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"eloquently" Definitions
  1. in a way that uses language and expresses your opinions well, especially when you are speaking in public
  2. a look or movement that expresses something eloquently shows a lot of feeling
"eloquently" Synonyms
significantly expressively meaningfully suggestively indicatively knowingly revealingly informatively pregnantly purposefully relevantly tellingly in a telling manner meaningly revelatorily movingly pointedly stirringly speakingly touchingly articulately fluently effectively vividly lucidly grandiloquently graphically magniloquently gracefully sententiously rhetorically coherently communicatively persuasively clearly cogently intelligibly understandably comprehensibly glibly ingratiatingly slickly unctuously sycophantically suavely smarmily obsequiously flatteringly silkily loftily statelily toweringly majestically formally dignifiedly solemnly convincingly compellingly strongly powerfully forcefully plausibly influentially soundly credibly conclusively impressively potently validly weightily efficaciously bombastically oratorically pretentiously flowerily floridly pompously orotundly turgidly ornately verbosely euphuistically tumidly purplely windily extravagantly affectedly distinguishedly magisterially talkatively chattily loquaciously garrulously conversationally gossipily mouthily talkily effusively volubly gushingly wordily gassily prolixly vocally ramblingly descriptively detailedly pictorially evocatively definitively explicitly strikingly illustratively imaginatively colourfully(UK) colorfully(US) narratively realistically picturesquely sensationally excellently wonderfully fantastically marvellously(UK) greatly superbly awesomely fabulously finely splendidly terrifically marvelously(US) stellarly grandly divinely coolly superiorly superlatively fantabulously bluntly frankly outspokenly forthrightly vociferously stridently clamorously noisily candidly directly insistently openly uninhibitedly emphatically enthusiastically keenly passionately emotionally intensely ardently fervently eagerly fervidly flamingly vehemently allegiantly animatedly assiduously committedly dedicatedly earnestly excitedly fierily steadfastly zealously readably enjoyably entertainingly grippingly interestingly enthrallingly absorbingly engagingly engrossingly stimulatingly compulsively pleasantly amusingly appealingly brilliantly cleverly easily excitingly fascinatingly ingeniously richly deeply resonantly mellifluously mellowly sonorously ringingly vibrantly melodiously boomingly dulcetly fruitily mellifluently brightly canorously rotundly More

676 Sentences With "eloquently"

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

They're always sharp, able to talk about their lives eloquently.
"These dicks just got a good story," Daryl said eloquently.
The men get to feel things, sometimes clumsily, sometimes eloquently.
As Bazelon so eloquently points out, however, it doesn't work.
Maxwell spoke eloquently about his reasons for taking a knee.
We guess their work speaks more than eloquently for itself.
All spoke eloquently, with bursts of humor and heartwarming stories.
Ilhan Omar, and Deja Foxx, who eloquently challenged former Sen.
It's her rich and eloquently argued body of philosophical work.
But still he wrestled eloquently with the meanings of things.
As Short eloquently puts it, "Fall the f*** back" fellas.
He lays that out very eloquently in the third verse.
Ali's widow, Lonnie, spoke eloquently about the inspiration of his legacy.
Here is the story told so eloquently by my sweet husband.
"It's hard to describe eloquently—it's just a feeling," he says.
Never before has a cat lady expressed her crazy so eloquently.
Pence said that Cruz's Facebook endorsement of Trump was "eloquently" written.
She spoke of cancer eloquently, no pretense here, words tumbling out.
Ten contemporary artists chosen by Mr. Gordon eloquently make the case.
It was, as the late triple world champion eloquently explained, almost unreal.
And she presents herself — eloquently — as an alternative to Congress's entrenched ways.
Laura Bush made that case eloquently in The Washington Post this weekend.
He sees loafers on the screens, all discombobulated, reacts quickly and eloquently.
It's so eloquently said he's now got us thinking ... Daymond for Veep?!
Nein, says Werner Ziegler (Rainer Bock), though he puts it more eloquently.
You eloquently repudiated the continuing attempts to repeal the Affordable Care Act.
Throughout history, philosophers, linguists and scientists have argued eloquently for each possibility.
Instead she bravely and eloquently spoke up about our First Amendment rights.
The criticism made eloquently by Luciana Berger and Chris Leslie is unanswerable.
A large number of you quickly, and often eloquently, responded with tips.
As has been eloquently argued by John Herrman at The Awl, Facebook and
ZUU eloquently spells out over its 42 tracks that Denzel Curry is back.
As countless Twitter users and internet commenters have so eloquently stated: Bixby sucks.
"John La Grange speaks so clearly and eloquently in this article," she writes.
And as Milo so eloquently stated, let's focus on how the man lived!
As he so eloquently tells Jack (Steve Baker) at the diner, he wants.
Barbara Bush eloquently describes the aura in a building rich in imposing artifacts.
She's written eloquently on personal loss and the important discussion around gender equality.
It will never say in words what it demonstrates so eloquently in movement.
But those who expected her to eloquently acknowledge a people's oppression were disappointed.
In 2014 he chronicled his predicament, precisely and eloquently, in The Hedgehog Review.
It's hard for me to eloquently say how disgusted I am by this.
Parents will love hearing these young readers eloquently, and quite often passionately, discussing literature.
We are in an unsubtle age, and the prevailing makeup trend eloquently mirrors this.
That she even hesitated speaks eloquently to the authoritative aura of Barbara Pierce Bush.
She also speaks eloquently on race and was the face of a Lancôme campaign.
Do you want to express your feelings just as eloquently as Taylor Swift does?
A small photograph, he has found, can converse eloquently with a large-scale sculpture.
So, as Ms. Angelou so eloquently stated, why should we have expected anything more?
Graham-Cassidy has followed the hasty, secretive, partisan process that McCain so eloquently decried.
As Becky G had so eloquently implied earlier, we were all united by blood.
A WISE MAN (ADAM SANDLER) ONCE ELOQUENTLY SANG (IN 'ANGER MANAGEMENT'): 'I FEEL PRETTY.
Few authors have written more eloquently and wrenchingly about female friendship than Elena Ferrante.
As Ms. Renkl eloquently describes, Nashville is in danger of destroying its own history.
These were strangers, but they were human beings — eloquently illuminated in Mr. Branch's article.
Editorial On the campaign trail, Hillary Clinton has eloquently defined workers' rights as human rights.
"This shit is good," Shark Tank judge Mark Cuban so eloquently said upon trying it.
I'm also an English graduate, so I like a man who can use language eloquently.
She eloquently explained her decision to make it public in an interview with The Guardian.
Doing so could advance the vision of a just society eloquently described from the pulpit.
You've spoken eloquently and passionately about your Appalachian background in numerous contexts, personal and political.
"jesus christ this bird kno my browser history," popular Twitter user @thugtear so eloquently stated.
The eloquently worded response is much more tactful than mine, but I'll say it anyway.
Scott makes it more sexual, stating eloquently, that someone should sit on his face. Yikes!
One reader, Adam Smith-Kipnis, eloquently framed the issue in an email to this office.
Fifteen families showed us the dishes they make that speak most eloquently about their traditions.
She's become a pro at eloquently shutting people down — handling backlash with style and grace.
Michael Shellenberger, a pro-nuclear advocate with Environmental Progress, has made this case eloquently here.
People who have served in administrations under investigation speak eloquently about how miserable it is.
Language, as Baron eloquently shows, works as a dynamic democracy, not as rule by experts.
But, as Paul eloquently begins in the obituary, Bill first lost his life in Vietnam.
Torsos bend eloquently, sometimes effortlessly down to the floor, sometimes gently swaying like a breath.
"It's hard for me to eloquently say how disgusted I am by this," McCain posted.
Sometimes the ideas aren't delivered quite as eloquently, but the effect is all the same.
He eloquently talked about his hope for America and the importance of equality for black people.
His genuine reaction to the 1957 Chevy Rick restored for his 70th birthday captures this eloquently.
In a wide-ranging interview with professional griller Jeremy Paxman, Bowie eloquently praises the nascent technology.
Even as Be the Cowboy speaks eloquently about loneliness, Mitski isn't necessarily reaching for other people.
The author Thomas Page McBee has written eloquently about the implicit violence embedded in masculine identities.
That marriage that's described in that article so eloquently is what I witnessed my whole life.
He spoke eloquently about how it hurts him to see Trump use sports to divide us.
Now, the professional ballerina has taken to Instagram to eloquently comment on Plank's pro-Trump sentiments.
"He spoke eloquently and sometimes delivered," said John Sifton, Asia advocacy director for Human Rights Watch.
Numerous Arab and Islamic scholars have eloquently argued that protecting equality strengthens Arab and Muslim communities.
Wearing black robes, with a long beard, Baghdadi, residents said, spoke eloquently and with extreme calm.
Dr. McCance-Katz has spoken eloquently about SAMHSA's deep need for reform on precisely this issue.
He was an announcer who spoke eloquently to our passions while baseball history was being made.
They were outlined so eloquently in perhaps the greatest document ever written, the Declaration of Independence.
As Ms. Solomon eloquently notes, these are elusive qualities that sabotage motivation and engagement in treatment.
" A statement from Johnson: "I'm disappointed I didn't more eloquently express my sympathy for what Sen.
The woman eloquently detailed her harrowing experience in a statement made directly to Turner in court.
Or, as they so eloquently put it, become the man they all wanted him to be.
The disquieting conclusion of Esther's tale was eloquently described by my great-uncle, Rabbi Joseph Soloveitchik.
Both talk expansively and eloquently about government or community help that was crucial in their lives.
To live is one thing, but to live kindly, "Sheppey" eloquently suggests, is something else altogether.
President Obama has already put this case eloquently in Prague at the start of his administration.
Susan Napier's Miyazaki World eloquently defines Hayao Miyazaki as an auteur who creates immersive animated realms.
As he did when he first ran for office, tonight President Obama spoke eloquently about grand things.
But as is often the case with artists, the work may speak more eloquently than the creator.
Switching back into business mode after two days partying, Luthra explains his aspirations to me more eloquently.
In a rapidly arranged ceremony to give out a new award in his name, Karen spoke eloquently.
This jacket speaks louder and more eloquently than any speech that can be given on the floor.
Known for his slicked-back hair, he speaks eloquently but often eschews discussing policy details in public.
Orhan Pamuk, Turkey's best-known writer, has written eloquently on the national predilection for hüzün, or melancholy.
"As Brittany Maynard so eloquently said, 'I don't have a suicidal bone in my body,' " he said.
Justice John Paul Stevens put it eloquently in the 1996 Supreme Court case, 44 Liquormart, Inc. v.
"I am not in play trying to pat myself on the butt," as he eloquently put it.
"Patent and copyright laws are intentionally made 'leaky,' " as the Yale Journal on Regulation eloquently put it.
Ms. Martin spoke far more eloquently, calling on all students to engage more deeply with one another.
As a backbencher, he spoke eloquently of his sympathy for, and rejection of, the Scottish independence movement.
The film eloquently grasps the pain and frustration they feel whenever another death or shooting is reported.
Viviana Andazola Marquez, a student at Yale, wrote eloquently about her father after his detention last year.
But the action speaks eloquently about the corner into which Jess has allowed herself to be pushed.
Mr. Oliver eloquently annotates that title in the manner of a silent movie star like Lillian Gish.
If you are going to go through it, do it as eloquently as Capaldi sings about it.
While he rendered various lyrical turns and harmonic shifts eloquently, he backed away from stormy, dramatic episodes.
The inmates offered up insights as deep and eloquently expressed as those from the Union graduate students.
In fact, he expressed his bewilderment more eloquently than he had ever expressed anything to me before.
We're clearer about what we want and more "equipped for the struggle," as Lurie eloquently put it.
General John Kelly eloquently describing how disappointed he was seeing the politicization of a fallen soldier. pic.twitter.
Warren speaks eloquently on the policy which she, along with Sanders (who "wrote the damn bill"), support.
That way, you can speak eloquently about CEO Mark Zuckerberg's vision for the company during job interviews.
As Jamila Lysicott eloquently asks in her TED talk, Three Ways to Speak English, who controls articulation?
Meanwhile, Rapinoe isn't only putting her money where her mouth is, but doing so bravely and eloquently.
Mr Lee emerged smiling, but the work spoke eloquently about life's difficulties and the frustrations of daily existence.
In her remarks, Larsen spoke eloquently of her former boss as a buoyant warrior for his conservative jurisprudence.
The notion of a fan email list also doesn't capture just how frequently, eloquently, and hilariously the emails
The minister very eloquently described all the initiatives the Malaysian government is taking in terms of policy framework.
Professor Avi-Yonah is a prominent expert on this subject and has discussed it eloquently in congressional hearings.
As Cobain eloquently stated, no one is this alone, and there's always hope for a happier, healthier future.
" As she so eloquently put it: "You cannot win an Emmy for roles that are simply not there.
So, here -- I think what Senator Harris was trying to say that she said very eloquently is this.
In remarks reprinted on Buzzfeed, she eloquently explained how her life had been severely impacted by Turner's assault.
