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142 Sentences With "have roots in"

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

His parents have roots in Hong Kong and Guangdong Province.
The law does have roots in Quebec's history and culture.
At first, the women needed to have roots in Tralee.
His wishes for the pony have roots in the family's faith.
These stereotypes have roots in America's postwar military incursions into Asia.
These individuals often have roots in US communities and live peacefully.
Julia Mata, 24, Illustrator I have roots in Central America and Lithuania.
The stories in The Loyal League have roots in an unlikely place.
Many Wallenberg firms have roots in the 230th century, before Investor was founded.
These shows join a number of series that have roots in the Sept.
Cinco de Mayo does, however, have roots in Mexico's struggle with another European power.
Many of the large funds striking seed deals today have roots in the stage.
Said to have roots in Maryland, the Baltimore-style crab cake often consists of
She points to Long John Silver's and Fazoli's, which both have roots in Lexington.
The spiral we see at the end of "Winterfell" also appears to have roots in mathematics.
Both have roots in the successful photo website, Flickr, which was acquired by Yahoo in 2005.
European companies whose production chains have roots in both the U.S. and China are at risk.
Many of these systems have roots in earlier BokuMono games, but their coalescence is well timed.
Sociologists tell us there's a strong social component; notions of elegance have roots in class dynamics.
It's not surprising, then, to learn both People Can Fly and G2A have roots in Poland.
This behavior can be quite adaptive (to a degree), and may have roots in our evolutionary past.
Fatty liver disease, dementia and coronary artery disease may also have roots in the microbiome, Katz said.
Nobody knows for sure what happens during the rites, which have roots in Shinto, Japan's indigenous religion.
It is unclear precisely how these guitars, which have roots in Hawaiian music, made it to Myanmar.
These 9 direct-to-consumer retail startups have roots in the number one business school in the country.
For example, look at the semiconductor and the Internet, both of which have roots in defense R&D.
"People say, 'Oh, it's Vietnamese food,' but it's not," said Phan, whose parents have roots in northern Vietnam.
That's no surprise given that so many of its staffers have roots in liberal and left-wing media.
The parties have roots in the student movement and had refused to attend discussions of the measures with Pinera.
New York roots Tuesday's contests were particularly significant for three of the candidates who have roots in New York.
Although most of the families come from Mexico and Central America, others have roots in Israel, Africa and Laos.
Dunja Hayali and Cherno Jobatey, Germany's best-known breakfast-TV personalities, have roots in Iraq and the Gambia respectively.
INSEAD might have roots in Fontainebleau, France, but the elite graduate business school has its sights set on Asia.
That's even though those classifications are often just meant to be divisive and have roots in Marxist/Leninist ideology.
While these golden brown and delicious gems have roots in the highlands of Jalisco, they are uniquely LA products.
Founded on a love of improvisation, they have roots in Abstract Expressionist painting, Process Art sculpture and Neo-Expressionism.
I NEVER would've thought that my overall mental and spiritual wellness would have roots in my fitness and nutrition.
Lithuania had a large Jewish population before the second world war, and many prominent Israelis have roots in the country.
The president's irritation with Bannon could have roots in the adviser's high profile in the early days of the administration.
A Vietnamese superstition that it cures cancer does not even have roots in traditional belief, but is a modern invention.
Like Mr. Attal's parents, many French Jews and Muslims have roots in Algeria, which was under French rule until 1962.
Unless you're lucky enough to have roots in the city, spending time with family is not part of the routine.
Traces of the encounters exist in modern DNA, too, especially in people who have roots in parts of East Asia.
Like the current polarization, the inverted invective seems to have roots in the era when Silvio Berlusconi was prime minister.
Many Serbians have roots in Montenegro and families in the country, while tens of thousands of Montenegrins reside in Serbia.
They have roots in the 16th century, when churches began buying property in Jerusalem from the Ottomans, who ruled the city.
They most likely have roots in altar-building — your mom's decorative bowl of pinecones is probably more meaningful than she thinks.
It's rare for New York Democrats to vote in a competitive primary in which both contenders have roots in the state.
It did not surprise the roommates that a lofty political figure could have roots in an apartment as modest as theirs.
