reputation for violence has to be cultivated.
|
|
Temerko cultivated close relations with the Russian defence minister of the early 1990s, Pavel Grachev.
|
|
Beyond its verges are fields of coca bushes, many of them cultivated by poor people.
|
|
To reduce the vulnerability to diseases, we need more genetic diversity in our cultivated bananas.
|
|
That knowledge provides a basis for identifying disease-resistant genes in wild and cultivated bananas.
|
|
China has forged closer ties with many developing countries and cultivated its own domestic market.
|
|
Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook's chief executive, has cultivated relationships with China's leaders, including President Xi Jinping.
|
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Seattle is a great city for carsharing, and we've cultivated a 75,000 strong membership here.
|
|
He does not enjoy the close personal relationships with French politicians that his father cultivated.
|
|
That means heroin can now be cultivated on a year-round basis, the report noted.
|
|
Temerko cultivated close relations with the Russian defense minister of the early 1990s, Pavel Grachev.
|
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Outwardly, Duke has cultivated the image as an attractive, articulate and media savvy political activist.
|
|
Once a fish and chip shop owner, she cultivated a naive persona in media appearances.
|
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It was built on a foundation of meaningful relationships, which were carefully and respectfully cultivated.
|
|
Valerian is a plant whose root has for centuries been cultivated for its medicinal properties.
|
|
Kushner cultivated MBS and invited him to the White House early in the Trump presidency.
|
|
This online public presence is something that needs to be constantly tended and intentionally cultivated.
|
|
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|
|
"Trump has also cultivated a reputation as a paper tiger throughout his presidency," Bernstein argued.
|
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One of Mr. Trump's chief assets is his self-cultivated image as a business titan.
|
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In the decades before his arrest he cultivated friends, allies and contacts in elite circles.
|
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What deer do to cultivated suburban yards can make otherwise peaceful people quite bloody minded.
|
|
The trail was a well-established meander through the woods, cultivated by decades of footsteps.
|
|
None of the people Epstein collected and cultivated for years will acknowledge any real connection.
|
|
He married a woman with a large inheritance and cultivated a high style of living.
|
|
Unlike most teen comers of the day, Daya's fan base was not initially cultivated online.
|
|
Click here for more BI Prime stories and subscribe to our weekly cannabis newsletter, Cultivated.
|
|
During this period, Banks cultivated influential politicians in Lesotho, including the Prime Minister, Tom Thabane.
|
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Jake is a hothouse flower, his artistic talents and sensitivities carefully cultivated by his parents.
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In Voltaire's terms, she cultivated her own garden, never threatening and never intimidating her neighbors.
|
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Oysters cultivated in this traditional way are the mainstay of older Gulf Coast raw bars.
|
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The brothers booked themselves, too, and cultivated a reputation in Southern California as solid workers.
|
|
The corn is a strain that Haudenosaunee people have cultivated for more than 1.73,400 years.
|
|
Yeah, I cultivated that in high school because there were a lot of freestyle sessions.
|
|
It also represents the network of gay organizers that Milk had cultivated throughout the decades.
|
|
He was being cultivated to be a race leader: a metallic statue of polished masculinity.
|
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And he has cultivated good relationships with reporters, becoming a comfortable and regular television presence.
|
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Reducing music to its intense essentials, Mr. Kurtag cultivated a style of precisely controlled intensity.
|
|
He cultivated a Robin Hood image among the poor in his home state of Sinaloa.
|
|
Was there a way of thinking or a habit you wish you had cultivated earlier?
|
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By meeting every challenge, by surviving every scare, Tottenham has cultivated an air of invincibility.
|
|
Mr. Huigens, who positioned himself as an honest broker, has cultivated a following beyond hobbyists.
|
|
He cultivated a provincial openness: curious about everything, but a face lost in the crowd.
|
|
Long before early humans cultivated wheat, barley, lentils and flax, ancient leafcutter ants raised fungus.
|
|
If "SpongeBob" sinks on Broadway, it could damage a carefully cultivated two-decade-old brand.
|
|
We worked to spur rural economic development, and we cultivated relationships with international trading partners.
|
|
And suddenly, the United States had millions of acres that could be cultivated for cotton.
|
|
The coffee cups on the table contained brews from Arabica beans cultivated at different altitudes.
|
|
Only here has it been cultivated with such an eye toward consistency for so long.
|
|
But he played football, consorted with the town's bad boys, and cultivated a blustery front.
