The top 10 percent is marked by the light blue lines, while the bottom 90 percent is marked by the black lines.
|
|
The late '19613s were, in general, marked by a sense of American decline, and the idea that the presidency was primarily marked by a fumbling impotence that deserved mockery.
|
|
I am marked by cancer, and I can't quite remember what the markers are that mark us as who we are when we are not being marked by something else.
|
|
The administration has been marked by infighting and a largely stagnant policy agenda, marked by a major setback in the effort to repeal and replace Obamacare in the Senate Thursday night.
|
|
The evidence was that Jethro was more interested in snow marked by another dog's urine than in snow marked by his own, even if it had been surreptitiously moved — by Dr. Bekoff.
|
|
His administration was marked by grace, civility, and social conscience.
|
|
The newlyweds' first day of marriage is marked by murder.
|
|
The record is marked by its array of vocal styles.
|
|
Mr. Eng described a childhood marked by drugs and neglect.
|
|
And the strangely courtlike atmosphere is mainly marked by separation.
|
|
That leaves foreign policy, an arena also marked by inertia.
|
|
The marriage, Debbie said, was marked by alcoholism and violence.
|
|
They'd surely prefer a market less marked by national borders.
|
|
They are marked by white crosses or Stars of David.
|
|
McClendon's final years at Chesapeake were marked by frequent controversy.
|
|
Identity moratorium is high exploration, low commitment, marked by indecisiveness.
|
|
The 1820s, 18903s and 1840s were marked by severe slumps.
|
|
The rankings race is thus marked by a happy irony.
|
|
It's been marked by relatively slow growth rates, 2 percent.
|
|
My life as a female comedian feels marked by warnings.
|
|
Harrison warns her that they've been marked by the killers.
|
|
But it was also a life marked by personal tragedy.
|
|
The campaign here has been marked by a relentless pleasantness.
|
|
But once you've killed, you're always marked by that action.
|
|
British politics has been marked by extreme volatility of late.
|
|
In politics, Trump's early endeavors were marked by similar bluster.
|
|
Most are marked by a sense of loss and melancholy.
|
|
What became the official version was one marked by division.
|
|
Mr. Trump's campaign has been marked by extraordinarily combative rhetoric.
|
|
Mr. Xu's death, like his life, was marked by politics.
|
|
It also has been marked by an upswing in defense.
|
|
This year's event has been marked by some notable absentees.
|
|
The Trump administration has also been marked by internal squabbling.
|
|
Merkel's tenure as Chancellor is marked by strong macroeconomic indicators.
|
|
In Phoenix, the reunions were marked by confusion and heartbreak.
|
|
Individual burials are within round mounds, additionally marked by stones.
|
|
It was a case marked by the lack of procedure.
|
|
The house is marked by large rooms and ornate furniture.
|
|
His tenure has been marked by a number of controversies.
|
|
For Hound Lab's breathalyzers, that qualification is marked by timing.
|
|
Effective diplomacy will typically be slow and marked by setbacks.
|
|
Mr. Xiao's disappearance has been marked by confusion and misinformation.
|
|
Ultimately, success is marked by how well the clothes sell.
|
|
Instead, Vance's futures are marked by rich, panoramic socioeconomic systems.
|
|
The morning was marked by a number of unexpected turns.
|
|
The immediate area was marked by the smell of death.
|
|
But her film career was marked by periods of war.
|
|
But Mr. Anderson's legacy is also marked by more controversial positions.
|
|
Hardiman's career as a judge is marked by law and order.
|
|
Unlike encounters, side missions are marked by a gray pentagon shape.
|
|
And the day hasn't been marked by such overtly militaristic displays.
|
|
The sweat ceremony consists of four rounds, marked by four songs.
|
|
This period was also marked by plague, invasions and economic depression.
|
|
But Johnson's political career has been marked by lies and evasions.
|
|
Still, she has had a challenging year marked by personal struggles.
|
|
Would they see a calendar marked by a White History Month?
|
|
That Mr Macron was marked by Rocard is not in doubt.
|
|
But this generation has already been marked by significant political activism.
|
|
But 2017 turned out to be a year marked by breakdowns.
|
|
Coach's transformation has been marked by incremental victories along the way.
|
|
But the period was also marked by social and political earthquakes.
|
|
Bitcoin has been marked by volatility in its 143-year existence.
|
|
The garment, marked by her name, simply isn't made for her.
|
|
Spicer's tenure was marked by a rocky relationship with the media.
|
|
The result is fabric marked by elasticity and quick-drying properties.
|
|
His life is marked by poverty and a love of art.
|
|
Kelp is grown on lines, marked by buoys on the water.
|
|
A recession is marked by a specific set of economic circumstances.
|
|
Mr. Harper's last months at the company were marked by controversy.
|
|
Late cycles are typically marked by slowed growth and rising inflation.
|
|
The postelection rally has also been marked by very low volatility.
|
|
Movements are marked by emotion — division and solidarity, victory and defeat.
|
|
The rainy season has become shorter, marked by more frequent droughts.
|
|
The band was marked by tragedy almost from its outset, however.
|
|
Ramadan is typically marked by an increase in violence in Iraq.
|
|
Fiat's bold logo evolution has been marked by many drastic redesigns.
|
|
Preller's tenure with the Padres has been marked by aggressive moves.
|
|
But the period was also marked by social and political earthquakes.
|
|
These monumental days, hours, and even minutes are marked by cake.
|
|
Opinion Columnist Most of human history has been marked by war.
|
|
President Donald Trump's first few months have been marked by protest.
|
|
The effort has been marked by a string of technological disappointments.
|
|
His achievement is monumental, marked by literary grace and intelligent commentary.
|
|
Canada Letter This has been a week unusually marked by tragedies.
|
|
Her third pregnancy was marked by her third gold medal game.
|
|
That ascent has also been marked by controversy, tragedy and challenges.
|
|
But his work in Washington was marked by frustration, as well.
|
|
They were also marked by the graceful integration of oak flavors.
