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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The strength of this novel derives from the old tradition.
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Much of Il Chiostro's charm derives from its idyllic setting.
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Much of the film's power derives from devastating visual juxtapositions.
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Part of the reason why derives from the race's fundamentals.
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But, of course, the rings' value ultimately derives from something else.
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" It derives from the french verb provenir, or "to come from.
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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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Courage, true courage, derives from that sense of who we are.
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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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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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Most state tax revenue derives from individual income, sales and gross receipts.
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The name derives from the Ancient Greek words for 'together' and 'feeling'.
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Most of the litter and pollution affecting oceans also derives from plastics.
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Game play is at our core, and everything else derives from that.
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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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The tension in fighting derives from the potential for profound personal humiliation.
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Facebook's value derives from the fact that almost everyone is on it.
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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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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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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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"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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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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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.
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As Halsall points to, the term "Moors" derives from the Latin word Mauri.
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Americans for Prosperity's position derives from a strong ideological belief in small government.
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It derives from a Spanish specialty called ensaimada, originally from the Balearic Islands.
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A family's social standing partly derives from women being able to stay at home.
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First, the word itself derives from Latin and French roots that are about birth.
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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 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.
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Concept of natural-born citizen in #14thAmendment derives from natural-born subject in Britain.
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And I don't think this skill is necessarily reserved for, or derives from, privilege.
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The bigger cost derives from how women's ideas are discounted and their talent ignored.
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Its name derives from the initials of its founders, Herman Schreiber and his wife, Blimie.
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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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All of Rackstraw Downes's work derives from the simple, everyday act of observing your surroundings.
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Another display of Islamic jade derives from a little-known collection of the Qing emperors.
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In Antiheroes, the rush for the artist derives from the "game-like" environment of creation.
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The chart derives from a poll, conducted by calling 25 record stores on the phone.
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That could reduce Facebook's advertising revenue and the power it derives from controlling referral traffic.
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Even that modern slur, khawwal , derives from an old term for cross-dressing male dancers.
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The process derives from illustrating with pencil and then applying saturation and hue with Photoshop.
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The title of Mr. Kahn's documentary derives from an interview with Mr. Edlis, the collector.
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This was ideal advocacy for Sattriya, which derives from the northeastern Indian state of Assam.
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Part of the fascination with the Nazca Lines derives from the mystery of their function.
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Its name — like that of Mithril — derives from the writings of J. R. R. Tolkien.
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If anything, he has said that his work derives from more earthy and accidental inspirations.
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Hastings told the Miami Herald on Thursday that Williams' high salary derives from her seniority.
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A lot of the movie's humor derives from showing an older woman as sexually prim.
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That standard derives from a 1964 Supreme Court ruling, New York Times Co. v. Sullivan.
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Okurr, in fact, actually derives from the same place where many catchphrases come from: Drag culture.
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You're not the only one whose happiness derives from cheap beer and tipsy conversation (soz mindfulness).
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Manning's affinity for multilayered compositions derives from the time he spent living in New York City.
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The EU is fuzzier on how to determine what share of profits derives from these revenues.
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For Kushner and Sessions, the intense interest also derives from them still working closely with Trump.
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The issue derives from trying to represent a three-dimensional world on a two-dimensional surface.
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Biden's third pillar of strength derives from his standing with older Democrats, specifically those over 45.
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Goldman declined to comment on the revenue or profit it derives from clean-coal tax credits.
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When power derives from force of arms and status of birth, inequality and injustice necessarily increase.
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So, yes, this data derives from the first full year of weed sales in the state.
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The color derives from palm nuts crushed into paste, their scarlet oil rising to the top.
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The movie's title derives from what Julita says she wanted from life before she got married.
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The longstanding "vagueness doctrine" derives from the court's understanding of the constitutional guarantee of due process.
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The other risk is to benefits America derives from its status as the world's economic leader.
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The sharp pain of these betrayals, Rosenblum argues, derives from the faith we place in neighborliness.
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Pešta's greatness derives from his synthesis of empathy and formal concerns, organized in order to interrogate hypocrisy.
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The name Melungeon derives from mélange, an appellation bestowed by early French settlers on the Clinch river.
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Their clout derives from a contemporary form of the centuries' old merging of media and political power.
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So often the horror in fiction about robots derives from the idea of them developing self-awareness.
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According to Old Time Candy, the name derives from how many candies originally came in a pack.
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If Mr. Pence's calculation was readily apparent, what Mr. Trump derives from the partnership is less certain.
