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"euphemistically" Definitions
  1. in a way that makes something embarrassing or unpleasant seem more acceptable than it really is

183 Sentences With "euphemistically"

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

This time was euphemistically referred to as the "special period".
He had "not always made the right choices," he said euphemistically.
They concern immigration and what is often euphemistically referred to as "culture".
It was his first passenger with "that volume of weight," he said euphemistically.
Legere has euphemistically insisted, repeatedly, that T-Mobile is merely "optimizing" video streams.
It was often described euphemistically as a campus, a farm, or a reformatory.
The offensive -- euphemistically called "Operation Olive Branch" -- began with dozens of airstrikes Saturday.
Ukraine has euphemistically designated the conflict zone an area of "anti-terrorist operations" (ATO).
The claims are obviously dubious, though I suspect that last one is meant euphemistically.
In prison, according to state media, so-called "religious extremists" euphemistically undergo thought rectification.
" Where Kavanaugh jumps off the page is in what might euphemistically be called "extracurriculars.
It's a stark example of what educators in the city euphemistically call the achievement gap.
It is known colloquially as the luxury tax and euphemistically as the competitive balance tax.
Researchers have developed a limited form of sleep deprivation that is euphemistically called wake therapy.
Before it was accepted as literature, the humble ''comic'' was euphemistically rebranded as the ''graphic novel.
The Special Period in Time of Peace, as the Castro euphemistically called it, lasted through the decade.
The Philippines rarely publicizes ransom payments and officials sometimes refer to them euphemistically as "board and lodgings".
Instead, brokers routinely take kickbacks, euphemistically referred to as "rebates," for routing orders to a particular exchange.
What ensued was a terrible period -- euphemistically called the Special Period -- during which many Cubans actually went hungry.
I was seated approximately 440 feet from home plate in what the Astros euphemistically call auxiliary press seating.
"We refer to it euphemistically with acronyms—EVA, PET, TPE—but at its core, it's plastic," says Melville.
" Pastor refers, euphemistically, to the band's "healthy culture of criticism," which "teeters on unhealthy every once in awhile.
Their covert consciousness unidentified, most linger, receiving what is euphemistically called "custodial care," and remain unevaluated for years.
And the current president has expressed full faith in the harsh methods described euphemistically as enhanced interrogation techniques.
On April 24th in a cramped conference room in a Westminster hotel, UKIP launched a euphemistically titled "integration agenda".
The administration continues to euphemistically refer to this as "extreme vetting" when it is nothing more than extreme bureaucracy.
In three of these the aircraft suffered what is known euphemistically in aviation circles as a "collision with terrain".
Bolton euphemistically called that effort a "drug deal," The New York Times reported, citing sources familiar with Hill's testimony.
Tax-favoured debt is the not-very-secret sauce of companies like Blackstone and KKR, euphemistically called private-equity companies.
Her government's agreement on women forced into sexual slavery, euphemistically known as comfort women, has proved deeply unpopular at home.
Advocates euphemistically call them "safe injection sites," but they are very dangerous and would only make the opioid crisis worse.
Smith, Yamamoto and Haley euphemistically use the word "stability" to signify their concern about an interethnic civil war in Ethiopia.
The part of the story that's most critical of Conway euphemistically characterizes her this way: [S]he is relentlessly on message.
" Last summer, Texas governor Greg Abbott signed into law Senate Bill 1978, euphemistically known as the "Save Chick-fil-A bill.
We have a discussion (I'm using that word euphemistically, it's more like an argument) and finally come up with a plan.
And across Britain, heritage plaques on Georgian townhouses euphemistically describe former slave traders and slave owners as West Indies merchants or planters.
In 4143, as the Pentagon euphemistically declared that it had ended combat operations in Afghanistan, larger bases like Camp Leatherneck shut down.
The plot concerns a messianic Stranger who arrives and brings what the libretto euphemistically terms "love" to a tyrannical Ruler's oppressive land.