|
|
Some lenders were also concerned about exposing investors they had cultivated to loans from competitors.
|
|
Hopefully, or ideally, your natural abilities will be cultivated and deployed most effectively and fruitfully.
|
|
Netflix has also cultivated massive franchises like Orange Is the New Black and Stranger Things.
|
|
Rather, Styles has cultivated stardom and standom on par with the savviest of pop divas.
|
|
Most CBD is made from hemp, a cannabis variety cultivated for fiber or other uses.
|
|
He values conflict as a productive state to be cultivated, even within his own party.
|
|
Such foods can be wild or cultivated and they're specific to locations and distinct cultures.
|
|
Such foods can be wild or cultivated and they're specific to locations and distinct cultures.
|
|
He cultivated superstition while growing up in Texas, with dreams of being the next DiMaggio.
|
|
But, in her own telling, her greatest achievement was the close, creative relationships she cultivated.
|
|
His great-grandfather had cultivated grapes since the late 19th century on a property nearby.
|
|
Laureate talks about its mission as expanding educational opportunity, and it's cultivated a humanitarian halo.
|
|
I really appreciate having such a cultivated space with my roommates where we can share that.
|
|
Over the years, Rosenthal has cultivated a business as a booking agent for other Santas, Mrs.
|
|
During its original run, The L Word cultivated a passionate fanbase of viewers — mostly queer women.
|
|
I remember that time, of being outraged at the cultivated ignorance that allowed it to continue.
|
|
To avoid tainting Costa Rica's premium arabica beans, ICAFE recommended robusta be cultivated in separate zones.
|
|
It's to this cultivated, intellectual, original and free-spirited Parisienne that I wanted to pay tribute.
|
|
The culture of the transfer window has also cultivated a basic failure across our common discourse.
|
|
That requires a kind of cultivated paranoia which does not come naturally to non-tech firms.
|
|
Liao, of the Chinese ministry, said the latest move reflected mutual trust cultivated through past collaborations.
|
|
Miriam Olsen was the first of a series of best friendships I've cultivated in my life.
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To justify its policy agenda, business cultivated a popular faith in the power of free markets.
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In his prose he cultivated self-irony and sought privacy and autonomy from the Soviet state.
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This marks a turning-point for an industry built on manipulated supply and skilfully cultivated demand.
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"The forest of Seih Sou wasn't systematically cultivated, and particularly (not) in recent years," said Zagas.
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Within what is now the United States, indigo came to be cultivated particularly in South Carolina.
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He cultivated an image of being above coups and protests while intervening in times of crisis.
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It's a skill Refinery29's own cofounder and executive creative director Piera Gelardi has also cultivated.
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And the Somali National Movement (SNM), which led the fighting, cultivated an internal culture of democracy.
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He also cultivated a Robin Hood image by donating money and housing to Medellin, Colombia's, poor.
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Also, the organoids have not experienced any "appreciable changes" in the year since they were cultivated.
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It was a striking reversal from the measured public persona she had cultivated throughout her career.
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The label for madder root reveals that Forbes had cultivated the plant in his own garden.
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A growth mindset is one in which people believe that interests and abilities can be cultivated.
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The Erdogans even cultivated family relations with the Assads, inviting them to join them on vacation.
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Stealing from his peers cultivated a deeper shame while making it difficult to create trusting friendships.
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In this case, they had been cultivated as RPE cells to replace the patient's diminished stock.
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Facebook has, for that reason, separately cultivated its own service, Facebook Messenger, which boasts 900m users.
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If you already have a carefully cultivated iTunes library of 25,000 songs, go for Apple Music.
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"We have already implemented alternative projects in those districts where poppy was cultivated before," he said.
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For much of his political career, Trump has cultivated a mutually beneficial relationship with Fox News.
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In Washington's lifetime people on both sides of the Atlantic cultivated sensibility into an emotional style.
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But have you really cultivated this drop-shouldered walk, this lean to the right, in opposition?
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She has resources enough to be taken seriously, and she has carefully cultivated her public persona.
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Click here for more BI Prime stories, and subscribe to Business Insider's weekly cannabis newsletter, Cultivated.
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Click here for more BI Prime stories, and subscribe to Business Insider's weekly cannabis newsletter, Cultivated.
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We—the whole crew and close customers—have cultivated a place where there is live music.
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These cells were stimulated to grow into brain cells and were then cultivated for eight weeks.
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Many tenants have spent their whole lives here, and have cultivated a community in those decades.
