Derive Systems, an automotive technology company, is soon unveiling a new device called Derive Teenage Driver.
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It's where I derive pleasure, it's where I derive reward, it's where ... I feel emotionally alive.
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In the same way that Guardians derive their power from the Traveler, so too do Taken derive theirs from the Darkness.
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U.S. S&P 500 companies derive roughly half of all their sales overseas, and they derive less than 10 percent of their sales from Europe, according to S&P Dow Jones Indices data.
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Miami did derive plenty of help in the second inning.
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They often develop advanced logistics solutions to derive additional efficiency.
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Most cryptocurrency exchange sites instead derive their traffic from coinmarketcap.
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That said, I still derive great joy from Black Twitter.
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It is a good exercise to derive these equations yourself.
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That doesn't mean she doesn't derive pleasure from sex, though.
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It may derive from the restless politics of Maddow's parents.
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Trump doesn't derive his views from a core belief system.
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Particular forms of intelligence derive from large groups working together.
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It also plans to derive more revenue from digital services.
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But the danger is to derive everything from this tradition.
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Yet we can derive that her life did not end easily.
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Lots of dyes used in sodas and colas derive from insects.
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They don't derive power from the men in their lives anymore.
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Quinn said those contracts derive their value from the Trump name.
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Where does this dramatic obsession with death and sickness derive from?
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Scarcity is, for the most part, where Breyers derive their value.
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These women derive pride and status from their homes and families.
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Macquerie also estimates that shareholders "derive negative value" from these projects.
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The satellites derive images from lesser traveled parts of the planet.
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Presidents derive their power from two sources — the Constitution and Congress.
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No one seems to derive any pleasure from Devon's supreme talent.
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And what general principles can you derive from studying tangled hair?
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We derive our enjoyment from the four-way connection that occurs.
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Much of the energy we could derive could come from ocean.
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It's from this that we derive Thanksgiving as we know it.
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A woman's value doesn't derive from her status as a mother.
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And what did you derive from your time with Tom Ford?
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PATIENCE. Both derive from the same Latin root pati (to suffer).
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Having measured Avogadro's constant, Dr. Bettin could derive the Planck constant.
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"We can't help but derive human meanings from them," she said.
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The agency considered its interrogation program to derive from that authority.
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People derive tremendous joy from being part of a winning team.
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His surname did not derive from the Russian word for reprobate.
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From these bets, we can derive probabilities of each candidate winning.
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Mr. Tuymans's fascination with moral complexities may derive from his upbringing.
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People spend time and resources building them, and derive value from them.
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Chipmakers, which derive much of their revenue from China, fell even more.
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Localytics breaks down iPhone first week usage to derive market-share numbers.
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Many managers derive a lot of their status from their oversight role.
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"We gain insight from prototypes that help us derive requirements," said Rugen.
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Don't get me wrong —introverts derive plenty of use from the internet.
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Companies that derive a large portion of their sales in China advanced.
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Negative rating action could derive from deterioration in Zhangzhou Municipality's credit profile.
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After all, we derive so much more from fiction than pure entertainment.
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So what can we derive from the Yank's managerial debut with Swansea?
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If our music matters enough to them, hopefully they'll derive some meaning.
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Chipmakers, which derive much of their revenue from China, fell even lower.
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Negative rating action could derive from deterioration in Zhangzhou municipality's credit profile.
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We do think their powers derive from the Children of the Forest.
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Most often, they derive their meaning from comparisons across time and space.
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These qualities derive from the excellent acidity in many of these wines.
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We also spend money on, and derive revenue from, brand-building activities.
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One is that they derive from the relationships we have with them.
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The other is that they derive from the mere fact of kinship.
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They derive their worth from labor that Apple wants to be invisible.
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Also, when we derive this using energy, there is no time variable.
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We derive value from those annoying moments when we're compelled to dawdle.
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CREATING DRAMA The drama in "Pacific Overtures" doesn't actually derive from diplomacy.
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"To derive some lessons learned from that is definitely important," she says.
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And she appears to derive great pleasure in getting on his nerves.
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Our elected leaders derive their power from the consent of the governed.
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The material's unique molecular properties derive from constituent proteins that repel each other.
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Smaller, less obvious terriers also derive, at least in part, from blood sport.
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Can't people derive inspiration from his teachings whether he actually walked the Earth?
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We want to derive more difficult relationships between people, locations and so forth.
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Companies that derive a large portion of their sales in China also advanced.
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Instead, it uses "swarms," or the hive mind to derive forecasts and conclusions.
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Pussy (n) may derive from the Old Norse puss meaning pocket, or pouch.
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So what can we derive from this photo, this photo of Donald Trump?
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The truest stories derive from a single, overriding skill: the ability to listen.
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Some claim the differences derive from the varying demographics of the two states.
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Some of the problems derive from esophageal conditions such as acid reflux disease.
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|
Being respectful of limits doesn't even begin to derive his cautiousness with me.
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|
Rather, they derive value from the invisible labor that goes into making them.
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It led me to derive my identity and self-worth from my work.
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They enjoy these things without irony and derive inspiration from the purest form.
|
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They derive some pleasure from (or lack thereof) choosing Stranger Things over Statistics.
|
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Companies that derive a large portion of their sales in China also slipped.
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|
In most cases — though not all — these ethics derive from a faith tradition.
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|
The opportunities to derive recommendations from these data sets are clear, Wachter said.
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|
Meanwhile, companies that derive a large portion of their sales in China advanced.
|
|
That trust must derive from the ability of people to ensure their privacy.
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|
But the volume of data makes it almost impossible to derive meaning from.
|
|
The thing about monsters is that they derive their power from the unknown.
|
|
"We derive no joy from reporting the same story every year," Schmidt said.
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|
Mayor and Queloz, of course, had to derive those estimates from the data.
|
|
For example, do the people with the highest triglycerides derive the greatest benefit?
|
|
In turn, Moscow and Beijing reciprocally derive advantages from the semi-allied states.
|
|
The strength Cat and Marlena derive from their connection offers an alternative escape.
|
|
His artistic skills likely derive from his mother, Brazilian actress and singer Rosana Tapajos.
|
|
Physicists research buckyballs because they have unique properties that derive from their icosahedral symmetry.
|
|
Like, do we honestly derive satisfaction from Dumbledore being declared gay ex-post-facto?
|
|
All, in Brussels's view, derive from the legal obligations implied by Britain's EU membership.
|
|
These saraka cakes, historians say, derive from the Islamic concept of sadaqa, or charity.
|
|
It is sinful for a priesthood holder to derive pleasure from the sex act.
|
|
I think fundamentally the most pleasure that I derive is, A, making people happy.
|
|
Don't use Photoshop on your resume: The algorithm can't derive data from a picture.
|
|
Chip stocks, which derive a large part of their revenue from China, also gained.
|
|
Who exactly is the Night's King and where does he derive his power from?
|
|
Shares of semiconductor companies, which derive much of their revenue from China, especially climbed.
|
|
I don't derive pleasure from most things, but they're things I have to do.
|
|
Chipmakers, which tend to derive a large portion of their revenue from China, rose.
|
|
Well, Christmas, Hanukkah, Kwanzaa and a few other holidays all derive from solstice celebrations.
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|
If you can derive meaningful insight from it, you'll no doubt improve your business.
|
|
And I wonder, 'What return on my investment with them will I actually derive?
|
|
Negative rating action could derive from negative rating action taken on the China sovereign.
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|
We then aggregate these estimates across all courses to derive a university-level average.
|
|
Dugri may derive from driving directions in Arabic, but it has become much more.
|
|
Companies with millions of followers derive far greater economic value than this monthly sum.
|
|
"Astro can derive learning and reflect back, helping you be more productive," Pflaum said.
|
|
" Both (along with "Baa, Baa, Black Sheep") derive from the French children's song "Ah!
|
|
So white women support the system because they believe they derive benefits from it.
|
|
Did the constitutional problem with the commission's actions derive solely from its members' motives?
|
|
Both those players, like Kiermaier, derive their value mainly from their youth and defense.
|
|
How much satisfaction would Moffitt derive from beating his old team for the title?
|
|
It operates globally, but more than half of transaction it processes derive from Europe.
|
|
Many of the most tantalizing parts of its repertoire derive from vegetables and fruits.
|
|
BP, Smurfit Kappa and Diageo, which derive most of their earnings overseas, were top gainers.
|
|
It operates globally, but more than half of the transactions it processes derive from Europe.
|
|
For that reason, traders are fond of using options prices to mathematically derive volatility expectations.
|
|
The app would then derive certain insights from the user's emotional-state history over time.
|
|
They derive a measure of skills by adjusting pay for age, firm, industry and location.
|
|
Numerologist Felicia Bender tells Refinery29 that numbers derive their power from spiritual energy — not superstition.
|
|
The horror in this particular flick appears to derive from something quite commonplace: white suburbia.
|
|
The name Mumbai is believed to derive from Mumba devi, patron deity of the kolis.
