And it's just an exaggerated, slightly only exaggerated ... KS: Mm-hmm, slightly only.
|
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Valfaris is an excellent action game, a game whose exaggerated aesthetic feels in concert with its equally exaggerated gameplay.
|
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"He exaggerated to a point, and I came up with my own conclusion to why he exaggerated …" To sell books?
|
|
It actually looks like a more exaggerated version on the ceramic OnePlus X.Similar edged design on the OnePlus X though less exaggerated.
|
|
"The odds of exaggerated news were substantially higher when the press releases issued by the academic institutions were exaggerated," the study authors conclude.
|
|
Look, I view this story as kind of a Greek tragedy in that every element is exaggerated as far as it could possibly be exaggerated.
|
|
He's out there in territory he thinks is familiar, which is meeting exaggerated statement with exaggerated statement, convincing the other side that we're tough, you're going to fold.
|
|
And while he's exaggerated in this, way over the top exaggerated, the fact that he has made a contribution to kind of loosen things up a little bit, I think that's good.
|
|
"That conclusion is a bit misplaced, or exaggerated," said Asif.
|
|
Reports of originality in pop music have been greatly exaggerated.
|
|
The group often makes exaggerated casualty claims for its attacks.
|
|
So, a lot of this I think is potentially exaggerated.
|
|
Rumors of its demise have been greatly exaggerated, another said.
|
|
Butts can be exaggerated and stomach rolls can be concealed.
|
|
Reports of Girl Meets World's death have been greatly exaggerated.
|
|
And some supposed successes turn out to be wildly exaggerated.
|
|
It is also true that the bot problem is exaggerated.
|
|
But reports of Tumblr's imminent death may be greatly exaggerated.
|
|
Mr Sanders's following, influence and prospects have all been exaggerated.
|
|
Our world also has these extremes, but they're less exaggerated.
|
|
It is mainly industrial output and investment that are exaggerated.
|
|
The Atletico Madrid striker denied he had exaggerated the challenge.
|
|
He despised "exaggerated planning", along with financial markets and banks.
|
|
From pouffy sleeves to balloon skirts, exaggerated proportions are key.
|
|
Height on top, and exaggerated shape all down the back.
|
|
Investors have exaggerated expectations of auditors' ability to detect fraud.
|
|
"This is too cute alright I'm dead," exaggerated one commenter.
|
|
Some critics, however, have accused him of making exaggerated claims.
|
|
Versace herself suggests all the industry gossip has been exaggerated.
|
|
His fans say Rivas exaggerated and the media demonized him.
|
|
And at the Met Ball, she works with exaggerated shapes.
|
|
But police statistics have shown that figure to be exaggerated.
|
|
The influence of economic anxiety, he concluded, had been exaggerated.
|
|
In some instances, Trump exaggerated his wealth, the paper said.
|
|
The second image below shows similar, but less exaggerated differences.
|
|
"Intrigue in the White House is always exaggerated," Sununu said.
|
|
Still, they are kind of fun in an exaggerated way.
|
|
He was swinging the knife in an aggressive, exaggerated manner.
|
|
But even when the antics are exaggerated, they remain believable.
|
|
" I used to run from it, like [exaggerated sigh] "Improvising?
|
|
There were many exaggerated flops, and virtually no scoring chances.
|
|
Exaggerated kissing is a signature feature of his animated shorts.
|
|
Lawrence and Schumer will supposedly play exaggerated versions of themselves.
|
|
The commission exaggerated the turnout by at least 1m people.
|
|
Some economists believe the report exaggerated the services sector's weakness.
|
|
Namely that the reports of my death are greatly exaggerated.
|
|
Hopkins exaggerated Clarkson's White House bona fides, he was otherwise
|
|
But the Gupta thing was an exaggerated version of it.
|
|
All these assertions are grossly exaggerated if not dead wrong.
|
|
Apparently, the death of business investment has been greatly exaggerated.
|
|
IBM said earlier media reports of "massive" layoffs are exaggerated.
|
|
He added that the sanctions issue should not be exaggerated.
|
|
So we suppose rumors of their demise were greatly exaggerated.
|
|
Those claims are often exaggerated, and they can evaporate fast.
|
|
Read more: President Trump's Exaggerated and Misleading Claims on Trade
|
|
Rumors of the Old Taylor's death have been greatly exaggerated.
|
|
He says he never sought out the most exaggerated wines.
|
|
He wears a shiny red nose and an exaggerated grin.
|
|
The dangers of the South Carolina defeat shouldn't be exaggerated.
|
|
The safety fears, if not purely imaginary, are wildly exaggerated.
|
|
This sketch reimagines that scene in an exaggerated joke format.
|
|
Traders said market moves could be exaggerated by low liquidity.
|
|
"No, that's the crazy thing!" he said with exaggerated amazement.
|
|
That description rankled former Bloomberg officials, who called it exaggerated.
|
|
" Any benefits of conservation programs Khetan said, are "grossly exaggerated.
|
|
Even there, the scale of Democratic weakness has been exaggerated.
|
|
Things look exaggerated and even hallucinatory as Neptune distorts reality.
|
|
We exaggerated the number of our members to scare others.
|
|
Russia's role in these events has been exaggerated, he said.
|
|
Now, he can be crude and exaggerated on the stump.
|
|
Fidyka shook my hand with exaggerated vigor, like a salesman.
|
|
What climate alarmists say is sometimes untrue and often exaggerated.
|
|
That could have exaggerated the decline in claims last week.
|
|
Since the baby was born, this quality had become exaggerated.
|
|
It's a reminder that reports of democracy's demise are exaggerated.
|
|
Reports of Bayern Munich's demise have not been greatly exaggerated.
|
|
Other experts say claims of a deteriorating military are exaggerated.
|
|
But in New York, he notes, the indifference is exaggerated.
|
|
So the heels are higher, the hair's bigger, everything's exaggerated.
|
|
The viciousness of the 2016 Democratic primary is sometimes exaggerated.
|
|
Tip: Works best alongside a thick and exaggerated winged eyeliner look.
|
|
But most economists think the impact on retail is greatly exaggerated.
|
|
He also exaggerated progress he claims to have made on Iran.
|
|
It's a great story, though it's probably exaggerated to some degree.
|
|
She doesn't direct attention to herself in a noticeable, exaggerated manner.
|
|
Pakistan also insists its influence over the Taliban has been exaggerated.
|
|
He asked me all kinds of questions, and I exaggerated everything.
|
|
Trump has exaggerated the effect of the tariffs on U.S. revenue.
|
|
Yet despite these failings, the euro zone's ills are easily exaggerated.
|
|
Short-term benefits, like a boost in tourism, are often exaggerated.
|
|
Our guide insisted on going, suggesting the risk must be exaggerated.
|
|
Trump's claims, which The Health 13 reported were exaggerated, infuriated Democrats.
|
|
Which begs the question, why the exaggerated horror at the news?
|
|
Her exaggerated, tear-faced crying sequence went on to become apparel.
|
|
However, the Spanish colonisers probably exaggerated how many they had seen.
|
|
This leads to the exaggerated equation of gentrification with white supremacy.
|
|
Reports of the death of Google Glass have been greatly exaggerated.
|
|
He has on occasion exaggerated his influence over his American counterpart.
|
|
Fashion artists have always outrageously exaggerated the silhouette of their models.
|
|
Mr Macron has on occasion exaggerated his influence over Mr Trump.
|
|
"We'll see," she said, throwing an exaggerated wink to the camera.
|
|
But Macquarie analyst Vivienne Lloyd said that aspect had been exaggerated.
|
|
Except in VR, they're realized as cartoon villagers with exaggerated features.
|
|
History has shown such predictions to be wildly exaggerated, of course.
|
|
Rumors of the American dream being dead have been greatly exaggerated.
|
|
The government denies this and say the death toll is exaggerated.
|
|
Some police estimates of previous protests have proved to be exaggerated.
|
|
Reports of Jack Ma's impending retirement are greatly exaggerated, it seems.
|
|
"It's exaggerated because the media love a monster story," Coleman says.
|
|
Similar to a long exposure, the colors can be more exaggerated.
|
|
That said, other downsides of Brexit are routinely exaggerated by Remainers.
|
|
Many of the commonly heard warnings about China's economy are exaggerated.
|
|
Some experts say WikiLeaks exaggerated the contents of the leaked documents.
|
|
Everybody is doing these exaggerated brows, but it's not my thing.
|
|
The impact of those imports on U.S. industry has been exaggerated.
|
|
First, he guides her exaggerated facial expressions from behind his monitor.
|
|
The exception is Versati, who speaks with an exaggerated Italian accent.
|
|
Glazer also portrayed an exaggerated version of herself on both series.
|
|
As of now, rumors of Obamacare's death spiral have been exaggerated.
|
|
Reports of the car show's inevitable demise have been exaggerated, however.
|
|
And from everything that we've seen, it is not over-exaggerated.
|
|
So is Joe an exaggerated version of who we all are?
|
|
Yet the risks posed by politics in Italy are usually exaggerated.
|
|
Later, she came back wearing a full face of exaggerated makeup.
|
|
A resident of Dongguan then "exaggerated" and spread the story further.
|
|
"Let's say nothing happens and people say they exaggerated," he said.
|
|
Some of Trump's claims about the economy were exaggerated or inaccurate.
|
|
Some dance with exaggerated technique, their faces pinched tight with discipline.
|
|
Twice as many Republicans as Democrats think the concern is exaggerated.
|
|
Mr. Duterte and the police say that figure is grossly exaggerated.
|
|
Mr. Trump's claim, referring to American military personnel, is slightly exaggerated.
|
|
"The impact of antibiotic therapy tends to be exaggerated," she says.
|
|
The world has gotten so cartoonishly exaggerated and over the top.
|
|
The purported harms reported here are exaggerated to a ridiculous level.
|
|
I'd only heard them and seen Ms. Kobayashi's exaggerated re-enactments.
|
|
There were plenty of deep sighs and exaggerated eye rolls, too.
|
|
While such actions are a good beginning, they shouldn't be exaggerated.
|
|
But it turns out that reports of its death are exaggerated.
|
|
More college teams are turning to exaggerated defensive shifts, for instance.
|
|
Cole Haan Slick Wool Wrap Coat with Exaggerated Collar, $380; zappos.
|
|
It seems exaggerated and ridiculous to me, this is called persecution!
|
|
So you get a series of exaggerated fervors — the Mueller report!
|
|
Much has been written about how Trump's success is highly exaggerated.
|
|
Democrats say that Republican claims of a prolonged trial are exaggerated.
|
|
Examples of odd and exaggerated Asian movie and TV characters abound.
|
|
"Some of the effects can be wildly exaggerated," said Citi's Watson.
|
|
Like so many aspects of porn, it's greatly exaggerated and unrealistic.
|
|
Prisons Minister Iris Varela suggested the cannibalism claims might be exaggerated.