|
|
Within minutes, the graves were covered and marked by two headstones.
|
|
That began a decade marked by corruption and human rights abuses.
|
|
The Clintons' public career has been marked by scandal after scandal.
|
|
The war was marked by extreme sexual violence and ethnic cleansing.
|
|
They're first-rate, marked by candor and seriousness, and they're familiar.
|
|
Days are now marked by resignations, unanswered messages and idled capacity.
|
|
And yet few places seem so obviously marked by the style.
|
|
It added up to a presidency marked by competence and stability.
|
|
It was also marked by nearly complete isolation from the West.
|
|
Criminal history Sayoc's past is marked by encounters with law enforcement.
|
|
The quarter was marked by weakness in its key trading business.
|
|
The past three seasons, their games were marked by palpitating comebacks.
|
|
And yet few places seem so obviously marked by the style.
|
|
Jewish holidays in the U.S. are increasingly being marked by atrocities.
|
|
Disoriented runners stumbled off the route marked by short red flags.
|
|
It marked, by length, his most effective start on the season.
|
|
Ugleholdt's experience with PPD was marked by sudden feelings of meaninglessness.
|
|
His music was marked by sexually charged lyrics and explosive live performances, while his private life was marked by a string of romances linking him with the likes of Madonna and actresses Kim Basinger and Carmen Electra.
|
|
By all accounts, Freddie Mercury's life was marked by two major relationships.
|
|
To varying degrees we're all marked by time, or will be soon.
|
|
France The upcoming French elections, meanwhile, continue to be marked by scandal.
|
|
This industry is competitive in nature marked by high industry rivalry levels.
|
|
But Cruz's speeches are marked by what you might call pagan brutalism.
|
|
Her worked is marked by curiosity, empathy, humor, tenderness, devotion, and imagination.
|
|
His private adult life appears to have likewise been marked by turbulence.
|
|
Dixon is marked by notes of ripe fruit, coffee beans, and herbs.
|
|
Unfortunately, Philip's early months of retired life were marked by health issues.
|
|
This my winter season has been marked by personal and professional hardships.
|
|
Day one was an unequivocal disaster, marked by chaos, disorder and division.
|
|
Joy's face-heel turn is marked by a ridiculous change in wardrobe.
|
|
To the contrary, the pursuit has been marked by some spectacular failures.
|
|
Early into her marriage, however, Winchester's life was eerily marked by death.
|
|
That's what a childhood marked by neglect does to you, I guess.
|
|
Or is it a life marked by isolation, narrowness, beneath our potential?
|
|
But most of his policymaking is marked by chaos rather than purpose.
|
|
Y. The hearing was marked by high tensions even before it began.
|
|
A prolonged tenure marked by failed solutions will eventually bring him down.
|
|
Its opening was marked by a parade of Boschian puppets on Feb.
|
|
The summit thus far has been marked by disputes over press access.
|
|
Coleman's life post-"Diff'rent Strokes" was marked by financial and legal troubles.
|
|
"His administration was marked by grace, civility, and social conscience," he continued.
|
|
It's rollout, however, has been marked by racial and financial access issues.
|
|
However, his career has also been marked by a string of controversies.
|
|
But relations between the two countries have increasingly been marked by discord.
|
|
Protesters encountered police as they neared the endpoint, marked by makeshift roadblocks.
|
|
That sparked a year marked by lawsuits, inquiries, executive departures, and more.
|
|
Trump's administration, meanwhile, has been marked by ethics scandals and taxpayer waste.
|
|
But even these cases were marked by bitterness rather than collegial celebration.
|
|
Early industry was marked by its dirty, dangerous factories (dark, satanic mills).
|
|
The years after "The New Negro" were marked by an agitated perplexity.
|
|
But his nomination has become marked by an unusual level of acrimony.
|
|
In its place will be an attitude toward policing marked by absence.
|
|
The rest of the lineup, though, is marked by a determined mediocrity.
|
|
Bear markets are often marked by declines of 20 percent or more.
|
|
Is it marked by a certain age, a law or an experience?
|
|
Mr. Xi's rise has been marked by rekindled enthusiasm for traditional culture.
|
|
Michelangelo's drawings on paper are marked by a forceful use of chalk.
|
|
Relations between groups are often marked by deeply felt hatred and demonization.
|
|
Other starting pitchers have had jagged seasons, marked by injuries and ineptitude.
|
|
The period was marked by widespread abuses, extrajudicial killings, disappearances and torture.
|
|
Boutier's transition into professional golf has been marked by steady, gradual progress.
|
|
The cryptocurrency's price has been marked by peaks and valleys this year.
|
|
Classroom teaching and dissertation direction were marked by mutual respect and trust.
|
|
He suffers from bipolar disorder, marked by swings of elation and depression.
|
|
Those years were marked by a fairly predictable pattern: See the challenge.
|
|
However, his first term was marked by widespread strikes and social unrest.
|
|
The rest of his career has been marked by twists and turns.
|
|
Ivorian politics is historically volatile, marked by conflicts over land and ethnicity.
|
|
More severe cases of COVID-19 are marked by pneumonia-like symptoms.
|
|
For Ms. Hampton, the documentary fits into a career marked by activism.
|
|
And we inherited a foreign policy marked by one disaster after another.
|
|
Otherwise, the earlier hours of Sunday was marked by more political theatrics.
|
|
However, Hadid's career was also marked by several controversies and public disputes.
|
|
Mr Macron's first month, marked by much diplomatic summitry, has gone down well.
|
|
Zuma, whose presidency was marked by scandals, says he has done nothing wrong.
|
|
Ehrenreich argued that the middle of the twentieth century was marked by the
|
|
Post-Civil War America was marked by epidemics: yellow fever, smallpox and typhus.
|
|
Her life was marked by innovation, creativity, and magnetic performance after magnetic performance.
|
|
Zimbabwe&aposs past elections have been marked by accusations of violence and fraud.
|
|
Germany's history, he said, was for many years marked by "dictatorship and repression".