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More than 91 percent of the company's revenue comes from subscriptions; the rest derives from professional services.
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Others say the name derives from that of Surgeon General Sir Thomas Gimelette of the Royal Navy.
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Hannity maintains that his scolding of Trump's conservative dissenters derives from his fear of a Clinton presidency.
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And the power it derives from nuclear weapons translates into an ability to build up economic might.
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Aspirin derives from willow bark, whose first-recorded use as a painkiller was in Egypt in 21970BC.
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The circular imagery is apt for a play whose gimmick derives from concepts of curved space-time.
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Zuckerberg believes that to do anything well, you must have energy, which he derives from staying active.
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Their name derives from the fact that (duh) they look like the head of a fiddle instrument.
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The name Élysée derives from the Elysian Fields, the place of the blessed dead in Greek myth.
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Her inspiration derives from observations of daily life and how technology has become intertwined into our everyday actions.
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The Romans used it for plumbing—in fact, that word derives from the Latin word for lead, plumbum.
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Her exceptional control of such tension, she claims, derives from her lifelong sense that she is the tension.
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The name itself actually derives from an old "lost palace" that used to be situated in the area.
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Our fascination with women like Ivanka and Julie, then, derives from their veiled subservience to the president's interests.
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And clearly, this is the, you know, radical version and the point that he derives from the Koran.
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The company says its edge derives from the technology that was developed by engineers and scientists at KAUST.
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Their name derives from the word for "tanned" in Occitan, a language spoken in the south of France.
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"Bitch" is of course a misogynist slur, but it derives from the term referring to a female dog.
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According to Goodwill's website, more than $4 billion of its income derives from sales at its retail stores.
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Specifically, it derives from the word nkran — "ants" — to reference the abundance of black ants around the area.
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A 20th-century coinage, "genocide" derives from the industrial and bureaucratic scale of slaughter perfected by the Nazis.
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Formally translated as "state", the word derives from gosudar, an old word which signifies a monarch or master.
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Some historians claim that the city's name derives from the dhak, a big drum with a clattering sound.
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Toast Ale's recipe derives from a 4,000-year-old practice from the ancient city of Babylon in Mesopotamia.
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My energy derives from movement—from the shuddering of buses, the rumble of planes, trains' and ferries' rocking.
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"Trust derives from candor, and your company will fall apart if your employees don't trust you," he writes.
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This, according to the FAO, represents 14.5% of "anthropogenic" — something which derives from human activity – greenhouse gas emissions.
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"Pacification" derives from a Latin word that means to make peace, but the act of pacification is violent.
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New York's abundance of resources, talent and ideas derives from its exceptional diversity and social infrastructure — urban virtues.
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Vote-at-home's power derives from it being an opt-out rather than an opt-in election system.
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The nickname Bombino derives from his teens, when he was the youngest kid hanging out with older musicians.
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His visual style derives from a corner of life that we never even knew had a style — i.e.
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The name derives from "poesy," a kind of short-form poetry that often uses rhythmic or rhyming verse.
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The novel's title derives from the shopkeeper's ability to replicate and even improve any item Frobisher brings in.
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Intimate Immensity's strength derives from its quiet concentration, which feels to me like resistance built for the long haul.
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A large slice of what the yellow vests call their patrimony derives from Turks, Jordanians and others selling theirs.
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Over two-thirds of the Arctic's contribution derives from ice loss from Greenland, according to the latest SWIPA report.
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But the fact that they do this shows that they don't actually believe their power derives from the people.
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Its title derives from The Brothers Karamazov, which, coincidentally, Dostoevsky wrote two years before his own death in 1881.
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Miller's Nephew-ness derives from his meanness: despite being five feet, 10 inches tall, he is a small man.
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The subject derives from a watercolor of 1947 where she feminizes the Christian Saint Sebastian for the first time.
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Malaria used to be widespread in Italy and the name derives from the Italian "mal aria" or "bad air".
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Our collective trauma derives from the unspeakably tragic loss of life, but also the disruption of this communal space.
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It actually derives from RuPaul's Drag Race season six contestant Laganja Estranja, who used it first on the show.
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The undertone of sadness in all of Mitchell's music derives from that gesture, as does the impulse toward flight.
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She writes that "there is peculiarly modern predilection for psychological explanations of disease," which derives from psychology's scientific flavor.
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Six decades later, Trump's "America First" doctrine little values those alliances or the strength the U.S. derives from them.
