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"epitomize" Definitions
  1. epitomize something to be a perfect example of something

191 Sentences With "epitomize"

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

Here are four that epitomize Shitamachi's richness:  Shitamachi (21954), dir.
The broad principles contained within Proverbs still epitomize wisdom today.
Manson came to epitomize the darker side of 1960s counterculture.
It's hard to imagine two products that better epitomize Google itself.
The Associated Press: Smollett reactions epitomize polarized state of U.S. politics.
Our neighboring home states of Kentucky and Illinois epitomize this crisis.
So how did the EpiPen come to epitomize unfair drug pricing?
These two races epitomize how the 2018 campaign is playing out.
Few agencies epitomize this approach better than the Social Security Administration.
Those two men epitomize what it means to be a responsible bystander.
Rhodes, who feels a "mind meld" with Obama, seems to epitomize that insularity.
Infrastructure and energy are the two that epitomize the Port of Corpus Christi.
That rally, and that photograph, epitomize the phony "populism" of our current president.
He thrived in an era of gaudy excess and came to epitomize it.
The ruins feature religious temples that epitomize Maya innovation in astronomy and science.
Sophie Turner and Maisie Williams epitomize what it means to be best friends.
These two modern-day icons go way back and they pretty much epitomize #FriendshipGoals.
He will truly epitomize the pain we'll all feel if and when Cap dies.
That populism now threatens precisely the globalization that Davos and its cosmopolitan elites epitomize.
Ms. Quintanilla, 60, seemed to epitomize Houston's work ethic, its resolve and its shock.
She is used to epitomize the kinds of horrors that died with Hollywood's golden age.
In his brief time at the White House, Mr. Scaramucci seemed to epitomize its chaos.
No nominee can epitomize the political spoils system that the MSPB was established to halt.
These buttons — hidden out of sight unless the Joy-Cons are detached — epitomize the Switch's versatility.
The "Mad Money" host asked the Super Bowl XLVII champion what three words epitomize his coaching.
"They just really epitomize to me what a loving relationship should be," Mr. Williams's mother said.
To Trump, few countries epitomize this sin so starkly and on all three issues as Mexico.
In that Paleolithic worldview, no policy could epitomize strength more than one that takes the defendant's life.
In fact, it has come to epitomize environmental anguish in the age of fear for the planet.
Symbolically, they might be the preserved body rot of whomever they are intended to pity or epitomize.
They epitomize the Cubs' philosophy of developing young superstars and complimenting them with big-budget free agent signings.
But if the right to repair fight is showing us anything, it's that farmers epitomize resiliency and ingenuity.
Iowans may epitomize middle America, but their caucus last night kicked an oddly European election into high gear.
They epitomize America's best, and their pictures represent the kind of people we all should aspire to be.
They epitomize the American middle class, with a simple home in a small suburb of Kansas City, Missouri.
We can expect the speech, in a nutshell, to epitomize the shortcomings and dangers of the Trump presidency.
The placid drones that open Malibu's contribution "Held" epitomize this form, a Berlin-schooled take on synth drama.
Not to mention that it would epitomize the cronyist, self-interested dealings of Washington politicians and union heads.
M.L.B.'s decline, America's — the Yankees may contribute mightily to the former, but they only epitomize the latter.
He has come to epitomize, for them, polarization, failure and the degradation of the office of the presidency.
" Burke uses the word "character" a lot in describing this team, which he said will epitomize "the Canadian Way.
With its price and earnest use of technology, Snoo would seem to epitomize the hyper-attentive parenting of the affluent.
John Legend and Chrissy Teigen epitomize #RelationshipGoals, and the couple's honesty about their marriage makes us love them even more.
These and other townships surrounding Boston epitomize the gains the Democratic Party has made nationwide in liberal, well-educated suburbs.
Both men have seemed ambivalent about Trump's candidacy — and they epitomize the Republican establishment that the businessman has often blasted.
For the spring '17 campaign, she cast Jenner alongside models Isabeli Fontana and Liu Wen — women that she believes epitomize modernity.
For me, the clothes I wear each day epitomize who I am, just as much as what I think or say.