|
|
They've provided the "joy" this season that Piper has been trying to derive through kickball.
|
|
Profanity is most likely to derive from things that tend to be taboo across societies.
|
|
Twitris was able to parse the different statements for more precise meaning and derive analytics.
|
|
Even when something great happens to envious people, they don't derive any satisfaction from it.
|
|
Chip stocks, which derive a large part of their revenue from China, were also higher.
|
|
To make it worthwhile, you've got to be able to derive meaningful insight from it.
|
|
You can derive any proposition you wish from a contradiction in a few simple steps.
|
|
And it may even derive a little from the classical authors Powell studied at school.
|
|
I derive this deep, deep satisfaction that nothing else, including sex, has ever given me.
|
|
Finally, and most importantly, the report cannot exclude concrete recommendations that derive from its analysis.
|
|
The court has undermined the protections all derive from the right to act in concert.
|
|
"Some women derive empowerment from a situation where they might otherwise feel helpless," she said.
|
|
Many memorable moments in "Dear Los Angeles" derive from seeing familiar persons against unfamiliar backdrops.
|
|
Fashion labels derive some of their highest margins from leather goods like handbags and wallets.
|
|
There are hundreds of millions of people like me who derive great benefit from Google.
|
|
No one person had the right to deprive them of whatever they derive from Mass.
|
|
Still, any political benefit Mr. Gantz might derive from the submarine scandal may be fleeting.
|
|
Reluctantly at first, he helped me derive a plan to switch pain medicines over time.
|
|
These are the qualities that we work to cultivate, and where we derive true self-worth.
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|
I'm consciously making it uninteresting because I want to derive enjoyment from other parts of life.
|
|
Said Richens: "If we derive the whole of quantum theory, that would be a huge."[PRL]
|
|
Many third-party research publications use this methodology to derive their market sizes for established markets.
|
|
Two. And that's how "we derive all the counting numbers from zero … from nothing," Kaplan says.
|
|
Japanese firms, led by the automakers, derive 14 percent of their revenue from the United States.
|
|
Even with our above-consensus estimates, we derive a fair value below the current share price.
|
|
And remember the time you watched them derive endless pleasure from popping bubbles in someone's bedroom.
|
|
Bran and other Three-Eyed Ravens derive their power from what fans dub the "weirnet," a.k.a.
|
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Chip stocks, which derive a large part of their revenue from China, were also trading higher.
|
|
Type A people derive so much of their self esteem from achieving goals and performing well.
|
|
He's beefcake mixed with an elegance that may only derive from his resemblance to Patrick Swayze.
|
|
Lower-income Americans and minorities derive almost no direct benefit from the rise in stock prices.
|
|
You could even make the case that Lil Peep's screech-strum dynamics derive from the Pixies.
|
|
Much of that stress seemed to derive from her almost bodily awareness of the world's problems.
|
|
Relationships are how we discover new ideas, understand our world and ultimately derive long-term happiness.
|
|
If anything, our beliefs about matters of fact derive from those worldviews more than vice versa.
|
|
The valley's soft green hills, spreading views and famously fertile soil all derive from this history.
|
|
The more data they can collect, the more information they can derive from patterns and behaviors.
|
|
Even though these men may never meet in person, they can still derive a powerful identity.
|
|
Doubtless Vladimir Putin continues to derive satisfaction from having assaulted American democracy and embarrassed Hillary Clinton.
|
|
Even including dividends, assumed reinvested to derive a total return, Blackstone's performance has been just ordinary.
|
|
If pathological narcissists derive their power from attention, we ought not to give it to them.
|
|
But doing so would run up against powerful stakeholders whose incomes derive from the status quo.
|
|
Surveying the views on City Island, it's easy to see where the artists derive their inspiration.
|
|
"A group that does not derive authority from the people has destroyed our hopes," he said.
|
|
Narrator: While seemingly crazy, Stevens says most superstitions derive from three universal principles across all cultures.
|
|
Hurricanes derive energy from ocean heat, and the Gulf is now much warmer than ever measured.
|
|
Smoking has gone overseas, and cigarette companies now derive most of their profits from international sales.
|
|
It's not clear what advantages other countries might derive from signing a safe third country agreement.
|
|
Racism and sexism in America derive from inequalities that disproportionately favor white people and men, respectively.
|
|
While some elements of Root derive from the girls' memories, others required a bit more research.
|
|
Science is supposed to help us, and derive informed theories and truths from carefully evaluated information.
|
|
The meaning we derive from clothes changes depending on who's wearing them and how and where.
|
|
Semiconductor-makers such as Qualcomm and Broadcom derive most of their revenues from China (see chart 3).
|
|
The word "bomb" is used because of the explosive power these storms derive from rapid pressure drops.
|
|
The U.S., for its part, does not derive any strategic leverage from the trade scuffle with China.
|
|
IT IS usually a mistake to try to derive a national message from a single by-election.
|
|
So my question is, based on your understanding of the presidency, where do you derive that power?
|
|
It should derive its descriptions of the economy as a whole from mathematical characterisations of individuals' behaviour.
|
|
Like the French law, Britain's tax targets big tech companies that derive "significant" revenues from digital activities.
|
|
Some jobs derive their bullshitness from involving long stretches of dead time; others are busy but unproductive.
|
|
Guardians continued to derive their powers from its Light, until Ghaul came along and messed everything up.
|
|
Make sure your kids see you win and they derive a lesson from it if you lose.
|
|
That means otherwise innocuous data points can be combined to derive a revealing look at your life.
|
|
Do our elected leaders derive the authority to govern from the people or by direct divine infusion?
|
|
Like always, the pioneering companies find their path and we then derive the playbooks out of them.
|
|
But because it ended so badly, I can't derive any joy from it—which is just horrible.
|
|
AST Changes in the notes' rating would derive from changes in the same direction in BAM's IDR.
|
|
When it comes to the elderly, 2628 percent derive most of their retirement income from Social Security.
|
|
U.S. companies in electronic technology derive 18 percent of total revenue from China, according to FactSet data.
|
|
Most of us derive a warm satisfaction when we feel our lives are aligned with ultimate values.
|
|
Most people said they derive the most sense of purpose from their friends, family, and romantic relationships.
|
|
Marx argued that commodities—or products meant to satisfy "wants"—don't derive their value from their use.
|
|
I like to create colorful worlds and landscapes, and see what stories people can derive from them.
|
|
To derive the general human image, the artist would select one of his friends as a model.
|
|
And from this fixed value of the Planck constant, scientists can derive the mass of a kilogram.
|
|
He added that "it's unclear exactly what benefit" all three countries would derive from a policy change.
|
|
They also, occasionally and charmingly, allow us glimpses of the giddy pleasure they derive from their performances.
|
|
They aren't independent of him, and any profits they derive from the lease will benefit him, too.
|
|
They derive their name from the layout of the living quarters, which are a single room wide.
|
|
Businesses derive benefit from some of these public goods: for example, transit infrastructure and an educated workforce.
|
|
I derive a great personal benefit from the totality of this belief, which comes naturally to me.
|
|
Some ministers went beyond analogy and proposed that New England derive a constitution directly from the Bible.
|
|
Paradoxically, the core strength of the West does not ultimately derive from military hardware or economic numbers.
|
|
The frames of the stop-motion animation derive from bold, brushy compositions Ms. Madani paints and repaints.
|
|
It comes from the Chumash word for "moon"; it does not derive from the word for "nest."
|
|
"You don't derive the same diversification benefit that you can get from a R.E.I.T. fund," he said.
|
|
In fact, we can use the concept of zero to derive all the other numbers in the universe.
|
|
There's something we can derive from this structure of the web itself, which is different, but very useful.
|
|
The same is true of her quest to understand the power her sister might derive from selling sex.
|
|
"I'm trying to see how can you derive richness out of such a poverty of sensing," he says.
|
|
Friends and relatives of those aboard it will doubtless derive relief from knowing where the flight ended up.
|
|
Rather, many derive their efficacy from features of the context, broadly speaking, in which they're most at home.
|
|
Sex manuals from the Qing dynasty listed dozens of ways to derive pleasure from a woman's bound feet.
|
|
Negative rating action on YWSCOC could derive from a deterioration in Fitch's internal assessment of the municipality's creditworthiness.
|
|
According to the International Labor Organization, human traffickers derive $150 billion per year in profits from their crimes.
|
|
Satellite imagery helps derive vegetation density, which measures the greenness of the crop and thus general plant health.
|
|
These artists derive everything… from their own depths, and not from the conventions of classical or fashionable art.
|
|
Am I wrong to derive so much joy from a holiday whose literal foundation I don't believe in?
|
|
But the end is really about looking at the turnaround and the lessons we can derive from that.
|
|
Something like a micro deli-slicer, Klimen explained, 3Scan's system can derive 303,000 slices from each tissue sample.
|
|
They are thought to derive spiritual power from their sexual status, and so can bestow blessings or curses.
