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"distinctively" Definitions
  1. in a way that shows a quality that is easy to recognize

362 Sentences With "distinctively"

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

Airbnb requests from guests with distinctively black names are about 16% less likely to be accepted than identical guests with distinctively white names.
Religious art captures a distinctively Puerto Rican story of survival.
It encapsulates exactly what makes Lil Wayne so distinctively good.
Each of the three is pursuing a distinctively different strategy.
There are hundreds of copycats with very distinctively different handwriting.
His distinctively electronic songs became hits across Nigeria, played everywhere.
His technique remains Italian, but his flavors are distinctively his own.
Even more distinctively, The Economist's correspondents write with wit and humor.
Describing Americans' mood as distinctively angry in 2015 elides this evidence.
It's not clear that voters are being distinctively motivated by Kavanaugh.
The backside of these devices also look and feel distinctively different.
"I think he wanted to be distinctively different," Mr. Hecht said.
And, distinctively, dogs seem to trust us for problem-solving help.
This southern dressing 'tastes so distinctively delicious,' says the chef 2 tbsp.
The tradition persists 2,000 years later, albeit with a distinctively Yankee flavour.
But there are also writers producing work with a distinctively online mindset.
This combination is distinctively bluesy in spirit, and sometimes in sound, too.
They fill out distinctively Scandinavian work sheets, about bears fishing for seal.
Statecraft involves some skills distinctively different from those of a business leader.
But there are also some distinctively Yang-y touches to the plan.
The ink on its mylar dust jacket makes a distinctively beautiful sound.
But what the sequence establishes most distinctively is a light, comic tone.
"I know everyone from Greece," said Colbert, imitating Trump's distinctively belligerent tone.
He mixes a distinctively Modernist, abstract iconography with anthropomorphic and figurative imagery.
There is something similar to the US, but there's also something distinctively Brazilian.
Eric takes us through the distinctively human traits that stand in their way.
Her menu is distinctively modern and includes the famous Ferran Adrià liquid olive.
The Trump team's approach also seems distinctively granular, hands-on and micro-managerial.
But he said, very distinctively, it's all — it was all over the place.
White supremacy, evangelical identity, and a distinctively Christian form of nationalism have combined.
"Castle Rock," on the other hand, falls to a distinctively Castle Rockian fate.
He is distinct and distinctive, but also distinctly and distinctively of a type.
They tend to write certain things—their names and their addresses very distinctively.
In 19903, the most distinctively baseball name in this round was Bubba Ashford.
As it rolled on, Opportunity came across a meteorite, its lithology distinctively un-Martian.
Like the thresher shark, the green sawfish has a distinctively badass method of attack.
A whole new vocabulary developed, with a distinctively American accent: Google, Facebook, Amazon, Spotify.
In this context, O'Toole writes, a distinctively English political community was bound to emerge.
A whole new vocabulary developed, with a distinctively American accent: Google, Facebook, Amazon, Twitter.
Some of the early images might have been by anyone, others are distinctively hers.
The book is "peevish, tender and deeply, distinctively odd," our critic Parul Sehgal writes.
The answer lies in the 19th century, when Judaism became a distinctively American religion.
This is distinctively old-fashioned, gentle storytelling that children will enjoy hearing read aloud.
Gomez, Ortberg writes, takes a "vocational glee" in his masculinity that is distinctively transmasculine.
It's a call to arms that is at once distinctively local and painfully global.
The taste was distinctively chocolatey and salted with no real hints of caramel at all.
"Natural Causes" is peevish, tender and deeply, distinctively odd — and often redeemed by its oddness.
He was the distinctively coifed canary in the coal mine of American two-party politics.
However, the neurological machinery that has helped us survive has also rendered us distinctively ruminative.
Compared with our extinct cousins, the back of the modern human skull is distinctively round.
The human version of the MARCO gene is distinctively different from that of other apes.
When built in a cell, they'll cinch and clump together, making a distinctively shaped globule.
And the protective instincts of well-meaning outsiders trigger an urgent, and distinctively Amish, crisis.
We have a system that is truly distinctive in advanced democracies and distinctively poorly performing.
But it's not just the practical action that makes Baby Driver so distinctively appealing in 2017.
The subscription economy is also a distinctively American response to lower levels of wealth and income.
The most distinctively Japanese part of Mr Asahara's story is how he was brought to justice.
It refuses to look away from difficult scenes, and its gaze is steady and distinctively female.
Rasheed uses a Xerox machine to tell fragmentary narratives from a distinctively American experience of race.
The composers represented were oldsters by comparison, and not always writing in any distinctively American style.
An under-appreciated one is the distinctively German, or rather Kallstadtian, tinge to his family history.
To some women, it sounds like a man appropriating a distinctively female kind of psychological trauma.
Should the church adapt to particular cultures, or should it maintain an approach distinctively its own?
Because of this rapid changeability, these genetic bits tend to vary distinctively from person to person.
Wang's lawyer said, she tried to bite her tongue off, a distinctively Chinese form of suicide.
Similarly, the much-discussed "Obama-Trump voter" did not report distinctively high levels of economic distress.
Like baleen whales, flamingos are filter feeders, and their distinctively crooked bills act as elaborate sieves.
Historian Landon Storrs notes that evidence presented against female defendants took on a distinctively gendered tone.
There had been several anecdotal reports of this phenomenon, but it gained empirical backing in January, when a Harvard Business School study found that "guests with distinctively African-American names" were about 16% less likely to be accepted by hosts than "identical guests with distinctively white names".
The department felt distinctively smaller than the produce sections of other Whole Foods stores I have visited.
EAGLE TOWER, a distinctively ugly high-rise, glowers over the Regency splendour of Cheltenham's posh Montpelier district.
The distinctively bright green laptop is intended for use by students as young as eight years old.
This includes most crucially her singing, which evokes Ms. King's distinctively throaty, ever-yearning voice without mimicry.
Books of The Times With her debut novel, "Grace," Natashia Deón has announced herself beautifully and distinctively.
The shape of the stain itself is distinctively triangular, as if an imprint from the organ below.
When we ask Wästberg about the album's title, the answer is sardonic and silly and distinctively Scandinavian.
"To me, it tasted distinctively hoppy, and not unlike a beer hopped with Cascade," said Dr. Denby.
Its eclectic palette is surprising, yet cohesive, held together by her distinctively quiet vocals and irreverent delivery.
L'Engle's distinctively Episcopalian theological approach is what makes A Wrinkle in Time so challenging — and so rich.
A much-reported-on 2016 study conducted by professors at Harvard Business School revealed "that requests from guests with distinctively African-American names are roughly 16% less likely to be accepted than identical guests with distinctively White names," and anecdotal reports from black potential guests confirm the study's results.
But he captures Wiseau's distinctively unplaceable European accent and stentorian slur, delivering lines in a lurching, syncopated cadence.