|
|
"I think what happened was exaggerated from all sides," Nastase said.
|
|
". "We are getting exaggerated moves but that's of course volatility playing.
|
|
This is a story that is completely exaggerated and made up.
|
|
Valletti said fears that regulatory action could hurt Facebook were exaggerated.
|
|
"My estimates of their demise have been greatly exaggerated," he said.
|
|
Others are generally true, but wildly exaggerated for no apparent reason.
|
|
Migrant workers frequently fall prey to shady recruiters proffering exaggerated wages.
|
|
Hyperbole: exaggerated statements or claims not meant to be taken literally.
|
|
Despite those safeguards, prosecutors are again making exaggerated threats about risk.
|
|
They were exaggerated or manufactured to be extra compelling, Kaplan said.
|
|
Reports of the demise of Manchester City's aura are, clearly, exaggerated.
|
|
Reports of the death of the written word are greatly exaggerated.
|
|
For Edgar an exaggerated distance might be useful in this fight.
|
|
Through exaggerated under Trump, Wilkerson said this trend is hardly new.
|
|
Experts have dismissed the sales and jobs numbers as highly exaggerated.
|
|
"El Mierda" he says, with exaggerated and definitely incorrect Mexican pronunciation.
|
|
There were other calling cards: upturned noses, small feet and exaggerated musculature.
|
|
Kickstarter's tool will flag exaggerated names and suggest that they be changed.
|
|
One character has a wild red pompadour and exaggerated patent leather skirt.
|
|
But tales of her heroics so far have been a bit exaggerated.
|
|
Turns out rumors of Game of Thrones' demise have been greatly exaggerated.
|
|
The pope's statement also had been exaggerated by the media, he said.
|
|
Orrin Hatch's demise are greatly exaggerated -- and he's proving it with bacon.
|
|
Bath salts are definitely dangerous, though their zombie-making reputation is exaggerated.
|
|
But the Philippine justice secretary said Duterte "exaggerated" during his latest remarks.
|
|
The exaggerated square neckline and dark lipstick gives her look an edge.
|
|
It's very difficult to time it and make sense of exaggerated moves.
|
|
To show what's going on, let's draw an exaggerated version of everything.
|
|
Reports of merger talks between Charter and Verizon have been greatly exaggerated.
|
|
Murdoch's letters shock, it is because her behavior is perhaps exaggerated, but
|
|
"Everything in North Korea is stated in highly exaggerated terms," Hoare said.
|
|
Reports of the Green Bay Packers' death have been...well, slightly exaggerated.
|
|
That's why you usually create an attractive, exaggerated image—like in cinema.
|
|
She is said to view exaggerated expectations as dangerous for her campaign.
|
|
Detecting which stories are exaggerated can be daunting if you're no expert.
|
|
Some events may be staged/re-enacted/ or exaggerated for entertainment purposes.
|
|
No story lines were off limits, including outrageous comedy and exaggerated drama.
|
|
But it's clear the reports of real books' death are greatly exaggerated.
|
|
" Clinton adds: "The burdens you now shoulder are great but often exaggerated.
|
|
This may seem like an exaggerated concern, but our memories are short.
|
|
Hicks' role and knowledge" concerning the privatization effort "have been grossly exaggerated.
|
|
I suspect it was slightly exaggerated, but the difference really is clear.
|
|
Venezuelan government supporters have said the extent of emigration has been exaggerated.
|
|
The bugs' expanded, exaggerated legs aren't common among insects, say the researchers.
|
|
If the colors in this image look exaggerated that's because they are.
|
|
Laverne Cox credits exaggerated shapes for making her hands appear more soft.
|
|
" It also called doctors' concerns about addiction side effects "inaccurate and exaggerated.
|
|
"At first, I found this law to be somewhat exaggerated," she said.
|
|
She is haunted by a cupboard full of skeletons, real and exaggerated.
|
|
Reports of the death of Bitcoin in India have been greatly exaggerated.
|
|
Science journalism is often full of exaggerated, conflicting, or outright misleading claims.
|
|
Of course, exaggerated claims are the norm for this self-obsessed regime.
|
|
FOX NEWS OPINION Kyle Smith: Trump&aposs demise has been greatly exaggerated .
|
|
A fugue is thought to be an exaggerated version of this impulse.
|
|
More than likely, this scene was exaggerated for the sake of drama.
|
|
In reality, reports of the death of the job are greatly exaggerated.
|
|
A lot of claims around antibiotics and the microbiome are very exaggerated.
|
|
"She was really unhappy with me," he said, with exaggerated self-deprecation.
|
|
Rather, they're showcasing an exaggerated version of their most uniquely female anatomy.
|
|
Contouring's sharp angles and exaggerated lines are a thing of the past.
|
|
The fiery freshman mocked Trump on Monday, claiming he's exaggerated his wealth.
|
|
But it's also possible that my despair over European reform is exaggerated.
|
|
The shop is a wildly exaggerated version of your local skate shop.
|
|
Mr Cameron may have exaggerated the risk of armed conflict in Europe.
|
|
And sadly some Republican lawmakers think that is nonexistent or wildly exaggerated.
|
|
But grenache has particular properties that lend themselves well to exaggerated wines.
|
|
Trump's campaign aides argue that predictions of his demise are greatly exaggerated.
|
|
Certainly, many costumes incorporate cultural images that have exaggerated or oversimplified elements.
|
|
He told the UK's Daily Telegraph newspaper that the allegations were exaggerated.
|
|
As at Moncler Gamme Bleu, exaggerated utility was Prada's tacit through-line.
|
|
Clinton's advisers suggest that the ideological schisms among Democrats have been exaggerated.
|
|
"Let's say nothing happens and people say they exaggerated," Mr. Nelson said.
|
|
"Watch for 100 percent claims," he said, because they are probably exaggerated.
|
|
"Reports of our death are extremely exaggerated," campaign manager Jeff Weaver said.
|
|
A handful of designers, in particular, have experimented with exaggerated, ballooning sleeves.
|
|
Bayer said the methods used by the E.P.A. exaggerated the environmental risk.
|
|
The above example might seem exaggerated and, to a point, it is.
|
|
Exciting conversations arrive today, but if something sounds exaggerated, it probably is!
|
|
But his exaggerated style resonated with young boys, fueling sales for Marvel.
|
|
Put simply, an aggressive walk is one where this rotation is exaggerated.
|
|
Then again, the federalists' strength has always been exaggerated, especially in Britain.
|
|
" Ullrich chalks this story up to "Hitler's need for exaggerated self-importance.
|
|
In many respects, the reports of Republican demise have been grossly exaggerated.
|
|
Even if the controversies are exaggerated, she should be better in control.
|
|
"I don't think it's exaggerated," Mr. Meidinger said about the police action.
|
|
We take exaggerated and histrionic offense to whatever is said about us.
|
|
But the overture is long, and the episode turns stagy and exaggerated.
|
|
"It's easier to resist as information if it feels exaggerated," she said.
|
|
Sergio Ramos with exaggerated slow steps and sends Akinfeev the wrong way.
|
|
We received a mix between the truth and lies from exaggerated sources.
|
|
You might be thinking I'm some demanding millennial with an exaggerated ego.
|
|
The president has at times exaggerated the timeline for a coronavirus vaccine.
|
|
The (exaggerated) weakness of their position makes Everett's supposed victory seem trivial.
|
|
The results show that all the talk of skepticism is badly exaggerated.
|
|
It's just a word that meant exaggerated, too much for the occasion.
|
|
So Turgenev hadn't exaggerated the beauties of his childhood world, I thought.
|
|
He has also exaggerated the trade deficit totals with China and Mexico.
|
|
Many readers submitted tips about deceptive or exaggerated claims targeting individual candidates.
|
|
"I'm kind of sick of that," he said of manufacturers' exaggerated claims.
|
|
He also said he thought recent reports have exaggerated New Yorkers' dissatisfaction.
|
|
He reacted to both with an exaggerated wave toward the Phillies' dugout.
|
|
It's important to note that accounts of electoral fraud are often exaggerated.
|
|
The optimistic tale of the modern, involved dad has been greatly exaggerated.
|
|
Reports of the economic expansion's death appear to have been greatly exaggerated.
|
|
Ethnic hostilities were most exaggerated when they provided a path to power.
|
|
The key passage: Accusing the President of authoritarian tactics once seemed exaggerated.
|
|
"Rumors of the demise of the theatre industry have been greatly exaggerated."
|
|
"The economic expectations of Democrats and Republicans are clearly exaggerated," Michigan found.
|
|
"It's an exaggerated model of what happens in humans," Dr. Perlman said.
|
|
But the greatest benefits came from the most exaggerated amounts of activity.
|
|
But the reports of death turn out to have been greatly exaggerated.
|
|
Elsewhere there were exaggerated bows, supersize strands of pearls and gargantuan ruffles.
|
|
There is nothing of the fashion priestess about her—no exaggerated chic.
|
|
" Adopting an exaggerated announcer's voice, Isaac replied, "'Go Poe,' on Disney Plus.
|
|
Just as recent recession fears were overdone, this bullishness may be exaggerated.
|
|
Putin's campaigns are insidious, operating under cover of bombast and exaggerated threats.
|
|
We have to be careful here not to have another exaggerated reaction.
|
|
It's grossly exaggerated and very unkind, and zero personal details are changed.
|
|
The fat-burning effects of high-intensity interval workouts have been exaggerated.
|
|
A less sensationalized feed that doesn't reward exaggerated claims would top my list.
|
|
And although the scenarios are exaggerated, they're hilarious, because they're sometimes scarily true.
|
|
Some think that, even without such a setback, Netflix's prospects are being exaggerated.
|
|
You can ask the question of whether the market has exaggerated the trade?
|
|
The end result half-succeeds, swerving between exaggerated satire and eye-rolling drama.
|
|
In general, whatever feature is closest to a smartphone camera will be exaggerated.
|
|
Reports of humanity's imminent extinction have been greatly exaggerated, to paraphrase Mark Twain.
|
|
Lastly, is the doom and gloom over the future of London nightlife exaggerated?
|
|
From the looks of it, the claims of vinnie_james are a bit exaggerated.
|
|
A study published in China Quarterly, though, suggests those numbers are probably exaggerated.
|
|
But it's uncomfortable when we see it happening on such an exaggerated scale.
|
|
Rumors of the Ford Mustang Shelby GT350's demise have been greatly exaggerated.
|
|
Reputation risk However, economist Nonso Obikili believes that the bleakest predictions are exaggerated.
|
|
Rumors of the Hound's demise might be exaggerated, and there's always Lady Stoneheart.
|
|
The way official figures are put together means that these declines are exaggerated.
|
|
Yet the pitch of economic anxiety motivating Mr Trump's supporters has been exaggerated.
|
|
Exaggerated and eyebrow enveloping, these styles get weird — and feel undeniably, quintessentially Gucci.