As Khizr Kahn so eloquently stated recently, Trump demonstrates a lack of empathy that should concern us all.
In his televised response to the attacks, President Obama eloquently summed up what clubbing signifies to queer individuals.
The fire, near Concord, Massachusetts, surrounded Walden Pond, about which he would write so eloquently a decade later.
That way, you can speak eloquently about Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg's vision for the company during job interviews.
Draw him out on the subject of our current troubled times, and Della Valle easily and eloquently expounds.
Chris Christie (R), who spoke so eloquently about his friend from law school who unsuccessfully battled opioid addiction.
So there it was: a fine concert that spoke eloquently to Ms. Zhang's technical abilities, musicianship and maturity.
In writing, childbirth is an experience mothers reflect on, eloquently summarizing their fears and anxieties for the reader.
Mr. Shinn's play remains of topical urgency, speaking eloquently to the abiding traps and dangers of American manhood.
The artlessness factor: This blunt cut speaks eloquently, as no other hairstyle can, to today's drive for authenticity.
Keep Near is a glistening, energetic continuation of what Robert Smith so eloquently popularized in the late 1970s.
His ethical capitulations for wealth and influence are all the more disturbing because he expresses himself so eloquently.
Gabe Winns Ortiz pulled off the neatest trick, tapping eloquently and endearingly, despite the terrible music he chose.
Tom Bramwell at Eurogamer wrote eloquently in 2008 about how there was no Heavy Rain before Heavy Rain.
That's the question Monica Lewinsky used a four-letter word to eloquently muse about on Twitter this week.
Haspel's involvement in torture is deeply troubling, as my friend and colleague, John McCain, so eloquently reminded us.
Thank you, Ms. Alexander, for reminding us so eloquently that we cannot be silent when such injustices occur.
And the silence that enfolded me, spoke to me, and spoke louder and more eloquently than any voice.
Take for example, these users who eloquently explained a few of their favorite films: Apparently the mission was possible.
This could even form the basis of the multi-tier Europe so eloquently laid out in your special report.
This tiny work speaks as eloquently about an exciting but anxious age as the booming voices that surround it.
Eurus was a genius "beyond Newton," (possessed of more than just "the deduction thing," as John eloquently describes it).
On Monday night, first lady Michelle Obama spoke powerfully, emotionally and eloquently about what's at stake in this election.
Manu manages to create perfect answers to unsolvable problems, with the sound of one hand clapping perfectly and eloquently.
I could go on, but many people on Twitter have voiced these concerns more eloquently than I ever could.
Keep in mind that your date may be caught off guard, and may not react eloquently in the moment.
Matt Moore got destroyed, "absolutely walloped," as Jim Nantz so eloquently put it during the game, and somehow—somehow!
The most eloquently odd of all the ballet's vignettes comes in the variation featuring Jaeger, nicknamed Nimrod by Elgar.
Ms. Haspel's involvement in torture is deeply troubling, as my friend and colleague, John McCain, so eloquently reminded us.
Second, the "truths" covered up in each story speak eloquently about the kind of lie we now fear most.
He spoke eloquently about the income inequality and poverty that afflicts the Dominican Republic, but said he had hope.
Under the direction of Julie McBride, a five-piece band eloquently mirrors the varied musical languages Friedman uses here.
Others, like Mr. Corker and Senator Tim Kaine, Democrat of Virginia, speak quite candidly — and often eloquently — when unscripted.
"As the mayor has very, very eloquently stated, we're not trying to penalize anybody," Mr. Carranza said on WNYC.
On Tuesday, during the memorial service for the five murdered Dallas police officers, President Obama began the speech eloquently.
Great poets have the ability to eloquently amplify the internal monologue, which is so often muted by outside distractions.
The son of Moldovan refugees, he eloquently describes the intellectual artifacts in the professors' house that his mother cleans.
Brutus eloquently proclaims as much to a crowd of commoners, who are at first won over to his side.
This analysis is very eloquently put here by Mr. Hart ... as acknowledged by none other than Mr. Hart himself.
So the founders of Twitter speak about this very eloquently — or Ev speaks about it very eloquently — where it's ... they just assumed that people would be nice even if they were able to create accounts with eggs and say whatever they want and comment on anybody's post and re-share anybody's post.
Robert La Follette, the historic progressive who eloquently railed against the very abuses now being resurrected in the Wisconsin statehouse.
Then the two took a photo where they're, as Shakespeare so eloquently puts it, making the beast with two backs.
Emblazoned on the front of the dress that so eloquently accentuates her pregnant belly is the Le Soleil tarot card.
That said, there is plenty of contemporary art that eloquently conveys the stories and histories that led to its creation.
The Brits loved Barack Obama because he spoke so eloquently, he seem so intelligent, he seem so kind and caring.
Williams speaks eloquently and simply to the fundamental tension underlying the interactions of Black men and women with police officers.
But AR is also a clear path toward the type of dysfunction Shteyngart so eloquently illustrated in his biting satire.
She emerges a supporter of physician-assisted dying, though she writes eloquently about disability rights and religious objections to it.
The Thirteenth Amendment, which is eloquently explored in DuVernay's Netflix documentary, was created at the same time as the Second.
I think Vice President Pence very eloquently outlined how important and how powerful the return of the honored dead is.
And as Elman eloquently points out, everyone deserves to be the protagonist of their own story, no matter their size.
Clinton's candidacy speaks eloquently of embracing the people, values and thinking that make this nation a leader in the world.
"At one of the callbacks, I just remember he spoke really eloquently about being an athlete," Ms. Blain-Cruz explained.
During the ride to the airport, the driver spoke eloquently about photographing plants in Central Park during his time off.
She writes eloquently about the ghost nature of fantasy families, the phantoms who inhabit the lives we dream for ourselves.
Mr. Kahn's movie eloquently demonstrates how painting, above all other art forms, keeps the top end of the market bubbling.
But there is nothing sterile about the report, as Mr. Amash and others, including Senator Elizabeth Warren, have eloquently noted.
His work is unapologetically, at times eloquently, and sometimes unintentionally a product of the time in which it was written.
And as I try my best to listen to people, I hear them express very eloquently frustration, bewilderment, anger, confusion.
Nothing declares one's own class allegiances more eloquently, after all, than the accusation that one's opponents care only about class.
Under the pseudonym "Publius," Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, and John Jay eloquently pleaded the case for ratification of the Constitution.
He was an imposing, handsome, well spoken, strong individual who spoke not just passionately but eloquently about principles and morality.
Stuart David put it very, very eloquently in an interview I saw once where he said: There's two Belle and Sebastians.
Despite the sizable odds stacked against them, both ascended to the top of what Disraeli so eloquently called "the greasy pole".
Bowie spoke most eloquently to the disaffected, to those who didn't feel right in their skin, the socially awkward, the alienated.
It's surely also the case that Roosevelt expressed his point more eloquently, and in far more logical detail, than did Trump.
I found out later that you can do one page and talk about your idea eloquently and still get picked up.
Ms. Meade's plush soprano, with a silvery glint that sharpens when she sings forte, eloquently expressed her character's volatility and pain.
Editorial Barack Obama has now addressed the nation eloquently on 11 occasions following mass shootings in various parts of the country.
Spooner, who wrote eloquently about her experience at Grant Park, says Obama's campaign was the first she ever got involved in.
While regretting and reprimanding the status quo, Kerry underplayed America's role in enabling the reality that he so eloquently objected to.
It's an equal exchange—the love you take is equal to the love you make, as Paul McCartney eloquently put it.
As the Supreme Court decision so eloquently stated, we as Americans now have equal dignity in the eyes of the law.
"The founder Reggie writes so eloquently about technology and humanity that I have to think it will be interesting," Weissman says. 
She writes fiction beautifully and also captures the South Asian immigrant experience so eloquently that it usually brings me to tears.
As one of our experts so eloquently put it in preparing this case for trial, he was performing hocus pocus medicine.
It was a condition, she said, that Ferrante had eloquently coined as "smarginatura," or, roughly put, being pushed to the margins.
Thompson: Klobuchar had the most powerful moment of her campaign when she clearly and eloquently called out sexism in American politics.
Reminding us that each person's path is different, the book eloquently tells the story of one person's struggle to overcome difficulties.
As Revere so eloquently put it, "blockchain is a technology that allows for peer to peer transactions," she explained on CTRL+T.
There was some interesting back and forth around people of color at Facebook, of an employee who called them out very eloquently.
"She talks really eloquently about wanting the workplace to be more diverse and more reflective of the community it covers," he said.
Lonnie Ali Muhammad Ali's widow spoke eloquently of her husband's strength of character and the inspiration his life might be to others.
In his books and in his speeches, he eloquently spoke for a generation of wounded people, the traumatized survivors of the Holocaust.
Those people will also tell you that not all skin complications can be fixed by "fuckin' dermatology," as Trump so eloquently stated.
As Google's Chris Urmson explained eloquently, there's probably no other company on the planet better equipped to deal with cybersecurity than Google.
" One jerk takes things too far, writing of Cash's WCW, "I smashed," while another eloquently adds, "Queen eats [enter eggplant emoji here].
Reid slips between mortified teen to eloquently speaking to the world's injustices as easily as she weaves between contrasting roles on screen.
Are we to believe the Hillary Clinton who spoke so eloquently in her acceptance speech about the need for comprehensive immigration reform?
Or as Trump put so eloquently in the debate, "…one nasty woman," referring to Hillary Clinton, in yet another wholly disqualifying statement.
He lives a very nice life in Manhattan, as I do, but he lives a little more eloquently than even I do.
Mr. Neumann would talk eloquently about creating the first "physical social network," a place where members could talk about jobs, family, love.
Authors tend to fall like dominoes for Tintoretto; among others of the intoxicated—eloquently stammering, mostly—were John Ruskin and Henry James .
" Another union official put it most eloquently: "Let's not turn away and overregulate or just say, 'No, keep it in the ground.
The concept is most eloquently explained by Christopher Allen in his essay "The Path To Self-Sovereign Identity" a few years ago.
There's a Franciscan priest named Richard Rohr who writes eloquently about having the carpet ripped out from under you in this way.
In the grand scheme of things — in the scheme that he himself so eloquently laid out — there's no contest between those concerns.
The casting of Anna Diop, who is Senegalese-American, was met with some racist trolling, but the actor responded eloquently on Instagram.
Each small photograph is its own contained world, its own perfect object — and each one speaks eloquently of regrets, roaming, waiting, smallness.
Project Debater's rebuttal, while eloquently phrased, seemed more like a continuation of its initial argument than a true rebuttal of Natarajan's points.
" Earlier this week, Johnson said in a statement to CNBC: "I'm disappointed I didn't more eloquently express my sympathy for what Sen.
Constitutional lawyers believe that inserting a faith criterion for citizenship contradicts as many as three articles of the country's eloquently secular constitution.
Graham spoke eloquently and emotionally from the Senate about the loss of his friend; "My name is Graham, not McCain," he said.
And it's that attitude that she so eloquently captured that will breed the feelings we need to keep us going through to 2020.
He turned it around, becoming known as "the Great Communicator," skillfully, forcefully but eloquently demanding that the Soviets be true to human rights.
It was makeup maven James Charles, however, who so eloquently summed up many fans' thoughts with his "I'm ready to be destroyed" remarks.
One thing they've learned — as Simon Fraser University's Mark Jaccard expressed so eloquently — is that a price on carbon will never be enough.
In a pleasant mixture of prose and poetry, they complain about the practical difficulties of their job while speaking eloquently about its meaning.
" We will speak of you — you who remain anonymous not only to protect your identity, but because you so eloquently represent "every woman.
"Because she's written by Justin, [Sam] is very — everything is very eloquently put," says Logan Browning, who plays Sam in the episodic version.
Each of them spoke more eloquently and intelligently than anything we have had coming out of the Oval Office since January 17, 2017.
J.K. Rowling, author, superwoman and avid Trump challenger, eloquently summarized POTUS's bizarre impromptu presser with a single powerful, humorous and eerily accurate burn.
Lest a reader think O'Brien is limited to military matters, he speaks eloquently and in detail of the need for effective public diplomacy.
Doreen St. Félix at The New Yorker eloquently observed how Lee's racism was being rebranded as normal drama based in morality, not race.
A Community can be a myriad of different things but as Mr. Eddie Pulliam eloquently described a community is what you make it.
Clinton to have made her case more eloquently than Mr. Trump, but if traders had already expected it, the markets wouldn't have moved.
"You can have the best story in the world, but if you cannot eloquently convey it you cannot draw people in," she said.
Over the weekend, Mariano Rivera spoke eloquently in heavily accented English during a ceremony celebrating his induction into the Baseball Hall of Fame.
A respected doctor who advocates eloquently for wider prescribing can quickly become a "key opinion leader"; invited out on the lucrative lecture circuit.
If you can speak confidently and eloquently about who you are and what you offer, you're leaps and bounds ahead of the competition.
Facebook is very obviously not just a tech tool, and to claim otherwise is disingenuous and downright dangerous — as others have eloquently argued.
