"I am a brand; my modeling career is a brand in itself," she said, explaining that social media is a business in itself that supports her brand.
|
|
Don't thank us — service is enough thanks in itself.
|
|
Opposition parties described the move as a coup in itself.
|
|
In itself, these expansions were quickly executed, finished in months.
|
|
Forgiving student debt in itself is not what we need.
|
|
The term refugee in itself is such a significant word.
|
|
Like Winterfell's weirwood, a godswood in itself isn't particularly special.
|
|
But that in itself can be a change in mentality.
|
|
This is good in itself and also increases political engagement.
|
|
That information is, slowly, becoming a valuable product in itself.
|
|
Storytelling in itself is an important component of Franits's book.
|
|
But does a Dubai property investment make sense in itself?
|
|
Two cast members were absent altogether — a statement in itself.
|
|
And that, in itself, is a win for the GOP.
|
|
"This in itself is quite an achievement," Chaudry told Refinery29.
|
|
Her awareness of Desiigner's existence is in itself an achievement.
|
|
It is symptomatic issue and not an issue in itself.
|
|
In itself, this need not disrupt the old political consensus.
|
|
I think that in itself is the meaning of it.
|
|
Picking up this little guy is also surprise in itself.
|
|
Now, getting under the map in itself isn't the issue.
|
|
"Didi's network is in itself a competitive advantage," assured Zhang.
|
|
That in itself is a buy signal and bullish opportunity.
|
|
Selling the hunters the required permits is lucrative in itself.
|
|
It will not, in itself, force the regime to change.
|
|
Which is in itself a form of massive power asymmetry.
|
|
The way auto insurance works is a challenge in itself.
|
|
However, not all Democrats actually supported the fencing in itself.
|
|
That in itself suggests we should have larger trade deficits.
|
|
This in itself would be useful as a training tool.
|
|
He emphasized that burning a flag is in itself legal.
|
|
I'm not a great ... That in itself wasn't a problem.
|
|
"[Applying] is almost like a job in itself," Dunn said.
|
|
That's a problem in itself, as Zaslavskiy also points out.
|
|
That's the reward in itself: They get to love you.
|
|
That's impressive in itself, but it wasn't always that way.
|
|
Although welcome in itself, this will have caused further confusion.
|
|
And that in itself is a valuable and provocative advance.
|
|
Since then, it's become something of a catchphrase in itself.
|
|
Rising debt is, in itself, not necessarily a bad thing.
|
|
That's an unknown and that in itself can cause stress.
|
|
This in itself was a break from the immediate past.
|
|
But this in itself is a good plan for Cadillac.
|
|
The program ends promptly at 6PM, a workday in itself.
|
|
Monday's drama would be a stunning Beltway story in itself.
|
|
The resort seems to be a romantic attraction in itself.
|
|
And that in itself poses some trouble for the company.
|
|
"The summit is not an end in itself," Guterres said.
|
|
In itself, the bill is a small but important step.
|
|
In itself, reversing Citizens United would be a minor step.
|
|
The practice in itself is abuse and against Islamic rituals.
|
|
This in itself is a huge setback for the authorities.
|
|
I've never seen him break, and that's hard, in itself.
|
|
But sobriety, and helping others, is in itself, strangely enough.
|
|
Honestly, that [first drive] in itself was an amazing experience.
|
|
And that in itself might be grounds for some optimism.
|
|
But, he noted, that goal may in itself be outdated.
|
|
Buying the tests became a sort of fetish in itself.
|
|
Wenger's longevity, as Ferguson highlighted, is an achievement in itself.
|
|
To some extent, the plan was an end in itself.
|
|
But "that in itself doesn't explain it," Dr. Kruspe said.
|
|
The subculture in the N.B.A. is something else in itself.
|
|
While not a commodity in itself, sex can be commodified.
|
|
The science in itself may not [always] be adequately persuasive.
|
|
The thing is, I think it's a format in itself.
|
|
And stress is, in itself, not always a bad thing.
|
|
One wonders, and that, in itself, is cause for alarm.
|
|
Each performance is going to be an event in itself.
|
|
That, in itself, is motivation for Mercedes, Wolff and Hamilton.
|
|
Or did it feel more like a year in itself?
|
|
This is what cauliflower is when cauliflower believes in itself.
|
|
It has invested money in players, but not in itself.
|
|
Taking a neutral stance is in itself a political stance.
|
|
Lack of choice can be a security threat in itself.
|
|
It tells many stories and is a story in itself.
|
|
Selecting the pacers for Kosgei was a challenge in itself.
|
|
The experience is powerful, a mission of pleasure in itself.
|
|
The Colorama campaign promoted photography as an activity in itself.
|
|
But why shouldn't such equality be an end in itself?
|
|
Painting is an artistic medium, not a technology in itself.
|
|
That, in itself, seems to increase the chances of success.
|
|
That in itself provides evidence of where it came from.
|
|
"Transportation is not an end in itself," Sowers told me.
|
|
The first act is almost a whole opera in itself.
|
|
The recorded vote to confirm Jorjani was in itself noteworthy.
|
|
Not having my hands full is a luxury in itself.
|
|
This in itself is thorny and unfair to Scorsese's work.
|
|
But neither cosmopolitanism nor parochialism is a virtue in itself.
|
|
Facilitating a gift is a very excellent gift in itself.
|
|
Craft in itself means nothing unless it reaches total flawlessness.
|
|
That is in itself a freedom, but also a danger.
|
|
So, that's very important, and that's a dichotomy in itself.
|
|
And that in itself has made the show worth watching.
|
|
In the future, that idea may be a relic in itself.
|
|
The bacteria-powered microrobot (BPM) idea is in itself not new.
|
|
That may sound boring, but it has a value in itself.
|
|
Trump's unpredictability was, in itself, a trademark of his presidential campaign.
|
|
A film's title sequence is a work of art in itself.
|
|
And that in itself allows there to be some ambiguity already.
|
|
Mr. Jones's gorgeous, burly baritone seems a complicated character in itself.
|
|
Optimism about the mining industry is a remarkable turnaround in itself.
|
|
That in itself would be a break from the recent past.
|
|
This in itself made it easier to be a sex worker.
|
|
Running a private server is not in itself a new idea.
|
|
And a lot of this rhetorical spin is transparent in itself.
|
|
Keeping control of my class is, in itself, a balancing act.
|
|
Having lots of capital is in itself a shield against competitors.
|
|
And ultimately, the process of working becomes an end in itself.
|
|
Identifying the oldest image of Mary isn't an end in itself.
|
|
It constructs the kind of blandness that is uplifting in itself.
|
|
And I think moving people in itself can be a goal.
|
|
In the meantime, ogling the Roborace cars is fun in itself.
|
|
The role of tire changer is almost a sport in itself.
|
|
YNH: The system in itself can do amazing things for us.
|
|
But that irrational fear is, in itself, a form of prejudice.
|
|
Like, as an animator the premise in itself sounded nearly impossible.
|
|
In itself this reflects how Mr Navalny's standing has been boosted.
|
|
Operating in the country, for instance, is a challenge in itself.
|
|
Presenting that as the assumed default is in itself an issue.
|
|
In itself, that should not have a great impact on policy.
|
|
That, in itself, is a big step in the right direction.
|
|
And that in itself is the first step toward protecting yourself.
|
|
And science is, in itself a complex concept and another language.
|
|
This plurality of voices is not in itself a bad thing.
|
|
" That in itself, she concludes, "is like a revolution for one.
|
|
In fact, not using your devices is a biometric in itself.
|
|
Now, airlines are making the stopover hub a destination in itself.
|
|
The story of creatives working together can be interesting in itself.
|
|
Age play and diapers are not sexual in itself for me.
|
|
The Type 001A isn't considered a major technological breakthrough in itself.
|
|
The absence of so many loved ones is haunting in itself.
|
|
Just seeing the difference in emoji presentations is revelatory in itself.
|
|
Failing to recognize your cognitive biases is a bias in itself.
|
|
That in itself provides us some evidence where it came from.
|
|
This is so juicy in itself, so flavorful on its own.
|
|
Putting the welfare of these children first, in itself, is admirable.
|
|
The process of finding a surrogate can be challenging in itself.
|
|
That's a great outcome in itself, and Finland's trial achieved it.
|
|
That in itself is indicative of a major problem facing Republicans.
|
|
His curiosity is weirdly unbounded, like a belief system in itself.
|
|
If you look at France, Macron in itself is a change.
|
|
Naval war in itself was essentially about castles, castles control territory.
|
|
Having too many choices is in itself inefficient and fantasy inducing.
|
|
Who would trust a country with so little faith in itself?
|
|
And therefore they conclude that popularity in itself is bad thing.
|
|
A direct Kim-Trump meeting is not an end in itself.
|
|
Obstruction is a crime in itself, and for an obvious reason.
|
|
It also doubles up as an enormous thirst trap in itself.
|
|
And the private island setting is quite the draw in itself.
|
|
Piper Auditorium is inside Gund Hall, not a building in itself.
|
|
The endurance of the "Iliad" is in itself evidence of this.
|
|
In itself this illustrates the peculiar cultural status we afford scissors.
|
|
I think avoiding that outcome was a worthy goal in itself.
|
|
That in itself tells you that they feel a possible risk.
|
|
Narrowing this list was a feat in itself — here we go!
|
|
Karen history is, in itself, a tale of trust and betrayal.
|
|
Ian Rhodes: That in itself won't necessarily make the cars faster.