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Part of the legitimacy of these programs derives from their focus on both Islamist and white-nationalist-inspired terrorism.
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The podcast's name derives from the typical reaction of a layperson to reading a noncelebrity's name in the news.
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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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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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"I do feel a sense of connectedness to the world around me that derives from studying consciousness," he said.
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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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His vision derives from the way things are, the changes that have occurred since Thoreau, confirmed by the camera.
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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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As it happens, this authority derives from the Constitution, the very document Cevallos claims his opinions would serve to protect.
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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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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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So far, so young millennial – but her spark really derives from her live performance, which is both intense and dynamic.
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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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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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Medical consequences The lethality of ricin derives from its ability to stop protein synthesis and halt the machinery of cells.
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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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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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This should not distract from the thesis of this book, which derives from my own life, my experiences and observations.
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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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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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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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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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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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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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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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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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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 name derives from a ritual dance in which we skip around a burning bus while punching ourselves in the face.
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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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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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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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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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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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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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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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The name derives from the wired version of the company's cheaply priced Bullet earbuds, though this version looks decidedly less like ammunition.
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The term derives from the war in Vietnam, where it was used to justify American intervention to stop the spread of communism.
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The vast majority of the humor, however, derives from its particular rendering of what is coded, again and again, as Trump Country.
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But there's a strained negotiation to this work, which I think derives from the contradictory cycles of information in the digital age.
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A church is, in the Greek of the New Testament, a "gathering place" or ekklesia; our word "ecclesiastical" derives from that root.
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People like Bancroft are called Meths, a term that derives from the Biblical figure Methusulah, who lived to be 969 years old.
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The company's value derives from software that locates optimal deals with algorithms and collects vast amounts of data to inform purchase decisions.
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Of course, sitcoms are also governed by stereotypes — by the idea that humor often derives from the broadest possible version of something.
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"Concept of natural-born citizen in #14thAmendment derives from natural-born subject in Britain," Amash, who represents Michigan's 3rd Congressional District, tweeted.
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The conjunction book and concluded show title—The Democratic Forest—derives from the photographer's equal treatment of all subjects in his compositions.
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"The clearest illegality derives from the fact that the league adopted its new policy without bargaining with the players union," Sachs writes.
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As Annie gets louder and, at times, more self-centered, we can see the rush she derives from finally putting herself first.
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The word "poetry" derives from the Greek poiesis , which doesn't refer to the writing of verse; it just means "making," in general.
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From the Latin root of the word 'Engine', the word Engineer derives from the word ingenuity, meaning to show brilliance in creation.
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They point out that anything the paper does carries the prestige of The New York Times and all that derives from it.
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From the latin root of the word 'Engine' the word Engineer derives from the word ingenuity, meaning to show brilliance in creation.
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In America, the legal meaning of "due process" derives from the common law tradition, the Bill of Rights, laws and court precedents.
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The tradition of honoring veterans at the SOTU is a relatively recent one that derives from the concept of highlighting American heroism.
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Much of the tension in the book derives from encounters with Islamist leaders in these places, and her attempts to understand them.
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Most of this exhibition's Rainer choreography derives from 1961-43; the earliest, "Three Satie Spoons" (1961), has a title I can't resist.
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In Russia, the status of a member of the opposition derives from the level of interest the police pay to the person.
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Perhaps Fugazzi's skill as an abstract painter derives from his background as a representational painter and as a former student of architecture.
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The income China derives from exports to the US is probably not much more than half the face value of those exports.
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The address derives from the US Constitution, but the language is vague, so different presidents have put their own spin on it.
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About 10 percent of Thailand's gross domestic product derives from tourism, and Chinese people are by far the biggest group of visitors.
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Its power derives from the spiritual capital the network has built for more than half a century in evangelical homes across America.
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The notion of "carried interest" derives from the share of profits that twelfth-century ship captains received on the cargo they carried.
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Stevens: This derives from the Christian story of the last supper, that Seder meal in that upper room on a Thursday night.
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This idea derives from traditional Marxist thinking: The "superstructure" of ideology, theorists argued, is determined by the economic "base" of class relations.
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It derives from the Latin, inaugurationem, meaning "consecration" and for hundreds of years was used to commemorate the ascension of new leaders.
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I think their power, an entity's power derives from repetition and being there every night and over time, reaching a big audience.
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Since two thirds of GDP derives from our consumer economy, it matters that wages are up 22008 percent, and personal spending is up.