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The idea would be broadly consistent with Musk's carefully cultivated reputation as a far-sighted innovator.
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It's a moment of cultivated eccentricity, to be sure, but also something of an artist statement.
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The Freedom Caucus has cultivated Trump's ear, forcing Republican Party leadership to listen to its demands.
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In the gallery that day, my pretensions of having become more cultivated and metropolitan were punctured.
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Peri peri, or piri piri, is a chile cultivated in southeastern Africa, with roots in Brazil.
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As the heir to James's cultivated power, Williamson can decide what the N.B.A. gives to him.
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Cultivated acreage in Canada is double that, and in China's Yunnan province, 10,000 farmers grow it.
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He rounded up politicians to speak at Southwest Key celebrations and cultivated ties to government agencies.
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As Jaipur cultivated the body, the mind and the spirit, it thrived socially, economically and culturally.
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And so the tram slipped into the vernacular of death long cultivated by the city's residents.
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The kind of presence required for deep friendship does not seem cultivated in many online interactions.
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"He cultivated the image," Robert Timberg wrote in a biography, "John McCain: An American Odyssey" (1995).
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The Islamic State has cultivated a reputation for ferocity, with fighters pledging to fight or die.
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Brash and technocratic, she cultivated grass-roots support, whereas the party handed most lawmakers their positions.
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The sense of inevitability about no-deal, cultivated by the hardliners advising Mr Johnson, is bogus.
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And he has played down the relationship that Mr. Kushner has cultivated with the Saudi heir.
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That vulnerability and intimacy are being cultivated among artists who have known one another for years.
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She obviously enjoyed fighting — and writing — the good fight, and exulted in the persona she cultivated.
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Adding to his anger, he discovered his own university had cultivated close ties with Chinese officials.
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Teyana Taylor has cultivated a fierce presence that can snatch all the attention in a room.
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THE SENSE OF nuanced antiquity he has cultivated exists in radical counterpoint to the apartment's spareness.
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Since taking office, President Xi Jinping has cultivated an aura of austere probity and stern control.
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Any image of morality and unity Haley had cultivated vanished when those words left her lips.
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With enough patience, the hard lessons that Saturn teaches can be cultivated in an empowering way.
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In addition to its qualities as a superfood, hemp can be cultivated for its cannabidiol (CBD).
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Bolivia has more than a thousand cultivated varieties of potatoes, along with dozens of wild species.
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However, the image of riches and success that it cultivated came crashing down in early 2016.
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While management consultants usually prefer to operate in the shadows, Mr. Berger cultivated a personal brand.
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Despite the carefully cultivated amorality of most strategy games, there can be no political fence-sitting.
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The president vilifies the news media; the chancellor has cultivated journalists in Austria, earning positive coverage.
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Mr. Coles and Atkins were in the tradition known as the class act: suave, debonair, cultivated.
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Alex Jones and his well-cultivated persona suffered a blow in a Texas court room yesterday.
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A drooling art commentary randomly cultivated through the blind collaboration of Caroline Mosby and Michael Toke.
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Colorado has cultivated a unique mix of technology companies in areas ranging from Earth science to defense.
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The idea of a "witchy" aesthetic has become something cultivated by many millennials, and they know it.
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Before that, she cultivated a huge online following for her outspokenness about the issues she holds important.
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It's then that they can finally drop the personas they've carefully cultivated, and can be truly honest.
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Trump welcomed the sexual revolution, which liberated young people from traditional morality and cultivated the playboy image.
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Apple has long cultivated a base of die-hard fans obsessed with the aesthetics of their hardware.
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Behind the scenes: While he was allegedly raping teenage girls, Epstein cultivated cozy relationships with America's elites.
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The Midwest doesn't need to be discovered — it's already here, and it just needs to be cultivated.
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In the intervening years, Bryant cultivated an image that tried to push past the sexual assault accusation.
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Yammoo has cultivated a relationship with her devoted viewers, who she's lovingly nicknamed yamm-baechus (her "cabbages").
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It is hard-baked into our culture, and cultivated by the silence of women and men alike.
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Companies like Memphis Meats (and, reportedly, Just) are working on lab-cultured meat cultivated from animal cells.
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The question of worth seems to have haunted Onfroy, whose entire life was one cultivated by violence.
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Where observers traditionally have been bystanders -- sometimes amused, sometimes appalled -- their participation and approbation are now cultivated.
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During the Great Depression, she cultivated a farm in her backyard so that her children wouldn't starve.