Distinctively, DRIVE PILOT can autonomously change lanes, if a driver indicates a lane change with the turn signals.
The distinctively shaped chart summarised the results of a huge number (196) of household surveys across the world.
But the American republic is only the second-oldest institution facing a distinctively unusual situation at the moment.
Although they were as big as modern human brains, they did not yet have its distinctively round shape.
I sampled both the gluten-free Victoria Sandwich and the Parkin, a distinctively Yorkshire variety of gingerbread cake.
Cake also makes the slightly faster and pricier Kalk& with a more traditional, but still distinctively spare, design.
No stranger to adventures and indignities, he was there to endure something new and distinctively American: a lawsuit.
Armed with a delightful lead guitar riff, the track is filled with hooks and a distinctively summer aura.
Lavell created a framework that allowed the trio to stack these shaders to create the app's distinctively warped effects.
Hoover believed that a small central government was the only possible distinctively American alternative to Socialism, Communism, and Fascism.
He is our metaphysical poet, using the desiring, sexual body to ask poetry's eternal questions in distinctively contemporary ways.
So Angelika von Heimendahl, an entrepreneurial veterinarian, bought eight Red Poll, a distinctively ruddy breed native to the region.
What marks these sparkling wines as distinctively English is both a spirited, glowing acidity and an orchard-fruit freshness.
Mr. Pincus-Witten also had a distinctively different speaking voice with a hard-to-define timbre that suggested erudition.
And from his mouth, Ms. Masciotti's distinctively awkward dialogue has never sounded more organic, or more revelatory of character.
Kael's distinctively passionate voice, competing with movie fragments, is disastrously muffled, as are those of her admirers and detractors.
While the functions of the SOTU are likely to be followed in general, the substance will be distinctively Trump.
Distinctively, the building literalizes this view, forcing us to look up — delivering circularity rather than conclusion, surprise over certitude.
Even in the bruising, often chaotic world of New York's nighttime trash collection, Sanitation Salvage cuts a distinctively brutish profile.
In Israel, for example, researchers found a few distinctively modern human skeletons that are between 120,000 and 90,298 years old.
" These include "stylized motifs of mythical animals, gilded geometric forms on a black background, and distinctively textured areas and patterns.
But the region's culture has a distinctively different feel, especially in a country that overall is about 10 percent black.
Hers is, in short, a true-life Horatio Alger tale, albeit one with distinctively Chinese, 21st-century and feminist elements.
Only 21982,2808 TR-808 Rhythm Composer units were made, because as semiconductor manufacturing improved, the distinctively defective transistor became unavailable.
And state-level candidates are more likely to promote political platforms that distinctively reflect the intimate concerns of their voters.
Such is the distinctively poetic and terrifying universe of Adrienne Kennedy, a playwright's playwright of slender output and immense influence.
Despite the heavy material, Redmayne distinctively recalls how his fellow 2015 Academy Award-winner would keep the mood light while filming.
WINSTON CHURCHILL'S dictum—"We shape our buildings; thereafter they shape us"—may account for the distinctively cabalistic quality of British politics.
With Iran emerging from a long stretch of Western domination, artists were in the mood to shape a distinctively native aesthetic.
Most distinctively, these millennial designers combine a rigorous work ethic (often using self-invented techniques) with a remarkably relaxed aesthetic sensibility.
A generation of Chinese is coming of age with an internet that is distinctively different from the rest of the web.
The Harvard researchers had observed a distinctively small shell, inside of which they had seen a peculiar, cagelike network of cells.
But what plays on the two small speakers above the door is also distinctively out of step with the modern world.
He eventually found a foster home in the Bronx, where he traded a German accent for a distinctively Noo Yawk one.
But it lacked the distinctively greasy mouth feel of a real burger, and the flavor was, in Mr. Motz's opinion, bland.
Fiat Chrysler Automobiles combined Italy's national automotive champion with the Detroit-based owner of the most distinctively American vehicle brand, Jeep.
Their strength lies in being distinctively fast, loud, and glib — and never letting the audience think too hard about what's going on.
By linking Vodou's distinctively African-based spirituality directly with evil, Robertson and other evangelicals construct a theology that is racist and intolerant.
Mega-donors are a non-representative subgroup of wealthy people; they are a subgroup with distinctively harsh attitudes on key immigration questions.
A distinctively different sort of refugee debate has gripped the small rural city of Twin Falls, Idaho for the past several months.
It was born in the nonconformist Valleys, where mysticism, mining and Methodism mingled and produced a distinctively emotional and poetic religious culture.
The generous back seat is distinctively comfortable with great thigh support (though at the Platinum level, those cushions really should be heated).
We taste some of the distinctively cucumber-like burnet and discuss the process of introducing new plant varieties into the restaurant's dishes.
Some are the products of a single pot still, the ancient, distinctively rounded vessel for distillation that produces the most flavorful whiskeys.
For all its sweep, "Spielberg" the documentary succeeds most distinctively where Mr. Spielberg the director has: accessing the child in its subject.
If your ancestry is distinctively Southeast Asian, a test can probably spot that and tell you that you're not of European background.
One school of psychology—"terror management theory"—holds that fear of death is the source of everything distinctively human, from phobias to religion.
Along with this upside-down playing technique; Dr Yunupingu had a distinctively haunting tenor voice that cut through convention with its unusual beauty.
They introduced a distinctively Jamaican emphasis on the upbeat, underlined on guitar and saxophone, that would persist as Jamaican pop evolved toward reggae.
What is distinctively contemporary about the French director Eva Husson's teenage sex film, "Bang Gang: A Modern Love Story," is its characters' nonchalance.
Despite these experiments and tweaks on the part of chefs and devotees of Aleppo pepper, the spice's stature remains distinctively Syrian, and Aleppan.
Ms. Wolf, a rising comedy star in the last five years, stands out for her quick wit and her distinctively conversational stand-up.
In part, the distinctively Alaskan way of thinking about mental illness may reach back to the era before statehood, which came in 1959.
When performers like Ms. Moreno succeed in conveying distinctively Nuyorican ways of moving, they seem to strain to do so under inhospitable conditions.
"Neither the existing crab nor shrimp emoji can be effectively used to represent a lobster, which has a distinctively different profile," he wrote.
STRONG IN STATES Fiat Chrysler Automobiles combined Italy's national automotive champion with the Detroit-based owner of the most distinctively American vehicle brand, Jeep.
" According to the Post, Rankin was "thoroughly feminine—from her charmingly coiffed swirl of chestnut hair to the small, high and distinctively French heels.
Frances FitzGerald's narrative of this distinctively American movement is a major work of history, piecing together the centuries-long story for the first time.
In Virginia Woolf's novel "Orlando," every century of the title character's long life is marked by distinctively different weather and changes in the air.