Under Israeli law, the prime minister alone is authorized to approve an assassination operation, euphemistically known as "negative treatment" within the Mossad.
But if there's one subject that unites the country, it is a loathing of what the airlines euphemistically call the boarding process.
Both players skipped the opening match of the season on August 11th following what a club spokesperson euphemistically termed "further security incidents".
" A local radio station started a countdown until she would turn 18, "euphemistically the date that I would be legal to sleep with.
Its facility in Tar Heel, North Carolina is the largest pork processing plant in the world, euphemistically "processing" around 30,000 hogs every day.
In addition, one of its key provisions removed the individual mandate penalty of the euphemistically-labeled "Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act" (ACA).
Since the early 2300s, Ms. Kim had been a prominent representative of the former sex slaves, who were known euphemistically as comfort women.
The OECD says products in its sights include pensions, insurance and citizenship-for-sale schemes, known euphemistically in the trade as "investment migration" products.
Chinese authorities claimed last month that it had released most Uighurs from the euphemistically titled "re-education camps," but has provided no credible evidence.
Former comfort women began to speak out about being forced into brothels, euphemistically called "comfort stations," in territories occupied by the Imperial Japanese Army.
Even those lucky few who do get rehabilitation and are not shunted off to what is euphemistically called "custodial care" get too little time.
Bagram started becoming an island unto itself in 2014, when American forces euphemistically ended combat operations and reduced the number of troops in Afghanistan.
Indonesia frequently faces criticism from neighboring Singapore and Malaysia for failing to curb the fires causing the smog, euphemistically known in the region as "haze".
By which we mean, will Britain vote to leave the world order designed and maintained by America post-war, euphemistically referred to as "the West"?
Euphemistically called "trade-related intellectual property rights," these protections serve mainly to transfer monopoly profits from global consumers to patent holders in the United States.
A signing ceremony listed on Trump's official schedule only a day earlier was scrapped, a move euphemistically deemed a "program change" by the White House.
Kanders's Safariland "defense products," as they are euphemistically called, have been used against protesters at Standing Rock and Ferguson and migrants at the Mexican border.
But the women, euphemistically called comfort women, came from other places as well, with Japanese-occupied countries — including China, Korea and the Philippines — providing the majority.
Ignoring birthing contractions to make an extra buck is not cute—it points to how fundamentally lopsided contract jobs are in the euphemistically-named sharing economy.
Unquestionably, college admissions may be corrupting: there is an unhealthy obsession about getting into the "best" college (often euphemistically referred to as the "right fit" college).
"You can take selfies with the animals, and later give them some gratification," he told me, euphemistically suggesting tips for the people who keep the animals.
Since 2014, after the Pentagon officially and euphemistically ended "combat operations," putting the Afghan military in the lead, more than 50,0003 Afghan security forces have died.
Shohrat Zakir, the governor of Xinjiang, claimed without evidence on Monday that everyone in the camps, which China euphemistically calls "vocational training centers" is now out.
"A countdown was started on my local radio show to my 18th birthday -- euphemistically the date that I would be legal to sleep with," she said.
But people don't just have amnesia about the era that politicians euphemistically refer to as "the darkest period of our history" ( la langue de bois strikes again).
Why should taxpayers spend $25 billion to fulfill what White House chief of staff John KellyJohn Francis KellyMORE characterized (euphemistically) as a "not fully informed" campaign promise?
Many of these areas are euphemistically called "zones of deescalation," but are, in reality, reservations for refugees and rebels, left to await Assad and Russia's next onslaught.
In the V.A. no less than in the military, this was a taboo subject, so much so that clinicians often refer to it euphemistically, if at all.
That is the third prong of the current opposition strategy, euphemistically called "protests," which in 2002, 85033 and 2014 turned into violent attempts to topple the government.
Often what we euphemistically describe as "politeness" ends up sounding like an apology for taking up space, for asking anything of others, for even existing at all.