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Sybaritic—a word meaning outrageously luxurious—derives from the ancient Greek city of Sybaris, known for its inhabitants' excessively piscine and indulgent feasts.
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Consider this passage: California's ability to hold aliens in its criminal system derives from the federal government's decision to let it do so.
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If the correlation between unfair advantage and plastic surgery derives from me being a transgender woman, it is clearly a matter of ignorance.
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Insys' prior authorization unit and the extent of sales it derives from prior authorization prescriptions was also a subject of the CNBC investigation.
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The beauty of cochineal-dyed fabrics derives from how, like stuff colored with madder or indigo or mud, they are mutable over time.
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The name derives from the discs in which the meat was traditionally cooked—discs that came from retired machinery used to plough fields.
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And if that isn't enough, the first mention of Satan derives from the Book of Job, translated from the Hebrew word for adversary.
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"My energy derives from movement — from the shuddering of buses, the rumble of planes, trains' and ferries' rocking," the nameless narrator tells us.
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Nineteen percent backed weakening E.P.A. rules — a prime objective of the Kochs, much of whose wealth derives from the petroleum and chemical industries.
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The word was first defined in a Merriam-Webster dictionary in 1967 and derives from the Surrealism artistic movement of the early 1900s.
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The video clip derives from a pro-Trump meme in which the president's face is superimposed on popular movies, cartoons and sports clips.
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Understanding this motivation and the reality that derives from it should help leaders develop a strategy of dealing with Putin and his entourage.
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An Appraisal His visual style derives from a corner of life that we never even knew had a style — that is, the classroom.
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However delicious those pancakes are, the fascination (aided by that wobbly table) derives from the visuals of the food itself and the setting.
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Unlike many actors whose expertise derives from movies, she has no trouble fully inhabiting, and projecting, even a jury-rigged character like Chloe.
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The obligation derives from the Fifth Amendment, for action by the federal government, and from the 14th Amendment, for action by state governments.
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The expression derives from the conventional meaning of a receipt that shows proof of purchase, but in this case, it's showing proof of shade.
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The modern cheque derives from an Arabic instrument, a written vow to pay for goods on delivery, to avoid carrying money on dangerous journeys.
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Maturities for financial institutions total EUR5303bn, of which EUR104bn (17%) derives from Italian, Spanish and Portuguese banks, which collectively issued only EUR6.7bn in January.
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The epithet derives from a short story of the early 20th century in which an aristocrat called Zhao humiliates a sort of Chinese Everyman.
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For the human pony, the excitement derives from the sense of freedom in becoming something else, something free to be sexual, playful, and affectionate.
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This loop derives from older proposals for a separated Blue Line that was supposed to add service to Georgetown while alleviating the core crunch.
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Judge Abrams called it "meritless," because Margouleff's claim of ownership derives from his purchase of the guitar, not from Beck's loss of the instrument.
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He hates his town (the show's title derives from his profane moniker for the place), but he also feels a deep loyalty to it.
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Leaks often take place when the wrongdoers sense tacit permission or feel the comfort of anonymity that derives from being part of a crowd.
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A mere 20 minutes long, the documentary, directed by Ciaran Cassidy and Adrian Chen, derives from a 2014 investigative piece by Chen for Wired.
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Those are normally manufactured with lenticular printing, in which the holographic illusion derives from a corrugated surface texture, rather than special paint or ink.
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Of the $1.52 trillion in outstanding student loan debt held by this country, $102 billion of it, or 7.5%, derives from private student loans.
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Linguists think the phrase "badger someone" came from their relentless salesmanship — either that, or the occupation derives from "bagger," someone who carries a bag.
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It's no coincidence that "lunacy" and "lunar" sound alike: "Lunacy" derives from the Latin "lunaticus," madness understood as a consequence of the full moon.
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The word quarantine derives from the Venetian word for 40 days, the length of the isolation period imposed on ships during times of plague.
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I'm not sure how much it actually helps him, beyond the fleeting happiness he possibly derives from believing he's getting a Special Breakfast Treat.
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Much of Deciem's value derives from The Ordinary, which has become its most popular offering, leaping over brands like NIOD, Loopha and Ab Crew.
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The name Campeche, he explained, derives from the words kaam, meaning mirror, and pech, meaning birds in the near-extinct local dialect of Maya.
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Qatar has sought to parlay the financial muscle it derives from its enormous gas reserves into a diplomatic status otherwise undeserved by its size.
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One example of this is marginal utility, a basic building block of modern economics that assumes all value derives from the wants of consumers.