Widely considered the "Queen of Knitwear," the distinctively red-headed Rykiel was born in Paris in 1930 to a French father and Romanian mother.
It is a head-turner, one of the most distinctively designed SUVs entering the 216 automotive market, largely because of its prominent triangular grille.
The aircraft's target, a distinctively T-­shaped building set on an expansive lawn, was lit by generators, a beacon in the blacked-­out city.
This produces ruby-red, slightly salty flakes that keep well in the freezer thanks to the oil and are distinctively Syrian, Ms. Matar wrote.
YouGov, for instance, consistently fared best in the Pew test in part by using a distinctively sophisticated method of sample selection, called synthetic sampling.
While they may now remind us of many other white wines, perhaps we'll come to recognize this specific combination of elements as distinctively godello.
"Neither the existing crab nor shrimp emoji can be effectively used to represent a lobster, which has a distinctively different profile," the senator wrote.
While this may seem like a back door to the establishment of religion, it's actually a distinctively progressive view of how the law functions.
The conference was not a distinctively Christian conference, and many people advised him not to go, fearing his presence would be used for propaganda purposes.
The film begins with a large pig wrapped in a distinctively American blanket, as a team of five men prepare the animal with careful consideration.
The sedan is meant to replace the old CTS, the four-door model that originally introduced Cadillac's distinctively Art & Science design language back in 26.
The number of ads placed far surpassed other political ad buyers, and they closely tailored their message to current events while sounding distinctively like Trump.
Since we're at an Irish gastropub, it's particularly important to know how to pour a Guinness, a distinctively dark Irish stout with a creamy head.
In their apartments, the designers, both of whom have children, have incorporated into their pared-down aesthetic the distinctively Soviet style they grew up with.
His performance was magnificent, in part because a great German artist was embracing a distinctively American piece and, in doing so, conveyed its universal resonances.
She encouraged him, and with a new focus on composition, he cultivated a distinctively laconic style purged of excess and meticulously designed from meaningful gestures.
Ben Brantley praised the script's "distinctively awkward dialogue" and its star, Joel Perez ("Fun Home"), who gives an instinctive yet disciplined, all-out emotional performance.
An argument begins to take shape that we should consider these chefs pioneers in a divergent new branch of barbecue, one that is distinctively Australian.
"Horror with a distinctively Singapore flavor has been a bit hit with fans in previous editions," Jason Horkin, senior vice president of attractions at RWS, said.
Whether American welfare continues to converge gradually with the rest of the rich world, or stays distinctively flinty, depends on which Wagner comes out on top.
Leaving aside the question of what he was or would have called himself, Forbes's discriminating eye, his exacting and exhausting taste, strikes me as distinctively gay.
When Wade and Shaquille O'Neal were leading the Heat to their first title in 2006, a distinctively-cornrowed Haslem did the dirty work right alongside them.
This is a place where the Democratic platform is genuinely more in line with American tradition and distinctively American values, and the convention speakers have noticed.
The students were randomly assigned whether the intoxicated woman in the story had a "distinctively black name"—LaToya—or an ambiguous name—Laura, as a control.
But it can also be seen in a battle that has broken out about the fundamental nature of this distinctively low-lying and spread-out city.
She began a short speech in her distinctively high-pitched, clear voice, then tugged the string that would pull down the flag to reveal the statue.
The idea of Myanmar's Buddhists as distinctively tolerant, then, became a key mechanism for dividing Burmese Buddhists from the Indian Hindus and Muslims living alongside them.
Miller and Lord have a distinctively impish and irreverent voice to their work, while Howard's work is more conventional, and integrating those two sensibilities seemed difficult.
The convergence of these two events presents an opportunity to stress the crucial intersection of two distinctively American institutions: the public schools and the Supreme Court.
The Chiaia neighborhood offers a slew of Italian luxury brands, but also some distinctively local shops, like Livio De Simone, a fabric printer since the 1950s.
The mother of them all is perhaps Byredo's Bibliothèque ($85), a distinctively black, woody aromatic around since 2013 that has become the company's most popular candle.
The rapture is a distinctively American fringe theology that says Christians will be taken up, or "raptured," into heaven at the onset of the end times.
It arises not out of Israel-Palestine grievances, as left-wing anti-Semitism often does, but rather from distinctively right-wing forms of xenophobia and racial grievances.
Although their influences are deeply rooted in the era of 90s metalcore, their sound is distinctively modern and accessible, making their revivalism feel more like a reinvention.
The two parts pleased me the way Lynch often pleases me, with sounds and images combining to form sequences of extraordinary power that were distinctively, purely Lynchian.
Snyder has always been a graphic visual stylist, giving films like 300, Watchmen, and Sucker Punch a visceral weight to go with the distinctively garish digital sheen.
Joining an army of artists such as J Hus, Afro B and Donae'o, Kojo infuses west African and Caribbean sounds with distinctively British pop, rap and grime.
Under those auspices, his new picture Phantom Thread feels like his Gosford Park: a British period piece that finds the filmmaker working in a distinctively classical style.
" That's when -- especially if there is a sense of a "legitimacy crisis" in place -- "a lying demagogue can appear as a distinctively authentic champion of its interests.
The pieces are distinctively "paper craft," not origami, and a serious hobbyist will tell you: Traditionally, origami involves folding one piece of paper without cutting or gluing.
As Bodi pursues his dream, a pack of wolves pursues him; grown-ups will enjoy hearing the distinctively enraged voice of Lewis Black as the head wolf.
Cleverly, La La Land doesn't get too self-conscious about this distinctively 2016 theme, in the end twisting the bittersweetness of this struggle back into the romance.
But Mr. Hinrichs said his members felt a sense of belonging in a distinctively local building and benefited from regular contact with business leaders in the community.
Although born in Norristown, Pa., in 1947 and long living in London, the Quays practice a distinctively Central European mode of animated puppetry and cultivated a kindred worldview.
Since becoming a household name after pleading guilty to lying to the FBI in October last year, Papadopoulos has lived in a strange bubble that is distinctively 2018.
Thor: Ragnarok placed its story in the hands of Taika Waititi, a comedian with a distinctively deadpan sensibility, and introduced indie-style emotional improv to the superhero world.
The only fee is $5,000 from the vendor, and that is to cover the cost of a new prefab kiosk, which is distinctively colored bright orange with black.
But the episode is also distinctively "BoJack" in the way that it forces its protagonist to push past his alienation and, briefly, care for someone other than himself.
Further indicating the origin of the waste, the pickers say they sometimes find accidentally discarded American dollars and broken liquor bottles with distinctively American labels, like Jack Daniels.
This new espresso, made with beans from Latin America, packs 10 more milligrams of caffeine per shot and has a distinctively crisp, citrus flavor and a creamy texture.
Its tiny form contained an unexpected array of elements: triangular panels; contrast-color stitching; and most distinctively of all, those vibrant elastic straps threaded through loops of crochet.