But why quibble?) More recent innovators, like Trent Reznor ("The Social Network"), Danny Elfman (Tim Burton's "Batman") and Rachel Portman ("Race"), speak eloquently.
Traditionally, he's a man we can't help enjoying no matter how badly he behaves because he wallows so eloquently in his own pain.
It's a great collection of thoughts and conveyed so eloquently that my heart swelled with emotion and my mind raced to keep up.
Within this visual context, the production's opening moments eloquently and efficiently present the comforting limitations of Ken and Nancy's life through brief vignettes.
These young people are eloquently and passionately demanding meaningful gun reforms, and developing the organizational capacity and resources required to effect real change.
It was a position most eloquently outlined by King, who was at one time Johnson's staunchest ally in the cause of racial justice.
Booker, crisp in his black suit and tie in the visual style of the civil rights generation, spoke eloquently about loss and action.
Sitting among the displaced last August, with her tiny baby in her arms, she spoke eloquently about what she hoped for the future.
This is powerful stuff — the last line, in particular — whose power lies in two arguments, two lines of thinking, that it eloquently distills.
His girlfriend, who has heard him talk eloquently of football's violence, will find him watching a Saturday afternoon game or a Sunday pro clash.
On January 21st, the astronomy team observed Haumea's occultation of a distant star — eloquently named URAT1 533-182543 — with 12 different telescopes across Europe.
The conservative case against him: Abdul-Jabbar has written eloquently and thoughtfully about race and about the importance of the Black Lives Matter movement.
" By Wednesday afternoon, Johnson seemed to walk back on his comments, saying, "I'm disappointed I didn't more eloquently express my sympathy for what Sen.
Waititi clearly anticipated those concerns and potential for controversy, and has addressed them fairly eloquently in the movie's production notes as well as interviews.
The cast gave young people of color a shining example of representation, and another reason to stand taller, as Michelle Obama said so eloquently.
Much of the recent interest in him was sparked when he spoke eloquently at a town-hall meeting broadcast by CNN in early March.
Emma Watson looks absolutely ravishing in that iconic yellow gown, the Beast's character transformation is so eloquently portray— Wait, is that not Emma Watson?
But it may take years before a voice-powered virtual assistant can eloquently switch back and forth in multiple languages to respond to users.
If you're a regular reader of The Verge, you may be familiar with Jake Kastrenakes' bluntly named, eloquently written weekly roundup of movie trailers.
Or, put more eloquently: "There's an upper limit on its effectiveness," Michelle Crankse, a clinical psychologist and anxiety treatment researcher at UCLA, tells me.
A new biography on Berger reveals a writer who to this day speaks most eloquently and passionately to our frustrations, fears, hopes, and desires.
And that may be OK for a special prosecutor … but it speaks very eloquently and strongly to the need for an independent outside commission.
In the snippet, the Black-ish star eloquently breaks down the effed-up (and unrealistic) beauty standards women are pressured to conform to regularly.
The old program was to be done away with and in its place was the eloquently named The Marihuana for Medical Purposes Regulations (MMPR).
Young people — and, as the Parkland survivors Emma González and David Hogg so eloquently remind us, young people of color — are hit especially hard.
Although the work isn't explanatory, Orlaineta speaks eloquently about the ideas behind his practice, pointing to hidden histories glossed over by capitalism and patriarchy.
Jerry Maguire famously coined the phrase "Help me, help you," which eloquently communicates this message, but let's use an even more familiar example — moving.
Warren's video makes eloquently clear that a single, distant, native ancestor hasn't defined her monolithically, but it informs who she is, in small part.
His tone sounded tight and strained at first, but over the course of the first movement began to glow; his playing became eloquently assured.
There are places I wish I could start over again and rewrite more clearly and eloquently, and take away the exhaustion of early parenthood.
Intel is trying to transform, as it so eloquently put it in its announcement, into a company that does more than provide chips for computers.
This statement eloquently draws together a number of aesthetic and symbolic components of Standfest's work: contraptions, instructions, maudlin memories, grotesque outcomes, and dark, dark humor.
When we go back to the Alexander Hamilton of Broadway Fame and if we read his federal of &apos210 and what he said so eloquently.
Who is this character, so eloquently portrayed by the delightful Stephen Toblowsky, whose Twitter feed is littered with delicious nuggets of behind-the-scenes scuttlebutt?
"I've had patients very eloquently talk about how much they miss being able to detect odors," said Bradley Goldstein, a lead author on the study.
The name of the game is "show me the man, I'll find you a crime," as Harvard Law Professor Alan Dershowitz so eloquently called it.
While giving out tips on finding love for young actors, Bloom is also eloquently talking about his recent his split from Katy Perry in February.
But as 16-year-old Anna Sweetland of Wilsonville, Oregon, proves, there's always someone ready and waiting to clap back (and eloquently, we might add).
At "English Grammar Day", an event at the British Library this summer, Bas Aarts, a syntactician at University College London, eloquently defended explicit grammar teaching.
Toon Hermans, his fellow-countryman, eloquently described his almost spiritual enthronement in Dutch hearts: Upgrade your inbox and get our Daily Dispatch and Editor's Picks.
Before Sunrise really eloquently showcases that there are soul connections between people that you can't understand, and I don't think they're meant to be understood.
One difference, though, was that because English is not her first language, Doe's statement wasn't delivered as eloquently as the victim statement in Turner's case.
A ten-minute drive away, hundreds of objects borrowed by the artist from collections around the Philadelphia area speak eloquently of individual hands and minds.
Those of us who make our living in "the tower of song," as Leonard Cohen so eloquently put it, must let our voices ring out.
If dark people have less it is not because they are less, a moral eloquently conveyed in these two classic novels, stirring explorations of colorism.
During an interview with NPR, John — unprompted — said he admired DeGeneres, 61, for "very eloquently" standing by her friendship with Bush despite their political differences.
"[We are] representing in Congress the students who have sacrificed so much, spoken so eloquently, commanded the attention of the nation," Pelosi told the crowd.
In past months, many of the country's arts, philanthropy, business and political leaders have spoken eloquently about the importance of federal funding for the arts.
Liberalism has long been seen as under attack; Fareed Zakaria, Edward Luce and Jan Zielonka are among those who have written eloquently about its decline.
The first time I heard Belafonte speak in person, he spoke so eloquently and passionately that I was sure that he was reading a speech.
The most persuasive version I've ever seen, from Fiasco Theater in 2014, refrained from interpretive gloss, and let the play's paradoxes speak eloquently for themselves.
Within Japanese culture there exists a time-honoured practice of pottery repair that eloquently doubles as a philosophy akin to the moral teachings of Zen Buddhism.
John Bright, a newly elected MP, spoke eloquently on the merits of abolishing duties on imported food, echoing arguments made in The Economist, a fledgling newspaper.
On the phone, he speaks quietly and eloquently about his experiences and the years it has taken him to achieve some sense of clarity and peace.
He wrote a book on it; he wrote a Harvard Business Review paper on it, that's what I read last night; and he speaks very eloquently.
As Senapathy so eloquently put it:The functions, interactions and inner workings of these "omes" are complex, with our understanding of them still at an infant stage.
You always see a Medium post that eloquently describes how the company was just acquired, it had total forethought into how everything was going to unfold.
Instead Pence turned to his own views or did not respond, speaking eloquently instead about his view of the world and matters foreign, domestic and social.
Nor can we ignore arguments from Clinton defenders like the one so eloquently made by Joan Walsh of The Nation, whose daughter works for Clinton's campaign.
Rakesh Khurana, dean of Harvard College, described the trend eloquently in his book "Searching for a Corporate Savior: The Irrational Quest for Charismatic C.E.O.s" (Princeton, 2002).
" Galloway said he did not take any pleasure in criticizing Sandberg because she had "written eloquently on personal loss and the important discussion around gender equality.
When she suggests that further progress could be made — that Hector could eventually walk and talk — Gus says no, gracias, though he puts it more eloquently.
Clinton visited veterans and spoke eloquently on topics like post-traumatic stress disorder, but nobody made sure those events were publicized to military communities and veterans.
This is really the crux of the issue that I and others are trying to put across, and I think that you've put across very eloquently.
Her arguments, which she makes eloquently in English, her third language, barely conceal the anger of a woman who has spent her entire life being underestimated.
This is really the crux of the issue that I and others are trying to put across, and I think that you've put across very eloquently.
What awaited me was not an array of smooth talking politicians in Mad Men suits, eloquently arguing the case of whichever side had paid them more.
No wonder so many poets have written so eloquently about Katz — from Frank O'Hara, James Schuyler and John Ashbery to Bill Berkson, Carter Ratcliff and Barry Schwabsky.
BuzzFeed News' Gabriel H. Sanchez eloquently put together this photo essay on the plight of helpless animals, while also showcasing the beauty of a community coming together.
After working in US embassies in Kiev and Moscow, he now sits on the National Security Council, and writes eloquently and forcefully about his sense of duty.
He speaks eloquently and, with his round glasses and slim build, gives off the vibe of the young teacher who's simultaneously chill and has his shit together.
Can you cite a moment in which a BLM leader passionately and eloquently denounced the recent shooting deaths of eight police officers in Dallas and Baton Rouge?
"Truly, how sad that a creative voice like Eugene Peterson would forsake the Scripture and the Tradition that he so eloquently wrote of," wrote one Twitter user.
The second annual Latin American Foto Festival, organized by the Bronx Documentary Center, gathers ten photographers eloquently using photography as journalistic evidence, personal catharsis, and cultural celebration.
You've seen some snippets already looking royal and speaking eloquently as hell ... but here they let loose after the interview ends and the mics are turned off.
Set in Mumbai but with characters that could belong anywhere, Oberoi manages to sketch the lives of three lonely people eloquently and with great attention to detail.
"Many around the world, particularly on this continent, speak eloquently about multilateralism, but they also need to walk the walk," Zarif said, according to the news service.
He eloquently discusses the nature of grand wars, like the one they find themselves in, and worries that his death and Jamie's will prove to be meaningless.
Another conservative on the panel, Mark Holden of Koch Industries, spoke eloquently about how our criminal justice system traps people in poverty when they need second chances.
Samantha Bee, the first woman to host a late-night satirical show, "Full Frontal with Samantha Bee," week after week cuttingly and eloquently attacks politicians and policies.
In a recent excerpt in the Wall Street Journal, he eloquently describes how his four-decade military career formed his thinking about the importance of international alliances.
Near the end of "Campus Confidential," Berlinerblau writes eloquently about the goal of "thoughtfulness" as the quality that good teachers most want to encourage in their students.
Patriots like Mitch McConnell and Paul Ryan have eloquently warned of the importance of ferreting out the truth and holding politicians accountable, including for leaking classified information.
I knew her name, because she is a poet, who has written eloquently about the North of England, in particular about the Northumberland coast, where she lives.
A mammoth is the first of the 17 animals Elena Passarello thinks eloquently about in her bestiary of essays, "Animals Strike Curious Poses," published earlier this year.
And today, a year after your passing, I still struggle to try and eloquently express what you mean to your family, your friends, your fans... and to me.
Never Been Kissed speaks surprisingly eloquently to the traumatic experience that high school can be for teenage girls, constantly bombarded with conflicting messaging about where their value lies.
I didn't know how to crumb a table, how to speak eloquently about wine—all those little things that you need to know as a fine-dining waiter.
But no other fighter has so consistently, eloquently, and quotably managed to entertain and eviscerate outside of the cage almost as well as he does inside of it.
He has both spoken eloquently about what serving in the military adds to experience in government, as well as, erm, tastefully burned, others for their inflated military claims.
They are two of the smartest people in the world of tech, and each spoke eloquently about self-knowledge and how humans can make themselves harder to hack.
The former head of the Venezuelan National Assembly, Julio Borges, a leading player in the interim government, put it eloquently in Washington this week at the Atlantic Council.
And he has written eloquently about his own obsession, dating back to childhood, with finding ways to integrate, unify, and make simple the apparent noise of the world.
George Wallace's infamous threat to stand by the schoolhouse door to prevent the University of Alabama from being racially integrated, John Kennedy firmly and eloquently supported black citizenship.
This philosophy, articulated often and eloquently by Pai, sits foursquare with the Trump doctrine and will guide Pai's actions, and most importantly, communications policy, for the foreseeable future.
In "Winter," one of those characters, Lux, eloquently describes how she once looked at her family tree, and saw herself at the very bottom of centuries of existence.
Written by Benjamin Cleary, it tells the tale of a lonely typographer who speaks eloquently in his head, but struggles to overcome his speech impediment when he talks.
And a Congressman named Jack Tanner who speaks eloquently about Dylan's political art supposedly got into a show via Jimmy Carter; this never happened and Tanner doesn't exist.
Writer Anand Giridharadas has written and spoken perhaps most eloquently on the subjects of empathy and reconciliation in this age of more winning winners and more losing losers.
He consistently wrote opinions that drew the ire of liberals, while conservatives praised his incredible ability — as perhaps the Court's strongest writer — to eloquently explain their legal positions.
