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227 Sentences With "denotes"

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

We can see that each record is formatted like so (I redacted the inmate name myself): The tag tr denotes a row in a table, while td denotes a table cell.
Of course, as Joyce denotes, it's an "out there" idea.
Spotify's logo, with is three curved stripes, denotes sound waves.
A reading above 50.0 denotes expansion, and below 50.0 contraction.
A number 6 denotes styrene, which is a known carcinogen.
In native parlance, the word denotes Manhattan below Fourteenth Street.
Any reading above 50 denotes economic growth in the sector.
Heroes whose image denotes a certain kind of dignified black person.
Red denotes places where expanding urban areas will compete with farmland.
The blue line denotes 0 degrees Celsius, or 32 degrees Fahrenheit.
His Instagram denotes a willingness to be in on the joke.
Redskin denotes someone as formidable, to be respected and even feared.
" Yet the character pronounced rei more often denotes "command" than "beauty.
Start addressing yourself in a way that denotes care and compassion.
As the term "in situ" denotes, the cancer has not spread.
Second Net profit row denotes profit attributable to owners ofthe parent
An X denotes the house was checked and cleared by rescuers.
This pulse ring denotes where the rock is breaking or slipping.
Quantitative easing or QE denotes large-scale central bank asset purchases.
A reading below 50.0 signifies contraction and a reading above denotes expansion.
"Addiction", however, denotes that there's something about the medium itself that's addictive.
We have this sensitivity because bitterness in nature most frequently denotes poison.
In the Army, the rank of captain denotes a relatively junior officer.
A number below 50 denotes contraction and indicates a possible economic slowdown.
Street Easy's price history denotes that cut happened in two separate $500,000 increments.
The Fat Amy conundrum is an interesting one because, ultimately, it denotes progress.
The name Mauna Kea, stemming from "Mauna (mountain) a Wākea," denotes this genealogy.
The number was well above the 50 mark that denotes expansion in activity.
The Levant denotes an area larger than Syria, including Lebanon, Jordan and Israel.
A number below 50 shows significant hardship, a number above that threshold denotes privilege.
A number below 503 shows significant hardship, a number above that threshold denotes privilege.
We've changed the wording to reflect the legal definition of 'gamble,' which denotes chance.
Part of what "high-end escort" denotes is a more "sophisticated" sense of sexuality.
Pale skin denotes a life spent indoors rather than outside working like a farmer.
Second Net profit row denotes profit attributable to owners ofthe parent To see Company Overview
Activists on the front lines of fighting racism say it denotes white domination and superiority.
He later posted a second, shorter video in which he denotes "Charlottesville 3.0" a success.
" And, a three-dot ellipsis denotes an "awkward or annoyed silence," or "are you serious?
The name One River refers to the Hudson, the river that denotes said creative impediment.
Jayus , in Indonesian, denotes a joke told so poorly that people can't help but laugh.
A positive slope denotes an increase in the y-values as the x-value increases.
It denotes the ludicrousness of whatever just transpired, while highlighting the general mood of the time.
This is what MB means by "coupé," which of course traditionally denotes a two-door hardtop.
Beli means white in Serbian, while Preletacevic denotes somebody who switches political party for personal gain.
A number below 50 means a sector is contracting, while a number above 50 denotes growth.
This sort of violation denotes rape on many levels: spiritually, mentally, emotionally and, yes, sometimes physically.
That's a head fake: the word is used in the French sense, and denotes more appetizers.
Conversely, a negative slope denotes a decrease in the y-values as the x-value increases.
Syaf is Indonesian artist, and in Indonesia, "212" denotes a mass protest against Jakarta's Christian Gov.
"I feel like Modi ji has done a lot," he said, using a suffix that denotes respect.
Your sign denotes where along the ecliptic the sun was at your birth, relative to these segments.
The map, created by NASA, denotes fires with red dots, based on heat measurements that detect fires.
In most walks of life, 19093-K denotes a long-distance run or a sum of money.