"Tomorrow, the Iranian regime will stage an event euphemistically called elections," Brian Hook, the State Department's special envoy for Iran, said at a briefing announcing the sanctions.
Even in a news analysis piece about Trump's strategic promotion of conspiracy theories, the New York Times euphemistically referred to "unconfirmed accusations" rather than baseless conspiracy theories.
Every year, Indonesia faces criticism from its neighbors Singapore and Malaysia over the smog, euphemistically known as "haze", and its failure to stop the fires from being lit.
Going back to your early days, people are wondering if you had problems with Dustin Hoffman, and your thoughts on the talk around him, to put it euphemistically.
Under a ruling military junta, journalism in Myanmar was subjected for decades to oversight by a national censorship office, known euphemistically as the Press Scrutiny and Registration Division.
This kind of cronyism, through which taxpayer money is used to advance private business interests in what is euphemistically called a "public-private partnership," has become disturbingly common.
For Mitchell, that meant shuttling back and forth between the two sides — an exercise known euphemistically as "proximity talks" — instead of meeting them together in a single room.
They cut the tiger prawns in half and "get the thanksgiving dinner out of them," as Werner euphemistically refers to the, um, less palatable part of the raw shrimp.
Fans are still hoping to see a reappearance of Arya Stark's sword instructor (or, euphemistically, "dancing master") Syrio Forel, presumed dead but not seen dead back in season one.
Jon Callas: The political situation that's going on all over the world, not just the United States, is that the world has caught what I euphemistically call authoritarian fever.
A partial solution is to use what Mr Ristevski euphemistically calls "probe data": the digital traces of millions of people using smartphones and connected in-car systems for navigation.
His coworkers on the early shift clocked out and went home, but no one came in to replace them, which created "a little gap," as Warner euphemistically put it.
Most gun crimes are occurring in what's euphemistically called the inner cities involving minorities and they're the ones the Democrats generally are going to bend over backwards to protect.
Euphemistically known as paper classes, the courses offered by the African and Afro-American Studies Department required no attendance, perhaps a rudimentary paper and little to no conscious thought.
The Platform takes this same concept and stages it in a prison-like building, euphemistically called the "Vertical Self-Management Center" by the bureaucrats who work for the government.
Inexorably a federal failure to match state spending, which Price euphemistically calls giving states "greater flexibility," will cause a decline in the quality — and availability — of long-term care.
"Privileged" is part of a family of terms used for euphemistically describing the not-destitute (or the "middle class," or—for a double whammy of socialism and Francophilia—the "bourgeoisie").
A process euphemistically known as a "market correction" will continue, using trade and other media-hyped issues as proximate causes for further risk-adjusted valuations driven by changing economic fundamentals.
Striding through the fog of obfuscation is Daniel J. Jones (Driver), a staffer charged by Senator Dianne Feinstein (Annette Bening) with investigating the C.I.A.'s euphemistically named enhanced interrogation techniques.
James E. Mitchell was a psychologist working as a contractor for the intelligence agency who had helped develop what was euphemistically known as "enhanced interrogation techniques" — a program of torture.
The alternative that the right would prefer would be a nyah-nyah contest, what we might euphemistically call a competition in the distance one can cover via the act of urination.
It is an idea that goes back at least 1,700 years, which was when Chinese doctors began to use what was euphemistically called "yellow soup" to treat patients with severe diarrhoea.
And scross cultures, scissoring has been euphemistically likened to "making tortillas" (Latin America), "gimlets" (France), a "game of flats" (based on an 18th-century British card game), and "polishing mirrors" (China).
In a Facebook post, Vermaak and Di Cosmo apologized for the name and said they would be "taking immediate steps" to resolve a situation that they euphemistically categorized as a 'mishap.
According to a new report by Privacy International, European companies supplied the euphemistically-named Technical Research Department (TRD) with intrusive surveillance equipment, enabling them to target human rights activists and journalists.
In solitary -- also called "the box" and "the hole" by prisoners, or euphemistically, "segregation" and "special housing" by corrections officials -- inmates have virtually no social contact, except for occasional transactions with guards.