|
|
That, in itself, should evoke universal condemnation of Republican congressional behavior.
|
|
And sometimes seeing, and being seen, is a statement in itself.
|
|
Yet the silence turned out to be an event in itself.
|
|
But that's a message in itself: You can never be certain.
|
|
Scaramucci's outburst — to a reporter, no less — is insignificant in itself.
|
|
Looking at Martin's art is something of an art in itself.
|
|
It is insignificant in itself; the economy is still growing strongly.
|
|
Hearing House members speak from Senate floor was extraordinary in itself.
|
|
The public debate that has been generated was something in itself.
|
|
And in itself it is no huge blow to the republic.
|
|
That in itself is a problem, at least to some eyes.
|
|
"Just the word 'Ohio State' in itself is enough for us."
|
|
That in itself is an asset that's going to help us.
|
|
Improvements to Georgia's infrastructure will, in itself, bring huge business opportunities.
|
|
But that in itself is not a violation of the law.
|
|
But Apple's arbitrary new numerical threshold tells us little, in itself.
|
|
And, of course, there is nothing wrong with aspiration in itself.
|
|
In itself it is, he said, another kind of created object.
|
|
"To become a starting pitcher in itself was unique," he said.
|
|
But it would not, in itself, be a step toward authoritarianism.
|
|
Rather, he's arguing that this overturning is the goal in itself.
|
|
Vim is extremely customizable and constitutes a programming language in itself.
|
|
Nobody will forget this, and that's an advantage in itself. Who?
|
|
That in itself is so goddamn metal we can't even stand it.
|
|
If it's just being her friend, then that's a blessing in itself.
|
|
Simply being charged by the SDNY is, in itself, a defendant's nightmare.
|
|
Job searching is in itself a skill, and one you can cultivate.
|
|
Electoral victory is important, but it is not an end in itself.
|
|
The attempt was beautiful to watch, and a thrilling achievement in itself.
|
|
Yet that in itself is not reason enough to avoid the game.
|
|
Conley said it was "a miracle in itself," that rescuers found him.
|
|
The analysis of a video game can be a game in itself.
|
|
That pricing disparity in itself seemed like a big problem worth solving.
|
|
Seeing the change you helped shepherd will be enough reward in itself.
|
|
Technology in Osmosis doesn't create a dystopia or a utopia in itself.
|
|
But if being unpredictable is your MO, that in itself becomes predictable.
|
|
Heavy is in itself an interrogation of Kiese Laymon, by Kiese Laymon. ●
|
|
To live with caution and not fail is a failure in itself.
|
|
The proliferation of conventional weapons is a source of volatility in itself.
|
|
Forget about good taste, too — eating them was a workout in itself.
|
|
The physical toll of being so heavy was a burden in itself.
|
|
The ferocious response to such an innocuous request is telling in itself.
|
|
But the foreword to the book is practically an event in itself.
|
|
It was effective — but also nearly a full-time job in itself.
|
|
That the bill got so far, so quickly, is notable in itself.
|
|
The problem with CGI villains isn't that CGI is bad in itself.
|
|
There is true emotion in this blockbuster, a rare feat in itself.
|
|
The presence of Mr. Smith, in itself, is not a big thing.
|
|
We feel like real big men and that's a privilege in itself.
|
|
I'm African-American: That in itself means that I'm filled with magic.
|
|
Kallas said Browder's complaint was not in itself enough to prosecute anyone.
|
|
The definition of queerbaiting in itself has been debated among LGBTQ people.
|
|
That in itself was remarkable, and after tonight, it will be gone.
|
|
"I feel like creation in itself is our own destruction," Fini says.
|
|
"Just believe that the heartbreak was a gift in itself!" she wrote.
|
|
Monday's flight — direct from Riyadh to Tel Aviv — was in itself historic.
|
|
It's behavior that needs to be addressed, not drug use in itself.
|
|
But others consider finding the strength to testify a victory in itself.
|
|
But Turkey considers the YPG to be a terrorist group in itself.
|
|
Because, ya know, the venomous viper part wasn't terrifying enough in itself.
|
|
Pretty strange in itself, but two days later, another one got stolen.
|
|
That is sufficient in itself to prove unacceptable wrongdoing by the president.
|
|
Arranging flights would in itself be a huge and very costly task.
|
|
This in itself was not proof of racial discrimination, notes Mr Fryer.
|
|
And student protest is often, in itself, an act of free speech.
|
|
That, in itself, could restore some stability and confidence to his campaign.
|
|
Pretty much any leader he meets will be an event in itself.
|
|
A perfect balance of trade should not be an objective in itself.
|
|
That a Democrat made the race competitive is in itself a story.
|
|
"Every day is alone in itself," a study quotes him as saying.
|
|
The Great California Wine, he feels, should be a thing in itself.
|
|
"It's a job in itself," Mr. Davidson said of the civil suits.
|
|
China poses a great risk in itself with households accelerating their borrowing.
|
|
That in itself constitutes a chilling effect and breach of academic freedom.
|
|
It's not a living in itself, but it supplements my freelance writing.
|
|
The act of the gathering the food was a hunt in itself.
|
|
So being in the video game, in itself, is a monumental accomplishment.
|
|
That in itself was so painful because I didn't have an answer.
|
|
I found a therapist and was diagnosed, which in itself was relieving.
|
|
This in itself is spurring startups that help merchants thrive on Amazon.
|
|
Still, that in itself doesn't open up the state to constitutional violations.
|
|
The fact that you have this message is a start in itself.
|
|
There is something enticing in itself, though, about creating an alter-ego.
|
|
Alongside a salad, it's a dinner in itself on a lazy weeknight.
|
|
The effect is bewildering, which is not in itself a bad thing.
|
|
The removal of cultural authenticity is in itself a violent colonial act.
|
|
The fact that they're returning the gaze is, in itself, very powerful.
|
|
The ability to deflect criticism is an asset in itself, of course.
|
|
That's a bad thing in itself, and it's a betrayal of trust.
|
|
"Kotlin in itself is a modern programming language," Ovechkin told Business Insider.
|
|
How the Turkish Open came to be is a story in itself.
|
|
Burek is almost a meal in itself, the phyllo crackly and capitulating.
|
|
Nevertheless, the fact that so many lived was a miracle in itself.
|
|
Just opening the door - in either direction - is a treat in itself.
|
|
In itself, this error isn't at all crucial to the policy debate.
|
|
The anticipation of the event brings a degree of happiness in itself.
|
|
Harris says the country in itself is a tourist attraction worth seeing.
|
|
Still, integrating that footage of Fisher was a special effect in itself.
|
|
Why isn't being a white working-class male an identity in itself?
|
|
That in itself makes me a part of a social-justice climate.
|
|
This meant that nonconsensual penetration was not, in itself, a real concern.
|
|
Serving credit needs of students is a big addressable market in itself.
|
|
Her career is a grand slam in itself, to say the least.
|
|
It gave the impression that the Socialist Party didn't believe in itself.
|
|
But it's a diagnosis in itself, with its own biology and symptoms.
|
|
"Privacy in itself is infinitely more than just regulatory compliance," he said.
|
|
The diagnosis was grave, the treatment arduous and life-threatening in itself.
|
|
But does escalating language in itself increase the chances for military conflict?
|
|
Just plain old Washington variety harassment, which is pretty unique in itself.
|
|
"So that in itself is very harmful to this administration," he continued.
|
|
Through virtual reality, the skull transforms into an enormous planet in itself.
|
|
"Speed, in itself, is not a goal for us," Stockmarr tells TechCrunch.
|
|
The company must regain confidence in itself through relentless root cause analysis.
|
|
Finding time to experiment in the space was a challenge in itself.
|
|
Trump is making change happen faster, and that in itself is dangerous.
|
|
"Obesity in itself is not something that should be glamorized," she said.
|
|
COSCARELLI Some Grammy performances have little to do with music in itself.
|
|
So that in itself was a completely different discipline to the series.
|
|
But for a social scientist, that in itself is reason for concern.
|
|
How much impact any decision will have is a question in itself.
|
|
That in itself makes the [Turner] case a success in a sense.
|
|
That may in itself be a pretty good reason to support it.
|
|
The linguistic analysis of female versus male speech is interesting in itself.
|
|
Lights, middles, and darks — each tonal passage is a world in itself.
|
|
According to Jost, alleviating public alarm is, in itself, a public health priority.
|
|
It does not, in itself, indicate wrongdoing or mean charges will be brought.
|
|
Having a heart defect is not that big of a deal in itself.
|
|
"That in itself speaks volumes about our commitment to investigative reporting," he said.
|
|
But that in itself was not enough to keep the peso from tumbling.
|
|
The process of working towards a prize is a learning process in itself.
|
|
The fall of the Kim family in itself wouldn't be enough, he estimates.
|
|
Pulling off a story that deconstructs fantasy tropes sounds hard enough in itself.
|
|
And her message in itself touched me – it made me come to tears.
|
|
Streep likened the art of acting to an act of empathy in itself.
|
|
Choosing a menu for the leaders has proven a diplomatic challenge in itself.
|
|
To me, the problem is not straight actors playing gay roles in itself.
|
|
The bottom line: The number of candidates in itself doesn't guarantee election victories.
|
|
It just goes along way in itself: just keeping good music alive, period.
|
|
Using sterile insects to control disease is not, in itself, a novel technique.
|
|
"My solo piano playing is a question in itself," he told Mr. Cappelletti.
|
|
"This is a little theater in itself," Mr. Rhoton said, discussing the incident.
