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196 Sentences With "made plain"

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

As Robert Mueller's investigation made plain, they did just that.
A ying and yang'd reality made plain in Beale Street.
But 2017 also made plain the shape of the overall disaster.
There's a neatly made plain bed and three books on finances.
John McCain, have made plain their frustration with the White House.
And then he made plain he understands viscerally what he has lost.
The Fix Marble or man-made, plain or veined, wood or steel?
The "Me Too" movement made plain how awful many men can be.
In the photo, her smile is toothy and bright, her happiness made plain.
But Ms. Gillibrand made plain that she had studied her major opponents' records.
Linguine tossed with a quickly made plain tomato sauce is sheer comfort food.
There are other racial caricatures in the game, made plain by the opening cinematic.
This information, the AGCM, suggests, ought to have been made plain from the beginning.
And he made plain that his actions would not be dictated by the president.
This is made plain by the totality of his conduct as alleged in the indictment.
These attitudes are being made plain nearly every week on one college campus or another.
But Calhoun also made plain that the N.C.A.A. would only be rewriting so many rules.
Some protesters even made plain their discontent with Tehran's rights-abusing political system as well.
Some of the senator's ideas still have purchase, as was made plain this week when Gov.
This was made plain by a recent article published in the September 30 issue of Science.
Well before Mr Trump arrived on the scene, China made plain its intention to catch up.
Yet critics say that zoo life has its serious downsides, too, as Harambe's story made plain.
The Trump Administration, meanwhile, has already made plain its intention of undermining the whole COP process.
The Charlottesville episode has made plain how desperate Republicans are for Mr. Trump to steady himself.
It made plain profound gaps in how men and women perceive one another's lives and prerogatives.
It has made plain that Taiwan is a friend, to which it has long offered military support.
That's been made plain by the significant role of cellphone video in the movement against police brutality.
He withdrew from a major overseas trade deal and made plain NAFTA is headed for serious renegotiation.
Mr. Finkelstein made plain that he is dreading any trial here, and not just for legal reasons.
Economy Minister Sigmar Gabriel visited China last month where he made plain his concern about Beijing's trade policies.
Deal or no deal, Iran's leadership has made plain its intention to continue its drive for nuclear weapons.
Earlier in the day, the president made plain his interest in increasing auto jobs in a Twitter post.
" Speaking to CNN's Jake Tapper a few days later, Trump made plain his position: "We are building a wall.
As made plain by an article published on Tuesday in Bioscience declaring a climate emergency, time is running out.
Mr. Pence, by contrast, made plain his determination to force his personal religious beliefs on every woman in America.
On Thursday, Judge Kavanaugh made plain how devastating the accusations against him were and whom he blamed: Democratic senators.
He does not, as he made plain during his Friday evening news media call in Madrid, even feel unlucky.
His grim demeanor during President Trump's impeachment trial made plain that he did not enjoy his role in it.
Although Trump was minimally involved in the process of crafting the legislation, he had made plain it was a priority.
In recent years, the Baroque repertory has undergone a dizzying democratization, as two midwinter concerts in New York made plain.
He certainly admires Chief Justice Hughes, as he made plain in remarks in November at New York University's law school.
And Mr. Moura and the producers have made plain that the end will come this season, internet spoiler police notwithstanding.
Allies of the governor, who have dismissed Ms. Nixon's candidacy, have made plain that they are worried about Mr. Williams.
Clinton's loss; the deep national divides made plain by the election; and the paths they want to chart going forward.
On the flipside, the whistleblower complaint says some officials raised concerns about the Trump strategy made plain in the call.
JAMES SHERWIN-SMITHLondon * You made plain in your piece that challenges remain when it comes to renewables and the power sector.
As they made plain in dissenting opinions they penned (and Ginsburg joined) in May and June, their question is: What's next?
Yet Frederick's relationship with the faculty is not without problems, as the vote of no confidence, valid or not, made plain.
As Trump's own remarks have made plain, any effort to elude Mueller, including by pleading the Fifth, could have political repercussions.
