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226 Sentences With "engenders"

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

Click here to view original GIFThe major disparity "XXX" engenders.
How knowledge engenders power, and how that power perpetuates itself.
The trauma engenders sympathy among those who know the story.
A report instigated by an interested party always engenders suspicion.
The authorities' tendency to hush up such problems engenders public distrust.
Truman's pride engenders some sympathy in the rearview mirror of history.
The growing tension between Dean and Allison engenders the most dramatic heat.
But there is something about large retail banks that engenders monetary malfeasance.
The brutal caste system that meritocratic competition engenders fuels politically potent rage.
The president and the reactions he engenders are not easy to predict.
What's unexpected is the odd sympathy the film engenders for them, particularly Viktor.
Instead, it engenders a pattern of thought opposed to other cultures of humanity.
Community service not only creates shared purpose, it engenders cohesion across demographic lines.
There's a high, from the logistical boldness it requires, the smallness it engenders.
The party's fear of bold ideas engenders a public fear of the same.
All of this engenders a fierce sense of ownership of his career among fans.
Bloodless revolutions from Armenia to Lebanon are about ending the fatalism corrupt rule engenders.
But hate only engenders more hate and there's no purpose in hate,' Bro said.
You could argue that swapping these snippets of information as we process them engenders intimacy.
However, it is precisely the prospect of massive violence which engenders the possibility of peace.
One of podcasts' greatest strengths is the personal connection it engenders between voice and listener.
She came to England alone, with no knowledge of the controversy that immigration engenders here.
She engenders a pragmatic hope that goes beyond what President Obama tried to accomplish nationally.
Having a nominee who engenders such mistrust poses complications for other aspects of the convention.
Most of us don't have designer suits, we don't have pagodas … it engenders some resentment.
The unremarkable appearance of Pantone's offices belies the excitement the brand engenders around the world.
Sexual assault engenders it, and being forced to play nice with your rapist perpetuates it.
Sometimes this engenders pushback from the West, but it is all part of a strategy.
Maddox points out the loyalty a move like continuing to pay workers engenders in employees.
I speak for the wolf and the life force it engenders not as an expert.
While purportedly written as a means to promote tolerance, the book engenders prejudice against the police.
It is nevertheless the map that precedes the territory—precession of simulacra—that engenders the territory.
"Enlarging the Shasta Dam is a project that engenders conflict," said Westlands' general manager, Mr. Birmingham.
More importantly, he didn't have experience with the open debate and criticism that domestic policy engenders.
Haley's statements throughout the campaign showed she is unafraid to criticize Trump even if it engenders pushback.
Despite the clamor and keyed-up emotions that luxury engenders, the reality is it's struggling to survive.
The erosion of the middle ground and the crash in trust that it engenders is not new.
And I hope that this knowledge engenders less judgment of people who use meth, and greater empathy.
But the payoff will come in the eating and in the fellowship it engenders at your table.
Implicit bias disassociates racism from overt villainy and, as a consequence, engenders less defensiveness in the dialogue.
No other platform engenders the kind of back and forth, heated mini-mind competitions that Twitter does.
This brings us, finally, to the kind of speaking "as a woman" that engenders defensiveness and hostility.
He still engenders bad will among certain owners in a way that does no favors for his son.
Mr Rasul is not very worried by the "little bit of overshooting" that excitement at new methods engenders.
We let go more easily and this engenders a certain kind of generosity and gratitude in our life.
But while new media has changed the dynamic of flattery, it cannot contain the corruption that sycophancy engenders.
I think it engenders a sense of purpose in Cas that he hasn't had for a long time.
Percoco tells me the sense of accomplishment that engenders is why clients say they're telling friends about Titan.
"Just like one of Unilever's highest profile products, Marmite, Polman engenders strongly differing opinions from investors," Wood said.
Carricarte said that Knight's "platform" as a surgeon engenders a sense of trust among patients and their families.
That arrangement engenders a perennial pop-star anxiety: Is it the songs that have fans, or the singer?
To many, "America First" does not sound like a nation that plays well with others or engenders trust.
And while Instagram lacks the fact-checking safeguards of more traditional scientific sources, it engenders a sincere, authentic experience.
