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"harked" Antonyms

125 Sentences With "harked"

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

The Hill's Jonathan Easley reports: Donald Trump harked back to former Sen.
Trump harked back to the Russia probe that Mueller concluded in April.
History was another passion, and it, too, harked back to his bar mitzvah.
The death certificate process, Dr. Bouchy said, harked back to an earlier time.
State of the Union address, delivered Tuesday night, harked back to the early days.
Worries about protectionism harked back to the early days of Trump's presidency, he added.
Lyudmila Alexeyeva harked back to the Cold War dissident movement in the Soviet Union.
The tropical beach setting of Bal Harbour Shops harked back to Mr. Whitman's upbringing.
His policy line, called "byungjin" or parallel development, harked back to his grandfather's era.
The religious conservatism that was then sweeping America harked back to the country's Puritan history.
Those strikes harked back to even larger mass protests in 1995 and, of course, in 1968.
In one way he harked back to a more innocent Mexico, without violence and drug cartels.
Only a disused, shabby warehouse — one of the company's original buildings — harked to the company's past.
It, too, harked back to the guitar-driven bands of the late 1970s and early 1990s.
A youthful work, but one that in this company harked back to Mr. Salonen's brainily nutty forebears.
That his intellectual and political orientation harked back to an earlier era, rather than the 21st century.
In explaining her case, Attorney General Loretta E. Lynch also harked back to the civil rights struggle.
Piped-in music on one night harked back to Olde New Brooklyn with tracks by LCD Soundsystem.
The speech was classically populist and harked back to the days when Republicans preferred retrenchment to foreign intervention.
" It was a straight-up dance anthem that harked back to her early smash hit, "Waiting For Tonight.
Many harked back to their unique biographies as immigrants and the legacy of painful periods in American history.
Trump, in perhaps his most heartfelt remarks of the night, harked back to New York's response to the Sept.
He harked back to two previous Middle Eastern wars in justifying Israel's need to hang on to the Golan.
But in comments on Thursday to American diplomatic and military personnel in Baghdad, he harked back to that proposal.
" Lockett's words harked to a different time, when the Seattle locker room wasn't as much of a "safe spot.
This predilection for bomber jackets harked back to the aviation chic of Amelia Earhart in the 1920s and 30s.
And yet the hack harked back to two issues raised at Wednesday night's debate — security and France's relationship with Russia.
The message harked back to Apple's famous 1981 "Welcome, IBM" ad addressed to its new competitor in the PC market.
The brand held a one-day exhibition celebrating years of iconic design in Paris, which harked back to classic designs.
The best-known books, published in the 1960s and 1970s, were simple stories that harked back to a more innocent time.
In an interview, she harked back to 1987 when she attended a school in the Bronx, pursuing a degree in cosmetology.
He regained power in 2013 with a campaign which both harked back to his famous road and promised more infrastructure to come.
Matthew Sutton, an associate professor of theology at St. John's University in Queens, said the battle harked back to the Middle Ages.
His devout mother Dorothy would read to the family from a Book of Common Prayer, whose sonorous language harked back to Elizabethan England.
" His message harked back to the politics of King in 1968 and to a kind of liberation theology: "Pay people what they deserve.
Demoff harked back to a conversation he had with Goff after that miserable 2016 season, when he lost all seven of his starts.
Modi harked back to Trump's "Make America Great Again" campaign slogan to stress that his agenda for his country was little different than Trump's.
It harked back to the era when West Coast hip-hop acts like N.W.A. and Snoop Dogg had a grip on the national consciousness.
Mr. Allison used his cool, clear voice to conversational effect, with an easy blues inflection that harked back to his upbringing in rural Mississippi.
According to some economists, Trump's declaration harked back to an era when the federal government's main source of tax revenue was derived from tariffs.
This was similar to the horrible chemical weapon attacks that crossed Obama's red line, and Trump even harked back to Obama's language in denouncing it.