|
|
Let me start off by saying that Navdy in itself is inherently cool.
|
|
Technology is always a means to an end, never an end in itself.
|
|
But the letter was so much of a piece of art in itself.
|
|
Getting jobless young people into the world of work is valuable in itself.
|
|
This in itself brings up issues that have long plagued The Bachelor franchise.
|
|
Not to mention that the events business is actually pretty lucrative in itself.
|
|
Compiling lead lists for telemarketers is not a crime in itself, of course.
|
|
The basic idea is for each arena to be an event in itself.
|
|
But that in itself is not a reason to adapt it, I think.
|
|
Nope, she credited the inspo to Bo Derek, which is problematic in itself.
|
|
The growth of the rental market is not in itself an unwelcome trend.
|
|
That Mixcloud has raised a decent sized funding round isn't surprising in itself.
|
|
It is in itself a new era for a post-al-Baghdadi ISIS.
|
|
That in itself is a megalomaniacal project which is almost bound to fail.
|
|
She was Facetiming without consideration for those around her — a crime in itself.
|
|
The internet has a funny way of bringing out the worst in itself.
|
|
Silicon Valley goes through boom-and-bust cycles, but always reinvests in itself.
|
|
This in itself is an imaginative and creative pastime and causes no harm.
|
|
That, in itself, is a sign of how far British universities have come.
|
|
The expense of attending a wedding can be a financial strain in itself.
|
|
It's important to note that using offshore accounts in itself isn't necessarily illegal.
|
|
A good thing, to be sure… But automation isn't a goal in itself.
|
|
"It should not be misunderstood as a comprehensive, privacy-proofed solution in itself."
|
|
The turn away from reality in the movie is in itself an allegory.
|
|
It's significant in itself that DeVos chose to speak at this particular event.
|
|
Finally we have the many chunks of Brooklyn, each a town in itself.
|
|
They need to win the viewers' trust, which is a battle in itself.
|
|
Making it believable is a challenge in itself, but it was so fun.
|
|
That in itself is a good enough excuse to sit out the event.
|
|
Skeptics will argue about compliance but the symbolism in itself cannot be understated.
|
|
The fact that I was wearing my habit, that in itself got attention.
|
|
In itself, this ability to be invisible was a certain kind of freedom.
|
|
Yet recent research suggests that streaming is not in itself diminishing artists' earnings.
|
|
Fog computing or fog networking is not in itself a completely new idea.
|
|
That in itself is an un-American attack on our freedom of speech.
|
|
In itself, this wasn't a good reason to discount the possibility of Brexit.
|
|
That feeling of success may have provided a sort of identity in itself.
|
|
But it isn't, in itself, evidence of a new policy toward the Palestinians.
|
|
Bernhard could not immediately identify the specimens, which was not in itself surprising.
|
|
Of course, dropping packages safely from the sky is a challenge in itself.
|
|
That's pretty miraculous in itself, considering how superior Spurs have been this season.
|
|
Her slow trudge toward a diagnosis is a source of trauma in itself.
|
|
The Startup Extreme event was interesting — and oh so very Norwegian — in itself.
|
|
I am obsessive about my artwork and my artwork is obsessive in itself.
|
|
In 2016, Xcel released its Colorado Energy Proposal, which was news in itself.
|
|
Small-business retirement planning is turning into a start-up industry in itself.
|
|
That will be a huge boost to housing and jobs in itself. 2.
|
|
Getting to the start line of the trials was a victory in itself.
|
|
And if you say they're not political, then that is in itself political.
|
|
So Aquaman having a credits scene at all is somewhat notable in itself.
|
|
I can't believe a beautiful city like this would not believe in itself.
|
|
The beauty of this system is that in itself, ATracker is completely nonjudgmental.
|
|
And, in fact, singing the national anthem is in itself a political act.
|
|
The making of the film has been something of a saga in itself.
|
|
The process of creating that is, in itself, the process of creating hope.
|
|
Adding "The Movie" to the title reads like a punch line in itself.
|
|
Yet a lack of volatility may in itself be a cause of worry.
|
|
The beat doesn't have to sell a song; it's a joy in itself.
|
|
That potential bonanza, in itself, gives them a boost in the stock market.
|
|
"The idea of stopping the apocalypse in itself comes into question," Gamble said.
|
|
That collective friendship is in itself a strategy — but it's one that works.
|
|
Measuring noise is important, Bronzaft said, but it isn't an end in itself.
|
|
It's clear that black leadership, in itself, isn't enough to transform the country.
|
|
This well-documented and thoughtfully argued claim is in itself a huge achievement.
|
|
Of course, Trump has been formally impeached, and that in itself is significant.
|
|
Otherwise, your steady calls of alarm risk becoming a complacent routine in itself.
|
|
Sectarian strife and instability, a worry in itself, also matters for the economy.
|
|
Such measures would also probably improve outcomes for patients — a good in itself.
|
|
But such a heavy emphasis on youth voters is a gamble in itself.
|
|
The act of spending money on other people could be beneficial in itself.
|
|
That, in itself, could be stretching out jury discussions, the former prosecutor said.
|
|
The din of voices is not enough in itself to stop the violence.
|
|
His awareness of and reference to Evola in itself only reflects that reading.
|
|
That there was a conservative research group to consult was in itself remarkable.
|
|
That, in itself, would have been considered astonishing … oh, back in 22, say.
|
|
For most people who participated, the march was not an end in itself.
|
|
The fact that this was ever in question, though, is in itself strange.
|
|
The New America article is not that big of a deal, in itself.
|
|
We gotta admit ... it's an accomplishment in itself that nobody busted their ass.
|
|
A CFIUS review in itself does not mean a deal will be halted.
|
|
There had been time enough to reason ourselves all the way from denial to acceptance: On considered thought, The Revisionist having in itself fulfilled its promise, stands as a complete body of work, entire in itself, that does not require continuation.
|
|
But increased migration tends to be seen as good in itself by today's liberals.
|
|
Simply getting from A to B tends to be a physics puzzle in itself.
|
|
The band's discography is, in itself, the story of Tommy and Paul's evolving relationship.
|
|
That he has the opportunity to pursue his dream is remarkable enough in itself.
|
|
That's a process in itself, because we're so attached to Isle de Jean Charles.
|
|
That in itself makes me not as nervous, but it's obviously an interesting transition.
|
|
The ideological diversity conservative Democrats bring to their party is also good in itself.
|
|
In this way World Citizen: Allen Ginsberg as Traveller is a guidebook in itself.
|
|
Ultimately, though, FitzGerald thinks that xenotransplantation doesn't have to be an end in itself.
|
|
While that's adorable in itself, many of the tweets focused on the couple themselves.
|
|
Maybe that in itself will prove to be "Break My Stride"'s lasting legacy.
|
|
But in general, the birth of a child is a powerful ceremony in itself.
|
|
Mr. Sala has arranged the show as something of a sound installation in itself.
|
|
The effort to track the happiness of large populations is not, in itself, new.
|
|
That's pretty early memory in itself, but for some reason it's vivid to me.
|
|
Besides, the act of toppling in itself does not solve a number of issues.
|
|
Finishing the movie in time for SXSW was an ordeal in itself, Cherry said.
|
|
The Hill is so interesting, it's kind of like a little city in itself.
|
|
Whether ICO tokens are a security is a million billion dollar question in itself.
|
|
What's more, for people with hypertension, measuring blood pressure in itself can be stressful.
|
|
Even if the significance isn't yet at the discovery, this is important in itself.
|
|
It's important to note that the polar vortex isn't a storm system in itself.
|
|
That in itself takes two, three hours to go through where it's like everything.
|
|
But even this would have its costs—and constitute a tough decision in itself.
|
|
In other words, it should not be regarded as an asset class in itself.
|
|
"A company should invest in itself and keep some room for manoeuvre," he said.
|
|
When you add the rice and the fried egg, it's a meal in itself.
|
|
Job hunting is basically a job in itself — and a humbling one at that.
|
|
As Jonathan Ladd has written, gerrymandering is not a very useful concept in itself.
|
|
"No single biometric is good enough in itself," says AimBrain co-founder Andrius Sutas.
|
|
It isn't a parody, and that in itself feels almost like a revolutionary act.
|
|
"This reinforces the fact that obesity in itself is a risk factor," Lassale said.
|
|
You may have lofty goals, but confronting your own ambition is terrifying in itself.
|
|
That Broadcom would be blocked from buying Qualcomm isn't necessarily a surprise in itself.
|
|
Ward winning a fight isn't an everyday occurrence, but it's not remarkable in itself.
|
|
That moment in itself was yet another indicator that live streaming is the future.
|
|
For the many always formed a rabble, and so democracy was distorted in itself.
|
|
Obviously this in itself is not sufficient evidence that zombie Cat will show up.
|
|
That in itself should pay dividends—numerical, in the Parliament and institutions—and symbolic.
|
|
Delighting both ten-year-olds and their parents is a magical feat in itself.
|
|
The legal terrain to come is a minefield in itself, education law experts said.
|
|
Even if you forget the pineapple, that in itself is a pretty huge legacy.
|
|
Tuesday night, the race was seen as a tossup is an accomplishment in itself.
|
|
This information in itself is far more than most cable news segments would provide.
|
|
If you shop at Sephora often, you know this is pretty valuable in itself.
|
|
"That could be $1,000 in itself, too," Lemp said, speaking of replacing the tires.
|
|
For example, speeding is wrong because it's illegal, but murder is wrong in itself.