But France, keen to try to reform the EU without disruption or sniping from Britain, has made plain its growing impatience.
Every movement Jamison madeplain, fundamental, vanilla even—was executed just a little bit faster than the opposing defense could respond.
In 1969, an essay in the Arts & Leisure section made plain that outlaw sex was only one facet of gay life.
That's because our strength is clearly of a type, and our years in Iraq and Afghanistan have made plain our vulnerabilities.
Empire As its initial installments this season have made plain, Fox's hit show "Empire" has been losing a two-front war.
The army has also made plain its dislike of a new movement it accuses of plotting against the government and monarchy.
But the risks to vulnerable people who buy coverage on the individual market were made plain by the final CBO score.
Amy Klobuchar has made plain her criticisms of Silicon Valley giants that step on user privacy and fail to protect consumers.
The testimonies of immigrants and religious minorities made plain that there is work to be done in ensuring equal rights for all.
Hermann Pomper, 75, declined to say how he had voted but made plain that he did not think highly of either candidate.
After she made plain that she was not carrying any money, her assailants knocked her to the ground and took her bike.
But the inherent dangers are made plain in the contracts signed by boxers, including these two first-time pros, Taylor and Aljahmi.
They bring food and clothing, then stay to pray and sing with the men — all, it should be made plain, without proselytizing.
It made plain and obvious that its news operation is no less part of the White House messaging structure than Judge Jeanine.
The implausibility of this claim would be made plain in 2004, when banks valued that same real estate at nearly $900 million.
Mr. Trump has made plain his displeasure with Mr. Sessions and has signaled that he could fire him after the midterm elections.
" Another parallel: As he made plain in an interview several years ago, he's not inclined to curl up with, say, "Mrs. Dalloway.
The motivations behind her behavior stem from her worldview, which is made plain to the viewer over the course of the film.
A 2008 report from Center for American Progress Action Fund made plain the risk of gambling Social Security contributions on Wall Street.
Beyond politics, the assault made plain that Germany, like France and Belgium, is now a primary European target for mass terror attacks.
It would also present Pelosi with a massive dilemma -- as made plain by a new CNN-SSRS poll released on Wednesday morning.
The prosecution also quickly made plain that Stone was not freelancing, but was in direct contact with Trump and senior campaign officials.
It would've made plain that Daenerys claiming victory in battle means many, many deaths, no matter how humanitarian she's trying to be.
That's because in 1747, Glasse popularized the modern English-language cookbook as the author of The Art of Cookery Made Plain and Easy.
Ahead of a stage-managed election last month, King Vajiralongkorn made plain in public statements his desire for soldiers to continue running affairs.
While the girls were still in elementary school, their father sat them down one evening and made plain the outlines of their inheritance.
By taking a mellow approach and keeping flamboyance and ego to a minimum, he made plain overlooked things that had always been there.
He added that he's made plain to Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov what Russia must to do improve relations between the US and Russia.
As was made plain in Charlottesville, those who continue to champion confederate leaders are revealing themselves as a new generation of white racists.
And Republicans have made plain their intention to go after the vote in the heart of an area Clinton should reliably win: Cuyahoga County.
The president herself, a pragmatist, has made plain her goodwill, by promising from the start that she will not rock the cross-strait boat.
Nonetheless, the Fourth Amendment requires no such thing as the Fifth Circuit made plain recently in the case of City of El Cenizo v.
Jeff Yang: Whose stories get believed I feel like there wasn't any singular moment when the degree of work needed was suddenly made plain.
And Malmstrom has made plain that she will "stand up to bullies," and Brussels will retaliate against the U.S. if pushed to do so.
In an interview with "Axios on HBO" last week, Trump said he's considering antitrust action against Amazon, but made plain he might not pursue it.
During the debates and in some interviews during his early 2016 surge, his lack of clearly defined foreign policy ideas sometimes made plain his shortcomings.
In a hot oven, the sprinkles melted into streaks and dots of bright color that instantly made plain cake obsolete for a certain demographic: kids.