He harked back to a "tough" 2015, when he lost his father, Mario, pivoting deftly to a call for 12 weeks of paid family leave.
The Crime Beat: With his Harry Bosch detective novels, Michael Connelly has always harked consciously back to the glory days of Los Angeles crime writing.
Clinton harked back to those days in public comments on Thursday, noting that she nominated Obama to be president at the 85033 Democratic National Convention.
Gomez took home her first AMA for favorite pop/rock female artist, leaving us with a heartfelt acceptance speech that harked back to her health troubles.
The informal rally harked back to his days as an up-by-the-bootstraps populist and Islamist leader who often spoke from the tops of buses.
Ms. Gould said the company did not realize the curriculum would offend or that the idea harked to a tactic big tobacco companies used decades ago.
Protests against Clark's killing harked back to those two cases, which spawned demonstrations when the Sacramento County District Attorney's Office concluded that officers' actions were justified.
The Alice Through the Looking Glass star harked back to his rural beginnings while in a Facebook live chat coinciding with the release of the new trailer.
Those who remained were treated to a stout defensive effort that harked back to the days of the renowned Fearsome Foursome defensive line a half-century ago.
The deaths of Tom Hayden and Daniel Berrigan, avatars of defiance, harked back to the student rebellions of the 1960s and the Vietnam War's roiling home front.
More recently, Scion has had success with a sporty coupe called the FR-S that harked back to iconic Toyota cars such as the Celica of the 1970s.
In the interview, Mr. Grijalva harked back to the George W. Bush White House, which also advanced a pro-drilling agenda and stood accused of conflicts of interest.
On a day when his shotmaking harked back to his glory years, Woods failed to convert six birdie putts of 20 feet or less on his last nine.
Abbey Simon, an American pianist celebrated for a style that harked back to an earlier, golden age of keyboard prowess, died on Wednesday at his home in Geneva.
At noon on Friday, Mr. Berg walked free after 23 months in prison on espionage charges, in a spy swap that harked back to the original Cold War.
He harked back to the original Mulberry logo and brand font after discovering it in the archives, a nod to both the company's '70s roots and its fresh start.
The veiled response harked back to the 1980s and '90s, when my girlfriend and I came out, a time and place we thought we had survived and evolved beyond.
His talk harked back to a formulation Mr. LaPierre popularized after 20 children and six adults were gunned down at a shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn.
Over cool, dark-toned string arrangements, he let out shivery cries that harked to the influence of Coleman, but had their own wry relationship to the surrealism of the film.
McCain was a conservative, too, but his personal philosophy harked back to a tradition of limited government and individual free will, to be enjoyed by lawmakers as well as voters.
Though he spoke soberly to Congress, Mr Trump harked back to his campaign rhetoric when he mentioned four guests in the House gallery whose relatives were "viciously" killed by illegal immigrants.
In images that harked back to the purges of the height of the Cold War, Jang was photographed being arrested at a party meeting as other delegates just looked on impassively.
Trump's comments harked back to his populist campaign rhetoric and Bonnie Glaser, an Asia expert at Washington's Center for Strategic and International Studies, said they betrayed a lack of strategic thinking.
The chants against the president harked back to campaign rallies in 2016 during which fans of Trump would often break into chants of "Lock her up!" in reference to Hillary Clinton
They said the bureau's analysis, earlier reported by Foreign Policy, harked back to the F.B.I. spying illegally on blacks during the civil rights movement and other groups suspected of being subversive.
"Sweet" has a reflective aspect to it: "I made the song as an RnG [rhythm & grime] track which harked back to my early teens hearing sweetboy stuff like 'Wifey Riddim,'" Cralias says.
And yet it is to the past, again and again, that Solskjaer has harked, ever since he rode back into Manchester to help his old team through its José Mourinho-inflicted crisis.
As feelings of nostalgia settled among some of those claiming a piece of an Atlantic City icon, the resort enjoyed a daylong boom that harked back to its heyday in the 1990s.