He talks often and eloquently about how he came to this country as a child and how his family lived in public housing and, yes, used food stamps.
More substantively, the musician John Mayer and the historian David McCullough speak eloquently of the need for tangible proof of creation versus the ephemeral nature of digital data.
Naomi RubinNew York To the Editor: As Sian Beilock points out so eloquently, the downside of social media is possible exposure to vilification by a world of strangers.
In its 232-page document outlining the new proposal, it eloquently described how the new disclosure would add transparency and understanding of what these outside investments are worth.
As such it should be a prized chamber-music companion, a point eloquently made by the harpist Sivan Magen in a sparkling concert of music for mixed ensembles.
"The past 40 years eloquently prove that China's development provides a successful experience and offers a bright prospect for other developing countries as they strive for marketization," he added.
And I have to say that The Colonists is such a striking game because it renders all of this so clearly and eloquently, perhaps on purpose and perhaps not.
It was nice to experience a new sensation, but I did miss that, to put it eloquently, "dee- dicking" feel you get without a cock ring in the way.
In an interview with the Guardian two years ago, he explained rather eloquently the ideals and principles that drove him to speak truth to power at great personal risk.
This is a technological solution which will definitely reduce that number (and one that's the opposite of being programmed to kill you, something Google has actually addressed quite eloquently).
On a day when Cleveland Cavaliers star forward LeBron James and his team coach Tyronn Lue also spoke eloquently about Ali, Kerr joined in with the heart-felt tributes.
The tiny rock — eloquently named TG387 and nicknamed "The Goblin" — was spotted by astronomers at the Carnegie Institution of Science using a giant Japanese observatory in Hawaii called Subaru.
But during the second debate in Detroit, she spoke eloquently about the water crisis in Flint, Michigan, talking about disadvantaged communities of color and the need for environmental justice.
Hathaway has become an ambassador for women's rights, speaking eloquently about the need for paid parental leave at the United Nations and serving as goodwill ambassador for U.N. Women.
In a new Humans Of New York post, one guy eloquently pinned down not only why dating can be harder for queer people, but why it's just plain hard.
The Fed is the race pacer As Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell eloquently described in his Jackson Hole symposium speech, the new Federal Reserve doctrine is "risk management," i.e.
Everyone knew, as screenwriter Scott Rosenberg (High Fidelity, Beautiful Girls) so eloquently wrote on Facebook, but no one did anything about it because Weinstein could make or break you.
Even for Republicans -- who spoke eloquently Tuesday about how they experienced the heartache of gun violence firsthand with Scalise -- the politics of guns on Capitol Hill have not changed.
In her first speech as Prime Minister, Theresa May spoke eloquently about the need for the country to unite, and her mission as a leader to end social injustice.
Just as Mr. Greene so eloquently articulated in his elegy, my friend shared with me that the rest of his life would be an aching limp to the end.
Any of these actions would speak far more eloquently to Trump and his new best friend Putin than any number of outraged press releases or tweets by GOP leaders.
Only once before — in the period when the United States was founded — have so many brilliant Americans so eloquently debated a question so fraught with meaning for all humanity.
Bingham — a former Newsweek correspondent and the author of "Class Action" and "Women on the Hill" — interviewed over 100 people, many of whom speak eloquently about possibility and impossibility.
Despite extraordinary personal adversity, pain and tragedy, Elie Wiesel enriched the world and the lives of others by eloquently writing, witnessing and speaking out against injustice, hate and suffering.
The film isn't a strident piece of advocacy — the gun control issue is just a small part of it — but its sentiments are clear, underscored with heartache eloquently expressed.
Fisher talked about how bipolar can masquerade as substance abuse and eloquently normalized the highs and lows of mania and depression so that all people could hear and understand.
And it's like, I guess, like everything's always been: The person whose opinion is presented more eloquently or more loudly is the one who gets to tell the story.
I feel it is important to be channeling my Freaks and Geeks energy, dialed up to 11, so that Tan can most accurately and eloquently rip on my clothes.
We were all so excited — we were going to hear from three secretaries of state who have given so much and performed so powerfully and eloquently in that service.
Lola Byers of Wilmington, N.C., eloquently summed up the sentiments of many: As we've seen in this world's history, the downfall of society begins with the burning of books.
His "Laudato Si'", an encyclical published in 2015 on climate change, sums up as eloquently as anything written so far the pressure from runaway growth on resources—and humans.
If he stands for the principles he spoke about so eloquently, he will vote no on this bill, just as he did on the deeply flawed health care legislation.
Before the game, Jones spoke eloquently about the city, the concerns of black residents and the need for peaceful protests, but also acknowledged that people were crying for help.
"As Amanda eloquently describes, living a barrier-free life must also include access, accommodations, and safety in air travel for people with disabilities," O'Rourke wrote in a Medium post.
There is a familiar theme in Israel's history — most eloquently evoked by the late Israeli writer Amos Elon — that the state's founding fathers and their sons behaved very differently.
Placing the story against a backdrop of historical shifts eloquently conveys how wars, court cases, and racism affect the individual, and how politics and prejudice can shape a family.
"He's a visionary, and he speaks quite eloquently about what the future opportunities are," says Gary Bettman, the N.H.L.'s commissioner, who until recently strongly opposed gambling on sports.
Removing and renaming are short-term solutions that may well spark a new dialogue and create a new context, as the descendants of Stonewall Jackson have so eloquently argued.
IVF remains a controversial treatment among some in the States, partly due to religious concerns (Rodeffer writes eloquently bout reconciling Christian beliefs with a need for assisted reproductive techniques).
That's the point Jill writes eloquently about: how these cases need to be given higher priority in police departments, and how these folks need more time and resources and equipment.
" Writing eloquently for The Root, Damon Young defined a hotep as "a person who's either a clueless parody of Afrocentricity" or "loudly, conspicuously and obnoxiously pro-black but anti-progress.
He invokes the five-hectare Holocaust Memorial in Berlin (criticised by Björn Höcke, a firebrand on the AfD right) and talks eloquently about the SPD as a "bulwark of democracy".
Please know what a privilege it has been to represent Times readers, who feel passionately and communicate eloquently about their newspaper, and want it held to the highest possible standards.
Nate Silver attributes the rise to young students speaking out after the massacre, who've spoken so eloquently and forcefully in favor of gun control that their speeches have gone viral.
We did want to include some of Fred Goldman, we have that speech in Episode 4 read very eloquently, talks about how his son is being overshadowed by the circus.
His second effort is an album that seeps into your consciousness rather than grandstands, which parallels how Okely behaves as a human: He speaks eloquently, his voice a tranquil hum.
This meant that not only did I need to understand the full scope of the mission, I needed to be able to argue it eloquently to others and foresee criticism.
False positives are a well-known occupational hazard for alien hunters, as SETI director Seth Shostak eloquently demonstrated in a recent Air & Space article about a "dry run" in 1997.
Ophele said that Andrew Bailey, chief executive of Britain's Financial Conduct Authority, had "eloquently" called for UK and EU regulators to cooperate closely so that cross-border financial services continue.
That pile of unpaid bills, eloquently called the reste ὰ liquider (the amount yet to be settled), is forecast to be €254 billion ($300 billion) at the end of 20153.
But it is Sloane's collection itself—all those dead little butterflies, all those things stolen from enslaved people, all those antique coins—which speaks the most eloquently about its owner.
The composition of the images, combined with the structure of the display, eloquently convey the push and pull between strain and excitement that shapes life in this old port city.
For example, Alexander Hamilton, the nation's first Treasury secretary, wrote eloquently about the need for the government to get involved in markets, specifically through the establishment of a national bank.
As the attorney eloquently notes in the series: If ICE agents will blatantly harm her in front of cameras, imagine what goes on in ICE detention centers behind closed doors.
I am at no stage just yet to eloquently speak at length about what it means to be non-binary but I can't wait for the day that I am.
She might be the eloquently rationalizing Humbert Humbert of the neighborhood, or maybe the spooked and high-strung governess in "The Turn of the Screw," losing herself in an obsession.
Survivor is a highly verbal game, and that's especially true at the final tribal, where you have to somehow answer questions thoughtfully and eloquently while placating a lot of angry jurors.
Mars eloquently sums things up: "Rather than policing people, [we should] just present it as a form of education, which is very insightful for people to build a dialogue," they explain.
He had been profiled on 60 Minutes and in The Atlantic, and he spoke eloquently about the subtle tricks that social media companies use to foster an addiction to their services.
So when I went out to audition for Coco, it was refreshing to read a character who commands a room, speaks her mind eloquently, and addresses the very issue of tokenism.
He made that case eloquently elsewhere in his address, and he did not need to specify that socialism is "not who we are" to demonstrate that it is a terrible idea.
Russian trolls are notoriously bad at making sense in English — a Texas secession page once eloquently declared "IN LOVE WITH TEXAS SHAPE" — and it's likely they'll slip up here as well.
Here are a few fun observations from behind-the-scenes (or rather, "inside the TV" as Kanye so eloquently put it.) Kanye West single-handedly brought the crowd to their feet.
This study from a Norway watchdog group eloquently and painstakingly describes the ways that companies like Facebook and Google push their users towards making choices that negatively affect their own privacy.
She gets hate for breathing wrong, so to see her speak so openly and eloquently about what matters to her despite how others might look at her made all the difference.
Justine Skye eloquently runs down her list in this track, only to come to the realization that since she can't make the perfect man she'll work on making herself better instead.
You do have to give this administrator credit, however, for addressing the issue so politely and eloquently, though we hope that Wildo the Dildo lives on in this kid's imagination forever.
Lewis, a giant of the civil rights movement, spoke eloquently and forcibly to call for a vote on both expanding gun background checks and dealing with the existing "terror gap" loophole.
Letters To the Editor: Re "No, Not Trump, Not Ever" (column, March 18): David Brooks eloquently lays out the moral imperative for disavowing Donald Trump despite the candidate's recent electoral victories.
" One wishes there were more than just the two of these photographs on display; they bring to mind the interplay of power, time, and fragility so eloquently referenced in Shelley's "Ozymandias.
You probably remember Khizr Khan, the Gold Star father who spoke so eloquently at the Democratic Convention about his son, Humayun, an Army captain, who heroically gave his life in Iraq.
Nicholas Kristof Women have been speaking out over the last few weeks about sexual harassment and assaults — passionately, eloquently and sometimes tearfully — and we men have been (for once!) rather silent.
Abraham Verghese's article eloquently describes the debacle of the mass and hasty implementation of electronic health-record technology that occurred in response to the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009.
Under President Xi Jinping's authoritarian leadership, censorship in China has tightened and artistic freedoms have been curtailed, as was eloquently described last month by Ai Weiwei in The New York Times.
That, along with his chaotic arrival and the growing frustration among his base caused by the glacial pace of change, spoke eloquently about the challenges Mr. Guaidó is facing at home.
Last but by no means least, Sanders eloquently gave Democrats the answer they wanted to hear when moderators asked him about Hillary Clinton's continued habit of needling him in television interview.
And if you read some of the stinging responses to my column — for a relatively kind example, I recommend Yascha Mounk's piece for Slate — you will find this case eloquently made.
Ronald Reagan did the same during a 1992 convention speech when he described this passage as "so eloquently stated by Abraham Lincoln": You cannot strengthen the weak by weakening the strong.
Mr. McCain spoke eloquently of the importance of the Senate, its recent failures and his desire to see the institution return to its more traditional give-and-take between the parties.
In a recent opinion piece, Standing Rock Sioux tribe chairman David Archambault II writes eloquently, but ultimately without precision and factual context as he opines against the ongoing Dakota Access pipeline.
Kevin Drum, a blogger at Mother Jones, eloquently made this point: People and groups have to be free to condemn abortion or police misconduct or anything else — sometimes soberly, sometimes not.
One of the tragedies of his work is that he was able to so eloquently describe what it feels like to be surrounded by a hostile community that's bent on your destruction.
" My colleague Yochi Dreazen wrote eloquently at the time, "Anyone with a basic sense of decency ought to be horrified by Trump's casual talk of groping women, not just fathers of girls.
No matter how you choose to prepare, make sure you're able to speak eloquently and confidently about yourself and why you're interested in the type of work, organization, and specific role. 3.
I believe you Kristina Cohen and thank you for speaking up so eloquently and really encompassing what young female actresses have to go through at the hands of men like Ed Westwick.
Some dispensary owners have called the bill, SB 18-029, "fucking crazy" while others have more eloquently expressed safety concerns over chemical agents added to herbs that are often smoked or ingested.
An eloquently-tied scarf isn't just a simple way to add a bold touch to your outfit — you're also able to give your tresses a break from heat styling and products, too.
Carolina Wilson eloquently expressed all the things that make her so passionate about pizza, and her words — along with outstanding grades and impressive extracurriculars, we're sure — earned her admission to Yale University.
Black people who are routinely harassed, profiled and brutalized by police in major cities and smaller hamlets reside on the outskirts of the "one American family," Obama eloquently noted in his speech.