|
|
Dancing at concerts — a new entertainment experience for Saudis in itself — is also prohibited.
|
|
Her intended successor will not initiate any revolutionary shifts, which is dangerous in itself.
|
|
But for Target, the company will remain focused on investing in itself, Cornell said.
|
|
This is in itself would not be an issue, were they not also inconsequential.
|
|
We gave up a short-handed goal, so there's the game right in itself.
|
|
"It's not even serious—the album art—which is funny in itself," Delilah says.
|
|
The result is that every translation is different, almost a new poem in itself.
|
|
Sure, but I don't think [the burning of memorabilia], in itself, validates his position.
|
|
That is notable in itself: It's the "climate" in which the "weather" took place.
|
|
The meeting turned into a meeting -- CHUCK TODD: Which in itself it's attempted collusion.
|
|
Divers found the team (a feat in itself) after 10 days, weak but alive.
|
|
I went to the Johnny's website before this call, which is amazing in itself.
|
|
It was disappointing to see, as well as manipulative — an underhanded ultimatum in itself.
|
|
CNN's Luke McGee writes: Isolating the Prime Minister is not that difficult, in itself.
|
|
This attitude was in itself an aberration, Scutts argues — and not an inevitable one.
|
|
Suffering at any level doesn't need legitimizing, and survival is not, in itself, selfish.
|
|
All these numbers point in the same direction: Congress is not investing in itself.
|
|
Johnston and Lee are interested in diversity, but not as an end in itself.
|
|
This in itself was remarkable: Alabama entered the game approximately a two-touchdown favorite.
|
|
But there's little to this story that is in itself religious, much less ancient.
|
|
But a politics less riddled with contempt would be a good thing in itself.
|
|
Around treats video as the means to an end, not the end in itself.
|
|
Again, the lack of hard data about the issue is an issue in itself.
|
|
To me, photography is a means to an end, not an end in itself.
|
|
I think gender is something fluid and the world is non-binary in itself.
|
|
"Those bite-sized pieces of work, it's a craft in itself," Ms. Michaels said.
|
|
"To be able to make such a sound is empowering in itself," she said.
|
|
That, in itself, is viewed with optimism by some female investors in Silicon Valley.
|
|
It was a holiday in itself to feel so out of touch, so uncontactable.
|
|
"Prepping for the &aposgo live&apos date was a full-time job in itself."
|
|
In itself, the President's decision to escalate things reportedly shocked some senior military planners.
|
|
So great was the power of Thatcher's handbag, it became a verb in itself.
|
|
But it's possible Airbnb's rapid ascent to global popularity is a problem in itself.
|
|
So to be back racing at WorldTour level is a huge victory in itself.
|
|
"Nothing about the corporate form in itself justifies categorically foreclosing corporate liability," she wrote.
|
|
But Stipanovich said the fact that the story caught fire was, in itself, telling.
|
|
Any step closer to a confrontation across the 38th parallel is dangerous in itself.
|
|
Classic rock in itself has long been established as a true American music genre.
|
|
At a certain point, though, declaring yourself apolitical is, in itself, a political act.
|
|
I saw its impact but understood that this, in itself, would not be enough.
|
|
Wounding the vainglorious is a pleasing pastime in itself and contributes to their demoralization.
|
|
It's the fact that you can just feel that the city believes in itself.
|
|
This in itself puts Moscow in the category of its own as our adversaries.
|
|
He enjoyed craft — the manipulation of forms and materials — as an end in itself.
|
|
That, too, is the flip side of the American Dream, in itself a scam.
|
|
That is a bad outcome in itself and worthy of the attention it's getting.
|
|
"Macau is part of China and is a safe haven in itself," he said.
|
|
That's because often, for Trump, having a fight is a political win in itself.
|
|
"We haven't gotten an invitation yet and that in itself speaks volumes," Staley said.
|
|
Tackling climate change in a big way is in itself likely to be transformative.
|
|
That in itself could result in six months in jail and a $1,000 fine.
|
|
To deal with these themes and surpass censorship will be an achievement in itself.
|
|
The cataclysms of World War II were not the fault of innovation in itself.
|
|
And, I got to be on the show, which is already winning in itself.
|
|
He managed to hang around the big leagues for 22 years, an accomplishment in itself.
|
|
That in itself is a battle, a valiant fight for one who has endured much.
|
|
Democratic Taiwan is a country in itself and has nothing to do with authoritarian China.
|
|
That wasn't a problem in itself, but the singers who accompanied these musicians were vexed.
|
|
Standin' at the edge of a dream gettin' ready to jump, nothing special in itself.
|
|
That's why the lead-up to Victor swiping his V-card in itself is hilarious.
|
|
That he's even getting praise for thinking about sexism is, in itself, kind of sexist.
|
|
The exchange rate on overseas profits can act as a tariff in itself, he said.
|
|
"Public opinion is not an objective in itself, sorry to be so blunt," he said.
|
|
"Having a basic smartphone in itself is a huge upgrade over, well, nothing," he said.
|
|
Julia Louis-Dreyfus and Bryan Cranston's 2014 kissWinning an Emmy is pretty exciting in itself.
|
|
"It's not particularly useful in itself," Andreas Wallraff, a quantum physicist from ETH Zurich, said.
|
|
Besides the usual array of grocery food, the new Wegmans is a destination in itself.
|
|
This sort of control system isn't new in itself, but it usually requires expensive hardware.
|
|
Other platforms and consoles use Linux already so that, in itself, is not a barrier.
|
|
But violence does not in itself lead to greater equality, except on a massive scale.
|
|
I first blocked for my partner — which proved to be an arm workout in itself.
|
|
Given the fears Mr Trump's behaviour raised, this is in itself cause for considerable relief.
|
|
"To see a snow leopard in the wild is a luxury in itself," she said.
|
|
A clean, unique data set is a competitive advantage in itself (so don't sell it!).
|
|
It may make you long for your teenage innocence, and that's a feat in itself.
|
|
That it and others are exploring new approaches must, in itself, be a social good.
|
|
If you watch a TV show long enough, the home becomes a character in itself.
|
|
But in itself, government was not inherently productive; rather, it was a stabilizing background force.
|
|
Besides, there is mounting evidence that the act of writing may deepen understanding in itself.
|
|
The convention in itself is relatively powerless to defeat powerful, well-organized transnational crime syndicates.
|
|
It will make readers think and smile, which is not a bad therapy in itself.
|
|
So how they – how they haven't told anybody is – is again a miracle in itself.
|
|
It sold a stake in itself to Affiliated Managers Group more than a decade ago.
|
|
The president's newfound confidence will not in itself be enough to make these reforms work.
|
|
That a trillion dollars might be at risk is not in itself all that worrying.
|
|
That is a risk in itself, says Alan Ruskin, chief international strategist at Deutsche Bank.
|
|
Witnessing the editing process can be an education in itself, too, if you're paying attention.
|
|
Stealing a million dollars worth of any food seems like a difficult task in itself.
|
|
By overlaying different closed systems – each perfect in itself — Kaufman evokes the inevitability of deterioration.
|
|
At this point, however, that in itself is not the biggest stain on Trump's legitimacy.
|
|
That result in itself was surprising and led to some new physical theories, explained Bazilevsky.
|
|
Valentine's Day felt like just another Saturday in winter, which was bad enough in itself.
|
|
And not — in itself — a shortcut to laying down a solid foundation of grammatical understanding.
|
|
It happens most memorably to Josh, the series' token male (a television innovation in itself).
|
|
That, in itself, is quite challenging because she has to be ready almost on improv.
|
|
It was such a weird gender mix that it almost felt like drag in itself.
|
|
Torture in itself isn't the theme but more like a piece of the overall concept.
|
|
This in itself would argue for a strong increase in production in the manufacturing sector.
|
|
This is a feat in itself, as many voice synthesis algorithms are quite resource-heavy.
|
|
Such a drastic change in tactics has required intensive troubleshooting, a costly proposition in itself.
|
|
This is not a Lolita situation, and that in itself is a small feminist victory.
|
|
And according to Beaudet and Roberts, that in itself was the key to their success.
|
|
This in itself would have made her six times more likely to have a stroke.
|
|
That in itself would be a costly subsidy to the 25m people in the North.
|
|
Moretti's blend of passion, principle, and pleasure is a lofty political project in itself. ♦
|
|
In itself, this view does not necessarily make them either out of date or undoable.
|
|
This would be a notable achievement in itself given Trump's vocal disdain for the deal.
|
|
But first I need to get there and I know that's a challenge in itself.
|
|
Gathering nearly 22014,000 portraits, an extraordinary enterprise in itself, began long before the museum opened.
|
|
"Investment in itself is not a guarantor of growth, nor of job creation," he warned.
|
|
That in itself underlined how important it is to Obama and those who served him.
|
|
Peace in the electoral process is an absolute bare minimum, not an end in itself.
|
|
Then again, a certain kind of forward-looking pragmatism was an Igbo tradition in itself.
|
|
DACA participation is sufficient in itself to establish deportability, and they can't apply for asylum.
|
|
The fact that Stone was in Trump's orbit for so long is problematic in itself.
|
|
And they're all valid; a black voice heard is in itself a form of protest.
|
|
Yet Zambrotta's crime was not the act in itself but the unexpected confession that followed.
|
|
Attacking Trump isn't in itself subversive—and there's a Goldilocks dynamic to the whole endeavor.
|
|
I like the writers who tell stories in a way that means something in itself.
|
|
That affirmation in itself shows why none of them are qualified to be our president.