The New York native's 2011 EP "Seven" wasn't necessarily ahead of its time; if anything, it harked back to the heyday of neo-soul and sometimes even further to R&B's golden age.
BEIRUT (Reuters) - Lebanon's traditional summer festivals harked back to the Arab world's musical past this year, highlighted by a performance by the great-granddaughter of the legendary 1930s diva Asmahan in a mountain palace.
Always Dreaming arrived in Louisville as a likely favorite after a big victory in the Florida Derby and timed workouts that harked back to the most recent big horses, American Pharoah and California Chrome.
Widodo's chief of staff, retired military chief Moeldoko, told local media someone was playing "old games", noting that deploying mentally ill people to create unrest was a tactic that harked back to the Suharto era.
In a memo packed with symbolism that harked back to an iconic notice issued just before the financial crisis, Sequoia Capital on Thursday painted a dark portrait of how the outbreak could reshape Silicon Valley.
The film also had flourishes that harked back to the World War II classic "The Dirty Dozen," with some of Unit 684's recruits described as criminals forced to join the government-run assassins squad.
The sound of "iLevitable" partly harked back to plushly produced Latin pop songs of romance (and mostly heartache) from half a century ago: bolero, cha-cha and bugalú, with big-band horns and luxuriant strings.
The sound of "iLevitable" partly harked back to plushly produced Latin pop songs of romance (and mostly heartache) from half a century ago: bolero, cha-cha and bugalú, with big-band horns and luxuriant strings.
By contrast, the nationalism born with the unification of Germany decades later harked back to Blut und Boden—blood and soil—a romantic and exclusive belief in race and tradition as the wellspring of national belonging.
Thompson's idea was that training for the five events (swimming, fencing, show jumping, running and pistol shooting) would provide the veterans with a secure, friendly sporting environment that also harked back to their former military lives.
Oklahoma's late-season Heisman campaign for Murray harked back to Bo Jackson, the 1985 Heisman winner, who went on to star in the N.F.L. and M.L.B. "I'd like to do both if possible," Murray said Friday.
There, they shot several images that harked back to Mr. Rockwell's "Freedom From Want," one in a series of four paintings inspired by Franklin D. Roosevelt's 1941 speech to Congress celebrating America's freedom and democratic values.
The scale of the graffiti, reported by websites this week including Gothamist, harked back to the 1970s and '80s, when vandalized subways were, for many, a symbol of New York City's struggle against crime and disorder.
That move harked back to other moves under Nadella's Microsoft -- bringing Office applications to Android and iOS, and adding Linux right into Windows, as well as making its own business software like SQL Server run on Linux.
"Blackstar" in fact harked back to his greatest period: the one, in the late 1970s, in which he escaped from Los Angeles to Berlin and laid the future to rest in a grave of strange, powerful sound.
By the time of his death, at 37, Mr. Perez was a balding father running with men half his age, a throwback whose taste for Biggie Smalls, Air Jordans and knife fights harked back to the '90s.
The pair harked back to a pre-Internet age, when the city had its own cast of colorful characters, who have since been either eclipsed by or subsumed into the broader national tragi-farce of public life.
In recent days, the president has frequently harked back to his decision a year ago to tour flood-ravaged sections of Baton Rouge, La. — a visit that he viewed as a turning point in his presidential campaign.
By the time she made her 2020 presidential announcement in January, she was riding on both a "nevertheless, she persisted" narrative and bona fides that harked back to the characteristics of the Democratic Party's golden child, Obama.
DeSantis singled out Broward County and Palm Beach County for tarnishing Florida's image during the recent recount, which harked back to 2000 when the presidential race between George W. Bush and Al Gore was kept in limbo.
"After Modric's missed penalty, we all harked back to Vienna and that situation where we lost in 2008," Dalic said, referring to an agonizing shootout defeat to Turkey in their Euro 2008 quarter-final when Modric also missed.