As TechCrunch noted, prior coverage of Corellium has emphasized that some of its founders have roots in the iOS jailbreaking scene.
Craft guilds, which have roots in Western Europe in the Middle Ages, can change the relationship between designers and their cities.
"It wasn't until then that I realized how lucky I was to have roots in two different countries and design traditions."
D. L. Hughley's not surprised by Donald Trump's belated rebuke of white supremacists ... because he believes the Trumps have roots in racism.
Turns out, its designers have roots in LA, and since June of 2015, Chris Medvitz of Lightswitch has been cultivating the vision.
It is thought to have roots in Old Dutch (krappen meaning "to cut off, pluck off") and Medieval Latin (crappa meaning "chaff").
They determined that brown rats have roots in northern China or Mongolia and at one point thrived on farms and in villages.
"You cannot speak about this area without Ukrainians, because three million Polish people living there still have roots in Ukraine," Tokarczuk said.
Bernie Sanders, both of whom have roots in the Empire State, are set to debate, hosted by CNN and Time Warner Cable's NY1.
Several anime series, such as Utwarerumono and Fate/Stay, have roots in games with erotic scenes, though they no longer contain explicit material.
Both liberal and conservative orthodoxy have roots in the polarization of the electorate, a division in which each side holds the opposition in contempt.
Studies have found a few common causes — shame, fear, and avoidance, all of which have roots in the culture and the "model minority" stereotype.
Even if they clear the hurdles, Puerto Ricans face additional challenges that have roots in our complicated history of colonization, slavery, and deep inequalities.
Some of his family have roots in Jamaica, they speak in patois and still retain elements of their culture while living here in Montreal.
Leading global wind turbine manufacturers Vestas and Siemens Gamesa have roots in Denmark, which now covers around 30 percent of its energy needs with renewables.
The movement's pro-Israel positions — strongly in favor of Israeli control of Jerusalem — have roots in millenarian theology as well as more straightforward identity politics.
The problem is that today's existential problems—a budding refugee crisis, nuclear weapons, and various climate crisis—seem incomprehensible but all have roots in human evil.
And though HYTE's second stage this year was a partnership with Detroit's Movement festival, none of the artists—except Richie Hawtin—actually have roots in Detroit.
There are important differences between the histories of race relations in the United States and in France, where racist attitudes have roots in France's colonial past.
And the best dishes have roots in the streets, like hawawshi, dough sealed around bristling ground beef and onions, then baked in a wood-fired oven.
I would not necessarily define myself as a second-wave feminist at this point, but I would say that I have roots in second-wave feminism.
How Iran got a hold on Iraq Much of Iran's power in Iraq comes through militia groups that have roots in the 1980s Iraq-Iran war.
These three all have roots in the Southern United States, and the episode pays special attention to how their ancestors' lives were shaped by American slavery.
In other exhibited works, what comes through clearly is an aura of almost vengeful brooding, an attitude that may have roots in Munch's own tumultuous romantic relationships.
"My identity is complex, I was born and bred in Britain but I am tied to both places and have roots in both places," said Ms. Nowobilska.
Tong is from Sichuan, but many of the flavors at Little Tong have roots in nearby Yunnan, a vast and diverse province, scattered with small family farms.
"I wanted to create an album where I tackled certain themes, and follow through on its authenticity by traveling to the countries I have roots in," he said.
At a clinic in Harlem where many of the patients have roots in the Dominican Republic, Dr. Juan Tapia-Mendoza talks to patients about the Zika virus daily.
While some Roma have roots in the country going back to the Middle Ages, others came to Italy from the former Yugoslavia to escape war in the 1990s.
Many Miami Gardens residents have roots in Overtown, a celebrated black community that lost most of its population in the 1960s, when Interstate-95 was extended through Miami.
They have roots in mid-20th-century supper clubs, the food trucks where laborers bought lunch and the home restaurants that fed leaders of the civil rights movement.
Pizzagate appears to have roots in the WikiLeaks release of Mr. Podesta's emails, one of which referred to plans for a Clinton fund-raiser that involved Mr. Alefantis.
They have roots in the Kriegspiel played by 19th century Prussian officers, and are close cousins of crisis simulators used to train officers and officials to this day.