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Bae founders cultivated their user base by going directly to the communities they believe need the app.
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It has cultivated ties with far-right parties in Europe, but has snuffed out extremists at home.
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The team has cultivated an extremely fast-paced, cutthroat culture with significant pressure on performance, they said.
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"This is a president who has cultivated inconsistency as an expression of his own power," he says.
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He won plaudits from diplomats for his affable style and cultivated important friendships in Russia and China.
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Facebook has cultivated far-flung, online friendships, but it has changed the nature of offline ones, too.
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That year, according to the UNODC, Afghan growers cultivated about 8,000 hectares (20143,000 acres) of poppy plants.
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She applied herself to hearings, visited troops in Afghanistan for Thanksgiving and cultivated advisers such as Gen.
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Yet of the 4,000 acres (1,600 hectares) cultivated by the father-son duo, only 300 are organic.
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It is a sobering sight in a country where every inch of arable land is intensively cultivated.
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It was part of the story that had been cultivated from the time Harvey was a kid.
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It's a mix of anti-elitism, anti-political correctness, and white identity politics, not carefully cultivated policies.
|
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That year, according to the UNODC, Afghan growers cultivated about 8,000 hectares (20,000 acres) of poppy plants.
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The problem now, however, he said, are budgetary cuts to the very programs that cultivated his talent.
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Tattoos on each hand spell out the image he cultivated in the mold of American gangsta rappers.
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Though he generated enthusiasm and helped bring out new voters, his bombastic cultivated persona thrives on winning.
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But one could imagine that the seafood supply would be more broadly affected than simply cultivated shellfish.
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Like a well-tended garden, the Al ecosystem must be cultivated; it will not spring up overnight.
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The Emirates have cultivated an image as progressive allies of the United States in the Middle East.
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Fonio has been grown for over 5,000 years and is possibly the oldest cultivated cereal in Africa.
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Heirs and children believed to be likely future recipients of family wealth are especially cultivated and recruited.
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They cultivated contacts abroad who could transfer funds on behalf of clients in Egypt, charging 2.5 percent.
|
|
See more of Business Insider's cannabis coverage here, and sign up for our new cannabis newsletter Cultivated.
|
|
But how—and where—are the next writers of "Broadchurch", "The Killing", or "Deutschland 83" being cultivated?
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Behind the jokes and the glamorous image she cultivated, however, was a struggle with PTSD and alcoholism.
|
|
Performances of this extremely cultivated, stylized and nuanced art of storytelling can extend longer than a month.
|
|
See below for a list of who's hiring, and sign up for our new cannabis newsletter, Cultivated.
|
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Although Jordan's cultivated English narrator, Jonathan, is indeed a detective, it isn't really a crime novel either.
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Since its founding, the United States has inspired and cultivated generations of innovators, entrepreneurs, and go-getters.
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Under the chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, Sydnor cultivated a background in national security and cybersecurity.
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Many researchers point to social media and the FOMO culture it has cultivated as another big culprit.
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The fast-fashion chain grew quickly and cultivated a following by selling trendy clothing for low prices.
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He marched from the back, a game face made of carefully cultivated, barely sublimated, method actor rage.
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What is it about the American experience, the American character, that cultivated this love of magical thinking?
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The model also allows some food exchange between the parcels depending on which food is being cultivated.
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Rivera and Lillis have consciously cultivated a relationship free from the pressure to conform to normative roles.
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In Buenos Aires, a grains export company executive said there is no GMO wheat cultivated in Argentina.
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But why stop there when you've cultivated a massive audience that extends onto every social-media platform?
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For the past 30 years, the Telésforo family has grown and cultivated these flowers in Mexico City.
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Wintour isn't known to beat around the bushWintour's email habit appears to fit the persona she's cultivated.
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In this secularized age of lonely seekers scrolling social media feeds, they have cultivated a spiritual community.
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Apple has long cultivated a premium image with higher prices than many others on comparable consumer electronics.
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He cultivated an image as a crude but honest candidate and vowed to reject traditional horse-trading.
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As a cultivated practice, the negative path of poetry introduces division into the habitual order of experience.
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For decades, the valuable New York-based Ballet Hispanico has cultivated and promoted Latino culture through dance.
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To this end she cultivated an arch, affected accent and persistently dogged the rich, famous and beautiful.
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Coaches came and went in those early years, while McLaughlin cultivated a reputation for ire and eccentricity.