Sustained whoops and cheers that harked back to the tenor of the post-2010 art market boom, which was marked by spiking prices and ever-new records, broke out as the hammer came down in Sotheby's packed salesroom.
They said it harked back to the era of La Francafrique, when Paris played puppet-master in African countries decades after post-colonial independence, propping up leaders like Bongo's father in exchange for pushing business to French firms.
Ben Carson harked back to the early days of our republic in describing his vision for a reduced social safety net during a CNN town hall event on Wednesday night — using an interesting anecdote to illustrate his point.
Vanita Gutpta, the president and chief executive officer of the Leadership Conference on Civil Rights, harked back to Democrats' vote on Friday to block a spending bill that would have kept the government open, without protecting the Dreamers.
Second, Mr Trump harked back to his original order from January 27th, a haphazardly crafted document that applied to America's lawful permanent residents and caused chaos at American airports by effectively rescinding visas from incoming travellers at 35,000 feet.
The practice harked back to the "dictatorship days" of Park's father, Park Chung-hee, who ruled the country after taking power in a coup in 1961 until he was assassinated by his disgruntled spy chief in 1979, Cho said.
The investigation of Visium harked back to a crackdown on insider trading in the nearly $3 trillion hedge fund industry that began with the arrest in 2009 of Raj Rajaratnam, the co-founder of the Galleon Group hedge fund.
Standing before a packed ballroom of the National Association of Attorneys General, Sessions harked back to his early time as a young prosecutor in Alabama and suggested that the nation "maybe got a bit overconfident" with more lax crime prevention efforts.
Lopez Obrador, who harked back to the era known as the "Mexican Miracle" in his inaugural speech, has threatened to undo what he calls a neo-liberal 2013-13 energy overhaul that opened the oil and gas industry to private capital.
In a recent interview, he harked back to the gloom of the late years of Mr Jindal's tenure, when deficits ballooned in part because the governor—then running for president—refused to approve anything that could be construed as a tax.
Clad in pristine military jackets, they harked back to a mythical vision of Albion, sounding like the Jam with a battered copy of Rimbaud in their back pockets, espousing the kind of Englishness that never existed, an Englishness out of time.
Mr. Noble said the image of an unprofitable company with a lofty market value harked back to the dot-com era, when enthusiastic investors drove up the stock prices of even start-ups that had no revenue and no profits.
Mr. Trump at the time harked back to his brief visit in December to see American troops at Al-Asad base in western Iraq and suggested that United States forces there could be used to carry out surveillance on Iran.
They harked back to massacres of Kurds in Iraq by the former dictator Saddam Hussein — including a 1988 chemical weapons attack in Halabja that killed 5,000 — that they say Washington either failed to prevent or was complicit in covering up.
They harked back to Appalachian tradition even in nontraditional songs like Neil Young's "After the Gold Rush" and Phil Spector's "To Know Him Is to Love Him," and their mutual respect shines through performances that were all about shared vocal harmonies.
Meral Aksener, leader of the nationalist IYI (Good) Party, which formed an alliance with Imamoglu's secularist CHP for the March vote, said the ruling by the seven judges of the YSK harked back to the era of Turkish military coups.
When Mr. Thiel harked back to the great projects of the past, like building the atom bomb, creating the internet and landing a man on the moon, he was citing three of the most important United States government initiatives of the last century.
Just as de Kooning represented a break with the artistic tradition of the past, Thomas's buildings for Lorillard harked back to the elegant Italian villas of the Renaissance while at the same time providing the city with retailing and manufacturing expansion space.
A performance by the Choir of New College, Oxford, and the English Concert Players, conducted by Robert Quinney at St. Bart's in Midtown Manhattan on March 28 harked back to a different tradition, that of the English choir of men and boys.
Just last week, the president used the Oval Office to unleash a blistering assault on undocumented immigrants, portraying them as criminals in a fashion that harked back to an earlier era of American politics but rarely heard from a president in modern times.