The listing denotes a building that is of special interest, which warrants every effort to preserve it.
ET, Thursday, June 1 TV: ABC Live stream: WatchESPN Finals schedule *Denotes if necessary Golden State vs.
Eric Swalwell's (D-Calif.) tip: Look for the telltale blue check mark that denotes a verified account.
It's the feeling that you're watching something that denotes seriousness, if not in subject, then in creation.
And in Greek — the language, not the yogurt — it denotes a person who is liable to suffer.
"I think he's conjuring ideals of domestic contentment — the comfort and stability a carpet denotes," she said.
Laojia, translated literally, means "old home" and the phrase denotes the ancestral wellspring of a paternal lineage.
"To me, franchise denotes multiple films or multiple TV shows living at the same time," he said.
The expression — literally "pure wool" — denotes anyone with a Québécois last name and the appropriate skin tone.
An index value above 50 indicates growth in trade and a value below 50 denotes a contraction.
But, at the end of the day, 'He's a Libertarian,' and that denotes some loose screws, maybe.
The comedy of her chasing down a chicken denotes the infantilizing of women, particularly in traditional family structures.
This means that something beyond what a word denotes—what it refers to—must cement it as profanity.
For fans of the sport, yes, his jersey comes with the coveted "C" that denotes the team captain.
This is usually because the label denotes family group shots with color-coordinating ensembles or worse, matching sweaters.
It is most often translated as "thug," but the word also denotes a certain amount of glamorous swagger.
The silver indicates operational areas, while the white denotes parts of the yacht for guest and entertainment spaces.
In fact, carried interest simply denotes the capital gains that an investment adviser receives on a business investment.
The method resembles a hieroglyphic code that denotes the time and size of visiting groups, and other details.
In this particular case it is, but according to Veale it still denotes that it's an invasion of privacy.
That was ahead of the preliminary reading of 52.7, however, and comfortably over the 50 mark that denotes growth.
Users can identify Canvas ads by a little upwards arrow that denotes that the full-screen experience will unfold.
Their adventurous pursuit is serious enough that the Prospectors even have a uniform that denotes membership to the group.
The cake — not pie, as the name denotes — is filled with a layer of custard and topped with chocolate.
One culinary-focused streamer, Cooking For Noobs, actually has a section in her profile that denotes her relationship status.
The first verse denotes profession (for boys)/husband's profession (for girls): Tinker, tailor, soldier, sailor, gentleman, apothecary, ploughboy, thief.
A sign on the box now denotes the traditional "location" of Vladimir Ilyich, a 1929 monument under state protection.
For businesses, rule of law denotes a predictable legal framework in which to operate, to hire, to make investments.
The Plus, as its name denotes, is more powerful than the standard Echo, and costs $50 more at $150.
"Hand brake on" denotes his side's lack of killer instinct; "little bit niggle" covers Jack Wilshere's lack of serviceable ankles.
Upspeak or uptalk denotes ending a sentence with a rising-pitch intonation, which can sound like you're asking a question.
"Eros" denotes passion and desire, "ludus" refers to flirtatious, playful affection, and "storgē" describes familial or companionate bonds of care.
The German word Kindertagesstätte, which is often shortened to Kita, denotes a day care center for children of any age.
The dashed circle surrounding the center denotes the average of all songs, with values beyond the circle being above average.
Ment At K-pop concerts, this denotes the time when those on stage introduce themselves, speak to fans, and give speeches.
Other esoteric icons include a circle wrapped around a horizontal line with a 'T' beneath it, which denotes a post office.
It denotes the idea of interactive infinity—a game that you can play forever, the one game to rule them all.
The MOA denotes a season by the planting and harvesting year, not by the actual marketing year into which it falls.
The phrase "net neutrality" denotes that data flowing over the internet should be treated equally regardless of its source or destination.
One Grinch denotes an annoyance, and five Grinches go to those who have undermined the news media or the general discourse.