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Wherever illegal drugs were cultivated, narcos harvested official corruption, undermining the rule of law and weak institutions.
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Wilcox is orderly and good-humored, but he has cultivated a worldly persona while neglecting his soul.
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They were the remnants of the once vital civil-society scene cultivated and marooned in Khatami's time.
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I had those meaty king trumpet mushrooms, a variety of oyster mushroom, my current favorite cultivated type.
|
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This picture runs completely contrary to the image of tolerance the Prime Minister has so scrupulously cultivated.
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To advance his interests, he has cultivated relationships with presidents and other powerful figures on two continents.
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"People who are otherwise cultivated will proudly confess their philistinism when it comes to mathematics," Holt writes.
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They've cultivated a vibe as down-to-earth elders, recording for independent labels staffed by younger admirers.
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In Japan, Tanaka and Darvish cultivated their arms regularly while pitching with five days' rest or more.
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Harder was a successful but obscure lawyer who had cultivated a modest specialty in the entertainment industry.
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Ms Bridgewater's big trade was for the People's Republic of China, a client she had shrewdly cultivated.
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Since early in its history, Bosch has cultivated a reputation as one of Germany's most conscientious companies.
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But the way she has run her race so far has cultivated a strong, if unusual base.
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He's an oddball by nature who also seems to have genuinely cultivated a disregard for conventional success.
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He's looked into having one shipped from Japan, where they are cultivated as a kind of curiosity.
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She cultivated an esteemed social circle that included the Kennedys, Henry Kissinger, Katharine Graham and Truman Capote.
|
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Dr. Gottlieb's nomination signals a continuation of FDA policies that have cultivated and fueled the opioid epidemic.
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Yet Ayotte is popular too, having cultivated a pragmatic reputation on issues like drug treatment and immigration.
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It's covered with ivy, said to be cultivated from the garden of his friend Dr. Paul Gachet.
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The environment cultivated around marijuana grows, however, makes it even harder for rape victims to speak out.
|
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During more than four decades in power, Omar Bongo cultivated close relations with a string of French presidents.
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During more than four decades in power, Omar Bongo cultivated close relations with a succession of French presidents.
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There are cultivated fields (in light colors), small towns (in blue and purple), and old forests (dark green).
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Afternoon traffic is something that many restaurants have tried to cultivated with value offerings and new menu items.
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Putin, who has lately cultivated a reputation for unpredictability, may have finally found his match in this regard.
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In the titular role, the actress cultivated a distinct accent, reminiscent of Jackie Kennedy's famous Mid-Atlantic vernacular.
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Someone creates an account for the pimple, quickly amassing more followers that Selina's cultivated in her entire career.
|
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Thus neoliberals cultivated on the left half of the American political spectrum a tribe they could work with.
|
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At a grassroots level, China cultivated local figures and helped them to take over various community-based bodies.
|
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Mashable has wizarded this selection down for you to the most cultivated, unique and fascinating Potter-associated gifts.
|
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But some of the most important changes were actually designed for the new audience the series has cultivated.
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The movie connects Westheimer's biography both to her philosophy toward sex and how she cultivated her famous persona.
|
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But apparently, the sense of humor he has cultivated on camera doesn't quite translate to real-life situations.
|
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During his ten years in the industry, Michael had cultivated a reputation as being effective, loyal, and upbeat.
|
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Don Draper might have cultivated the image of a perfect man, but he was empty and broken inside.
|
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Mr. Cruz's campaign manager, Jeff Roe, has also cultivated relationships with the relatively small universe of Republican strategists.
|
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Uber has long cultivated a reputation as a scrappy startup, willing to do whatever it takes to win.
|
|
A crop of black sitcoms from the late 1980s and throughout 1990s cultivated such varied and radiant images.
|
|
In high school, she experimented with a quirky fashion style cultivated from thrift shops and hand-me-downs.
|
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"It's funny that someone who purports to have cultivated taste reviewed that place so favorably," my source remarked.
|
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Both have cultivated a social media image that looks like it's straight out of a public relations firm.
|
|
Trees on the properties were wild but still producing fruit, and there was evidence of cultivated taro ponds.
|
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We grew up in the age of the knowing smirk, of the hipster with his cultivated handlebar mustache.
|
|
Like some chicories, dandelion has a pleasant slight bitterness, more so with the wild than the cultivated type.
|
|
Musharraf cultivated an image of Enlightened moderation, introduced some women-friendly laws and pushed back against religious forces.