As just noted, the net metering system engenders a cross-subsidy to solar PV customers from other power consumers.
I don't really know what is it about Los Angeles that engenders that but I think it's really interesting.
But even with all of the cynicism Washington engenders, senators still take pride in the high ideals of politics.
Another important aspect of Professor Porath's research is the extent to which a leader's civility engenders respect and admiration.
Unlike Trump, who engenders loathing among Democrats and love from his base, incumbent Republicans evoke disdain from all comers.
But the arc it engenders — from the film stills to the aging starlets — is an important one in Sherman's career.
Their politics is driven by their psychological profile and the worldview it engenders, not by professional organizers or political consultants.
This is the attitude that Chris Thomas espouses and engenders in his thought-provoking new book, "Inheritors of the Earth".
VICE: At any point in the process of fundraising, were you surprised at the response Joan engenders among her fans?
The thing is, disconnecting from digital devices, meditating, creating, and processing trauma — all the activities coloring supposedly engenders — aren't easy.
By putting materials in conversation with each other the collection engenders more in depth and multilayered perspectives on singular topics.
It engenders that bungee-recoil reading wherein your eyes shoot right back up to the title after the last line.
Labyrinth Theater Company's Dolphins and Sharks centers on the necessity of wage labor and the human relations our system engenders.
"Our involvement in this terrible war is one thing that engenders more terrorism," Rand Paul (R-Ky.) told NBC on Sunday.
I feel like the internet engenders the widening of those communities, and cosplay is perhaps maybe one of the most spectacular.
His initial joy at reconnecting with Asiri, an old school friend, was soon replaced with a typical reaction Facebook engenders: FOMO.
Such diversity requires constant management, leading to an almost fetishistic attention to liberal unifying principles by Democratic activists, which engenders intolerance.
The openness, empathy, and selflessness it engenders can also make life with Williams seem like a more enlightened way of being.
This may be the country's greatest advantage, because it engenders a level of humility and a drive to constantly reinvent itself.
In "Restraining psychotic at holding station, Guam" and other works, her rapid strokes vividly portray the drama and despair war engenders.
The spat has been a public sensation in Italy, combining the particular mix of respect and hatred that Mr. Saviano engenders.
An ideal production does more: It balances the busyness of all these worlds with the pain and foolishness such busyness engenders.
They're nearly life-sized, and have a plain quality (stoic faces, straightforward poses) that engenders an equally plain acknowledgment: they're alive.
Directed by Charlotte Brathwaite, Dolphins and Sharks centers on the necessity of wage labor and the human relations our system engenders.
"Honda engenders more trust than any other brand," says Edwards, whose firm conducts one of the industry's largest annual psychographic consumer surveys.
Space debris, as one example in the specific — and more generally, a reminder that exponential change naturally engenders a reaction of fear.
Physical things anchor our gadget lust in the real world and ultimately soak up whatever goodwill the software on those gadgets engenders.
Bermudez's property engenders a sense of time travel, when water purity wasn't a romantic concept but a fact that necessitated real gratitude.
It's these kinds of ideas that proponents say a basic income unlocks—that life freed from waged labor engenders more, fuller life.
The feeling of insignificance this engenders, of being pressed up against a magnitude that could crush you, could almost be called sublime.
The art reflects on a cultural heritage that engenders belonging rather than exclusion, and highlights the process of creation rather than destruction.
These parallels all stem from the most significant similarity: both fathers died for a cause—a realization that engenders the book's catharsis.
Telling them they have to pay more or be denied insurance reduces empathy and engenders blame for crimes they did not commit.
The sculptures don't swallow you up; they are works you walk around, not through, which engenders a more conventional art/viewer relationship.
A Christopher Kane dress, decorated with diagrams from a botany textbook, contains aspects of a blueprint, the seed that engenders a final product.
Accordingly, the emotional power of her music and the intimacy it engenders with her fan base recedes into the background of the profile.
An issue of this import and complexity engenders deep feelings, and I thank you for the opportunity to share our position with you.
But the phantom oppression he engenders in the minds of his supporters manifests as actual oppression enacted on the bodies of women worldwide.
It engenders a sense of stress and urgency in me because I feel that, regardless of all my hard work, I've fallen behind.
