Audiences often assume that artistic difficulty derives from pretentious obscurantism, but Rasheed's installations demonstrate how, at its best, such difficulty derives from nothing more than simple necessity.
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Gazprom derives more than half of its revenues from Europe.
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The primary material from which it derives is very important.
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The strength of this novel derives from the old tradition.
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It derives nearly half of its total revenue outside China.
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The company derives 60 percent of sales from this category.
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Queerness, she wrote, derives its radical power from its inclusivity.
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To piss derives ultimately from the Vulgar Latin verb pissiare.
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The fund derives the majority of its earnings from overseas.
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Much of Il Chiostro's charm derives from its idyllic setting.
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Each derives part of his power by opposing the other.
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Much of the film's power derives from devastating visual juxtapositions.
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Their wealth derives largely from the Dutch brewing giant, Heineken.
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The company derives 35 percent of its revenue from royalties.
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Part of the reason why derives from the race's fundamentals.
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But the atmosphere derives mainly, and beautifully, from the rhythm.
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But, of course, the rings' value ultimately derives from something else.
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FCA derives around 75 percent of its profit from North America.
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" It derives from the french verb provenir, or "to come from.
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Currently the company derives 2403%–2240% of its sales from China.
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The word speculator derives from the Latin word for a "lookout".
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The book's name derives from the temperature at which books burn.
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This anti-gravity effect derives from America's hegemonic role in finance.
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The difference in the latter two estimates derives largely from classification.
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In fact, Iran derives its power mostly from the region's chaos.
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Courage, true courage, derives from that sense of who we are.
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Everything I tell you derives or comes from my actual experience.
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Syngenta derives about a quarter of its sales from North America.
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The bank derives 15 percent of its revenue from that region.
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The word ecstasy derives from the idea of standing outside oneself.
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The term derives from the 19th-century Tory politician Benjamin Disraeli.
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The "super" part derives from the eclipse coinciding with a supermoon.
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True tolerance derives not from coercion but rather from mutual understanding.
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Accuweather derives its core weather data from the National Weather Service.
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The FBI, after all, derives its immense authority from their consent.
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AccuWeather derives its core weather data from the National Weather Service.
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Much of Prince Charles's income derives from the Duchy of Cornwall.
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Much of Catholic education's historic commitment to basketball derives from demographics.
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Undoubtedly, some of the mounting anxiety derives from my family history.
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The name Seattle derives from a local Native American chief, Sealth.
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It's unclear how much of Galvanize's revenue derives from tuition versus rent.
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It derives its name from its course; it typically originates near Hawaii.
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It derives more than a fifth of its revenues from such work.
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Lindsay's tale derives its power from its own rejection of a resolution.
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It derives a significant amount of its revenue from in-game purchases.
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Most state tax revenue derives from individual income, sales and gross receipts.
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Prism derives a unique profile for each insurer based on their experience.
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The name derives from the Ancient Greek words for 'together' and 'feeling'.
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The Emirate derives substantial support from its membership of the UAE federation.
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The emirate derives substantial support from its membership of the UAE federation.
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Dialog derives more than half of its revenue from Apple, analysts estimate.
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Most of the litter and pollution affecting oceans also derives from plastics.
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Financial disclosure: PharmacyChecker derives revenues from its Pharmacy Verification and Listing Programs.
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The sources can vary — Ladder, for instance, derives it from green tea.
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That willingness to take risk derives in part from Mr. Modi's ambition.
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CN. Santander derives more than a quarter of its profit from Brazil.
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Game play is at our core, and everything else derives from that.
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It is from him the Codex derives one of its many names.
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Much of his success with sponsors derives from his social-media savvy.
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The word derives from the Greek "pentekostos," related to the number 50.
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The name NANKEEN derives from Nanjing, China, where this particular fabric originated.
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" The word derives from the Greek "toxikon pharmakon," meaning "poison for arrows.
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This novel derives its power from its limited focus and direct language.
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The tension in fighting derives from the potential for profound personal humiliation.
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Its strength derives not from vast panoramas but from an intimate gaze.
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IT derives power from people's fear, not just from consuming their bodies.
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Facebook now derives the vast majority of its revenue from mobile ads.
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For fans, the thrill derives, in part, from the possibility of disaster.
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Facebook's value derives from the fact that almost everyone is on it.
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Today's MacGyverish food and drink derives not from scarcity but rather abundance.
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History The word amateur derives from the Latin word, amator, or lover.
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The Court's reputation arguably derives from its transformation under President Jimmy Carter.
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Our work is then to pay attention to where the fatigue derives from.
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Faced with such numbers, human probabilistic reasoning derives more from anecdotes than statistics.