The major new twist to the plot, a mystery element apparently involving gentrification, is playing out slowly but already feels forced into what's been a distinctively organic narrative.
It's a distinctively woke race melodrama, but it's still a race melodrama — a genre that "An Octoroon" and, more recently, Jackie Sibblies Drury's "Fairview" suggest we might retire.
So in a marathon concert, "Folk, Form and Fire," he led his Mariinsky Orchestra in these five works, in order, each with a different — and distinctively brilliant — pianist.
As Boris Johnson distinctively wears no bra, I&aposve also been allowing my nipples to rage through the fabric and out to the public&aposs vision all week.
Ultimately its most damning weakness is price where the $200 controllers and $79 third camera sensor put the already $599 Rift headset in a distinctively high-end product category.
Filled with sleek designs, it leaned distinctively more office-appropriate than on-trend, but Giberson has assured us that the revamped version will have a much more modern feel.
As Laura Turner notes in an excellent piece for BuzzFeed, no theological tradition is as rife for accusations of hypocrisy as the "prosperity gospel," a distinctively American theological tradition.
The New York Times' Los Angeles bureau chief, Adam Nagourney, wrote last month about their concerns that the frenzy of building is ruining the city's distinctively low-lying character.
Both have oak floors and built-in seats — at the window in the dining room and at the distinctively shaped curved wall housing the fireplace in the living room.
The Koran was revealed to Muhammad in Arabic, and the distinctively fluid form of writing is intertwined with the religion and culture of more than a billion people worldwide.
ANext up is "Where Da G's"—a track which you could say foreshadowed Skepta's affinity with distinctively US rhyme patterns and beats, a skill integral to his crossover appeal.
What's distinctively compelling about Ake, however, is how much better he felt before he was sent on his journey to self-awareness, when he was living a comfortable lie.
It&aposs an adaptation that follows the original beat by beat, panel by panel, resulting in a work that distinctively looks like "Watchmen" but doesn&apost feel like it.
Israel is now the home of nearly nine million citizens, with an identity that is as distinctively and proudly Israeli as the Dutch are Dutch or the Danes Danish.
But with that breezy freedom, guilt, distinctively literary in nature, that you're not giving the poems the full attention they deserve, a feeling easily exacerbated by Lax's deceptive simplicity.
"You can hear the amount of air going in and out," Boehme said of the animal, which is the length of a small car and has a distinctively sour musk.
And then there was the distinctively Trumpian touch: his slogan "America first" invoking the notorious movement before World War II that included not only traditional isolationists but also Nazi sympathizers.
BEIJING, Jan 23 (Reuters) - Ford Motor Co is betting on one of its most distinctively American models, the Mustang muscle car, to boost the company's sales and profits in China.
Richard Nicoll, the British fashion designer who took a distinctively Modernist approach with candy-colored palettes and sculptured creations that attracted a celebrity clientele, died on Friday in Sydney, Australia.
Within that context, Ms. Whittaker — who was terrific as a bereaved, angry mother on Mr. Chibnall's "Broadchurch" — performs gamely, if not yet distinctively, as the 2,000-year-old Time Lord.
Bartlam gave the printed decoration of the teapot a distinctively American slant by including two sandhill cranes beneath a Sabal palmetto tree, both of which are indigenous to South Carolina.
He was acclaimed as a member of a distinctively New Orleans piano pantheon alongside Jelly Roll Morton, James Booker, Tuts Washington, Professor Longhair, Fats Domino, Allen Toussaint and Dr. John.
But Cuthbert became a national hero, sprinting down the red-brick track at the Melbourne Cricket Ground in Australia's first-ever Olympic Games, her mouth distinctively open as she ran.
It was an approach to photography, art and cultural criticism that was both proudly American and distinctively Jewish — to embrace a new homeland by becoming one of its fiercest critics.
Perhaps the biggest revolution was a distinctively nostalgic print of '60s-era flowers, whose bright colors covered some of the collection's ubiquitous quilting and even a zigzag-shaved fur coat.
And while the rhetoric in the United States has turned distinctively against foreign trade, American politicians have not shown any aversion to it when it brings jobs to their districts.
Virgin Galactic is a distinctively speculative investment, Kennedy noted, as the company has yet to begin flying customers to space – let alone realize the revenue it expects from commercial operations.
Smith sprinkles James's distinctively fresh early style with just the lightest pinch of turgid fussiness — the language is pitch perfect — and his insights into James's character and mind are flawless.
The company intended to classify voters by select personality types, applying its system to craft messages, online ads, and mailers that, it believed, would resonate distinctively with voters of each group.
There is something, maybe in the less-than-professional recordings, or crudely drawn demo designs, that makes every band from Broward, no matter what subgenre they perform, distinctively a Broward band.
They do not just let it locate fishing vessels; they let it take a good guess as to what they are doing (boats long-lining for tuna, for example, zigzag distinctively).
A 2016 study by Harvard University professors found requests from guests with distinctively African-American names were 16% less likely to be accepted than those from identical guests with white names.
Curving one way, then the other, as they squiggle up slopes that are hundreds of feet above sea level, the nonlinear roads give the area a distinctively non-New York look.
With the steady post-1960s weakening of traditional Christian confessions, the preachers of this kind of gospel — this distinctively American heresy, really — have assumed a new prominence in the religious landscape.
But the Marshall McLuhan guy, with his glasses and distinctively Allen-style haircut, is surely a doppelgänger and a clue that Alvy is more of a pretentious windbag than he realizes.
Voters have never given a ringing endorsement to Mr. Abe's "Take Back Japan" agenda, which promotes a "stronger" Japan both economically and militarily with a distinctively nationalist tone, glorifying Japan's past.
The researchers were startled to detect in the mother bear's blood and milk traces of the distinctively labeled water samples they'd earlier given to the cubs as part of the experiment.
There were over 20 different problematic products misleadingly marketed using the Navajo name (and various signature patterns or motifs that are distinctively associated with the tribe), including a flask, socks, and underwear.
Distinctively American, Sternberg's figures radiate energy even as they are dramatically constrained by larger forces — amoral capitalism or perhaps just the godless universe — within which human beings create, and surrender, their fates.
A sketch group called Nephew scores pretty well with a bit involving a (fake) 93-year-old comedy legend, and Alice Wetterlund brings a distinctively droll delivery to her stand-up set.
While Stu doesn't have the yuck-factor of old man getting a blow job on the street, or an assaultive "regular" customer, there is still something distinctively uncomfortable about the young man.
Absent Bannon, there's no one to give unifying voice to a distinctively Trumpian foreign policy, no one who could really take the president's impulses and shape them into a truly radical doctrine.
But exactly how a T cell "saw" that sick body cell, how it recognized the distinctively foreign sick cell proteins (or "antigens") on the cell's surface, was still a stone-cold mystery.