|
|
"They should feel safe and free enough to derive some satisfaction out of what we do," Kiraly said.
|
|
The statute from which he claims to derive authority, known as the National Emergencies Act, is itself unconstitutional.
|
|
The U.S. Declaration of Independence proclaims that "governments derive their legitimate powers by the consent of the People".
|
|
Dorveille's appeal doesn't derive from historicity: what appeals is the escape from the very conditions that obliterated it.
|
|
Jefferson and James Madison argued that the strength of the nation would always derive from its agrarian soil.
|
|
In fact, most of the due process rights we hold dearest derive from lawyers who represented unpopular defendants.
|
|
They derive from basic social contract principles of a kind that both Democrats and Republicans claim to embrace.
|
|
Larger insurers, which derive a smaller portion of business from Medicaid, have seen less impact to their shares.
|
|
The electric colors and material exuberance that have become his trademarks derive partly from that South American heritage.
|
|
The forces of radical Islam derive their ideology from radical clerics like Gülen, who is running a scam.
|
|
Other rare earth projects under development in the region derive the minerals from hard rock or other sources.
|
|
I derive energy from the people watching and cheering, I grab hints from those with a smart observation.
|
|
And now, I was attempting to derive all my protein needs from insects, for a whole seven days.
|
|
Researchers believe this is especially true for older people, who derive much more pleasure from experiences than possessions.
|
|
They note their mutual understanding of each others' work habits — and they derive motivation from each others' rhythms.
|
|
These bonuses derive largely from fees levied on securities issuance, corporate-finance activity and on assets under management.
|
|
Patients won't be inclined to push for anything less, as they would derive no benefit from doing so.
|
|
London Theater Reviews Some dramas derive their potency from the struggle involved in simply getting through the day.
|
|
You know, the theory that people derive psychological satisfaction and benefits from being members of the dominant group.
|
|
Many antibiotics used today derive from chemicals produced by microbes to defend themselves or to attack other microorganisms.
|
|
Mr. Trump's lies are dime novel, pulp fiction, heart-pounding, mesmerizing and that's where they derive their power.
|
|
Among the companies developing a higher level of science focused on car performance is Derive Systems in Florida.
|
|
Natural language processing deals with how systems parse human language and are able to make decisions and derive insights.
|
|
Negative rating action on SFund could derive from a deterioration of in Fitch's internal assessment of the municipality's creditworthiness.
|
|
And to do that, you don't need to derive as much data about users without their knowledge, she said.
|
|
Patent trolls are companies that derive all or almost all of their revenue by asserting patents against other companies.
|
|
Instead, I derive deep pleasure from photobooks where the form of the object and its intended function work together.
|
|
Who among us doesn't derive a little twisted entertainment from watching petulant teens bully their parents over a party?
|
|
It's one thing to derive comedy from BoJack's misanthropy, but allowing it to go unchallenged sets a dangerous precedent.
|
|
But the curious and driven will derive great satisfaction from learning the way this strange, beautifully made machine works.
|
|
Salakhutdinov's recent research (PDF) has included work on how to better derive the context behind the questions people pose.
|
|
She can also derive second-hand pleasure in seeing another person's success—success that she was partially responsible for.
|
|
At $99, the service would seem to be geared only toward people who derive a professional benefit from Twitter.
|
|
I am constantly blown away at how much joy people derive from these characters, and I'm just so grateful.
|
|
Steinbaum said middle class families would derive little benefit from a tax plan that caters to billionaires and corporations.
|
|
That capability will derive from Sikorsky's Matrix Technology system, which it's currently testing in Black Hawks and commercial helicopters.
|
|
In Latin inspirare, from which we derive the word inspiration, meant that man had been touched by the divine.
|
|
Her proposal seeks to derive 100 percent of the country's electricity from "clean" sources with a federal jobs guarantee.
|
|
Republics and limited monarchies derive their strength and vigor from a popular examination into the action of the magistrates.
|
|
It operates as a coalition of 30 other organizations which support PLAN and derive common benefits from its work.
|
|
Throughout his life he kept few books, preferring to derive conclusions from first principles whenever he felt the need.
|
|
Sports historian Allen Guttmann has argued convincingly that modern sports derive from ancient rituals to secure the necessities of
|
|
Unlike the Conways, Frank and Claire appear to derive their earthly pleasures from coaching each other toward professional success.
|
|
Although I don't derive the same kind of pleasure I used to from eating, I'm still passionate about it.
|
|
I derive little pleasure from this vindication, which is odd as I am, generally speaking, nothing if not petty.
|
|
In general, wealthier families are more likely to have 529 accounts, and they derive greater tax benefits from them.
|
|
It could also derive from inadequate processing, like cooking at too low a temperature because of a faulty thermometer.
|
|
The book's hypnotic power does not derive so much from its wild details as from its epically sarcastic tone.
|
|
That rally was led by commodity-linked stocks and luxury goods, which derive most of their demand from China.
|
|
Prize money — directly related to the amount of income UEFA can derive from sponsorship and television rights — keeps growing.
|
|
Scholars and local people alike, however, seem to derive the concept of honor outside of the sphere of Islam.
|
|
It may derive from nostalgia for Wodehouse's manicured milieu of mirth and privilege — "Downton Abbey" with a laugh track.
|
|
It's interesting that the new feminist directions sometimes derive from the stereotypical roles that society has imposed on women.
|
|
American high school students can recite Shakespeare's sonnets, derive advanced calculus theorems, and explain the Chinese spheres of influence.
|
|
I don't deny that you can derive a lot of meaning from pursuing an activity at the highest level.
|
|
But it turns out that with three (or more) bodies, there's no way to derive an equation of motion.
|
|
We derive so many benefits from healthy bird populations, including pollination, seed dispersal, insect control and other ecosystem services.
|
|
And I'll be the first to admit I do derive simple pleasures from that kind of Mariah-inspired playfulness.
|
|
"It creates this incredible fragmentation of us trying to extract the data and derive intelligence from it," she said.
|
|
He's a biologist at Oberlin who studies what kind of information animals derive from the many sounds around them.
|
|
It may be possible for older women to derive some degree of protection from the vaccine, some experts say.
|
|
A limitation is that the majority of health care costs derive from labor, which this approach would not affect.
|
|
Trading in options, or other financial instruments that derive value from securities, is also banned for all SEC employees.
|
|
The FTSE 100, whose constituents derive much of their revenue in U.S. dollars, dipped 0.2 percent by 0814 GMT.
|
|
"We slightly miss the point if we don't understand how much pleasure their supporters derive from this," he said.
|
|
The learning curve is set up in such a way that beginners can derive gains quickly at the start.
|
|
To avoid tax penalties, social clubs cannot derive more than 15 percent of their gross receipts from nonmember use.
|
|
In other words, publishers that derive traffic from users sharing their stories might not notice much of a difference.
|
|
And democratic governments, at least, derive legitimacy and accountability through regular elections that decide the top ranks of decisionmakers.
|
|
They derive 80% of their market value from intangible assets such as patents and brands, as opposed to physical ones.
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These form Aaron Taylor Kuffner's gamelatron installation, a series of automated bronze instruments that derive from the traditional Indonesian gamelan.
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One of his technical supports may derive from an interest in the picture as a text, most likely a poem.
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Embryonic stem cells, which have the potential to treat myriad medical conditions, are controversial because they derive from early embryos.
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The research: Educated users with high incomes derive the most benefit from internet use, a 2016 study in Europe showed.
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Ultimately, those who derive the most meaning from this experience are likely those who come determined to believe in it.
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Now, the guilt accompanying any pleasure we derive from watching a man control a woman is a little too overwhelming.
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The housing crisis in New York does not just derive from businesses moving in and making it a "nicer" area.
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Ahead, we've mapped out how the numbers one through nine can help you derive a sense of your spiritual trajectory.
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The service will help AWS users derive insights from attack patterns and techniques so they can take action more quickly.
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Many of these sites now derive revenue from their reviews by linking the products to Amazon to receive referral fees.
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And if you want to get technical, Oxehealth uses computer vision, machine learning and signal processing to derive vital signs.
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You can't derive from them that financial concerns don't drive some amount of Trump's support independent of white racial resentment.
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Matt Dorfman Solving March Madness How a sports prediction site is using an evolutionary algorithm to derive the perfect bracket.
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Straps that dig, rising back-bands, chafing, and back bulge are all, on the whole, issues that derive from fit.
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Ron would probably derive more psychic income from working out in a kind of Henry Kissinger-esque kind of way.
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Underlying the Trump administration's cuts to UNRWA is the false premise that Palestinian refugees derive their refugee status from UNRWA.
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Those disheartened by that perceived reality could theoretically derive satisfaction from seeing these high-profile figures relegated to pariah status.
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"Companies are looking for people that can derive dashboards and reports from big data and analyze the data," Kahn said.
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Mishaal: By then, I'd realized the effect that FGM had on my ability to derive sexual pleasure from any experience.