It also applies to groups of sports fans in Italy, including soccer, and denotes those who also boisterously celebrate their teams.
Though the level is usually reported as a simple number, it actually denotes the percentage of manufacturers planning to expand operations.
I reject the notion that compliance with the law and morality are the same thing — or that one denotes the other.
App performance class for smartphones and tablets The App Performance Class denotes which MicroSD cards are best for smartphones and tablets.
He's described making the film as a "pilgrimage" of sorts, which denotes both a journey and a struggle, and it shows.
Twitch's partner badge is one of the harder verifications to get online, and it denotes a level of status on the site.
Does Indiana Jones become Indiana Joan, wherein the reboot is set in a dystopian world (or Russia) where last name denotes gender?
We live in a consumerist society where the ability to buy things both denotes status and operates as a stress release mechanism.
Based on intraday trading, stocks descended just below the 20 percent-loss threshold that customarily denotes the birth of a bear market.
The oft-used "ESG" acronym denotes a strategy whereby a company's environmental, social and governance factors are evaluated alongside traditional financial metrics.
It denotes a noncompetitive, laissez-faire existence based on the idea that little that is out of reach is worth striving for.
At present, the total debt of the airline is estimated at around 60,000 crore ($8.3 billion.) One crore denotes ten million rupees.
The Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Wind Scale denotes the maximum wind speed of a storm, ranging from a Category 1 to Category 33.
Allahabad, a city of more than a million people, is now called Prayagraj, a Sanskrit word that denotes a place of sacrifice.
The title denotes equal amounts of pride and pain, translating as both "my fatherland is my love" and "my fatherland is my scar".
They finished the regular season ranked 12th in the NBA in defensive efficiency, outside the zone that typically denotes a true title contender.
In gospel music, form and content are joined: the term denotes both a style and a message, leaving no room for theological ambiguity.
It identified three categories: Old Masters (a description that denotes the longstanding gender bias), "blue chip" works, and the "speculative" or "growth" arena.
Deriving from the Arabic wadi , for "valley," the "Guad" in Spanish geographical names denotes a river—Guadiana, Guadalupe, Guadalete, Gua­dalquivir (Wadi al-Kabir).
Weight gain and loss are part of the job, but it's the kind of thing that denotes serious commitment and feeds awards campaigns.
A red bar denotes periods within 10 trading days of a record high in which the aggregate of these variables have been observed.
It is measured on the Kelvin scale and denotes the temperature required for a black object (think charcoal) to emit a certain color.
Especially because Intel does not adhere to strict rules with how it names these series—but as a rule the letter denotes two things.
The term denotes the systematic practice of lenders denying services to people in a residential area because of its racial composition, not their creditworthiness.
The moniker "earmarks" denotes a practice where House leaders buy members' votes by guaranteeing funding for pet projects via must-pass government funding bills.
You can eat it for bonus points, and the kind of fruit denotes the level you are on (cherry, strawberry, orange, and so on).
They use examples from domestic life to illustrate their aesthetics: Joelson apparently doesn't like closing closet doors — it denotes a system of closed deductions.
"Formation of monthly shooting star denotes sudden reduction in bullish momentum," Stéphanie Aymes, head of technical analysis at Societe Generale, said in a note.
It is painful and expensive for banks to be left holding paper and denotes aggressive debt market conditions despite a weakening macro economic climate.
The "modular" part of this watch denotes that you'll be able to customize a ton of the parts of the watch before you buy it.
Each filled square denotes a seat won by the party; each empty square shows additional seats it would have gained under a directly proportional system.
One source said the project is nicknamed "Google Ayosh," where "Ayosh" means occupied Palestinian territories and "Google" denotes the technology's ability to search for people.
But, for those who are still in the natural hair game like Whitney White—who also does beauty vlogging—hair denotes something about the self.
In particular the hike of fees on short-dated spreads, first and foremost "tom-next", which denotes the spread between tomorrow and the day after.