|
|
Monson, 47, a tattooed cage fighter known as The Snowman, has cultivated ties to the Russian Communist Party.
|
|
The store has cultivated a broad customer base with its low prices, unique offerings, and charming store features.
|
|
I'll be off next week, so the next edition of Cultivated will hit your inbox on August 60.
|
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For centuries, sport was the exclusive province of males, the competitive arena where masculinity was cultivated and proven.
|
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If none are available, just use a mixture of cultivated pale-colored oyster mushrooms or royal trumpets instead.
|
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Taser cultivated chiefs and officers, treating them to junkets and conferences and hiring recently retired officials as consultants.
|
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For decades, they'd cultivated ideas and attitudes in a garden of global threats to American ideals and interests.
|
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Throughout, Ripert conveys the terror and dread the great chef cultivated; Robuchon wanted his cooks to fear him.
|
|
The earliest references to it being cultivated date back roughly to 3,400 BC, in lower Mesopotamia (southeast Asia).
|
|
It's a stock that would make any Bay Area chef jealous; both porcini and coccoli cannot be cultivated.
|
|
Why it matters: Trump has cultivated an extraordinarily adversarial relationship with comedians and the late-night TV circuit.
|
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Currently, it's hosting two small exhibitions that telegraph the respectably cultivated past I sensed some 22017 years ago.
|
|
It feels like the particular style of Trump supporters Jones has cultivated just can't accept that they won.
|
|
Meanwhile, he cultivated an air of mystery, giving few interviews and releasing a vague note about his sexuality.
|
|
You could really impact people's attitudes about what they consume and how the things they're eating are cultivated.
|
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Wild art stands to art world art as wild animals to house pets, or weeds to cultivated plants.
|
|
Ms. Salzberg and others discussed the six "perfections," actions that, if cultivated, lead to a more fulfilling life.
|
|
CHICAGO — For more than three decades, Michael Madigan has cultivated an unrivaled power base in Illinois Democratic politics.
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He has cultivated an image as a kind of iconoclast - a surfer and libertarian who supports legal marijuana.
|
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Johnson's mother, meanwhile, had a greenhouse in which she cultivated those most beautifully useless plants, orchids and cactuses.
|
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President Richard Nixon assiduously cultivated China's Mao Zedong, the shah of Iran and the Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev.
|
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Whitlow grass blooms in the poorest of soils — look for it where cultivated plants have had trouble establishing.
|
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Hormel's new brand will be called Happy Little Plants, and will be housed under its Cultivated Foods umbrella.
|
|
The flat land, though cultivated and presumably fertile, feels as bare and bland as a tract-house town.
|
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For decades, he has cultivated a style of Formalist Pop Surrealism that balances between fine and commercial art.
|
|
Mr. Trump's moves will also test the personal relationship he has cultivated with Mr. Xi, the Chinese president.
|
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Mr. Kushner, 37, has cultivated a personal relationship with Prince Mohammed, 32, meeting him over dinner in Riyadh.
|
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But other senior administration officials, who have cultivated ties to Australia, favor prioritizing other elements of the relationship.
|
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But the Ghost Ship fire exposed fault lines that rippled far beyond the community of artists they cultivated.
|
|
But things could have turned out differently if Nye's fascination for science hadn't been cultivated as a kid.
|
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" A man on his own "may be a cultivated individual," but "in a crowd, he is a barbarian.
|
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They've cultivated all of this outside traditional media, and in the process, they've established new pathways to fame.
|
|
This won her praise — and business — from New York's leading restaurateurs, whom she had cultivated through aggressive marketing.
|
|
Like a fun house for cultivated grown-ups, the Palais de Tokyo is full of wonder and diversion.
|
|
Children's resilience is cultivated when families can restructure after a parent's death, providing a stable and supportive environment.
|
|
For years he cultivated relationships with his clients, whose lives he knew only by planning for their deaths.
|
|
Over the years, Twitch chat has cultivated its own culture, including its own particular memes, emotes, and chants.
|
|
Mindful Chef's meat is 100% grass-fed and its vegetables are cultivated in the most natural way possible.
|
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Michael Milken, Drexel's junk-bond king, had cultivated a network of investors who were hungry for new issues.
|
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" James's biographer Leon Edel describes Pozzi as "a society doctor, a book-collector, and a generally cultivated conversationalist.
|
|
London has looked on with concern as Mr. Macron has cultivated close ties with Mr. Trump, while Mrs.
