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281 Sentences With "dwells"

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

He is not a director who dwells on the prosaic.
The truth dwells in the complicated zone between the two.
It dwells mainly in New York rock and California pop.
Yet this is not a film that dwells on style.
Among whatever else dwells in these depths, there are shapeshifters. 
He rarely dwells on what he has lost, he said.
But mostly he dwells on the blessing which folk song represented.
Kim Kelly is Noisey's metal editor; she dwells on Twitter here.
He notes the way racial injustice dwells in apparently mundane facts.
The man dwells in a loopy land of his own invention.
It dwells in the world of ideas, tracing the arc of debates.
They were taken on Thanksgiving, the same day the song dwells on.
Now is the time to confront whatever resistance dwells deep inside you.
Instead, the haunting, beautiful film dwells in the dusty cracks we usually avoid.
What he's not is someone who dwells on the sunny side of life.
HE PICKED MIKE PENCE AND MIKE PENCE DWELLS ON HIS TENURE IN INDIANA.
Instead she dwells on cases of childhood illness which she blames on vaccines.
Meanwhile, obsidian and black onyx help draw out any negativity that dwells within.
But Metro 2033 is also critical of the nostalgia that it dwells upon.
Wieviorka's survey dwells on numbers and bureaucratic infighting among the Allied intelligence organizations.
" Freed from measurable time, Pavla dwells on "the central problem of her life.
Now I'm an immigrant, part of a larger diaspora consciousness that dwells within borders.
The status quo that — at best — dwells in a muck of mediocrity always prevails.
China banned entertainment news that promotes "Western lifestyles" or dwells on celebrities' personal lives.
Instead, it further heightens the chasm that dwells within our common language and Constitution.
He dwells on his abject failure and how shitty his trailer park life is.
Surrounded by sunlight, flowers and gentle breezes, Jeanne dwells in a vision of happiness.
On Baseball Ned Yost is not the kind of manager who dwells on statistics.
RHOA dwells on the protracted anxiety of owning one, and the lifestyle the house represents.
Musically, the album dwells at the shadowy crossroads where black, death, and doom metal meet.
"'A magic dwells in each beginning, protecting us, telling us how to live'," he reads.
AOL may be as good as dead but its Digital Prophet still dwells in possibility.
This is a brooding book, one that dwells on Dostoyevskian notions of innocence and evil.
While Trump promises to "make America great again," he dwells on what chumps we are now.
The love of Christ that dwells within your heart exudes from you like a sweet perfume.
Fast forward just two years and the virtual reality industry Oculus dwells within has shifted dramatically.
One of the scenes dwells upon how they mark their underwear in order to avoid confusion.
Similarly, Bowien dwells on his missing Korean heritage, but has also broken free of its trappings.
Last year he was photographed, disshelveled and emerging from his mom's basement, where he apparently dwells.
The mystery — and the possible lesson for the present — dwells in the question of Franz's motive.
Jalik Lewis, a 13-year-old point guard at Durant Middle School, dwells on missed opportunities.
But the movie never dwells on its violence; it refuses to turn its gore into a fetish.
But some think they need to be respectful of Kevin, as the park is where she dwells.
Never are they more fascinating than when she dwells on them and breathes life into their travails.
The artist, who lives and works in Portland, Maine, dwells mostly in the collage and printmaking space.
But Milosz, in "Native Realm," dwells less on love and more on his political and intellectual motives.
Hence, the prodigious exterior variety of these edifices, at whose foundation dwells so much order and unity.
For pages and pages, he dwells on the past, on his childhood — that beating on the cobblestones.
The book dwells on gender bias and what is reality and what is perception in the art world.
" President Lincoln's Secretary of State wrote: "a nobler, higher spirit, or a truer, seldom dwells in human form.
Instead, it's a raunchy, hilarious comedy that dwells on the actual mechanics of reuniting man and missing appendage.
"Hag-Seed" is at its eerie, enchanting best when Atwood dwells on Felix's relationship with his lost daughter.
In his social media posts as StalinGulag, Mr. Gorbunov rarely dwells on the problems faced by disabled Russians.
These days, Horvath rarely picks up a racket and almost never dwells on that day 34 years ago.
Much of the parrot population dwells on the south of the island, which was hit but not devastated.
Masino dwells in an ethical gray zone, and his biography is a chiaroscuro of compromise and partial vindication.
Svetlana dwells less on her father's evil than on her own wrongdoing in the abandonment of her children.
Despite its rather flat-footed title, this section, "The Sixties Generation: Materials and Processes," dwells on the apocalypse.
The dialogue, which often dwells on matters of bloodlines and family lineage, would be embarrassing in a video game.
This returned focus to the movie's villain — the nameless, shapeless evil that dwells beneath the town of Derry, Maine.
No one in the Trump administration dwells much on war-torn Libya or the troubled democratic transition in Tunisia.
That message, by and large, dwells on what Mr. Rubio describes as the unique and special character of America.
Cupcakes' size, shape, and appearance all promote a view of femininity which similarly dwells on size, shape, and appearance.
As a writer, Carson dwells in a space of disintegration because she doubts the existence of a cohesive whole.
This particular black hole dwells in Messier 87, the scientific name for a distant galaxy in the constellation Virgo.