|
|
He lost to Bill Clinton in a campaign marked by highly charged attacks.
|
|
Community's fifth and sixth seasons are marked by cast change after cast change.
|
|
This annual celebration is marked by a different animal in the Zodiac calendar.
|
|
"Cruz's speeches are marked by what you might call pagan brutalism," Brooks argues.
|
|
Their relationship would be marked by loss, tragedy, and a lot of cheating.
|
|
THE late 1970s were marked by high oil prices and faltering Western economies.
|
|
The dirt covering his body was marked by a homemade cross of sticks.
|
|
"Now a new time is coming," he promises, marked by dialogue and tolerance.
|
|
The 2016 presidential election has been marked by personal attacks and Twitter rants.
|
|
And that first dinner is marked by the Beast's deference to her wishes.
|
|
Both periods were marked by extreme concentrations of personal wealth and corporate power.
|
|
Obama delivered perhaps the best speech in a career marked by memorable ones.
|
|
But O'Keefe's career is also marked by instances of dubious editing and lawsuits.
|
|
The personality is marked by extreme self-confidence and simple conceptions of leadership.
|
|
A Collection is essentially a tag, marked by a title and designated color.
|
|
His presidency has been marked by disputes with those delivering rebuffs to him.
|
|
The different rooms will be marked by the real pathways on the square.
|
|
The first five episodes are marked by oppressive dourness, with precious little relief.
|
|
Their bodies may have been irreversibly marked by cross-sex hormones and surgery.
|
|
My previous journey had been one marked by solitude, traveling alone and unattached.
|
|
His subdued demeanor marked by moments of extreme lunacy makes the script work.
|
|
Heat illness or stroke is another condition that's marked by change in appetite.
|
|
Her side of the family is marked by melancholia, mood disorders, and depression.
|
|
It was a week marked by some innovative hacks in the security world.
|
|
Each inch of the painting is marked by a dot or short line.
|
|
The vote was marked by a blackout of the internet and international calls.
|
|
Our lives are marked by the ages we become allowed to do things.
|
|
But his approach has been marked by uncertainty, U-turns and, occasionally, incompetence.
|
|
Jeff Nichols' career has been marked by both its unpredictability and its versatility.
|
|
It is another scandal marked by secret meetings, violated norms, collusion, and deceit.
|
|
Ethical consumption of porn is mindful, aware, responsible, and marked by sexual integrity.
|
|
Perhaps more than anything, Trump's first 50 days have been marked by controversy.
|
|
But Wells's tenure has been marked by massive growth for the streaming service.
|
|
Grieving relatives fondly remembered happy childhoods marked by thriving farms and big families.
|
|
This season is marked by barbecues, donut-shaped pool floats and sunny days.
|
|
Mankind's history is marked by more genocides than we would like to admit.
|
|
Mugabe's 37-year rule was marked by corruption and violent oppression of dissent.
|
|
"It's been a busy and exciting year marked by numerous bipartisan achievements," Sen.
|
|
Sri Lanka has a troubled recent history marked by war (The Associated Press).
|
|
But Pruitt's time as EPA's administrator was marked by more than just scandals.
|
|
The two had a fraught relationship marked by reports of Kelly's imminent ouster.
|
|
In the past, this was marked by checkpoints, military bases and customs posts.
|
|
"Marked by Fire" was also adapted into a gospel musical, "Abyssinia," in 1987.
|
|
The country's culture is marked by Calvinism: hard work is in their nature.
|
|
Anna Pavlova, whose death was ceremonially marked by a spotlight shining on an
|
|
We watch as a series of rounds hit distant buildings marked by flags.
|
|
Others looked at urge incontinence, marked by a sudden urgent desire to urinate.
|
|
This year's Oscar race was marked by a wide-open Best Picture race.
|
|
The early part of the fight was marked by equity between the fighters.
|
|
It produces something like a New Age trance sensation, marked by dreamy heaviness.
|
|
The early stages of the personal cell phone revolution were marked by variety.
|
|
The milestones of their young lives have been marked by loss and violence.
|
|
His first term was marked by an energetic foreign policy and alliance building.
|
|
The speaking and listening, all elements of that test is marked by machines.
|
|
At a Channel 4 debate, his absence was marked by an empty lectern.
|
|
His tenure was marked by increasing tension between Argentina and the United States.
|
|
But most of her books are marked by a spare, intimate, confessional tone.
|
|
Their formative years have been marked by both economic expansion and political discord.
|
|
Four years later, in a contest marked by grotesque vituperation, Jefferson beat Adams.
|
|
Their Sunday meals were special occasions marked by extraordinary, labor-intensive home cooking.
|
|
Effective leadership is marked by a mixture of stereotypically feminine and masculine qualities.
|
|
Their arrival was marked by hundreds of people who stood outside behind barricades.
|
|
His spiritual mood, marked by a sardonic cultural pessimism, is suited to match.
|
|
The last quarter of 2017 was marked by significant change at the newspaper.
|
|
Moscow's main index rose 29% in 2019 – a year marked by fiscal loosening.
|
|
For the last several months, the route north has been marked by desperation.
|
|
Tragedy is always marked by the same question: Can this happen to me?
|
|
The comeback was marked by a couple of highlight-type dunks from Stanley.
|
|
The campaign was marked by violence, including the murder of an election observer.
|
|
He suffers from bipolar disorder, marked by sweeping swings of elation and depression.
|
|
After a dominant first set marked by Djokovic's strong serving, the contest tightened.
|
|
Dear Madonna, The early years of independent reading are marked by sudden turns.
|
|
The current demonstrations, now in their fourth month, have been marked by violence.
|
|
I am not someone whose childhood was marked by isolation and unsociable behavior.
|
|
CARL QUINTANILLA: You know, Larry, these takes often get marked by a phrase.
|
|
They see history as cataclysmic cycles — a zero-sum endeavor marked by conflict.
|
|
Each week that followed was marked by more allegations against other prominent people.
|
|
As back to school season, September is marked by heightened attention to education.