Cheerleaders were expected to epitomize a very traditional ideal of femininity and sexuality — but only with the approval of the League.
" Former CIA Director John Brennan, a new tweeter: "Andy McCabe & Jim Baker epitomize integrity, competence, and respect for rule of law.
"I want to epitomize what the new 70 looks and feels like — it's sexy!" she told Closer Weekly in October 2016.
And if anyone has come to epitomize the friendly spirit on the European side it is everyone's favorite Spaniard Sergio Garcia.
He also focuses excessively on several rather obscure academic projects that he believes epitomize the sterile moribundity of American strategic thought.
Jane Austen's novels may epitomize Regency England, but she didn't think much of the man for whom the period was named.
Maybe that was true of many more places in New York at the time, but it seemed to epitomize that oddness.
His lusty vampires and undead ingénues epitomize fantastique, a European genre wherein horror, darkness, magic, psychology, science, and primitivism all intersect.
To many, the Kardashian-Jenner clan epitomize that perfection — and that might be making Kylie's reported body image issues even more pronounced.
But the figure of the jeune fille did epitomize a confusion around a new sexual order that was not in order yet.
I mean sculptors who epitomize their epochs in three dimensions that acquire the fourth, of time, in the course of our fascination.
Whether they're competing at the Olympics, the Paralympics, or small-town high schools, these teen phenoms epitomize girl power in every competition.
Both of these situations epitomize that gray area that looms larger and larger in discussions I've had with men about consent and coercion.
This overlap between the outlandish Bravo and the slow-moving midwest looks like it will come to epitomize the culture of Trump's America.
Soon, the show—and the collection of performers and DJs that gravitated toward it—came to epitomize the messy, east London drag scene.
Thursday's event will also feature four young people -- two Germans and two Americans -- who epitomize his focus on local organizing and community work.
Consider buying one of the store's handmade pom-poms, Dr. Seuss-like brightly colored balls that have come to epitomize the colorful town.
He shows the class a photo, or perhaps a hologram, of an artist who has been intentionally selected to epitomize the entire concept.
The U.S. lost that day, but that game, that bar, and that photo epitomize what I used to love most about American soccer.
But the town came to epitomize the nation's rising antagonism against immigration, a central issue for voters in the referendum on June 23.
Bookshelf If you're looking for objects that define New York, few epitomize the city — and evoke more vexation — than pigeons and taxi cabs.
Images of auto workers with shaved heads and red head bands clashing with riot police have come to epitomize today's public perception of unions.
Right now, restaurants epitomize the abuse faced by women everywhere, with a harassment culture that sets the tone for many people's entire working lives.
And if you really want to epitomize a sun-kissed goddess, you can even swipe a layer over your shadow to amp it up.
The annual meeting in Davos was thought to epitomize the elitist nature of these organizations, especially since it takes place at a swanky resort.
"Judge [Gonzalo] Curiel and his family epitomize the American Dream," said Lorella Praeli, Hillary for America's director of Latino outreach, in a statement Friday.
Yet the attention is unsurprising, because the event, live-streamed by the student activists themselves, seemed to epitomize campus trends that many outsiders abhor.
May, who also went to Oxford, is several years older than this group, but her politics epitomize Britain's retreat into a provincial mind-set.
In such tumultuous times of political intransigency and war, Indian modern artists exercised a critical power — their art could epitomize political leaders as gods.
That may be acceptable for a service chief, but it can be counterproductive for a leader who is supposed to epitomize the joint warfighting ethic.
It seemed to epitomize the urgent problems facing the Rikers Island jail complex, which inmates, experts, and advocates often describe as a civil rights catastrophe.
That is precisely the term for which another strategic port, Hong Kong, was leased by the Qing to the British in circumstances that epitomize colonialism.
The insulin made by Eli Lilly and Novo Nordisk, Merck's cancer drug Keytruda, and Pfizer's breast cancer pill Ibrance epitomize this growth of sales and prices.
"Lucky" Jack Riley seems to epitomize the strange—and sometimes strangely forgiving—culture of the place, given that he was able to set himself up there.
As depicted by Efron and his gang, tank top and neon hat and/or fanny pack wearing bro-ravers now epitomize one kind of EDM fan.