The half-dozen styles span the gamut in terms of silhouettes, including everything from an off-the-shoulder top with a distinctively notched neckline to a high-necked, tassel-trimmed halter maillot.
Every morning, on my way to the gym, I pass by his distinctively onanistic "Le Monument à Balzac" ("The Monument to Balzac," 1898) at the crossing of the boulevards Montparnasse and Raspail.
A study by academics at Harvard found that guests with "distinctively African-American names" were less likely to be accepted by hosts than guests with identical profiles but with typically white names.
Grime, the musical genre that combines electronic dance beats with jungle and reggae influences, accompanied by fast, virtuoso rapping in distinctively British cadences, originated in East London, in the early two-thousands.
It's about being outside of time and looking in, with free reign to mix and match objects new and old for the express purpose of curating a nondescript yet distinctively "cultured" sensibility.
Religiously, we can see it in distinctively American crazes like the Victorian era's New Thought and the popularity of the Christian prosperity gospel, which implies that your piety directly impacts your pocketbook.
Carmen Maria Machado is an Angela Carter for 2017: Both of them have a distinctively gothic, bloody, dark fairy tale sensibility, but unlike Carter, Machado is overtly queer, feminist, and body-positive.
That explanation lies specifically in Jewish-American history rooted in the 19th century, when Judaism became a distinctively American religion, substantially changed from what it had been for more than two millenniums.
Many of Aquinas's followers today, Bowlin notes, would resist such an effort, because they think of toleration as "a distinctively modern response" — perhaps even a morally relativistic one — to differences of worldview.
But Trump doesn't appear to care about that distinction, and he has picked up some of these duties in a distinctively Trumpian fashion, responding to reports erratically, recklessly — and often on Twitter.
This is because wherever Courtney Love goes she brings all her musical baggage along too, with her distinctively emotive vocal adding a whole new layer of unease to this early psychedelic rock hit.
In 1989, Terada founded Tokyo-based label Far East Recording, putting his distinctively cheerful, proto-chiptunes stamp on the deep house sound nurtured by New York imprints like Strictly Rhythm and Nu Grooves.
" On Fox, Smith also separated CNN's reporting from BuzzFeed's, noting that its "exclusive reporting on the Russian matter was separate and distinctively different from the document dump executed by an online news property.
This is a question I pose to Roman Činčara, a native of the town known throughout this country as the home of tvarůžek, a soft yellow beer cheese with a distinctively pungent aroma.
"I think what it's done is it's really opened people's eyes to how distinctively different craft beer was and how we really brought that artistic creative expression aspect to craft beer," said Caruso.
A recent study by Harvard Business School researchers found that requests from Airbnb guests with distinctively African-American names were 16 percent less likely to be accepted than those with white-sounding names.
But before long, Fania became a powerhouse and the primary label for the evolving sound of salsa, a distinctively New York mix of Cuban and Puerto Rican dance styles, sometimes mingled with funk.
While Justice Scalia was best known for his originalism and textualism, the most distinctively conservative feature of his jurisprudence was to accord great weight in adjudication to longstanding customs and traditional social practices.
The distinctively transparent nature of the egg lent itself to this kind of voyeurism, as did the fact that fertilization in sea urchins takes place outside the body, as it does in frogs.
From that simple idea flows the wonderful and distinctively American idea of the melting pot, where everyone is welcome as long as they sign up to America's values and precepts: that they become Americans.
Australia's law, introduced in 2010, bans logos and distinctively-colored cigarette packaging in favor of drab olive packets that look more like military or prison issue, with brand names printed in small standardized fonts.
"Moreover, Khalifa utilizes the term 'most of us' to introduce the audience to the same theme of sinful behaviour with the same expression" in a manner "distinctively original to Bennett's work," the complaint said.
While all of this testifies to an aesthetically and technologically sophisticated culture, a nonspecialist might wonder what is distinctively Seljuqian about it — what distinguishes it from, say, medieval Islamic arts and crafts in general.
Marianne Bertrand, an economist at the University of Chicago, and I conducted the first study: We responded to actual job listings with fictitious résumés, half of which were randomly assigned a distinctively black name.
Like other Israeli thrillers, "False Flag" has learned a lot of its moves from American models (the better to perfect them and send them back), but it can be distinctively different in its details.
Even the chill music is distinctively vaporwave, having been ripped from the game demo for Hellbender, a nauseating whirl of grey and black polygons that was included on the 1996 Microsoft Interactive CD Sampler.
A distinctively egalitarian leader, Mr ul-Haq often fields at short leg, the most dangerous position in the game due to its proximity to the batsman, and one traditionally reserved for the team's junior player.
It's almost literary in how distinctively Swift tells her story of forgotten scarves, plaid shirt days, and the pain of remembering every excruciating detail of being in love after the magic's not there no more.
In late October, Mr. Pettis, 103, sat down to discuss the Origami Watch ($5,800), a distinctively angular watch made of sandblasted stainless steel that is the centerpiece of his Brooklyn-based manufacturing company, Bre & Company.
In 1886, the author Franklin Harvey Head reported that his contemporaries regarded insomnia as a "modern and even an almost distinctively American disease" brought about by the hustle-bustle of the railroad and the telegraph.
Crucially, several had been at the 1963 March on Washington and were fired up with the idea of infusing art with political content, and in making work that would be, in some way, distinctively black.
The Denver Art Museum, with its distinctively angular Daniel Libeskind-designed wing, anchors what has turned into the city's museum quarter now that the Kirkland Museum of Fine & Decorative Art moved in two blocks away.
There are, in fact, important historical reasons that the idea of distinctively Buddhist tolerance figures both in nationalist disparagement of Myanmar's Rohingya and in widespread Western astonishment at the idea of Buddhists engaging in it.
If there were one piece of gear absolutely vital to early electronic music and hip-hop, it would probably be Roland's TR-808 drum machine, known for its distinctively deep kick drum and snappy handclap.
And if anyone could be dismissed as shrill, it was Lindsey Graham, another (male) Republican senator, who called the proceedings "the most unethical sham since I've been in politics" in his distinctively high and nasal timbre.
According to the Kumano Hongu Tourist Association, Yunomine Onsen's water contains high concentrations of hydrogen sulfide, sodium, hydrogen carbonate, magnesium, and calcium, along with a dozen other minerals, which give the food a distinctively meaty flavor.
And still, distinctively black brands like FUBU or Cross Colours, which became behemoths in the '90s, were kept on the fringes — no Vogue spreads, and good luck finding FUBU denim jackets on the racks at Barneys.
It's impressive for a new band to have so many qualities which feel distinctively theirs, but by taking this behemoth of a song and making small tweaks, Superorganism show their considerable chops as a musical force.
The company, which develops 'smart city' solutions has made a land grab in its home country and is looking distinctively like the domestic leader in smart street lighting, as local governments seek ways to reduce energy consumption.