Daw is one such prefix; it translates literally as "aunt" but means something more like "madame," and denotes an older or married woman of substance.
The scene denotes an intimacy between the former foes, not just based on the proximity and shared doors of their bedrooms, but through their conversation.
It denotes encompassing all the resources that a state can focus — military, economic, political and cultural — to further its own interests in a global landscape.
That is because the word "high" in the phrase "high crimes and misdemeanors" denotes serious offenses that harm our system of government under the Constitution.
In this context, Namibia's 'AAA(zaf)' rating denotes Fitch's expectations of the default risk relative to other issuers or obligations rated on the South African scale.
Facebook and Twitter could also censor GIFs via search terms more aggressively, but this is also problematic if the subject the word denotes is too general.
Many of the women appear uncomfortably young, particularly in videos where the title denotes a high school student or features a woman in a schoolgirl uniform.
As a final touch, paper ruffles dress up the end of each drumstick and and a line of frosting drawn on the side denotes a wing.
For decades Muslim countries outside the Gulf (where the garb is common) have discouraged the full-face veil—and the strict form of Islam it denotes.
But its meaning in German is a little more specific: It denotes a "storm of outrage" on the internet, such as blowback generated over social media.
"The truth will not run away from us" – this remark by Gottfried Keller denotes the exact place where historical materialism breaks through historicism's picture of history.
Indeed, though The Modist, the name of Ms. Guenez's website, is a clear nod to "modest," it also denotes a "modiste," a fashionable milliner or dressmaker.
In the lexicon of infectious diseases, the term 'Patient Zero' denotes the primary case of an outbreak, the first person to show symptoms of an illness.
In Buddhism, the lotus denotes a particular significance: a flower rooted in muck that rises above the scum and mud to unfurl on the water's surface.
A large port denotes a sharp, invisible border separating the grey urban sprawl from a leaf-shaped green reserve with an ecological sports park at its core.
Green provided several images as proof to the publication, including an image of his replacement box with a black square which denotes it's got a safe battery.
It denotes a common slang (most famously, saying "kill moe" to express agreement, disappointment, or anything in between) and dress (recently, a love for New Balance sneakers).
Mr. Motasim, 45, comes from the Taliban heartland of Kandahar Province and bears the title "sayed," which denotes that his family is descended from the Prophet Muhammad.
More performance art than news, their appearance is fodder for ridicule, but there's nothing funny about the larger implications of "After Truth," and what that title denotes.
Divide it into sections and it references anatomy while evoking sexuality; study it as a singular form and it denotes vital personhood, resistance, independence, and material aptitude.
The popular acronym denotes when a company's environmental, social and governance factors are taken into consideration when someone is choosing whether or not to buy a stock.
The academic term "cultural Marxism" is a positive one that denotes the spread of Marxist values throughout culture, but its common use today is much more pejorative.
People who know him say an unflappable demeanor denotes an attention to detail, a workaholic who came in as an outsider to win the party leadership in 2016.
A constellation of satellite dishes denotes a neighborhood in Istanbul, boisterous dancing crowds represent the streets of Havana, pixelated water and boats show the Huangpu River in Shanghai.
For a company like Apple, which uses a white macintosh, deploying a symbol is a power move that denotes just how omnipresent the brand is across the globe.
The nine-dash line, which denotes China's unilateral claim to the potentially mineral-rich area, is official Chinese government policy and features on all maps sold inside China.
Singapore's Global Pathfinder Database of the International Centre for Political Violence and Terrorism Research says the increased magnitude, scale and intensity of the attacks denotes a growing threat.
A black collar means a 100% Ibérico pig, reared free-range and fattened on bellotas; white denotes a pig reared in feedlots and sired by a non-Ibérico.
Ten masked members of the Qassam Brigades, Hamas's armed wing, were stationed in front of the tent, a positioning that usually denotes the death of a top fighter.
The Commodity Futures Trading Commission's regulation 50.4(a) denotes four classes of interest rate swaps — fixed-to-floating swaps, basis swaps, forward rate agreements and overnight index swaps.