She dwells on a topic having little to do with selfies and then glosses over complicated selfie-related stories.
She has learned that the unknown dwells in every moment and to honor it is to live life fully.
The New York psyche — if there is such a thing — no longer dwells in that age of relentless crime.
Worry is what happens when your mind dwells on negative thoughts, uncertain outcomes or things that could go wrong.
Mishra dwells in the realm of ideas and emotions, which get short shrift in most accounts of global politics.
The first half of the collection dwells in hauntings and elisions, building gradually toward something like reunion and repair.
But she dwells mostly in a benumbed, stressed-out limbo, in frenzied motion from one nowhere to the next.
Just off the coast of Southern California sits Santa Cruz Island, where a magical creature called the island fox dwells.
So the media dwells on the most pessimistic projections, ensuring that polling, no matter how divorced from reality, shapes it.
But cupcakes' size, shape, and appearance all promote a view of femininity which similarly dwells on size, shape, and appearance.
Such a character could, in some hands, come off as inert as he chain-smokes and dwells on his memories.
Wordplay MONDAY PUZZLE — Presents are always nice, and today Jules Markey dwells on a special gift-giving tradition from Britain.
First, I overlooked the sort of fiery, anti-authority streak that dwells mostly but not entirely dormant in the English id.
She dwells first on the grisly details of the immigrant's criminality, and then invokes her opponents' name a bunch of times.
The belief is that our soul has another part to it, and that part dwells inside someone else — your twin flame.
Berlin neither dwells on nor complains about this, but merely presents it again and again until it becomes difficult to ignore.
It dwells, sometimes too comfortably, sometimes too clumsily and sometimes with bracing effectiveness, within long-established patterns of mainstream movie storytelling.
Her eroticism dwells in the crook of an elbow, a pulse seen in a bicep; never in language or simple romance.
The critique dwells safely within the limits of the allegorical while the real anxieties, however obscured, remain just outside the window.
This conversation with our critic Wesley Morris dwells more than briefly on the '80s teen-adventure movie "The Goonies" [pictured above].
It asks and answers familiar questions, dwells of topics of reliable comity, and stresses fellow feeling rather than sources of disagreement.
Photo: Marc MilneScientists have discovered a new species of sheet-weaving spider, and it only dwells in one cave in southern Indiana.
In an age of spin he dwells on the imperfections of human life—his father's drinking, his wife's neediness, his children's tantrums.
"A little magic dwells in each beginning," proclaimed Mrs Merkel at their first meeting as leaders in May 2017, quoting Hermann Hesse.
Succession, of course, occurs only upon the death of his 92-year-old mother so it is not something he dwells on.
Perhaps this started well before temperatures near the surface — where much life dwells — hit 20 Fahrenheit (around 10 Celcius) higher than normal.
Though he currently dwells in an anonymous village in Spain's Catalonia region, Koze was born Stefan Kozalla in Hamburg, Germany in 1972.
Like the first episode of Ezra Edelman's ESPN documentary O.J.: Made in America, the series' second part dwells heavily on racial tension.
Almost half the film dwells in a desert region of Kazakhstan, near the site of the Baikonur Cosmodrome, the world's first spaceport.
Manigault Newman dwells within a new shrine to celebrity status where shame is but a quaint and quixotic relic of the past.
True to its title, the book dwells on the New World, with very brief detours to Asia, Eastern Europe, Spain and elsewhere.
Tyehimba Jess's Olio takes up this challenge, dwells in it, breaks it apart, rearranges it — and encourages us to do the same.
Without human insight, it cannot grapple with the ever-evolving nature of online hate that dwells in double meanings, memes, and in-jokes.
But the characteristic feature of King's novel is the way it dwells, with paranoid intensity, on the awful potency of its own language.
Instead of talking heads recounting their shocking experiences with graphic content, the documentary dwells only with a few people during their introductory training.
Padura's Heretics also dwells there, although his focus is on a Jewish assistant to Rembrandt, forbidden to make representative art by his religion.
And therein lies the concern that my neurotic mind dwells upon on auspicious occasions like today's, the 50th anniversary of the Beatles' Sgt.
He has created a movie that dwells longingly on Hollywood's past, while trying to make the case for its relevance in Hollywood's future.
He dwells in an anxious limbo where the harsh realities of big-city life coincide with a childlike longing for a magical escape.
Being a survivor is a part of Elizabeth's identity; not an experience she dwells on, but one with which she continues to contend.
Rather than focusing on macroeconomic factors such as growth, productivity or unemployment, in "Transaction Man" Mr Lemann dwells on how companies are run.
But before he dwells on who's got next, he may well want to heed an experienced voice of the not-too-distant past.
It's been listed as endangered since 1970, and about 85033 percent of the known population dwells on private timberlands, principally in North Carolina.
And reflecting upon this concept, that what motivates and inspires you actually dwells within your physical body, can profoundly change how you view yourself.
She dwells on a sprawling property in Woodstock, New York, which has become a pilgrimage site for aspiring herbalists and witches seeking her tutelage.
The film dwells on the achievements of Mr Xi. In February the media regulator said that it would designate 5,000 cinemas as "People's Theatres".