Something about using it just engenders affinity, I enjoyed using this computer every day and was continually impressed at how well it multitasked.
I encourage him to rework the brand and the purchasing so that it easily engenders repeat purchases if a recipient loves the undies.
Kodak lent this device to filmmakers too, and it's clearly hoping to capitalize on the nostalgia the mere mention of Super 8 engenders.
A once-loathsome, smack-talking thief engenders some sympathy; a heavily medicated woman previously defined by her work deals with trouble at home.
The fact that Apple is sharing a new anonymized, non-personally identifiable information (PII), customer model with Goldman likely engenders two valid responses.
While he's always been gaffe-prone, his speech has grown tentative and meandering in a way that engenders sympathy but also profound anxiety.
This sensation is due, in large part, to the familiarity she projects onstage and engenders in her audience, regardless of the role she's playing.
But the fear he engenders has catalyzed the least democratic of our impulses: mob rule by the left and boss rule by the right.
Positive feedback tends to engender positive motivations, which draw on imagination and confidence; negative feedback engenders negative motivations, which draw on anxiety and fear.
Among Vermonters, Mr. Sanders still engenders a strong sense of loyalty, and his presence in the state Saturday was, for many, a welcome sight.
The myth of a "capitalist peace," in which economic integration undergirded by U.S. economic hegemony engenders mutual goodwill, remains far too common in America.
When you start to give and receive love in a way that's more personalized, it engenders an even deeper connection between you and your boo.
Disengaging will not cut America off from the world so much as leave it vulnerable to the turmoil and strife that the new nationalism engenders.
Matthew Panzarino writes about how no other social media platform engenders the kind of back and forth heated mini-mind competitions that Twitter does. 9.
Other early and important ones include Shakespeare's Othello [1603] and John Milton's Paradise Lost [1667], which includes a description of the fear an eclipse engenders.
The result is Deeper Remixed, an album that engenders Vasquez already gritty, gothic music with dance club catharsis fit for a early morning Berghain bender.
Others share a common language that engenders trust, most notably the so-called Five Eyes countries: the United States, Britain, Australia, Canada and New Zealand.
Less a classic attack ad than a scolding one, it takes on added power because of the sympathy that he engenders, much of it wordlessly.
By the '90s, money, and the instincts for self-preservation that money engenders, had created a system of formalized control that holds to this day.
First, he swallowed the myth that unleashing generals and giving them tactical freedom somehow engenders better results in a war with a fundamentally political objective.
Recent decades have brought agreement that higher education is, if not a cure, then at least a protection against underemployment and the inequality it engenders.
Power, and the fear it engenders — not freedom, humanity, democratic institutions, and the rule of law — is what the Russian ruling elites value and respect.
The findings suggest that Apple, while still a massively influential force in the industry, engenders less positive feelings, and in some cases more explicitly negative ones.
Our client-first approach engenders trust, and has enabled us to establish leadership positions in a number of complex fields in financial markets around the world.
Plus, it has to be said, he looks like a white, American or European child, which engenders sympathy across a broad swath of the developed world.
The pleasures "normal" Facebook use provides — keeping up with friends, baby pictures — are balanced out by the pains it engenders — weakened in-person social ties, depression.
Lawmakers not seeking re-election are often the most candid about the slavish devotion Mr. Trump engenders with voters — and the pressure it puts on them.
And yet it's impossible not to empathize with the rats; most of what they whisper to you is grounded, realistic in a way that engenders sympathy.
And honestly, it's not the kind of display that engenders a lot of faith that the product will be coming to market in just under two months.
While economic globalisation and technology have moved the world toward convergence of unprecedented scope and at a swift clip, the cultural and political imagination engenders the opposite.
All this debt engenders the stag part of stagflation because it is difficult to grow and invest for growth in an economy under such high debt burdens.
"If anything, regulation will only increase bitcoin's rate of growth as regulation lends credibility and engenders trust," Nicholas Gregory, CEO of London-based cryptocurrency firm CommerceBlock, said.
The ongoing enforcement of marijuana prohibition financially burdens taxpayers, encroaches upon civil liberties, engenders disrespect for the law, and disproportionately impacts young people and communities of color.