The standalone app, called Engage, is targeted at a group Twitter euphemistically calls "popular creators", with the stated aim of helping them "interact with their fans and grow and retain an audience".
The death of Song Shin-do leaves 32 women registered with the South Korean government as surviving "comfort women", as those forced to work in wartime brothels are euphemistically known in Japan.
According to Professor Hanebrink, many aspects of the Judeobolshevik fantasy survived the Holocaust it helped bring about, just with the role of the Jews implied more euphemistically or replaced by new adversaries.
The "dual-use" purpose of facial recognition tech that Bezos is referring to could be less euphemistically compared to the dystopian mass surveillance environment already reportedly emerging under the authoritarian Chinese government.
In the United States alone, what the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) euphemistically calls "enteric fermentation" — the belches and farts of livestock, mostly cattle — is the second-biggest source of US methane emissions.
As a pioneer in the space, Sidecar had the first-mover advantage, but Uber ended up being the dominant player in the category by using what are now euphemistically called "aggressive" tactics.
Why, then, as medical science has made enormous strides in alleviating the pain and distress of dying, are we seeing relentless campaigning for the legalisation of what is being euphemistically called "assisted dying"?
Now that Japan and South Korea have agreed to end their bitter dispute over the "comfort women," as Japan euphemistically calls them, Japan would like nothing better than to have the statue removed.
The issue of "comfort women", as those forced to work in Japan's wartime military brothels were euphemistically known, has long embittered the ties of neighbors, such as China and South Korea, with Japan.
BERLIN — The warning came to the German security authorities in early September from "our best partners," as they euphemistically refer to the American intelligence agencies: A terrorist assault might be in the works.
The treatment of the women, known euphemistically as "comfort women," is one of the most painful legacies of Japan's occupation of Korea from 1910 to the end of World War II in 1945.
The following year, he may also have witnessed the capture and killing of dozens of women and children by U.S. Army soldiers, in what is euphemistically known as the Battle of Ash Hollow.
Performing extractions, as squeezing your blackheads is euphemistically referred to in the world of beauty, is something best done by a professional — you can leave yourself scarred if you don't do it right.
The end result is a personalized listening session that sounds distinct for whomever is wearing the H2 — based largely on what EVEN euphemistically calls an "EarPrint" that is as unique as a fingerprint.
Diaz-Canel has said he hopes to avoid the long power outages that characterized the euphemistically named "special period" of the 1990s, but if they are required, they will be announced in advance.
Donald Trump nominates a slate of people we might euphemistically call "law and order"; the truth about the Ford plant Trump claims to have saved; wrapping up the successor to the Paris climate conference.
Another powerful and controversial capability set out in the bill is the euphemistically titled 'Equipment Interference' — aka the power for intelligence and law enforcement agents to hack into devices and services to gather data.
Last Wednesday morning, a tractor trailer carrying live chickens to what Purdue Farms euphemistically calls its "harvest facility" overturned on a Delaware highway, and most of its already doomed cargo spilled onto the pavement.
On February 6th, at the most recent Republican presidential debate, Mr Trump repeated his support for waterboarding and upped the ante on what George Bush's advisers euphemistically called "enhanced interrogation" techniques 15 years ago.
The U.S. Census Bureau, however, says 1,600 people live here, many of them in one-story cinder-block homes, not the big beach houses on stilts, known euphemistically as cottages, a few miles away.
And the bar that has to be met for what the bill euphemistically calls "regularisation" is fairly high: settlers will have to convince the courts that they did not know the land was privately owned.
THE control tower at Iwakuni air base near Hiroshima gives a bird's-eye view of the huge facility shared by American marines and Japan's Maritime Self-defence Force, as the country's navy is euphemistically known.
In time it will come out that this response including hiring a public relations agency whose work includes what is euphemistically referred to as "opposition research" and is more commonly understood to involve smear campaigns.