Not that the author dwells on the comparison; discretion is among the ways in which her meticulous, elegantly wrought narrative bears the Cartier hallmark.
It dwells on the intimidating dichotomy of parenting: deciding what to try to fix in your children and what to accept and even celebrate.
It's a show about the power of words and stories and memories in a genre that so frequently dwells on violence, sexual and otherwise.
Mainly, though, they don't care because it's an investigation that dwells on the past, while the presidency is about the present and the future.
Morgan, like every comic, has watched a lot of Richard Pryor, and his standup, like Pryor's, dwells on the viscera of working-class existence.
It's a movie with dire warnings about everything from technological over-reliance to corporate idolatry to environmental abuse, yet never dwells on any of them.
A character in Legion dwells inside a swanky, 1960s-styled ice cube, which looks a bit like the white bedroom from 2001: A Space Odyssey.
The cinematography of It dwells in the loose light of summer vacation; thick late-afternoon light plays in grass, knees are skinned and bicycles ridden.
On top of that, the bacteria would have to travel safely to the lower intestine (where good bacteria dwells) without getting obliterated by stomach acid.
An awful lot of the ZAM interview still dwells within the IGDA's established enthusiasm for talking about talking, and the criticism demanded some damage control.
He never seemed to me entirely at home in his domicile of deception; she dwells without evident compunction in a gaudier fairyland of grander fictions.
While she dwells extensively on the milieu of the harem, she spends little time explaining what led Jahangir to elevate Nur above his other wives.
The ugly hand dwells upon the shoulders of these children like the person expects the children to take them wherever as if they are servants.
We then jump to his college days, during which he dwells in an attic apartment and, as expected, punctuates his bookishness with love and sex.
Of these atrocities we get some dreadful glimpses, but much of the novel dwells on the Spada household's domestic arrangements under German and, later, Austrian occupation.
Chronicling its achievements, as the cradle of the industrial revolution, it also dwells on Manchester's resilience in the face of recessions, economic decline—and now this.
Sinosphere BEIJING — Po, the wisdom-seeking hero of the "Kung Fu Panda" films, might recognize this temple in China where the world's first robot monk dwells.
While the Constitution's first three articles define the federal government's three branches, Article 4 dwells on the interlocking relationship between federal, state, territorial, and tribal powers.
In the poem "Dear Adam," Myles dwells on what it means to live in a stolen country that was always stolenand worked largely by stolen people.
In conversations, the president dwells on the map and its import, reminding visitors about how wrong the polls were and inflating the scope of his victory.
Grubbs, a shark scientist at Florida State University, only hoped to attract a little-seen creature that largely dwells in the lightless ocean depths: the sixgill shark.
That's because some of the mystical-mumbo-jumbo dialogue -- as in, "Dormammu dwells in the dark dimension" -- could sound stilted or silly tripping off less talented tongues.
But for the Yoruba people, numbering some 40 million, she is Osun, and dwells in the waters of the Sacred Grove, just outside the city of Osogbo.
In New York, huge crowds gathered in Union Square before marching 40 blocks to Trump Tower, blocking off the streets surrounding the luxury skyscraper where Trump dwells.
Tsai's static camera dwells on these islands in the audience; the sparse crowd are all ghosts to one another, trailed by a murmuring soundtrack, melancholic and indelible.
One can't help but suspect that this agitprop perversion of Indonesian history obsessively dwells on the myth of rampant Communist torture as a form of psychic compensation.
We have included most of her article below: Worry is what happens when your mind dwells on negative thoughts, uncertain outcomes or things that could go wrong.
Up to half of the habitat of the endangered giant barred frog—which dwells within the nightcap oak grove, among other places—has been impacted by fire.
" The Jew, says Wagner, "speaks the language of the nation in whose midst he dwells from generation to generation but he speaks it always as an alien.
It's a Bonnie and Clyde tale worth telling today — not just for how it calls back to our past, but how it dwells with our uncomfortable present.
Voters embracing such a backward-looking nostalgia are likely to favor Trump, who dwells on how corrupt elites have steered the United States in the wrong direction.
He settled on Caenorhabditis elegans, or C. elegans, a tiny, transparent roundworm that dwells in the soil, eats bacteria and completes its life cycle in three days.
Until recently China has tried to keep foreign blue-collar workers out of the country, preferring the affluent sort of foreigner who usually dwells in its richest cities.
Like Steve McQueen's "12 Years a Slave," it is most powerful when it dwells on the particulars of that crime, on the everyday wickedness of 19th-century slavery.
It is unlikely to happen, and their book dwells on one source of the difficulty (radical activists) while mostly ignoring equally important ones (donors, mass media, the Internet).
That will make clear what has always been the case -- Trump cares most about his base, and rarely dwells on who or what is caught in the crossfire.
Most of the remainder of the book dwells at great length on the "disordered aftermath" of this conflict overseas, which he believes set the stage for the collapse.
I hear somewhere close   that bird calling could-be , could-be — tell me, Bird, how soul inhabits the place of fire, how soul dwells there in its trembling?
That's because Weir is a process nerd, and processes are what truly interest him; by extension, when he dwells on process is when the book becomes truly interesting.
He dwells on his suicide bid in his autobiography, A Life Decoded, and even alluded to it in the speech he gave at the White House in June 2000.