|
|
He also said he thinks some of the reports were a little exaggerated.
|
|
"The 'glow' is exaggerated by the actual highlight in the image," Stewart says.
|
|
Sometimes, in order to make those conflicts legible, they have to be exaggerated.
|
|
Soros himself has said that his role in Georgia has been greatly exaggerated.
|
|
"Keep it clean and in classic shapes, with an exaggerated detail," Fridja advises.
|
|
The idea that the Saudis could help topple Iran's mullahs was similarly exaggerated.
|
|
The circumstances surrounding them suggest that claims of customers being swindled are exaggerated.
|
|
The volunteers are generously spaced apart and attack one another with exaggerated movements.
|
|
"That didn't happen and that's why — I over-exaggerated that part, " Lochte said.
|
|
The buildings around it threw exaggerated dark silhouettes of themselves to the east.
|
|
Brexiteers may claim that, like forecasts before the referendum, the risks are exaggerated.
|
|
They scream and shout, and I feel their support, however exaggerated or performative.
|
|
Was my hip-to-waist ratio as exaggerated as I could make it?
|
|
But a source told PEOPLE at the time that the report was exaggerated.
|
|
His anti-rich populism turns out to be exaggerated, not least by him.
|
|
These charges may be quite baseless or exaggerated, but the damage is done.
|
|
"I think the complete death of stores has been greatly exaggerated," Wenig said.
|
|
ORRIN HATCH, R—UTAH: The reports of my demise have been greatly exaggerated.
|
|
"The benefits of new treatments are always exaggerated at the start," he says.
|
|
The difference between underlying technologies is exaggerated by differences of language and conceptualization.
|
|
Facebook's downfall has, it seems, been greatly exaggerated — at least according to Facebook .
|
|
Deradicalisation, says one official, is a "growing industry with lots of exaggerated claims".
|
|
But Daqneesh claims the details of what happened to Omran were grossly exaggerated.
|
|
Still, Jacobs noticed the performer with the exaggerated lips and the delicious name.
|
|
The gyrations at high-end steak houses were even more exaggerated, he said.
|
|
And I must say, the exaggerated size really highlights the AirPod's hairdryer physique.
|
|
But many concerns about cultural compatibility might be exaggerated, according to labor experts.
|
|
It may sound like an exaggerated characterization of his position, but it's not.
|
|
However, Kogan said the services provided by the consultancy had been greatly exaggerated.
|
|
Conservatives' allegations of media bias over the years have been exaggerated and overblown.
|
|
The article grossly exaggerated the number of witnesses and what they had perceived.
|
|
But these are outlandishly exaggerated examples of absent, dismissive, inept, or villainous fathers.
|
|
Reports of the Canadian immigration website buckling under heavy traffic were, however, exaggerated.
|
|
Importation advocates have long exaggerated the disparity between Canadian and American drug prices.
|
|
Things like anxiety and dread are way exaggerated when you're in that state.
|
|
The giant, exaggerated roofs would peek out over other buildings, beckoning to drivers.
|
|
The bass is either anemic, as on Apple's EarPods, or exaggerated and distorted.
|
|
Biden doesn't have the same exaggerated scandals in his closet that Clinton did.
|
|
"I think a lot has been said about that is exaggerated," Wenger said.
|
|
It confirmed what many meteorologists had already suspected: The old calculation had exaggerated.
|
|
The vaccine produced an exaggerated immune response, causing extensive damage in their bodies.
|
|
If heroes are idealized humans, then today's reflect an exaggerated Cult of Self.
|
|
If anything, the role of Facebook and its executives has sometimes been exaggerated.
|
|
It shows how exaggerated things seem to be when in reality they're not.
|
|
Everything feels exaggerated—have fun, but don't make promises that you can't keep.
|
|
The trade "war" between the United States and China is exaggerated and overblown.
|
|
This shift comes after a long period in which exaggerated red wine ruled.
|
|
Many are being shut down for making exaggerated claims or selling phantom products.
|
|
Rumors of UFC heavyweight Travis Browne leaving Edmond Tarverdyan have been greatly exaggerated.
|
|
Fox News' impact was exaggerated on a hyper-politicized day like Mueller Day.
|
|
And I think some discussion of the Ohio case exaggerated its likely effect.
|
|
As for Russia, it's a threat that needs to be handled, not exaggerated.
|
|
A woman's accusation will turn out to be grossly exaggerated or flatly untrue.
|
|
But much like Mark Twain, the rumors of its death are greatly exaggerated.
|
|
Mr. Zuma often said critics exaggerated the level of graft in his administration.
|
|
"I think we get exaggerated moves when we have fewer and fewer intermediaries."
|
|
Trump has repeatedly exaggerated the size of the overflow crowd outside his rallies.
|
|
As CNN's Daniel Dale notes, many of Trump's economic claims are heavily exaggerated.
|
|
However, there are reasons to think that this perspective, although understandable, is exaggerated.
|
|
He mouthed an exaggerated "Yes," but then he broke into a broad smile.
|
|
And he earned prestige with a resume built on exaggerated and dubious achievements.
|
|
The butch black sex stud they desired, exaggerated by the meth, imprisoned him.
|
|
Time and time again, he found that risks existed but were frequently exaggerated.
|
|
Taliban forces have often exaggerated or fabricated their capabilities in the Afghanistan conflict.
|
|
She added that "fears of outright populism" in the budget may be exaggerated.
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In truth, the much-invoked deficiency of the hall's acoustics has been exaggerated.
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But little about these feats, whether they are exaggerated or not, resounds domestically.
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There is nothing exaggerated or overblown in what Freeman says in the video.
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I mean, he was a jerk, but I might have exaggerated a bit.
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It was an epic threat that he painted — and a grossly exaggerated one.
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To say that these actions were unnecessary and exaggerated would be an understatement.
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If that number sounds exaggerated, think of four billion Asians installing air-conditioning.
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Casualty numbers provided by both sides are often exaggerated and difficult to verify.
|
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Nothing feels exaggerated, which is quite something given the themes of the game.
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Update: George R.R. Martin declares rumors of his death to be greatly exaggerated.
|
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" Those comments, al-Jubeir said, were "exaggerated and I think, frankly, they're not fair.
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Mr Ollila, now 68, has described Mr Siilasmaa's claims as exaggerated or not true.
|
|
Ultimately, Cramer found that the Journal may have exaggerated how bad earnings season is.
|
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Reports of the Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA) impending death may have been greatly exaggerated.
|
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To Hutchinson, the stiletto seemed like an exaggerated, even sexualized, representation of women's footwear.
|
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Trump exaggerated the amount of money Iran gained access to because of the agreement.
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There's a lot of exaggerated hand signals when it comes to communicating with him.
|
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But for McHugh, these depictions reflect reality — an exaggerated version, perhaps, but reality nonetheless.
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I&aposve seen these attacks before -- unfair, exaggerated, and I&aposve seen them work.
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Boys and men are pushed to be manly and have an exaggerated masculine pride.
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So far we're only showing the position of the (exaggerated) Moon once per day.
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|
I think that's a little exaggerated, because that's what people really like to hear.
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The way newscasters speak is unmistakeable, with their exaggerated modulations and drawn-out pauses.
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But even here, her lead was probably always a bit exaggerated by the media.
|
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Sudan and Bashir denied war crimes were committed, saying casualties in Darfur were exaggerated.
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More exaggerated oscillations would spell blizzards and heatwaves in unexpected places at unexpected times.
|
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"Fears of a supply shock were greatly exaggerated," PVM analysts said in a note.
|
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Russia's claims in this area have long been regarded in the West as exaggerated.
|
|
Some Trumpkins are expertly carved, presenting exaggerated caricatures of the Donald's most famous attributes.
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I can actually see myself in them regardless of how [exaggerated they might be].
|
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Most often, the Iranian-born photographer achieves this through the exaggerated manipulation of color.
|
|
Y: Yahoo's exaggerated serifs make it one of the most recognizable fonts in tech.
|
|
The Border Patrol has insisted that reports of deplorable conditions for migrants were exaggerated.
|
|
At the lunch meeting, Trump also touted exaggerated stats about the Republican healthcare plan.
|
|
Tayo Oviosu, its founder, argues that the advantages of telecoms firms have been exaggerated.
|
|
The concerns are exaggerated, however, says Mark Davis, co-founder of the Unicode Consortium.
|
|
This sort of exaggerated, 'I can't even talk to women,' which is completely overblown.
|
|
But the way official figures are compiled means that manufacturing's decline has been exaggerated.
|
|
That means viewers can expect a wide array of exaggerated and theatrical outfit choices.
|
|
John Harwood: So you think the "Angry Maxine," the "Kerosene Maxine," has been exaggerated?
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|
"Talk about a nationwide housing bubble is surely exaggerated," Interhyp CEO Michiel Goris said.
|
|
Neck rolling, exaggerated hand gestures, and animated conversations are all native to Black girls.
|
|
" Saudi U.N. Ambassador Abdallah Al-Mouallimi has described the U.N. figures as "wildly exaggerated.
|
|
The former U.S. attorney then used an exaggerated Italian pronunciation for his own name.
|
|
Venezuela's government has repeatedly said its problems have been exaggerated by hostile foreign media.
|
|
Then again, this is the type of story that could take on exaggerated attention.
|
|
Grubbs was interested in how the public might be responding to this exaggerated narrative.
|
|
"The rise is not as exaggerated" as after the Baoshang Bank takeover, she said.
|
|
Arnaboldi, the researcher, said he thought reports of escapes from Sirte may be exaggerated.
|
|
REAGAN: DO YOU THINK THAT THE DEATH OF THE DEPARTMENT STORE HAS BEEN EXAGGERATED?
|
|
Arkia said it was "astounded at the exaggerated response from some of the passengers".
|
|
I run my them along the lines of text with exaggerated speed and motion.
|
|
Bill also tried to reassure Kathy Griffin ... Self-projections of demise were greatly exaggerated.
|
|
Smartphone addiction and social media have exaggerated our already-accelerated pace of daily life.
|
|
And that's fine, since some people dislike the exaggerated colors produced by OLED displays.
|
|
It's this over-exaggerated "special night" that people hype as transcendental and insurmountably emotional.
|
|
A cargo pocket never really looks like it belongs, especially on modern, exaggerated renditions.
|
|
There are so many exaggerated plays with proportion, mostly of the exceedingly oversized variety.
|
|
And both appear to have exaggerated their connections with WikiLeaks, either privately or publicly.
|
|
TV not dead Like Mark Twain, reports of TV's death have been greatly exaggerated.
|
|
In the 2018 feature film, all the girls play slightly exaggerated versions of themselves.
|
|
Imagine the Philadelphia Blacks, featuring a logo with exaggerated lips and similar big teeth.
|
|
So far, the pain felt by the stock market has not been that exaggerated.
|
|
Exaggerated reports along with out-and-out hoaxes are more common and easily accessible.