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Those arguments often derive from different financial views, like if one partner is a spender and one is a saver.
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Each artist takes a creative new approach to the human form that derive from a wide variety of historic motifs.
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And we derive a commensurate value to that from the distributors, and we have no intention of changing that proposition.
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If the fun most people derive from Ready Player One comes from recognizing the references, then I'm excluded by default.
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Shares of other chipmakers — which derive large chunks of their revenue from sales in China — fell in sympathy with Nvidia.
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Where, they ask, does it—and fellow tech giants—derive the legitimacy to be independent actors on the international stage?
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The longtime journalist argued that it would mean "no serious journalism" about the 2020 campaign would derive from the organization.
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Glück's analyses seem to derive from this grief; she is wary, and sometimes darkly funny about, poetry's temptation toward grandiosity.
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When people are motivated by contributing to something bigger than themselves — something with purpose and meaning — they derive more satisfaction.
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It also said it uses the legal ground known as legitimate interests to provide functionality and derive analytics on articles.
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But brands need personalities to succeed, at whatever price point, and those personalities derive most easily from, well, a person.
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"Knowing the densities of a planets allows (us) to derive a model of the interior structure," Grimm and Demory said.
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China's Paris commitment also included a pledge to derive 20 percent of its energy from non-fossil fuels by 2030.
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"If the audience isn't able to derive positive lessons from a drama, any negative influence on society should be avoided."
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Armed with that data, it's just a hop, skip, and a jump to derive performance specs like acceleration and thrust.
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"You can't describe things to the pope in social situations and derive a juridical result from that," Mr. Cafardi said.
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Asian tech shares slid after U.S. peers, which derive much of their sales revenue from China, took a battering overnight.
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That, in turn, can make it harder still for a member of one party to derive any benefit from breaking ranks.
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It's a sad thing to see because inherently human beings derive great joy and satisfaction and pleasure from helping other people.
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One challenge is to decide what should be designated an axiom and what physicists should try to derive from the axioms.
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Some national publications with big enough audiences have managed to derive profits from digital ads, according to the Wall Street Journal.
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The researchers analyzed multiple datasets in Google Earth Engine, an internet platform for processing geographical data, to derive global scale estimates.
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Nearly all mainstream media outlets derive a mammoth portion of their audience from the very platforms that are swallowing them whole.
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Chevron and Occidental also have put forward different estimates on the value of the operational synergies they can derive from Anadarko.
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But I derive great personal meaning and joy from a government official and lawmaker learning more about Nickelback's next tour date.
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Ancestors is constantly challenging you to mess around, and to derive pleasure from the thrill of fresh neurons snapping into existence.
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"I think actually we made a mistake in trying to derive the Model X from the model S platform," he said.
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Since Native Americans' genes do, indeed, indicate they all derive from a single population, this discrepancy in timing is a paradox.
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All of these derive from Britain's current membership in the EU and it highly probable that they would come under attack.
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Tepper adds that its diversified business model also works to its advantage, helping it to derive revenue growth across the company.
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Subsectors of defensive shares, consisting of companies that derive a significant portion of their earnings from the domestic market, performed well.
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All this recycling is wonderful for the billionaires who derive a warm feeling from spending their money on helping the poor.
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But, in fact, Böröcz's sensual conceptualism dealing with everyday absurdities derive most directly from his respect for art and manual labor.
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In Sunni-ruled Saudi Arabia and in Shiite-ruled Iran, death sentences often derive from a stern interpretation of Islamic law.
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Once we stop turning our circumstances into problems and start thinking of them as experiences, we can derive satisfaction from them.
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They can use a triangular effect from the cellphone and GPS to derive the exact longitude and latitude of the individual.
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Certainly this is only one of many systematized attempts to derive secret information such as sexuality, emotional state or medical conditions.
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The researchers interpreted this as suggesting that "simply being in a committed relationship is insufficient to derive benefits from pleasurable activities".
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They derive directly from the paleoconservatism promoted by Pat Buchanan and a small band of right-wing thinkers since the 1980s.
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But we need to find way to be critical of these institutions without necessarily shaming those who derive joy from them.
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A lot of women benefit from and derive psychic satisfaction from feeling as though they're being protected by this invulnerable man.
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In his view, malevolence and ignorance both derive from a deficient facility with words; evil, where it emerges, manifests in language.
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About 86 percent of the company's earnings will derive from cable programming, 90 percent of which will come from Fox News.
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Under UNCLOS, which came into force in 1982 and which China ratified in 1996, maritime rights derive from land, not history.
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A judge can easily pretend to be an originalist while simply manipulating historical meaning to derive the outcome that she prefers.
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It estimates that both Sysco and US Foods each derive at least 30 percent of revenue serving the independent restaurant category.
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Many of the negative comments derive from sizing issues with the smallest size being too big for small dogs like chihuahuas.
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This is one of a number of projects by Japanese authors that derive from that series, many of which are pastiches.
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At a time when religious repression is on the rise, we derive inspiration from persecuted communities standing up for one another.
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In the United States, despite his attempts to woo minority voters, Donald J. Trump appears to derive support from such sentiment.
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Australia's four biggest banks derive 40-60 percent of their earnings from home loans, the most lucrative part of their business.
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"I'm sure of what we're seeing here, the dimensions that we're able to derive from this image (are) conclusive," Kraft said.
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PBMs derive substantial revenue from "clawbacks" they collect when the total cost of a drug is less than the patient's copay.
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"All my work is about order systems, how we derive, create, or apply meaning from the world around us," Orr said.
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Often associated with small animals, newborns, and many other manifestations of helplessness, sweetness, and vulnerability, how does it derive its power?
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The intensity of the bright pinks in "Loom" (2018) seems to derive from a solid green line on the middle left.
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We derive endless satisfaction from feeling morally superior to him — and as Leon Wieseltier put it, affirmation is the new sex.
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The FCA's analysis showed that the main banks derive their competitive advantage from a combination of current accounts and many branches.
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A slowed metabolism means the body has become more efficient in using fuel -- whether from food or oxygen -- to derive energy.
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They derive part of their identity and status from being Takoma homeowners and will fight tooth and nail to defend it.
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Our principal sources of economic news derive from changes in the GDP, national employment, the unemployment rate, and the stock market.
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Para que un golpe de Estado derive en el establecimiento de la democracia, los gobiernos interinos deben practicar una moderación extraordinaria.
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There are no guarantees going in that you will derive any financial benefit from the pursuit of a dream, of course.
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Thus, they derive the majority of their water intake from industrialized fluids: soda, beer, Gatorade, baby blood, and such and such.
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It also could derive from the swell of missed extra points, creating score lines that warrant going for 23 later on.
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We also have U.S. companies who derive a majority of their revenues, a majority of their operations outside the United States.
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Latour's talk about how facts derive their authority from trust might sound squishy and abstract, but he considers himself a realist.
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The depressing answer seems to be that people derive pleasure from demonstrating that they are more powerful than a small animal.
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By looking at their DNA, he can infer their genetic potential, and better understand how they derive energy from such environments.
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Thorpe's more skeptical estimates in many cases derive from the attempt at implementing single-payer in Sanders's home state of Vermont.
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Despite the defeat, Rangers defenseman Marc Staal said the team could derive positives from the game against the sizable and speedy Kings.
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A tolerance for error and no need for provably correct or optimal solutionsNearly all ML algorithms derive their solutions statistically and probabilistically.
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The laughs derive from fish-out-of-water gags, as the Coneheads' customs and culture shock smack head-first against American normalcy.
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Helping sentiment was a weaker dollar, which tends to benefit U.S. multinationals that derive a large portion of their sales from overseas.
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Transportation gig workers were also more likely to be unemployed in the traditional sense and to derive their earnings from multiple platforms.
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The woman radical itself (女) is throught to derive from an image of a woman bending over with her hands clasped together.
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Only a very small number derive benefit, so we need better tools to define who are those men and women at risk.
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However, given the painful buying process and commoditized nature of the insurance product, consumers derive little intrinsic joy from shopping for insurance.
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Startups, however, may derive some strategic benefit from having no legacy product lines to sustain or proprietary platforms they're obligated to support.
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It's a testament to the efficiency of modern engineering that products can derive such long running times from such a frugal battery.
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UBA's 'b' VR is used as the anchor from which to derive the '5' Support Ratings (SR) assigned to the three banks.
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At issue is "partisan symmetry"—the intuitive notion that political parties should derive roughly the same legislative representation from equivalent popular support.
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The Dora Milaje, on the other hand, derive their power and beauty from a femininity that exists outside patriarchal concepts of empowerment.
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Insurers use your credit score to derive a credit-based insurance score to determine how likely you are to file a claim.
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The word "person", for instance, comes from the Latin for "mask"; the word "tragedy" may derive from the Greek for "goat-song".
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Mr. Coates said he expected that Instructure would eventually derive much of its revenue from companies, which pay higher fees than schools.