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Most of the mystery in the show derives from the dual story lines.
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"Antifa" derives from "anti-fascist," and is associated with aggressive, hard-left activism.
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And from the narrowness of its vision that DFS Lab derives its effectiveness.
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The archipelago in the Indian Ocean derives much of its income from tourism.
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It derives its name from the eponymous blockchain network that records bitcoin transactions.
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The Palmetto State derives its nickname from the state tree, the sabal palmetto.
|
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But the power of the series also derives from its disturbing contemporary echoes.
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Queen Anne's lasting image as a slovenly, childish woman derives from Sarah's memoirs.
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Protelindo derives close to half of its revenue from investment-grade telecom operators.
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Meanwhile, Facebook derives a whopping 82 percent of sales from ad on smartphones.
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ARM derives a majority of its revenue from Asia, followed by North America.
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This manic energy derives, I think, from the many paradoxes that orchids embody.
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"The fear [of shooters] derives from a feeling of being powerless," Parker said.
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SL derives from the German Super-Leicht which means Super Light in English.
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The country derives immense benefits from being part of an $18.5 trillion economy.
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This capacity to depersonalize derives in large part from cultural and political attitudes.
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A title card reads "Happy Arabia," which derives from an Alexandre Dumas text.
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The moniker derives from book, The Sandman, by Prussian Romantic author, E.T.A. Hoffman.
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Christie's novel derives much of its notoriety from the solution to its mystery.
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But the book's momentum derives from the relationship between the protagonist and Hendricks.
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This documentary's title derives from a story told by one of its interviewees.
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A city's dynamism derives from its inefficiencies, from people and ideas colliding unpredictably.
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|
The city's beauty derives from its cacophony of tastes and cultures, its tolerance.
|
|
As Halsall points to, the term "Moors" derives from the Latin word Mauri.
|
|
WEALTH: A billionaire, he derives his fortune from Russian natural resources and banking.
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|
Hansen Holding, which derives 80 percent of its profits from natural food preservatives.
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Americans for Prosperity's position derives from a strong ideological belief in small government.
|
|
It derives from a Spanish specialty called ensaimada, originally from the Balearic Islands.
|
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It is from his repository of fashion wisdom that the film's title derives.
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A family's social standing partly derives from women being able to stay at home.
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Dialog derives more than half of all of its revenue from Apple, analysts estimate.
|
|
Wells Fargo derives just 4 percent of its revenues from outside the United States.
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|
First, the word itself derives from Latin and French roots that are about birth.
|
|
Unlike other big Chinese technology firms, it derives half of its revenue from overseas.
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|
As more and more wealth derives from technology, technology = politics becomes the bedrock law.
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|
Concept of natural-born citizen in #85033thAmendment derives from natural-born subject in Britain.
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The company derives the bulk of its revenue from the United States and Canada.
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The word monsoon derives from mausam in Hindi (and originally from Arabic), meaning "weather".
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|
This sharp shift in the age of authority derives from increasingly rapid technological change.
|
|
Analysts reckon Dialog derives more than half its revenue from supplying Apple with PMICs.
|
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That character, Clady said, derives in part from the aftermath of his mother's death.
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The holiday derives its name from the date it takes place on, 11/11.
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Drama here derives principally from the dances, which are as odd as the costumes.
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The show's allure derives almost entirely from Mr. Fierstein's fairly restrained, impeccably timed performance.
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Rio Tinto derives most of its revenue from iron ore, copper, aluminium and bauxite.
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Concept of natural-born citizen in #14thAmendment derives from natural-born subject in Britain.
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Europe's integration underpins the trade zone from which Europe derives much of its prosperity.
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|
And I don't think this skill is necessarily reserved for, or derives from, privilege.
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The movie derives its humor, such as it is, from the teens' avatar choices.
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The bigger cost derives from how women's ideas are discounted and their talent ignored.
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It is a betrayal of literature itself, from which our idea of the individual derives.
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Its name derives from the initials of its founders, Herman Schreiber and his wife, Blimie.
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ExxonMobil already derives 15-25% of profits from chemicals, twice the share a decade ago.
|
|
Barclays picks out Actelion as it derives 50 percent of revenues from the United States.
|
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Located in Alsace on France's German border, Eurometropole derives some benefits from Germany's dynamic economy.
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|
The pleasure of reading derives not from any neat conclusion, but from the search itself.
|
|
Rather than peddle brand-new virtual products, Miniwiz derives value from physically repurposing old rubbish.
|
|
Yet the longest-lasting impact of Sun on Chinese political life derives from something different.