|
|
" He added, in an exaggerated brogue, " 'Aye, ye broke the strings of me harp!
|
|
An underlying theme here is that hate crimes are often either exaggerated or fictitious.
|
|
They were almost always grinning with exaggerated smiles, but underneath lay feelings of angst.
|
|
Against this background, even surprisingly robust growth should not raise exaggerated hopes, Andreae said.
|
|
In a sketch about food, he gives his cat's fluffy cheek an exaggerated lick.
|
|
It is very easy for the Chinese expert community to develop exaggerated threat perceptions.
|
|
With one out and the Dodgers using an exaggerated infield shift, Lucas Duda walked.
|
|
But rarely have I seen an effort as disingenuous and exaggerated as what Gen.
|
|
All features are exaggerated for maximum impact and no, the point is not subtle.
|
|
The war on drugs has played a significant — but exaggerated — role in mass incarceration.
|
|
Mr. Venturi himself complained that his followers had sometimes "misapplied or exaggerated" his ideas.
|
|
Hempton teased Josh, who responded with exaggerated throat-clearing as he prepared a bluff.
|
|
But they exaggerated the meaning of that kernel of truth, creating a market bubble.
|
|
I think the value of reason is exaggerated by some and downplayed by others.
|
|
The benefits of these hypothetical devices tend to be exaggerated and oversimplified, Agar says.
|
|
His lawyers insisted, though, that law enforcement officials exaggerated his wealth and his lifestyle.
|
|
On his evening Fox News show, Sean Hannity exaggerated the significance of this moment.
|
|
The importance of London's financial passport is being exaggerated, according to a think tank.
|
|
I'm not suggesting that Mr. Kahane and the players should have exaggerated for effect.
|
|
How could the estimable Mr. Millhiser sign his name to such an exaggerated claim?
|
|
One of the group's common tactics was to mock the state through exaggerated obedience.
|
|
Economists and military analysts said those numbers were so exaggerated as to be fanciful.
|
|
Schiff has defended his comments, arguing the exaggerated comments were made partially in jest.
|
|
They argued that, thanks to current forestry practices, its climate benefits have been exaggerated.
|
|
But the exaggerated language around a woman's decision to speak out is strikingly similar.
|
|
He said he suspected Mr. Sondland's stated influence with the president might be exaggerated.
|
|
Florence yearned to be an opera singer, but she exaggerated her talent and training.
|
|
Critics also say Tesla and its chief executive, Elon Musk, have exaggerated Autopilot's capabilities.
|
|
Exaggerated collars and bows will also be a major trend in the next decade.
|
|
To borrow from Mark Twain, the reports of Sandy's death have been greatly exaggerated.
|
|
I would say you exaggerated a little much on the way the abortion happens.
|
|
If this sound exaggerated, consider two recent speeches given by Attorney General William Barr.
|
|
It said the agency used theoretical modelling that exaggerated the risks of the chemicals.
|
|
"Some seem to fear a resurgence of inflation; this is very exaggerated," Villeroy said.
|
|
Cobb ripped the story, calling it "exaggerated and/or fictionalized" in a lengthy email.
|
|
Reports of robots stealing our jobs are greatly exaggerated—but they are changing them.
|
|
The official Xinhua news agency said China's influence on North Korea had been exaggerated.
|
|
BRIAN SULLIVAN: So the death of the internal combustion engine has been greatly exaggerated?
|
|
He also said that Cambridge Analytica exaggerated how accurate the harvested Facebook data was.
|
|
Opinion The president has exaggerated threats but ignored the hazards his border policies created.
|
|
Mr. Cohen testified to Congress last month that the documents exaggerated Mr. Trump's wealth.
|
|
It's well-known that President Trump exaggerated his riches to make himself seem wealthier.
|
|
This difference rarely appears more exaggerated than on the subject of obstruction of justice.
|
|
His speeches and gestures also recall the intentionally exaggerated performance and makeup of kabuki.
|
|
And that's before considering that the benefit for the bottom 20 percent is exaggerated.
|
|
Fingers crossed that Scott's alleged infidelity has been wildly exaggerated...or just a huge misunderstanding.
|
|
"People shouldn't have left," priest Azmi Arian told CNN, suggesting that the fears were exaggerated.
|
|
"People came into the year with an exaggerated short position on the dollar," said Sutherland.
|
|
Trump also exaggerated the number of witnesses he "gave" to Mueller so they could testify.
|
|
Tech companies are often encouraged to have an exaggerated view of themselves and the world.
|
|
So what if the threat of a blue wave ends up being exaggerated, he said.
|
|
The stories tend to be exaggerated and uncritical, which can put unwitting readers at risk.
|
|
For example, he had a slight lisp, and in some films, that lisp is exaggerated.
|
|
If Napoleon's followers sometimes exaggerated his brilliance, that is nothing compared with his own hyperbole.
|
|
Fears of a "purge of sex-segregated restrooms across the nation are therefore decidedly exaggerated".
|
|
The government also rejected the accusation, saying aid agencies deliberately exaggerated crises to increase funding.
|
|
"Another big, big trend is exaggerated volume, ruffles and feathers, ruffly feathery things," Saboura said.
|
|
Characters have exaggerated, Pixar-style bodies and the world is painted in lush, vibrant colors.
|
|
In an early hearing, Schiff exaggerated the conversation between Trump and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky.
|
|
"We used to watch soap operas, which are highly exaggerated versions of reality," he said.
|
|
What they got, instead, was a campy, exaggerated, and all too short-lived wrestling career.
|
|
Sadly for Y. huangi, its exaggerated sexual displays may have contributed to its ultimate demise.
|
|
Do you think the idea that everyone tells everything to their hairdresser is over-exaggerated?
|
|
Perhaps exaggerated gratitude towards acquaintances and strangers is a way of turning them into friends.
|
|
Instead of laughing at Michael Scott's (Steve Carrell) exaggerated antics, though, I found myself cringing.
|
|
We also need to contend with the exaggerated illusions that keep people supporting these leaders.
|
|
"The idea that this is false or exaggerated is really offensive to me," she said.
|
|
His and Mr Di Maio's rhetoric may have been exaggerated, but their concerns are real.
|
|
The threat of Texas becoming California, as the Lone Star State's leadership fears, is exaggerated.
|
|
Oversized sweaters are exaggerated, low-key dramatic, and most of all comfortable to the core.
|
|
The exaggerated and consistently sexualized representation of these super humans is part of their marvelousness.
|
|
It may be that Brazil's elite have an exaggerated sense of the risk of crime.
|
|
That's not a bad thing, but it does leave our proportions looking a bit exaggerated.
|
|
The clip is an obvious parody, with an exaggerated vocal impersonation and unrealistic computer effects.
|
|
And Ms. Hoffman played up the looks of this already odd couple with exaggerated silhouettes.
|
|
Exaggerated and heavily-spun stories that might be considered clickbait may prove tougher to fight.
|
|
This included tracking exaggerated and misleading headlines and placing them lower in the News Feed.
|
|
Exaggerated silhouettes and bold colors defined Son Jung Wan's fall collection, inspired by '80s fashion.
|
|
"A huge weight came off my shoulders," she noted, breathing an exaggerated sigh of relief.
|
|
Microsoft wrote on its blog today that reports of Paint's death had been greatly exaggerated.
|
|
In short, reports of the demise of old-fashioned sexual morality have been greatly exaggerated.
|
|
An alternative explanation is that their early optimism and more recent gloom are both exaggerated.
|
|
Reports would later reveal multiple cases of police writing false or exaggerated reports and statements.
|
|
It's exaggerated by brain damage, but the tendency to confabulate is something we've all got.
|
|
These are detailed, if exaggerated, depictions of warplanes flying into Pakistan, inspired by a Feb.
|
|
So they exaggerated his closeness, his movements, and the creepiness of that blood-filled skull.
|
|
She carried many-a-scene with her exaggerated, out-of-the-box southern belle persona.
|
|
There's nothing wrong with commercial flights, and who hasn't exaggerated their life on social media?
|
|
The neon demon is an exaggerated concept, but there's this sense of groundedness to it.
|
|
Sure, the elephant may have some exaggerated features, but they all serve an important purpose.
|
|
Disembodied, cartoon-y, and "exaggerated," above them hangs a necklace with a dangling "13" pendant.
|
|
"People's concerns about excessive flatulence from eating beans may be exaggerated," the authors write helpfully.
|
|
"Mary Queen of Scots" nominee Margot Robbie wore a sparkling gown with exaggerated tulle sleeves.
|
|
Unfortunately, the results tended to be exaggerated in terms of color reproduction with this mode.
|
|
"The burdens you now shoulder are great but often exaggerated," he wrote Bush in 2000.
|
|
And past reports of the death of the Social Security number have been greatly exaggerated.
|
|
In doing so, he said some things that were exaggerated or wrong, or somewhat misleading.
|
|
While often exaggerated, the complaints have become part of the political backdrop to the protests.
|
|
"It's definitely over-exaggerated but that's how I felt after my breakup," she told me.
|
|
Reuters noted that some Western experts say Iran has exaggerated its missiles' range and power.
|
|
Trump ultimately withdrew his nomination following reports that Ratcliffe exaggerated his work on terrorism cases.
|
|
But rumors of our righteous certainty, our "retrograde intransigence," are likely to remain greatly exaggerated.
|
|
If this business model works, reports of the A380's death may have been exaggerated.
|
|
It's also clear that social media's role in the initial waves of protests was exaggerated.
|
|
In the interview, he said local Czech media exaggerated the issue with their "fake news".
|
|
It seems that, over time, the sets have become more exaggerated and oversized, even dazzling.
|
|
Portfolio managers of emerging-markets funds say today's worries, like yesterday's euphoria, may be exaggerated.
|
|
Subsequent evidence suggested that the primary source had fabricated or exaggerated parts of her narrative.
|
|
"White later told People magazine that reports that he'd started drama with Johnson were "exaggerated.
|
|
"I went to doctors with exaggerated truths," explained Ms. Weber, who once had four doctors.
|
|
Claims like "599.993% more color and 10 times brighter" than standard 4K TVs sound exaggerated.
|
|
It convinced me of his deep faith, and that his drinking has been grossly exaggerated.
|
|
McKay said in Wednesday's interview that rumors of Ferrell starring as Reagan were greatly exaggerated.
|
|
A flair for the theatrical in this new art often expressed itself through exaggerated scale.
|
|
For those unfamiliar, an almond nail is a more exaggerated variation on the oval tip.
|
|
Children who have experienced trauma can have exaggerated responses to situations and problems with peers.
|
|
But since then we've seen hints that rumors of his death have been greatly exaggerated.
|
|
It exaggerated the characters, and I had a hard time with it, on some days.
|
|
The rumors of sports' death have been greatly exaggerated, says former ESPN President John Skipper.
|
|
Your understanding of yourself is exaggerated as these planets face off with power planet Pluto.