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Moreover, these ratios are fine for fish, but warm-blooded mammals require 20133 times more energy in order to derive breathable gas.
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Though the company has other businesses (Friendly's, ice cream, fruit punch, et al.), over 60% of its sales derive from conventional milk.
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While the Float Lab's design particulars derive from practical concerns, the project as a whole draws inspiration from architectural and artistic predecessors.
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The Philadelphia Semiconductor index dropped 3.1 percent as shares of chipmakers, which derive much of their revenue from China, took a hit.
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The exhibition, Robinson argues, deals with the existential question of how to derive sense and purpose from a chaotic and meaningless world.
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A weak pound also supported some companies that derive earnings from overseas, as sterling hit an eight-week low against the dollar.
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Either way, you have been introduced to Bilquis, the ancient goddess of love, whose powers derive from prayers of a sexual nature.
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Both derive from the changes introduced to the market since it was bought in 2012 by Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing (HKEx).
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I derive a lot of satisfaction from organizing information (as any good librarian would), so this is actually something I enjoy doing.
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Globally, countries categorized as "high" or "extreme" risk in the index derive on average 16.7 percent of their economic output from agriculture.
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The NSR will first give Russia opportunities to derive revenue from international trade and diversify its economy away from oil and gas.
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Helping sentiment was a weaker dollar, which tends to benefit American multinationals that derive a large portion of their sales from overseas.
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Lisa Murkowski (Alaska) -- "My issues are still how they derive the formula and how that works with the numbers for Alaska" Sen.
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Typically teachers derive and/or prove a new theorem and then present sample problems and applications showing how this theorem is used.
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The titles derive from songs that remind Erizku of his past relationships and break-ups, turning the exhibition checklist into a playlist.
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But with very, very few exceptions, I don't think you can have an economy where people derive their income solely through donations.
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The Philadelphia Semiconductor index dropped 523 percent as shares of chipmakers, which derive much of their revenue from China, took a hit.
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When errors occur, they usually derive from mistakes in the raw DNA data, said Mike Cariaso, also a co-founder of Promethease.
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I was supposed to derive a thrill from being trapped in a cubby with strangers, trying to prevent my own fake death?
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He failed to answer when asked to provide one example of a benefit that his country could derive from an expanded tournament.
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They derive their identity from portable traits, like education or job skills, and are more likely to move to areas of opportunity.
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From such lavish depictions we derive with infinite pleasure a pointilliste picture of the world's food economy in all its magical complexity.
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Stingrays derive their power by pretending to be cell towers, tricking nearby devices into connecting to them instead of the real thing.
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It also changes the composition of the local population, threatening the "compositional amenities" that natives derive from their neighborhoods, schools, and workplaces.
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Nathalie heads toward the light and Michèle toward the dark, but both roles showcase Huppert's great ability to derive power from vulnerability.
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People who can afford a meal at any restaurant in the world derive a thrill from dining without being handed a check.
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The whole time-consuming business only adds to the joy I derive from it, and sets me up for the year ahead.
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The tweets occasionally upend the news cycle, and something of a cottage industry has sprung up to derive some sort of pattern.
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"There are no plans to amend this legislation nor change materially the methodology EIOPA uses to derive the curves," EIOPA told Reuters.
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Both initiatives derive from complementary technological and scientific achievements that advance medicine, but lack emphasis on the everyday struggles of cancer patients.
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The cyanotoxins derive from algae bloom in Detroit Lake and can induce allergic reactions, respirartory malfunctions, or damage to the liver or kidneys.
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What becomes clear is that the application of celibacy in the priesthood did not derive in a vacuum, nor from a single moment.
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It's a way of thinking about life, and what joy and meaning we can derive not just from optimizing it, but living it.
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Violet would derive strength from her mother's spectral presence, which would perch next to her sleeping bag in the Parr kids' cave hideaway.
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The curtness of his response gave the misleading impression that he didn't, in fact, enjoy his job or derive satisfaction from his career.
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If you're familiar with the practice of numerology, you already know that you can derive a lot of meaning from a single date.
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At this level of the market, it's clear that African objects derive their value in proximity to the Western canon of modern art.
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Not only those who fought there, but those who derive some inspiration from that monstrosity, including possibly this individual conducted this attack today.
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However, it is hedging its bets with a project in Norway to derive hydrogen using power from hydroelectric dams and eventually wind farms.
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On a typical high-carb diet, we're fueled primarily by glucose (or blood sugar), much of which we derive from carbohydrate-rich foods.
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The latest studies, he told the audience, showed that the brain learns by replaying experiences during sleep, in order to derive general principles.
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The practice may derive from Mexico and Mesoamerica, but similar traditions can also be found in the cultures of Italy and the Philippines.
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Its edge instead seemed to derive from how its socialbot reflected the personality of the team's 1003-year-old student leader, Hao Fang.
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But it has hedged its bets with a project in Norway to derive hydrogen using power from hydroelectric dams and eventually wind farms.
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Novack, who has studied infants as young as 18 months, has seen how the capacity to derive meaning from movement increases with age.
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Google Apple CEO Tim Cook has made the argument before that part of the value customers derive from his company's products is privacy.
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Elected leaders derive their legitimacy from the consent of the governed, and that consent should come from as many eligible voters as possible.
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The weaker dollar not only boosts commodities, but is beneficial to U.S. multinationals that derive a large portion of their sales from overseas.
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After beating the Predators 217-123 on Friday night, the Wild appeared to derive momentum from that effort during a scoreless first period.
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They are more social and well connected, they derive happiness and life satisfaction from their friends, and networks, and social activities, and volunteering.
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Three scarlet 21950D-printed bracelets by Doug Bucci, who is diabetic, derive their patterns from data transmitted by the glucose monitor he wears.
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Yet his fans should derive some comfort from the greater serenity he exhibits, the product of age and, he says, lots of therapy.
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But a few hundred firing together offered a robust signal, from which he could derive a vector describing where the arm was heading.
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That is because the share of profits that fund managers receive through carried interest does not derive from money they have personally invested.
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These slight changes are literally reflected in how the ultrasonic pulses bounce back, and the reader can derive electrophysiological voltage from those changes.
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At this final stage, heroes derive more fulfillment from teaching others what they've learned than they do from winning more prizes for themselves.
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The potential for intolerance lies in the logic of religions like Christianity and Islam that say their teaching derive from a divine revelation.
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Will Chief Justice Roberts derive comfort from the "damned if you do, damned if you don't" nature of the choice before the court?
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She said that while governments do need to take tough action, they derive their courage to do so from the conduct of citizens.
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For investors in the United States, Goldman produced a list of companies in the S&P 500 that derive considerable revenue from Britain.
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Yet Diane seems to derive little happiness from these ceaseless activities, her weary features suggesting a private hurt eased only by constant motion.
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When it comes to mindfulness and meditation, you may think it takes years of training — or a spiritual journey — to derive any benefits.
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Do we derive something from a book from Berlin or Beijing that we cannot get from a work from Los Angeles or London?
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The absolute risks of light and moderate drinking are small, while many people derive pleasure from the occasional cocktail or glass of wine.
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The recent small-stock outperformance may derive from fears over the impact of a trade war with China on big, trade-oriented companies.
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Queen Elizabeth and Prince Charles derive income from two duchies with medieval roots — which were both caught up in the Paradise Papers leak.
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In the end, exhausted and aggrieved, I simply gave up trying to figure out who stood to derive the most edification from Hunters.
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The enemies of Trump might surely derive some aid and comfort from the remarks by Schiff, but the president is not the nation.
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There is much joy to derive from food, and this kid has it in her mind that a lot of food is dangerous.
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The rents earned by wealthy landowners derive in part from improvements they make to the land, he argued, but also from land's scarcity.
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"The basic proposition you can derive from this paper is, we have no earthly conception how bad it's going to be," Lalwani says.
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The study used firm level data from publicly traded companies allowing them to compare output and input prices and derive profit margin data.
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The books that helped Arnott develop as an investorArnott didn&apost derive his value-based approach or investment prowess out of thin air.
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With respect to disinvesting from the coal industry, Axa will target companies that derive more than 30 percent of their revenue from coal.
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The first, common in low-income countries, is to ask people about their consumption and then derive a dollar figure from their answers.
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Many of the preexisting AI GAN artworks also derive from Romantic landscape paintings or portraiture, which contributes to the spookiness of the style.
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Yes, and this is partly because of companies being disingenuous about the continued benefit they derive from retaining the data of the dead.
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You derive most of your stature, your identity, from your work — from lashing yourself to an institution, a brand, a set of perks.
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Countries such as South Korea and Taiwan derive 38 percent and 55 percent of their GDP from exports, respectively, would be particularly hard hit.
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Her retreat from the public life these past few months, however, has given the media less fodder to discuss, dissect, and derive meaning from.
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Mid caps, which derive a larger part of earnings from the UK, pulled out of their dive with an hour of trading to go.
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Other requirements include that any business invested in by the fund must derive at least 50 percent of its gross income within the zone.