|
|
Brian Kemp in an election marked by accusations of voter suppression and disenfranchisement.
|
|
The seventh full year of Theodore Roosevelt's presidency was marked by some setbacks.
|
|
His anti-Catholic tracts are pervasively marked by vast, frankly bewildering conspiracy theories.
|
|
Trump's rallies in California have been marked by disruptive and sometimes violent protests.
|
|
Even Eid, the traditional day for celebration in Islam, was marked by violence.
|
|
Results in the quarter were marked by currency volatility, including for the British pound.
|
|
It's the shining bit of a very dark world, marked by inequality and hopelessness.
|
|
Alongside the VAR fallout, the game was marked by indiscipline and rash challenges throughout.
|
|
Losar is usually a celebratory festival, but it was marked by the majority of
|
|
His time at Justice was marked by a politicization of the Civil Rights Division.
|
|
It was an election marked by fierce disagreement over domestic economic and social policies.
|
|
Plus, the lead-up to this showdown has already been marked by high drama.
|
|
The Democrats have already done some very public soul-searching, marked by Ohio Rep.
|
|
Trump's previous bilateral sessions were marked by comity and a focus on shared priorities.
|
|
An electoral landscape increasingly marked by identity politics is a recipe for national unease.
|
|
Like most old millennials, my own career path was marked by two financial catastrophes.
|
|
It was marked by allegations of corruption, which he dismisses as smears by rivals.
|
|
To be clear, my adolescence wasn't marked by anything close to a gay epidemic.
|
|
Each of these relationships has been marked by its own unique exchange of goods.
|
|
Schizophrenia is a chronic, severe and disabling brain disorder, marked by hallucinations and depression.
|
|
Their relationship is marked by profanity and insults, and by Logan's roughness and resentment.
|
|
The final years of both periods were marked by a degree of monetary experimentation.
|
|
Gen Zs' short lives have been marked by political turmoil and contentious national debates.
|
|
Brink Lindsey: What changed was that the 1970s were marked by lousy economic performance.
|
|
Now a fourth stage has begun, marked by fear that China is reaching parity.
|
|
Ramadan is the Muslim holy month, marked by daily fasting from dawn to sunset.
|
|
Later winter was marked by complicated family situations, sick relatives, and arguments with partners.
|
|
The gibes capped an awards season marked by celebrities' fiery protests of Trump's policies.
|
|
It is slow, painstaking work, often marked by its failures rather than its successes.
|
|
Microcephaly is marked by abnormally small head size that can result in developmental problems.
|
|
And the campaign underway to replace Mr. Obama has been marked by bitter polarization.
|
|
The United States is marked by far more racial division than its European peers.
|
|
The annual meeting is typically marked by near consensus on issues like free trade.
|
|
The birth defect is marked by babies born with brain abnormalities and undersized heads.
|
|
Historically, health systems in Latin America have been marked by fragmentation and gross unfairness.
|
|
Since then, Maduro's presidency has been marked by violent protests and a crumbling economy.
|
|
The sale, which fetched 97 million francs, was marked by "healthy prices", it said.
|
|
Lesar's unusually long tenure at the company was marked by growth but also controversy.
|
|
Their careers are indelibly marked by their gender and race, and so is Timberlake's.
|
|
A quick and contentious tenure Bannon's turbulent White House tenure was marked by controversy.
|
|
The gathering follows a summer marked by mounting signs of a rapidly warming atmosphere.
|
|
Photographs from the incident showed a wall marked by what appeared to be gunfire.
|
|
As with Trump's candidacy, the Brexit forces have been marked by accusations of xenophobia.
|
|
For me, it's only marked by my constant sense of fear and never knowing.
|
|
For many, the years following Morales's 228 election were marked by jubilation and hope.
|
|
In fact, Priebus' relationship with Trump has long been marked by ups and downs.
|
|
The last seven years of his tenure were marked by multiple episodes of illness.
|
|
George H.W. Bush lived a life marked by integrity and service to the country.
|
|
Veterans Day is marked by parades, speeches and solemn ceremonies offering a nation's appreciation.
|
|
Mr Macron's campaign was marked by Kennedyesque optimism and a wholehearted embrace of globalism.
|
|
I felt marked by my decision, forever crazy, broken, and with an impossible future.
|
|
Their one-year relationship, Lauren continued, was also marked by physical and emotional abuse.
|
|
Many would go on to have severely disrupted lives marked by abuse and violence.
|
|
The current consensus seems to be that they are marked by unstable self-esteem.
|
|
Trump's campaign has been frequently marked by stumbles while trying to court minority voters.
|
|
"That's why my photography style is marked by simplicity and daily things," he added.
|
|
All of it is marked by the ease of Padgett's writing, his unrivaled directness.
|
|
When you pick them up, they're marked by the game's code to be deleted.
|
|
That severe downturn was marked by a near-collapse of the entire financial system.
|
|
The 90s was a decade marked by other innovations in the winter sports industry.
|
|
They are marked by a deep social distrust and a bent toward conspiracy thinking.
|
|
Lastly, the sneakers are also marked by suede on the tongue, vamp and heel.
|
|
But despite this intimacy, their later years were marked by dissension, addiction, and unhappiness.
|
|
The jet-setting socialite's later years were marked by a scandal that captivated France.
|
|
Her parents are buried in a family compound marked by gravestones and flowering bushes.
|
|
A correction is marked by a move lower of at least 10% from highs.
|
|
Its revival, a project marked by decades, not years, has cost around $300 million.
|
|
"It's an information vacuum marked by corruption, where contracts are routinely violated," he said.
|
|
Afterward, Trump publicly insisted the gathering was marked by displays of unity and cooperation.
|
|
THE COMMUNIST PERIOD in Poland was itself marked by at least two distinct phases.
|
|
It Takes, the run-up to the 1988 primary was marked by intense, even
|
|
Years marked by as much isolation and self-doubt as discovery and original research.
|
|
The novel coronavirus is marked by symptoms of fever, cough, and shortness of breath.