In a direct nod to BHS, the paper dwells on the idea of extending formal corporate governance and reporting standards from listed companies to 2,500-odd large private companies.
To Be Wrong dwells on the ways misinformation is constructed and packaged as fact, while Signal illustrates the excess of news, both real and fake, that overloads our senses.
In telling it, she's made it impossible for comedians who come after her, and their audiences, to forget the horror that dwells on the other side of every joke.
She dwells on broad social and political events, which she believes were not merely a context for the artists' work but the raison d'être for their allegiance to abstraction.
Elections are about the future, not the past, and Mr. Trump often dwells on a bygone era when he says he believes life was better in the United States.
With the crucial exceptions of "Summer Friends" and "Angels," both of which address impoverished Chicago neighborhoods, Coloring Book dwells on the dark side of the universe mainly by omission.
As Myshkin dwells on his childhood, and reads his mother's letters, the novel alternates between beautifully rendered images and a gentle stagnation that brings the narrative to a standstill.
Humpty is quite alone on most of the pages; the urban landscape in which he dwells is one of shadows, plus that looming wall from which he famously tumbles.
Brown, for example, acknowledges but scarcely dwells on how the princess' two children became "widely regarded as more accomplished and personable" than the queen's own feckless, always-divorcing offspring.
The iPhone dwells among us, but it looks — it's designed to look — as if it just moments ago entered our world from some higher, more ideal plane of existence.
For perfectly good reasons, the literature of grief dwells on the experiences of the living, the survivors who grapple with the pain of loss and the puzzle of absence.
It dwells a little too much on some tangential pop culture, like props from the 1960s Batman TV series or the opulent Broadway disaster Spider-Man: Turn off the Dark.
Slippery and elusive, she invites us to view the stories being told not as documentation of past experiences, but rather as a re-creation that dwells between memory and fantasy.
There's a setup, but instead of a punchline, the audience gets jabbed in the tender part of the brain that dwells on how one day, inevitably, we will all die.
Each side insists it's putting the Puerto Rican people above political ambitions in a fight that dwells on the contentious and, for many, painful issue of the island's territorial status.
To navigate the world of "wild surmise" in which the critical mind so often dwells, it behooves the critic, Professor Hartman said, to hew a path through the textual landscape.
Her dump salad appears in the pages of her cookbook, where the country singer embraces ingredients some may dismiss as "low"; I'd say she dwells in the low without apology.
The Trump confidant, who dwells in the Sheldon Adelson wing of American conservative Jewry, is arguably responsible for the single largest fundraising surge progressive-leaning Jewish nonprofits have ever seen.
"Diamond Island" runs long in its final act as the script, by Mr. Chou and Claire Maugendre, dwells on its theme of a land and its people undergoing constant change.
So I'll note instead how the film dwells on rooms, the contrast between the sunny traditional home of the mother, Laura, and the coolly modernist place belonging to the father, Richard.
Julien's current installation dwells on Douglass in Britain, especially in Scotland where he was so warmly received that he gave 5003 lectures in and around Glasgow alone between 2500 and 214607.
Consider the way the women are shot, from the legs up: Tate mostly wears miniskirts, and the camera dwells lovingly on her knees, while Pussycat's long legs dance in denim cutoffs.
His scapegrace father, whom readers of "The Mysteries of Pittsburgh" will recognize, makes a few brief appearances later on, but this book dwells mainly on the mysteries of the maternal line.
Alyx also dwells a little more on the weird dynamic of being a post-apocalyptic teenager (in this game, at least) who hangs out with a bunch of nostalgic old men.
Alyx also dwells a little more on the weird dynamic of being a post-apocalyptic teenager (in this game, at least) who hangs out with a bunch of nostalgic old men.
And wasn't the most important takeaway that neither of the candidates dwells in the truth-free, information-barren, delusion-rich bubble surrounding our current president, whose irresponsibility is having epic consequences?
On the French president's first official visit in May she welcomed him with a line of poetry from Hermann Hesse: "Jedem Anfang wohnt ein Zauber inne" (A magic dwells in each beginning).
She tells of the craze for pleasure-boat trips in the river's upper reaches during the late 19th century, and dwells at length on William Morris, the Victorian Arts and Crafts revivalist.
The strength of the labor market has been a key selling point for Morrison, though the center-right politician never dwells on the fact that the new jobs created were public ones.
None of these essays could be described as ultra-confessional, and none of them dwells on the pain, trauma, or gross-out physical experiences in which Jezebel essays, for example, often specialized.
Dear Climate dwells on the deep entanglements of our species with not only animals, but also plants, minerals, organic matter and the bio-geo-physical systems (including climate) that govern the Earth.
"By every appliance of literature and art, we must show to all coming ages that with us, at least, there dwells no sense of guilt," The Daily Picayune wrote at the time.
It's notable that the Target lawsuit dwells primarily on the "jazz stripe" trademark, only briefly mentioning the other obvious similarities between the two shoes, like their shape, color scheme, and waffled bottoms.
But the super PAC spending by the nurses' union also underscores an aspect of the Supreme Court's Citizens United decision that Mr. Sanders rarely dwells on in his campaign speeches attacking the ruling.