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Members of groups, Vanderbilt's Kam explained, often prefer "the self-esteem they derive from where their in-group stands," regardless of material self-interest.
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Our basic urges derive from the lower-level areas of the brain, such as the limbic system, which is involved in emotions and motivation.
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I save likes for people I know IRL and who I figure would derive joy out of the fact that I liked their photo.
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"There are a lot of people that derive motivation from inspiring stories from people that look like them," Koch said in the same interview.
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They derive their income from a wide variety of sources, from fee-paying students to nostalgic alumni, from hard-headed businessmen to generous philanthropists.
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And a third of the colleges — of which there are some 7,000 around the country — derive almost all of their revenue from federal sources.
|
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We don't have Dropbox's relative growth rate, but we can see enough crossover between the two companies' results to derive an inference or two.
|
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All the same, Japanese prosecutors derive authority from their perceived role as guardians of social order, despite the occasional high-profile miscarriage of justice.
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My sense is that the groups that claim allegiance to ISIS or al-Qaeda do derive some real tangible, very dangerous benefit from that.
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Depending on the specific shape of the pigment cell, they were able to derive certain colors, including yellows, greens, blacks, brown, and even iridescence.
|
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To derive a probability of victory consistent with that aim, we need to know the odds of every possible scenario, even the extreme ones.
|
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Writers used to derive a significant part of their income from residuals, which are fees that television networks pay writers for replaying their work.
|
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Where you land on that spectrum will determine whether or not you derive much enjoyment out of Café Society, his 46th and newest film.
|
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Sessions said small businesses — a key factor in the Latino economy — would derive "enormous" benefits from the tax credit system proposed under the AHCA.
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We can anonymize data, we can perturb data, and apply these techniques for protection while still being able to derive value and help customers.
|
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The historical castas provide a useful counterpoint to Dicochea's contemporary casta paintings, which derive their imagery from the news, architecture, art, and popular culture.
|
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But while its beauty products can be bought online, fashion collections remain off-limits, even as other brands derive strong growth from e-commerce.
|
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Larry shippers, as doomed as their mission appears, do have a sort of power, which they derive from the sheer mass of their project.
|
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How much do you tip a porter, valet or concierge, none of whom receives a base payment from which you can derive a percentage?
|
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The problem seems to be the "GDP deflator", a gauge of inflation by which the data are adjusted to derive the "real" growth rate.
|
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By loving its characters, Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt allows us to love them, and to derive comfort from the time we spend in their company.
|
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Technology giants, for instance, derive more of their worth these days from services, patents and brand value, intangibles that can be hard to value.
|
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In the real world, however, most of us derive the lion's share of calories from edibles supplied by a handful of giant food conglomerates.
|
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Still, I think we are looking at strong similarities: responses to a mediocre recovery and candidates who derive their power from division, not unity.
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The three framed photos, collectively titled "Untitled (Preface)" (2019), introduce the exhibition, illuminating the perennial yet impossible desire to derive knowledge from photographic images.
|
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Pro Farmer will then use the Tour data to derive national and state-level corn and soybean crop estimates to be released on Friday.
|
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Consumers will derive trillions of dollars in benefits from smart homes, enhanced health applications, driverless vehicles, Internet of Things (IoT) technology, and other innovations.
|
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To derive a going concern enterprise value of $1.5 billion, Fitch assumes a going concern EBITDA of $310 million valued at a 5x multiple.
|
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More recently – and projected for the future – are reductions in weight that derive from advanced design and manufacturing processes, and lighter, but stronger, materials.
|
|
Vermont's energy goals are among the most ambitious in the country: to derive 90 percent of its power from renewable sources by 2050. Gov.
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Employees should think about it in terms of the functionality they bring to the company and the satisfaction they derive from their own careers.
|
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We do not derive pleasure from punishing people, but we have enacted procedures to do so objectively and appropriately when someone is truly culpable.
|
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The U.S. tech ETF includes investor favorites like Microsoft, Apple and Facebook, which derive a significant amount of revenue from outside the United States.
|
|
Even if something seems routine or boring, like delivering milk bottles, you can still derive pleasure from it and have a sense of accomplishment.
|
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The world's second largest economy has steadily slowed in recent years as Beijing tried to reposition and derive growth from consumption rather than exports.
|
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Over his career, Lee has found ways to bring sound and color into symmetry as well as discord, and to derive power from both.
|
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We all derive influence from different ideological thoughts on the left, but I would never tell somebody to just become all consumed by ideology.
|
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Over the next few weeks, you'll derive comfort and satisfaction from cleaning and reorganizing your home or from getting in touch with your roots.
|
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Mr. Fine, who had no role in the Eskom contract, said he had been assured that Eskom did derive measurable benefits from McKinsey's consulting.
|
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Fortunately, garlic, miso paste and nutritional yeast are also packed with umami, but derive from plants — making this edit of the classic totally vegan.
|
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He had only a loose web of ideas, a series of scattershot meetings and public statements from which Washington types struggled to derive meaning.
|
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Is that something you worry about — scientists feeling they derive less meaning from their work as machine learning makes more inroads in the field?
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It is less normal to say that you derive pleasure from taking an eye test or by making eye contact with an inquisitive waitress.
|
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The Petros are set to live on a blockchain like the one Bitcoin uses, but will derive their value from the government's natural resources.
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Workers who derive a big chunk of their paychecks from tips, like waiters and bartenders, may get smaller unemployment checks than they hope to.
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Rather, they are smart extensions of the iPhone franchise, and a way for Apple to derive additional revenue from a base that isn't growing.
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His latest research suggests that the benefits portsiders derive from the element of unfamiliarity become greater when their opponents have less time to calculate.
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Such divergent levels of fear could partly derive from the usual level of lethal violence, far higher in the United States than in Europe.
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Part of his anger may derive from the notion that you deliberately misled him, in order to try to entrap him with the child.
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Dr. Donald Winnicott coined the phrase "transitional objects" to refer to the blankets and "loveys" that children attach themselves to and derive solace from.
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These maps — and their lingering effects — derive from a time when the American government, he writes, believed that "inharmonious racial groups" should be separated.
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Levy declined to specify how much EDF will invest in the electric mobility drive or how much revenue it hopes to derive from it.
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Made of brilliantly colored, loosely knitted yarn, the works' impressively varied compositions derive from his DNA, specifically those sequences that determine someone's individual traits.
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Those familiar with Amazon&aposs logistics network say those higher rates derive from the fact that those regions are high population and high density.
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They're also forcing punishing taxes upon tens of millions of hardworking Americans who derive nothing from these plans, usually pushed and enforced by unions.
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Granted, the documentary is essentially a somewhat hurried primer, which doesn't add much new but does derive power from its subjects' on-camera testimony.
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Ms. Kara's baby-blue and burgundy canvases with masklike figures are shown alongside her sculptures, which derive from marks and figures in the paintings.
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Studies show that we derive more emotional benefit from experiences rather than possessions, so create a budget that prioritizes togetherness over expensive gift-giving.
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And though they take their work very seriously, the enjoyment and gratification they derive from it blurs the common demarcation between work and play.
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"We could only derive an upper bound to the measured motion because it's moving so slowly that our instrument couldn't detect it," said van Dokkum.
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One would think that governments, which both regulate and derive considerable tax revenue from the alcohol industry, would properly inform the public of health risks.
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Both firms derive a high proportion of their revenue in South Africa, whose parliament was set to confirm Cyril Ramaphosa as president later on Thursday.
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It was a way to take her victimhood and turn it into something she could have control over — something she could derive pleasure from even.
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The answer is that our sense of direction—or "wayfinding" abilities—derive from a complex web of interactions between our brains, senses, genes, and environment.
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These probabilistic engines still follow Carnot's efficiency formula in terms of how much work they can derive from energy passing between hot and cold bodies.
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The system employs Intel RealSense 3D depth sensors to scan bodies and Intel Quad Core processors to derive highly accurate scans in about 20 seconds.
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Deutsche Bank strategist Binky Chadha has a model to derive the economic expectations embedded in the S&P 500 relative to its 200-day average.
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The contingency of genius-weirdos that derive true pleasure from combing all 12 pages of an Etsy search for "flat mule" are a rare breed.
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Last, official calculations make little allowance for the size of an informal economy from which ordinary North Koreans derive a vast chunk of their livelihoods.
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UFO also focuses as much as possible on "pure play" space companies, Chanin said, as roughly 80% derive the majority of revenue from space businesses.
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"There is bipartisan acknowledgement that the strategic advantages we derive from our national security space systems are eroding," Rogers and Cooper said in a statement.
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In the same way that the earliest astrologers found meaning in the stars, we derive our horoscopes and countless astrology memes from these heavenly bodies.
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Still, analysts at Jefferies said they believe it will be difficult to derive value from a more integrated and broader portfolio from an implementation standpoint.
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Until they do, Ginger told the Hollywood Reporter he hopes folks can derive some meaning from the sculpture—or better yet, just laugh at it.