"No point in being specific, it just engenders immune reactions from other players so we're just going to be a little quiet for a while," he said.
There is something nihilistic, in House of Cards as in life, about relentless ambition and plotting that only feeds on itself and engenders more ambition and plotting.
Having your ears candled engenders a state of relaxed focus, both on the flame burning mere inches away from your ear and on your friend's presence beside you.
This is a love letter to Burial, an ode to the feelings that this strange and singular producer, this impersonal poet of the deeply poetic, evokes and engenders.
Soft Sounds from Another Planet embodies one of indie-rock's central dilemmas: the contrast between acoustic and electric sound, which engenders the consequent contrast between electric and electronic.
That manufactured surface also engenders an astonishing array of unnatural textures that contribute tangibly to the music's aural world, the organic exception being Bieber's sweeter flavor of croon.
The belief that the Jews have no right to the land and Israel is to be destroyed, which engenders a culture of hate and incitement, needs to end.
The shift from the previous painting to this one engenders a sense of pressure and release, the impression of a hand squeezing the space and then letting go.
It is, of course, admirable for Ms. Lázaro to depict the full range of burdens and stresses that bedevil her characters, and the socioeconomic climate that engenders them.
The kind of robustly left, disruptive campaign Sanders is building engenders its own kind of unity—just not, according to the Times, among the right kinds of people.
Then and now, officials and experts said, the Russians and others could bank on one constant: America's partisan divide, which engenders deep cynicism among Democrats and Republicans alike.
Like every other important religion in history, Buddhism engenders powerful protective feelings among its followers, especially when sacred history and national history become intertwined, as happens in Sri Lanka.
It was an attempt to shield girls from the shame of being uncircumcised -- and therefore unmarriageable -- while protecting them from the horrors in childbirth the more extreme version engenders.
Having a trans person at the exhibition's helm engenders a high level of trust between the curator and the donors, as evidenced by the emotional openness of the labels.
It seems that the United States's problem with inequality in the military has more to do with what over-militarization engenders, like making violence (and violence towards women) commonplace.
One is a childish fantasy that often engenders a lifelong obsession with its unbelievable heroes, leading to an emotionally stunted, socially crippled adulthood, unable to deal with the real world.
Although some critics may argue that child labor in any form is unacceptable, proponents of the bill say that working for one's family engenders a sense of discipline and responsibility.
Voters recognize that the ongoing enforcement of marijuana prohibition financially burdens taxpayers, encroaches upon civil liberties, engenders disrespect for the law, and disproportionately impacts young people and communities of color.
The first factor that engenders the Islamic State is the organic crisis of governance, and ungovernable spaces, that plagues Syria, Iraq, Libya, Yemen, Egypt's Sinai Peninsula, West Africa and Afghanistan.
And as her mother explained, Ogunbowale engenders a two-way connection, something of particular import for W.N.B.A. teams hoping to win both on the court and at the box office.
Hockey engenders a connection between anthem singers and fans, who grow familiar with a voice, its cadence and its crannies, and anticipate it game after game, as soothing as a lozenge.
I thought that I was purchasing the more recent one, the one that promises the kind of cozy contentedness — hygge, to use the word much in vogue — that good design engenders.
Rebels said it amounts to forced displacement of Assad's opponents from main urban centres in western Syria and engenders demographic change because most of the opposition, and Syria's population, are Sunni.
In a company blog post, Twitter's Wayne Huang writes: Businesses have known for years that great customer service engenders brand loyalty; this research shows a wide range of additional benefits to businesses.
Protected from the outside world by the otherworldly bubble of a family park, the festival engenders a sort of unending stretch of time within which to crack on and on and on.
Although unconvinced by Fidden's global genocide theory, both are avowed anti-vaxxers—believing that vaccinating children against common diseases like measles actually engenders the spread of disease, rather than being a preventative.
When aid breaks the cycle of poverty, the mechanism often seems to be that it raises self-confidence and engenders a new sense of possibilities that people then work harder to achieve.
The delay is an odd turn for a topic that engenders rare bipartisan support in Congress, where many lawmakers are eager to take harsh action against President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia.