The media dwells upon real-life killers, describing every detail of their crime during prime-time TV. The current conditions easily set up children to begin thinking like soldiers and even justify killing.
Tooze dwells at length on the European transition from stabilization to austerity, which coincided with the emergence of a sovereign-debt crisis in three peripheral members of the eurozone: Greece, Ireland, and Portugal.
Futterman largely ignores our current golden age of ball movement and dwells instead on the decade following Michael Jordan's retirement, when a host of players came to the N.B.A. directly from high school.
Much of his large-scale symphonic writing dwells in Shostakovich's mournful-antic shadow, yet in chamber forms Weinberg assumes a distinctive profile, his melodic fluency underpinned by a flair for tension and surprise.
The composer said he enjoyed coming up with Broadway-ish music for the character of Mr. Bobo, an eccentric old man who dwells in the apartment above Coraline and conducts the mouse orchestra.
Instead, he dwells on everything else that Snowden took from the N.S.A. files: details of N.S.A. methodologies, overseas operations, foreign sources—revelations that, national-security officials maintain, gravely compromised our foreign intelligence-gathering.
Although the book's three principals see their share of human tragedies—bodies caught in rubble, corpses laid in alleyways—Barker dwells less on these experiences than one might expect, given her previous novels.
The title itself comes from a sonnet by Gerard Manley Hopkins, a Victorian poet of God-in-Nature, which asserts that each created thing has an individual self, "that being indoors each one dwells".
Sure, there have been mobbed-up record labels in the real world — but when the series dwells on Galasso, it feels like we're eating the leftovers stashed at the back of Martin Scorsese's refrigerator.
It's good that he struck while the iron was hot, because he now dwells in a frigid limbo on the far side of his days of White House service, which numbered all of 24.
The kinkajou typically weighs 3 to 7 pounds and dwells in the forests of Central and South America; state officials aren't sure how one made its way to Lake Worth in the first place.
That, in turn, could bother Washington: "This will inevitably undermine the regional security posture of the United States that traditionally dwells on the anti-communist unity of South Korea, Japan and Taiwan," Petrov continued.
In the sport-sedan segment — notably, the sportier subset of the segment, where the BMW M and the Mercedes AMG and the Audi RS dwells — each ride needs its logic, a determination of identity.
The book has its share of gross-out imagery at the gravesite, and the murderous half-dead child who eventually comes back to life, but it works because dwells on the father's state of mind.
Testing revealed that strain ST131, which dwells in the gut and can occasionally cause serious infections, dominated in human blood, sewerage and feces samples, while different strains were more common in animal meat and slurry.
Steve Luxenberg, an editor at the Washington Post, dwells on the personal lives of the men who built and decided a case that wound up blessing the regime of Jim Crow segregation in America's South.
As a sign that dwells in the realm of ideas, Geminis can feel out of their element during something as earthy and physical as sex, and they sometimes deal with this by attempting dirty talk.
As The New York Times points out, this result is akin to grinding up plastic water bottles and throwing them into these bodies of water — but worse because of what dwells in the waters: fish.
In that ancient mystery religion, remember, the earth was created by a malevolent demiurge, while a transcendent God dwells, inaccessible, in a realm of light, unknowable except by those who receive a special, secret revelation.
The Helsinki quartet burst onto the scene in 2009 (following a brief period under the name Turbin), but really started picking up steam last year with their last LP, and Spinefarm debut Where Evil Dwells.
Coverage of the romance industry often dwells on the contrast between the nubile young heroines of the novels and the women who actually write the books: ordinary women with ordinary bodies, dressed for their own comfort.
But all had the same hope: to shift the conversation about transgender youth from one that dwells on bullying, suicide and murder, to one that focuses on positivity, through an online campaign called the GenderCool Project.
Yet again and again he seems drawn back to that other country in which part of him still dwells, arguing that his achievements in ending the war and rebuilding the north have never been fully acknowledged.
Without shirking the mechanics of how time travel works, the novel dwells at length in how time travel feels, both for those who hop back and forth through it and for those who experience it linearly.
One of Sam's prized possessions is an issue of Playboy from 1970 (it belonged to his dad), and "Under the Silver Lake" dwells in a hedged, half-guilty, self-conscious iteration of the magazine's hedonist philosophy.
All politicians and reformers should be informed and bound by science — no small caveat, given the fantasyland in which the GOP dwells these days — but science will always under-determine what they can or should do.
"Bandwidth" is a book that savors everything: Dag dwells as much in the scents and tastes of coffee and tequila as he does in philosophical problems of means justifying ends and the limits of ethical persuasion.
Booker's call to find common ground was couched in cultural terms, too, as he spoke about how he had read "Hillbilly Elegy," the hit book by J.D. Vance that dwells on the plight of poor, white Americans.
The paper, written by Dr. Hansen and 18 other authors, dwells on the last time Earth warmed naturally, about 120,000 years ago, when the temperature reached a level estimated to have been only slightly higher than today.
The Washington exhibition dwells on the voyages of Ms. Dwan and the new Jet Age culture she was part of — on "the technologies of travel, and how this was affecting aesthetic practice," as Mr. Meyer put it.