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While it's true that you can't derive worth from your looks, my insecurities still dragged down my feelings about myself, destroying my confidence and assurance.
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Andrej completed his computer vision PhD at Stanford University, where he demonstrated the ability to derive complex descriptions of images using a deep neural net.
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The list should more closely resemble America's register of "specially designated nationals" who are close to Mr Putin and derive their wealth from his favour.
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McKinsey estimates that firms will derive between $1.3trn and $2trn a year in economic value from using AI in supply chains and manufacturing (see chart).
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"For reasons we cannot fully explain, transfer recipients appeared to derive less economic value from their assets than microenterprise beneficiaries did," the study authors write.
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The second features Bollinger's own indicator, Bollinger Bands, which jointly measure recent prices and volatility in order to derive potential levels of support and resistance.
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She had just solved a major problem in quantum computation, the study of computers that derive their power from the strange laws of quantum physics.
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Because researchers don't yet fully understand how language is organized within the brain or which neural circuits derive meaning from gesture, the question is unsettled.
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Power, prestige, and plausibility can derive from various sources, and in our society one of those is marriage — at least it was 30 years ago.
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Negative rating action on CQNA could derive from a deterioration of Chongqing Municipality's credit profile, which could lower Fitch's internal assessment of the municipality's creditworthiness.
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Scientifically dubious gadgets eager to tell me what's wrong with my body Some people do derive benefits from their fitness trackers and quantifying their health.
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That argument ignores the value that retailers derive from accepting debit cards and the importance of interchange in making the electronic payments system function effectively.
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The new entity would derive around 43 percent of revenue from Germany, including a greater share from more predictable lending to retail customers and companies.
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The idiomatic expression seems to derive from the idea that when selling a home, everything that's not affixed to the plumbing can be carted off.
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Andrej completed his computer vision PhD at Stanford University, where he demonstrated the ability to derive complex descriptions of images using a deep neural net.
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What possible benefit could any society derive from releasing a member of the Manson family or a man who killed his grandmother with a hammer?
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"Without enforcement of [data property rights], anyone can take data and derive value from it without attributing value back to the original owners," Song says.
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The study found allocations of shares in company flotations were "skewed towards buy-side investors from whom banks derive greater revenues from other business lines".
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Researcher Beau Op de Beeck developed a new method to derive these hydrocarbon chains from cellulose, while removing the oxygen inside, deemed undesirable in gasoline.
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And while there's dignity in a day's labor, no matter how simple or technical, my father didn't derive any sense of pride from his work.
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Razi was diagnosed with idiopathic epilepsy, a form that's thought to derive from genetics, in 2013 and placed on anti-seizure medication, the park said.
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"You can use this system to derive various brain regions and like a Lego game, assemble them to form circuits in a dish," he says.
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But get this: since vitamins A and D are fat soluble, this means that the body needs fat to really derive any benefit from them.
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Analysts had been skeptical about the benefits AGL would derive from a takeover of Vocus, which is in the midst of turning around its business.
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One involves "cognitive load" — when you can't hear well, the brain receives garbled signals, forcing it to work harder to derive meaning from the message.
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I went in to say hello to the stuffed animals and to see if I could derive any inspiration from the people interacting with them.
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"All men's miseries derive from not being able to sit in a quiet room alone," the French philosopher Blaise Pascal wrote in the 17th century.
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The mace, decorated with roses, thistles and pearls, represents the royal authority of the crown, from which the Houses of Parliament derive their own authority.
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I want to be careful here because obviously people can derive a sense of meaning and purpose from their religious beliefs and their religious commitments.
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The island's population potentially may pay the steeper price, particularly Cubans who derive their livelihoods from tourism and increased business opportunities stemming from the opening.
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They derive their income from images of their faces, hair, and nails, so they stand to lose a lot more when those images are stolen.
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Her "Imogen Says Nothing" meanders across some mighty strange terrain, and ultimately fails to derive much meaning from the admittedly inventive strands of its story.
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The slowdown in home sales has investors concerned about the impact on Canadian banks, which derive a big chunk of their earnings from residential mortgages.
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Geographically, both derive 21 percent of their revenue from Europe, with the remainder roughly divided between the Americas, Asia Pacific, the Middle East and Africa.
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Only about 35 percent of the companies listed on the JSE derive all their earnings from South Africa, said Gryphon Asset Management analyst Cassie Treurnicht.
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But the gains and losses would derive mostly from the increased profitability of American operations and the lost opportunities to avoid paying United States taxes.
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Such a shift could be particularly disruptive, given that most incumbents still derive the bulk of their revenue and profit from voice and text messages.
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It reminds us that as wonderful as work is (and the accomplishments which derive from it are), it is not sustainable unless balanced by rest.
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And the programming techniques—including self-programming techniques—now bundled up under the catch-all term AI can derive all sorts of meaning from them.
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President Trump will derive immense satisfaction from the fact that over one-in-three Americans trust him more than CNN; 13 percent trust them equally.
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In this case, those plays derive from multiple platforms (mostly YouTube and Myspace) and may even represent repeat plays on behalf of a particular user.
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The United States enjoys enormous advantages that derive from owning and operating hundreds of military bases spanning the alliance network — many in Germany and Japan.
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Idiots stealing wheeled bins from outside homes and businesses, taking them to waste ground or parks, and torching them for whatever kicks they can derive.
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Others derive some sense of cultural currency from renderings of flamenco dancers and bullfights, in spite of those subjects' connections to the colonizing influence of Spain.
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This is very cool, as we can derive precious information about the orbital and mass distribution of planetesimals at the time when the planets were forming.
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Combined with real voting roadblocks that have been put into place in recent years, Trump could undercut the advantage Democrats derive from high rates of voting.
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But it's our job, as parents, to teach our kids that a life well lived doesn't derive from having lots of money or from being famous.
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We all apprehend things in our daily life that we derive pleasure and beauty from, and which we don't spend a lot of time thinking about.
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These workers range from home health care aides whose jobs derive from Medicare and Medicaid to janitors in the federal buildings, such as the US Capitol.
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Combine this with the myriad other types of data and business logic and you create an intricate mesh of data that's difficult to derive conclusions from.
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The two firms are set to join a tiny elite of multinational financial firms that derive a significant share of their global profits from mainland China.
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His tax plan breaks with past establishment Republican candidates for president in its extreme generosity to taxpayers who derive their income from investments rather than work.
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It seems possible that at least part of respondents' negative associations about Twitter could derive from the often negative content for which it is best known.
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Apple's iPhone 7 customers derive from three places: existing Apple users that upgrade, regular phone users that switch to a smartphone, and from competitors like Samsung.
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But not only do approximately a couple billion users derive daily entertainment from the free service, but the service's sheer ubiquity makes it hard to leave.
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Though Jet initially charged a $50 membership fee, from which it said it would derive its profits, it eliminated that charge after only a few months.
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For instance, the idea that women have certain innate characteristics (being loving and nurturing, say) and natural roles that derive from them (wife, mother) is sexist.
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However, it's important to remember the data and information that a company can derive from manually, semi-autonomously and fully autonomously driven miles are very different.
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If copied by other states, such approach would open new opportunities for the companies, which mostly derive revenue from running their own prisons or government facilities.
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Schoeppenthau said the Court's ruling meant all cabin crews in Europe can derive their rights and applicable law from their "Home Base" as a general rule.
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They point out their partners, extol them, call them wife, and derive their own identity from whatever she is or does according to her own volition.
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Marthas, who act as housekeepers, derive their name from the biblical figure Martha, Mary's sister, who's more interested in serving Jesus than listening to his teachings.
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Attractive US Tobacco Industry: We calculate that as a result of the merger with RAI, BAT would derive 45% of its profits from the US market.
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How much value do online publishers derive from behaviorally targeted advertising that uses privacy-hostile tracking technologies to determine which advert to show a website user?
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The Taliban derive an estimated $3 billion from opium, according to UN officials, money that goes a long way in one of the world's poorest countries.
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Besides, as you grow older, I've realized you are forced to reckon with all the garbage you put in your body from which you derive pleasure.
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Mr. Maxwell, though wary, pointed out that companies in the blue-chip FTSE 100 index derive 75 percent or more of their earnings from outside Britain.
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Officials in some states are also trying to determine if they can tax some of the global income that corporations derive from intangible properties, including patents.
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Much of Trump's evangelical support last year appeared to derive not from who he is but rather who he was not: Barack Obama or Hillary Clinton.
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For example, Kraft Heinz, General Mills, Campbell Soup and others in the space derive at least 20 percent of their net sales from Wal-Mart Stores.
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Their painterly intensity and formal composition derive from Henri Cartier-Bresson's definition of photography as "the decisive moment," the juncture of maximal effect and maximal information.
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Perhaps the neural pathways that allowed me to derive pleasure from comics and cycling were simply too well-worn to let me think about anything else.
