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114 Sentences With "elides"

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

Any assessment of his book that elides this is incomplete.
His political religious vision elides struggle and, in turn, victory.
But this claim elides a more obvious point of entry.
That attitude either ignores or elides the point of vaccines.
The first set of criticisms elides the boardroom with the barroom.
Describing Americans' mood as distinctively angry in 2015 elides this evidence.
But more important than what it elides is what it hints at.
Yet the idea that Democrats have little to lose elides several clear dangers.
But after what Beauvoir elides over as "bad experiences," the friend is transformed.
But that elides the somewhat sticky question of what hip-hop should do.
That isn't the point of the test stand, though — something the bogus video elides.
But the result is imperfect, because it elides crucial elements of the whole story.
Pétain later fervently sought to collaborate with them, a fact Mr. Le Pen elides.
However, Bi Gan's film elides actual plot elements far more than it articulates them.
Disarmament is the simpler term, but it elides the complexity of the current situation.
But such a conflation elides actual, significant policy differences and does a disservice to both factions.
Like all schematics, this one elides a lot of details, but it provides a useful conceptual frame.
It also elides the other seminal event of 1979, when pious rebels seized the grand mosque in Mecca.
He elides facts, fudges the specifics and dispenses with professional norms in the service of success and status.
For example, The Room is misogynistic and disturbing in places, but The Disaster Artist elides that detail entirely.
Instead, users need to click through multiple photos to find this information, which elides the risk of BIA-ALCL.
But he's also cognizant of the pitfalls of auteurism, which elides the myriad artists who contribute to a finished film.
It's as much about what questions it deflects, the descriptions it elides, as it is about the things depicted and explained.
It also elides a simple truth: Pool has thrown off the yoke of corporate bureaucracy, but he's still subject to market incentives.
That's often because Pruitt's EPA fails to show a robust rationale for repeal or delay, or elides compliance with other procedural requirements.
It elides the need to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, curb fossil fuel consumption, work with other countries, or to increase energy efficiency.
Of course, this Trumpian narrative elides his deferments during the Vietnam War and mockery of John McCain's suffering as a prisoner of war.
Like many (most) white directors, Sofia Coppola simply elides race, which makes its absence in her Civil War drama "The Beguiled" more blatant.
Many of them suggest that casting experience as an intersection of super-abstract social identities, such as "femaleness" and "blackness," elides historical specificity.
It's another bold gesture that ignores the complexity of the problems he is trying to address and elides over the tough choices involved.
The social norms around privacy are 'just something that's evolved over time,' a stance that elides his company's interest in nudging that evolution along.
The social norms around privacy are "just something that's evolved over time," a stance that elides his company's interest in nudging that evolution along.
The understanding of any job as something "no one wants" elides the question of compensation: For a fair price, most jobs are very doable.
And it elides the inability of the U.S. and its global trading partners to shift away from dollar dominance without creating worldwide financial distress.
Jacare is a scary, superlative middleweight whose one-fight win streak elides the eight straight victories that preceded a close split-decision loss to Romero.
This elides the fact that investigators found that her nation's laboratory had tinkered with many hundreds of urine tests, substituting the clean for the dirty.
His very candidacy, pitched on a vice presidential tenure under the glorious "post-racial" interregnum of the Obama years, elides much of his public career.
But this characterization elides a dozen or more major blemishes in order to make the case, in order to hem and haw over the calculus.
But Amazon's messaging around the Dash button discontinuation elides the fact that they were ruled illegal in Germany — the company's second-biggest market — this January.
It elides numerous divides: city and countryside, aristocrats and laborers, colonizers and colonized — "fancy Asian" and "jungle Asian," as the comedian Ali Wong puts it.
The McDonalds' introduction of Fordism to their business turned employees into factory workers and changed the restaurant industry, though the movie elides the global stakes.
They don't always, and this misunderstanding of empathy results in product videos like the Facebook Puerto Rico clip, and elides the differences between reporting and voyeurism.
But, according to the Times, it elides more persistent and more complicated issues dividing the Israelis and Palestinians, such as continued violence and conflicting political goals.
But Stevens elides the fact that he voted to uphold death sentences as late as 2008 out of respect for the court's previous rulings allowing them.