By retelling the same stories about Clinton and her career that we've already heard many times, from her and others, it dwells on the past without telling us much at all about our political present — or future. ●
Both are rapping well, but neither dwells on it, especially Blac Youngsta, owner of one of the most free-spirited social media presences in hip-hop who raps like he might bust out giggling at any moment.
While popular culture dwells on the big planet-wide catastrophe to come, it is easier to ignore the smaller catastrophes that strike somewhere every day, ones that are in no way small to those caught in their path.
She is fascinated by moments in which "there is some action of cutting through surfaces" not because of a trite conviction that equates the superficial with the flimsy or false, but because underneath dwells something unexpected, potentially untranslatable.
"When Watched," Leopoldine Core's first collection of short stories, dwells in the realm of the sparkling mundane, the type of human matter that is invitingly recognizable, the type of matter that you yourself have participated in or observed.
Lyrically, "Sleep Well Beast," like much of the National's discography, dwells on the impossibility of human relations: how hard it is for two people to want the same thing, in the same way, for longer than just a moment.
The prose poem/essay "Some Zones" dwells on how the mind compartmentalizes place and time, as in time zones, the "zones" of the Glen Echo ravine where the boy Matthias played, The Twilight Zone, the "interzone" of William Burroughs's Naked Lunch.
The local press dwells on the attacks by Rohingya insurgents on police and army posts, and on the relatively small number of assaults on Buddhists and Hindus, while ignoring or glossing over the persecution of the Rohingyas, who are Muslim.
The simple fact is that all of this constructing, demolishing, harvesting, and gathering is nested inside of a big story that asks big questions about the nature of creation and destruction and dwells on how communities come together and break apart.
Oculus may have had a rougher start with the first iteration of the Rift than many would have hoped, but Facebook is still showing a surprisingly level-headed vision for a technology whose final form still dwells beyond the horizon.
Lupin seems to continue this teasing into adulthood: In Prisoner of Azkaban, when he becomes professor of Defense Against the Dark Arts at Hogwarts, he teaches his students about a being known as a boggart, which dwells in dark, small spaces.
"On Peripersonal Space" similarly dwells on a term – here, from psychology, referring to the space beyond one's own body, within one's reach – to arrive at a moment of unflinching personal revelation about the complexities of the parameters of parental love.
It was the start of a remarkable reinvention that turned a polished corporate dealmaker who once devised $10 billion mergers on Wall Street into a purveyor of scorched-earth right-wing media who dwells in the darker corners of American politics.
CreditCredit PAHOA, Hawaii — When the rivers of lava forced thousands to flee this month, many people on Hawaii's Big Island pointed with awe toward the drizzle-shrouded volcanic crater where Pele — known as "the woman who devours the earth" — usually dwells.
Such fears are embodied in the figure of Grendel in "Beowulf", "a creature of darkness, exiled from happiness and accursed of God, the destroyer and devourer of our human kind", as well as Grendel's mother, who dwells in a watery cave.
" Another section on religious leaders dwells on their taste for the high life: "If (critics) are so upset by your private jet, they should go and question the God who blessed your hustle and lifted you above your poor followers.
"Toy Story 4" involves a new human owner, Bonnie; a new character in peril, Forky (a plastic utensil that has gained a personality through a kindergarten craft project); and even an evil doll, Gabby Gabby, who dwells in an antiques store.
The facts of the case are revealed gradually, and along the way Maja continually dwells on the kinds of questions that are, as her celebrity lawyer puts it, "not judicially relevant" — such as why she and Sebastian did what they did.
This fascinating debate over the impending majority-minority status of our country, as census numbers have so surely projected, dwells on an interesting aspect of the demographic changes the United States is experiencing: the perceived and self-perceived race of mixed-race Americans.
" James Clapper, the longest-serving DNI and an occasional Trump sparring partner since he stepped down at the end of the Obama administration, was far more critical: "This is simply a reflection of the no-fact-zone reality bubble where Trump dwells.
The concern was less about disturbing the final resting place of its unknown occupants, and more because removing its lid could plunge the world into a cursed darkness, overwhelming us with deep despair as the blackness that dwells within everyone is revealed.
She seems to be able to traverse any kind of theme and terrain and wield them together into an assemblage that dwells in the interstitial state between dreams and our darkest waking places, a kind of laughter derived from shock of the new.
Painter dwells a bit much on being self-conscious about becoming an artist, about how to dress as an artist and achieve the look of an artist — it's almost as if her agent instructed her to add those details to seem more human.
Stocked with British comedy elites, Emma dwells on the foibles of small-town neighbors struggling to get along, and features particularly winning turns from Alan Cumming and Juliet Stevenson as the officious couple who set out to one-up Emma at every turn.
Without neglecting other things, Kaplan concentrates on "The Stranger" and dwells on Camus's adherence to and emulation of American novels by Faulkner and Hemingway and especially James M. Cain's "The Postman Always Rings Twice," which upended the style and history of French fiction.
There's a refreshing humanity in the way the youngest March sister -- who's at once bratty and thoughtful -- openly, rigorously dwells on the limitations of the cultural script that's been written for her, specifically in regard to the mingling of freedom, wealth and love.
The one scene where she dwells on her body with shame is not as Sunny Leone but as Karenjit Kaur, when she's bullied in a gym full of white students for her hairy legs, and rushes home to wax them while her mother is away.