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The report is the result of a 2016 NTC directive to reform transportation legislations so that Australians can derive the full benefits of self-driving cars.
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Psychologists who have investigated what role superstitions play, have found that they derive from the assumption that a connection exists between co-occurring, non-related events.
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The only lesson the nation should derive from that story is that it's a bad idea to give an extremely long inaugural speech in inclement weather.
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But those looking to biology for an easy-to-administer definition of sex and gender can derive little comfort from the most important of these findings.
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Gulls are what's known as "opportunistic kleptoparasites," meaning they don't derive 100 percent of their diets from heist but rather just steal when the opportunity arises.
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The debate will pit old-school Democrats like Mr. Hoyer, who derive their power from the seniority system, against newcomers, who want to shake things up.
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The sculptures derive directly from humble and silly sources: pizza boxes and shipping cartons covered in newspaper and painted, or cans created out of cardboard cylinders.
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Negative rating action on XICI could derive from deterioration in the credit profile of Xi'an Municipality, which could lower Fitch's internal assessment of the municipality's creditworthiness.
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The weaker U.S. dollar has benefited large multinational companies that derive a large chunk of revenue abroad, said Michael Binger, senior portfolio manager at Gradient Investments.
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"There are a lot of people who derive motivation from inspiring stories of people who look like them," Koch said in an interview in early October.
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"Investors are interested in the real returns they derive from their investments," said Steve Hanke, a professor of applied economics at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore.
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Riddell's designers layer and fuse the 3D scans together to derive a blueprint for each player's helmet, then they send the final design to be manufactured.
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The House bill would only apply the nutrition rule to establishments that derive more than 2900 percent of their total revenue from the sale of food.
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As frustratingly slow as Tillerson's internal deliberations have been, he deserves praise for acknowledging management reforms must derive from a strategic vision of the department's purpose.
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People who brim with confidence derive their sense of pleasure and satisfaction from their own accomplishments, as opposed to what other people think of their accomplishments.
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The bet now is that Tan can use his acquisition integration acumen to derive value from a business vertical that isn't core to Broadcom's semiconductor business.
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And it was a five-second microcosm of a growing, ebullient force in rock, of nonwhite female songwriters who derive power from the small and mundane.
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Yale surveys more than 18,000 adults and then runs various kinds of statistical regressions (more on methodology here) to derive county-level data on climate opinion.
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The ministry also proposed tightening its rules for excluding from its investments companies that derive more than 30 percent of their revenues or activities from thermal coal.
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Risks to financial stability also derive from sharply rising Slovenian real estate prices and concerns over banks' profitability against a backdrop of low interest rates, it added.
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The monthly price factor is added to the average of Platts' dated Brent prices published in the month to derive the Malaysian crude official selling price (OSP).
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Only in Somalia, which in 2011 was the last country to suffer an officially declared famine, does the risk of starvation derive in large part from weather.
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But there's a certain subconscious resonance I felt while watching the New England Patriots literally battling their way back that I can never derive from video games.
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The UK government wants the country to become a global leader in renewables and plans to derive a third of its electricity from offshore wind by 2030.
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Animals can potentially derive two types of information from the geomagnetic field: the direction in which they are facing, and where they sit relative to a goal.
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The 10% figure does in fact derive from an extreme warming scenario, one in which the climate warms by about 8°C, or 14.4°F, by 2100.
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The folk tale doesn't clearly have a point, and that is, well, the point: You're meant to puzzle over its meaning, and maybe eventually derive your own.
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But, you don't have to get too deep into the weeds of your planetary placements to derive astrological meaning from your half birthday, writes astrologer Isabelle Ghaneh.
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Do you put the data into the computer and let them derive the algorithms, and believe those algorithms, and then move forward and bet on with that?
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Until this process of negotiations is over, the United Kingdom remains a member of the European Union, with all the rights and obligations that derive from this.
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Often they are real; for instance, regal and royal derive from the same source, which was imported into English twice, from both Grandpa Latin and Aunt French.
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But just as some people saw a blue dress and others a white one, you're free to derive whatever conclusion you'd like from Lorde's Mona Lisa smile.
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Negative rating action on CQNA could derive from a deterioration of the credit profile of Chongqing Municipality, which could lower Fitch's internal assessment of the municipality's creditworthiness.
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Kreindler said his team hands a potential recruit an iPad, and asks three to five open-ended questions in order to derive about 300 words of speech.
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And, given the dangers of overly-aggressive pore strips and masks, better to derive pleasure from watching someone else attempt it than to try it yourself. Right?
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The tax-deferral benefits are available to multiple owners and spouses who derive income from the business, ensuring partnerships and collective owners can also leverage these vehicles.
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Their rigid class distinctions, false religious piety, sexual aggression, oppression of children, spouses, and siblings—all reveal themselves to derive from the most primitive and idiotic impulses.
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And people who are already being treated for cardiovascular disease might not derive any further benefit from knowing that the arteries in the breast are calcified, too.
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Negative rating action on BIG could derive from a deterioration of the credit profile of Baoji Municipality, which could lower Fitch's internal assessment of the municipality's creditworthiness.
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"To derive a conclusion that is completely contradictory to the path of history and to the interest of the US economy is actually quite sad," Figueres said.
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That meaning of leak is young—since the '50s only—and appears to derive from simple analogy to the ordinary meaning, of stuff escaping through a hole.
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To accomplish this, we started by simply drawing a graph of average Broadway revenues per performance from 1984 to the present, to derive an annual growth rate.
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Differences with allies are inevitable, but instead of resolving them diplomatically, quietly, Trump seems to derive pleasure from rubbing salt in every wound, from maximizing the pain.
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The business model of American Express depends primarily on merchant fees, while competitors like Visa and MasterCard derive most of their revenues from interest on unpaid balances.
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Leveraging data as an asset to derive meaningful evidence-based governmental tools allows for implementation of a smarter and more efficient strategy to respond to natural disasters.
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All other things being equal, we might expect that young girls would derive some benefit from seeing a woman occupying the highest political office in their country.
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"At the end of the day, processors look at the total package of metal and what value they can derive from that," GFMS analyst Johann Wiebe said.
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"The forces of radical Islam derive their ideology from radical clerics like Gülen, who is running a scam," Flynn wrote in an op-ed in The Hill.
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Or more indirectly, "marketers could derive from raised stress levels, poor sleep, and a combination of other behavior that a romance is in trouble," experts have speculated.
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In contrast to some other organizers prominent in New York politics, he didn't seem to derive his power or impact from being commanding or even especially visible.
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The deeper question we need to reckon with is why boys and men are socialized to derive their self-worth from the denigration and domination of women.
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And it applies to nearly any policy question related to Israelis and Palestinians, suggesting that Americans derive their views by identifying with one side over the other.
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Or is it not an issue to you because machine learning will just make the science advance faster and then we can all derive meaning from that?
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Even if producer interests predominate over consumer interests, what producers should care about is not how much they export but how much income they derive from exporting.
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The 400 highest-income taxpayers in the country, with average annual incomes exceeding $300 million each, derive about one-fifth of their income from pass-through businesses.
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Little about this remake is new, including the delight that Senate Republicans derive from making Mayor Bill de Blasio squirm, especially on the matter of mayoral control.
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And while many women derive their deepest fulfillment as mothers, it doesn't preclude their ambition or fly in the face of leaning in or out or sideways.
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Indeed, the DeVoses' education activism, which favors alternatives to traditional public schools, appears to derive from the same free-market views that inform their suspicion of government.
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The alleged savings derive from the erroneous assumption that if Free File users filed their taxes without Free File they would file paper rather than electronic returns.
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"But most of it was only for domestic consumption - we want to help them scale up their production and derive a reliable income from it," he said.
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Algorithms like Digital Shepherds that derive risk scores by weighing variables such as identification of violent extremism ideology and frequency of engagement rely on debunked radicalization theories.
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Instead he said investors should keep an eye on Yum and Starbucks as the outbreak continues, since they derive a larger portion of their profits from China.
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Compared with the highest earners, they often derive a large chunk of their tax benefits from a host of deductions and exclusions that could be cut back.
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I do, however, agree with Bloom when he argues that one can do good, and derive a moral code, without empathy, through the exercise of pure logic.
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I assumed that if it ever went, so too would my femininity, or the strength I derive from traditionally 'feminine' things like makeup, dresses, or domestic badassery.
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The reality is that when we protect birds and their habitats, we derive many co-benefits that support human health and wellbeing, the economy and healthy environments.
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Now that Republicans derive an outsize portion of their support from rural voters, their share of senators exceeds their share of total votes cast in Senate elections.
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" The agency suggested such growth was driven in part by "individuals who could derive equal or greater benefit from less costly alternatives, such as high-amplification phones.
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Neither of us was to blame, as I see it; we were just incompatible in terms of how we process the world and derive meaning from it.
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But Twitter's developer terms prohibit people from using Twitter data to "derive or infer potentially sensitive characteristics about Twitter users" like their political affiliation or religious beliefs.
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