Petite, silver hair cut distinctively in a short bob, Wilmers had brought a copy of the latest issue — Volume 41, Number 13 — to a bright back room and a desk laden with current British newspapers and magazines.
"(Attenborough) has had so many jobs and done so many things that doing a slightly absurdist show about him doesn't feel out of place," Neenan said, who wears heavy-rimmed spectacles and adopts Attenborough's distinctively earnest style.
"The whole policy is very tight now," said Guo Yan, 35, a tour guide who advocates a distinctively Chinese strain of Judaism and runs a small museum in an apartment filled with pictures of Kaifeng's Jewish past.
As the Tokyo bureau chief for The New York Times, I had come to report on the Sand Museum, where artists from around the world assemble every year to build massive sculptures from the distinctively moldable sand.
But soon the Flying Squad homed in on the grandpas, largely thanks to John "Kenny" Collins, described by fellow gang-members as a "wombat-thick old cunt", who drove to the crime in his own distinctively painted Mercedes.
And except for a distinctively European-looking car in one of the shots, there is little to suggest they were taken in France; they could just as easily have been shot in a suburb of Manchester or Chicago.
Viewing it — and re-viewing it, and reviewing it — in every climatic condition has a deep value to my life that my temporary interactions with Sehgal's performative contributions to contemporary art distinctively lack, regardless of their passing charms.
Some of the dozens of questions that Mr. Carter answered were distinctively of the late 1970s: about the gas tax, Mr. Carter's pardoning of draft dodgers in Vietnam and the early days of the U.S. space shuttle program.
Some of the dozens of questions that Mr. Carter answered were distinctively of the late 1970s: about the gas tax, Mr. Carter's pardoning of draft dodgers in Vietnam, and the early days of the U.S. space shuttle program.
Certainly. The human male is a dangerous figure — generally bigger, stronger and more violent than the female of the species, free from the vulnerability that pregnancy entails, and therefore often distinctively threatening, to women and other men alike.
The things that were distinctively Hefnerian, that made him influential and important, were all rotten, and to the extent they were part of stories that people tend to celebrate, they showed the rot in larger things as well.
A pair of series added to the service in December without much fanfare, "Fauda" from Israel and "Nobel" from Norway, are both better than and distinctively different from most of the American TV you're watching at the moment.
The changes made to our international tax law encourage investment here at home, and the reduction in the corporate income tax rate from a distinctively high 28503 percent to 22019 percent augurs a drastic transition for American commerce.
The band, which recorded 16 albums, culled "the best parts of the British Invasion, American garage rock, and Dylanesque singer/songwriters to create a distinctively American hybrid that recalled the past without being indebted to it," the site said.
Originally produced to mark the 2016 launch of the BeoSound 1 13-degree wireless speaker, the five distinctively colored pieces are going up for online auction this Thursday, with an estimated final cost of somewhere between $3,000 and $5,000.
The Charlottesville protests, marching under Confederate flags against plans to remove Confederate statues, are a distinctively American reminder of that (indeed, the Nazis were inspired by Jim Crow laws and studied segregation as a possible model for German society).
Read enough of them and the 89-year-old chief executive of Berkshire Hathaway gets around to giving his distinctively value-tinged, commonsense approaches to accounting, mergers, stock buybacks, dividends and other tricks of the trade to build value.
Not to discredit the imaginative vision of the writer-director, his co-scripter and invaluable tech and design teams, but Phoenix is the prime force that makes Joker such a distinctively edgy entry in the Hollywood comics industrial complex.
Forced to compete with a near-constant barrage of movie fragments — some with only the most tenuous connection to the text — Kael's distinctively passionate voice (smoothly narrated from her letters and essays by Sarah Jessica Parker) is disastrously muffled.
As always, Ms. Morisseau's characters are distinctively expressive, and there are beautiful monologues of self-revelation by Nya, Omari and Ms. Velazquez's uprooted boarding-school girl, who combines adolescent romanticism with a precocious awareness of how love usually ends.
On the record, there's serpentine breaks ("Planet Lonely"), chattery deep house ("We Are Going Nowhere"), slo-mo techno, and a number of other major moments in rave history—but it's all linked by a distinctively airy, magic-hour ambiance.
The company will bring its distinctively Google-y perspective to bear on the neighborhood it will build there, collecting data on everything from the function of the robocars inside to how well canopies protect pedestrians from the brutal Canadian winters.
" Viktor claims the vid tries to mimic the "unique look and feel" of her works, but also uses "specific copyrightable elements" such as "stylized motifs of mythical animals, gilded geometric forms on a black background, and distinctively textured areas and patterns.
By the time the midterms rolled around, she no longer had a viable challenger in the field, but her position nevertheless seemed distinctively weak as she veered this way and that to placate various factions and put her winning coalition together.
Where the Democrats have clearly decided to support the exclusive Clinton power structure, distinctively defined by wealth, family ties and access to power, Trump has brought the Republican Party to its knees, forcing them to acknowledge that PEOPLE come before party.
Meg McDonald, who two years ago became the company's first social media manager, said she was troubled recently when she came across a photo of one of McCall's distinctively illustrated envelopes in a nostalgic "Do You Remember?" post on Facebook.
The recent influx of foreign money and visitors, combined with the centuries-old local obsession with good food and good tea, have made the city one of China's most aesthetically and gastronomically innovative hubs, while also remaining distinctively, traditionally Chinese.
Still, the nostalgia is fun, the arc is mostly satisfying, and the movie uses Krysten Ritter's distinctively spiky screen presence way more effectively than the show did back in 2005, when it mostly asked her just to play a ditz.
Perhaps unsurprisingly, then, it's one of the more distinctively weird shows currently on television, following would-be entertainer Chip Baskets (Galifianakis) after he flunks out of Parisian clown college and has to move back home with his suffocating mother (Louie Anderson).
In a typical image the dog is posed in a distinctively person-like way, as if on the phone, seated at a table or wearing headphones, and dressed in human attire — glasses, a dog-size suit and tie, even pantyhose.
"Her unique combination of local and global experience in the arts world made her the superlative choice for leading the Queens Museum, and for serving the borough's distinctively international constituency," said Mark J. Coleman, the museum's board chairman, in a statement.
He writes: "A pair of series added to the service in December without much fanfare, 'Fauda' from Israel and 'Nobel' from Norway, are both better than and distinctively different from most of the American TV you're watching at the moment."
A cinematic wanderer who captured a distinctively Jewish sense of exile and bereavement, Akerman filmed herself obstinately and revealingly, contemplating her own absence and pursuing ecstatic beauty and harsh ideas, work and love, as if to defy the void. ♦
Andre Williams, who carved out a place in the 19886s rhythm-and-blues scene with earthy songs distinctively delivered, then fell on hard times as a result of addiction before enjoying a late-career resurgence, died on Sunday in Chicago.