Bertram, an adorable rescue pup who dwells in New York City's The Hole art gallery, is usually a subtle dresser-upperer, with his owners filling his wardrobe with tiny ties, bowties, sun hats, and woollen knits, so the Paddington get-up seems a natural choice.
And PLEASE don't think I'm joining the dour chorus of complaints about the updated Fiat 500, a car that routinely dwells at the bottom of customer surveys, but that did help the Italian brand reestablish itself in the US market after departing in the 1990s.
On Tuesday afternoon, with much fanfare, Sessions strode onto a stage at Georgetown University and decried the rise of a creature with an insatiable appetite for affirmation, a distressing inability to respect the other side and an ugly impulse to silence anyone who dwells there.
Dr. Soon said the boys might also be at risk of contracting other infections, including leptospirosis, a bacterial disease that is carried by rodents and can be transmitted through water, and histoplasmosis, an infection caused by a fungus that dwells in soil containing bat excrement.
It dwells, as people often did back then, on the remarkable fact that Reagan had been an actor in Hollywood, but it does not chronicle the path that took him from the movies to the California governor's mansion on his way to the White House.
Repeatedly, it returns to the negative influence of the alcoholic mother — as though growing up the child of an alcoholic could explain a Susan Sontag — and repeatedly, it dwells on the fame that assaulted rather than gratified her, certainly never put her demons to rest.
Ritter's record of this pursuit is the record of his pursuit of love — but of a distant love, a doomed love — a love that won't be returned; not by Sarah, not by the "foreign" cultures he dwells among, and, most grievously, not by music itself.
Ellis's calculating 19-year-old narrator, Anne Jaccob, dwells in what may be the bleakest house in 18th-century London, shadowed with the family's grief over Anne's dead toddler brother, the frailty of her serially miscarrying mother and the caterwauling of her abusive father.
Kane seeks his 11-year-old daughter, Indi (the promising newcomer Teagan Croft), who dwells in a remote bunker that protects her from external threats like the grizzled, hard-living reprobates who populate the lawless frontier and the bulky, viscous monsters the corporation has bioengineered.
Though much of "Wine Up" dwells on the club part of that journey—it is the most eventful segment—there's something about those crystalline opening chords that evokes pathos and promise: that giddy, queasy rush you get in the cab on the way out.
Eventually you become friends with a few other students who all discover they have the titular power of persona, which allows them to venture into worlds created from the deepest, darkest desires of other people, and summon monsters to fight against the evil that dwells within.
Mr Young, a leftist critic of American foreign policy, dwells at some length on the notion that simply allowing the sputtering civil war to rage might in the long term have yielded more effective state-building than peace talks mediated (and paid for) by the international community.
Like James Baldwin's "Go Tell It on the Mountain" — or, to take a more recent example, like Ta-Nehisi Coates's "Between the World and Me" — "Moonlight" dwells on the dignity, beauty and terrible vulnerability of black bodies, on the existential and physical matter of black lives.
Because Molly's family is religious, the book also dwells on domestic Jewish rituals, lavishing special attention on the Sabbath, "the Queen of Days," that stretch of 24 hours ingeniously engineered by the ancient rabbis to honor God, and while doing so, lasso the family into relaxed togetherness.
With the ransom note in hand, he sets off to find and rescue her, but when he arrives on the island where the cult dwells with their charismatic leader (Michael Sheen), he discovers that what's going on there is a whole lot darker and weirder than expected.
"This street was a looters' paradise, with thieves taking furniture, doorknobs, anything the Americans left behind," said Expedito Duarte de Brito, 21921, a retired milkman who dwells in one of the homes built for Ford managers in what was planned to be a utopian plantation town.
The New York Times reported that Bernhardt, while at Interior, has worked to strip away such rules, which are also opposed by his former client Westlands Water District, a state-chartered organization that represents farmers who want access to the river water where the fish dwells.
Even as some Democratic Party leaders have sought to move on from 2016, however, Trump himself often dwells on it, regaling friends, reporters and crowds with reminders of his Electoral College victory while piling on Clinton, who is only in recent weeks emerging from a silent period.
In many ways, Mr. Tykwer's script is scrupulously faithful to the novel, often repeating scenes line for line, but at the end it dwells more on a romance between Alan Clay and a Saudi doctor (Sarita Choudhury, Saul's wife on "Homeland") who cares for his butchered neck lump.
To do what journalists do, which is to shed light, and the lack of an outright political bias in this reporting is not regrettable, in my opinion, but it makes the piece come alive, as the reader dwells on the mundane, everyday details of this neo-Nazi's life.
In the seriousness and sadness of I Am Not Your Negro dwells a lyricism that Peck expresses in his choices of archival images and the way they're intercut with contemporary scenes — Times Square, anonymous roadways in the rain, Southern homes and fields, all deepened by an elegant orchestral score.
" On the beautiful, skeletal "Over Before It Began," he dwells on how looking back reveals truths that couldn't have been seen in the moment: "Some of them were friends I guess and others I guess they were fans/Some of them were strangers, some of the were part of the plan.
His message is also — to put it lightly — something of a hard sell in Washington; even Bernie Sanders of Vermont, the only democratic socialist in the Senate, dwells less on critiques of capitalism than on policy ideas like a $15 minimum wage, which he has been unable to get passed.