So the NC-17 designation, by contrast, has always been a true rating; rather than meaning "unrated," it denotes that a film contains particularly mature or violent content.
In thermodynamics it denotes the amount of heat — wasted energy — inevitably produced by a steam engine, for example as it goes through its cycle of expansion and contraction.
"So we instituted these little ticking clocks that essentially denotes that change is afoot and these executives likely won't be in the role that they are right now."
More significant, it denotes the nearish point — the Census Bureau has it at about 2044 — when the whole country's white population is expected to fall below 50 percent.
Largo is similar in speed to the tempo "lento" (see No. 8 below), but it also denotes a composition that should be played more broadly and with emotion.
If Thrill Collins was the precise opposite of what was anticipated then surely this statement denotes that "Baggy Mondays" will be the absolute nadir of what was anticipated.
The inhuman coloration to their skin and general lankiness denotes an otherness, but everything else feels oriented towards sexiness, creating a line of mean, angular villainesses—like fuckable Lamborghinis.
Assuming the storm keeps up, the solar wind could supercharge the aurora borealis, pushing the oval — which denotes where people can see the cosmic lights — farther south than usual.
LONDON (Reuters) - A look at the road to Wimbledon final for Spain's Garbine Muguruza and American Venus Williams ahead of Saturday's clash on Centre Court (prefix number denotes seeding).
"Best" often denotes technical pugilists—the ones who rely on the holy trinity of brains, skills and good defense to prolong their short shelf life in the fight game.
For Erdogan, the word "terrorist" chiefly denotes the Kurdish militants of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers' Party, or P.K.K., which has fought an intermittent insurgency against Turkey since the 1980s.
That was still above the 50 level that denotes growth but down from May's 18-month high of 56.0 and slightly below the median forecast of a Reuters poll.
A slope equal to zero denotes no change in value and the line is horizontal because there is no change in the y-values as the x-values increase.
MELBOURNE (Reuters) - A look at the records of American Venus Williams and Switzerland's Belinda Bencic before their first round match at the Australian Open on Monday (prefix number denotes seeding).
Most of the French improvement came in the services sector, with the manufacturing index actually falling short of expectations although it remained well above the 54.43 line that denotes growth.
"Azalea" is a beautiful word in any context, but in this stark verbal landscape it stands out like the garish shrub it denotes, here reduced to its bare winter interest.
For instance, we use the hyphen in compounds denoting national origin, like Japanese-American, but not when the phrase denotes current group membership rather than origin, as in French Canadian.
For a movie, according to the statistics that have appeared in the earnings reports, a view denotes that 70 percent of it was watched within four weeks of its premiere.
"(The term) denotes that a single leader is the main one to focus on, as opposed to just the first among equals in a rule by committee situation," Wasserstrom said.
The responses are then converted into a numerical scale between 0 and 100, where 100 denotes being entirely happy or confident, and zero being not at all happy or confident.
The one big emotional payoff was Jaime knighting Brienne, a moment that denotes a much more powerful connection between the two that Tormund and his jokes can ever hope to achieve.
NEW YORK (Reuters) - A look at the road to the U.S. Open final for Rafa Nadal and Kevin Anderson ahead of Sunday's clash at the Arthur Ashe Stadium (prefix denotes seeding).
"The United States: Her Natural and Industrial Resources" shows just that: the legend in the corner denotes kinds of land use (pastoral, fallow land, etc.) and resources (uranium, wind power, etc.).
It coincides with a Serbian Orthodox Christian festival and denotes the Serbian territory's 1992 secession from Bosnia, which set off a bloody three-year war that ended with the Dayton accords.
That's because the lowercase v denotes membership in a group called the Vitézi Rend (Order of Vitéz), a far-right nationalist group in Hungary originally founded by fascist dictator Miklós Horthy.
A good case in point is the current fashion for denouncing "cultural appropriation," which denotes the use by people of one culture (especially privileged ones) of the symbols or ideas of another.