The performer and I both just show up; this magical ease elides the reality that each of our activities translates to real currency for the other.
The tabloids offer a sordid vision of society, where the mainstream image of celebrities elides their secretly miserable lives (whether because of addiction, aging, infidelity, or bankruptcy).
Swenson's account of the War on Crime context also elides the role that was played by demands from within the black community to take on drug dealers.
Still, while the movie largely elides overt politics and policies, both domestic and foreign, they are inextricably embedded in every single narrative turn, each word and image.
When that set becomes the backdrop to a viscerally exciting fight, all the red abruptly evokes the spilled blood that this otherwise squeaky clean series insistently elides.
They did choose this particular person as their subject, and they did create a movie that neatly elides a few of the more unsavory aspects of Avery's past.
The problem with this statement is that it elides the decades of heated struggle and activism that finally led to taking down the Confederate flag in South Carolina.
Murphy's rosy response was technically correct, but it elides the fact that Republicans won a bare majority of votes overall yet captured a near-supermajority of assembly seats.
The talking point elides the distinction between a president who is trying to achieve some public policy goal and one who is trying to obtain a personal benefit.
Adapting James Frey's infamously fictionalized memoir, "A Million Little Pieces," the director Sam Taylor-Johnson niftily elides the book's truthiness problem with an introductory quotation from Mark Twain.
She also elides over the consequences of some systematic issues — even the worst horror stories breeze by in a minute or less before she's off to the next area.
Among other things, it elides the fact that many whites do "know what it's like to be poor" even if the poverty they experience is different than black poverty.
Since these books are almost entirely made up of conversation — even though Faye often elides her own side of the dialogue — someone may propose the Tête-à-Tête trilogy.
What you read on Facebook is determined entirely by Facebook's algorithm, which elides much — censors much, if you wrongly think the News Feed is free speech — and amplifies little.
Others have written at length about the way Bombshell elides the contributions that its characters, and in particular Megyn Kelly, have made to the worldview peddled by Fox News.
Civil rights groups argue this process elides privacy protections against search and criminal suspicion, but there's little that can be done when the public doesn't even know they're being scanned.
Gatti claims the "financial clues speak for themselves," which both begs the question of why they need to be publicly highlighted and elides his role in turning "clues" into evidence.
A timeline on one wall elides world history: We move swiftly from "Jesus Christ is crucified" to witch panics in 16th-century Scotland, with an implicit link between the two.
This banal framing elides some of the more complicated — and frankly, dramatically effective — realities of coming to terms with queer sexuality as a public figure, which are ignored in the film.
But reducing the significance of the DUP to a "right-wing religious party," or comparing it to the American religious right, elides the complexity of religion and identity in Northern Ireland.
When I read about teenage girls in London who run away to join ISIS, I feel like they're creating this romantic narrative that sort of elides the reality of the situation.
Srinath Raghavan, a fellow at the Centre for Policy Research, a Delhi think-tank, usefully supplies the facts, in charts, figures, maps and details of military operations, which Ms Khan elides.
Nevertheless, he elides the fact that unidentified blood was found at the scene, and construes inconsistencies in Noura's description of the night her mother was killed as evidence of her guilt.
The game reveals the town's atrocity early on, but it elides most questions about how Wellington Wells established its super high-tech society and what the rest of the world looks like.
All of this—the trainings, the alarm, the PSAs that emphasize the trauma of school shootings—elides the fact that school shootings are much more rare than other kinds of gun violence.
Sure, this construction elides granularity about specific writers or beats, and it conflates trusting a website with trusting the validity of the content presented by the website, but now it's at least passable.
Later, he argued that the court's rulings were only binding on the parties directly involved, not on anyone else—a pedantic point that elides how legal precedent works in the American judicial system.
A slickly produced video that elides facts -- we have no signed trade deal with Japan (the video suggests we do), the USMCA trade deal has not been agreed to by Congress yet, etc.
There's no exact release date just yet, but the show does appear to be coming soon: the trailer elides the release date at the end, but appears to say it'll launch sometime in 2017.
That argument elides the crucial distinction between foreign-policy decisions made in the national interest—the definition of which is of course open to debate—and those made for the president's personal political benefit.