|
|
Others argue that reports of the death of the gasoline engine have been greatly exaggerated.
|
|
On the Runway LONDON — The death of the It bag may have been greatly exaggerated.
|
|
Furthermore, these exaggerated estimates turned out to strongly predict their own support for a policy.
|
|
In both projects, elements of classical architecture are rendered in exaggerated form as surface decoration.
|
|
Biden talks all the time about continuity with Obama, and I think that's often exaggerated.
|
|
Brexit supporters say such fears are exaggerated and Britain would thrive in the long term.
|
|
Initial reports from Saigon had exaggerated the significance of the surprise raids in that city.
|
|
"To do scientific research with a Class A drug has vastly exaggerated costs," Feilding says.
|
|
Some experts said that worries about an imminent recession -- perhaps sometime in 2020 -- are exaggerated.
|
|
It had a new, exaggerated flush, as if his heart was racing or beating erratically.
|
|
Critics argue that benefits are exaggerated and that the trade creates a slew of problems.
|
|
But Smuts did not meet with them, and dismissed their views as unrepresentative and exaggerated.
|
|
The film's take on the influence of The Birth of a Nation is not exaggerated.
|
|
Her tousled hairdo, headlight-size eyes and exaggerated mouth were the subject of countless caricatures.
|
|
Your fears may be exaggerated, too: You aren't the natural focus at another couple's wedding.
|
|
She lavishes exaggerated praise on items she encounters, demonstrating the disjunctions between speech and image.
|
|
Their status has been slightly exaggerated and enhanced, and they start swallowing their own bathwater.
|
|
As he has done before, Mr. Trump exaggerated the economic progress made on his watch.
|
|
He exaggerated the United States' trade deficit with China as $507 billion (it's $336 billion).
|
|
History since 2001 has taught us that our fear of immigrants is grossly, wildly exaggerated.
|
|
I agree with Mr. Wegman's premise that exaggerated sentencing and racial disparities must be confronted.
|
|
LOGAN LUCKY It seems rumors of Steven Soderbergh's retirement from movies have been greatly exaggerated.
|
|
"At nineteen, I fell in lo-o-ove," Warren says, with an exaggerated eye roll.
|
|
But her face is a precise map of exaggerated dots, and her gaze misses nothing.
|
|
But there's also no question that law enforcement exaggerated the threat they posed, and overreacted .
|
|
Separating children from parents and putting them in detention centers is an exaggerated liberal narrative.
|
|
Andrea Gibson read her own poems, exercises in sentimental emotionalism, with a throbbing, exaggerated tremolo.
|
|
Lindbergh developed an "exaggerated confidence," as she puts it, that became a kind of superpower.
|
|
"Reports of our death are greatly exaggerated," insisted Weaver to kick off the afternoon call.
|
|
I heard about the lawsuit filed against them in 2005 over exaggerated job placement statistics.
|
|
Many commenters felt Jodi exaggerated the difficulties of being tall, especially compared to other marginalizations.
|
|
Its simple, exaggerated language could make it easier for babies to grasp what's being said.
|
|
But Mr. Ratcliffe was seen as highly partisan and had exaggerated parts of his resume.
|
|
Those who are more politically engaged tend to have exaggerated views of their political opponents.
|
|
Condemn Trump enemies in the most incendiary and exaggerated language possible (treason, traitors, coup, etc.).
|
|
Headwear ranged from Kangol-inspired bucket hats to exaggerated crocheted shapes and cheetah-print derbies.
|
|
This year, the exit polls again exaggerated the importance of well-educated and Hispanic voters.
|
|
Opt for unique silhouettes like a puff-sleeve top or an exaggerated wide pant leg.
|
|
Reports of the American people's horror at the mere whisper of "socialism" are greatly exaggerated.
|
|
Three years later, Khan, the Punjab government spokesman, told CNN the media exaggerated the allegations.
|
|
He explains away behavior that, even if exaggerated, was nonetheless horrendous, including accusations of rape.
|
|
To borrow from Mark Twain, reports of the death of Social Security are greatly exaggerated.
|
|
It was a quintessential Conway drive-by, replete with artful political spin and exaggerated comparisons.
|
|
At the end of her surgery, her smile has been exaggerated into an overblown grin.
|
|
I have a colleague who speaks in an exaggerated baby voice when men are around.
|
|
Later biographies have asserted he exaggerated his criminal youth to create a stronger personal story.
|
|
So some real disparities exist, even if they may be exaggerated in the political rhetoric.
|
|
It's a performance of femininity that's exaggerated without being mocking, equal parts affected and affectionate.
|
|
The Islamic State has often exaggerated the numbers of dead and injured in its attacks.
|
|
The authors also included a note of caution that China's efforts should not be exaggerated.
|
|
The answer is: We don't know yet, but reports of its demise are greatly exaggerated.
|
|
And since landing at the White House, the administration has consistently promoted exaggerated growth promises.
|
|
It was an homage to her feminine ideas, the most exaggerated representation of being female.
|
|
And over the years, it is an idea that has grown increasingly exaggerated and ugly.
|
|
During the campaign — and into his presidency — Donald Trump repeatedly exaggerated and distorted crime statistics.
|
|
Batman tends to be so self-serious these days; Arnett's exaggerated narcissism is much more entertaining.
|
|
Exaggerated lacy vinyl skirts bloomed around bony hips, and oily, iridescent feathers bristled at the neck.
|
|
Not only that, but the President also exaggerated the number of witnesses he "allowed" to testify.
|
|
Stuhlberger stuck to his call that domestic equity prices are reflecting "exaggerated optimism" over Rousseff's departure.
|
|
The "Into You" singer settled on a filter that exaggerated her face, and she's clearly amused.
|
|
Pluto's surface colors and topographic relief have been exaggerated to make the landscapes look particularly dramatic.
|
|
Exaggerated blindness fears aside, the hogweed is a legitimate nuisance that ecologists are rightfully worried about.
|
|
The Dominican Republic's top tourism official also downplayed what he called "exaggerated" reports about the deaths.
|
|
This hilarious — and obviously exaggerated — sketch by AwesomenessTV nails how ridiculous "foodtographers" have become these days.
|
|
Since the beginning of the Mueller investigation, Trump has exaggerated the relationship between Mueller and Comey.
|
|
Reports of Ali's demise – particularly reports about his lack of mental acuity – have been greatly exaggerated.
|
|
Kendrick tries to keep the interview going even as Merchant takes exaggerated offense to her compliments.
|
|
Hyde-Smith had apologized for her remarks, which she said were an "exaggerated expression of regard."
|
|
In this exaggerated version, Seppala undertakes the impossible journey desperate to find a cure for her.
|
|
Rumors of Ryan Reynolds and Blake Lively's marriage demise have been greatly exaggerated, says Ryan Reynolds.
|
|
Mr Trump's exaggerated miserabilism, about the state of America and the world, chimes with that pessimism.
|
|
Blackmagic claims 13 stops of dynamic range, but I think that may be a bit exaggerated.
|
|
" She paused, and then added: "I definitely exaggerated a lot of the feelings of the characters.
|
|
Is the dualism of the music against this exaggerated imagery an ironic comment on metal iconography?
|
|
Again, these were often exaggerated responses to errors for which she was only partly to blame.
|
|
"Reports of my death have been greatly exaggerated," the photo says, with Hart's signature glasses overtop.
|
|
He said, "Doooood," in that exaggerated way of his, and made reference to an inside joke.
|
|
After its release, the doc was accused of either being entirely fictional or exaggerated for entertainment.
|
|
Its exaggerated, dominant front end is like a neanderthal's oversized jaw, grinning a toothy radiator smile.
|
|
" An exaggerated sense of urgency based on apocalyptic predictions, they add, could result in "poor planning.
|
|
Moves were exaggerated with London markets out for a local holiday while Japanese markets remained shut.
|
|
Not to please other people, but to reap the benefits of exaggerated, costume-style comfort ensembles.
|
|
Obviously, everyone is a little bit exaggerated, but he's very independent, very hardworking, very, very smart.
|
|
But that figure and the extrapolation are based on Nigeria's 2006 census, which was probably exaggerated.
|
|
That means nothing "false, misleading, exaggerated or promissory" is allowable, on any media, social or otherwise.
|
|
That Trump has prevaricated, exaggerated and distorted while in office isn't a surprise for most Americans.
|
|
But to paraphrase Mark Twain, reports of the death of itchy pubes have been greatly exaggerated.
|
|
McCarthy proved to be a pathological liar, who exaggerated his war record and colourfully abused opponents.
|
|
Of the studies that avoided this pitfall, 80% were found to have exaggerated the reported results.
|
|
This was definitely a fun outlet to get these stories out there in an exaggerated way.
|
|
Trouser suits were deconstructed while dresses came in a variety of eye-catching and exaggerated shapes.
|
|
So Tesla basically is saying that all the mentioned issues were either false or over-exaggerated.
|
|
They want 1984 and Melissa McCarthy as a slightly exaggerated version of an unhinged Sean Spicer.
|
|
Eeyore, because he wasn't allowed to talk in the suit, was just making exaggerated hand gestures.
|
|
Facts were invented or exaggerated, and it all appears to be a hoax to destroy Trump.
|
|
Moreover, the plight of Copts is regularly dismissed by local officials as exaggerated or otherwise nonexistent.
|
|
Reports of terrorist use of encryption are wildly over-exaggerated—sometimes merely misleading, sometimes outright lies.
|
|
Quite evidently, reports of the death of the Chinese manufacturing sector may have been slightly exaggerated.
|
|
" But he also questioned the sourcing and accuracy of the report, describing the numbers as "exaggerated.
|
|
With their exaggerated plots and thrilling twists and turns, crime movies make for exhilarating viewing experiences.
|
|
"It is an exaggerated, ridiculous and political sentence," Mairena's lawyer, Julio Montenegro, told a news conference.
|
|
Duterte has never disclosed the source of that information and some experts say it is exaggerated.
|
|
The map depicts Trump's modest electoral victory, which Trump has since exaggerated to predictably delusional heights.
|
|
More likely, he was referring to the problems in the ACA marketplaces, which he has exaggerated.
|
|
The exaggerated portrayals may also help to downplay surveillance efforts in other parts of the world.
|
|
They'll both play exaggerated versions of themselves in the upcoming film Rock'n Roll, which Canet directed.
|
|
For the first time, Refn is exploring that opacity through exaggerated femininity instead of fetishized masculinity.
|
|
Was the drug scene as big in real life, or is that exaggerated in the book?
|
|
Some clearly do, partly because they have an exaggerated idea of the danger that terrorism poses.
|
|
If overall spending is recorded accurately but inflation is exaggerated, output must be higher than thought.
|
|
He cautioned them against a sense of grievance too exaggerated and an outrage bereft of perspective.
|
|
Some voters said Monday that the focus on race and gender is exaggerated in any event.
|
|
Effie's exaggerated femininity is camp, and it is at first the enemy of the workers' movement.
|
|
He wildly exaggerated the number of immigrants in this country illegally and "inner city" crime rates.