The establishment center-left and center-right coalitions ruled out working with SD — who have roots in neo-Nazism — forcing a rejiggering of political alliances that at points seemed impossible.
Some of these parties, like the National Front in France or the Sweden Democrats, have roots in fascist movements and are considered unfit partners in government by the mainstream parties.
But for those who, like Burrow, have roots in poverty-stricken Athens County, Ohio, his most impressive stat may be the $508,102 he helped raise for the area's food bank.
For the rest of you: Both Niantic, the company that makes Pokémon Go, and Otto, the self-driving truck company Uber bought this summer, both have roots in the search giant.
Though the craze may have roots in a 2015 Onion piece, a lot of people over the past few months agree that the poisonous and colorful little packets look pretty appetizing.
Darktrace's founders have roots in the U.K. and U.S. intelligence, where they took what they knew of the cybersecurity threats to the private sector to where the new battleground opened up.
Mr. Iovino and the chef, his brother, John Iovino, have roots in Naples and plan to serve their grandmother's meaty ravioli in marinara sauce, filled with house-made sausage and cheese.
Today, a number of transportation-on-demand companies that have roots in the tech world (Uber, Didi and Yandex Taxi are three examples) are trying to build their own self-driving tech.
They all have roots in an old problem that has lately found new urgency: SIM card swaps, a scam in which hackers steal your mobile identity—and use it to upend your life.
Calls to break up the big banks and bring back Glass-Steagall, a Depression-era law that separated commercial and investment banking but was repealed in 1999, have roots in Occupy as well.
It's a hugely popular sector of the VGM world, aided by the fact that so many video game soundtracks, especially from early consoles of the '80s and '90s, have roots in electronic music.
The violence, which is so severe that it has made Central America one of the most dangerous regions in the world, is widely acknowledged to have roots in US deportation policies of decades past.
At the Center for Strategic & International Studies' Global Security Forum in 2015, former CIA Director John Brennan also argued that today's challenges in the Middle East have roots in climate change and environmental problems.
Ms. Aung San Suu Kyi and her government have argued that the Rohingya are migrants from Bangladesh who do not deserve citizenship rights, although most have roots in the area that go back generations.
The Most Influential People of African Descent (MIPAD), a group working to bridge the gap between Africans in the diaspora and those living on the continent, wants people to have roots in Africa -- literally.
Adaptogens—While adaptogens—like so many other modern wellness "trends"—have roots in Chinese and Ayurvedic healing traditions, a lot of (white) people came to the herbs in the twenty-teens via Gwyneth Paltrow.
Although the coalition is backed by the United States, many of the Y.P.G. leaders have roots in the Kurdistan Workers' Party, or P.K.K., which is on the State Department's list of foreign terror organizations.
Bill LoSasso, the director of GreenThumb, said the program had increased its efforts to create more community gardens across the city, especially in largely immigrant communities where many newcomers have roots in agricultural areas.
While The Grudge ultimately connected with American audiences, the themes of domestic abuse and sorrow were general enough to have roots in both cultures but didn't resonate with North American audiences in an iconic way.
An alfajor is a cookie sandwich made from two plain sugar cookies and a sweet filling, and although these treats are popular in South America, they are believed to have roots in the Middle East.
The idea that Chinese food relies heavily on "unhealthy" MSG has both been debunked and is theorized to have roots in racism and xenophobia, with non-Asian people believing that authentic Asian food is unclean.
Today, my city friends are surprised to hear I have roots in the "mofussil," a British colonial term for the countryside that Indians now use to refer to rural places where old ways run deep.
Leaders of the center-right and center-left coalitions have ruled out working with SD, who have roots in neo-Nazism, but the ousting of Löfven has raised more questions about the potential need for cooperation.
Three members of Switzerland's starting lineup, including Xhaka and Shaqiri, were born, or have roots, in Kosovo, an ethnically Albanian province that fought a war of independence against Serb-dominated Yugoslav forces in the late 1990s.
The rise of the ayatollahs gave birth to the Shiite anti-American terrorism of the 1980s; al-Qaeda, the Taliban and other Sunni extremist groups have roots in the Afghan jihad and the Saudi's global Wahhabi crusade.