As the election cycle has progressed, those hopes have waned – the Cook Political report lists the district as currently "likely" Republican, a designation it says denotes the race is not currently competitive.
The 77-year-old businessman, whose signature denotes the company's logo, had built two lavish resorts in the former Portuguese colony of Macau where only six companies have licenses to operate casinos.
Receiving a 2, which Novartis said denotes meeting expectations, or a 3, for "role model" behavior, would make them eligible for a bonus of up to 35 percent of their total compensation.
" This denotes an old-fashioned kind of acting in which singers take up a fixed position onstage, "park" there and sing, the implication being that opera performers attend solely to their "barking.
But there's always some kind of disjuncture, a disjuncture that arises from photography's tendency to show only so much but to often mean much more: A photograph connotes more than it denotes.
The 76 year old businessman, whose signature denotes the company's logo, had built two lavish resorts in the former Portuguese colony of Macau where only six firms have licenses to operate casinos.
To have the top Democrat and Republican on those committees co-sponsoring these bills denotes a real intention to pass something — if they can first resolve this dispute over payments and arbitration.
The term comes from the Japanese otaku, and denotes those who pursue obsessive interests—think a "nerd" or an "anorak" with few social skills and a fetish for some aspect of popular culture.
Because there is strong social consensus that "racism" denotes something bad, but no social consensus whatsoever on whether Donald Trump is bad, to call anything Trump says or does "racist" is necessarily controversial.
NEW YORK (Reuters) - A look at the 215 record of Spain's Garbine Muguruza and Czech Petra Kvitova ahead of their fourth round match at the U.S. Open on Sunday (prefix number denotes seeding).
The finished script, running 88 minutes and credited to both men, elegantly fuses the plot of "In a Grove" with the setting and title of "Rashomon," whose name denotes a historic Kyoto gate.
Protease inhibitors are another class of antiviral drugs, like lopinavir and ritonavir used to treat HIV (the -vir suffix is used to denote an antiviral drug, similar to how -cillin denotes an antibiotic).
Earlier in the day, credit rating agency Standard & Poor's cut Toshiba's rating to "CCC+" from "B-", pushing Toshiba one notch deeper into junk territory with a rating that denotes substantial risks for investors.
In Japan — which has a word, "gaman," that denotes a sense of bearing with it — the elderly are perhaps more susceptible than anyone to feeling they should simply put up with the heat.
That rating denotes a building with at least four high-speed internet service providers, robust redundancy of components in case of failure and the capacity to support new digital services, among other features.
However, credit quality has deteriorated notably over the years, with emerging market debt, excluding China, carrying an average rating of slightly below "BB+," which is the lowest since 2005 and denotes a speculative outlook.
" In his new book, "Little Black Stretchy Pants," Wilson wrote: "To me athleisure denotes a non-athletic, smoking, Diet Coke-drinking woman in a New Jersey shopping mall wearing an unflattering pink velour tracksuit.
Apple has also seems to have tweaked how it denotes an LTE watch: rather than filling the digital crown with a red dot, it now just features a red ring, which is much subtler.
In the DSM-V, the new term to describe problematic drinking is alcohol-use disorder — a clunky but more expansive phrase that denotes a spectrum of risky drinking from mild to moderate to severe.
More mayors are shedding the sash that denotes their authority, as the appeal of presiding over the tricolor flag that flutters outside every mairie, or town hall, is not what it used to be.
If rumors of movement toward a settlement should be borne out, the global economy should be ready to begin an upswing from short of the 2 percent growth barrier that generally denotes a recession.
Class X flares are the most intense flares, and the number attached to it denotes its strength, where X6 is twice as intense as X2000, and X1503 is three times as intense, and so on.
Output in the "Oceania" region, which denotes Australia plus the Tomago smelter in New Zealand, slumped by more than 27604 percent in the first four months of this year, according to the International Aluminum Institute.