And while the quality of shelters certainly plays a role in choosing to remain on the street, even smaller, friendlier shelters, which the city euphemistically calls "safe havens," won't lure people in from the cold.
Despite battles with persistent antiSemitism—described euphemistically in letters as "the old, old story"—Bernard became a successful doctor, taking time off from a busy career to serve king and country in two world wars.
Pressure from a combination of the police, the acid squad, and what we'll euphemistically refer to as "local characters", meant securing warehouse space was difficult, so Joe was forced into looking for a licensed premises.
Canada Letter When a senior American cabinet secretary shows up for an interview, it usually involves a motorcade of sleek, black cars complete with a "security package," as they euphemistically call the guys with guns.
South Korea has not formally abandoned the agreement, which both governments at the time called a "final and irreversible" settlement of the decades-old dispute surrounding the former sex slaves, known euphemistically as comfort women.
Importantly, torture was referred to euphemistically as "enhanced interrogation techniques," and this willful innocence seeped into every aspect of how they dealt with the findings of the report and its eventual dissemination (or lack thereof).
The Report stars Adam Driver as Daniel J. Jones, the Senate staffer who spent seven long years, beginning in 2007, investigating the CIA's use of torture — or "enhanced interrogation techniques," as they were euphemistically called.
LONDON (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - When Britain's Prince Harry carries his new bride over the threshold after their wedding on Saturday, it will be into a two-bedroom house that estate agents might euphemistically describe as "bijou".
Buchanan's column is worth a detailed look because his forthrightness is a corrective to the tendency of other political commentators to ignore racism as a factor in Trump's rise and focus instead, euphemistically, on economic anxiety.
The process has become popularly—and euphemistically—known as "clean coal," because, if all goes according to plan, a plant equipped with C.C.S. produces only a fraction of the emissions of a conventional coal-fired plant.
As two men batter each other around the head with all manner of what wrestling commentators euphemistically refer to as "foreign objects" I weep tears of utter joy; this is one of man's finest artistic achievements.
In the latest of its (likely fruitless) attemptsto govern the seething mob that comprises its user base, Twitter rolled out a change in how it oversees the publication of what it euphemistically referred to as 'intimate media.
As neo-Nazism, in its euphemistically rebranded "alt-right" form, has risen across the globe in the past few years, so too has the question of how best to combat this dangerous threat to freedom and humanity.
North Korea can also tap what is euphemistically known among economists as "errors and omissions," which in North Korea's case has included narcotics trafficking, counterfeiting, gunrunning and the sale of advanced weapons technology to other rogue regimes.
There is nothing quite as dark as scrolling through your dog's Instagram feed for a quick pick-me-up and discovering that one of your favorites has, as their owners like to say euphemistically, crossed the rainbow bridge.
In what would become a much meme-ified statement, he told the diary room camera that he'd be lying if he said he wasn't attracted to her; he euphemistically said he'd be open to 'getting to know' her.
It carefully framed its Korematsu opinion as focused on a policy of "exclusion," ignoring the network of civilian assembly centers and "relocation" camps — as the internment camps were euphemistically known — that ultimately held between 110,000 and 120,000 people.
That Mr. Donnelly, who got his start writing graffiti in his native Jersey City, has recently joined the American Museum of Folk Art's board may sound incongruous for someone routinely designated (and euphemistically maligned) as a street artist.
According to Marine Corps records, though, Whelan did not retire from the Marines but has what the services euphemistically call "bad paper," a type of military discharge that, among other things, creates issues with veterans benefits — and security clearances.
Bosch developed software known euphemistically as the "acoustic function," according to the lawsuits, that would detect when the engine was being tested for air quality and would turn off the engine-quieting function, to keep emissions within allowable limits.
Photographers working for the euphemistically named War Relocation Authority to document this massive involuntary migration were instructed to not depict armed guards, barbed wire, or watchtowers, according to Susan Carlson, who curated the New York iteration of the show.