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|
The term derives from jahada, an Arabic word meaning to labour, struggle or exert effort.
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Stada derives about 20.9184 percent of group sales from Russia, its largest market outside Germany.
|
|
Nokia derives a similar share of revenues from the Chinese mainland, Hong Kong and Taiwan.
|
|
Styx derives its title from the mythic passage of water separating earth from the underworld.
|
|
Converus derives its 86 percent accuracy rate from a number of lab and field studies.
|
|
Yuanfudao told TechCrunch that it derives the majority of its revenues from selling live courses.
|
|
All of Rackstraw Downes's work derives from the simple, everyday act of observing your surroundings.
|
|
Another display of Islamic jade derives from a little-known collection of the Qing emperors.
|
|
Trump, by contrast derives nearly all of his strength in this race from baby boomers.
|
|
In Antiheroes, the rush for the artist derives from the "game-like" environment of creation.
|
|
The chart derives from a poll, conducted by calling 25 record stores on the phone.
|
|
Russia's government derives about 40 percent of its income from the oil and gas industry.
|
|
That could reduce Facebook's advertising revenue and the power it derives from controlling referral traffic.
|
|
Even that modern slur, khawwal , derives from an old term for cross-dressing male dancers.
|
|
Ukraine derives up to 3 percent of its gross domestic product (GDP) from transit charges.
|
|
The process derives from illustrating with pencil and then applying saturation and hue with Photoshop.
|
|
The telco derives only 34% of its funds from operations from its Singapore home market.
|
|
The title of Mr. Kahn's documentary derives from an interview with Mr. Edlis, the collector.
|
|
This was ideal advocacy for Sattriya, which derives from the northeastern Indian state of Assam.
|
|
The technology it uses derives partly from systems designed to grow crops on the moon.
|
|
The Beluga derives its name from the whale to which it bears a striking resemblance.
|
|
Part of the fascination with the Nazca Lines derives from the mystery of their function.
|
|
The Cornelius, North Carolina-based company derives half of its business from staffing truck drivers.
|
|
Its name — like that of Mithril — derives from the writings of J. R. R. Tolkien.
|
|
If anything, he has said that his work derives from more earthy and accidental inspirations.
|
|
Hastings told the Miami Herald on Thursday that Williams' high salary derives from her seniority.
|
|
A lot of the movie's humor derives from showing an older woman as sexually prim.
|
|
That standard derives from a 1964 Supreme Court ruling, New York Times Co. v. Sullivan.
|
|
Okurr, in fact, actually derives from the same place where many catchphrases come from: Drag culture.
|
|
The two Irish subsidiaries and the Dutch intermediary is where the tax loophole derives its nickname.
|
|
You're not the only one whose happiness derives from cheap beer and tipsy conversation (soz mindfulness).
|
|
It continually develops new products and reinvents existing ones and derives increasing revenue from those innovations.
|
|
The hirsute Jones, with her uncanny facial hair, derives somber authority from an intimidating large book.
|
|
Manning's affinity for multilayered compositions derives from the time he spent living in New York City.
|
|
COBALT derives its name from Kobold, a mischievous German goblin who, according to legend, lurks underground.
|
|
The company also derives close to 40% of sales and over 30% of gross profit overseas.
|
|
The EU is fuzzier on how to determine what share of profits derives from these revenues.
|
|
Neither the governor nor any member of his family derives a personal benefit from the donation.
|
|
For Kushner and Sessions, the intense interest also derives from them still working closely with Trump.
|
|
What is not clear is exactly how each respondent derives his or her crop condition score.
|
|
The issue derives from trying to represent a three-dimensional world on a two-dimensional surface.
|
|
Currently AmVac derives 60% of sales in its U.S. home market and 40% externally, Trogele said.
|
|
Biden's third pillar of strength derives from his standing with older Democrats, specifically those over 45.
|
|
Goldman declined to comment on the revenue or profit it derives from clean-coal tax credits.
|
|
When power derives from force of arms and status of birth, inequality and injustice necessarily increase.
|
|
So, yes, this data derives from the first full year of weed sales in the state.
|
|
The color derives from palm nuts crushed into paste, their scarlet oil rising to the top.
|
|
The movie's title derives from what Julita says she wanted from life before she got married.
|
|
The longstanding "vagueness doctrine" derives from the court's understanding of the constitutional guarantee of due process.
|
|
The other risk is to benefits America derives from its status as the world's economic leader.
|
|
Generated through a digital process called "mining," bitcoin derives much of its value from its scarcity.
|
|
The sharp pain of these betrayals, Rosenblum argues, derives from the faith we place in neighborliness.