Hersey, in "The Algiers Motel Incident," made plain his mournful belief that justice for white citizens and justice for African-Americans were two separate entities.
This novel viewpoint has gained currency among some former IC professionals who disagree with or have made plain that they don't like the current president.
Eventually they find themselves being taken by boat to a remote place where freedom still reigns — a place that, it is made plain, is dying.
A conversation where Marianne attempts to console Héloïse over her pending marriage becomes a moment when the precarity of the painter's understanding is made plain.
As Mr. Ballhaus made plain in interviews and throughout his work, the photographic stasis that some cinematographers seemed to favor was emphatically not for him.
Corker, who has announced he'll leave the Senate next year after two terms, had already made plain his concern about expanding the deficit through tax cuts.
But as Mr. Darden made plain in his book, he has endured such criticism before, including being called a traitor for helping to prosecute Mr. Simpson.
Meanwhile, the army has made plain its dislike of a movement it accuses of trying to rally the young against the monarchy and the armed forces.
President-elect Donald J. Trump, a fast food aficionado, has made plain his appetite for the meals on the run that are popular with many Americans.
The precariousness of the situation was made plain in 2006 and 2009, when Russia temporarily interrupted the transport of gas through Ukraine, causing shortages in several countries.
Germany's economy minister Sigmar Gabriel made plain his concerns about Beijing's trade policies in talks with Chinese government officials on Tuesday marked by tensions over corporate takeovers.
During a joint interview with the Times of London and the German publication Bild ahead of the inauguration, Trump made plain his fears over the transatlantic alliance.
Most policymakers have already made plain that in contrast to previous years, the Fed feels more confident in its forecast of two more rate increases this year.
Neither of the mainstream parties gave a recommendation to voters before Sunday's election, but Mr. Kern made plain that he would vote for Mr. Van der Bellen.
The request made plain Bloomberg's comfort with — and, in some ways, dependence on — the Silicon Valley companies that have been persistently criticized during the 2020 Democratic primary.
" Throughout the run, audiences routinely made clear their intense connection with Mr. Washington, hissing at him when his character's infallibilities were made plain: "Denzel, how could you?
Politicians from Chancellor Angela Merkel on down have made plain they resent comparisons to the Nazis, defending the cancellation of appearances by Turkish politicians over security concerns.
But the letter of endorsement he wrote to AEG made plain that he understood there was a nexus between employing Ticketmaster and retaining access to Live Nation talent.
Voters made plain their disgust in November by approving a referendum authorizing judges to reduce or revoke the pensions of politicians who commit felonies related to their duties.
He was named the company's chief creative officer in August 21, but it wasn't until this year that Mr. Simons's plans for the label were finally made plain.
Trump has long made plain his hatred for Bezos, who he calls "Jeff Bozo," who also owns the Washington Post, part of the "Fake News Media" Trump so disdains.
As error-ridden, the decision to invade was, our failure to withdraw once the mistake had been made plain began a vicious cycle that has yet to be broken.
But the extent to which that was crisis management was made plain in a subsequent statement from her doctor—which revealed that the former secretary of state has pneumonia.
The film made plain that the War of Independence, for all its heroism, involved a crime—and, for many people, that implicit acknowledgment was impermissible for the public airwaves.
The location of those resources made plain that the restructuring amounted to a kind of environmental gerrymandering: Grand Staircase had been carved up to maximize access for extractive industries.
As was made plain by their questioning of former FBI director James Comey and the three intelligence chiefs last week, Democrats have moved the goalposts on the Russia investigation.
The race against Quinn really turned after de Blasio ran an ad narrated by his teenage son Dante, which made plain that stop-and-frisk was personal for him.
This was made plain during a visit last spring to his quarters on the second floor of the Park Avenue Armory, where he was then an artist in residence.
Outside a polling place in Auburn, voters on Tuesday repeatedly described their disgust with Republican officials in Washington and made plain that Mr. Trump's endorsement had not swayed them.