On a recent radio segment, I found out that a newer term for "cisgender" is "chromosomal," as in "chromosomal female," which denotes a person who identifies with the sex (female) she was assigned at birth.
"Achieving deficit reduction through such unpredictable revenue sources denotes weaker fiscal policy effectiveness than if consolidation were achieved through more durable and predictable revenue sources, such as tax revenue," analysts at Moody's Investor Service said.
Output in the "Oceania" region, which denotes Australia plus the Tomago smelter in New Zealand, slumped by more than 27604 percent in the first four months of this year, according to the International Aluminium Institute.
Some developers have a special branded page to make all of this even more clear — Final Fantasy-maker Square Enix, for example, has a page on the App Store that clearly denotes its official status.
"Social isolation denotes few social connections or interactions, whereas loneliness involves the subjective perception of isolation — the discrepancy between one's desired and actual level of social connection," they wrote in the journal Heart last year.
Fences — both the play itself and the word — denotes the literal barriers that Troy erects around the house for Rose, to both delineate their property and also keep out the evil that lurks around the perimeters.
It's a Retina strip that sits on top of the keyboard (Retina commonly denotes a super high DPI) and is a replacement for the function keys that have existed on laptops for what feels like forever.
Measures of output and new orders also fell below the 50 mark that denotes growth for the first time since early 2013 due to weaker market conditions at home and uncertainty related to the EU referendum.
It denotes the shared industrial design of the new HTC Desire 2530 and Desire 28 devices, both running Android Marshmallow on a set of low-end components and encasing it in a fun, prettily designed exterior.
More likely, it denotes the end of one stage in the evolution of communication and the beginning of another—just as the Gutenberg printing press put paid to the livelihood of monks who produced illuminated manuscripts.
Achieving the room's peculiar lines was not the only way Ravenswood brought Van Gogh's painting to life; the very brushstrokes themselves were duplicated, providing the sense of texture and electric life which denotes the artist's work.
Avenir, the new sub-brand from Buick, denotes a top-of-the-line model, and comes with a revised mesh grill that is much more fitting for a $59,425 luxury SUV than the standard chrome grill.
PATH TO THE FINAL (prefix denotes seeding): 1st round - bt Misaki Doi (Japan) 6-7(20) 214-26(23) 27-25 53nd round - bt Alexandra Dulgheru (Romania) 25-26 22-4 3rd round - bt Madison Brengle (U.
"My hope is that we revive 'monopoly' as a core piece of political rhetoric that broadly denotes dominant firms with pernicious powers," he says, rather than as a "technical" term referring to one company cornerning a market.
The enthusiasm of Ms. Eilish's devotees denotes a striking turnabout, a new generation's rejection of the flirty babe aesthetic embodied by contemporary idols like Ariana Grande in favor of something more crazily improvised and less strenuously sexual.
As the latest advance in mobile communications, 5G denotes a new era in which networks will adapt to applications, and performance will be tailored precisely to the needs of the user, according to trade body, the GSM Association.
By utilizing domiciliary objects and effeminate colors, Renee denotes the traditional role of women being confined to the kitchen, the seedy underbelly of traditional households, and the pervasive need to be viewed as perfect by the outside world.
Trump meets with more than 200 House Republicans Comey also testified that there were three emails found on Clinton's servers bearing the letter "C" which denotes they were classified, in apparent contradiction of the former secretary of state's statements.
Markit's euro zone composite PMI, seen as a good guide to economic growth, fell to 25 last month from January's 1003, its lowest reading since the start of 2100, but was still over the 251.2 mark that denotes growth.
The Washington D.C. team, whose nickname denotes decades of persecution and violence against Native American peoples, and is defined as a racial slur in every major English dictionary, will compete in the 2016 National Football League (NFL) International Series.
If coolness denotes — or once denoted — a certain indifference to what people think, then these middle-aged mothers with their silly, adorable shtick and their paunchy husbands are perhaps the only cool people left on our try-hard planet.

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