It offers a detailed and damning review of the evidence, but it stops short of drawing the broader conclusion: namely, that the approach of serving industry under cover of secrecy is not idiosyncratic to Pruitt, nor is it distinctively Trumpian.
The money signifies a return to form of sorts for Mr. Soros, who in 2004 contributed $18.5 million to outside groups seeking to elect Democrats and defeat President George W. Bush, making Mr. Soros a distinctively influential figure in liberal political projects.
Bob Elliott, who as half of the comedy team Bob and Ray purveyed a distinctively low-key brand of humor on radio and television for more than 213 years, died on Tuesday at his home in Cundy's Harbor, Me. He was 21951.
Bevan's done well for herself, but hasn't yet risen to the heights of someone like Sia, who famously wrote "Diamonds" for Rihanna in 14 minutes and used her massive wig enigma effect and distinctively powerful hooks to make a name for herself.
BRUSSELS (Reuters) - The European Union would not agree to a post-Brexit deal in which Britain would stick to the bloc's rules in some areas, diverge moderately in others and go for distinctively different solutions for the rest, sources in Brussels said.
In a paper drafted by G.L Walters entitled "The Art of War, Nonlinearity, and Coping with Uncertainty" (1994), the author gives strategic weight to a concept of nonlinearity as it relates to military planning, informed by a distinctively artistic way of thinking.
In "queens," a Lincoln Center/LCT3 production, she applies her distinctively poetic brand of empathy to the shifting values and aspirations of two generations of immigrant women, who clash and commune in a basement apartment in the New York borough of the title.
The evening did offer yet more evidence of Mr. van Zweden's prevailing style in the standard repertory: tight, brightly lit performances that seem happiest — most themselves — when rising in volume to what I've come to hear as a distinctively Jaapian yellow-hot clang.
In another departure from traditional cable news telecasts, the program will invariably be done from Levin TV studios with a distinctively different set than what viewers are used to, featuring a library backdrop and a large classic radio microphone on his desk.
It was founded to buttress the railways, roads and fibre-optic cables of the Belt and Road Initiative—a globe-spanning scheme launched in 2013 by President Xi Jinping—with something less visible: a distinctively Chinese vision of how laws should govern globalised commerce.
Add some tactical shades to complete the look, and there it is—part Parcells homage, part Child's Drawing Of Jeff Fisher come to horrible life, but all of it imbued with a faintly upsetting Jon Gruden vibe and all of it, always, distinctively McAdoo.
Lawyers for Mr. Skidmore presented evidence showing that the bands crossed paths while touring early in their careers, as well as testimony from music experts saying that both songs shared a similar chord progression and, most distinctively, a descending bass line in a chromatic scale.
TROON, Scotland — Over the past four decades, the soundtrack to the British Open has generally included the whistling wind, the patter (or sometimes pounding) of raindrops and, at the start of every single round for every single golfer, a distinctively singsong voice from Dumfriesshire.
The event marks the start of the German onslaught against the American upstart and showcased a SUV with a 450 kilometer range, distinctively full-width rear light and clean-cut interiors that Mercedes hopes will find favor with luxury customers and tech-savvy millennials alike.
There are Cramps tracks I've been surprised to learn aren't actually originals: "Goo Goo Muck," from Psychedelic Jungle, for instance, sounds distinctively Cramps, but was in reality a flop novelty song about a teen monster written for Ronnie Cook and the Gaylads in 1962.
It's part of a distinctively Trump administration approach to the conflict that I've termed a "blank check": essentially letting Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his allies on the Israeli right get away with virtually whatever they want when it comes to the Palestinians.
And the ethnic tensions that Trump has exploited are mirrored as well, albeit with distinctively French twists — like the role of the vast suburban housing projects, built in the postwar era for a largely native working class and now contested between natives and immigrants.
Sydney may shop at the same vintage store as decades of alienated teens before her, but Lillis distinctively embodies her balled-up nerves and rubbed-raw discomfort in her own skin — when she says, "Sometimes I feel like I'm boiling inside," the burn is palpable.
Hicks's posthumously published autobiography, I SCARE MYSELF (Jawbone/Quarto, paper, $22.95) — the title is also the name of one of his best-known songs — captures his distinctively droll voice, even when addressing (but by no means making light of) his long battle with alcoholism.
"The violence inside swerves from slapstick to bloodshed and back, producing a volatile blend of humor and horror that pays tribute to the source material while coloring its themes with the director's distinctively perverse and humane sensibility," A. O. Scott wrote in The Times.
Everybody knows he was gay, that he supposedly had to have sex daily (as has similarly been observed of Epstein), and that he surrounded himself throughout his life with young, handsome, distinctively goyish-looking men (one of whom agreed to be interviewed for the film).
Early in his tenure, he wrote a distinctively moody digital short, half in Spanish, starring Lin-Manuel Miranda as a sensitive boy named Diego calling his mother in Mexico from a telephone booth in a North Dakota cornfield, describing America with wonder and romance.
For any nonperson of color, there's a distinct possibility that you've never seen a wave, nor understand what the hell a wave is, but this entire couple of minutes dedicated to some black dudes chopping it up around a distinctively black tradition sits there without nuance.
If you operate, which most of us do, from the premise that there are things about the contemporary US that make it distinctively hard to be a real human being, then maybe half of fiction's job is to dramatize what it is that makes it tough.
He is a natural introvert, two sources close his team told Reuters, adding that his shyness is often construed as arrogance, and he needs a lot of time alone before speaking in public - distinctively at odds with the public perception of Johnson being a natural, unscripted showman.
There has been widespread acknowledgment that these misogynistic actions occur for a while now, but the latest push is one that is distinctively toward attitudinal change: a sense that it's time for men like Trump to move on and that women are done tolerating the status quo.
A Norwich TerrierPhoto: Marcia A. Sessions (University of Edinburgh)As wonderfully cute as dog breeds like the French Bulldog look (for some people at least), it's long been thought that these dogs' distinctively compact skulls also make them very vulnerable to severe health and breathing issues.
It's a "time for a change" election; Hillary is distinctively unpopular, dragging unexpected baggage, and has been tugged pretty far leftward during the primary season; Trump is probably more likely to deflate than the normal G.O.P. nominee and to tear down Hillary while he does it.
Chapanis came up with an ingenious solution: He created a system of distinctively shaped knobs and levers that made it easy to distinguish all the controls of the plane merely by feel, so that there's no chance of confusion even if you're flying in the dark.
" There's also, perhaps most distinctively, a song called "1-800 Suicide," which describes ways you might kill yourself, such as like for example touching the third rail, autoerotic asphyxiation, taking LSD before crashing your car, or contriving to "confront an alligator, let it eat you raw.
Despite their distinctively cyberpunk aesthetic of visual static and fragmentation in a palette dominated by blacks, pinks and techno greens, the images are powered by the same careful counterbalancing of color and form you would see in any good abstract painting of the past 50 years.