" At a rally in the final days before the election, Mr. Zuma harked back to the A.N.C.'s glory days, saying: "Comrade Nelson Mandela stated eloquently in December 2000 when he said: 'The African National Congress is the only party that could deliver services.
Krishna Yeshwant, a doctor who heads the life-sciences team at GV, formerly Google Ventures, said the transformation harked back to the origins of the US healthcare system, with health plans growing out of hospitals as a way to cover the cost of care.
In the 1990s, when the party launched its first wave of SOE closures, resulting in millions of lay-offs, some angry workers even began to embrace a neo-Maoist movement that harked back to the days of guaranteed jobs (and far firmer controls on internal migration).
But power-pop began earlier, and it was a more American phenomenon, with mid-70s bands such as Los Angeles' the Nerves and New York's Milk 'n' Cookies writing stripped-down earworms that harked back to the golden age of 50s and 60s rock 'n' roll.
His work harked back to Benjamin Franklin, who published "Poor Richard's Almanack" throughout the mid-18th century, and Thomas Jefferson, who kept assiduous records of the weather over four decades — less than half as long as Mr. Hendrickson did — from the late 18th century to the early 19th.
A furious firefight this month between Islamic State fighters and Navy SEALs in northern Iraq, in which Special Warfare Operator First Class Charles Keating IV became the third American to die since the campaign against the Islamic State began, harked back to the bloodiest days of the Iraq war.
Duda tied the game, 4-4, in the eighth with a blast over the right-field wall, and the Rays stranded a runner at third base in the ninth against Aroldis Chapman, who harked back to his dominant form of 2016 by firing 104-mile-per-hour fastballs.
It reached back to some of the hard-edged law and order rhetoric of the Nixon years, offered a small dab of religiosity, harked way back to GOP isolationists of the 1920s, and then poached a fair amount of people-versus-powerful rhetoric from the populist wing of the Democratic Party.
The thing that makes it special is that this is one of the largest diamonds in the world, and the Oscars are the crown jewel (pun intended) of Gaga's awards circuit looks for A Star Is Born, which have harked back to old Hollywood glamour and the Audrey Hepburn era.
Mr. Étaix (pronounced ay-TEX), an actor as well as a director, specialized in a deadpan visual comedy, animated by sight gags, funny sound effects and fantasy sequences that harked back to the silent films of Charlie Chaplin, Buster Keaton and Max Linder as well as his own background as a circus performer.
It struck me as I was speaking with Ms. Palmieri, who harked back to how President Obama's nominee to lead the Health and Human Services Department eight years ago, Tom Daschle, withdrew his name after news broke that he had failed to pay taxes on his use of a chauffeur and car service.
When he broached this provocation in conversation with me not long before the conference, it became clear that his point harked directly back to Franklin: that the topic he and his colleagues studied was created by the scientific establishment, and only in order to exclude it — which means that they are always playing on hostile terrain.
For Norwegians, the sight of dozens of American Marines traipsing through the snow in military fatigues — the first time foreign forces have been posted to their country's territory since World War II — may have brought a welcomed sense of security, but it also harked back to a dark era of the Cold War that many had hoped to forget.
On a recent Wednesday night, a profusion of patrons, skewing slightly toward middle-age men, settled into plush leather chairs or leaned against solid oak tables, sipping Chivas Regal, smoking $17 Davidoff cigars and listening to the drummer Gil Hawkins's trio perform Miles Davis's "Nardis" in a rendition that harked directly back to the classic, understated version created by the Bill Evans Trio in 1961.
This glint of suicide chic harked back to a 2013 Vice fashion spread featuring models dressed up as female authors who had committed suicide: Virginia Woolf looking regal in a high-collared white dress in a sunlight-dappled river, the Taiwanese author Sanmao about to hang herself with a pair of stockings (the tights were credited as product) and, of course, Plath herself, kneeling in a pleated schoolgirl dress before an open oven.

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