But the issue of the comfort women, as the former sex slaves were euphemistically called in Japan and South Korea, remains seemingly intractable, despite a 2015 agreement between the countries that was meant to put the dispute behind them.
Next, a contracted surgeon removes a patient's head if the member selected Alcor's "Neuro" option, as it's euphemistically called, in hopes that a new body can be grown with a member's DNA once it comes time to be thawed out.
Bannon has been widely viewed as a point man connecting Trump to the noxious universe of right-wing white nationalists -- euphemistically called the alt-right -- who reared their ugly head in Charlottesville, Virginia, leaving one woman dead in the mayhem.
It is the latest in a long series of efforts from the Obama administration at what diplomats and other officials euphemistically call "public engagement," and the multiple reboots have shown how hard it has been for these programs to find traction.
As detailed in the New York Times in April, "The Chamber of Commerce and the tourist board are calling for harsher measures to improve what is euphemistically called the 'condition of the streets,'" after lower than expected tourism numbers in 2017.
Wednesday was the first anniversary of a landmark agreement between South Korea and Japan to resolve their dispute over the extent of Tokyo's responsibility for what happened to the wartime sex slaves, or "comfort women," as they were euphemistically known.
The soldier's death is a grim reminder that more Americans have died fighting the Taliban and other insurgent groups in 2019 than in any other year since 2014, when the Pentagon euphemistically announced the "end of combat operations" in the country.
Japan's occupation, which lasted until the end of World War II, was horrific — the Japanese military forced thousands of Korean women to serve as camp prostitutes, euphemistically called "comfort women," which remains a prickly issue in Japanese-Korean relations today.
In light of this, Clinton has made a concerted effort to define Trump by legions of supporters known euphemistically as the "Alt-Right" Trump's most prominent backers have furiously denied being motivated by racism, and are instead deeply concerned about the economy.
No matter how many times Mr. Trump issued boyish insults against other candidates, or faced newspaper stories that exposed his business dealings, his sexism or his distortions (something Mr. Trump has euphemistically called "truthful hyperbole"), people kept voting for him at the polls.
However, a moment of a consensual affection being attacked as being immoral or culturally offensive is especially hypocritical in a culture where everyday sexual harassment is so common that it's euphemistically called "Eve-teasing," as if it were merely playful and harmless.
Until I looked it up, I'd assumed that, unless we were talking about phone chargers or car keys or cake recipes, we were using the word "lost" figuratively, even euphemistically—that we say "I lost my father" to soften the blow of death.
China at the time blamed the protests on counter-revolutionaries seeking to overthrow the party, though in more recent years government officials, when answering questions from foreign media, have tended instead to simply refer more euphemistically to the "political turmoil" of the period.
Diaz-Canel has said that he hopes to avoid the long power outages that characterized the euphemistically named "special period" of the 1990s by using such measures, but that if any are required they will be planned and announced ahead of time.
The big picture: 20 American troops who have been killed in combat operations in Afghanistan — the most in one year to die fighting militant groups there since 2014, "when the Pentagon euphemistically announced the 'end of combat operations," the New York Times notes.
Any such violation, or simply being a Uighur artist or wealthy businessman, can lead to indefinite detention in what the government euphemistically calls "political training centers" — a revival of punitive Maoist re-education camps — secured by high walls, razor wire, floodlights and guard towers.
Although the show remains widely acclaimed, some critics found the brutality of the second season's early episodes — in which June painstakingly cuts a tracking tag out of her ear and Emily provides a window into the hopelessness of life in the euphemistically named Colonies — gratuitous.
" Norfolk now mandates that new construction be built three feet above current base flood elevation (as if the houses were boats, this distance from the waterline is called freeboard), and 18 inches above what Homewood says is "euphemistically known as the 500-year floodplain.
In the besieged Syrian town, which made international headlines in January when photos of its starving residents spread around the world, the only medical care facility, slightly euphemistically called the field hospital, is now run by two dentists, an agricultural engineer and a vet.