In a Wednesday conference call with Bills reporters, a typically mundane exercise, Kaepernick spoke eloquently about Justice Ginsburg's criticism and suggested that history had shown her dismissiveness to be a misguided choice.
"There's nothing secret about it," Mr. Dylan said in an eloquently revealing speech last year, about how deep, deep immersion in folk songs and the blues made his songwriting possible, even inevitable.
What we do need, as writers like Zeynep Tufekci and Roger McNamee have eloquently argued, is a system of regulatory processes that create accountability and empower tech companies to create tools responsibly.
Among the artists he has written or spoken eloquently about, I would list Jasper Johns, Maurice Denis, Burgoyne Diller, Charles Filiger, Gerald Murphy, Giorgio de Chirico in 1918, and Patrick Henry Bruce.
Adriana Pericchi, a community health worker, said something to me while sitting at a McDonald's that I thought spoke eloquently to the shared despair wrought by opioids across all types of communities.
These topics, previously thought uncommercial, not to mention unsexy, have been eloquently explored recently by Diana Athill ("Somewhere Towards the End"), Roger Angell ("This Old Man") and Christopher Hitchens ("Mortality"), among others.
Our reviewer, Margaret MacMillan, says Snyder "argues forcefully and eloquently" that we are living in dangerous times, and calls his book a "good wake-up call" about the importance of Enlightenment reasoning.
The president "spoke eloquently about grand things," but provided nothing of substance, she said; Washington is a bunch of do-nothings; Republicans must save Washington; and Obama doesn't stand for all Americans.
" Many Democrats point out, however, that Hillary Clinton did call out racism in her speech on the alt-right and then again, less eloquently, when she called half of Trump supporters "deplorable.
Imani Gandy [senior legal analyst at Rewire, a news site for reproductive justice issues] talks about this very eloquently — nothing could be further from the truth about the accusations about targeting African Americans.
James admitted to the rolling camera it was his first time placing his life in the hands of the MTA, or "traveling like a real citizen, man," as JR so eloquently put it.
He would also find red-state voters who share the values he so eloquently talks about, yet view Democrats as an alien species who stop by only every four years, if at all.
Perhaps relatedly, a local museum display eloquently described the near-total extermination of Patagonia's natives by noting the deed was accomplished first with rifles, then syphilis, and finally alcohol to finish the job.
Fluent in Spanish, he speaks eloquently of the positive aspects of the US–Mexico border area that he represented in Congress, a place that President Donald Trump has painted as dangerous and lawless.
It eloquently chronicles the effects of the North American Free-Trade Agreement between Mexico, America and Canada, the militarisation of the border after the attacks of September 11th 2001 and Mr Trump's victory.
Travis Moore, the founder and director of the TechCongress fellowship, has written eloquently on this topic: The typical path to a Congressional staff position is through an internship or an entry level job.
But what they don't understand is that most Americans aren't political activists who can eloquently argue the points of whether or not abortion ought to be outlawed under the Fifth and 14th Amendments.
In sum, Washington has signaled its readiness to use force in support of its diplomacy, as Ambassador Nikki Haley so eloquently said at the UN Security Council meeting she chaired on April 7.
As Vox so eloquently explains (emphasis mine): The Republican bill will make insurance less affordable for millions, scale back Medicaid, and yes, likely result in some people dying sooner than they would have.
I've loved horses for so long, I can't even eloquently explain it... it just feels like there's a chip in my brain that goes "Oh, good!" every time I look at a horse.
He spoke to me, eloquently and passionately, about the ways in which the coal industry collapsing in slow motion has strangled everything from restaurants to 60-year-old businesses as capital flight accelerated.
Beyoncé is "challeng[ing] the myths and distortions about black existence," as Harry Belafonte once eloquently put it, but within the confines of a capitalist system that she praises in the same breath.
As English Professor Anna Kornbluh explicates so eloquently in her days-old essay "Academe's Coronavirus Shock Doctrine":  Faculty are being asked to redesign their courses and reinvent their pedagogy on an emergency basis.
For the better part of a decade, the league's leading players and coaches have spoken out, often eloquently, on issues like police brutality, gay rights, guns and the president of the United States.
In stained-glass-like watercolor and collage, his stately illustrations – skies rendered in squares of layered blue, the crumbling walls of Southern black schools, triptychs of Thurgood's notable cases – make their case eloquently.
Never before has a crime drama so eloquently and delicately shown the cracks in the justice system when it comes to sexual assault, and it couldn't have come at a more critical time.
Moreover, as John Hyten, the vice-chairman of America's Joint Chiefs of Staff, eloquently puts it, America's kit in space consists mainly of large, "exquisite" satellites that make for "big, fat, juicy targets".
Ms Jongerius makes the point eloquently throughout the exhibition, but perhaps it is most striking in a display of 300 vibrantly glazed vases, created in 2010, arranged in a fat circle on the floor.
I have never read someone so succinctly, eloquently, and urgently explain the roots — capitalism and imperialism — of the climate crisis, and how those roots grow up into the forest of our culture/popular imagination.
Mr Kaufmann goes into detail on the physical demands of his art, which he describes as a competitive sport; he speaks eloquently of the fear to which all singers are prone when illness strikes.
Nothing will make Trump's point that he has kept faith with his anti-establishment crowd more eloquently than his rally in the heartland while the press yucks it up in tuxedos and ball gowns.
So if you win a prize for an awkward story, maybe you can use some of that Line currency to get a new sticker pack that'll convey your regret more eloquently than words can.
A new biography on Berger — the first published since his death in January of 2017 — reveals a writer who to this day speaks most eloquently and passionately to our frustrations, fears, hopes, and desires.
"Enchanted" eloquently tells the story of meeting someone for the first time, and being so completely swept off your feet by their charm that you find yourself dancing around all alone at 2 a.m.
Another local paper asked three former editors to write about their experiences at the Herald, and a former staff member eloquently wrote a back page column about the paper's storied history for a weekly.
But there was plenty of symbolism as Williams, who had lobbied so eloquently for women to receive as much prize money as men at Wimbledon, became the first women's champion to receive equal pay.
Behold: Your eyes do not deceive you: This is, in fact, a video of Sylvester Stallone, Al Pacino, and Guy Fieri hanging out—a "meeting of the titans," as Stallone so eloquently put it.
You could fill an entire bookshelf with works about the crisis of democracy in the Trump era, but Lessig, a professor at Harvard Law School, has been eloquently hammering this point longer than most.
Atticus Finch is timeless and wonderful, illustrating so eloquently that one need not have super powers to be a person of character and integrity who helps others — one simply needs to choose to do so.
She posts viral tweets to her 1.5 million followers that eloquently and passionately explain her progressive political goals, each tweet evidence of a moment Twitter has stolen from her—time she'll never get back. Amazing!
In the news conference announcing his nomination by Obama, Merrick eloquently, while breaking through a wall of his own emotion, told the story of his grandparents, including the children of our great-grandparents, escaping persecution.
Refinery29 editor Ashley Edwards already eloquently explained that no, it's not on Black people (and specifically Black women) to "save" everyone, particularly white voters who are the reason for this mess in the first place.
"My views are my own and not at all related to my father's position; millions of other people have said the same as I did, and more eloquently," she said in an email to CNN.
" Though attempts to fully explain ego death always fall short, drug YouTubers like PsychedSubstance have tried eloquently, saying it's like "stepping back from experiencing life as the program and experiencing life as the operating system.
But to see someone expound so eloquently and with such depth about something like porn awards — which most people think about on a very basic level, if at all — was unlike anything I'd ever seen.
The CEO of Alcoa has eloquently argued that not only do tariffs hurt profitability, they distort the market and make it less efficient "by incentivizing the restart of aged, inefficient capacity" in the United States.
In March, the natural brunette, who has spoken out eloquently in the past about the importance of body positivity, debuted her fun, new fiery-red hair and a rather badass new thigh tattoo on Instagram.
I'm a slightly cranky viewer of this show, but I've been moved by the performances of the older women who so eloquently exude capitulation, numbness and exhaustion — the sigh of Lila's mother (Valentina Acca) alone.
She was asking whether someone of deep faith and who had previously openly (and in our opinion eloquently) written about the relationship between judging and faith could cast aside her deeply held views when judging.
Jeffries stood out during the impeachment trial as someone who launched sharply worded rebukes against the president and his GOP defenders while also eloquently framing the motivation behind Democrats' decision to push forward with impeachment.
In eighth grade, I had a breakdown, triggered by some of the same issues that she so eloquently describes: the tension between religious devotion and hypocrisy, and the worship of the Apocalypse and of wealth.
" (She subsequently spoke out eloquently.) Under sustained criticism, Trump proposed, instead, to "screen out any who have hostile attitudes towards our country or its principles—or who believe that Sharia law should supplant American law.
He eloquently emphasizes his upstate Irish ancestry; his antiterrorism activism after his brother's death in the 1988 bombing of Pan Am Flight 103 over Lockerbie, Scotland; and his record of job creation as an entrepreneur.
The Woodward book will only confirm to most the wisdom of their actions, and the urgency to complete these workarounds before everything comes unglued, as the writer of the anonymous op-ed so eloquently suggests.
Sadeghi eloquently described the difference between generations of Iranian artists by stating that the artists of his generation were focused on the quality of their production, in comparison to artists currently concerned with fulfilling market demands.
Over at Screencrush, Matt Singer eloquently unloads on this this twist: So when Bernard looked at the photo the first time, he didn't see himself in the photo because that would have revealed his true nature.
From his first interview, Coates, a simple but articulate man from rural South Carolina, spoke eloquently about how veterans should be treated better, and deserved more after all the sacrifices they had made for their country.
MONACO (Reuters) - (Attention language in paragraphs 5 and 15.) Lewis Hamilton celebrated a memorable Monaco pole position on Saturday before speaking eloquently of the debt he owed to friend and late triple world champion Niki Lauda.
Readers would enjoy clicking the links that are posted above, listening to his words, sharing his values, being lifted by his visions, and watching him speak eloquently about the dreams and ambitions that Democrats stand for.
So you watch where you're going and take care of yourself, knowing that you're bound to get hurt again at some point, and — in the words so eloquently mocked by Tina Fey — it's not your fault.
WHITMER: I'm a sexual assault survivor and I've talked about it publicly, and you know, to watch that play out, for every survivor, it's not a moment in your life, as Dr. Ford so eloquently explained.
Lizzy K. from New York eloquently summed up the concerns of her generation: We grew up thinking that there was a finite number of years left on the earth because of exhausted resources and global warming.
No matter how many Carl Sagan-level thinkers eloquently expound on that point, people may need to make the ultimate pilgrimage and experience the planet the way astronauts do in order for it to really click.
This is a work that succeeds as it fails, speaking most eloquently when it admits that it can't tell the story it wanted to tell, that its maps can't plot the shape of a human life.
SCHIFF: And, sadly, in this presidency, what matters this president -- and I think Mr. Holmes made this point quite eloquently -- he... (CROSSTALK) TAPPER: David Holmes, the Ukrainian -- the US Embassy ambassador -- US Embassy official in Ukraine.
"Many around the world, particularly on this continent, speak eloquently about multilateralism, but they also need to walk the walk," Mr. Zarif said in his last public address to the West, at the Munich Security Conference.
In a TV show during the 2013 campaign Mrs Merkel was eloquently skewered by Patrick Pronk, a prospective CDU voter who wanted to know why she would not let him adopt a child with his male partner.
In the video, you talk about running around like a child and doing "stupid stuff" — as you so eloquently put it — while hopping around from one foot to the other (which is a jeté, by the way).
A colleague who has had a couple of biopsies since her treatment, but no new disease, wrote eloquently to me about how tai chi and dark chocolate help tamp down her fear that her cancer will return.
"Many of his classes were popular ones," she said, "but none more beloved than his signature course, 'Negotiating Rapture,' where he would wax eloquently in the dark, savoring the cinema as the highest form of spiritual mystery."
" In any case, Mr. Ozawa often speaks eloquently in this translation by Jay Rubin, as in this comment, which grows out of an exchange about the pianist Rudolf Serkin: "A musician's special flavor comes out with age.
Some of the cities and states that have emerged as frontrunners in the race to win Amazon's second headquarters are also promoting discriminatory social policies that stand in direct opposition to the values Bezos so eloquently extolled.
He was making on a replicant in the video for "Zaddy," eloquently pulling apart police brutality and calling for unity on "No Justice" with Big TC, and his collaboration with Future, "Campaign," kicked the summer into gear.
To the Editor: On a frigid Friday morning, well into the bleakest part of winter and resigned to the working mom juggling act with my son home sick from school, I saw your eloquently written article about Einstein.
Ally Thompson, a contestant from New Zealand, had a far worse fate — she fell on her tailbone, "cracking her butt" as the show so eloquently put it, and sat on the sidelines for the remainder of the competition.
I want to credit this argument to my wife who makes it more eloquently than I do, but every day you have child poverty in America is a day you are choosing to have child poverty in America.
Like many trans folk before me, and as Charlie Kiss so eloquently discussed in his contribution to this series, I was told that I was just a confused lesbian, in spite of the fact that I'm proudly bisexual.