|
|
It's not a big project in itself, doable within a few days if miners cooperate.
|
|
"It'd be stupid to do that, too much of a fad in itself," he says.
|
|
Buhari's visit in itself is also bound to enhance Nigeria's leadership position in West Africa.
|
|
"Jesse is a formerly incarcerated artist—that art in itself was contraband material," she says.
|
|
Traveling on my own for the following three months was a powerful experience in itself.
|
|
And that's a metaphor in itself, wrapped up in the overall theme of the show.
|
|
People aren't looking at it as a launching pad—it was a destination in itself.
|
|
It has also attracted investors who see it as a potentially lucrative commodity in itself.
|
|
Her mission to bring largely black audiences to typically white spaces is, in itself, transformative.
|
|
"It's not a reflection, in itself, of the mood of the country," Mr. Pinker said.
|
|
A kiss did not have to lead to anything; it was an act in itself.
|
|
Figuring out whom to write, and how to contact them, was a challenge in itself.
|
|
Well, because I think this is not likely to be sufficient in itself to replace.
|
|
As I said, that in itself is not enough to meet the state's emissions target.
|
|
For instance, films about dumping e-waste in Africa has become a genre in itself.
|
|
"French food is not food in itself; it's the experience of hospitality," Mr. Kaysen said.
|
|
And that in itself was lucky; it sounds like this puzzle just passed muster. Phew!
|
|
Tracking down, retrieving and maintaining the money has become a complex multinational operation in itself.
|
|
Read: Parul Sehgal's elegant review of Rob Doyle's novel "Threshold" is a pleasure in itself.
|
|
Read: Parul Sehgal's elegant review of Rob Doyle's novel "Threshold" is a pleasure in itself.
|
|
Sticking with the book example, writing 20193,000 words a week is a goal in itself.
|
|
The restaurant is a destination in itself, and monthly programming includes art workshops and concerts.
|
|
The ability to generate double-recessives would have been a valuable lab tool in itself.
|
|
"The ownership structure has never been a goal in itself," CEO Hans Roelofs told reporters.
|
|
Dia:Beacon (3 Beekman Street) is more of a rabbit hole, another day trip in itself.
|
|
The most vocal expansionist was Theodore Roosevelt, for whom hegemony was an end in itself.
|
|
Threatening to withhold aid for political favors can be an abuse of power in itself.
|
|
Both manage to breeze past it without cracking up, which is a feat in itself.
|
|
Cats only works (to whatever degree it does) because of its incredible confidence in itself.
|
|
The fact that he's able to do it again is in itself a big success.
|
|
But would politically neutral redistricting in itself yield significantly more competitive and less polarized politics?
|
|
Of course, it's totally framed in psychedelic neon cyberpunk visuals, but that's cool in itself.
|
|
The recording of the law in itself is treated as the reality of the reform.
|
|
Do you see interviewing as a service or can it be an artform in itself?
|
|
So al-Afri's killing probably will not, in itself, be that consequential for ISIS's future.
|
|
So in that sense, I do see it as a quasi-nuclear move in itself.
|
|
We never know what life brings us and every happy moment is a blessing in itself.
|
|
" The Bush musician continued, "We had 20 years together and that in itself is pretty incredible.
|
|
I personally don't believe that LSD in itself has a negative impact on your mental health.
|
|
Plus, working in an environment all about health, wellness, and adventure is a perk in itself.
|
|
To some on the new left, the existence of extreme wealth is in itself a problem.
|
|
This announcement is exciting in itself, but we have a truly amazing deal for you too.
|
|
A low rate of staff turnover, while good in itself, would slow the pace of change.
|
|
That's why vacationing in a fictional world that continually made sense in itself was very appealing.
|
|
This in itself is not new; Thursday Night Football has been a TV program for years.
|
|
I feel like the house is a character in itself, too, especially with that gorgeous view.
|
|
But listening to them is, in itself, an occasion of the sort that everyone can appreciate.
|
|
A "comeback" in itself it is not, but it might herald the tentative beginnings of one.
|
|
"Closer" is a deeply inoffensive song, almost to the degree that this in itself becomes offensive.
|
|
But, she warned a stronger-than-expected mandate for the ANC could in itself be problematic.
|
|
But the fact that the bones were too old for radiocarbon dating is notable in itself.
|
|
They shouldn't, because compromising one's values is both bad in itself and, sometimes, a tactical misstep.
|
|
The large number of missing cookies weren't seen as a red flag in itself, McGraw says.
|
|
And that is truly wonderful in itself, even if it doesn't lead to a better toaster.
|
|
The fact that certain parts of society are more privileged than others is fascist in itself.
|
|
"Antarctica is isolated in itself but East Antarctica is generally just untouched," Walker tells The Verge.
|
|
That is in itself a big change for Airbus, but staff turnover does not stop there.
|
|
If you want to measure bias, you can't use a benchmark that in itself is biased.
|
|
The interview in itself is a sign of warming relations between Israel and the Gulf states.
|
|
That most MCU enthusiasts will be excited to see "Infinity War" is a coup in itself.
|
|
If investing through offshore funds is, in itself, wrong, then millions of Britons are guilty, too.
|
|
It's inspiring in itself, the work that everyone else has done kind of feeds your performance.
|
|
While getting to Mars is an end in itself, there&aposs another compelling reason to go.
|
|
This week's row was proof in itself that previous attempts to tackle the problem have failed.
|
|
The affirmation of Aboriginal Australians as the most ancient civilization on Earth is astounding in itself.
|
|
"That would draw attention in itself," he says, as if that might be the main reason.
|
|
But that in itself is a myopic assumption when only 89% of Democrats voted for her.
|
|
"When he came over to start talking to me, that was weird in itself," Allen said.
|
|
Analog computing offers a solution, but programming an analog machine is a deep challenge in itself.
|
|
If you're a musician with a platform, you must realize that is a privilege in itself.
|
|
Emotion is the fuel for the critical engine, but it's also a worthy end in itself.
|
|
To be clear, Debord did not believe that new technology was, in itself, a bad thing.
|
|
The trouble is that working out how to value these outfits is a quest in itself.
|
|
Why they can't divulge to the American public these sorts of facts is telling in itself.
|
|
Recruiting a patient's own immune system into fighting cancer is not in itself a new idea.
|
|
Calvin Klein asked [to dress] Laverne for the Emmys — that in itself is a big deal.
|
|
That in itself is a significant victory for Democrats that could pay dividends down the line.
|
|
That in itself is pretty crazy, considering it's only made of two scents: amber and musk.
|
|
But such a difference of opinion in itself is no reason to scrap this policy wholesale.
|
|
It's a more straightforward sort of show than "The Good Fight," but that's interesting in itself.
|
|
The rhetoric that the President uses is in itself something that will be difficult to undo.
|
|
Prices are usually low enough to warrant what is essentially a year-round sale in itself.
|
|
Marshmallow isn't in itself bad, but it's no longer either the latest or greatest from Google.
|
|
Among skeptics, any move to lower the number of troops would be a problem in itself.
|
|
"In itself it's a nebulous word," said Jagdish Bhagwati, a professor of economics at Columbia University.
|
|
This may not be in itself surprising—what is interesting is the extent of their differences.
|
|
Biden believed that he could thrive as vice president, making that job an end in itself.
|
|
However MGA head Cuschieri said the act of sealing was not a legal requirement in itself.
|
|
Yet some Americans are turning the moment they pay off loans as a milestone in itself.
|
|
Given the disastrous map Democrats faced to begin with, that in itself is a small miracle.
|
|
"This in itself is a disqualifying act of deception," Republican National Committee Chairman Reince Priebus said.
|
|
But Trump went too far when he called it a "sanctions bill against Israel" in itself.
|
|
Given his track record with collaborations—Carly Rae Jepsen, FKA Twigs, Solange—that's tantalizing in itself.
|
|
The city wraps me up in itself, does with me as air does to particulate matter.
|
|
Hardware startups are hard (I should know…), and scaling hardware manufacturing is an art in itself.
|
|
They somehow spark nostalgia for what is happening right now, which is a feat in itself.
|
|
Or if I just have canned tomatoes, olive oil, and pasta, that's a meal in itself!
|
|
It leads to a very large number of diseases and is a pathological process in itself.
|
|
That in itself was a slight quirk, given that Tanaka was pitching on four days' rest.
|
|
Additionally, Son's presence at the annual Saudi Arabia investment conference this week is controversial in itself.
|
|
To me, pie crust is a sublime food in itself, and there's never enough of it.
|
|
This subjugation of eastern Germans to mostly western German psychoanalysis is a political drama in itself.
|
|
The effect, as she streams her consciousness over many pages, can in itself be somewhat anesthetic.
|
|
We knew early on this was a vulnerable situation that would be an experience in itself.
|
|
It's a dour, effortful account full of dispassionate observation that feels, in itself, a bit performative.
|
|
That, in itself, is a significant indictment of the way he's doing his job as president.
|
|
Their privileged status as the soccer moms of this election cycle is, in itself, somewhat puzzling.
|
|
A bladder is both a high-end business gift and a sort of trophy in itself.
|
|
Bantock marries image and text to create both a book and an art object in itself.
|
|
That is in itself a 10 percent drop compared with the same period a year ago.
|
|
The existence of such an unfair hereditary practice in 21st-century America is startling in itself.
|
|
An industry in itself, this so-called decommissioning process creates jobs and profits along the journey.
|
|
In itself, dressing up across the color line doesn't have to be either of these things.