A remarkable musical polymath and conservationist of beatnik culture, he has played at the club monthly for 25400 years and has come to epitomize its essence.
The bot had played a move that confounded established theories of the board game, in a moment that came to epitomize the mystery and mastery of AlphaGo.
Perhaps, in not-so-distant histories, this city's ongoing devastation from Hurricane Katrina will epitomize the national failure to prevent what scientists keep telling us is happening.
If his flow and beats were a smidge more iconic, he'd epitomize the kind of major minor artistry Le Tigre—hell, Spoon or somebody—parlayed into legend.
At worst they epitomize everything that's backwards about how we lionize male rock stars, airbrushing the edges of their ugliness and in the process corroding the truth.
In that way, they epitomize the Palestinian Museum's mission to tell new stories, ones that free history to live, breath, and renew itself through the ritual of storytelling.
The dangers for elected Republicans Ingraham's verbal spanking of the Republican leadership and Limbaugh's condemnation of Boehner's openness on immigration reform epitomize a common theme in conservative media.
One of the places that epitomize this scene is Form & Function, a hip, minimalist coffee shop on the ground floor of the Fowler that opened in January 2018.
But as the Hefner era fades into history, it should be remembered that for all the hedonistic fun the mansion seemed to epitomize, it contained many dark corners.
Postponing Arlene's Flowers means that people like Barronelle – who epitomize how Americans with differing marriage beliefs can coexist – will continue to be maligned in their businesses and communities.
But it has nonetheless come to epitomize the elitism of a New York City subculture in which patrons can afford to spend upwards of $1,000 on secondary market tickets.
Mars is arguably unthreatening to older, whiter audiences, in a way that separates him from black artists of past eras and current hip-hop stars who epitomize groundbreaking coolness.
" Earlier in the day, Lorella Praeli, director of Latino outreach for the Clinton campaign, praised Curiel's experience and qualifications, saying, "Judge Curiel and his family epitomize the American Dream.
To some, Mauna Kea's crown of observatories epitomize the intrusion of Western ideology—not least because they literally sit atop the oldest and most significant ancestor in native spirituality.
We could do the same with sloth, greed, gluttony or anything else, compiling our dossiers and using a one-off comment or incident to epitomize the person's entire life.
"Statements like this epitomize out-of-touch liberals who do not appreciate the important role the Second Amendment has played – and continues to play – in our nation," Graham added.
In fact, statements like this epitomize out-of-touch liberals who do not appreciate the important role the Second Amendment has played – and continues to play – in our nation.
But their presence has caused anxiety and resentment in Boston, a town on the east coast of England that has come to epitomize this country's rising antagonism toward immigration.
At first glance, LoCash seemed to epitomize the slick twang of everything I don't particularly enjoy about modern country music — impeccably crafted facial hair, power chords and tacky clothes.
Jean-Michel Basquiat, whose work has come to epitomize the notion of art as a commodity, is also a perfect example of the importance of widespread access to culture.
The two men epitomize the divisions that have riven Poland since the ruling Law and Justice (PiS) party, in which Jaki serves as deputy justice minister, took power in 2015.
In 1972, the iconic photograph of a naked Vietnamese girl fleeing a napalm attack came to epitomize the horrific nature of the weapon and helped coalesce opposition to the war.
Tribeca is proud to host the accomplished and multi-hyphenate Mr. Cranston for a rare opportunity to understand the career that has come to epitomize the golden age of television.
The city has come to epitomize the state of the nation's decrepit infrastructure and the failure of government agencies to protect the public, especially when they're poor and non-white.
The economist Irving Fisher, who took over as the head of the AALL during the final stage of its doomed health insurance campaign, seemed to epitomize this way of thinking.
Samsung, a symbol of the country's rise from poverty following the 1950-53 Korean War, has come to epitomize the cosy and sometimes corrupt ties between politicians and the chaebols.
I was driven by two conflicting needs: One, to understand how someone who I knew to epitomize integrity, nation before self and commitment to public service could support this president.
It's also the country where, in darker times, Hitler laid the groundwork for a network of multilane highways that in the postwar years came to epitomize economic success — and freedom.