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A prominent Russia analyst says that fears about Russia are exaggerated when America faces domestic crises.
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The panic it set off was met with speculation in some quarters that fears were exaggerated.
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"Wildly exaggerated economic grievances, not national security, are driving Mr. Trump's trade agenda," the board wrote.
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Distorted and exaggerated stories about Clinton controversies had the added effect of pumping up Trump's candidacy.
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Most generational differences are vastly exaggerated — they're driven primarily by age and maturity, not birth cohort.
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A. Mitchell Palmer exaggerated the Red Scare in 20053 and Joe McCarthy did it in 1950.
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Reports of a decline in enthusiasm among Sanders's supporters also appear to have been greatly exaggerated.
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Everyone is an anthropomorphic animal in this town, but not in a goofy or exaggerated way.
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The campaign has been criticized for suggesting that she exaggerated other such incidents in the past.
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False or greatly exaggerated national security claims provide convenient excuses for seizing power and destroying liberty.
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Calls for help sometimes have been exaggerated by local commanders to gain extra supplies or equipment.
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While some historians have found such accounts as possibly exaggerated, the audience reaction was surely feasible.
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"[Anime] is a very exaggerated version of sexuality which is more appealing to teenagers," Jenefsky explained.
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While the current friction is unwelcome and largely unnecessary, reports of NATO's death are greatly exaggerated.
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Along the way, these Brexiteers also exaggerated those downsides and sometimes flat-out lied about them.
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They were like fake orgasms, untruthful actions giving the man an exaggerated view of his talents.
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"It turns out that the President nearly exaggerated Tom Hanks' death," a source told the paper.
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"It turns out that the President nearly exaggerated Tom Hanks' death," a source told the paper.
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All of this is exaggerated by the data monetization models of companies like Facebook and Google.
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Others, such as Thrall of the International Crisis Group, find the threat to be greatly exaggerated.
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He blackens the space under his photographer's hat, save for an exaggerated nose and receding chin.
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Earlier, Kyaw said during the debate that Zeid's report contained information that was "distorted or exaggerated".
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In recommendation letters, they fabricated and exaggerated stories of hardship that played on negative racial stereotypes.
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Numerous anecdotes and studies have shown that doctors often ignore female pain as constructed or exaggerated.
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His tweet on Saturday was crammed with statistics that were either exaggerated or omitted important context.
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This in-between status must neither be disregarded nor exaggerated, but carefully diagnosed — and gradually dismantled.
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However, he said, some problems were exaggerated and residents sometimes waited before coming forward with issues.
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Was the the boost of an exaggerated gesture needed to deflect their potential perception as sculpture?
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The accents are all slightly exaggerated, but the humor has a soft touch; it's never cartoonish.
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Oh, and in case you were curious, Katter's statistics about crocodile attacks are a bit exaggerated.
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He claimed the effect of the coronavirus was grossly exaggerated — a conspiracy fomented by his opponents.
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"It's about doing just enough to achieve your purpose and not an exaggerated response," he added.
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Mr. McConnell's claim that the "most common reason" for cancellations was high cost is also exaggerated.
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His left arm was much weaker than his right, and his reflexes everywhere were abnormally exaggerated.
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Trump has repeatedly exaggerated the number of supporters stuck outside his events unable to get in.
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Doom and gloom over Italy's banking sector is "exaggerated," according to Intesa Sanpaolo CEO Carlo Messina.
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Look, I know it's TV, I know it's exaggerated, but this stuff always gets to me.
|
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Some politicians, financiers and academics say bankers have exaggerated the threat to the economy from Brexit.
|
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She said she thinks some of the media coverage of the virus seems to be exaggerated.
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There were also concerns that Mr. Ratcliffe exaggerated some of what he included on his résumé.
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Yet focusing on exaggerated threats to freedom and stigmatizing the communist enemy undermined their progressive goals.
|
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During the Great Leap Forward, local officials reported exaggerated harvest yields even as millions were starving.
|
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Meanwhile, a Times analysis found five of its claims were false, seven misleading and five exaggerated.
|
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Meaningful details are obscured or forgotten, while others, taken out of context and exaggerated, appear determinative.
|
|
Aminé (uh-MEE-nay), 23, has a wonderfully liquid face — bugged eyes, wide smile, exaggerated expressions.
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"People are just showing absolute exaggerated discrimination," said Deng, whose two-week isolation ended this week.
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On the hanger, the nude sheer trench looks as if its sleeves are exaggerated and flouncy.
|
|
In the end, that was probably exaggerated, but at the time it didn't feel that way.
|
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Trump either knowingly exaggerated, got mixed up, or didn't know and didn't care enough to check.
|
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The rest was transience, people moving through the static, like Michael, heading uptown with exaggerated purpose.
|
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The tendency to dismiss Biden is probably exaggerated because of who he is winning support from.
|
|
For example, people have a vastly exaggerated view of how much we spend on foreign aid.
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It is as if they don't exist, or that they have fabricated or exaggerated their needs.
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|
Plastics-- as the world gets bigger, has the death of the oil company been greatly exaggerated?
|
|
"Reports of our death are extremely exaggerated," Campaign Manager Jeff Weaver said during the call Monday.
|
|
They have produced videos together for years, playing exaggerated egotists in desperate need of self-awareness.
|
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"A lot of what he's been doing in these states has been exaggerated," said the adviser.
|
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Reagan's influence were exaggerated and that it was merely the protective concern of a loving wife.
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Exaggerated red lips are a common trait of racist cartoons depicting black people throughout American history.
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This is the point when people start exhibing "impaired judgment" and "exaggerated behavior," the CDC said.
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Say if I sat on someone's lap they would make exaggerated faces because of my weight.
|
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Being a Helio Gracie match, this one has been reimagined and exaggerated severely over the years.
|
|
On the one hand, the complaints against Wasserman Schultz sometimes look like exaggerated, puffed-up outrage.
|
|
Which raises the question, even accepting that she is an exaggerated character in an exaggerated world: Is that really the message we want to send about female empowerment to our daughters in an era when there are a number of fully clothed, notably powerful female role models?
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|
A 16-millimeter masterwork from 1968, "Walking in an Exaggerated Manner Around the Perimeter of a Square," shows the artist in a white T-shirt and dark pants toeing the line of a square in an empty studio, stopping to strike an exaggerated Renaissance-style contrapposto.
|
|
In fact, consent almost seems exaggerated, perhaps to make up for the ambiguous moment in the book.
|
|
Why it matters: Wealthy millennials' exaggerated, idiosyncratic shopping habits fuel trends like meal-kits and grocery delivery.
|
|
Snowden&aposs defenders maintain that the U.S. government has for years exaggerated the damage his disclosures caused.
|
|
One of our favorite tricks to capitalize on the exaggerated shapes of coats is to layer up.
|
|
Clinton Foundation spokesman Brian Cookstra told CNBC that reports of the foundation's demise have been greatly exaggerated.
|
|
It also disputes the high number of injured, saying claims by the Gaza health ministry are exaggerated.
|
|
Round-collared tops, also with exaggerated sleeves were cropped at the stomach and paired with drawstring shorts.
|
|
Relish it to the fullest while acknowledging its depiction of romance as knowingly exaggerated for entertainment purposes.
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But it's clear that some tea manufacturers are making much more exaggerated claims than they should be.
|
|
His country was working to clear up what he called misrepresentations and "exaggerated" reports about the deaths.
|
|
I turned to my friend, who was staring at the floor under me, making exaggerated retching noises.
|
|
A Harvard researcher once offered this memorable if exaggerated explanation: When you're drunk, you run red lights.
|
|
Fixer Upper lovers, fear not, rumors of Joanna Gaines' departure from the show have been greatly exaggerated.
|
|
It's about germs, not people—an ultimately rational if exaggerated response to the threat of foreign pathogens.
|
|
The media is filled with exaggerated complaints about Chinese retaliation against just $50 billion in American exports.
|
|
Clothing that capitalizes on the "ugly Christmas sweater" trope by adding exaggerated jokey details, like drunk elves.
|
|
She weaves exaggerated memoir with thoughtful advice, all stylized as jokes and hardball flirting with her audience.
|
|
Up front, you'll find that word of the Pixel 3 XL's notch was, in fact, not exaggerated.
|
|
One could easily picture Ace Ventura or the Mask making any of these ridiculous exaggerated O-faces.
|
|
It's practically a scientific fact, verifiable by the multitude of headphones out there with deliberately exaggerated bass.
|
|
I was happy, filled with the fragile, exaggerated belief that this time, this city would be ours.
|
|
The bass isn't exaggerated or distorted, the treble isn't spiky, and the midrange is smooth and harmonious.
|
|
Reports of the demise of stock-picking are greatly exaggerated, hedge fund manager Barry Rosenstein said Thursday.
|
|
That concern is greatly exaggerated in an attempt to avoid any obligation to employ content identification technologies.
|
|
Critics say the government has exaggerated the risk that students stay in Britain after their visas expire.
|
|
It seems unlikely; Democratic extremism is often exaggerated and independent candidates face big financial and other barriers.
|
|
They're funny because they're outsized and exaggerated, but they also reveal a lot about the fractious crew.
|
|
It's not that we're incapable of identifying false or exaggerated information; it's just that we're always performing.
|
|
Only that which has the proper mix of the exaggerated, the fantastic, the passionate, and the naïve.
|
|
Madness"Madness" is almost an exaggerated example of the contradictions that exist between the two of us.
|
|
A vertically exaggerated view of Utopia Planitia, showing depressions that prompted researchers to look for buried ice.
|
|
These two both fit into each other's increasingly exaggerated self image, and now we all know it.
|
|
They exaggerated how big of a kingpin I was, but I think 27 years is too long.
|
|
But Mr Hokayem warns against exaggerated expectations of the sort that were (briefly) associated with Mr Sarkozy.
|
|
That had a craft to it and was feminine and light, cool and irreverent, decadent and exaggerated.
|
|
The elevations have been exaggerated a bit, too, just to illustrate just how dynamic the geography is.
|
|
And the troubles of areas like Tensta have been exaggerated by outsiders with an anti-immigrant agenda.
|
|
Social media mean that news of scandals spreads faster than ever and often in an exaggerated fashion.
|
|
For example, they use actors pulling exaggerated faces as their starting point for what emotions "look" like.
|
|
However, related claims about the song and its author as especially racist have been distorted and exaggerated.
|
|
The egg's creators said those claims of the opportunity's value were "greatly exaggerated," according to The Times.
|
|
It's further evidence that the exaggerated fangs of saber-toothed cats were strong enough to penetrate bone.
|
|
His compositions feature isolated, highly idealized bodies that echo the exaggerated flair of late-Renaissance mannerist paintings.
|
|
Who's worse, the exaggerated fictional monsters in the novel, or the "real" people in the frame story?