Mr. Davis had no illusions that the dances he presented on this side of the Atlantic were exact copies of the African originals, which he made plain in interviews.
Stock and real estate bubbles throughout the 85033th and early 21st centuries, the current wave of "stock buybacks," and the related wave of "taking firms private" have all made plain.
Milan is, by some distance, the youngest squad in the league; Montella has made plain that comparing these players to the greats of the past is premature in the extreme.
Then he released emails that made plain he was actually drawn to the meeting by the promise of dirt on Hillary Clinton -- a promise, he told investigators, that went unfulfilled.
The big prize is Michigan, with 125 delegates at stake; both Biden and Sanders have spent time in the state, and Sanders has made plain that he needs the state.
The characters' hardscrabble lives are made plain by the opening tableau, in which the women of the jury are shown doing housework in the partitioned boxes of Bunny Christie's set.
BEIJING (Reuters) - Germany's outspoken economy minister Sigmar Gabriel made plain his concerns about Beijing's trade policies in talks with Chinese government officials on Tuesday marked by tensions over corporate takeovers.
With 2787 A403s already in Emirates' fleet, Clark made plain the concerns about Airbus' commitment to the project were being felt as high as the Dubai government, which owns the airline.
Mr. Grimm made plain he is not only rooting for Mr. Collins but mistrustful of the government's case, even as former prosecutors have said the insider trading timeline is especially damning.
The new disclosures came only moments after Mr. Biden stepped off a debate stage where the dynamics made plain that even his rivals no longer saw him as the front-runner.
When midfielder Willian lost his mother this season, Conte allowed him as much leave as he felt he needed and made plain that the other players were feeling their teammate's pain.
Trump has made plain to chief of staff John Kelly and others within the administration that he wants the information released, and that message has been relayed to the Justice Department.
The list of six defined criteria were made plain in the president's order, including whether a regulation inhibits job creation; is outdated, unnecessary, or ineffective; or imposes costs that exceed benefits.
Ms. Malmstrom and other European leaders have also made plain their unhappiness with what they see as Mr. Trump's crusade to undermine the World Trade Organization as the arbiter of trade conflicts.
She also made plain how the conversation about integration that took place in Washington and in cities around the nation directly affected the life of a first grader on a school bus.
Still, Mr. Fink made plain that while he intends for the firm to consider climate risks, he would not pursue an across-the-board sale of energy companies that produce fossil fuels.
But China, which worries that substantially more pressure on North Korea could destabilize the regime and trigger a flood of refugees across their border, has made plain the limits of its cooperation.
As the ruling made plain, the fight to clean up Olympic sports is a clumsy dance, with the drug takers leading and the watchdogs taking one step back for every two steps forward.
Yet the chief justice has also made plain his larger concern to keep the judiciary out of the volatile politicization that has seized the country and taken steps to separate himself from Trump.
Whereas what's happening now is web users are being tracked without being asked if that's okay and also without the extent and implications of all this mass surveillance being made plain to them. 22019.
The case concerned Donald F. McGahn II, the former White House counsel, but the questions from the judge, Thomas B. Griffith, made plain that the court was struggling with something more general and fundamental.
However, Yellen and some other key policymakers have also made plain they expect to continue to gradually raise interest rates given the strength of the overall economy and continued tightening of the labor market.
Wick's respect for library protocol is made plain, however — after using a book (Russian Folk Tale, Aleksandr Afanasyev, 1864) as a deadly weapon, his first instinct is to replace that book where he found it.
Specifically, it made plain that Jews were not to be considered collectively responsible for the death of Jesus Christ, and it affirmed (as the New Testament does) that God's covenant with the Jews was irrevocable.
However, Yellen and a number of other key policymakers have made plain they expect to continue to gradually raise interest rates given the strength of the overall economy and continued tightening of the labor market.
The U.S. central bank last week cut interest rates for the third time this year but made plain that it does not expect to lower borrowing costs further unless the U.S. economic outlook materially deteriorates.