|
|
For those who've made a name being outspoken, suddenly saying nothing is a statement in itself.
|
|
Some also pointed out that "ethnic" foods -- a controversy in itself, because what is "ethnic" anyway?
|
|
In the absence of that, I legitimately cannot say, which, in itself, is saying a lot.
|
|
It generated the kind of frisson that a parade of clothes might not in itself provide.
|
|
The long drive from there to the reservation in South Dakota was an education in itself.
|
|
President Trump's deal with congressional Democrats on the debt limit is not especially momentous in itself.
|
|
Getting stuck on that godforsaken island with the worst company and weather Is enough in itself.
|
|
This simple rebuttable evidentiary presumption would not in itself determine the outcome of any particular proceeding.
|
|
"We believe in this group, and frankly, more importantly, this group believes in itself," Stearns said.
|
|
The idea of creating super-black surfaces out of carbon nanotubes is not in itself new.
|
|
The Cheesy Made-for-TV Christmas Movie, a genre in itself, always follows a certain formula.
|
|
We watch a good game because it is fascinating in itself, in its inner ongoing drama.
|
|
And he said the finding that black carbon is present in placentas is significant in itself.
|
|
"The real threat to Western civilization is Western civilization ceasing to believe in itself," you write.
|
|
Beating yourself up into creating a new habit can work, but that's a habit in itself.
|
|
But this fact in itself is controversial due to the military's long history of election interference.
|
|
In itself, that could have bolstered Trump's argument that unrest in America is on the rise.
|
|
Politics is not just a way to help their criminal businesses; it is a business in itself.
|
|
Yet that partisan divide would not, in itself, be enough to make this a truly crucial year.
|
|
Recovering from a hack is a whole other article in itself, but that should get you started.
|
|
That looked bad for Mr Rosselló, but was not in itself necessarily fatal to his political fortunes.
|
|
And by detaching you will realize that the process – not the outcome – is a reward in itself.
|
|
The country's aforementioned ASAT test in 2008 was a rather unnecessary folderol of saber-rattling in itself.
|
|
That goal "is not an end in itself," Merkel told the lower house of parliament on Wednesday.
|
|
I think that in itself is the whole project — turning your alarm system off and really listening.
|
|
After all "personalized" is just another word that sounds good but doesn't in itself mean very much.
|
|
"Simply listing an unquoted company overseas does not in itself make the stock more liquid," Bailey wrote.
|
|
Don Jr. came into the room and walked behind his father's desk — which in itself was unusual.
|
|
Destroying it should be a cause in itself, and it doesn't need more people living in it.
|
|
If women were to fly at all, an odd thought in itself, those seemed the right type.
|
|
Sometimes I think that split reflection, beautiful in itself, is what this trip has been for me.
|
|
That's because the CEO sees the opportunity to help veterans as a viable business model in itself.
|
|
This, in itself, should be intolerable to any Christian, particularly one who views abortion as morally suspect.
|
|
That in itself is perhaps even more telling than a quote from an anonymous source would be.
|
|
Matter frequently employed two models because she prioritized the relationships between things over the thing-in-itself.
|
|
I think of who I was before who I am right now; that's a transition in itself.
|
|
The hat trick is a special feat in itself, but this one was loaded with more significance.
|
|
Many assumed that the arrival of Mr Bolsonaro's government in itself would breathe life into the economy.
|
|
This discovery was remarkable in itself, but even more odd was that this atmospheric wave wasn't moving.
|
|
"The siege is a battle in itself," he told a packed conference room in the capital, Damascus.
|
|
That's pretty daunting in itself, but also having three different in-house developed software packages to support?
|
|
By the way, Akihito made the announcement during a speech, which is a rare thing in itself.
|
|
The dance lights a fire under the play while discovering in itself a knack for narrative drama.
|
|
Each of these moments in e-sports history have been important milestones, and that's notable in itself.
|
|
Poverty does not in itself prevent anybody from tying the knot—at least not in Western countries.
|
|
It's also fun and freeing, and that, in itself, is oppositional to cultures of fear and hate.
|
|
Charging the battery is not something people usually pull over to do as a task in itself.
|
|
Fortunately because the wood itself is just so beautiful that in itself sold it to these artists.
|
|
Getting ghosted by skaters is a subculture in itself — there's a whole poetry account dedicated to it.
|
|
Spacing things out like this is, in mathematical fact, anything but random: that, in itself, is suspicious.
|
|
On "VENGEANCE," his brutal comic flow even manages to match JPEGMAFIA's, which is an achievement in itself.
|
|
That is not new in itself; what has changed is the warmth of the welcome they get.
|
|
This in itself is not unusual as GBV honcho Robert Pollard has released a lot of albums.
|
|
It is not just a means for getting what Mr Putin wants, but a goal in itself.
|
|
Belief in a strong state is not in itself a contradiction of older traditions of political liberalism.
|
|
Where I was going was quite white middle class and that in itself is a culture shock.
|
|
The $400 million investment last week led by Ford's $182 million stake seemed pretty significant in itself.
|
|
She said the NCA was not a goal in itself, but a first step towards deepening dialogue.
|
|
The diplomatic rapprochement that has unfolded this year makes this much less likely -- an achievement in itself.
|
|
Tanking a nation's economy is a means to a clearly defined end, not an end in itself.
|
|
That's a statement in itself, that I have this beautiful piece of jewelry that only I have.
|
|
Yet the potential for an avocado famine became a story in itself, spawning hundreds of stories online.
|
|
We were totally self-motivated; nobody told us to do it, which was in itself an incentive.
|
|
To get to the second floor, I took the escalator, which is an architectural anomaly in itself.
|
|
In itself, the pardon of Johnson is a good thing, and should have been done decades ago.
|
|
But the diversity of the country in itself does not rule out a victory for Mr. Trump.
|
|
Editorial Maria Sharapova's admission that she had been caught using a banned drug is stunning in itself.
|
|
But at least if some parties can continue a dialogue, that in itself is clearly worth pursuing.
|
|
I feel really passionate about legalizing cannabis, because it's actually a crime in itself that it's illegal.
|
|
Could it be that this ritual—the searching—is actually a draw in itself for some men?
|
|
Yet simply saying, "Hey, this money is here if you need it," might be enough in itself.
|
|
It is "kind of like a mash-up" in itself, Simmons says: part townhouse, part art space.
|
|
That in itself is fine, but he thinks of weed as a status symbol, better than booze.
|
|
SBC's sharing of addresses with Trendy Sunshine and Shen Zhong isn't a sign of wrongdoing in itself.
|
|
When I was young, she told me that she had lied only once (a lie in itself).
|
|
I usually find that they've completely misconstrued what I'm interested in, but that in itself is interesting.
|
|
Now we wanted to take a view of the plant as a work of art in itself.
|
|
Trying to stop AT&T's $85 billion offer for HBO's parent is an unusual move in itself.
|
|
" "That in itself is refreshing," he continued, "since dinosaurs are so often depicted as behaving like monsters.
|
|
Their mere presence before the steel barrier dipping absurdly into the ocean was a statement in itself.
|
|
That in itself helps the theme hang together, and today we are watching an international car race.
|
|
It's a story that in itself offers some ingenious arguments and counterarguments for the play's central debate.
|
|
To be sure, Mr. Macron's victory, with 66.1 percent of the vote, is in itself a revolution.
|
|
Whether the loss of its leader will in itself affect the group's capabilities is open to debate.
|
|
J.C. In itself, "Heaven" is a song about identity and self-acceptance, about individuality versus religious teachings.
|
|
But having the choice of if, when and how to fight is, in itself, a monumental privilege.
|
|
At the end, her face is unveiled as if that, in itself, were some kind of resolution.
|
|
This was a Rolleiflex, an advanced implement and in itself a strong statement of commitment and ambition.
|
|
That in itself is notable, as Iran often targets the U.S. through proxy militias beyond its borders.
|
|
Consistency means that the theme has been polished to its utmost, which is an art in itself.
|
|
But the killing will not in itself weaken the Revolutionary Guards or Iran's role in the region.
|
|
And again, I view taxation as something that's supposed to correspond to spending versus something in itself.
|
|
"I suppose that to write a piece like this is, in itself, an optimistic gesture," he said.
|
|
Her presence was unusual in itself: a woman outside the women's quarters, speaking with a male prisoner.
|
|
His testimony essentially offers Democrats validation for moving ahead with impeachment -- a significant political risk in itself.
|
|
While this in itself is exciting to watch, what makes the video even better is the commentator.
|
|
Still, meeting an ambassador is no crime in itself, which makes Mr. Sessions's denial even more inexplicable.
|
|
With the imminent and welcome demise of disengagement reports, that's a bad April Fools' joke in itself.
|
|
Proving to others that her advocacy work was of her own prerogative became a task in itself.
|
|
Don Jr. came into the room and walked behind his father's desk -- which in itself was unusual.
|
|
If Professor Marston feels a little bit conventional at times, that, in itself, is kind of incredible.
|
|
That doesn't mean that Krampus Furby has nothing to say: Krampus Furby is a statement in itself.
|
|
Go watch another icon slay If Beyoncé shows up at your performance, that's a gift in itself.
|
|
Strong in itself, the score was further elevated by the colossal conviction that Kissin brought to it.
|
|
"The wall is not in itself a bad idea, it's just — it's been done," Mr. Smith said.
|
|
"For a conservative city, I think this opening of the mind is in itself an important contribution."
|
|
"The skinny version in itself, if it comes before vote in the House, would not pass," Rep.