|
|
The valley's southern end is marked by a huge fjord that abuts steep cliffs.
|
|
How nice: to have the emergence of one's self marked by a rocket exploding!
|
|
The subsequent 214 years of Haitian history have been marked by triumph and tragedy.
|
|
The hours are marked by small pronounced steel ticks that make up the dial.
|
|
Some of their protests have been marked by rioting, partly blamed on black blocs.
|
|
Lime has lost yet another executive amid a year marked by C-suite shakeups.
|
|
Marked by balance and brightness, it is oolong tea to bone broth's double espresso.
|
|
The outbreak has been marked by confusion and conflicting analysis of the available information.
|
|
His early producing tenure was marked by hits ("Sherlock Holmes") and misses ("Gangster Squad").
|
|
Freedom as detachment is marked by absence — the absence of coercion, interference and obstacles.
|
|
But the early days of the Trump presidency have been marked by extraordinary ineptitude.
|
|
Her tenure at HUD has been marked by her outspoken and controversial personal tweets.
|
|
The later part of Mr. Stubblefield's life was marked by bouts of poor health.
|
|
It was the fifth consecutive Saturday marked by a large protest against the president.
|
|
Political divides widened The past decade's politics have been marked by polarization and division.
|
|
In contrast, the path that led Mustafa Nayyem to journalism was marked by happenstance.
|
|
Trump's presidency has been marked by his personal desire to improve relations with Russia.
|
|
"I think the foreseeable future will be marked by volatility," McMahon of Raymond James.
|
|
"Late cycles are typically marked by outperformance of commodities," JPMorgan analyst Dominic O'Kane said.
|
|
In South Africa, Jacob Zuma resigned after a presidency marked by corruption and impunity.
|
|
Some of their protests have been marked by rioting, partly blamed on black blocs.
|
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" Like other such fights, it is "marked by periods of progress and devastating reverses.
|
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Experts define burnout as a syndrome marked by emotional exhaustion, cynicism and decreased effectiveness.
|
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The history of China has been marked by periods of unity followed by fracture.
|
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It was marked by a small marble bench with a carved dove on it.
|
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Men whose childhood years were marked by family disruption seem to fare the worst.
|
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The B.J.P. campaign, marked by Islamophobic speeches, was aimed at intensifying Hindu majoritarian impulses.
|
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Duterte's brief reign has been marked by a consistent stream of menacingly misogynistic comments.
|
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Every generation has its thing, and the last two have been marked by digital technology.
|
|
Three years later and they were married, an occasion marked by The New York Times.
|
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For Maria Hiaasen, her birthday will forever be marked by the loss of her husband.
|
|
That era from 1998 to 2008 was marked by fractures in the US-Korea alliance.
|
|
The royal couple's visit is also sadly marked by a recent death in the family.
|
|
The week was marked by wild swings, but indexes finished nearly flat on the week.
|
|
The spot is now marked by a plaque commemorating the event, according to Atlas Obscura.
|
|
Ravenel's time on Southern Charm was marked by his tumultuous relationship with ex Kathryn Dennis.
|
|
The regime was marked by corruption, brutality and the excesses of his wife, Imelda Marcos.
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The regime was marked by corruption, brutality and the excesses of his wife, Imelda Marcos.
|
|
It's a time Lee remembers as the end of childhood, marked by brutality and hunger.
|
|
But Pace argues that Obama's NASA has been marked by a deterioration in international relations.
|
|
The years from 1970 to 1975 were marked by cultural upheaval, both domestic and geopolitical.
|
|
In some respects, it resembles a miniature Detroit, marked by unemployment, blight and violent crime.
|
|
It's cinematic, it begs to be traversed, and it's marked by extreme vicissitudes in fortune.
|
|
This clever circle was marked by eccentricities, disagreements and rivalries, and other more serious problems.
|
|
That visit was also marked by large protests in London and throughout the country. 4.
|
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Health care is one of the industries that has been marked by bouts of consolidation.
|
|
While Conservative candidates tear strips off each other, Lib Dem hustings are marked by agreement.
|
|
The news comes ahead of weekend soccer games that will be marked by the tragedy.
|
|
Although he oversaw strong economic growth, Mr García's terms were marked by allegations of graft.
|
|
The progression of AI is marked by victories against top players in many strategy games.
|
|
The ninth Democratic primary debate on April 14 was marked by sarcasm, innuendo, and contempt.
|
|
Drivers must stop precisely on a spot marked by adhesive tape in the pit box.
|
|
They're a deist non-religion marked by a disjointed mixture of conservatism and high theatre.
|
|
Past elections in the southern African nation were marked by allegations of fraud and violence.
|
|
But I sincerely hope the changes marked by 2016 will continue and be built upon.
|
|
The home stretch of this election has been marked by Republican desperation and Democratic angst.
|
|
Greenland's hulking glacier and the Arctic Sea ice are now marked by their rapid melting.
|
|
Photo via YouTubeIf this year is marked by anything, it is the politically charged atmosphere.
|
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Pinera's previous stint as president, from 2010 to 2014, was marked by huge student protests.
|
|
That investigation, spanning Clinton's two terms, was marked by a huge amount of staff turnover.
|
|
Our football was marked by violence for decades, our rugby is still an organised scrap.
|
|
And where Arab states aren't collapsing, they are marked by a high degree of dysfunction.
|
|
In 2012, it was marked by a long-range rocket launch attempt which also failed.
|
|
The early years of her career were marked by relentless experimentation and constant self-doubt.
|
|
Without further ado: + This week was marked by one "Oh, Shit!" moment after the next.
|
|
Asia's asset management industry is marked by intense competitive pressure, thin margins and high fragmentation.
|
|
They are marked by bright pink signs that say "Female Only" in Chinese and English.
|
|
He was quickly cremated in an ashram ceremony again marked by ecstatic singing and dancing.
|
|
"The meeting was marked by concentration and mutual respect," Beer said after the exploratory talks.