The world of IoT opens up a lot of exciting technological possibilities for businesses around the world, but it's likely the structural and organizational changes it engenders that will be the longest-lasting.
And if Joker engenders sympathy for the devil, so to speak, then it's well within critics' and audience's rights to call it out and decry its moral bankruptcy if they think that's bad.
It's not that they're not doing their jobs — it's that they're not going the extra mile and being proactive, which engenders more voluntary, subjective encounters with the populace that can always go sideways.
"But having said that there are very strong feelings, and nobody engenders stronger feelings and says worse things or acts in a more confrontational manner than the President of the United States," he continued.
After 40 minutes, both humans and orbs exit, but the orbs float back in and the audience is encouraged to move into the space to see how their own movement engenders an aerial dance.
Women must instead assert and promote their intrinsically female traits of social connectedness and empathy, to lift and be lifted, because collaboration is what engenders social and environmental justice as well as personal success.
Sometimes it even engenders heated debate, as in the case of Chris Dave & the Drumhedz, whose late show at the Bowery Ballroom on Friday was a soup of fleeting rhythmic genius and unfocused meandering.
But while Curry's iconic performance overshadowed everything that was mediocre about the 1990 miniseries, Skarsgård's Pennywise and the many traditional horror scares he engenders aren't remotely the most interesting parts of this layered, knowing film.
But in the end, one can't help feeling that reading Rogers's exhibition—and the sense of confusion it engenders—as the embodiment of concerns so private they resist legibility seems like a a cop-out.
On a platform rife with drama, racist "pranks," and some of the worst commenters on the internet, Cooking With Dog was a welcome respite from the meanness, stupidity, and all-caps self-promotion YouTube engenders.
Among its other provisions, this law includes a mandate for the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) to tackle racial and other forms of segregation and the lack of access to opportunity it engenders.
While the International Energy Agency warned the world was drowning in a flood of crude oil, "the extreme pessimism this sort of rhetoric engenders .... risks setting the stage for the exact opposite outcome," he said.
Rebels say it amounts to forced displacement of Assad's opponents from Syria's main urban centres in the west of the country, and engenders demographic change because most of the opposition, and Syria's population, are Sunni.
If there is one country that has been in the vanguard of both demographic decline and the political exploitation of the frustrations it engenders, it is neither Japan nor any of the countries just discussed.
For a show based on a superhero comic and set in an alternate timeline (in which Richard Nixon was important enough to merit a bust on Mount Rushmore), Watchmen engenders a surprising level of resonance.
The ongoing enforcement of cannabis prohibition financially burdens taxpayers, encroaches upon civil liberties, engenders disrespect for the law, impedes legitimate scientific research into the plant's therapeutic properties, and disproportionately impacts young people and communities of color.
This proves what dealmakers have always known: that volatility and uncertainty are the enemies of capital formation, and a trade agenda that engenders such volatility and uncertainty will curtail or at the very least postpone investment.
Showing the passions that Raphael's work engenders, the entire scientific committee at the Uffizi resigned last month to protest at Schmidt's decision to loan one of its paintings to the Scuderie in defiance of their recommendation.
The finished product engenders a pronounced universe of diffuse influences, most of which are controlled by nation-states and non-state actors seeking to deliberately employ media-transmitted information against tailored target audiences for specific ends.
The Sisters aim isn't to mock nuns ("We are nuns," Sister Agnes Dei'Afta Tamara assures me), although religion itself, and the kind of hypocrisy it engenders in its most dogmatic adherents, is often subject to their satire.
"It's actually an effective strategy for a perpetrator to use," Freyd added, noting it engenders public sympathy and can increase the chances that the accuser will blame themselves, and that she coined the term to "defang" the strategy.
You don't have to be a baseball enthusiast to feel the spritz of hope, luck and determination our national pastime engenders in E. Ethelbert Miller, who has written a book's worth of poems in honor of the game.
Because when it's in conflict with other parties, the Trump administration can cast itself as a soldier in a kind of cultural war, and that war, and the resentment it engenders, is what gives its version of reality power.
"We now have to wait until the Court again rules that the deal is illegal and then, maybe, the EU and US can negotiate a credible arrangement that actually respects the law, engenders trust and protects our fundamental rights."