"Republicans need to stop listening to anti-conservative nativist organizations that have roots in population control and financial ties to racist eugenic organizations," said Mario H. Lopez, president of the Hispanic Leadership Fund, a conservative advocacy organization.
Blackface performances in the United States, which have roots in minstrel shows of the early 1800s and became especially widespread during the early 20th century, have persisted despite criticism that they amplify hurtful, demeaning and racist stereotypes.
Up the organizational ladder, 12 general managers have roots in college hockey, the most recent being the Wild's Paul Fenton, who, like Quinn and Sullivan, played at B.U. According to a database maintained by College Hockey Inc.
They point out that goth and alternative cultures may be linked to whiteness in the popular imagination, but many of the characteristics associated with these subcultures, especially piercings, tattoos, and rock, have roots in communities of color.
Let's ensure that those advancing social good have roots in sustainable strategies, proven tools and avenues to bend the arc toward youth and community-led efforts that are already changing civil societies across the globe for the better.
On our table, Rivera set a jibarito, a sandwich that may have roots in rural Puerto Rico, definitely became a thing in the Puerto Rican community in Chicago in the 1990s, and which Rivera has revived in Seattle.
This public garden is inviting eager young scholars to continue their exploration of the Harry Potter world here, where they can find plants that have roots in the real world as well as in J. K. Rowling's imagination.
For those who don't follow pro football: The Pats are widely reviled among football fans that don't have roots in Massachusetts because they have a pesky habit of getting to and then winning Super Bowls, especially in recent years.
Mr. Rodríguez Mora, the economist, said the split in opinion correlated with income, with villagers and affluent urbanites generally in favor of independence, while working-class urbanites, many of whom have roots in other parts of Spain, opposed it.
Mavis Davis, her niece Debra Sandler and grandniece Kiah Sandler, all of whom have roots in Trinidad and Venezuela, have formed a company with the expertise of a chef, Martin Little, to bottle and sell the family's Caribbean sauces.
So a group of scientists at Iowa State University in Ames began to wonder recently whether our feelings about moving might have roots in gym classes, which are often the first introduction many of us have to formal exercise.
The infections there are believed to have roots in a conference in Singapore last month, which a British man, Steve Walsh, attended before flying to Geneva, according to the French authorities and to Mr. Walsh, who publicly identified himself on Tuesday.
The mainstream narrative around Latinxs and abortion goes something like this: Because most people within the Latinx community are deeply religious and have roots in countries with highly restrictive abortion laws, they will inevitably oppose a woman's right to choose.
Germany's twin fears of inflation and fiscal fecklessness, which arguably have held back recovery in the euro zone after the 2007-08 crisis, have roots in a series of 20th-century economic calamities, dating back to the hyperinflation of the 1920s.
As temperamentally distinctive as Mr. Bush is from Mr. Trump, historians seeking to tell the story of the devolution of the Republican Party will also find that the forces that gave us 2016 have roots in the first Bush administration.
They have roots in a place, so they can point you toward the tofu counter hidden inside a flower shop, or the neighbor selling bowls of pho in her living room, down a skinny unlit alley and up three flights.
Three members of Switzerland's starting lineup, including both of its goal scorers on Friday, were born in, or have roots, in Kosovo, an ethnically Albanian province that fought a war of independence against Serb-dominated Yugoslav forces in the late 1990s.
While the four members of the group all hold different passports—El Far22i and El Jehaz are both from Jordan, Z the People was born to a Palestinian family in Washington DC, and Sbeit is from Israel—they all have roots in Palestine.
According to census results released this week, one in two Australians are now either born overseas or have a parent who was born overseas, and that cohort is more likely to have roots in Asia than Europe for the first time since colonization.
And while of course more density would mean change, and people for understandable reasons tend to be mildly averse to seeing communities they have roots in changing, there's good reason to believe looking at the simple wage comparisons undercounts the benefits of more density.
Following the winding stone roads, I came to the crumbled site of a fortress, believed to have roots in an ancient Thracian settlement, and made my way to Knyaz Alexander I, a pedestrian-only street lined with shops and restaurants and doner kebab stands.