Trump has made plain his feelings on some big foreign-policy issues, and those are areas he should keep in mind as he picks his next national security adviser, writes Defense Priorities fellow Gil Barndollar.
The spending measure cleared Congress early Friday morning and, while Mr. Trump had made plain he was unhappy with some aspects of it, his senior advisers spent Thursday telling reporters that he would sign it.
It was the third interest rate cut this year, but the Fed made plain at the time that it would lower rates again only if there is a material deterioration in the U.S. economic outlook.
African-Americans and other racial minorities, galvanized by Ms. Pressley's message that "change can't wait," have made plain that they intend to demand more than a left-leaning voting record in this moment of insurgent fervor.
Pei Ronggui, an 81-year-old retired bishop who was recognised by the Vatican, made plain his concern about the CCPA as he prepared to take confessions in a bare room at the makeshift church in Hebei.
From cyberattacks on state voter systems to disinformation campaigns waged on social media to the hacking of materials belonging to a major political party, Mr. Mueller made plain that the country's electoral infrastructure remains vulnerable to attack.
Thousands of emails — possibly obtained through a Russian-sponsored hacking scheme — made plain the party leadership's poorly concealed preference for Hillary Clinton over Bernie Sanders and led to a series of resignations that included the party's chairwoman.
By their questions in a hearing Tuesday, three US appeals court judges made plain that even at this early procedural stage they are concerned about the administration's potential targeting of Muslims along with possible risks to national security.
Khamenei said that he considers the opening weeks of Trump's administration to be a revelation of America's true character, and was grateful for how it made plain impulses that have typically laid beneath the surface of American policy.
Asked last month during a Fox News interview, soon after Republicans suffered a round of bruising election defeats, if the party needed to consider distancing itself from the President, House Speaker Paul Ryan made plain the GOP calculus.
Pop Smoke was killed in an apparent home invasion robbery; in the hours following his death, internet sleuths made plain how easy it was to track where he was staying in Los Angeles based on social media posts.
Sam JohnsonSamuel (Sam) Robert Johnson Retirees should say 'no thanks' to Romney's Social Security plan Lobbying world Social Security is approaching crisis territory MORE (R-Tex.), introduced a bill that made plain what conservatives would do if they could.
And on the first day of his quest for a mega-promotion, as he ferried his team in a rented minivan with Illinois plates, Mr. O'Rourke made plain his intention to transpose his Texas blueprint onto the national stage.
Democrats say the centrality of Mulvaney to the case against Trump was made plain Saturday by Trump's own lawyers, who attacked the House managers for not having a witness to directly link Trump to the pressure campaign against Ukraine.
The first season of Mad Men made plain the parallels between Peggy's story of discovering her creative voice and Don having done the same, and the series continued to develop her trajectory into something even more complex and fascinating than Don's.
In the day and a half before Kennedy's announcement, the impact of the Scalia seat was made plain again, as the court issued 5-4 rulings in favor of Trump's "travel ban" and anti-abortion groups, and against public employee unions.
Although she said prosecutors did not believe Ms. Winner to be a Taliban sympathizer or an aspiring radical, Ms. Solari made plain that officials were troubled by the evidence they had gathered about a person with a top secret security clearance.
Then the secretary of state made plain that American values now take a back seat to security interests, even though those interests are enhanced by our partnerships with democracies that respect human rights and undermined by regimes that repress their citizens.
Except that Warren has kept it up, even in the wake of Sanders' crushing victory in Nevada, a win that has made plain that he is now the favorite be the Democratic standard-bearer against President Donald Trump this fall.
Flanked by the Canadian prime minister, Justin Trudeau, Mr Trump made plain that he stands by a campaign pledge to rewrite the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), a 23-year-old pact underpinning trade between Canada, Mexico and the United States.
"The Government has now made plain that the FBI will not comply with the Court's discovery order," wrote Colin Fieman and Linda Sullivan, attorneys representing Jay Michaud, one of those arrested as part of the FBI's investigation into child pornography site Playpen.