Amy Winehouse's reappearance makes a splash because of the tragic circumstances of her life and death — made widely known in the award-winning 2015 documentary Amy — and the devotion she engenders thanks to her life story and remarkable talent.
In almost any setting, rudeness does tend to beget rudeness, whether because the top people in a hierarchy are modeling it for those they should be teaching or because it engenders anger, stress and a desire to strike back.
Such legislation—and the pointed debate it engenders—sharply contrasts with the image of Virginia as a forward-thinking, Upper South state that began to emerge in 1989 with the victory of L. Douglas Wilder as the nation's first elective governor.
I am about thirteen years old and my body and mind are carried along by the energy that thinking engenders in me—the nearly phosphorescent ideas and possibilities I find in books, looking at pictures, and whenever I visit a museum.
Absent of his moral clarity and the style of leadership such vision engenders, questions are being left unanswered, the void is filling with ambiguity -- just as thunder clouds loom on a late summer afternoon, darkening the horizon gathering torrential fury.
The intellectual and political task ahead is at once to resist the ugliest manifestations of the new right-wing populism—the fears it plays on, the divisions it engenders—and to confront the consequences of globalism, technology, and cultural change.
Pumping engenders so many negative feelings in new mothers that there are regular hackathons to build better breast pumps, and a photo shoot depicting a new mom kicking and punching her breast pump a la Office Space went viral last year.
The government-citizen disconnect also engenders a participatory tilt in politics, as those who are most likely to take part are least aware that government has come to their aid and less likely to support expanded social provisions for others.
The domestic, as Mailhot observes, interferes with the writer's ability to complete the memory, jot down the thought (those soapy hands), but it is still the site, the source, of the realization, the place that paradoxically engenders and inhibits writing.
There is a particular madness to the idea that we have reached the point where a head scarf, a full beard or even a family name engenders so much animosity -- animosity that is leading to hate crimes and anti-religious and ethnic violence.
Despite the light dusting of pop physics — specifically, the "many worlds" version of multiverse theory, in which virtually every choice made by every sentient being engenders a new universe — Crouch is effectively repurposing and joining two well-worn channels of fictional speculation.
When Alexandra, a young American writer living in Sofia, happens upon an urn of cremated remains, her search to learn about the deceased and to find his family engenders an exploration of Bulgaria's fraught history from the Second World War to the present.
Bishop Garrison, an army veteran, joins the small but distinguished ranks of vets who use both their personal experience and speculative fiction to examine the future of warfare and the trauma it engenders through a lens you quite literally cannot find anywhere else.
In a sign of the particular interest that Wells Fargo engenders, the bank's main regulator, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, said it had informed the bank in writing that it did not object to the choice of Mr. Scharf.
"Having this extra edge with a space that engenders creativity allows you to work with the latest technology tools" — all while still connecting it back to the company&aposs culture — she told Business Insider, adding that it helps attract and retain talent.
It is therefore crucial to establish in our societies the concept of full citizenship and reject the discriminatory use of the term minorities, which engenders feelings of isolation and inferiority," reads the "Document on Human Fraternity for World Peace and Living Together.
PICA Director Amy Barrett-Lennard refers to the "complicity of the spectator" in witnessing the more gruesome aspects of the films, and this is key in that it engenders a personal responsibility of sorts: a burden that the viewer has to carry.
In fact, the repetitive nature of that cycle — and the helplessness that it engenders in David, Karen, and Vicki as parents struggling to navigate a mountain of specialists and advice to figure out what to do — is the true subject of Beautiful Boy.
The flip side of the dread The Americans engenders by pitting the Jennings marriage against the fate of the free world is the hope that arrives from knowing that whatever happens to Philip and Elizabeth, the rest of us get to survive.
"It's not that there aren't leakages, it's not that it doesn't matter what happens in the rest of the world," but after China's market turbulence and the European debt crisis, the U.S. focusing within engenders some major benefits, said Martin, senior U.S. economist at Barclays.
The sight of a bulletproof black man is inspiring: Hooded and unstoppable, Mike Colter's Luke Cage engenders all of my fantasies as a child who used to imagine being a superhero who, with powers, wanted to matter to those who mattered to me the most.