|
|
"The best slave derives the highest pleasure from being her Master's ultimate tool," read another passage.
|
|
The firm last year spent $54 billion acquiring BG Group, which derives half its production from gas.
|
|
The company also derives close to 40% of sales and over 30% of gross profit from overseas.
|
|
Qualcomm, for instance, derives two-thirds of its revenue from China; for Micron the figure is 57%.
|
|
Qorvo, which employs 8,600 people and makes wireless communication chips, derives 15% of its revenue from Huawei.
|
|
Pešta's greatness derives from his synthesis of empathy and formal concerns, organized in order to interrogate hypocrisy.
|
|
End of the Line's silliness derives directly from its premise: a big man purchased a small man.
|
|
HSBC is headquartered in London but derives much of its revenue in Asia, particularly in Greater China.
|
|
VirnetX is a Zephyr Cove, Nevada-based company that derives most of its revenue from licensing patents.
|
|
The name Melungeon derives from mélange, an appellation bestowed by early French settlers on the Clinch river.
|
|
He derives much of his wealth from his £140,000 per week wages and endorsement deal with Adidas.
|
|
Germany is cleanest, where just a sliver of the country's billionaires derives their wealth from crony sectors.
|
|
Their clout derives from a contemporary form of the centuries' old merging of media and political power.
|
|
So often the horror in fiction about robots derives from the idea of them developing self-awareness.
|
|
The power of Kurtág's creation derives in part from its fusion of Debussy's poetry and Webern's pith.
|
|
According to Old Time Candy, the name derives from how many candies originally came in a pack.
|
|
The company derives 93% of its FY0003 revenue from HDD components, and 7% in automation system integration.
|
|
If Mr. Pence's calculation was readily apparent, what Mr. Trump derives from the partnership is less certain.
|
|
The International Olympic Committee is in charge of the Olympic Games and derives tremendous revenue from them.
|
|
More than 91 percent of the company's revenue comes from subscriptions; the rest derives from professional services.
|
|
Others say the name derives from that of Surgeon General Sir Thomas Gimelette of the Royal Navy.
|
|
Mastiha is made from the resin of the mastic tree, from which English derives the verb masticate.
|
|
Hannity maintains that his scolding of Trump's conservative dissenters derives from his fear of a Clinton presidency.
|
|
Yes, a doctor says, as a person with bad dreams still derives the physiological benefits of sleep.
|
|
IPPsolar derives its power from a solar array system on the rooftop of Truck & Trailer Service Ltd.
|
|
In the fifth installment ("The Spiritual Game"), Brady ruminates on the karmic satisfactions he derives through sports.
|
|
And there's no getting away from the purely instrumental benefits he derives with his seemingly insane tweets.
|
|
And the power it derives from nuclear weapons translates into an ability to build up economic might.
|
|
Aspirin derives from willow bark, whose first-recorded use as a painkiller was in Egypt in 21970BC.
|
|
Apple, he said, derives most of its profit from sales of hardware, not trading your user data.
|
|
The circular imagery is apt for a play whose gimmick derives from concepts of curved space-time.
|
|
Zuckerberg believes that to do anything well, you must have energy, which he derives from staying active.
|
|
McEwan is hardly a dummy; he derives more than a few witty-ish moments from his premise.
|
|
A similar device powers NASA's Curiosity rover on Mars; its thermoelectric generator derives heat from plutonium radiation.
|
|
Their name derives from the fact that (duh) they look like the head of a fiddle instrument.
|
|
The name Élysée derives from the Elysian Fields, the place of the blessed dead in Greek myth.
|
|
Business Diversification The group derives about 60% of its revenue from the cyclical and volatile automotive supply business.
|
|
Her inspiration derives from observations of daily life and how technology has become intertwined into our everyday actions.
|
|
The Romans used it for plumbing—in fact, that word derives from the Latin word for lead, plumbum.
|
|
Her exceptional control of such tension, she claims, derives from her lifelong sense that she is the tension.
|
|
The name itself actually derives from an old "lost palace" that used to be situated in the area.
|
|
It derives a significant amount of its revenue from in-game purchases that players make with their smartphones.
|
|
The weekend derives much of its importance from the fact that so many people are off work together.
|
|
The X1 Carbon derives its name from Lenovo's use of a carbon fiber mesh in the top lid.
|
|
Our fascination with women like Ivanka and Julie, then, derives from their veiled subservience to the president's interests.
|
|
And clearly, this is the, you know, radical version and the point that he derives from the Koran.
|
|
The company says its edge derives from the technology that was developed by engineers and scientists at KAUST.
|
|
Their name derives from the word for "tanned" in Occitan, a language spoken in the south of France.