It also elides the structural impediments — the lack of free time and ample resources and good education — that prohibit millions from pursuing an origami hobby, let alone finding a career in a creative field.
This makes for a wonderfully compact film that departs from the usual documentary formula, but it elides the changes that took hold of soccer just as Maradona's playing days were coming to an end.
"Drops a few G's, say?" sounds as if someone were spending a lot of money, but in today's puzzle the person is dropping them from his or her speech, so the answer is ELIDES.
And introducing technology as a way of bypassing political debate elides the truth that technology is political—especially when it consists of drones, surveillance devices and "non-lethal" weaponry to potentially be placed in schools.
It elides the disastrous initial attempts at a ban, portrays the president as a distant figure in the matter, and recasts the current version of the executive order as the untainted product of his advisers.
But saying that elides the distinction that Macron was trying to draw between patriotism (a form of national pride compatible with international cooperation) and nationalism (a more selfish and chauvinistic assertion of group self-regard).
As concerned with the aftershocks of war as with war itself, "The Refugees" mostly elides grisly scenes like the bombings, killings, rapes and tortures that fill Nguyen's spectacular Pulitzer-winning debut novel, "The Sympathizer" (2015).
But this kind of discussion too often elides the real practical difficulties in implementing big domestic policies like those, and the ways in which the US system is uniquely bad and inefficient about doing so.
The incident inspired a famous Washington Post cartoon by Clifford Berryman showing Roosevelt nobly refusing to kill the cub; it elides the fact that one of Roosevelt's companions then killed the bear with a hunting knife.
He's a con man, who talks endlessly about honesty, who sees his abuse as groovy social nonconformity—and who elides consent by telling the young Jenny that she is a special girl, making bold choices. Mrs.
The praise Trump elicits from voters for his "authenticity," for "telling it like it is," elides the fact that he is committed to hiding his human side from the world and, for that matter, from himself.
The Duggars' mass-market brand of King James–style bigotry, however, elides the only sensible reading of Christ's example, one that I keep hoping, to my continuing disappointment, will rise and redeem the benighted religious South.
In any case, what this elides is that, at a time when a user's relationship with a brand is becoming paramount, media companies are effectively going to war with their own audience to make their user experience worse.
McFadden's novel deals with horrific sexual violence, which it often elides, focusing instead on the small moments of resistance in the face of pain, and the agency, along with the necessary support, involved in healing from terrible trauma.
The pledge and the community around it valorizes billionaire giving — likely a smart strategic decision for getting billionaires to sign up, but one that necessarily elides some important questions that the rest of us care a lot about.
Because this is Ramsay, the movie largely elides violence to think about the effects of violence, the ways that abuse and horror we suffer as children trickle down through the years and manifest themselves when we become adults.
Heller ruling establishing the personal right to own a gun—essentially the same position struck by Obama nominee Sonya Sotomayor during her confirmation grilling, and one that elides the big questions that the landmark 2008 decision left unresolved.
Often in evangelical circles, the perfectly understandable theology of repentance — that people who genuinely regret their sins and make honest attempts at amends will be forgiven by God — takes the form of a perverse performance that elides actual justice.
Le Pen, however, has suggested the state of emergency doesn't go far enough and made electoral ground positioning herself as the candidate of national security against "rebellious militias," a formulation that neatly elides "delinquents" like Adama with jihadist terrorists.
Maybe we give too much credit to the idea that the 2016 Indians were just a single good swing away from being World Champions—a quasi-mythic standard that elides the team's flaws for the sake of a good story.
Though cynics might suggest the adtech giant is responding to competitive pressure on privacy by trying to frame and steer the debate in a way that elides its own role in data mining Internet users at scale for (huge) profit.
That truth, however, elides an important fact: A litany of other governments have overseen substantial improvements in literacy or health care outcomes without simultaneously suffering through decades of dictatorship, disappearances, and disastrous economic reforms that have immiserated an entire island.
Shlaes also elides the useful distinction between the belief that government should control the means of production — the classic definition of socialism — and the belief that government should redistribute output, which is more accurately described as support for a welfare state.