|
|
But their grand return to Earth wasn't marked by tearful reunions and glamorous photo ops.
|
|
The hours are marked by simple lines instead of numbers, giving it a minimalistic look.
|
|
His formative years in France and Andorra were marked by a fair share of misery.
|
|
This triggers a long period of conflict, marked by political assassinations and suicide bombings. Dec.
|
|
N. Lesar's unusually long tenure at the company was marked by growth but also controversy.
|
|
Wall Street trading volumes were low in a week marked by the U.S. Thanksgiving holiday.
|
|
John McCain, which was marked by implicit references to Trump and his behavior as president.
|
|
Its 127-year history was marked by revolutionary technologies, immense profit, and now, alleged fraud.
|
|
There are three crashes, marked by excited shouts from bystanders and very visible crash landings.
|
|
It will be marked by events on both sides of the Irish border this month.
|
|
They have flawed records, as most politicians do, marked by bad positions and dubious compromises.
|
|
The compression fills the drawing with erotic longing, a memory marked by presence and absence.
|
|
The referendum has been marked by a pin-striped nihilism dressed up as common sense.
|
|
The site is marked by a sign, in Irish, and a tall, plain wooden cross.
|
|
Childbirth, marked by thronged women repeating prayers invoking the Virgin Mary, is her life's refrain.
|
|
Both efforts have been slow but steady going, marked by sporadic success and cyclical setbacks.
|
|
The second is the multicultural story: American history has been marked by systems of oppression.
|
|
For him, it is a culmination of an adulthood marked by drug abuse and arrests.
|
|
Each outlined area is marked by a different linear pattern done in a different color.
|
|
American popular culture has long been marked by an absence of empathy for American Indians.
|
|
The Mountain West — marked by its different philosophical outlook — seems to be a hot ticket.
|
|
It was an exciting moment for me and it was marked by an unusual occurrence.
|
|
His political career was marked by humanitarian efforts and legislative expertise in agriculture and education.
|
|
His early life and career were marked by the most traditional signposts of American success.
|
|
So the lead-up to Dime Day was, naturally, marked by widespread anger and controversy.
|
|
In an era marked by unprecedented religious decline, Mormons appear to be holding their own.
|
|
The magic of Samuel Westing's game is, like America itself, marked by capriciousness and contradiction.
|
|
Not only that, but its short existence was marked by a string of embarrassing missteps.
|
|
They are often marked by economic stagnation, social isolation, family breakdown and high opioid addiction.
|
|
India's public health care system is marked by long waits, poor care and worker shortages.
|
|
For better or worse, there's no one standard distinction that's marked by these two words.
|
|
Despite the happy tenor of his music, his life was difficult and marked by adversity.
|
|
John Kelly left the post after a tumultuous tenure reportedly marked by infighting and distrust.
|
|
Baltimore is addressing these videos in an era marked by growing concerns about police accountability.
|
|
For 42 years, Ms. Espada's life was marked by a dependency on drugs and alcohol.
|
|
Then, like now, the few town halls that were held were marked by voter rage.
|
|
Microcephaly is a condition marked by abnormally small heads that can lead to developmental problems.
|
|
The six-story lobby and atrium are marked by rich wood, bronze, and antique accents.
|
|
The largely peaceful climate rally was marked by brief confrontations between police and masked demonstrators.
|
|
But the 1990s were later marked by the longest peacetime expansion in the nation's history.
|
|
Meanwhile, Labor Day in the United States is also set to be marked by strikes.
|
|
The actress's career has been marked by empathetic and generous performances, a rarity in comedy.
|
|
Past trade negotiations between Chinese and U.S. officials have been marked by last-minute upsets.
|
|
For lovers of Ethiopian food, recent years were marked by two seismic events in Harlem.
|
|
A midterm year marked by Democratic enthusiasm could also help the senator avoid an upset.
|
|
He has a lengthy criminal history Sayoc's past is marked by encounters with law enforcement.
|
|
Previous aid efforts within Venezuela have been marked by concerns Maduro would interfere with distribution.
|
|
Every year, his birthday is marked by "Dilla Day" celebrations around the world, featuring doughnuts.
|
|
A disjointed and inconsistent responseThe airline&aposs response to complaints has been marked by inconsistencies.
|
|
Frantic talks Lehman's final days were marked by frantic last-minute negotiations over its fate.
|
|
American culture has long been marked by questions about the moral caliber of wealthy people.
|
|
Its blue atmosphere was also marked by a dark blemish nicknamed the Great Dark Spot.
|
|
Initial efforts by small, homegrown extremist groups are usually marked by some degree of failure.
|
|
I mean, a lot of people had diets that were marked by scarcity and deprivation.
|
|
Their financial reality is marked by high unemployment rates, low savings, and low credit scores.
|
|
In a life marked by disappointment and compromise, Azizeh remarked, what did the dress really matter?
|
|
Elections in the southern African nation have long been marked by allegations of violence and fraud.
|
|
Isarescu said the inflation outlook was marked by uncertainties over the government's fiscal and income plans.
|
|
People with diabetes—a condition marked by chronic high blood sugar—often develop poor blood circulation.
|
|
This is Carrey's first public relationship since 2015, a year marked by tragedy for the actor.
|
|
In place of the Windows key you'll find the "Purism key" marked by a white rectangle.
|
|
Hatch: 'In a political landscape marked by anger and acrimony, Charles stood for reason and respect.
|
|
Vox's campaign was marked by passionate reference to Spain's history, customs and survival as a nation.
|
|
Skarsgard's Pennywise has a far more sinister edge, marked by piercing yellow eyes and contorted movements.
|
|
Both girls stutter, a speech characteristic marked by repetition in sound, prolonged pauses and repeated words.
|
|
Boehner's tenure as speaker was marked by fractious divisions among competing groups within the Republican Party.
|
|
But A Quiet Place is marked by a steadfast conservatism, more primal than literal or political.
|
|
The big picture: Merkel's leadership has been marked by her commitments to decency, multilateralism and diplomacy.