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That style derives from the era when Italian immigrants, coming from scarcity, turned to the abundant cheap cuts of meat in their new country.
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This anomaly derives from the origins of the Commonwealth, which became a U.S. protectorate in 28500, as part of the Spanish American War booty.
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You can easily see the originality of Mr. Taylor's idea, which derives from Elgar's music (and maybe from Frederick Ashton's 1968 ballet for that).
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Yoga derives from ancient Indian spiritual practices and an explicitly religious element of Hinduism (although yogic practices are also common to Buddhism and Jainism).
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Though the title of John Guare's latest play may sound like an especially racy entry in Urban Dictionary, it derives from a whaling crisis.
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Mr. Guaidó's claim derives from a creative interpretation of a constitutional provision, rather than from popular will or the due process of the law.
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Republicans and conservative commentators have increasingly argued that the investigation derives from a conspiracy by biased law enforcement officials seeking to sabotage President Trump.
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It derives from a long genealogy in Islamic art that flourished in early Ottoman, Timurid, and Deccani realms and often appears in Sufi contexts.
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The Hunter's Nick StatonOctober 16, 143 This name derives from a Native American tradition of naming each lunar cycle in relation to its seasonal significance.
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Most of the entrepreneur's wealth derives from his 85.2 percent majority stake in Dangote Cement, which is the largest cement producer in sub-Saharan Africa.
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It's the genuine enjoyment he derives from creating XXX parodies that blend the boundaries between sexy and ridiculous that fuels his passion for these projects.
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Rather, the buyer is paying for such cars' value as a status symbol, which derives from the fact that very few people can afford one.
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The project's name derives from the word "kinetic," referring to the their movement as they reconfigure into different patterns, keeping the clothing designs ever changing.
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Cancer derives from the Greek for "crab," and in this case, it was easy to see how the ancients imagined crab claws in cancer's eruptions.
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I don't think his genius derives from the music he creates but from his ability to extract excellent work from the collaborators he works with.
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The humor derives from the fact that Guy is a constant worrier and a conscientious breadwinner, anxious to keep both family and lovers financially afloat.
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Despite Silicon Valley's name - which derives from the raw material for computer chips - many venture investors prefer to stick to software, advertising and commerce companies.
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"There's a fundamental principle of law that derives from Sherlock Holmes, which is the dog that didn't bark," quipped Justice Samuel Alito at one point.
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Her provocative slogan, "Kamala Harris, For the People," derives from her career as a state and local prosecutor and speaks to her toughness and advocacy.
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The military's authority derives from the king, and there is a sense of national anxiety about his condition and what will happen when he dies.
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If there's an element of stiffness in Ms. Danes's nonetheless tartly funny performance, it probably derives from a glaring lack of nuance in the character.
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The assertion that the 1787 Constitutional Convention exceeded its authority is also false: It derives from failure to read or understand that body's governing documents.
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The natural order of life is to hate your boss: it is an ancient system, older than the earth, a hierarchy that derives from nature.
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You might worry that her failure to respect the reproductive autonomy of her husband derives from a generalized contempt for the reproductive autonomy of others.
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The core philosophical argument he derives from this potted history — that nationalism is morally good because it reflects an organic pre-political order — is wrong.
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A significant portion of the income Alfred derives from his family's timber business — the grounds are thicketed with larches and spruces — goes toward property maintenance.
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No. The image derives from a 1960s picture by the South African photographer Ernest Cole of miners being subjected to a humiliating group medical examination.
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It derives from a Greek word meaning "generalship" or "the office or command of a general"; it was an enterprise for the man in charge.
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The UpStairs Lounge was, by most accounts, a seedy dive, and the show's power derives from its ability to place the viewer inside that world.
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The threat is imminent, and the case against pre-emption rests on the misinterpretation of a standard that derives from prenuclear, pre-ballistic-missile times.
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"The fiscal importance to FNC of The O'Reilly Factor derives from its audience size rather than its advertising revenues, even after these defections," Tyndall writes.
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There probably isn't a connection between sea gulls and getting gulled (which probably derives from gullet, and the dupe's act of swallowing just about anything).
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But then the twist comes, unearthing some of what's really going on while keeping Lazzaro's goodness, and the happiness he derives from that goodness, intact.
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And some of the melancholy derives from the MCU's series-wide tendency to rush past its best moments in pursuit of grand, crowd-pleasing crossover events.
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That realism derives from the painstaking cinematic construction of a community that seems to have been cut off from any economic growth since the late 1990s.
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