|
|
Given the amount of revisions and recalls this album's been through already, that's a feat in itself.
|
|
But the beauty of this forest in itself was not really the point of our being here.
|
|
The journey from the little Mitzi Newhouse to a big Broadway stage is a story in itself.
|
|
They're able to do magic things in service of those relationships, not as an end in itself.
|
|
I didn't want to put out an inferior version, which is probably a bit absurd in itself.
|
|
SRS: I imagine you think quite a bit about the political act of photo documentation in itself.
|
|
The beady eyes, weird voices, and disregard for his own safety is an art form in itself.
|
|
But immigration in itself has been widely regarded as good for America and for the American dream.
|
|
That in itself does not rule out coordination between Masood and militants in the shrinking, self-styled caliphate.
|
|
The former allied commander Dwight D. Eisenhower, then the president, thought that little plan was in itself foolish.
|
|
"We've seen different degrees of abuse, but I won't say that torture, in itself, is unique," Lee said.
|
|
There was a lot of times when I really couldn't move and so that in itself is difficult.
|
|
So an abundance of investors looking on the dim side of things doesn't in itself mean the Dec.
|
|
Things move quicker and smoother because we're on the same page creatively, and that's a privilege in itself.
|
|
The storm has already maintained "major" hurricane intensity for more than three days, a remarkable feat in itself.
|
|
A meeting in itself means nothing, said Mike Rogers, a former FBI agent and Republican congressman from Michigan.
|
|
That, in itself, marked the primary out from the fiasco that enveloped the Iowa caucuses eight days before.
|
|
Now that in itself wouldn't be a problem if they weren't trying to be Clarkson, May, and Hammond.
|
|
This in itself is an interesting concept that may have a life of its own as a business.
|
|
Contents last longer so there's less food waste, which is in itself a major driver of climate change.
|
|
Tech, the message is, is not evil in itself, but rather gets tainted by the hubris of mankind.
|
|
For an outsider to be given so much trust to be left with children is massive in itself.
|
|
My acting and my music, and being a creative director is a whole 'nother ball game in itself.
|
|
Canceling can be a challenge in itself, one that the bill-tracking sites are happy to help with.
|
|
So the FPÖ is a factor in itself, but it is also affects Austrian politics as a whole.
|
|
So the fact that he is nearing four years in the job this time is remarkable in itself.
|
|
Is your hotel going to be a destination in itself, or simply a place to rest your head?
|
|
The calcium carbonate then grows up around the micelles—even making little cavities in itself to accommodate them.
|
|
It's probably largely due to the fact that everything we're approaching musically is a culture clash in itself.
|
|
"The Olympics will be a race in itself but I'm pleased with the journey so far," she said.
|
|
That's a worthwhile goal in itself, but there's no guarantee it will succeed in averting drastic temperature increases.
|
|
Running a single marathon, let alone seven of them on all seven continents is a feat in itself.
|
|
While we are positive on the Indian business cycle, that in itself is insufficient to secure equities upside.
|
|
As the election of Donald Trump clearly demonstrates, mocking bigots is not sufficient in itself to stop them.
|
|
Her family legacy is, in itself, a conversation, as Jamilah struggles not to inherit her mother's superiority complex.
|
|
What almost certainly does exist is a chain of suspicious-looking meetings, which doesn't in itself prove anything.
|
|
The sweatpants cuffs seemed jarring until one remembered the tuxedo is in itself a form of casual wear.
|
|
The company took a temporary hit to invest in itself, says Neil Saunders, managing director of GlobalData Retail.
|
|
And while making websites more accessible is crucial in itself, these features don't just help people with disabilities.
|
|
Which, in itself, already contains some very exotic wildlife – of the Ben Stiller fashionista variety – of its own.
|
|
You might have really bad guys running a corporation, but a corporation in itself can&apost be bad.
|
|
Defense attorneys -- and even the presiding judge -- reminded jurors that exorbitant wealth, in itself, is not a crime.
|
|
We might think that the existence of simple destructive weapons shouldn't, in itself, be enough to worry us.
|
|
That, "in itself, guarantees the absorption of carbon, controls soil erosion, conserves biodiversity and provides other ecosystem services".
|
|
Yet, there is surprisingly little evidence — despite our wishing it so — that awareness in itself leads to action.
|
|
Because if Michael Horowitz does that, that in itself is a scandal and would need to be investigated.
|
|
Offline playback is also available, and the Go name in itself suggests a focus on attracting mobile users.
|
|
Changi's many attractions makes it a tourist destination in itself, and is a source of pride for Singaporeans.
|
|
Comparatively, Suiteness' photos are so great that browsing suites on the site is almost an experience in itself.
|
|
"Tongue plaque can cause bad breath, but, in itself, it is not considered a serious condition," she says.
|
|
As if the Upside Down wasn't a terrifying maze in itself, someone has created one in our world.
|
|
Unfortunately, training for the top certification tests is a challenge in itself and could also be quite costly.
|
|
Crude is purely a victim of oversupply, which, in itself, has serious ancillary effects for the short term.
|
|
Regardless of whether she survived in the book, the survival of Offred's story is a triumph in itself.
|
|
AI was truly his authentic self, which is in itself an act of political rebellion in black America.
|
|
The idea of a deep state can be a potent force in itself, helping Trump shore up power.
|
|
All but three of the country's 20 insurgent groups attended the conference, which is an achievement in itself.
|
|
The selloff in itself surprised no one; more interesting was the suddenness and the apparent lack of triggers.
|
|
And you learn that the psychology of the gun is very powerful, that in itself it represents power.
|
|
In itself, his fear was amoral, an involuntary reaction—"the terror was undoubtedly upon me"—to overweening power.
|
|
Having just given birth (a strenuous process in itself), it makes sense that Meghan would choose this stone.
|
|
"The deal in itself must not entail further capital needs, (these) go under the heading 'opportunities'," he said.
|
|
After that, it was time for the second steeping, which is supposed to be another revelation in itself.
|
|
If charity inspires a warmth in the person giving, is that not, in itself, an emotional pay-off?
|
|
O'Rourke's loss, in itself, is one reason cited by Democrats skeptical he is their best candidate for 220006.
|
|
Currency weakness would not in itself give cause for changing policy, he said when asked by the audience.
|
|
It's clearly not just a hotel, it's a bucket-list destination in itself for a lot of people.
|
|
I had bought the thing in the name of economy, but it had become an attraction in itself.
|
|
Here, the curators want to expose the show's inherently paradoxical thesis: sometimes absence is a presence in itself.
|
|
In others, Muslim women in veils silently read the Qur'an – their absorption a vision of power in itself.
|
|
To put it another way, in the Garden of Eden, the forbidden fruit was not, in itself, bad.
|
|
He considers squealing from the Washington establishment an end in itself—and Mr Erdogan has egged him on.
|
|
"Therefore we do not need to put to one side the principle in itself straight away," she said.
|
|
"Obviously just having Republicans and Democrats in a house together is in itself a great thing," she said.
|
|
Spirits high, we turned off to travel a strip of the Blue Ridge Parkway, a treasure in itself.
|
|
What each of these views shows is that living longer does not in itself make us better off.
|
|
People on Twitter shared their frustration at the blanket-labelling of female musicians comprising a genre in itself.
|
|
If Labour MPs do reject the plan, Downing Street could pass a motion of no confidence in itself.
|
|
The Edinburgh one is 97 pages long with about 60 words per event, a short book in itself.
|
|
For her to open up the way she has to Randall and his family is amazing in itself.
|
|
It may well be different this time, which in itself would be a "grey swan" moment for investors.
|
|
It makes speakers and writers scour their minds for original and arresting language—a good thing in itself.
|
|
In itself, their coming together was tender and highly charged with emotion; you felt their built-up pain.
|
|
Ironically, the open source movement's commitment to political neutrality ends up becoming a salient cultural critique in itself.
|
|
Fighting Maia's hands for three rounds is a feat in itself and he never looked resigned to failure.
|
|
Her voice is an entity in itself, a force that asserts itself and demands to be reckoned with.
|
|
This top doesn't come cheap, but for $112, you get a shirt that's basically an outfit in itself.
|
|
So yes, while the video in itself is pure, perfect, incredible, there is a twist in the tale.
|
|
But Singapore simply sending a skater to compete regularly at the elite championships is a success in itself.
|
|
But this in itself… what Dave Eggers got when he connected with Valentino Achak Deng, the main character.
|
|
The idea to kill a baby in itself is so absurd that I wouldn't know how to answer.
|
|
Everything is a joke, but if that in itself is misunderstood, I find that very funny as well.
|
|
One crucial early turn involves the Prostration of the Angels, in itself a beautiful title for a poem.
|
|
It believes so deeply in itself that it does not even think there is a need for discussion.
|
|
Sprinkled with phrases too salty for a family news organization, Ms. Longshore's conversation is a performance in itself.
|
|
Yet the support and promotion of violent, white supremacist art is an unacceptable act of violence in itself.
|
|
But getting North Korea to attend the Games was a diplomatic puzzle in itself, especially amid escalating tensions.
|
|
You also get so much puzzling bang for your buck, because each clue is a puzzle in itself.
|
|
That in itself is a nice find, but this is Thursday and we have more business to finish.
|
|
Investing in itself has been a core tenet of Amazon's business, and it doesn't show signs of flagging.
|
|
Assembly Room became a space to carry on the conversation — which in itself is an act of resistance.
|
|
TV becomes an end in itself as opposed to a way to further your career behind the stove.