Consider some of the faces of Young Hollywood: stars Rowan Blanchard, 16, Yara Shahidi, 18, and Amandla Stenberg, 19, are activists as well as actors, who have spoken frankly and eloquently about issues of gender, race, and class.
And how could they when photographer Caroline Logan so eloquently captured the couple, their bridesmaids, and their groomsmen holding adorable (and adoptable!) puppies in their wedding photos — which have gone viral following their big day on Sept. 1.
But as Casey Newton so eloquently explained, there's a very real chance that these bots are going to become our primary interface to the internet, the medium through which we get our information and our sweet, sweet content.
Even though not all of the connections and rivalries Lacey sketches are romantic, they are all forged between two (or, often, more) extraordinarily thoughtful individuals who can eloquently explain their insatiable need to fuck a Mysterious Blonde Poet.
In 223, legal theorist Cass Sunstein eloquently anticipated the ill effects of Internet filtering on our democracy in a prescient essay that he expanded into a cautionary book called Going to Extremes: How Like Minds Unite and Divide.
Kelly spoke eloquently and with great dignity about the pain of losing a son in battle, as he and his wife did, and about certain bedrock values that our society has lost in how we treat one another.
Here, every moment — light flooding a darkened room, an oceanic baptism and a halo of shampoo crowning the head of an abandoned child — speaks more eloquently than most of its dialogue, though the words are very fine, too.
"No question, we have had a front-row seat to history in terms of the message that Megan Rapinoe has so eloquently expressed about the human condition," said Ellen Staurowsky, a professor of sport management at Drexel University.
Without frills or fuss, he shaped a riveting family drama, a plausible potboiler worthy of Arthur Miller, with a cast including a world-wearily granitic Eric Owens, as Wotan, and Christopher Purves, eloquently and chillingly human as Alberich.
In the stand-alone chapter "The Nature of Gothic," he eloquently extolled the collaborative dignity of medieval architecture, establishing the ideological foundation of the Arts and Crafts movement, and of thousands of neo-Gothic buildings across the world.
And so Walser eloquently calls attention to the obvious, such as (still of Watteau) that "all the romanticism that dwelled within him possessed, as it were, excellent manners," without being able to enlighten us further about the matter.
Hubert Védrine, a former French foreign minister, has eloquently expressed the view of many on the continent that a source of the widespread antipathy to the EU is not merely that it has lost the vision that inspired it.
The filmmakers have simply supplied the appropriate panty-girdles, crew-neck sweaters, frat-house initiation rites and rituals of the toga party, and let all that idiocy speak — very eloquently, and with a lot of comic fervor — for itself.
Long's time in Dallas In a video posted on YouTube July 10, Long, who was African-American, speaks at the camera eloquently about recent protests and officer-involved shootings, often employing the motifs of blood and money and revolution.
As Taya Kyle, widow of American hero Chris Kyle, so eloquently stated -- not one of Obama's proposals or executive action would have prevented any recent mass shootings and murderers could use pipe bombs to kill people en masse too.
Despite the efforts of some amazing volunteers, we didn't manage to win enough votes to send me to the convention, or to win the Democratic primary, but my commitment to the progressive ideals that Bernie so eloquently expressed remains.
When Shinji and Kaworu battle in the episode's climax, the feminine voice they so eloquently captured in the episode's early moments gives way to more masculine patterns: a rasp of anger, a deepening of pitch, a suppression of weakness.
GTA protagonists are uniformly angry and violent—seemingly, they are frustrated by the contorted version of America in which they live, and yet it's only Bellic who is able to eloquently vocalize confusion and frustration at the status quo.
"Jeb has eloquently articulated this conservative vision, leading the charge to repeal Dodd-Frank and deliver a freer market that gives every American the opportunity to achieve the American dream," said House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy in a statement.
At a time when women are demanding to be heard, in an era of fake news and bad apologies, she eloquently called attention to the need to speak "your truth," as well as the importance for people to listen.
Hamilton also eloquently argued that, in cases where laws and statutes clash with the Constitution, it is the Constitution that must prevail, and it is the duty of the Supreme Court to side with the Constitution in those instances.
In "High Cuisine," this yin-yang dynamic between the two chefs plays out in comedic moments, with Tucker often giggling in a billow of smoke, while Joseph remains sober and lucid, eloquently introducing each unlikely course to the diners.
A year ago, prodded by a reader who wrote eloquently about how women were underrepresented on the letters page of The Times, we started the Women's Project, aiming to correct that imbalance and better reflect the diversity in society.
Menendez began by saying that "political disclosure is a shareholder interest as well as a societal good" and spoke eloquently about the importance of this information for investors trying to make decisions about where to entrust their money. Sens.
It was not so long ago when Mayor Bill de Blasio spoke eloquently about New York being a "tale of two cities," a place where the privileged had all the advantages, and the working class and poor had none.
"This will go down in history as an eloquently delivered eulogy to the two-state formula, which is in itself a recipe for disaster," said Oded Revivi, the chief foreign envoy of the Yesha Council, which represents Israeli settlers.
It was not so long ago when Mayor Bill de Blasio spoke eloquently about New York being a "tale of two cities," a place where the privileged had all the advantages, and the working class and poor had none.
It's incredibly difficult for any survivor of sexual violence to come forward but, as Marling so eloquently points out, the power imbalance in Hollywood and myriad other industries leaves women vulnerable to abuse at the hands of men like Weinstein.
Emily Doe's essay for Glamour, published a day after the mag announced it would include the anonymous sexual assault survivor in its roundup of Women of the Year nominees (see also: Bono), is a moving and eloquently written triumph of spirit.
The resulting chemical, eloquently called the iFixit "Adhesive Remover," is administered using a syringe, and comes with gloves and eye protection; Hartt says the solution is just a mild skin and eye irritant and that the repair itself is relatively easy.
Despite the sarcastic comments of some of the men in the audience, Tyger and Jackie were excited, as was the young woman accepting their applications, who said eloquently, "this is where it will start," with the licensing of these two women.
Recently, Gordon's mother found the note Nanjiani had left with his name and phone number the first night she was in the hospital, and it obviously brought up a wave of feelings that the actor then eloquently wrote about on Twitter.
By now it's well established that HBO's Confederate is probably a Bad Idea, for reasons eloquently expressed by many influential voices from Roxane Gay, who wrote that it made her feel "exhausted," to April Reign, who conceived Sunday's #NoConfederate Twitter protest.
As carefully and eloquently as I laid it out for her, though, the gist was: Get your shit together and love me, or literally get your shit together and leave my apartment before I get home today—because you're hurting me.
For Pereira, an apology was sent out on The Tenors' official twitter stating that he "will not be performing with The Tenors until further notice" with the artist himself following up with an eloquently foolish series of explantions for his actions.
Our new princess is a self-made woman who speaks eloquently and passionately about everything from her experience of racism, to poverty, to Me Too, who has worked for the UN and asks for wedding donations to be given to charity.
The ambassador will face serious headwinds in German public opinion — just 11 percent of Germans have confidence in the U.S. president — but eloquently conveying your knowledge of and connections to Germany goes a long way in successful diplomacy in Berlin.
Shifting among the desperate voices of Yongju, Danny and Jangmi, Ms. Lee, who lives in Seoul, South Korea, eloquently draws attention to issues of displacement, loss and identity, and to China's record of human rights abuses against North Korean refugees.
I did an interview with Mark Zuckerberg, and one of the things he put forward and I was hammering him on all the things, these kinda things, saying exactly, not as eloquently as you have, but I was hammering him.
Under intense strain, even revered figures like Yi and Choe, who had eloquently given voice to their countrymen's longing for independence, now called for Koreans to become "imperial subjects" of the Japanese emperor and sacrifice their lives for Japan's wars.
" Elsewhere she speaks eloquently of travel's power to transform: "The traveling writer is someone seeking … a sort of non-existence, the quest for which can lead, paradoxically, to the discovery of the self set free from the bafflement of context.
" Mr. Lanier, who discourses eloquently on subjects like limerence and lust in his book, says: "The future I'd prefer to see is one where people use VR together to make really crazy imaginative experiences that might be sexual or might not.
Over at OneZero, Colin Horgan makes this argument eloquently: The more indispensable an internet connection becomes, the less choice we have, which means we have less and less autonomy, a key element of being capable of exercising control over our lives.
Eduardo Porter, writing in The New York Times, eloquently described the Ryan bill as "A Health Bill that Wounds," and hypothesized that: Might an uninsured mother become more reluctant to let her child play outdoors and risk and expensive broken arm?
" But he said, "Just hearing Adam Schiff speak so clearly and eloquently about what went wrong, it just seems to obvious to me — and yet, we have more than half of the Senate who clearly just doesn't want to listen.
Above all, it's important to remember, as Hazel Cills eloquently wrote recently at Jezebel, that the Lee family believes Syed to be guilty, and has repeatedly expressed its outrage and hurt at the attempts of Syed's supporters to relitigate the case.
Robert Triggs very eloquently lays out the situation over at Android Authority, pointing out that the different ways phone makers are using USB-C is taking some of the shine off this supposedly brave new world of one socket to rule them all.
A few commentators — most eloquently Philip Bump — have interpreted Trump as "wanting to be liked," which indicates to them (and to some in the Republican establishment) that Trump will be malleable in a way that a more ideological candidate like Cruz will not.
" Obama during his visit with Chancellor Angela Merkel, lauded her stance on refugees, saying "Chancellor Merkel and others have eloquently reminded us that we cannot turn our backs on our fellow human beings who are here now, and need our help now.
Her art is as varied, engaging, and complex as the African country for which the eponymous leader successfully campaigned for independence, yet while "Kenya" is so eloquently embedded in her forename, it's the entire African Diaspora that remains one of Hinkle's major influences.
Well, who cares whether he gets his inspiration in Union Square or while talking on the phone to his importer: The point is that he knows where to find ingredients that speak far more eloquently than any server reeling off prepared talking points.
This is most eloquently embodied by Uri Savir, an Israeli cabinet member portrayed juicily by Michael Aronov as an exuberant rock-star dignitary, and Ahmed Qurie , the P.L.O. finance minister played with a careful balance of wariness and warmth by Anthony Azizi.
The President's absence and failure to lead a grateful nation in mourning would, for McCain, eloquently reflect the fracture with the traditional ruling classes that he successfully made the focus of his 2016 campaign and that has become a motif of his presidency.
In this lovely, low-key Argentine movie, a middle-aged woman (an eloquently silent Verónica Llinás) exists without companionship in a primitive hut at the edge of a forest, save for the pack of dogs that live, hunt and sleep with her.
The institution of slavery meant that the Constitution, for all its worthy prescriptions that Representative Adam Schiff defended so eloquently during the House trial, was going to be a document undermined from the beginning by the founders' tacit embrace of that institution.
That new specimen tulip poplar you're coddling may be lovely, but in NATURE'S TEMPLES: The Complex World of Old-Growth Forests (Timber Press, $13), Joan Maloof eloquently urges us to cherish the wildness of what little old-growth woodlands we have left.
To the Editor: Ariel Dorfman eloquently argues that what Russia allegedly did in hacking the 2016 United States presidential election, the United States has often done to other countries, including his native Chile ("Now America Knows How Chile Felt," Op-Ed, Dec. 17).
"Some of the younger artists, who were then in their thirties, like Kehinde Wiley and Mickalene Thomas, who speak so eloquently about his impact on their work, were starting to get a lot of attention, critically and in the market," Schoonmaker said.
Jordyn Woods might be well on her way to fashion world domination: She's made a name for herself as a model (and spoken eloquently about the lack of body inclusivity within the industry), and built quite a support system following the whole Tristan Thompson fiasco.
Two kitties named Weston and Ellinore are shaking up everything we know about cats by doing things typical cats wouldn't even consider — like climbing, running, hitching rides in backpacks and sledding in the snow, as Weston here so eloquently illustrates in this YouTube video.
Lou has a longstanding practice of hyper-adorning objects, including the construction of entire domestic settings covered in glass beads, but the Windex bottle manages to hold its own, even as a standalone object, eloquently and even playfully summarizing the experience of invisible domestic labor.
He writes about them so vividly, comments so astutely on small details of light and space and color, that we find ourselves reading the book with an iPad or laptop on hand, Googling images of the works he has so eloquently and ardently described.
That was true in 1984 despite Ronald Reagan's talk of morning in America, and in 1992 when Bill Clinton emerged as a man from Hope playing the saxophone for Arsenio Hall, and even in 2008 as Barack Obama eloquently spoke of hope and change.
As CNN contributor Van Jones and others so eloquently displayed in the Netflix documentary The 13th, Former President Bill Clinton's crime bill resulted in more blacks being sent to prison for non-violent crimes than during any other president's administration in our nation's history.
On March 25th, as Western Christians remembered the Crucifixion of their faith's founder, he made his feelings eloquently plain: "O Cross of Christ, today we see you in the Mediterranean and Aegean seas which have become insatiable cemeteries, reflections of our indifferent and anaesthetised conscience."