Crossword puzzles epitomize the intersection of logic and perceptiveness, for every letter placement hints at a distinct meaning and success is only accomplished when all the words come together in harmony.
So regardless of their shared ethnic background, Rachel and Nick in fact epitomize two entirely different worlds: One we know, and one we can only fantasize about in a foreign land.
It was during one of those sessions the President threatened North Korea with "fire and fury," a phrase that came to epitomize the harsh rhetoric that preceded the current diplomatic thaw.
The flamingos that once prowled the property were long gone (or hiding in shame) and the monkey cages, while clean, seemed to epitomize the place — an icky vestige of another era.
For Michael Jackson, an American venture capitalist who has spent more than a decade living in Europe, such plans epitomize the region's ham-fisted tactics to help the local digital economy.
With an alligator on the ceiling to taxidermied birds on the shelves, Imperato's collection and its organization quickly came to epitomize Renaissance Europe's Wunderkammer — cabinet of curiosities — and has for centuries.
Academy Award Nominees Pose for an Official Group Photo Ahead of the Oscars "The roses in particular felt like they epitomize a state of humanity and an organic, natural thing," Korins says.
However, for all the new game can champion in terms of artistic sensibilities and austere adulthood, it still contains many red flags that epitomize continued flaws in the industry as a whole.
More likely, it could come to epitomize the way investors in a time of extremely low interest rates became willing to run multiple, hard-to-fathom risks in exchange for minimal compensation.
In the 1970s, France, like other industrialized countries, began a shift away from manufacturing to a services-based economy, and within a few decades, Pas-de-Calais came to epitomize industrial decline.
Few institutions epitomize this reality better than The New Israel Fund, an NGO founded in 1979 to strengthen civil society organizations and help bridge the gaps between Arab and Jewish populations inside Israel.
Greer may have been a steady and quiet sort, but one night in the fall of 1967 he showed a thing or two to a Knicks rookie who would come to epitomize flash.
Though the objects mostly predate the great breakthroughs of the mid-1920s, there are worthy highlights, such as a reconstruction of Itten's glass "Fire Tower," meant to epitomize the unity of artistic disciplines.
To crack the code, we combed through tons of gorgeous Instagrams and pulled together a handful of shots that epitomize on-point shelfies — and the secrets we discovered couldn't be easier to copy.
As the singer and lyricist for some of producer Frankie Knuckles's best songs in the 1980s, he helped to create a catalogue that, for many, came to epitomize the sound of Chicago house.
On Saturday, looters smashed the front of Fouquet's, a restaurant that came to epitomize economic privilege after Nicolas Sarkozy hosted a party there on the night of his presidential election victory in 2007.
Are Western ideals central to global literature, or do speculative novels that unspool Western ideas to tragic ends (like Atwood's "Oryx and Crake" and Houellebecq's "The Possibility of an Island") epitomize literary colonialism?
Itineraries The front desk manager or housekeeper may epitomize the hotel employee, but the hospitality industry is increasingly dependent on tech workers, vacuuming data scientists, web designers and other experts into its ranks.
They are documents from a period when the impulse to wipe the slate clean and systematize all aspects of the composing process came to epitomize a brave new world of the avant-garde.
And some of them, like "i can't tell if i'm in the ring shaming group or the nail shaming group," self-described as "sometimes everything is just so bad," perfectly epitomize the sarcastic culture.
Median house price: $1,340,000 In New York City's most populous borough of Brooklyn, the once-industrial urban wasteland of Williamsburg has come to epitomize a gentrification success story (for those who can afford it).
The lyrics Summer sings ("And if a double-decker bus / crashes into us / to die by your side / is such a heavenly way to die") epitomize the darkly romantic sensibilities of a Smiths fan.
Until a few weeks ago, numerous senior administration officials maintained access to top secret materials without full clearances through the interim system but none of these epitomize these problems so much as Jared Kushner.
District jurists resolve immense caseloads, thus constituting the New York justice system's "workhorses," and the myriad vacancies pressure New York courts and litigants, conditions which epitomize those in many of the country's 2202 districts.
On those tiny islands way out in the middle of the Pacific, a hodgepodge of cultures come together to create some truly tasty and iconic dishes that epitomize what it means to be American.