|
|
"Bitch" is of course a misogynist slur, but it derives from the term referring to a female dog.
|
|
Analysts reckon Dialog derives more than half its revenue from supplying Apple with power management integrated circuits (PMICs).
|
|
According to Goodwill's website, more than $4 billion of its income derives from sales at its retail stores.
|
|
Germany still derives 40 percent of its power from coal and employs tens of thousands in the industry.
|
|
This derives partially from a "leave it all on the field" philosophy that is natural in electoral politics.
|
|
HBO, Netflix, Amazon, Hulu, Buzzfeed — consumers don't care about where content derives, they only care that it's quality.
|
|
Specifically, it derives from the word nkran — "ants" — to reference the abundance of black ants around the area.
|
|
A 20th-century coinage, "genocide" derives from the industrial and bureaucratic scale of slaughter perfected by the Nazis.
|
|
Formally translated as "state", the word derives from gosudar, an old word which signifies a monarch or master.
|
|
The military junta, which seized power in a coup two years ago, derives its authority from the king.
|
|
Some historians claim that the city's name derives from the dhak, a big drum with a clattering sound.
|
|
Toast Ale's recipe derives from a 4,000-year-old practice from the ancient city of Babylon in Mesopotamia.
|
|
My energy derives from movement—from the shuddering of buses, the rumble of planes, trains' and ferries' rocking.
|
|
The FTSE 297.145 index, which derives most of its earnings from abroad, rose 297.323 percent to 21.1015,210 points.
|
|
"Trust derives from candor, and your company will fall apart if your employees don't trust you," he writes.
|
|
This, according to the FAO, represents 14.5% of "anthropogenic" — something which derives from human activity – greenhouse gas emissions.
|
|
"Butcher's Block" is the third installment of this series, which derives its material from popular internet horror stories.
|
|
"Pacification" derives from a Latin word that means to make peace, but the act of pacification is violent.
|
|
New York's abundance of resources, talent and ideas derives from its exceptional diversity and social infrastructure — urban virtues.
|
|
Civility derives, according to the Oxford English Dictionary, from both the Latin civilitas and the Middle French civilité.
|
|
Vote-at-home's power derives from it being an opt-out rather than an opt-in election system.
|
|
The company derives revenues from membership fees, billing insurers for services and through network partnerships with health systems.
|
|
Adient also derives profits from 17 joint ventures in China, where its largest partner is interiors supplier Yanfeng.
|
|
The nickname Bombino derives from his teens, when he was the youngest kid hanging out with older musicians.
|
|
His visual style derives from a corner of life that we never even knew had a style — i.e.
|
|
The name derives from "poesy," a kind of short-form poetry that often uses rhythmic or rhyming verse.
|
|
Shares in ARM, which derives most of its earnings in U.S. dollars, have also risen steadily since Brexit.
|
|
It's from these two numbers that Trump derives his $3.5 billion he argues California owes the federal government.
|
|
The novel's title derives from the shopkeeper's ability to replicate and even improve any item Frobisher brings in.
|
|
It derives both color and tannic structure in the qvevri by macerating and aging with the grape skins.
|
|
Because Wells Fargo derives nearly all of its profits from the United States, it would make out best.
|
|
And though it's a scenario that seems extreme on paper, Climax derives its power from an unsettling realism.
|
|
Intimate Immensity's strength derives from its quiet concentration, which feels to me like resistance built for the long haul.
|
|
A large slice of what the yellow vests call their patrimony derives from Turks, Jordanians and others selling theirs.
|
|
Concern derives in part from the industry's explosive growth in the past three decades, to $11.3 trillion in 20083.
|
|
Like Carlip, Ng also derives the large value for a positive cosmological constant using a model of spacetime bubbles.
|
|
Over two-thirds of the Arctic's contribution derives from ice loss from Greenland, according to the latest SWIPA report.
|
|
But the fact that they do this shows that they don't actually believe their power derives from the people.
|
|
These days the company derives nearly 75 percent of its revenue from those monthly subscription plans to individual traders.
|
|
The Fed derives profit from the holdings and sends it to the government in a quiet windfall for taxpayers.
|
|
If you're one of those people who derives pleasure from being scared senseless, then this will certainly interest you.
|
|
Its title derives from The Brothers Karamazov, which, coincidentally, Dostoevsky wrote two years before his own death in 1881.
|
|
Miller's Nephew-ness derives from his meanness: despite being five feet, 10 inches tall, he is a small man.
|
|
The improvement derives largely from a national investment of over $100 million in a 4,500-kilometer fiber optic network.