" Hiaasen describes the deficiencies of this product eloquently: "The target market segment was middle-aged men with slack penises and gagging body odor, but the refreshing juniper scent had attracted teenage girls who failed to read the warning label while rifling their parents' medicine cabinets.
" At a rally in the final days before the election, Mr. Zuma harked back to the A.N.C.'s glory days, saying: "Comrade Nelson Mandela stated eloquently in December 2000 when he said: 'The African National Congress is the only party that could deliver services.
Greg Howard at Deadspin has written eloquently about the broader meaning of Williams' performance, of a black athlete displaying such dominance at a position that blacks were dissuaded from playing and for a team that was the last in the NFL to integrate its roster.
There are real reasons to be suspicious of the new, glossier, advertiser-oriented YouTube, which the people behind the effort to unionize YouTubers communicate eloquently: It creates a culture of corporate-friendly sameness, and income insecurity for anyone who doesn't toe the new line.
" Clinton's attorney, David E. Kendall, submitted a letter to the State Department on August 30 that reads, "(Clinton) has no desire to have her clearance become part of an unprecedented partisan controversy over the clearance process, for the reasons eloquently stated by Admiral William McRaven.
A recent ProPublica series eloquently highlighted the impact of racism in pregnancy and childbirth for black women, who are as much as three times more likely to die from complications that arise in childbirth as whites, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
But some of that lack of national experience could hurt the younger candidates, particularly someone like Pete Buttigieg, who spoke eloquently on many occasions but still needs to convey how his experiences from governing a relatively small city in Indiana apply to governing the country.
In Miyazakiworld: A Life in Art, Susan Napier, a professor at Tufts University focused on Japanese culture, eloquently defines Miyazaki as an auteur who creates immersive animated realms that vary from film to film but are joined by a consistent (albeit evolving) worldview and tropes.
"I must applaud Dominus on a brilliant review...While admittedly a large part of what compels the reader forward through this book is morbid fascination, it is steadily supplanted by sharing the profound and unrelenting grief Klebold articulates movingly and eloquently," said Stewart Mawdsley of Edmonton, Canada.
Women like Coral who smoke weed on Periscope are attempting to revitalize the image of the traditional pot smoker, from the slovenly hippie to the cute girl next door, who can speak just as eloquently and passionately about state marijuana legislation as about her favorite hybrid strains.
And as I get to know more about music, and know about more music, I feel like so much of it has been said so eloquently and beautifully that there's little point in making more stuff if it's just covering ground that other people have done better.
Other conservative figures, including the columnists George F. Will, Charles Krauthammer, William Kristol, Kathleen Parker, and Michael Gerson, have been deeply and eloquently disdainful, but many of these same people had missed repeated opportunities over the years to identify and condemn the party's drift to radicalism.
But the second, more interesting half of the film shelves the populist appeals and hokey doomsday gags for a misty-eyed paean to Clinton that eloquently—even reverently—re-frames the beleaguered candidate as a deserving, patient, ultra-competent politician whose election will empower women worldwide.
What might be even better would be to signpost the many, many black artists and academics who have been saying the same things—more eloquently too—for a very long time, so that Eminem's involvement in the conversation doesn't become bigger news than the conversation itself.
Coming across this idea as eloquently expressed as it was by this writer really made me stop, and think, and recognize the obvious truth of what he says — as if I'd known it before, but never felt it so sharply as when he articulated it well.
Janice GewirtzMountain Lakes, N.J. To the Editor: Re "Observation, Not Participation" (Inside The Times, March 8): Peter Baker, chief White House correspondent for The New York Times, and other Times journalists speak eloquently about the need for political impartiality, objectivity and trust in their professional lives.
Baseball can be slow and boring but not with these guys involved — a fire-breathing pitcher who can't see the plate until he gets glasses and a cocky leadoff hitter who "may run like Mays but [who hits] like s---," as manager Lou Brown eloquently puts it.
During the gathering's opening session, Kohr spoke passionately and eloquently to 18,000 AIPAC conference attendees about the need to stand in opposition to those who seek to unravel the bonds that have bound the U.S. and Israel in solidarity since the Jewish State was established in 1948.
And with an expert technical team — which includes Riccardo Hernandez (set), Howell Binkley (lighting) and Elaine McCarthy (projections) — and the eloquently understated musician and composer Marcus Shelby, who provides a gentle accompaniment on a bass violin, Ms. Smith draws us into an ever-mutating, ever-expanding discussion.
To the Editor: Re "As the U.S. Disengages, Peril Ahead for the World" (Op-Ed, June 15): François Delattre, France's departing ambassador to the United Nations, eloquently calls on America to rise above preoccupation with daily provocations and insults to our values and to civil discourse.
Spend an afternoon with him, and you will hear him discoursing eloquently on any subject you might bring up, from evolutionary theory to the workings of modern capitalism to the films of Peter Greenaway (whose obsession with systems of representation, be they numbers or zoology, overlaps with his own).
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads I came to know Gateway Projects Spaces through attending a brunch given by the Flux Art Fair, where the co-director Jasmine Wahi spoke eloquently about the misguided prejudices some arts organizations have that ordinary folks won't typically be interested in contemporary art.
"As Steve Jobs so eloquently described the Apple ecosystem at his last WWDC in 2011, &aposIf the hardware is the brain and sinew of our products, the software in them is their soul&apos," Monness Crespi Hardt analyst Brian White in a research note ahead of the event.
As Vox's David Roberts has argued eloquently, climate change campaigners have learned by now — or should have — that you will not be able to truth-bomb your way to political victory over opponents who are in thrall to an entirely distinct reality, a reality untethered to observable phenomena.
By providing some credible perspective that — in keeping with the truly American values eloquently expressed this weekend in his dedication of the National Museum of African American History and Culture — vouches for the basic honor of her life and public service, whatever her considerable shortcomings as a presidential candidate.
" Speakers echoed the unity theme once more from the stage when Milwaukee Sheriff David Clarke eloquently stated, "In 1963, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. wrote passionately about 'the interrelatedness of all communities and states' and about our 'inescapable network of mutuality, tying us in a single garment of destiny.
Much has already been written, eloquently and incisively, about the emotional and cultural significance of a bulletproof black hero in the time of #BlackLivesMatter, and there's no denying the visceral visual impact of an African-American man in a hoodie striding through a hail of gunfire and emerging unscathed.
Our own Cameron Kunzelman wrote eloquently on why it's so interesting, as a practice: Speedrunning has always fascinated me from that point of view, particularly if you dive into the history of how particular glitches or tricks are found, since they bely so many tricks of game development.
But Angela Davis said quite eloquently in the 80s that, just because of the number of black women incarcerated were smaller than the numbers of black men, that didn't mean their experiences didn't have something to teach us about larger pattern of racial injustice and white supremacy in America.
But it's also the case that Trump has made a clear appeal to the economic interests of working-class Republicans, promising to defend their retirement programs and claiming (spuriously but eloquently) that his skills as a trade negotiator will raise their wages and bring back their lost jobs.
The result of our interviews, and subsequent ones by Leslye Davis and Margaret Cheatham Williams, Times video journalists, is "The American Thanksgiving," an interactive article that looks at families across the country, and at the dishes on their Thanksgiving tables that speak most eloquently about their heritage and traditions.
This was the question posed (far more eloquently) by food activist Tristram Stuart in his 2012 TED talk and, now, four years later, what lead him to create Toast Ale, the first British beer to be made with surplus bread from bakeries that would otherwise be sent to landfill.
If the United States players often make a point of saying how proud they are to play for the country — one that has been eloquently made by Adam Jones, whose father and brother have served in the military — they have also had a couple of sore spots repeatedly exposed.
What a shift in power would mean for the nation The most likely outcome agreed upon by pollsters and pundits on Tuesday is one that would eloquently enshrine America's polarization -- Democrats would win a narrow majority in the House and Republicans would keep the Senate, and possibly gain a few seats.
The financial conditions paradox, eloquently described by Morgan Stanley's Ellen Zentner during the question-and-answer session, is that while conditions have loosened on the expectation of significant Fed policy loosening, a failure to deliver upon the expected rate cuts will lead to tighter financial conditions, thereby requiring more Fed accommodation.
"The two presidents speaking out so forcefully and eloquently is a warning that some basic principles of democracy that both parties have long supported at home and abroad are in jeopardy," said Antony J. Blinken, who served as Mr. Obama's deputy secretary of state and attended Mr. Bush's speech on Thursday.
Helen Miller, who took care of the sick and the elderly for nearly 21995 years in Chicago while championing her fellow home care workers, fighting for greater pay and benefits as a union leader and speaking eloquently about the dignity of their work, died on March 21999 in Louisville, Miss.
Many of the 50 or so people who came to the community meeting seemed to appreciate the sentiments behind the effort — one man spoke eloquently about how when friends came to visit, they immediately wanted to go to San Francisco — but were not keen on Arena Green as the location.
Some local blogs explored the phenomenon a while back, such as in the eloquently titled 2010 post "Listen Bitch, I'm going to put you up on some fucking game right now." from Uptown Almanac; or travel writer and former San Francisco mayoral candidate Broke-Ass Stuart's breakdown of the cutty bang in 2011.
His presence on the podium was also a valedictory for an exceptional man and president who will be remembered for eloquently defending the founding precepts of the country — even as he used those precepts to expand the mandate of inclusiveness and broaden the definition of what it means to be an American.
Last December, the Monterey Bay Aquarium eloquently noted that Apple's squid emoji has a "siphon" on the front — but apparently, the siphon is actually supposed to appear on the back of the squid: / ̄ ̄ ̄\  ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄|  ー __ | Not even squidding |  ◉ ◉ | the siphon should \   ▱ /∠ be behind the head \   | rn it just looks like /   \ a weirdo nose: / |       ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ ̄ pic.twitter.
"Don't get me wrong," the group admin wrote, "I'm sorry that [name redacted] is having issues and feels he must so eloquently announce to everyone that he is GIVING UP." The admin suggested solutions to fixing Ring products that were often more labor-intensive or expensive than setting up the device itself.
And it was compounded by the fact that Rubio used the same talking point even more times later in the debate: Say what you will about 2008-era Barack Obama, but he was a first-term senator who could speak eloquently in impromptu settings — or, at least, could speak extemporaneously at all.
"The prospective nominee expressed his ambition to 'tame the block like he brought down the Soviet Union', eloquently supported dissolution of the European Union and explicitly bet in the demise of the currency within months," the leaders of liberal and conservative parties said in a letter to the presidents of the European Council and Commission.
Jordyn Woods might be well on her way to fashion world domination: She's made a name for herself as a model (and spoken eloquently about the issues the industry still faces in regards to body inclusivity), and built quite the social profile (having Kylie Jenner as a close pal definitely doesn't hurt in that department).
No art in "Aging Pride" speaks more eloquently to our collective power to reimagine old age than a clip from the German choreographer Pina Bausch's "Kontakthof" — her 1978 masterpiece of lonely-hearts on the dance floor, which she created for her company of dancers in Wuppertal, Germany, but later restaged with volunteers over 65.
I would also urge people to seek out and read the works of these women — especially the numerous texts of Bell Hooks, who has so written eloquently about the brutality and cruelty black women endure and, again, has made central to her work the issue of erotic transformation as crucial to any truly revolutionary change.
If you're concerned about hitting the holy grail that is 60 FPS without looking like you're, as my colleague Sam Rutherford stated so eloquently, "hosting a one person rave," there are other laptops with enough power to suit your needs, like the MSI GS65 Stealth, which has a 1080p display along with a lightning-quick 144Hz refresh rate.
Having excoriated Russia, Mr Nunes then explained that it was also important to focus on the leaks from within the federal bureaucracy that had resulted in Michael Flynn, the national-security adviser, losing his job for covering up conversations with the ambassador for Russia, the country Mr Nunes had just so eloquently denounced as an adversary.
However, as her book eloquently indicates, the effect of these artworks is not merely to bring our wasteful habits into sight and therefore into mind; trash can in fact be utilized as a mode of understanding the key global capitalist forces that drive our world — and which are driving us to the brink of self-destruction.
I am just making the point that Gregg Jarrett made really eloquently that there is multiple acts of corruption and political malfeasance involved and Sean, I say it as a proud and loyal Democrat, I want the whole thing cleaned up and that includes as Gregg Jarrett said, a special prosecutor to look at multiple potential crimes.
This, after all, from a man who during the dotcom boom in the late 1990s explained eloquently why he and partner Charlie Munger steered clear of technology: "Our problem - which we can't solve by studying up - is that we have no insights into which participants in the tech field possess a truly durable competitive advantage," Buffett wrote in 1999.
Is it possible, though, to say that the 'real' Melanie is not the three-year-old who's easily terrified, and the 16-year-old who flirts, and the 64-year-old who's sitting on the sofa in Remy Aquarone's consulting room, talking eloquently about a sense of being that she now realizes is so different to most people's?