The show Radical Love at the Ford Foundation Gallery, curated by Jaishri Abichandani and Natasha Becker, engenders a particular critical response (at least in me), one that looks to answer the provocative questions the title raises: What kinds of love are modeled or enabled here?
I think any voter, regardless of party, who has survived and flourished in a long-term relationship will clearly recognize how meaningful the wisdom and tolerance, and empathy, and capacity for compromise that marriage engenders is perhaps the most telling qualification for serving as president.
He's the buzziest candidate in what could be a GIANT Democratic field and, if he passed on the 2020 race, it's not clear whether the energy and excitement he engenders among many party activists right now would continue for the next four or eight years.
In Edward Deci's seminal book on human motivation theory,Why We Do What We Do, he describes how "meaningful choice engenders willingness" and results in higher quality of decisions, and greater motivation and commitment to the task, all shown in research he's done over 20 years.
As she got older, however, she similarly found that cutting your hair short when you are a woman, and particularly when you are a fat woman, engenders this sudden absence of male attention; the kind of male attention women and femmes are generally taught to aspire to.
It's supposedly bad form to dive across the finish line and thanks to the special kind of know-it-all jingoism that the Olympics engenders for two weeks every four years, Americans were up in arms that Felix—an Olympics darling—got "robbed" by below-the-board tactics.
The film gets some meaningful — if heavy-handed — mileage out of exploring the way social media kicks in at this point, complete with a look at the rapid escalation of a viral news event into backlash and toxicity, as well as the ease with which social media engenders hypocrisy.
I have trouble engaging in the exercise, in part because I'm not part of the Oakland-based activism community the conference has attracted, and in part because I'm still thinking about an issue that was raised during the previous discussion on lookism: the deep sense of loneliness it engenders.
Largely pushing Lucious and the constant conflicts he engenders between his sons to the side, this week's focus was squarely on the queen as she attempted to bring her scatterbrained family together to impress the family of her once-again boyfriend, the New York City mayoral candidate Angelo DuBois.
They may not have a Ph.D. after their names, but the "ex-" before their names qualifies them to be true agents of transformation with firsthand knowledge of the obstacles that have destined lives to failure, the empathy that engenders long-term commitment; and 24-7 availability to those they serve.
To watch Richard mush into Festus Ezeli at the rim, make an uncontested putback, hook around Harrison Barnes off the dribble, and draw fouls on fast breaks is to know, most intimately, the character of these first two games, and to experience the pure banal letdown that a mismatched series engenders in viewers and fans.
And Liu's first collection is just as varied and full of thought experiments as The Hidden Girl, from an ice cube soul ("State Change") to the moment one soul engenders another in a kind of spiraling creation myth ("The Waves") to an explication of horrific, real war crimes ("The Man Who Ended History: A Documentary.").
But I do love that, as Todd VanDerWerff points out at Vox, it also engenders A Very Millennial changing of the guard, from the crusty old white men who clung to power (in both the Empire and the Rebellion but especially the Empire) to a diverse array of impressive young men and women of every conceivable background.
"I think that loyalty has always been a one-way street with Trump, and he doesn't really care about the wreckages he engenders as long as he comes out where he wants to be," said Tim O'Brien, a biographer who was sued by Mr. Trump over a book reporting that Mr. Trump had inflated his net worth.
I asked scholars and officials at the Niskanen Center — a Washington think tank that recently received favorable coverage for its efforts to resolve contemporary ideological division — whether they thought the Republican Party has come to recognize that prosperity helps Democrats, while economic adversity engenders hostility to immigrants, resentment of liberal elites and animosity among rural voters toward urban America.
That shows like The Daily are about letting yourself ... letting people into your lives, you know, journalists or the characters in the story, the Shannons or the Miriams, you know, the woman from Burkina Faso who was abused by her husband, and it just inevitably engenders understanding and humanity in a way that I think the rest of journalism is still struggling with.
The post on Medium goes on to explain why tipping is troublesome for any type of service-based industry—which is true—but in Uber's case the company claims it engenders inequality: Tipping might mean that two drivers make substantially different amounts for the same trip, or that drivers might spend more time picking up passengers in wealthier parts of town.