|
|
Their meeting was long on theatrics, but was also marked by candid moments and sweeping pledges.
|
|
Microcephaly is a condition marked by abnormally small head size that can result in developmental problems.
|
|
That was marked by systematic shortages and regular power cuts, the memory of which is traumatic.
|
|
Microcephaly is a neurological condition marked by unusually small heads that can result in developmental problems.
|
|
However, her ongoing recovery has been bumpy, marked by a mix of both gains and setbacks.
|
|
Advancement within guilds implied authority, and the path from apprentice to master was marked by ritual.
|
|
However, with playmaker Christian Eriksen tightly marked by Poland's defenders, Denmark were unable to draw level.
|
|
It can cause the rare birth defect microcephaly, marked by abnormally small heads and developmental problems.
|
|
After being stunned, Schrock went into ventricular fibrillation, a condition marked by a wildly erratic heartbeat.
|
|
The rare birth defect is marked by unusually small head size and potentially severe developmental problems.
|
|
The season was marked by having the most idols and secret advantages in any season ever.
|
|
Wideman, Larkin and Matthews all scored on power plays in chippy contest marked by numerous penalties.
|
|
Mr García's first term in office, from 1985 to 1990, was marked by disastrous populist policies.
|
|
S. relations back to the status of last year which was marked by exchanges of fire.
|
|
The drones carried brightly colored LEDs and raced through crumbling corridors marked by even more lights.
|
|
STERLING has had a very choppy history, marked by crises such as 20163, 22016 and 230.
|
|
"The current survey period has been marked by great political uncertainty," ZEW president Achim Wambach said.
|
|
But over the years, the war has become a multifaceted conflict marked by multiple foreign interventions.
|
|
In 2012, the day was marked by a long range rocket launch attempt, which also failed.
|
|
His nine years as president were marked by multiple corruption allegations, economic mismanagement and disputed appointments.
|
|
Just a year earlier, films were marked by far less idiosyncratic storytelling, and more bankable stars.
|
|
The U.S. election was similarly marked by a seeming disregard for experts, considered opinions, and facts.
|
|
The beverage is then marked by slowly-poured full espresso shots, creating a signature espresso dot.
|
|
IBS is a chronic condition marked by stomach pain, diarrhea or constipation or alternating between both.
|
|
The raid also uncovered about 19,000 tablets of fentanyl, marked by traffickers to look like oxycodone.
|
|
Chronic food insecurity, marked by persistent absence of readily accessible and nutritious food, worsens this situation.
|
|
The couple's romance filled her later years with happiness – and followed two marriages marked by tragedy.
|
|
In his decadeslong career marked by bankruptcies and controversies, Trump was exceedingly careful about protecting himself.
|
|
The period will be marked by bouts of protectionism and by slowing growth and growing tensions.
|
|
The president's visit to Paris has been marked by criticism over controversies at home and abroad.
|
|
Her election comes after a year marked by massive teacher protests over pay throughout the state.
|
|
Yet the book itself, scarcely over a hundred pages long, is marked by a certain reticence.
|
|
Mullah Mansour's tenure was marked by purges and open rebellion that have receded into the background.
|
|
While the campaign of Mr. Trump has been marked by a hard-line nationalist approach, Mrs.
|
|
The race has been marked by allegations of voter suppression from Kemp's secretary of state office.
|
|
In a summer marked by racial tensions, the latest debate has surfaced in a Boston suburb.
|
|
But the rest of the week has been marked by volatility and steadily lower market closes.
|
|
It was a period marked by glaring partisanship that reached a peak under California Republican Rep.
|
|
First, a foreign policy that is marked by realism totally undisguised by platitudes or historical sentiments.
|
|
Mr. Williams's tenure of three and a half years in Philadelphia was marked by relative peace.
|
|
The caption read, "33, you're alright," and was marked by a smiling emoji and black heart.
|
|
And what more appropriate genre for writing about Hollywood than one marked by theatricality, hyperbole, excess?
|
|
He was afraid of falling, he said, his vowels still marked by his Bronx childhood: fawling .
|
|
On appeal, Lee's case was marked by a series of defense attorneys whose work was questioned.
|
|
Microcephaly is marked by small head size that can lead to severe developmental problems in babies.
|
|
My life has been marked by such safety-seeking behaviors, many of them embarrassing to admit.
|
|
But Ms. Hidalgo's efforts aside, Paris Fashion Week has been marked by its lack of activism.
|
|
He was marked by just one man and muscled his way clear for the easy header.
|
|
The creation of the Sydney Opera House was an arduous process, marked by setbacks and compromise.
|
|
My time in Britain was deeply marked by an attack at London Bridge in June 2017.
|
|
Peter can't make up his mind ... remember, his season was marked by his flip-flopping ways.
|
|
She also surprised Bachelor Nation with shocking details about her engagement, marked by frustration and disappointment.
|
|
Her appearance in the tournament has always been marked by boundless public curiosity and burdensome expectations.
|
|
But a trade war marked by a spike in consumer prices could jeopardize their survival strategy.
|
|
My favorite is the score of Beethoven's Seventh Symphony, dramatically marked by Gustav Mahler in 266.
|
|
The surface of one of his paintings is likely to be marked by staples and seams.
|
|
Since then, the two Communist countries have maintained an alliance marked by long periods of tension.
|
|
It was a period marked by sustained success, if not the excellence of Snyder's earlier years.
|
|
It was an intense and divisive election — and one marked by violence and threats of violence.
|
|
Are these counties marked by high social cohesion, economic dynamism, surging wages and healthy family values?
|
|
John Kelly, who left the post after a tumultuous run reportedly marked by infighting and distrust.
|
|
The country went through two decades marked by violence, torture, exile, censorship, and, of course, corruption.
|
|
He liked disruptive ideas, sweeping change, and quick action—not long negotiations marked by tiny advances.
|
|
Plus, there was a hefty supply of organic options, which were marked by these green signs.
|
|
Its opposite, La Niña, marked by cooler ocean water, tends to increase hurricanes in the Atlantic.