The F.A.A.'s European counterpart has made plain that it now has so little faith in Boeing and the F.A.A.'s ability to regulate the planes that it might take the unprecedented step of withholding approval even after the F.A.A. signs off.
The conservative bloc under Chief Justice John Roberts has made plain that it believes states should be freer to determine their own voting maps and election practices, and that concerns about race discrimination simply do not carry the weight of earlier eras.
In the day and a half before Justice Kennedy's announcement, the impact of the Scalia seat was made plain again, as the court issued 5-4 rulings in favor of Mr. Trump's "travel ban" and anti-abortion groups, and against public employee unions.
Decades before he moved from ensemble figure to leading character in the nation's impeachment theater, friends and peers from his Senate days say those episodes made plain to Mr. Biden just how damaging and unseemly the proceedings could be for all involved.
The constraints facing Republicans on tax reform were made plain on Tuesday when the House Budget Committee released a budget resolution outline that, if passed, would unlock the legislative tool that would let Republicans rewrite the tax code without the help of Democrats.
The corrupt intent made plain in the record of the July 25 call between Presidents Trump and Zelensky has been supplemented by significant evidence showing the extent of the President's abuse of power both before and after the July 25 telephone call.
The staff of the NWS Birmingham office and the rest of the NWS forecasters in attendance all reportedly received a standing ovation; and the director made plain why the local forecast office sent "that" tweet and why they were right to do so.
Biden leans on his proximity to Obama as a proxy for how good he is on race, but almost every time he opens his mouth we learn how little he knows about the racism regularly made plain when President Obama was in the White House.
Their discussion made plain the fact that Tim Kaine has faith in women to make their own reproductive choices without a politician standing in the way, and that Mike Pence believes he's better equipped than a woman to make a decision about her health care.
No rational policymaker could ever determine that alcohol and tobacco should be legal while marijuana is illegal—the reason that some drugs are legal and others aren't is related to who had power and who did not when the laws were made, plain and simple.
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.'s 1963 speech, in which he dreamed of a country where crooked places would be made straight, and rough places made plain, and where freedom might ring out from a multitude of American places — including Stone Mountain of Georgia.
Bill Cosby's lawyers made plain this week the basis on which they are seeking to challenge his conviction for sexually assaulting Andrea Constand, an appeals process that could take as long as a year as the parties submit legal briefs to the Pennsylvania Superior Court.
The governor's refusal to resign plunged Virginia into political turmoil and created a crisis for national Democrats, who have assailed President Trump for his demagogy on racial issues and have made plain that they cannot abide a prominent party leader associated with emblems of bigotry.
However, the artists and writers generously critiquing "Open Casket" have made plain to me that I have benefited from the very systems of racism I aimed to critique, in a way that blinded me to what my re-presenting this image would mean to Black audiences.
While it is unclear whom she voted for in the last presidential election — she left fans to speculate based on a sweater she appeared to wear to the polls — Ms. Swift has finally made plain her political values, if not her voting record or party allegiance.
But that was before he saw the results of a poll of Democratic primary voters that made plain that he was exceedingly vulnerable in his district, with more than 70 percent saying they would be less likely to support him if he voted against impeaching Mr. Trump.
But it was funny to us when we saw the car approaching, funnier when we made plain that we had no plans to pause our stop-grab football game to allow him to pass through and hilarious when we all scattered after we saw the gun.
But Powell has also made plain that the Fed will take further decisions on the path of interest rates on a meeting-by-meeting basis and he, Clarida and several other policymakers have said the economy, powered by robust consumer spending, is in a good place.
At the same time, Trump has also made plain his desire to withdraw from Syria and Afghanistan (to Iran's advantage in both cases), his reluctance to re-establish deterrence with Tehran through a limited military reprisal, and his general skepticism regarding America's role in policing the global commons.
The tone of the overtures has been diplomatic, according to Democrats who have heard from the campaign, but Mr. Bloomberg's emissaries have made plain that they hope officials who are currently backing Mr. Biden will move in his direction if the former vice president flags badly in the coming weeks.