The author of the international best-seller "The Little Book of Hygge," Meik Wiking, takes VICE News on a hygge tour of Copenhagen coffee shops, library gardens, and wine bars that epitomize the lifestyle trend.
The IMF authors also state that the costs in terms of increased inequality are prominent and such costs epitomize the trade-off between the growth and equity effects of some aspects of the neoliberal agenda.
Just as low-rise jeans and denim Dior epitomize the early noughties, and grunge-inspired flannels with ripped-up mom jeans (think Tai from Clueless) embody the '90s, the go-go boot epitomizes the '60s.
No place seemed to epitomize the "gangsta" lifestyle more than Los Angeles, with television and movie portrayals of mostly black and Hispanic gang members transforming Southern California's laid-back image into one of racialized terror.
Over some dozen panels, the artist juxtaposes press shots of Marilyn Monroe with a set of amateurish self-portraits which, naturally, fail to attain the heights of glamor which the screen goddess came to epitomize.
Dropbox and Google Drive really epitomize what backing up should be in 2017: As soon as files get dropped into the designated folders, they're sent to the cloud and your other devices, with changes updated seamlessly.
Pam and Tommy, I think, epitomize that story that is often untold, and one thing that I thought is so important is that we often categorize that – and the media say – as quote-unquote 'gang-related.
Rep. Susan Davis of California tweeted that "it is time to open an impeachment inquiry," adding that "President Trump's actions surrounding Ukraine epitomize his disregard for checks and balances as well as normal practices and protocols."
From her faint foot tattoo, that reads "sunshine" (commemorating her grandmother) to the intricate line of script in Arabic that translates to "love yourself first," Gomez's tattoos epitomize the things that mean the most to her.
They epitomize some of the issues that the Pope has promised to bring attention to, though some there seem to find more hope in the skeletal pseudo-saint than in the head of the Catholic Church.
Mutzke-Felippelli has paired the chair with a custom 42-minute mix with acts that epitomize the musical culture from which the chair takes its inspiration, including Cassius, Étienne De Crécy, and of course, Daft Punk.
"I found that the dollification masks were a fantastic way to push my exploration of gender and identity in my photography work as they visually epitomize the cultural perception of the 'perfect' Barbie doll woman," she says.
The series of controversies around Omar also epitomize a particular challenge that black women face: the risk of being perceived as an "angry black woman," all for daring to take a critical stance and standing by it.
Ultraripe, jammy fruit bombs — lacking freshness and structure (other than the tannins contributed by new oak barrels) — seemed for too long to epitomize what powerful critics sought and what many producers were all too willing to provide.
The chairman, Miguel Blesa, 69, achieved notoriety in Spain for his lavish lifestyle and the rapid expansion of Caja Madrid, a regional savings bank that came to epitomize the excesses of the country's construction-led economic boom.
Government services, for many, epitomize the worst of bureaucracy: they are, at their low point, large, lumbering organizations working under strained budgets, staffed by lifer employees who don't get much say in improving things, and lots of paperwork.
Each in their late 30s, Mylavarapu and Rogers epitomize a new class of rising power brokers in Silicon Valley in the age of Trump: politicized, extremely well-connected, and eager to spend their money now rather than later.
A lyrical rendering of a fingerprint, by Moira Dryer; a blue-and-white abstraction that's as fresh as a sea breeze, by Mary Heilmann; and a stencilled word painting, by Christopher Wool, epitomize the dénouement of the period.
Few workers epitomize the trend as much as agricultural-equipment mechanics, who faced the most concentrated group of prospective employers out of the roughly two dozen occupations that Mr. Azar, Ms. Marinescu and Mr. Steinbaum examined on CareerBuilder.
The focus of the Met Museum's 2017 exhibition, The Art Of The In Between, and the theme of that year's Met Gala, Japanese designer Rei Kawakubo and her label Comme des Garçons, epitomize fashion at its most avant-garde.
The Willie Horton episode and the political advertising that came to epitomize it remain among the most controversial chapters in modern politics, a precursor to campaigns to come and a decisive force that influenced criminal justice policy for decades.