|
|
The subject derives from a watercolor of 1947 where she feminizes the Christian Saint Sebastian for the first time.
|
|
Russia derives 20 percent of its gross domestic product from the Arctic, primarily from onshore oil and gas wells.
|
|
Lawmakers, NRA leadership and grassroots Second Amendment supporters all say the NRA derives its power from its membership roll.
|
|
Prysmian derives the bulk of its sales from the energy and infrastructure businesses, which includes its power distribution business.
|
|
Malaria used to be widespread in Italy and the name derives from the Italian "mal aria" or "bad air".
|
|
It derives its warmth and characteristic qualities from the sort of "imperfections" hi-res audio is ostensibly ironing out.
|
|
Compare that to Alaska, which derives more than two-thirds of its revenues from state levies on hydrocarbon extraction.
|
|
Our collective trauma derives from the unspeakably tragic loss of life, but also the disruption of this communal space.
|
|
Homes abandoned in the battle lie strewn across the rocky highlands from which their state, Plateau, derives its name.
|
|
L'Engle's book derives its magic from refracting and magnifying Meg's pain, anger, and impotent rage into a fantasy quest.
|
|
It actually derives from RuPaul's Drag Race season six contestant Laganja Estranja, who used it first on the show.
|
|
We know that America derives its strength from its values and we can never retreat from that core concept.
|
|
The undertone of sadness in all of Mitchell's music derives from that gesture, as does the impulse toward flight.
|
|
She writes that "there is peculiarly modern predilection for psychological explanations of disease," which derives from psychology's scientific flavor.
|
|
Six decades later, Trump's "America First" doctrine little values those alliances or the strength the U.S. derives from them.
|
|
The MLM business model, which derives its revenues from a non-salaried workforce, relies on constantly recruiting new staff.
|
|
Part of the legitimacy of these programs derives from their focus on both Islamist and white-nationalist-inspired terrorism.
|
|
The podcast's name derives from the typical reaction of a layperson to reading a noncelebrity's name in the news.
|
|
Net worth: $18.5 billionSource of wealth: Advance PublicationsThe Newhouse family's wealth derives from the publishing giant Sam Newhouse created.
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" It refers to a habitual residence, of course, but it derives from an Old English verb meaning "to wait.
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Here's the Russian eagle, which has two heads and derives from the coat of arms of the Russian czars.
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Customer Concentration: Like most EMS providers, Flex derives a significant portion of its revenue from a select few customers.
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Qatar's wealth derives from the South Pars/North Dome Gas field — the world's largest — which it shares with Iran.
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Opening the local pork market will affect CP Foods, which derives 30 percent of revenue from sales in Thailand.
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SKF derives about 70 percent of group sales from its industrial business and the rest from the automotive sector.
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A person is a "relational" leader when he or she derives some authority from relationships with aides or employees.
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"I do feel a sense of connectedness to the world around me that derives from studying consciousness," he said.
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His vast popularity within the military derives largely from his reputation for total, self-punishing commitment to his troops.
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"American Horror Story" derives its coherence not from a stable set of characters and situations but from the opposite.
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In all of these instances, the Director and the total hierarchy underneath them derives symbolic power from the board.
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Mr. Trump's view of policing clearly derives from "Dirty Harry" fantasies, with he himself playing the beloved strongman commandant.
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The word oelek derives from the Indonesian ulekan dan cobek, the stone mortar and pestle used to prepare sambal.
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Juuls and other e-cigarettes are regulated by the F.D.A. as tobacco products because nicotine derives from tobacco leaves.
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I love the idea of the Crone and her power, and that none of it derives from sexual desire.
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I suspect some of the community pushback to that idea derives from a lack of collaborative planning and architecture.
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Yet this refuge necessarily implies exclusion—after all, the term pairidaeza derives from the words for "walled" and "around".
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A derivative is a security, like a stock, that derives its value from an underlying asset, like a mortgage.
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His vision derives from the way things are, the changes that have occurred since Thoreau, confirmed by the camera.
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From these four, the geomancer then derives a further twelve patterns, using the following dials to record each stage.
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Part of the problem derives from a law banning women married to foreigners passing their nationality to their children.
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But for most artists, the value of the work derives mainly from the labor that they put into it.
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As it happens, this authority derives from the Constitution, the very document Cevallos claims his opinions would serve to protect.
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Victoria's Secret now derives more than 20% of its revenue online, partly as a result of its vibrant catalog business.
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Like Bailly, a classics professor and a former Scripps bee champion, Sietsema derives tremendous satisfaction from working with young spellers.
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They picked out luxury retailer Luxottica as exposed, because it derives 58 percent of its revenues from the United States.