"The corrupt intent made plain in the record of the July 25 call between Presidents Trump and Zelensky has been supplemented by significant evidence showing the extent of the President's abuse of power both before and after the July 25 telephone call," Schiff wrote in the letter to his colleagues on Monday.
But after the sitdown with Trump, Obama told staff members that he had talked Trump through the rudiments of forming a cabinet and policies, including the Iran nuclear deal, counter-terrorism policy, health care—and that the President-elect's grasp of such matters was, as the debates had made plain, modest at best.
Trump has made plain to chief of staff John Kelly and others within the administration that he wants the information released, and that message has been relayed to the Justice Department, including during a meeting at the White House on Monday between Kelly, FBI Director Chris Wray and Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein.
"Biden leans on his proximity to Obama as a proxy for how good he is on race, but almost every time he opens his mouth we learn how little he knows about the racism regularly made plain when President Obama was in the White House," Emory University law professor Dorothy Brown recently wrote in CNN.
In 2018, Solo: A Star Wars Story made plain that audiences do not have a bottomless appetite for Star Wars movies in the same way they do for Marvel Studios releases, so much so that Disney reportedly lost $50 million on the film, and canceled Star Wars spinoff feature films for the foreseeable future.
Notwithstanding the scare tactics, and the parade of Remain politicos (including the prime minister, who announced his resignation today), business leaders, academics, celebrities, and even a misguided visit by President Obama threatening "back of the queue" status, the British people made plain their disdain for Europe in the most democratic way: at the ballot box.
Trump, who prides himself on not being like anyone who has held the office before him and has frosty relationships with the living past presidents, somehow had a conversation with some of them in which it was made plain to him that they knew they should have built a border wall on their watch?
But even if he is not a candidate himself, Mr. de Blasio has made plain his desire for a national bully pulpit that so far has eluded him, sometimes to an embarrassing extent — his efforts to organize a presidential forum in Iowa last cycle, for example, flopped when no one would agree to attend.
Trump and Nielsen have made plain that they believe that the US policy of not prosecuting people traveling as a family unit has been badly exploited by all sorts of criminals in recent years -- pointing to a surge in the percentage of people trying to enter the US as a family unit in the last few years.
Not only does the lawsuit feel disingenuous, but the six-person partnership — considered among the top firms in the world and a unique alternative to fierce rivals like the sprawling Andreessen Horowitz, as well as the more metrics-driven Sequoia Capital — has now made plain that when push comes to shove, it won't be so founder-friendly after all.
Draw up a list of the 2000s' most potent singles and the Thin White Duke's influence will be made plain—the Bond-3000 grandiosity of "Toxic," the robot fashion show of "Bad Romance," the shorted-out sexuality of "Last Nite," the sax fantasia of "Run Away with Me," the funked-up syncopations and meticulous detail of Missy Elliott's highest points.
Undermining his own CIA's intelligence assessment and hyperventilating about the virtues of the Saudis (a "truly spectacular ally," he called them last weekend), Donald Trump made plain he has no intention of losing confidence in Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, let alone imposing sanctions or him or any other Saudi royal over the killing of Washington Post journalist Jamal Khashoggi.
When I was offered the chance to perk up my curly curls and scrub up my Irish brogue to portray the fairylike Sharon McLonergan in a coming Off Broadway revival of the musical "Finian's Rainbow," this version of the actor's dream crept into my subconscious and made plain thoughts I was already thinking: At age 46, when does an ingénue hang up her ponytail?
Speaker Nancy PelosiNancy PelosiOvernight Energy: Protesters plan Black Friday climate strike | 'Father of EPA' dies | Democrats push EPA to abandon methane rollback Youth protesters plan Black Friday climate strike GOP lawmaker boasts 'overwhelming bipartisan support' for USMCA trade deal MORE (D-Calif.) has made plain that she deems the legal fights to be yet another stonewalling tactic by the White House — one that could emerge as a separate article of obstruction as Democrats weigh specific charges against the president.

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