So I think part of our challenge going forward is how do we create oversight mechanisms that enable intelligence, law enforcement, to do their important duties in a way that both engenders confidence for the citizens we serve but at the same time acknowledges in order to do this, we can't just publicly get into the details of everything we do.
It is this consummate control of form, and the palpable presence it engenders, that felt so vital even against a Neo-Conceptual backdrop: the helmet-like head and dangling foot of "Leigh Bowery (Seated)"; the divan in "Benefits Supervisor Sleeping" (1995); and, most ravishingly, the fabric patterns in "Sleeping by the Lion Carpet" (1995-96) and "Portrait on Gray Cover" (1996).
" As our conversation shifted back to current events — it took place before Trump's latest pronouncements against women and a free press; the latest suicide bombing in Afghanistan; and the murder of the Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi at Saudi Arabia's consulate in Istanbul — Ono alluded to such horrific news and the sense of darkness and hopelessness it engenders: "We're all stuck in it.
While her story has most often been interpreted as a cautionary tale about the dangers of modern man's hubris as he pushes the limits of scientific knowledge — and it certainly is that — it is also, more powerfully, a story about the failure to recognize the humanity of those who don't look like us, and how that failure of sympathy itself engenders monsters.
But they knew, too, that what makes a stadium great is not just the quality of its finish but the feeling it engenders; they wanted to infuse it with a little of the magic that of Dortmund and Munich and Marseille, designing not just something to take the breath away, but a place to make fans scream their lungs hoarse.
The FBI's stonewalling of the document starting the Russia investigation engenders similar suspicions, especially since House Intelligence Committee Chairman Devin NunesDevin Gerald NunesJuan Williams: Trump, his allies and the betrayal of America Trump expected to nominate Texas GOP lawmaker to replace Dan Coats: report House Republicans claim victory after Mueller hearings MORE (R-Calif.), who has seen it, has reported it has no intelligence from official channels.
" For Butt, the heterogeneity of elements in Bach's Passions engenders a novelistic richness, a virtual world rife with ambiguity: "It is as if he had entered into a 'Faustian pact,' by which he sought for his music an extraordinarily strong power in articulating and enhancing faith within the Lutheran religion, but in doing so gave to music an autonomous logic and referential power that goes well beyond the original purpose.
Finally, in the episode we see that the one who's very likely the most lost in the illusion — or perhaps delusion — of personal specialness that fame engenders is the defendant himself, O.J. Simpson (Cuba Gooding, Jr.), who's lived most of his adult life as a figure of adulation whose celebrity and personal charisma have obtained things most people can only dream of — and frequently excused behavior that others would've been called out on.
Suspicion of authority, rejection of expertise, a fracturing of factual consensus, the old question of individual liberty versus the common good, the checkered history of medical experimentation (see: Tuskegee, Henrietta Lacks, Mengele), the cynicism of the pharmaceutical industry, the periodic laxity of its regulators, the overriding power of parental love, the worry and suggestibility it engenders, and the media, both old and new, that feed on it—there are a host of factors and trends that have encouraged the spread of anti-vaccination sentiment.
But it also — if you've been smartphone watching for long enough — engenders a distinct feeling of déjà vu… Specifically it looks rather like webOS running on the Palm Pre — a handset that was announced in 2009, after Jon Rubinstein, former SVP of Apple's iPod division, had been lured out of retirement in Mexico by Palm: A mobile device company with a (very) long history, and enough self-perspective to realize they needed an experienced product designer to help them surf the next wave of mobility: touchscreen computing.
In order to be effective in this respect, the DoD will need to develop a comprehensive technology strategy that will enable the DoD to align resources with priorities; restructure the acquisition directorate and implement other reform measures in a manner that comports to Congress' intent; make sure, particularly within the military departments, that the right executives are placed in the right positions and are appropriately resourced and empowered to execute their new roles and responsibilities using streamlined acquisition modalities designed to provide needed capability on time and on budget; interact with the commercial marketplace in a manner that engenders risk-taking — by commercial startups themselves and by their VC investors; and develop performance metrics that can help the DoD measure performance to plan and encourage military departments to look to the commercial-technology sector as a possible source of material solutions, wherever appropriate.

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