For those of us who appreciate Ailey's distinctively African-American rendition of modern and contemporary dance since the early '60s it is a privilege being able to publicly access the collection of more than 213,000 photographs chronicling the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater from 1961 to 1994.
In the absence of a distinctively different operating system and any alternative to what is already on the market software-wise, it will be interesting to see whether this is enough to motivate the masses who are new to Nokia phones an brand loyalists from the old days.
Paul Klee's bold but indirect color choices, his distinctively eccentric line and his evocatively spooky mix of suggestive abstraction and dreamy figuration form a uniquely recognizable but hard-to-put-your-finger-on style that would seem easier for younger artists to use as pastiche than to learn from.
It was a great idea to precede this work with another distinctively American piece: Ives's "Central Park in the Dark," in which soft cluster chords in the strings suggest the hazy summer nighttime in the park as sounds of whistled tunes, ragtime pianos from apartment windows and more intrude.
But if you're looking at what Trump has directly changed, who seems distinctively offended and energized by his provocations, white-brown-black differences aren't where the action is; instead, it's with the large female backlash that may be poised to swamp the male backlash that helped make him president.
Not every piece in the show is equally strong, and not every strong piece is necessarily well served by even a discreet use of gender and ethnicity as an organizing principle — it risks reducing distinctive and distinctively self-sufficient artworks like Ms. Herrera's painting into mere specimens of type.
But while the King of Pop is most fully embodied through the character of Theodore Perkins, Darius's diminutive and creepy host, whose bleached skin and distinctively molded face could be a nod to no one else, Jackson is far from the only cultural touchstone driving the episode to its violent conclusion.
But what does run through all of them is a distinctively playful intimacy: Unlike the alien beings fit only for scientific analysis or service as metaphors that we find in the West, Japan's animals come across as friends — to be attended to, delighted in, or, on occasion, made fun of.
But if Dauber is as worried as he claims to be that as American Jews assimilate, Jewish-American comedy will become less distinctively Jewish and more generically American — something he warns of in his concluding pages — all the more reason for a serious scholar of Jewish comedy to turn east.
In one distinctively complex passage, seven are in three horizontal rows: Each row is doing something quite different in tempo, and the two dancers of the middle row are moving as mirror images of each other (left-right versus right-left), while the three in the back row are moving in unison.
" He believes in no God, describing himself, with acuity, as "an amiable, low-voltage atheist" and, in an absorbing chapter on religion, makes the case that "not only can conservatives be thoroughly secular, but that a secular understanding of cosmology and of humanity's place in the cosmos accords with a distinctively conservative sensibility.
Warren's adoption of "Latinx" is a different example of this problem: There's no policy here, but the rhetoric still suggests that Warren is distinctively beholden to a hermetic academic-progressive world, to a point where she doesn't know how to talk to the less-ideological, less-woke, maybe-even-somewhat-conservative Hispanics whose votes her party needs.
Long admired as a rare manuscript, its true significance was discovered more recently when scholars pondered clues—distinctively English bookmaking techniques, an Anglo-Norman term for "seagull" in a list of non-kosher birds jotted in a margin—and concluded that this is the only known book to survive from the tiny, embattled Jewish community of medieval England.
A humble farmer's son and onetime engineering student who dropped out of university, Cucinelli became a self-taught philosopher before he began selling cashmere sweaters, and eventually launched his company with a distinctively humanistic formulation of what a capitalist enterprise could achieve — for which he is being awarded Germany's prestigious Global Economy Prize for "Honorable Merchant" this Sunday.
Working firmly within the tradition of New York Jewish humor distinctively mined by the likes of Woody Allen, Neil Simon, Carl Reiner, Herb Gardner, Elaine May and so many others, Baumbach's film for Netflix is more conventionally conceived than some of his best work but benefits from sterling turns from a wonderful cast, most notably Dustin Hoffman and, no kidding, Adam Sandler.
Unlike Mr Trump, a would-be strongman who talks with relish of the president's executive powers, the Senate leader returns time and again to what he considers his distinctively Republican distrust of government—reinforced by a brief stint at the Department of Justice, recalled as "people shuffling paper, doing the bare minimum, spending their days in an endless cycle of bureaucracy".
It represents a time when the distinctively non-Efron-like (read: swoll) Brendan Fraser was considered leading man material; a time when a fresh-faced actress like Rachel Weisz could wear her hair curly, and still be a sex-symbol; a time having a villain dissolve into a swirling sand storm was the height of special effects; a simpler time.
Ms Vestager and Ms Goulard want to use their clout to develop a distinctively European way of managing new technology and finding a balance between open markets and interventionist industrial strategy in responding to new industrial giants from China and Silicon Valley (tough Ms Vestager's liberal instincts may collide with the activist mood, personified by Ms Goulard, in Paris and Berlin).
Some said they were a sign that Colombia was stuck in its own traditions but were unsure if the performance should be changed, while others were quick to say the paint was distinctively different than "blackface" in the United States, where it was was employed for centuries to scapegoat and negatively stereotype African Americans, particularly as costumes in minstrel shows that ridiculed black communities.
President TrumpDonald John TrumpTrump pushes back on recent polling data, says internal numbers are 'strongest we've had so far' Illinois state lawmaker apologizes for photos depicting mock assassination of Trump Scaramucci assembling team of former Cabinet members to speak out against Trump MORE should make it a priority to lead the way of that realignment with distinctively American notions of generosity, fair play and equality.
Pääsuke is a maverick of sorts: Distant from the history of Soviet official art and the nonconformist response to it, as much as from the rigid influence of German abstract impressionism, Pääsuke is at home with the Surrealism and Fauvism of the Paris School, and blends photographic realism inflected by Magrittesque elements with a kind of Pop art sensibility which is so distinctively Baltic.
It was not until 260, with the publication of his story collection "Damballah," that Wideman grew into his mature style, a learned and distinctively black register that switches naturally between the sublime and the profane, an earthy vernacular and a high literary mode with which he spins tales both true and untrue that overlap and accumulate, like 753-D printing, into tangible landscapes and characters.
The heavy hand of Paris brought distinctively French touches: padded seats even in third class, an unwieldy timetable the size of a dictionary, the grandeur of the high-speed TGV, and a class of civil servants who call themselves cheminots with essentially a job for life and guaranteed sick leave, which created the old French joke that working for the railway must be dangerous because its employees are always getting ill.
"Late Night With Seth Meyers," which recently celebrated its fifth anniversary, does this distinctively and brilliantly, by folding barbed one-liners into more shapely structures, including "A Closer Look," which is essentially a spoken essay, about 20163 minutes long, that hews tightly to a discrete theme — one from mid-December mulled the tandem hooey of Trump's philanthropy and his proposed border wall — and that Meyers does every few days.

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