Plenty of people have tweeted against the preposterous claim, made by some, that Jonas is not in conventionally muscled shape, and pointed, instead, to the way the celebration of his muscled body simply elides the actual fatphobia rampant in gay dating apps.
They say the former vice president didn't have the years to build the lists that Sanders and Warren did, a point that elides the success of Buttigieg or political newcomer Andrew Yang, who could outraise Biden next quarter if the current trends hold.
The chasm between the actual report and the attorney general's four-page summary is breathtaking in terms of how the summary elides the specifics of President Trump's repeated efforts to stymie the probe into efforts to cover up the investigation into Russian collusion.
Though that argument elides the problem of digital information being maliciously and deliberately weaponized in order to sew social division — which works against the kind of collaboration and compromise he's saying is essential to successfully manage and maintain a healthy online space and thus society.
Reflecting true Bernsteinian logic, he writes near the end of the poem: the ear hears / what the eye elides   saying light when there is no light tremble when everything shakes These poems all made me laugh and cry, sometimes when reading a single page.
Though the Special Forces later said they were unaware that it was the hospital, the redacted investigation documents show that they passed a description that matched the M.S.F. compound to the AC-1003 as a target — a fact that the military elides in its summary of the bombing.
At one point, she's hiding under a table, and a wight ducks down to look at her, and the camera cuts to reveal that she has left that spot — an effective way to build suspense about how she'll escape, but one that largely elides how she did so.
The problem isn't that this is a hopeful ending — these characters deserve hope — but that it's an ending that elides some of the more uncomfortable questions about who gets to own pain, who gets to profit from it, what it means that hate has birthed a tourism industry.
Virginia's recent political shift toward the Democratic Party elides just how divided the state is politically between Republican-leaning and less populated rural areas and Democratic-leaning urban and suburban regions in the north of the state and around Virginia's flagship universities, the University of Virginia and Virginia Tech.
NICARAGUA Mar Caribe Costa Rica San José Térraba Océano Pacífico 50 miles Por The New York Times Elides Rivera, lideresa local de tierras indígenas, todavía tiene la grabación de la llamada que le hizo al comandante de policía para pedir ayuda: "Se lo pido con todo, todo el corazón".
An argument that conveniently elides things such as the Tuck Rule Game, winning like 8 million Super Bowls because you somehow have a robot named Adam Vinatieri, the Pete Carroll/Malcolm Butler vortex, and, you know, walking ass backwards into the best quarterback in the history of football with a sixth-round, compensatory pick.
But as some, including Slate, have pointed out, Zunger's post sometimes elides fact in favor of intrigue: His suggestion that the Department of Homeland Security could become a force loyal to the President alone, for example, does not acknowledge that DHS Secretary John Kelly was reportedly unaware of the administration's immigration order until just moments before Trump signed it.
Yet it is a limited one, whose pat framing too often elides the ways that calls for equality have often been, at their heart, a desire for a closer relationship to whiteness, and portrays the interests of Chinese Americans and others of Asian descent in this country as naturally aligned with other people of color, when a deeper examination shows otherwise.
Though he elides the important role that second hand Apple devices play in helping to reduce the barrier to entry to Apple's pro-privacy technology — a role Apple is actively encouraging via support for older devices (and by its own services business expansion which extends its model so that support for older versions of iOS (and thus secondhand iPhones) is also commercially sustainable).
Suffice it to say that in telling of an encounter by the expatriate American thriller writer Patricia Highsmith (of "The Talented Mr. Ripley" fame) toward the end of her life with a visitor named Edward Ridgeway, who may not be what he seems, "Switzerland" elides art and life so as to make Highsmith the victim of her own literary creation.
You can see this in the way Zuckerberg fuzzes and elides what his company really does with people's data; and how he muddies and muddles uses for the data — such as by saying he doesn't know what shadow profiles are; or claiming users can download 'all their data'; or that ad profiles are somehow essential for security; or by repurposing 2FA digits to personalize ads too.
Sure, people remember it, and, yes, you can still find the music itself easily, but the Lil Wayne story as it's consistently written usually elides most of the period between the Hot Boys and Tha Carter II. As far as firsthand accounts of the period, there are probably magazine articles about it (and I intend to keep searching), but it falls in a dead period for online information.

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