A South Korean panel set up to investigate the deal concluded on Wednesday that it failed to meet the needs of the thousands of girls and women forced to work in Japan's military brothels, many of them Korean, euphemistically termed "comfort women" by Japan.
FOLLOWING a violent confrontation in the West Bank on February 2nd between Jewish settlers and police, who were carrying out a High Court order to evict an unauthorised mini-settlement at Amona, the Israeli Knesset voted on February 6th to pass a euphemistically named "regulation law".
The notion of a backdoor, or what Senators Burr and Feinstein euphemistically call "technical assistance," that can only be used by the government—whether law enforcement needs a warrant to do so or otherwise aside—has been unanimously rejected by every mathematician and cryptologist who studies it.
The August 2016 review of the bill's bulk powers, which was carried out by the government's independent reviewer of terrorism legislation, rapidly concluded there was a distinct though not yet proven operational case for the inclusion of "bulk equipment interference" (as mass hacking is euphemistically termed).
Ms. McDaniel's selective presentation of the facts hews closely to the playbook of a president who sees his brand as all about winning — and who has no qualms about engaging in what he long ago coined euphemistically as "truthful hyperbole" if he thinks it helps him.
This was an odd display of public hand-washing, given that Breitbart News, which Bannon ran before he joined the campaign and to which he has now returned, has been so closely tied to the development of the euphemistically termed "alt-right" and its various belligerents.
The Athens in which the novel is set — like today's — is a city of refugees: the aftermath of what was euphemistically referred to as a "population exchange" after the terrible Greco-Turkish War of 1919-22 had suddenly increased the city's population by more than a million.
On what the political press has rather euphemistically decided to describe as the "Access Hollywood tape," Trump — talking to a casual acquaintance while wearing a microphone — offered this view of his philosophy of life: I better use some Tic Tacs just in case I start kissing her.
The Chamber of Commerce and the tourist board are calling for harsher measures to improve what is euphemistically called the "condition of the streets," a term that encompasses the intractable homeless problem, public intravenous drug use, the large population of mentally ill people on the streets and aggressive panhandling.
The challenge, by rights group Liberty, led last month to an initial finding that MI5 had systematically breached safeguards in the UK's Investigatory Powers Act (IPA) — breaches the Home Secretary, Sajid Javid, euphemistically couched as "compliance risks" in a carefully worded written statement that was quietly released to parliament.
Here's Wax using the phrase, popularized by people including Derbyshire (and note how she refers to the alt-right, euphemistically, as the "dissident right"): There's currently tremendous resistance to thinking rigorously about the causes of persistently chaotic conditions in the Third World, and to addressing the implications for immigration policy.
Jay Michaud, FBI special agent Daniel Alfin argued that the hacking tool used to identify Michaud and thousands of other Playpen users—which the FBI euphemistically calls a "Network Investigative Technique" or "NIT"—isn't malware because it was authorized by a court and didn't damage the security of Michaud's computer.
Both appear to be betting that voters are so tired of what is euphemistically called the "street conditions" that they are willing to depart from the live-and-let-live San Francisco ethos and work more forcefully to put an end to the many tent encampments and public drug use.
Near the very end of The Bell Curve, he writes, somewhat euphemistically, "that group differences in cognitive ability, so desperately denied for so long, can best be handled — can only be handled — by a return to individualism" rather than with policies that seek to specifically address or remedy racism or racial disadvantage.
It has also been accused of applying a biased standard when it comes to weeding out "coordinated inauthentic behavior", as Facebook euphemistically calls the networks of fake accounts set up to amplify and juice reach — when the propaganda in question is coming from within the US and leans toward the political right.
Harald Metzkes "The Drinker" (1955) oil on board As cultural policy, administrators and managers in the GDR often avoided outright use of the word "verboten" (forbidden) when censoring works; instead, most of them euphemistically referred to their administrative actions simply as "measures," even when cancelling performances, exhibitions, or preventing individual art works from public display.