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Schwab, which derives about 11 percent of its revenue from trading fees, saw its shares fall 4.9 percent at $39.33.
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This most recent frame derives from measurements of 4,536 quasars, all between 100 million and 10 billion light-years away.
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But while in ketosis, the body derives ketone bodies from the butter you just drank or from previously stored fat.
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While "The Apollo" itself might have taken a more inventive approach, it derives its power from the artistry it captures.
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It is also a major global investor in equities and bonds, and derives the majority of its earnings from overseas.
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Patents, copyrights and trademarks all protect intellectual property – an invention, idea or process that derives from a person's creative thoughts.
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But mostly, the attention derives from the fact that their outrageously theatrical dancing always becomes the talk of the night.
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It's not that the ideas are based on something literal; rather they spring from something which derives from my consciousness.
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Post-product/market fit, the limiting factor to scale generally derives from some version of not having enough great leaders.
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President Joseph Kabila's legitimacy derives directly from the St Sylvester agreement brokered in December 2951 by Catholic bishops in Kinshasa.
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Rail operator Kansas City Southern, which derives a big portion of its revenue from Mexico, saw its shares tumble 27.3%.
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So far, so young millennial – but her spark really derives from her live performance, which is both intense and dynamic.
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Given the reservoir of anti-Americanism in Turkey, any Turkish leader derives political benefits from conflict with the United States.
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When their primary income derives from elsewhere, it becomes easier for critics to take chances and experiment in their writing.
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It derives two-thirds of its revenue from outside China and is the top seller of premium smartphones in India.
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Our government derives its legitimacy entirely from the fact that electoral results, more or less, reflect the will of voters.
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This slang noun possibly derives from the Norse word for "pouch," or by analogy with the small, warm, furry animal.
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Our core strength as a country derives from the First Amendment, freedom of the press, liberty and our democratic institutions.
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Tenant's Business: Windstream derives more than 70% of revenues from business services (including the carrier market) and consumer broadband markets.
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Medical consequences The lethality of ricin derives from its ability to stop protein synthesis and halt the machinery of cells.
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Mnangagwa remains one of the most powerful figures in the country and derives much of his support from the military.
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It's believed that the word kefir derives from the Turkish word keyif, meaning "pleasure" or "feeling good" after its ingestion.
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Like that pickpocket, the spiritually moribund Yurika derives what little joy she can find in life from violating its rules.
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Trump on Monday said he derives "no satisfaction" from Clinton's health woes, adding she has struggled with health concerns before.
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The clearest illegality derives from the fact that the league adopted its new policy without bargaining with the players union.
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Namely, the source of conservative discontent derives from the fact that Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas was excluded from enshrinement.
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Look up the etymology of 'anger' and you'll find that it derives from the Old Norse adjective 'ongrfullr' meaning 'sorrowful.
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The performers seem more positioned than directed, and the movie's fascination for a contemporary viewer derives from their self-presentation.
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This apparel style derives from 19th-century workwear that is worn over street clothes to keep them from getting dirty.
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This division derives from our different views of the C.C.P. — Gao Enzhou, Bangkok I'm currently a university student in London.
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"There's a fundamental principle of law that derives from Sherlock Holmes, which is the dog that didn't bark," he said.
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About three-quarters of economic activity derives from consumer spending, and half of that is at risk, Mr. Daco said.
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But the film derives some of its vital energy from the way that it often seems to argue with itself.
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This should not distract from the thesis of this book, which derives from my own life, my experiences and observations.
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The Hopi Tribe derives 85 percent of its annual general fund from coal, and the Navajo Nation around 22 percent.
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Qualcomm derives almost half of its revenue from China, and there are concerns that the coronavirus outbreak could hurt sales.
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Shakespeare's anti-Semitism, Jacobson insists, is simply a category error; the morality in his play derives from his villain's religion.
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Relocating an entire neighborhood, especially a neighborhood whose significance derives in large part from its coastal position, is another matter.
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Relocating an entire neighborhood, especially a neighborhood whose significance derives in large part from its coastal position, is another matter.
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Yet if the film derives power from its broader context, there's strength in the journey as well as the destination.
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Anschutz made his fortune in oil, railroads, telecom, real estate, and entertainment, while Hunt's wealth derives from the oil industry.
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Mr. King's influence over national politics derives from his representation of the reddest district in the first presidential nominating state.
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Mr. Franks's wealth derives primarily from stock in Trinity Petroleum, where he was chief executive before he ran for Congress.
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The real strength of moneyed interests in Congress derives from America's unfortunate habit of starving its public institutions of resources.