The rampant privatization of the military and the prison system epitomize U.S. militarism, prioritizing the profits of the few who make billions from war, tactical equipment, and mass incarceration, over the health, education, and well-being of the many.
The fundamental contradictions, as Karl Marx would have noted, lie in the collision of interests between a group that has come to epitomize self-consciously progressive mega-wealth and a mass base which is increasingly concerned about downward mobility.
If life is a gift, and one we take for granted, surely those who just love life so much that they never want to "leave the party," as Chamberlain puts it, perhaps epitomize the spirit of 'joie de vivre'.
The blame game triggered by accusations against the boyish stars who epitomize an industry that carried South Korean pop culture to the global stage is rooted in concerns the business has neglected morality in its lust for fame and fortune.
Trump, the developer who came to epitomize opulent wealth during the 80's before tumbling into deep financial trouble, has managed to erase much of his debt and is moving ahead with major projects at a time other developers are idling.
Also Friday, Turkish officials announced that three human smugglers had each been sentenced to 125 years in prison for their roles in the death of a Syrian toddler, Alan Kurdi, whose drowning came to epitomize an earlier migration crisis, in 2015.
The vendors, known as manteros, epitomize a quandary facing the authorities: It is one thing to debate whether to allow more migrants into the European Union, but quite another to agree on what to do with them once they arrive.
Headlines about the tiger — the kind found in the wilds of India or a zoo — in a city apartment came to epitomize New York City at a wilder time when it seemed almost nothing was too crazy to be believed.
The allegations against the boyish stars who epitomize an industry that has put South Korean pop culture on the global stage has triggered a blame game with accusations the business has neglected young stars' morality in the lust for fame and fortune.
For some critics, the 1994 crime bill has come to epitomize the late-20th-century policies that sent incarceration to record levels and ravaged poor communities, taking a particularly devastating toll on African-Americans that political leaders are only now working to reverse.
Benjamin Netanyahu, the Israeli Prime Minister, appeared to epitomize this train of thought, when he released a video on Twitter praising the Iranian goalkeeper Alireza Beiranvand, 25, for stopping a penalty kick by Cristiano Ronaldo during Iran's World Cup match against Portugal.
The house belongs to Elena and Bill Richardson, a wealthy white couple who epitomize success in picture-perfect, late-'90s Shaker Heights, and their four teenage children, including girl-next-door Lexie and the troubled prankster Izzy, who is suspected of arson.
It was a revealing moment in an enthralling clash of philosophy, temperament and style that unfolded Friday between a current and former president who epitomize opposing currents in an epochal political moment and are now in direct conflict ahead of the midterm elections.
We stopped beneath an apple tree overlooking the carp ponds and neighboring cow pastures and little Norman outbuildings all over the lawn, with their dark columns and white plaster walls, little gingerbread houses that epitomize all kinds of things that we are not.
But Angela Missoni, 58, scion of the Missoni fashion house that was founded in 1953 — and whose languid, luridly colored work came to epitomize the '70s and the constant revivals of that decade forever after — is responsible for more collections than most.
Geoffrey Rush gives the sun god Ra a humorously smug hauteur: His personal space station, positioned high above the digital masses, and the atomic-powered, Uzi-like automatic weapon that he fires each night at an approaching dragon of darkness epitomize the movie's cheesy grandeur.
In fashioning their arguments this way, Ms. Carlson and Ms. Smith epitomize a stark trend in discrimination cases over the last decade or two: More and more workers are bringing retaliation claims, and those claims, in turn, often determine the outcome of their cases.
His comments Thursday played into the enduring conceit in American politics that Paris and France epitomize effete, liberal, globalized elites that are the antithesis of the earthly, honest American values on which Trump built his appeal to the Midwestern voters who made him President.
The book is particularly strong when Ferguson takes on how classism and racism shape smart policing datasets, which epitomize how "big data" policing is held back by the many limitations of larger legal structures but is presented as the solution to that very problem.
Crusading intellectuals like Jane Addams and John Dewey came to epitomize this type: privileged members of society who put their talents to work devising new ways to help the poor or to educate children, aiming to liberate the human spirit to reach its full potential.
But while pundits derided LaVar Ball as the state of the art in obsessive sports dads — an Earl Woods or Stefano Capriati for the social media age — he may actually epitomize a model that extends far beyond the arena: the helicopter parent of the workplace.