Just as modern crime stories and police forces have roots in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, so does our current system of mass incarceration; the idea of locking people up for long periods of time was an alternative to corporal punishment and frequent executions.
Marzena Gesiarz and Zofia Kusmierska, the pierogi makers at PierozeQ, have been in New York for several weeks helping Mr. Kucharski and Ms. Siwiec, who have roots in Czestochowa and own small restaurants in Greenpoint, fine-tune their pierogi for the new restaurant opening on Wednesday.
" Indeed, her political proposals on everything from health care to climate change have roots in the United Methodist Church, which advocates social justice in addition to personal piety, said Paul G. Kengor, a professor at Grove City College and the author of "God and Hillary Clinton: A Spiritual Life.
When: Saturday, October 47003, 5–6:30pm Where: Annenberg Space for Photography (2000 Avenue of the Stars, Century City, Los Angeles) For the past three years, photographer and filmmaker Walter Thompson-Hernandez has been documenting the Blaxicans of LA—people who have roots in both Africa and Mexico.
Although the centuries-old story of the poor girl who falls in love with a prince and then becomes royalty has debatedorigins (it's been said to have roots in places likeChina,Egypt, Greece, andFrance) and a lot of different versions, one thing is for sure — it's popular to retell.
Many chess fans had hoped the challenger would be one of two Americans, Hikaru Nakamura or Fabiano Caruana, who both have roots in New York, but Mr. Karjakin, a supporter of Vladimir Putin and his invasion of Crimea, bested them and others in the qualifying tournament in Moscow in March.
That's why even as Friend and the other members of the Health Ministry Network and the Minority Coalition for Precision Medicine remain hopeful that they can one day become official NIH partners, they're also looking beyond All of Us for ways to ensure the next era of biomedical discovery will have roots in their communities.
Matty, a Canadian, might not have roots in the American South, but he knows how to treat a bird right: by brining it first in pickle juice (for up to three days) and then in buttermilk, before showering it with a mix of nearly a dozen spices, dredging it in flour, and frying it to crunchy, golden perfection.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads The living, grinning skeletons we immediately associate today with Day of the Dead festivities have roots in a little-known source: La portentosa vida de la muerte, or The Astounding Life of Death, one of the first Mexican novels, written in 1792 by Joaquin Bolaños, a Franciscan priest from Zacatecas.
The sentences, colloquially called the "Harvard Sentences" and first introduced by the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) in 1969 as the "IEEE Recommended Practice for Speech Quality Measurements," have roots in World War II, when Harvard scientists at the school's Psycho-Acoustic Laboratory helped to test different kinds of noises for wartime military communications.
"Many of the themes running through my illustrations today have roots in my childhood; I was lucky to live in the countryside with very little technology growing up, so I think much of my work draws from that era of my life and celebrates the freedom of exploring nature, as well as the significance of connecting with our environment and nurturing the flora and fauna around us," said Tasker.
GIRL&aposS FLORAL DUCK TAPE PROM DRESS MAY EARN HER $10K After arriving at the awards show with the long, tight braids that have roots in African culture, Twitter commentators were quick to call out Kardashian's 'do as "cultural appropriation," noting that the "Keeping Up with the Kardashians" star has not only opted for the hairstyle before, to similar outcry, but that she has also previously referred to the cornrow-style as her "Bo Derek" look.
Artifice and camp ("from cosmos to cosmetics," as the poet and critic Daniel Tiffany has written, in a phrase Glenum quotes in her own introduction to the anthology) — anything that might be anti-objectified or hyper-objectified in protest, anything that might be re-embraced as a claim to power rather than submission, anything that might have roots in fear and contamination and nevertheless be nurtured into a celebration of resistance — became part of the movement.
I began adjusting certain scenes in After Effects and adding 3D elements which have roots in mathematic formulas found in nature and geometric objects, like the Golden Ratio and Pi." GIF courtesy of Kurtis Hough The result is a surreal effect caught between reality and manipulation, where the natural abstractions are further heightened by the application of Google's dreaming AI. "I wasn't interested in the 'dog slug' images I was seeing in Deep Dream postings with furry eyeballs filling the frame.

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