The athletic Mr. Jovanovich wears an 18th-century hunting coat, and as the witch Jezibaba, who dwells in the forest but straddles the human and supernatural worlds, the powerhouse mezzo-soprano Jamie Barton is made up like a Victorian matron (though the cobweb patterns on her dress are a surreal touch).
Some god who probably dwells in Los Angeles has declared that there has to be at least one big fighting movie every year — boxing, wrestling, MMA, whatever, as long as there is a ring, a cheering crowd, and a story of overcoming long odds: injury, a tough upbringing, a looming legacy, etc.
In most stories there is, in fact, only one lifelike character, sometimes referred to as a "personage" or "implied author," who dwells on various images—the face of a woman, a horse jockey's racing silks—that swim up from the depths of memory or imagination or some numinous combination of the two.
The first section features four chapters, one on each man's boyhood and early influences; the second part, also comprising four chapters, dwells on early-adulthood traumas that tempered their flaws and bred resilience; the third part spotlights the chastened leaders in their crucibles of crisis; and an epilogue lightly glosses their legacies.
The victim is Michèle Leblanc (Huppert), a divorcée who dwells alone in an elegant house, shuttered like a country retreat, in a Paris suburb; the shutters will have a part to play, swinging and banging during a storm as if to remind us, and Michèle, how poorly protected her bourgeois fortress is.
The room is heavily symbolic — the poorer the person is in "Parasite," the farther underground he dwells — and yet it is also a practicality: Rooms such as this, we are told, are a common amenity in wealthy homes, a safeguard against nuclear attack, perhaps, or a place to hide your worst secrets.
Flora had fled to, and for a time flourished in, Paris, with Versailles on its outskirts, and then wound up living in a seedy Los Angeles apartment building called The Versailles, where the camera dwells on its threadbare sign, and where David Mayo traipses down the corridor toward his mother's former door.
The play, translated from the French by Miriam Heard and Kenneth Casler for this co-presentation by the Cultural Services of the French Embassy in New York and Abrons Arts Center, dwells in a post-mortem dream space inhabited by Pollock and Krasner who speak directly to the audience, often on mikes, and only occasionally to each other.
The stories he dwells on longest involve a water contamination catastrophe that makes Mairead very ill ("history and politics were now a severe intestinal disorder, spliced into the figure of my wife who sweated along the pale length of her body") and a case of political graft sabotaging a public construction project he'd overseen as an engineer.
Her decision to give up Nicole because she knows the girl has no chance of reaching her full potential in Gilead is a little rushed — Serena barely has time to think about letting the infant go — but it's ultimately believable because the show and Strahovski have demonstrated what a complicated, independent thinker dwells beneath her Commander's Wife facade.
All Quiet on the Western Front dwells on the alternating terror and boredom of trench life, opens with hungry soldiers looking for food, features a soldier expressing regret about having taken home leave, contains a failed effort to carry a wounded comrade to safety after an airplane-related injury, and very heavily emphasizes the notion of World War I as senseless slaughter whose causes nobody can even comprehend.
"A Statement of Facts, Relative to the Supposed Abstinence of Ann Moore, of Tutbury, Staffordshire: And a Narrative of the Circumstances Which Led to the Recent Detection of the Imposture," a wonderfully titled, hundred-and-fifty-page-long account of the unfortunate woman, compiled in 1813 by a local clergyman who had participated in the watch, dwells at anxious length on the harm Moore had done her religion by professing her fast to be holy.
Consisting of three room-size installations on the second and fourth floors of the Perili Köşk building that is home to Borusan Holding and its contemporary art collection, the exhibition dwells on the idea that, on the one hand, the world is witnessing a moment of remarkable instability and conflict, yet on the other, the systems and forces behind this condition are at present too complex and diverse to understand, creating a pervasive feeling of insecurity and fear.
Cyber hacking: Notwithstanding a long history of flagrant cases of industrial espionage in the 19th century by Britain, Continental Europe and the United States, evidence of Chinese cyber espionage must be taken seriously, and it was at the Sunnylands 2015 summit between Presidents Obama and Xi. Unfortunately, the USTR dwells on reports of Chinese hacking that predate an agreement on this threat that was signed at this summit, which has been followed by a sharp reduction in Chinese incursions.
The show goes longer on spy thrills than on moral and legal perplexities, though that may have been inevitable given its co-organizer: none other than the Mossad, the intelligence service that is Israel's equivalent of the C.I.A. The agency's involvement surely explains why "Operation Finale" dwells more on the hunt for Eichmann than on his subsequent trial, although the show ends with a shattering hammer blow: the actual bulletproof glass dock where Eichmann sat in Jerusalem.
In the interests of heightening the depravity of the Gilead regime, the TV writers have told an increasingly grisly story, which dwells, at gruesome length, on sadistic tortures inflicted upon the Handmaids: In addition to the ritualized rapes described in the novel, there are finger amputations, Taser assaults, an excised eyeball, hands scorched on hot stoves, muzzles and metal rings used to keep the women's mouths clamped shut — the sort of abominations more likely to be found in the misogynistic horror porn that Offred's activist mother wanted to burn, than in a feminist allegory.

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