|
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Its clownishness and sexuality aside, the image seems squarely aimed at Mr. Putin's carefully cultivated reputation of hypermasculinity.
|
|
He has cultivated close ties to the Trump administration; his sister, Betsy DeVos, is Mr. Trump's education secretary.
|
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Gibson had worked in the sheriff's office for twenty-eight years, and he cultivated an aura of invincibility.
|
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The pair met as teen-agers in St. Louis, and had cultivated a loose collaboration for several years.
|
|
Ms. Grisham has not cultivated that level of respect, but it is not clear she seeks it, either.
|
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Such a relationship has to be cultivated and nurtured, and protected from the temptations that novelty can present.
|
|
But as Abercrombie cultivated its rebellious image with half-naked models, controversies piled up, and its popularity fell.
|
|
The state has a smart, tech-savvy workforce, cultivated in the renowned Research Triangle region that includes Raleigh.
|
|
At home, Mr. Johnson has cultivated a reputation as someone who will not back down from a fight.
|
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He took our jewels and cultivated opium addictions and connived for power, and then he starved us all.
|
|
Ms. Adichie has cultivated these two strands of her identity: the serious literary author and the fashion icon.
|
|
But perhaps more than any other media outlet, CNN has really cultivated a brand of antagonism toward Trump.
|
|
Gardens, of course, must be cultivated, and thus they are rich allegorical territory for storytellers of all sorts.
|
|
Kushner has cultivated a close relationship with Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, the kingdom's de facto leader.
|
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"Much of the hatred and discrimination against the Rohingya population has been cultivated over many years," said Smith.
|
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" The United States, which has cultivated closer ties with Myanmar in recent years, called the arrests "highly irregular.
|
|
In sunny south-facing valleys, grapes have been cultivated on steep, terraced slopes for 2,000 years or more.
|
|
An ancient, sandy-colored grain, fonio was cultivated for thousands of years across West Africa and still is.
|
|
For the Red Raiders, though, the bonhomie engineered at the ranch and cultivated ever since has been essential.
|
|
She, like her mother, cultivated her public persona to be the much needed protection for her self-esteem.
|
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The Weeknd has cultivated a specifically dark strain of R&B that exhales sleaze like a strong perfume.
|
|
They were as cultivated as people of their type needed to be, but not great theater-, concert- or cinemagoers.
|
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During his almost 20 years as an MEP he has cultivated deep connections with right-wing populists across Europe.
|
|
Penelope cultivated Hal's "murderous impulses" during their season 2 affair, all in the hopes of taking revenge against Riverdale.
|
|
But, perhaps because she doesn't fit the mold of a typical island politician, Lúgaro has cultivated a substantial following.
|
|
Nonetheless, the scope of the event cultivated buzz among street art aficionados and benefitted many of the participating artists.
|
|
For a flu mist, the cultivated virus strains are weakened, not killed, and the production process is slightly different.
|
|
He became a patron of the arts and cultivated political ties in Spain and in his native Zhejiang Province.
|
|
Trump and his son-in-law and adviser Jared Kushner have cultivated deep personal relationships with the crown prince.
|
|
After months of carefully engaging with ads, I've finally cultivated what I want to see on my Facebook feed.
|
|
He makes mention of crops that were cultivated in the region, including harvests of wheat, rye, barley, and oats.
|
|
For countless generations, my ancestors cultivated olives and wheat in Ein Yabrud, providing for their families with their bounty.
|
|
During the campaign Mr Bannon cultivated the support of the "alt-right", a loose collection of far-right groups.
|
|
Sanders, in the months since 2016, has cultivated a closer relationship with leaders like Al Sharpton and Jesse Jackson.
|
|
He is one of the few Westerners who has cultivated a relationship with Kim, over several trips to Pyongyang.
|
|
He has taken charge of all the most important portfolios, cultivated a huge personal following and purged his opponents.
|
|
Today's superstars, multimillionaires enjoying their bounties, have cultivated a taste for the finer things: wine, cars, jewelry, luxury fashion.
|
|
The peppery bite is in full swing in this new, deceptively delicate-looking watercress being cultivated primarily in Florida.
|
|
The startup has already cultivated an active online community of 2,500 creators excited about creating and sharing this content.
|
|
Solidarity, by contrast, had to be cultivated: It was the practice of creating social ties, actively inventing collective identity.
|
|
Bell says that Śiṣya will incorporate many of the design elements that he has cultivated over the last decade.