"Mineral pigments epitomize our formative cultures" — from the hematite mines in East Mojave to the ocher found in Native American grave sites in California — offers the artist Oscar Tuazon, whose Los Angeles project space Corner Door is presenting Schlingelhoff's work, in a statement about the project.
In the first line it sounds like she just wants a foot massage out of this whole deal (relatable) and I kinda don't mind the earthy references — "mud ridges in a dry field" and "grain from a bucket" epitomize getting down and dirty, if you ask me.
The company, which seemed to epitomize a Silicon Valley "unicorn" by shooting to a valuation of $9 billion on the promise of revolutionary technology, making a billionaire of its founder, Elizabeth Holmes, could find itself swamped as it deals with the investigations and problems in its laboratory.
But in the seemingly incoherent array of US policies and alliances between secular and Islamist fighters, the agreement is merely a prelude to a Syria with Islamist groups like the 20,000-strong Ahrar al-Sham, that epitomize how Syrian politics will always stubbornly transcend US and Russian interests.
As much as many people would like to see a female take the lead at a troubled Silicon Valley company that has come to epitomize all the gender problems that have long troubled tech, I know as much as the next business person that the numbers just aren't in our favor.
This week, The New York Times wrote about LaVar Ball, the father of the U.C.L.A. basketball star Lonzo Ball, who has played a central role in his son's dealings with professional teams and apparel companies and may epitomize a model that extends far beyond the basketball court: the helicopter parent of the workplace.
And the administration's decision to abandon the Trans-Pacific Partnership trade deal and to use high-pressure tactics to rework or abandon the North American Free Trade Agreement epitomize the "go it alone approach" that President Trump has used, breaking with the traditions of every other post-World War II presidency, Professor Shapiro said.
Eight paintings by Boucher in this exhibition epitomize the mature Rococo, among them a soft-edged portrait (lent by the Harvard Art Museums) of Madame de Pompadour, Louis XV's mistress, as well as "The Toilette of Venus" and "The Bath of Venus," twin pictures of that nude goddess cocooned in silks and smothered by cherubs.
While the former was an almost-unique symbol of female freedom of pursuit (nearly 100 years later, the much-beleaguered Marie Antoinette even rode in breeches, in an attempt to wrench herself free of the restrictions of life as queen consort at the French court), the latter came to epitomize the male hold on women, figuratively as well as literally.
Yet here she was, one morning in September, looking for 45 people to take part in a new film of her roughly five-minute masterpiece from 1966, "Trio A." Each of us, she explained, would perform seven seconds of the choreography, which, though not so easy to do, has come to epitomize the anyone-can-do-it aesthetic of early postmodern dance.
Aside from Swift's now-infamous habit of hiding names of potential future songs in her videos ("Greedy" and "Karma" are two of them this time around), Thursday's video for "The Man" also calls out specific men that Swift feels epitomize the ethos of the lyrics, which are all about double standards for powerful men and women, and the ways men can abuse their power while women must shrink.
With regard to the opioid epidemic, the series examines its small-scale and suspicious beginnings; however (save a few words on screen as an epilogue) The Pharmacist focuses on Schneider's own efforts and doesn't give viewers an overview of the entire epidemic or succinctly epitomize other dynamics at play in its narrative, such as the racial divides contained in New Orleans or the damage inflicted by Hurricane Katrina.
Turns out the book's seemingly diffuse structure, while unsuitable for carrying a quick plot, is actually essential to accomplish this other greater goal: understanding how people change over a lifetime, how a self is built, how the past is revised to suit the present, how adults come to epitomize exactly what they hated most as children, how secrets and pain and trauma play out in a mind and a body over the decades.
" It was a time of global food shortages, rising food prices, and growing concern over industrial agriculture and the deluge of highly processed foods that flooded the country in the decades after World War II. With National Food Day, Jacobson had organized a "national day of action" that featured protests, concerts, fasts, teach-ins, and the unveiling of the "Terrible 663," a list of foods — from Wonder Bread and Coca-Cola to bacon and beef — that "epitomize everything wrong with the American food system.

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