|
|
During the campaign, a Washington Post analysis found that Trump often exaggerated his charitable contributions in public.
|
|
In my view, the supposed adverse impact of these Lifeline actions has been exaggerated in many quarters.
|
|
In Europe, fears that ascendant populism in Britain, Poland, and Hungary would destabilize the E.U. proved exaggerated.
|
|
However, PNP Chief Oscar Albayalde said that some complaints had been exaggerated by candidates or their supporters.
|
|
A good, albeit exaggerated, cultural reference for that is the 2011 film The Roommate starring Leighton Meester.
|
|
Officials cautioned, however, that the Russians might have exaggerated their sway with Trump's team during those conversations.
|
|
The point is that rumors of Wayne's irrelevance have been greatly exaggerated, Cash Money lawsuit or no.
|
|
He speaks in a thick, fabricated Indian accent, exaggerated for comedic effect by voice actor Hank Azaria.
|
|
Kimmy moves into a tiny Brooklyn apartment, and soon attracts a gang of friends with exaggerated personalities.
|
|
But if perceptions are heavily influenced by the media buzz, then levels of corruption might be exaggerated.
|
|
However, Taye Shim, head of research at Mirae Asset Sekuritas, said the market reaction was slightly exaggerated.
|
|
Some say the long-term effects of any such disagreement between the two officials have been exaggerated.
|
|
" On defense, Hyde-Smith called the comment about attending a public hanging "an exaggerated expression of regard.
|
|
Many disability claims on the VA are alleged to be exaggerated or distantly related to military service.
|
|
She turned around and feigned exaggerated embarrassment, as if we had caught her unaware in her scanties.
|
|
In the midst of everything our family is going through things got heated and a bit exaggerated.
|
|
But as has happened with many wines recently, exaggerated styles of grenache have prompted more restrained responses.
|
|
I don't know what the chronic exaggerated joking in the Edwards family meant about their deep relations.
|
|
Hardman added that he thought the initial selloff that took the euro to its lows was exaggerated.
|
|
People who know him say Mifsud was always networking and often exaggerated his access to decision-makers.
|
|
Drake has dismissed his father's claim that the rapper exaggerated their strained relationship to sell more records.
|
|
In attempting to secure loans from the bank, Trump often exaggerated his wealth, according to the Times.
|
|
It's a straining for exaggerated politeness or elevated speech that reflects a society still riven by class.
|
|
They'd invented a word to describe her experience: "neuro-emotion," an exaggerated feeling not grounded in reality.
|
|
" Both operate in the emotive, exaggerated style that served them well as correspondents on "The Daily Show.
|
|
Kushner also warned others in the campaign about dealing with people who he believed exaggerated their connections.
|
|
Nobody is asking for Clinton to spend the rest of his life offering an exaggerated mea culpa.
|
|
Those who wore makeup in the '60s often aimed to create exaggerated eye looks, according to Blush.
|
|
Worries over a flattening of the U.S. yield curve, another major market fear, appear exaggerated, Montagne added.
|
|
A lot of things are being said on both sides that are dubious, exaggerated or factually inaccurate.
|
|
It is an exaggerated scoop neck, terrycloth sweater with super long belled sleeves and a raw hem.
|
|
The press and public perception of him was, in hindsight, both fair and exaggerated, Oli tells me.
|
|
His latest collection was reminiscent of the 1970s, featuring bell bottoms, mixed denim, and exaggerated cut-outs.
|
|
The exaggerated tongue is just for fun (and for making statements, as RiRi is wont to do).
|
|
Herbal teas fit neatly into that, even though health claims associated with them tend to be exaggerated.
|
|
The trouble with avian spook-stories is they're often exaggerated, speculated, or outright fabricated for maximum drama.
|
|
Gratias argued that the party's supporters were motivated by exaggerated news reports and political rhetoric concerning immigration.
|
|
Sometimes all an outfit needs is a chain bag in exaggerated proportions — in a sumptuous floral print.
|
|
Many TV brands take this opportunity to sell sets with exaggerated features that have subpar picture quality.
|
|
But it does seem that Wielgus, in his anger, exaggerated some statements he made to the newspaper.
|
|
But experts noted that the $110 billion figure is exaggerated while the $450 billion figure is fanciful.
|
|
Antisuffrage leaders (certain that support for that movement was grossly exaggerated) claimed the true figure was 24,629.
|
|
His instincts and reactions serve, as always, as a kind of comically exaggerated caricature of the type.
|
|
As a businessman, Mr. Trump often fabricated or exaggerated to sell a narrative or advance his interests.
|
|
Because they're tough to mistake for any other creature, thanks to the exaggerated stretch of their ears.
|
|
It's a pseudoscience exaggerated with a wink through memes, an everything-in-quotation-marks lens for culture.
|
|
His final collection for the brand was filled with exaggerated '80s shoulders, big belts, and microscopic hemlines.
|
|
Perhaps our sense of division is exaggerated by the nonstop coverage of Trump and his polarizing ideas.
|
|
Immigrant prison population Mr. Trump's figure for the percentage of unauthorized immigrants in federal prisons is exaggerated.
|
|
Although the late scenes set in North Africa are likely Capote's doing, his influence has been exaggerated.
|
|
Some experts consider AI an urgent danger; many more believe the fears are either exaggerated or misplaced.
|
|
But perhaps these are just exaggerated representations of the many expectations regular women balance in real life.
|
|
The brain becomes acutely sensitive to minor increases in environmental temperature and responds in an exaggerated manner.
|
|
Even as the war rages, he has repeatedly claimed victory, prompting outrage by some over exaggerated proclamations.
|
|
And the president's many unsupported, exaggerated or misleading comments about trade, immigration and even his own popularity?
|
|
The line reports weren't "remotely exaggerated," and were "really that bad" at certain polling locations, Brannon added.
|
|
He exaggerated the United States' trade deficit with the European Union as $151 billion (it's $101 billion).
|
|
Doing nothing that felt exaggerated or overwrought, Ms. Wang emphasized unsettled harmonies and de-emphasized melodic integrity.
|
|
Mr. Owens described his recent designs as almost insanely exaggerated, which was not at all the case.
|
|
Rumors of Lindsay Lohan's crush on Liam Hemsworth have apparently been greatly exaggerated — according to Lohan herself.
|
|
" At a different moment, the screen warned: "9/26: SCHIFF PUBLICLY EXAGGERATED SUBSTANCE OF TRUMP-ZELENSKY CALL.
|
|
A lot of the things I had believed about budgeting were either exaggerated or simply not true.
|
|
" He complained of negative press coverage that was "grossly exaggerated" and "prominently printed to prejudice my case.
|
|
It's an exceptionally exaggerated, stressed accent as opposed to the usually relaxed tones of a real Australian.
|
|
A more muted reaction could suggest that Trump critics have exaggerated the negative impact of the decision.
|
|
Biden has previously made (and retracted) exaggerated statements about his own involvement in the Civil Rights movement.
|
|
He exaggerated the amount of money that was made available to Iran in the 2015 nuclear agreement.
|
|
To be sure, the policy divide between Sanders and Warren on this issue should not be exaggerated.
|
|
JR asked them to make exaggerated faces, then pasted the images around the bourgeois neighborhoods of Paris.
|
|
The political impact always was exaggerated, but out-of-control deficits were a staple of opposition rhetoric.
|
|
U.S. officials also cautioned that the Russians may have exaggerated their relationship with Flynn in the communications.
|
|
LONDON (Reuters) - Rumors of the death of the iron ore market appear to have been greatly exaggerated.
|
|
Supporters of Trump's tactics say the negative consequences of the Appellate Body shuttering have been overly exaggerated.
|
|
It's common knowledge, too, that squeezing insurance money out of fake or exaggerated injuries is a racket.
|
|
It even dwarfs Trump's most exaggerated claims about his wealth, which typically top out at $10 billion.
|
|
Then the researchers had each volunteer complete three distinct, four-day sessions of living calculatedly exaggerated lifestyles.
|
|
It was all very over-the-top and exaggerated, totally campy and silly, a classic Purim Spiel.
|
|
That may be because they're built on wildly exaggerated, if not entirely fabricated, versions of the facts.
|
|
But the lack of progress in the investigation has fueled speculation about whether the report was exaggerated.
|
|
She said Mr. Putin's grip on the country had been vastly exaggerated by both supporters and opponents.
|
|
Fantin-Latour's still life and group portraits accept the powers of observation while rejecting Romantic, exaggerated emotionalism.
|
|
George Bellows painted supposed German atrocities, based on a war report that turned out to be exaggerated.
|
|
Research has shown that babies prefer to listen to this exaggerated "baby talk" type of speech than typical adult-like speech: They pay more attention when a parent's speech has a higher pitch and a wider pitch range compared to adult-like speech with less exaggerated pitch features.
|
|
The erosive effects of robotisation and artificial intelligence on the world of work are debatable and frequently exaggerated.
|
|
But whether her role was misconstrued, exaggerated or even a flat-out lie isn't really the point anymore.
|
|
"The market is quite short so any bullish news can have quite an exaggerated effect," one trader said.
|
|
The small size also means that small changes on the joysticks get a bit exaggerated in the air.
|
|
It's clear that Gilardi had certain preoccupations: religious themes, an interest in nature, exaggerated sexual imagery, and homosexuality.
|
|
Things get over-exaggerated this week, so make sure that you take everything with a grain of salt.
|
|
Very Nice is a smart, stylish read about a bunch of exaggerated and not-so-self-aware characters.
|
|
Second, one can also see there a political subtext without falling into an exaggerated reading of unfriendly behavior.
|
|
Another photo featured several staffers dressed in sombreros, ponchos, and fake exaggerated mustaches, a racist stereotype of Mexicans.
|
|
Those numbers are steep and concerning, but the good news is — they also might be a little exaggerated.
|
|
Nakamura likes to mug to the crowd with the exaggerated showmanship of someone who thrills to live performance.
|
|
The only acceptable response to being told you should "wear less makeup" is a long, exaggerated eye roll.
|
|
Many think that the toxic nature of e-cigarette vapour may have been exaggerated by unrealistic laboratory conditions.
|
|
Combined with its exaggerated size, the golden sparkling organ cuts a figure that's more than a little imposing.
|
|
He gestures at the Qatari flag behind him in an exaggerated fashion, while the second soldier is laughing.
|
|
Reports of the demise of Twitter's 140-character limit have been greatly exaggerated, according to the company's CEO.
|
|
The exaggerated imposition of order on my freedom was, weirdly, intended to turbocharge my ability to work freely.
|
|
"Reports of Netflix's demise have been greatly exaggerated," Stifel Nicolaus' Scott Devitt wrote in a note to clients.
|
|
I wouldn't say I'm like Portia, but there are definitely exaggerated insecurities that I have that we share.
|
|
This ideological orientation led to exaggerated accusations in the United States, especially in the aftermath of the Sept.