|
|
It is this second feature that enables liberalism's bad ideas to be pruned and the good to be cultivated.
|
|
The publisher's online subscription business, embarked upon somewhat sheepishly in 2011, has now cultivated over 2.2 million paying readers.
|
|
Two days before the presidential election, a businessman who cultivated links with Smer was charged with ordering Kuciak's murder.
|
|
But the circumstances surrounding this relationship meant that it cultivated legions of skeptics long before there were rings involved.
|
|
Brown cultivated an affable, bipartisan image, but he wasn't willing to buck conservative party leaders in the US Senate.
|
|
Kushner has cultivated a personal relationship with MBS while serving as senior White House adviser for Middle East affairs.
|
|
Anton Shekhovtsov, a Ukrainian political scientist, has studied the links Russia has cultivated with an array of European parties.
|
|
He believes high-tech urban farms are the way ahead for the city, where more land cannot be cultivated.
|
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The bonds aren't always cultivated or maintained in the same way, and different friendships tend to have different dynamics.
|
|
This password manager has cultivated a following of millions and for good reason: it just gets the job done.
|
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Solano also cultivated an unusual "spy" within the ranks of the paramilitaries: his cousin, who had joined the Urabeños.
|
|
And, crucially, her message is landing — thanks at least in part to that long-cultivated girl-next-door image.
|
|
The worms were cultivated in Petri dishes at about 20 degrees Celsius, or 68 degrees Fahrenheit, for several weeks.
|
|
As a kid, my folks cultivated a dual identity within the Lebanon-like bubble of our southwestern Ontario home.
|
|
Recovery could take as long as a decade, and its carefully cultivated "halo" may never return, experts told CNBC.
|
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According to Marturano, below are the four fundamentals of professional excellence that can be cultivated through mindful leadership training.
|
|
When the researchers analyzed the fossilized fungus gardens, they found that the fungus species only grows when it's cultivated.
|
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A statesmanlike image cultivated at the summit might encourage Mr Abe to take advantage of the opposition's present disarray.
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Booker and Harris "have the greatest understanding of Silicon Valley and have cultivated the deepest relationships," Conway told me.
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Representative Brian Fitzpatrick cultivated a moderate reputation, and Democrats weren't able to land a star recruit here early on.
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For five years (or four, if you're Zayn), the boys cultivated easily accessible personalities in the spirit of professionalism.
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"'Into You' is a great example of the sound we've cultivated on our upcoming album Love Luxury," she said.
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Garland, 85033, is the chief judge of the D.C. court and has cultivated a moderate reputation in Washington. Sen.
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It depicts teenage rebellion as a potential asset to be cultivated, rather than as a threat to be quashed.
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Washington Post reporter Josh Dawsey says he's cultivated a relationship with President Trump, in part by being unfailingly obedient.
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Her parents were impoverished farmers who cultivated corn and beans until a drought forced them to abandon their land.
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Kojève was born in 22011 into a well-off Moscow family, and he was raised in a cultivated atmosphere.
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But despite the disparity in size, both chains have cultivated some of the most loyal followings in the industry.
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But there are places that have cultivated an audience who will go to see something they've never heard of.
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What the Dossier Center's documents show President Bashir cultivated a close relationship with the Kremlin, visiting Moscow in 2017.
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For me, natural phenomena created an opportunity to take a closer look on the sensitivity that society had cultivated.
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Its construction effectively denied local farmers access to the lands that generations upon generations of their families had cultivated.
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Lola, I got this wonderful tension between the two of you, and wondered how you cultivated your characters offset.
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Smith-Schuster has also cultivated a goofball persona, so you know it's not mean spirited, he's just trolling folks.
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So he made an offer to NSM's president, Jeff Schoep, whom he had cultivated a relationship with for years.
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The sources Mr. Friedman cultivated as a reporter became his clients or instruments of lobbying pressure for Mr. Manafort.
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On set, the stars deliberately cultivated an idealized simulacrum of the broader industry — female-led, open, nonhierarchical, mutually supportive.
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The retailer JD.com, which had around 300 million buyers, has courted upmarket brands and cultivated a reputation for reliability.
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She cultivated characters that were the opposite of her real self, all of them designed to make people laugh.
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Q&A Introduced to Europe from the Americas, the common bean was cultivated into a staggering number of varieties.
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So the conclusion is that it must be a kind of passion, and I think passions should be cultivated.
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Rogan has cultivated a persona as an easygoing bro, willing to entertain out-there ideas before swatting them aside.
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