|
|
SNOWBOARDING The tweet came in the middle of the gold medal competition, a podium-worthy trick in itself.
|
|
That in itself was appealing at the time, anywhere to go and hang and hear good music was.
|
|
This in itself might be enough to turn some of you off the idea of using rechargeable batteries.
|
|
Atamanuik's impression is so precise and disciplined as to be entertaining in itself, like a high-wire act.
|
|
As Grayling reminds us, democracy, understood as the rule of the majority, has never been sufficient in itself.
|
|
For Trump, disrupting NATO doesn't seem to be a means to an end; it's an end in itself.
|
|
Yet coming to the United States to seek asylum or protection is not in itself an illegal act.
|
|
For them, terror is an end in itself, whose sole aim is to inflict pain and instill fear.
|
|
"It is letting someone into the most intimate parts of yourself which can heighten the experience in itself."
|
|
Attaining "perfect skin" in itself is an unrealistic aspiration, and it certainly won't be achieved through scented lotions.
|
|
To one Senate Republican, the firehose of evidence was an education in itself, for him and his colleagues.
|
|
He was appointed the University of Saskatchewan's chancellor in 221 — an act of reconciliation in itself, he added.
|
|
Most informative are scrappy works by Iraqi artists whose struggle to make art becomes a subject in itself.
|
|
But this in itself is not certain: instability in Iraq and Libya in particular could disrupt supply levels.
|
|
That money, in other words, may be the currency of the corrupt but is not in itself corrupting.
|
|
Now production growth is not really a goal in itself, and budget discipline, profitability is much more important.
|
|
"The act of creativity is an act of hope in itself," Mr. Owens had said before his show.
|
|
Maybe there was no such thing as American normalcy; or maybe the normalcy was in itself a performance.
|
|
For example, "Writing tip #43" at 23A is NEVER GENERALIZE which, of course, is a generalization in itself.
|
|
Ask how you can be helpfulBut the decision-making process in itself is not the time-consuming part.
|
|
This mindset is a skill in itself and can often be more important than specific areas of experience.
|
|
That outcome in itself would be momentous, with big implications for the country's future and, of course, Brexit.
|
|
If you choose not to act, is that in itself an act, leaving you responsible for those deaths?
|
|
The loss of ice shelves does not in itself affect sea levels because the ice is already floating.
|
|
He is a creature of the parts of TV and media where display is an end in itself.
|
|
However, a misleading statement is not a crime in itself — or half of Washington would be serving time.
|
|
" He stresses that as a matter of simple logic, mutability is "by no means a good in itself.
|
|
Tanking, in itself, can be a foolhardy strategy — especially in the wake of a procedural change this season.
|
|
"It's not only logical, which is amazing in itself, but in its logic it is beautiful," he said.
|
|
Still, how a color so rare in nature went viral on the planet is a mystery in itself.
|
|
Lying to the public or encouraging others to lie to the public is not in itself a crime.
|
|
"The wall is a message in itself," the man, who said he painted the mural overnight, told Reuters.
|
|
What some might call surrealism is often the reality there, and that is fascinating to me in itself.
|
|
The paradox of vastness of scale expressed on physically small surfaces is plenty to deal with, in itself.
|
|
Then we take the elements that the world carries in itself and distribute them equally between the characters.
|
|
In itself, that could have bolstered Trump's argument that America needs a stiff dose of law and order.
|
|
As any beauty pro would confirm, makeup can be a costume in itself — no elaborate purchases or planning required.
|
|
Image 2 of 2 MOSCOW – For Vladimir Putin, holding a summit with Donald Trump was a victory in itself.
|
|
This was February in Manchuria, and getting people outside when it's minus 40 degrees was a feat in itself.
|
|
"Art in itself has the potential to be an act of protest," said Jackson, who co-directed the exhibit.
|
|
And the fact that we still have to call out and celebrate these wins is a shame in itself.
|
|
That's really rewarding to me in another way because it means the book stood as a project in itself.
|
|
I don't really think I'm in a position to give advice, which is kind of an answer in itself.
|
|
This in itself was helpful to know—as with therapy and "heavy stuff," there were limits to life coaching.
|
|
Apart from launching her eponymous line, McGrath's rhythm takes pride in itself for putting the art before the artist.
|
|
The intracommunity, generational, and class divisions that such a campaign exposed could be a very rich story in itself.
|
|
With houses ranging from $600K to over a million dollars, a 20% down payment in itself is six figures.
|
|
So, I'm often left stressing about the prospect of getting a migraine, which sometimes triggers a migraine in itself.
|
|
Set against those numbers, the size of Chinese investment does not in itself signal a plan for global domination.
|
|
Even Dapper Laughs got involved, a fact that shows, in itself, what a huge mess this whole thing became.
|
|
The passing of that moment without great upheaval should in itself go a long way towards defusing political tensions.
|
|
Her career in Kabul is a story in itself (and she is the subject of a documentary, "Motley's Law").
|
|
The claim that "you can't criticize Israel without being called anti-Semitic" is, in itself, an anti-Semitic myth.
|
|
That's because spritzing your favorite perfume is an experience in itself — and it's usually done before a big moment.
|
|
It's becoming a craze in itself: Even Knicks fans were chanting for him to get playing time on Saturday.
|
|
It is not in itself an impeachable offense for a President to run a back-door foreign policy shop.
|
|
Failing to retain teachers is a problem in itself, but it also points to other issues bedevilling English education.
|
|
During a visit to Estonia, Williamson said the backing for Britain was in "itself a defeat for President Putin".
|
|
" But if an AI is told, "I"m going to break the rules," that is a rule in itself.
|
|
Attempts to branch out on mobile have failed, though none very spectacularly — which is almost a failure in itself.
|
|
Who knew that my 10th puzzle in The Times, a personal goal in itself, could be such an adventure?
|
|
Given all that has passed between Clinton and Obama over the years, it was a fascinating moment in itself.
|
|
But that in itself is impressive, given that the markets faced an uphill battle under the Trump White House.
|
|
As a forensic psychologist, she spent most of her time with violent patients, a high-stress situation in itself.
|
|
While that in itself doesn't sound terribly revolutionary, the Fed is at a unique moment in monetary policy history.
|
|
But that in itself makes it an extremely powerful tool for anyone who wants to modify their own console.
|
|
Provisions were made as the firm was also closing a deal to sell 13 percent in itself to ChemChina.
|
|
The U.S. central bank last hiked in December 2015, which in itself was the first tightening since June 2006.
|
|
In itself it's a very large sign that he wants Uber to have a new public face at least.
|
|
The mom to son Johnny, 2, added that having to make such a public statement is problematic in itself.
|
|
Music, and the human voice in itself, is so powerful that I think it's often overlooked in big arrangements.
|
|
The process of researching and timing the market in itself is a full-time job, CNBC's Jim Cramer said.
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The idea of winning or dominating others as an end in itself is one I tend to find objectionable.
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Either way, sorting through all the submissions seems likely to be a major job in itself for Donald Trump.
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This was a challenge in itself because we shot the whole thing in Singapore, and it's very hot there.
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Their reaction — furiously cheering and hugging each other as they fell into the pool — deserved a medal in itself.
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"A designation refers to any letter after your name, which in itself does not imply continued competency," he said.
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When a Trump press conference is in itself an act of post-modern absurdity, what more can fiction offer?
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That in itself is a pretty noteworthy achievement, but Teigen is trolling him for not winning anything this year.
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That something so beautiful can forge its way after something so scary and dark is a miracle in itself.
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Confusingly, the court's decision does not in itself annul his candidacy: a separate tribunal must now decide on that.
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However, the dearth of art criticism, which is a relatively nascent form in itself, is not a new problem.
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By threatening to abolish "an ideal of mutual respect and regard" between citizens, it presents an evil in itself.
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That's massive in itself... I wasn't old enough to understand what she was doing or who she was upsetting.
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That fact in itself suggests an aversion to pretentiousness, which is about as Yorkshire a trait as it gets.
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Once I realized that, if I'm kicking ass 75 out of 80 plays, damn, that's pretty good in itself.
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More than 80 percent of the island is still without power, which in itself is a life-threatening situation.
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This piece, in itself, is an exercise in rebutting my own secrecy and making what happened to me known.
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"It's an installation in itself that's hopefully highlighting and enhancing — in a different manner — the artwork," said De Betak.
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Sexuality, a natural and glorious thing in itself, is being stripped of its spontaneity and subjected to contradictory rules.
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Few were willing to speak openly for fear of antagonizing Cocobod and some said that in itself reduced accountability.
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But maybe that in itself is a sign of a more fundamental problem with the LME aluminium contract. Again.
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First, Trump should clarify that his protectionism is a tactic to advance fair trade, not an end in itself.
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That title is a political message in itself â€" as is the cover, which promises an "Obama-Biden mystery.
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University instructor formerly of N.Y. Changi Airport in Singapore is so pleasant that it's a tourist destination in itself.
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Learning to speak English in an English-dominant country such as America is not in itself a bad idea.
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Probst said introducing competition is not an aim in itself but a means to improve service and reduce costs.
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Or do you see work as an end in itself — that is, simply working for the sake of working?
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Tampering with a witness is a crime in itself -- and it's one Manafort has not yet been charged with.
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A puppy pooping on your living room rug in the middle of the night sounds pretty nightmarish in itself.
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The producers are so unique, I feel like putting it inside a genre bracket is a limitation in itself.
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It is an end in itself, not a means for characters to engage in bigger, supposedly more consequential issues.
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