Then there are all the mandatory charges rolled into the published "tuition and fees," including a slew of euphemistically named fees for costs that used to be covered by tuition, like the annual $814 "student success fee" at California Polytechnic State and the $3,324 "academic excellence fee" for entering students at the University of Oklahoma.
It's also not the only David artwork in the video, with glimpses of the bro moment Oath of the Horatii, the (questionably) euphemistically titled The Intervention of the Sabine Women (the Sabine women were either raped or kidnapped or both, depending on what you read), and Portrait of Madame Récamier, an 1800 portrait of the Parisian socialite Juliette Récamier.
Rather than sport Nazi uniforms and talk endlessly of "niggers" and "kikes" as Rockwell did, Spencer and his twenty-first-century allies have eschewed the uniforms and swastikas—though Spencer does enjoy a good Nazi salute now and then—and euphemistically labeled themselves "alt-right," which sounds more cutesy than threatening, and which the media obligingly went gaga over.
Headlines and protests spiked in the spring of 2018, when the Trump administration declared family separation (euphemistically termed "Zero Tolerance") to be government policy across the entire U.S.-Mexican border; the outcry was so explosive that on June 20, 0003, Donald Trump was forced to sign an executive order, ostensibly ending family separations at the border.
Photo: Hassan Ammar (AP)Egyptian authorities are not very happy with a video taken by Danish photographer Andreas Hvid, who climbed what appeared to be the Great Pyramid of Giza, took footage of himself and a female friend in what was euphemistically termed a "naked embrace," and then uploaded it to YouTube in the past week, CNN reported on Saturday.
Furious and despairing about the actions of the current administration, the group will then travel about 40 miles down the road to Dilley, Texas, where they will be joined by others for a protest at the euphemistically named South Texas Family Residential Center, where children are being separated from their parents — like Ina and others who were separated from parents during World War II. "We're in our 70s, 80s, and 90s," Ina said.
Scorsese often juxtaposes LaMotta's baser desires with his Catholicism, to humorous effect — for instance, he meets his second wife Vicky at a church dance; on their first date they rather euphemistically lose a ball in the minigolf hole that is shaped like a church; and we often watch Jake and Vicky in various states of undress in the door to the bedroom, which is flanked by kitschy portraits of Jesus and Mary.
This period (euphemistically described in the exhibition's placards as a time when power between East and West was "more evenly balanced") saw travelers, such as the German Bernhard von Breydenbach (226-97) — whose magnificent 1486 travelogue "A Pilgrimage to The Holy Land" is part of the exhibition — write about the Islamic polities they visited for an increasingly curious audience back home, feeding European and, later, American fascination with the exotic lands of the Orient — especially the Ottoman, Safavid, and Mughal Empires.
The LGBT conservatives of Log Cabin Republicans were among the revelers — not only because the decision affirmed our organization's longstanding constitutional commitment to marriage equality, and not only because the decision was authored by a Justice appointed to the nation's highest court by the rightly lionized conservative legend President Ronald Reagan; but also because in enumerating the reasons why DOMA was wrong, Justice Kennedy shined a spotlight on what is perhaps one of the greatest inequalities in the federal tax code: the estate tax — more euphemistically (and rightly) known as the "death tax".
The WP29 today said those alternative transfer mechanisms could still continue to be used by businesses while the uncertainty around a new overarching EU-US data transfer mechanism continues — albeit the legality of those mechanisms has also been questioned, on the same grounds of whether or not they provide an elusive 'essential equivalence' level of protection for Europeans' data once it is in the US. The Privacy Shield provides for a swathe of exceptions whereby US can perform bulk collection (or "generalized access", as it was euphemistically referred to by the EC commissioner leading the negotiations to secure a new deal) of European data — such as where "tailored and targeted access is not technically or operationally possible; or if they see some very dangerous trend that needs more than targeted access" — and these exceptions are evidently too broad for the WP29 to be confident the Privacy Shield would stand up to a future legal challenge.

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