While Ryan and Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi both spoke eloquently about our common humanity in the wake of the attacks, within hours the shooting had grown deeply political -- due in large part to the fact that the shooter, James T. Hodgkinson, expressed a number of anti-Republican and anti-Trump sentiments on his social media feeds.
As theoretical physicist Richard Feynman eloquently put it in 23, it's a bit like the cell tower is a little blind bug resting gently atop the water on one end of a pool, and based only on the frequency and direction of waves that cause it to bounce up and down, it's able to reconstruct who's swimming and where.
As Michael Doran of the Hudson Institute has eloquently outlined, Iran's indications of nuclear breakout — and its increasingly bellicose behavior in the Persian Gulf — are intended to raise the specter of war with the United States, and prod increasingly nervous European nations to pressure the U.S. to back off its campaign of "maximum" economic and political pressure.
Earth is under siege by creatures from another realm, but through first the warrior-robots called Jaegers and then the ingenuity of two scientists (played by Charlie Day and Burn Gorman), humans are able to fight off the threat, seal off the void through which they're entering, and — as the movie so eloquently puts it — cancel the apocalypse.
The biologist E.O. Wilson eloquently argued against living in a world of crows and rats, and against the loss of beautiful, fragile species like snow leopards, white rhinos and tiny mouse lemurs; even if you never see a lemur or an arctic fox in person, the world can be a richer place by having such creatures in it.
Drew Olanoff, a former TechCrunch journalist whose father died in 2015 and left behind a charmingly dad-joke filled account, eloquently put this sentiment to words: "When humans use the things you build and you stop treating them like humans, but rather like bits and bytes and revenue dollars, you've given your soul away," Olanoff wrote.
Letter To the Editor: Re "Memories of a Real 'Witch Hunt' " (Op-Ed, July 5): Julie Garfield, the daughter of the movie star John Garfield, who was investigated by the House Un-American Activities Committee in the 1950s, eloquently expressed what many of us whose parents were investigated during the McCarthy era experienced and still bear to this day.
Blanchard may want adults to stop calling out teens for their allegedly dramatic antics, but she's also proof that grown-ups need to start respecting Generation Z. The actress may not be old enough to vote yet, but she's still spoken eloquently about topics like intersectional feminism, using her voice at protests to fight for causes that she believes in.
But the reaction this has received and the connection I feel with so many of artists who have submitted their work from places I have never been to, who have had life experiences so different from my own, and here they are eloquently expressing the same fear and anger and hope that I myself am experiencing...this is so powerful.
Well, last year, the FCC got very close to approving such a strategy, which would have created a software-based solution to the problem, effectively replacing the CableCard (which Wired eloquently called "a technological annoyance beyond many people's willingness to endure") with an app on your Roku or Apple TV. There was a lot of back-and-forth on this issue.
In Doris Lessing's book Out of the Fountain (1975) she eloquently writes of the diamond cutter's process: A man may spend a week, or even weeks, studying it, accumulating powers of attention, memory, intuition, till he has reached that moment when he finally knows a tap, no more, at just that point of tension in the stone will split it exactly so.
But even though the basement floods regularly, even though the cold wind flows through a crack in the door, even though the couple have seen tough times — their son had a near-fatal illness as a baby, her mother died of cancer, his mother suffers from Alzheimer's — Shapiro clings eloquently to her faith that they'll make it through it all.
"Even more than his predecessors, Zeid fully embraced the role of U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights as 'conscience for the world,' eloquently using his voice to become 'a sort of nightmare' for dictators, demagogues, and anti-democratic foes," said Felice Gaer, director of the American Jewish Committee's Jacob Blaustein Institute for the Advancement of Human Rights, in New York.
In a recent interview that has already become essential reading, Steven Universe creator Rebecca Sugar eloquently put words to what many queer adults (former queer children) have always known: telling queer stories in children's media is one way that we can "let children know that they belong in this world," especially those who may get the message from other parts of society that they don't.
Dwayne The Rock Johnson went on The Tonight Show on Wednesday night to tell Jimmy Fallon about his new movie Hobbs & Shaw, his very cute daughter, why his massive cheat meals are like church... and also to speak eloquently and with genuine empathy and understanding about why he supports the people protesting the building of a giant telescope at a sacred site on Hawai'i's Mauna Kea peak.
Now my son has become a free diver and as I recently watched him dive silently, on a single breath, his body elongated with outsize fins, unencumbered by tanks, regulators and the noise of escaping bubbles, I saw what James so eloquently described in his book — a human being interacting with the ocean and marine life in a manner few people can ever experience.
Ted CruzRafael (Ted) Edward CruzTrump moves forward with F-16 sale to Taiwan opposed by China The Hill's Campaign Report: Battle for Senate begins to take shape O'Rourke says he will not 'in any scenario' run for Senate MORE — who could yet win the nomination; former Hewlett-Packard CEO Carly Fiorina, possibly the best performer in the entire primary season, who eloquently endorsed Cruz; former Texas Gov.
Not only is the upscale wing of the Democratic Party an unreliable ally of the left on economic issues — as I have noted in this column before and as Lily Geismer and Matthew D. Lassiter eloquently pointed out in The Times last week — but Enos demonstrates that the liberal resolve of affluent Democrats can disintegrate when racially or ethnically charged issues like neighborhood integration are at stake.
In her book, WELCOME TO PAINTERLAND: Bruce Conner and the Rat Bastard Protective Association (University of California Press, 19573), Anastasia Aukeman has written eloquently and thoroughly about the milieu in which this iconoclastic group of artists, poets, musicians, and publishers thrived from 1957  — when Conner and wife, Jean Sandsted, arrived in San Francisco from Lincoln, Nebraska  — to the day "The Rose" was removed from DeFeo's apartment.
In 2016, President Obama relied on the Antiquities Act of 1906 (signed by Theodore Roosevelt) to set aside 1.35 million acres of public land in southeastern Utah, intending to protect for all time more than 100,000 sacred Native American sites, not to mention a contained landscape upon which the narrative of time has been written more eloquently and indelibly than anywhere else on earth.
To: David BrooksFrom: Paul Krugman O.K., since David has written eloquently about the importance of humility, I offer the services of an actor dressed as the Roman slave who, it's claimed, would be assigned to stand behind a general celebrating a triumph, continually whispering "Sic transit gloria mundi" in the hero's ear to remind him that he was, all the same, just a mortal man.
Jeff FlakeJeffrey (Jeff) Lane FlakeArpaio considering running for former sheriff job after Trump pardon Overnight Energy: Warren edges past Sanders in poll of climate-focused voters | Carbon tax shows new signs of life | Greens fuming at Trump plans for development at Bears Ears monument Carbon tax shows new signs of life in Congress MORE (R-Ariz.) eloquently defended Latinos from these scurrilous attacks, the Republican brand is now fused with Trump.
Over six weeks in 1971, Mr. Neville eloquently mounted his own defense; the comedian Marty Feldman was called as an expert witness; John Lennon and Yoko Ono recorded a pop single ("God Save Us") to raise funds for the defense; and Anna Wintour, a young British national, offered to marry Mr. Neville, who was her boyfriend and boss at the magazine, to keep him from being deported after he was convicted.
Dalloway," by Virginia Woolf (reading again after I recently heard Michael Cunningham talk eloquently about it); "Lost Connections," by Johann Hari; "Night Sky With Exit Wounds," by Ocean Vuong; "When I Was a Twin," by Michael Klein; "How to Change Your Mind," by Michael Pollan; "Barracoon," by Zora Neale Hurston; "Winners Take All," by Anand Giridharadas; the poems of Hafiz; "The Collected Poems of Lucille Clifton, 1965-2010.
"The past 40 years eloquently prove that the path, theory, system and the culture of Socialism with Chinese Characteristics pioneered in the wake of the Third Plenary session of the 11th (Communist Party of China) Central Committee by the Chinese people of all ethnic groups rallying under the leadership of the CPC are completely correct, and that CPC theory line and policy that have since taken shape are completely correct," Xi said.
It would be ironic -- as well as encouraging and highly unlikely -- if the result of this sordid affair of foreign hacking could be a national learning experience about American unexceptionalism, one that leads to a joint declaration by both Republican and Democratic candidates that clearly and eloquently states that neither of them wants what was done to Salvador Allende to be done to them or to their people, not now, not ever.
In between honorees' speeches, two students who have benefited from OppNet's intensive program spoke eloquently about their experiences: Harvard-bound freshman Ethan Ambrose, who earned an internship working at a pediatrician's office after joining OppNet after helping his own mother complete her college education by babysitting his infant sister, and Kelly Tran, who's deciding between Swarthmore, Vassar, Franklin & Marshall and Tufts and was her Vietnamese-immigrant parents' English translator from age 8.
Ms. Hase (pronounced HAH-suh) made architectural photographs, portraits, landscapes, advertisements and reportage to earn her living through the growing German illustrated press during the years leading up to World War II. Yet her art, which spoke eloquently in the modernist photographic language that the Bauhaus visual theorist Laszlo Moholy-Nagy called the New Vision (unexpected angles and compositions that responded to a world remade by technology) stayed quietly in her studio.
Celie blossomed and finally found the courage to take her freedom back; Billie Holiday fearlessly sang "Strange Fruit" for white audiences in a time where she wasn't even allowed to use the same bathroom due to Jim Crow laws; Angela Davis eloquently spoke (and still does) truth to the masses in an anti-black, male-dominated society; Nina Simone was a rebel, filled with passion and fierceness who continued to speak out through her music.
Since Brand has spoken eloquently in the past about issues with gun violence in the US, I wanted to use part of our conversation in the latest episode of my podcast, I Think You're Interesting, to discuss the Recovery mindset as it might apply to gun control in the US, by asking him if he thinks a whole country could become addicted to something — in this case, the power that comes from wielding a firearm.
Yardley eloquently speaks to many of these, and I would add a few more, some trivial but still noteworthy: the rampant advance of capitalism, ranging from the commercialization of Halloween to the corporate naming of our sports stadiums and other public buildings; feminism and civil rights becoming dirty words; the rebirth of exclusiveness and elitism, like the Greek system and brand-only consumerism; and wearing one's religion (read: Christian) like a lapel pin.
In my still somewhat delirious condition, I felt that what was needed was someone to celebrate the Via Alpina's vision of the good life—to sing the goulash and polenta, the bunk beds and the benches, the inextricable joys and pains of the trail, the Hobbitish congeniality of it all—as eloquently as Shelley had sung the desolation of the glaciers or Rousseau the uplifting terror of the torrents and the precipices.
Responding to White's criticism that he was refusing to fulfill his media obligations in the run-up to his rematch with Nate Diaz at UFC 200, the reigning UFC featherweight champion argued eloquently on Facebook that as the most profitable fighter in the history of the UFC he's done more than his fair share of promotional work over the years and that he believes he's earned the right to a little leeway from the company he's helped rocket into the mainstream.
If Klobuchar runs with Kennedy, she would be paired with a four-term congressman who speaks eloquently about moral capitalism, economic policies that lift all Americans, health care that protects every citizen, human rights that would lift the spirits of believers in democracy everywhere, and common decency to feed the hungry, lift the needy and love the poor as Jesus taught in the Sermon on the Mount, which I consider the noblest and wisest words ever spoken in the history of humanity.
" As The Light Years progresses, Rush writes eloquently and candidly about his adventures and travails through a short stint in Catholic boarding school (where a too-friendly priest started paying him inappropriate nightly visits), expulsion from said school (for kissing a boy), and then years spent on a drug-filled journey through the underground countercultures across the US. Favorite passage: "To Mom, the past was something you sped by — and best to do it at ten miles over the speed limit, in a brand-new Cadillac.
The actress and author of several novels urges readers to turn to words of past presidents, including her father, former President George W. Bush and former President Barack ObamaBarack Hussein ObamaBen Shapiro: No prominent GOP figure ever questioned Obama's legitimacy 85033 real problems Republicans need to address to win in 2020 Obama's high school basketball jersey sells for 0,000 at auction MORE, who she writes all "spoke eloquently, with somber compassion and with reverence for the pain of the victims and the shock of a saddened country" after tragedies.
Appearing on Jimmy Kimmel Live to promote his EP There's Alot Going On, released earlier this year, Mensa delivered a blistering version of the track "16 Shots", which addresses institutional racism in the US. Part performance art, part public service announcement, the performance saw Mensa flanked and dragged around the stage by faceless figures dressed as riot police – a clear reference to this year's many prominent Black Lives Matter protests against police brutality – before stopping the music to speak eloquently on policy and why every vote against Trump matters.
Politicians as diverse as Vice President Mike PenceMichael (Mike) Richard PenceThe Hill's Morning Report - Trump on defense over economic jitters FEC chair calls on Trump to provide evidence of NH voter fraud Five years after Yazidi genocide, US warns ISIS is rebounding MORE and former Vice President Joe BidenJoe BidenEight Democratic presidential hopefuls to appear in CNN climate town hall Hill Reporter Rafael Bernal: Biden tries to salvage Latino Support Biden, Buttigieg bypassing Democratic delegate meeting: report MORE have spoken eloquently about the value of budgets as moral documents that allow us to express our national priorities.

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