|
|
Instead, it keeps the exaggerated features seen in Warcraft but polishes them with much better detail and lighting.
|
|
Nearly all PC gaming laptops have a myriad of crazy keyboard fonts, colors, and exaggerated, aggressive chassis designs.
|
|
These include mood swings, unjustified violent tendencies, domestic violence, criminality and exaggerated emotional reactions to every day stresses.
|
|
Some of Mr Modi's ministers have done incremental work to address pollution, but others dismiss complaints as exaggerated.
|
|
" She added, "That's why I like to have my parties on Wednesdays at home because everything gets exaggerated.
|
|
Navalny says Putin's support is exaggerated and artificially maintained by a biased state media and an unfair system.
|
|
Given these varied and exaggerated representations of group sex, you might be wondering: what even is an orgy?
|
|
Not so, I was there," described as "an exaggerated motion, shaking her head vigorously for a few seconds.
|
|
They're all exaggerated and futuristic in a way that the final controller, a straightforward Twinkie-shaped remote, isn't.
|
|
The Bachelor is most irresistible when it's an exaggerated mirror to our own love lives, not a fantasy.
|
|
This shift is extraordinary, to be sure, but the power it hands to America can also be exaggerated.
|
|
In other words, Blair deliberately exaggerated the threat from Iraq and downplayed the risks of invading the country.
|
|
An asteroid hits one of the ships, and the man disappears with an exaggerated wave of his hands.
|
|
Only a minute into his monologue, he dialed down the exaggerated punchlines to get real with his audience.
|
|
There are some good reasons to think the increase of microcephaly in Brazil since 2014 may be exaggerated.
|
|
In the film, it's all part of the protagonists' trip to Camazotz, an exaggerated Pleasantville-meets-1984 utopia.
|
|
Experience matters: Horror stories about government procurement are often exaggerated, but there's a kernel of truth to them.
|
|
The recent Forbes article — revealing that Ross vastly exaggerated his net worth — did not help his internal standing.
|
|
I drew the curtains and immediately fell into a peculiar state of 'drunkenness', characterised by an exaggerated imagination.
|
|
To the show's credit, June's experiences of pregnancy ring with the same demented, exaggerated reality of Season 1.
|
|
Each person donned makeup and used outfits and props like smoke bombs to create exaggerated versions of themselves.
|
|
Trump has blamed the manager he hired to run the business, whom the Post reports exaggerated his credentials.
|
|
But as experts in that business, we are all too familiar with exaggerated claims about technologies' social implications.
|
|
Trump campaign officials and Republican data operatives have argued that Cambridge exaggerated its role in Trump's digital campaign.
|
|
These are female robots, and they have a sort of typical exaggerated female porn star kind of look.
|
|
"The demise of the U.S. economy has been greatly exaggerated," said Ward McCarthy, chief financial economist at Jefferies.
|
|
Tesco, a British supermarket that confessed in 2014 to an accounting scandal, exaggerated its profits by about $350m.
|
|
The American Mafia has become more realistic—and with that transformation, its reality, at times, has been exaggerated.
|
|
It's sure to be big (but perhaps exaggerated, too, since Jupiter, the planet of expansion, can overdo things).
|
|
The gist of the argument is that Tillerson's assurances to shareholders were fictitious, or at least greatly exaggerated.
|
|
It was engineers at Nissan who discovered that Mitsubishi was using unapproved mileage tests that exaggerated fuel performance.
|
|
We should always reflect on Mark Twain's words: "The reports of my death are greatly exaggerated," Moscovici said.
|
|
Mr. Sisi convened a committee to examine the figure, which concluded that Mr. Geneina had exaggerated the figures.
|
|
Here is the thing: many items on that charge-list against Mr Bush were either unfair or exaggerated.
|
|
It never felt, however, entirely sincere; I always believed he recognized how absurd and exaggerated his screaming was.
|
|
Both had an exaggerated version of the facial changes of bony overgrowth, with prominent brows and massive jaws.
|
|
The Arts Club exhibition includes three photographs of girls caught in exaggerated motion in a theatrically lit forest.
|
|
The Rent Stabilization Association, a major landlord group, said the report exaggerated the effect of the vacancy allowance.
|
|
Louisiana is an exaggerated case, but the pattern persists when you look at the country as a whole.
|
|
As for those that persist, like cultural disruptions caused by migration, peoples' characterizations of them are grossly exaggerated.
|
|
The automaker said it still did not know exactly how many models had been given exaggerated fuel ratings.
|
|
Again, the potential of debates to completely shake up a presidential general election campaign has often been exaggerated.
|
|
They walked around a college campus in exaggerated outfits, makeup, and hair all the stars are known for.
|
|
Infections are skyrocketing: Many residents fail to protect themselves against bites because they believe the threat is exaggerated.
|
|
" Cranston's exaggerated hand gestures and puffed-out lips drew laughter from those watching on the set of "Today.
|
|
The Irish president's smaller stature is exaggerated when he hangs out with his giant dogs, Bród and Síoda.
|
|
There is rhetorical strategy: "He has exaggerated to compensate for people who don't like him," Mr. Nadler said.
|
|
The shows, aggressively styled as they are, represent an exaggerated version of what eventually ends up in stores.
|
|
Those fears are often unfounded or exaggerated, and even if just partly true, they certainly never justify violence.
|
|
Turns out Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross may have greatly exaggerated his wealth, according to a report from Forbes.
|
|
And the market swings can be "amplified by computer trading," which can trigger more exaggerated selloffs and rallies.
|
|
However, Paul Donovan, global economist and managing director at UBS Wealth Management, says the data is wildly exaggerated.
|
|
"Though digital payments are on the rise, reports of the death of cash are likely exaggerated," Vergne said.
|
|
But this is a big island and this eruption is being exaggerated just a little, don't ya think?
|
|
This could help reduce local support for Iran, potentially debunking exaggerated Iranian claims and deterring further destabilizing action.
|
|
Some researchers say millions died as a result of the wars, though others dispute that estimate as exaggerated.
|
|
The experience in neighboring New Mexico, which abolished civil forfeiture last year, suggests those claims may be exaggerated.
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Camp, as defined by Sontag, is a love of the unnatural, and/or an exaggerated form of something.
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We're especially loving the exaggerated sleeves paired with the luxe Bulgari jewels and metallic silver ankle-strap sandals.
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Like a cartoon character, the DeMarco of side jibes, fart jokes, and general goofiness has been partly exaggerated.
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Given Gurion's new C-level job, however, it seems unlikely that he dramatically exaggerated his position with Airbnb.
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Sure, some of it will be exaggerated, but it's good to know that people are excited and optimistic.
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Why it matters: As was the case in Singapore, Trump exaggerated what had been accomplished at the summit.
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Or the Oblongs, a mutated, disabled, and overly exaggerated group that rubbed me the wrong way in appearance.
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There were also instances in which a campaign's performance was exaggerated in order to hike up the price.
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Mr. Hammer suggested that the numbers looked bad because New Jersey Transit exaggerated its problems by "overcounting" them.
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There were giant pantsuits in primary shades or 1960s tablecloth prints with exaggerated buttons; darling-are-you-here?
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She never milked the emotion or exaggerated her presence; she commands a space without ever trying too hard.
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This includes a cringe-inducing montage of actors like Marlon Brando and Katharine Hepburn playing exaggerated Asian characters.
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White actors (and later some black actors as well) performed exaggerated and highly racist caricatures of black people.
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But the candidates, and, indeed, the moderator, exaggerated that threat so far beyond reality it is hardly recognizable.
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Liukin's is a bit more exaggerated, but it's the same effect: She's building momentum for the next moves.
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" Mr. Coats asked Andrea Mitchell of NBC, the event moderator, before uttering an exaggerated and drawn-out "O.
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Does his primal fear of germs have anything to do with his exaggerated fear of certain foreign bodies?
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The story of the wildly exaggerated promises and damaging unintended consequences of technology isn't exactly a new one.
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He told supporters that it was a "hoax" that Democrats and news organizations had exaggerated to undermine him.
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These messages tend to distort Mr. Bolsonaro's positions on taxes and the minimum wage, often using exaggerated data.
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Now they acknowledge them but insist that Western reports about North Korean abuses are vastly unfair and exaggerated.
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He exaggerated the United States' trade deficit with the European Union as $151 billion (it is $101 billion).
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He had pushed his luck too far, based on an exaggerated impression of his own capabilities and reputation.
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Op-Ed Contributor BANDUNG, Indonesia — The reports are greatly exaggerated: Liberal, multicultural democracy in Indonesia isn't dead yet.
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Scottish butchers have fought these bans for decades, arguing that the American government's food-safety concerns are exaggerated.
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But so, too, are his comedic skills, demonstrated both through the fighting scenes and his exaggerated facial expressions.
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Some of those gains may be exaggerated, however, and lower crime levels have come at a terrible price.
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Indoor-outdoor living is nothing new in Southern California, but at the Thompsons' home, the concept is exaggerated.
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Having noted all of this, I believe that the benefit Republicans get from demonizing her have been exaggerated.
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Some supporters of adding the question counter that it's a modest change and say the opposition is exaggerated.
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"While Tesla has many advantages, we believe its self-driving capabilities are exaggerated," said Bernstein analyst Max Warburton.
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The illustrations are flat and telegraphic, with exaggerated facial expressions to convey the characters' shifting moods and motives.
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Studies suggest that such fears are exaggerated; that, for instance, Facebook users do have access to contrary views.
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"The death of retail branches is greatly exaggerated," Nate Smith, group manager at Adobe Analytics, told CNN Business.
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In a world where male contrition isn't taken for granted, it is given space and wins exaggerated praise.
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That's especially true with science stories, where nuanced research can get summed up in misleading or exaggerated ways.
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To put it in Mark Twain's terms, news of Donald Trump's political demise has been greatly exaggerated … again.
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"In the history of transplantation, our concerns about donor lifestyle have been a little over-exaggerated," Shah said.
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The collection combined simple forms with flourishes like oversize shoulders, oval shapes, wide collars and long, exaggerated sleeves.
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But she greeted me with the exaggerated hand gestures and a syllable-punctuating laugh universally associated with Italians.
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"We view the current price rise as exaggerated and see growing correction potential," Commerzbank said in a note.
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Ultimately much of What the Golf is centered around trying and failing to corral the game's exaggerated physics.
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Only one source claimed an 80 percent rate, and the guide itself said that number might be exaggerated.
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During his post-summit press conference he bemoaned -- and exaggerated -- the cost of maintaining a US military presence.
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Another talk by David Autor, an economist, argued that reports of the death of work are greatly exaggerated.
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While the makeup was not exaggerated blackface, it was apparent that I was a white kid in makeup.
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He said, however, that the reports about his having been snubbed by Haitian officials had been grossly exaggerated.
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It was exaggerated, it was dishonest, and it massaged information to fit a narrative that he had preconceived.
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