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Shares of Snap, which derives revenue mostly from ad sales on its social media app, dropped 0.75 percent to $14.53.
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MARYLAND: Cake-like Berger Cookies are topped with a thick layer of chocolate fudge that derives from a German recipe.
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This speculation derives from the fact that if you kill a White Walker, all of the wights they "sired" die.
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Colgate derives a significant portion of its revenue from so-called developing economies, so it's less exposed to temperamental U.S. consumers.
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But aside from these stunts, Bin Laden's music has little to do with the terrorist from whom he derives his alias.
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Venture capital's risk/return profile derives from the inherently risky nature of the businesses themselves, usually because of their early stage.
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Now, after meeting Holly, we know where June derives the strength that has carried her through her years as a handmaid.
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Also, passwords aren't typically hidden by asterisks anymore; they're hidden with dots, which is where the new icon derives its design.
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Britain's Trooping of the Colour features storied regiments but derives its meaning from the monarch, before whom the colours are trooped.
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Today, their "energy" typically derives from some type of neurological stimulant that makes people feel more energetic, or sometimes just sugar.
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In musical terminology, tempo is the speed or pace of a given piece and derives directly from the average beat duration.
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The final source of growth derives from advances in technology that introduce something new to the world at large (technological innovation).
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The most detailed numbers come from South Korea's central bank, which derives them from figures on production volumes of various goods.
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My definition is more expansive, but derives some cultural legitimacy from the fact that it tracks the Uerdingen line almost perfectly.
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Much of the episode's humor derives from that dissonance: The Dunphys are in mourning, but they're also in very silly costumes.
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Garlinghouse likened Ripple's situation to Yahoo, which derives almost all of its current value from its large stake in China's Alibaba.
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My interest probably derives from the two years I spent being sexually harassed by a married writer at the New Yorker.
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From "Handmaids" to "Angels," this new society enforces a hierarchy using a distinct vocabulary, much of which derives from the Bible.
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The decline is hammering the economy of the country, which derives about 95 percent of its export earnings from extractive industries.
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The name derives from a ritual dance in which we skip around a burning bus while punching ourselves in the face.
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Valerian, directed by Luc Besson, derives it name and its fantastical world from the French comic book series Valérian and Laureline.
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A more serious limitation of the book, in my view, derives from Junger's reliance on evolutionary psychology for his explanatory framework.
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Schwab, for example, now derives more than half of its revenue from money it makes on the cash holdings of clients.
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Their power derives partly from their innate tension; these are works of artistry and precision carved with a swift, violent instrument.
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Economists' near-universal disdain for rent control derives from a belief in their models, but those models don't apply right now.
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The hunting of humans, and the gratification the sniper derives from the ruthless murder of an unarmed Palestinian civilian in Gaza.
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Free-traders are not indifferent to national security nor blind to the benefits a nation derives from having a middle class.
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The "whit" part derives from "white," for the clothing many wore for baptisms held on Whitsun, another British name for Pentecost.
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Should Ford and G.M. be categorized as tech companies, too, when the bulk of their revenue eventually derives from electric vehicles?
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Turning earnest, Clark explained that she actually derives as much benefit from doing her radio show as any of her listeners.
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The exhibition's allure instead derives from its comfort with paradox and difficulty, its calm in the face of rising, polluted waters.
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The name Wool, which is more than 1,000 years old, derives from Wyllon or Well, which means spring, the council said.
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The pleasure of "The Country Life" derives from how skillfully Cusk draws us into "the solipsistic cabbage patch" of Stella's consciousness.
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Like that movie, "Blinded by the Light" derives many of its laughs from the divide between conservative parents and defiant children.
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In part, it derives from factors beyond our control — nativism in the West, Hindu supremacy in India or totalitarianism in China.
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The corporation derives the majority of its funding from a levy on farmers' output, which encourages projects that will increase yields.
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Right of blood Jus soli derives from common law, the system used in most English-speaking countries and former British colonies.
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Nike Inc, which derives 62.5% of its revenues from overseas, reported its first-quarter earnings for fiscal year 2020 on Tuesday.
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Mr Trudeau is unlikely to cut Alberta's subsidy to the rest of Canada, even though it largely derives from oil dollars.
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Granted, Trump derives most of his energy from consuming day-old Burger King chicken fries, but it's energy all the same.
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So it all derives from a Caribbean aspect of it because I'm Bahamian and Native American, so I'm pretty much mixed.
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Ninety percent of the DNA from the later skeletons derives from the Anatolian farmers; 10 percent comes from the hunter-gatherers.
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Iowa derives about a third of its economy from agriculture, which may explain the need for migrant workers in the state.
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