|
|
The first few episodes of The Good Place's final season have been marked by emotional turbulence.
|
|
It was also a game marked by several pivotal, and controversial, calls by the game officials.
|
|
The sentiment may seem trite, but it comes amid an election marked by unprecedented political ugliness.
|
|
Bertin's death on Monday followed a weekend in the city marked by several other notable crashes.
|
|
McCain's last years were marked by principled opposition, first to Obama and then to Donald Trump.
|
|
The government formation process from here will therefore be marked by horse-trading and backdoor discussions.
|
|
Both games are marked by both their humor and their frequent self-aware fourth wall breaks.
|
|
Trump sought to look past those facts and toward a future marked by unity and inclusion.
|
|
The succession battle they described is marked by old grievances, petty rivalries -- and deceptively high stakes.
|
|
All listened to pro-democracy speakers in a gathering marked by music and a festive mood.
|
|
December's weaker German annual inflation rate was marked by a pronounced slowdown in energy price rises.
|
|
Yet every life has a story, and every story is marked by pain, loss and sorrow.
|
|
The years following the Arab Spring were marked by an outpouring of creativity, dissent and wit.
|
|
The hearing had moments of revelation and substance, but it was also marked by fiery exchanges.
|
|
However, "Fair and Square" was marked by a sign warning visitors not to make physical contact.
|
|
Tesla's initial years were apparently marked by an above-average level of danger on its factory floor.
|
|
The radicals she encounters in Europe are often marked by broken homes, abusive relationships and petty criminality.
|
|
So it is not automatically marked by an algorithm or is Twitter's moderation team staffed by executives.
|
|
Presidents haven't traditionally delivered public remarks, and the day hasn't been marked by such overtly militaristic displays.
|
|
The powerful ending, mirroring the performance's beginning, is marked by the assertion of women in seminal roles.
|
|
The mourning in Annapolis continued Tuesday, marked by a lowering of U.S. flags to honor the victims.
|
|
This elite set is marked by same tattoo: A small musical note (yep, like Lizzie and Charlotte's).
|
|
The period since 1945 has been marked by the absence of war between the world's major powers.
|
|
That assessment of Obama's presidency, as well as his approval ratings, are marked by sharp partisan divides.
|
|
"Quantum thermodynamics" is a field in the making, marked by a typical mix of exuberance and confusion.
|
|
"Watches are marked by flashy brands and millennials reject that idea," Kaden, of Union Square Ventures, said.
|
|
Syria has been engulfed in a civil war for six years marked by Sunni-Shiite sectarian conflict.
|
|
Legally compliant hoverboards abide by local electrical standards and are marked by the Australian regulatory compliance symbol.
|
|
Role in House Benghazi investigation Gowdy's congressional tenure was marked by central roles in high-profile investigations.
|
|
Even for a White House marked by its chaos, the last few weeks have been exceptionally tough.
|
|
The film is marked by a stark, visually expansive style rooted firmly in a historical frontier wilderness.
|
|
With millions of American youths marked by trauma, hunger, fear, and violence, the future looks increasingly bleak.
|
|
Cuban police and soldiers walked around the concert but it was marked by a mostly joyous atmosphere.
|
|
That can be a nice escape, especially with our real-life era marked by so much turmoil.
|
|
Class intrudes: Lucy has escaped her family's marginal existence, while still feeling herself indelibly marked by it.
|
|
This burst is promising, but a true return is marked by more than a couple of months.
|
|
This generation, once marked by ambivalence or inability to buy homes, has begun to reconsider its goals.
|
|
Briefly, Pareto argued that history was marked by the rise and fall, or circulation, of governing elites.
|
|
While election day itself was declared largely peaceful, the days following it have been marked by violence.
|
|
A bubble market, said Yellen, was one that is "clearly overvalued" and marked by strong credit growth.
|
|
Both were marked by civil war, regicide, the advent of a republic and the restoration of monarchy.
|
|
The sentencing hearing has been marked by a number of disagreements between the prosecution and the defense.
|
|
Five years into the conflict, marked by successive waves of ethnic cleansing, the humanitarian situation is dire.
|
|
So far, his improvements are marked by being able to twitch his foot or point his fingers.
|
|
Yet Korea's future is more likely to be marked by a cursed mountain than a mystical one.
|
|
Cover all but the main entry point (usually marked by feces and teeth marks) with steel mesh.
|
|
Your weapon is only effective in short range, which is marked by a line across your tower.
|
|
Nancy debuted in 213, a year also marked by the emergence of another female detective: Miss Marple.
|
|
I was marked by some symbol of womanhood, sexuality, and maturity that I hadn't yet grown into.
|
|
The situation today is marked by groups of computer engineers sitting around discussing age-old philosophical problems.
|
|
Elections under Mugabe&aposs 37-year rule were marked by violence against the opposition and alleged fraud.
|
|
It's remarkable how the years that followed Apple's last panic were marked by profound growth and innovation.
|
|
With his power consolidated, he must now tackle an economic crisis marked by widespread shortages and hyperinflation.
|
|
There is a closed white door immediately to the right of the corner marked by the stone.
|
|
The lifetime of the computer has been marked by an ongoing struggle to communicate with the machine.
|
|
The skirmish started with shouting matches and quickly escalated to brawls marked by punches and pepper spray.
|
|
But his first year in office has been marked by clashes with Congress and slowing economic growth.
|
|
The trip has been marked by heavy security, including metal detectors and sniffer dogs at most events.
|
|
It suggests that the Moon has had a fairly complex geological history, marked by extensive volcanic activity.
|
|
Everywhere you look, the work is marked by unerring decisions and choices, an unrivaled intensity of concentration.
|
|
Yet the Franco-German dialogue over refugees has, in reality, been marked by misunderstanding, dismay and irritation.
|
|
Democrats took control of the House last year in an election marked by voter opposition to Trump.
|
|
The United States and China have been locked in trade tensions marked by tit-for-tat tariffs.
|
|
His tenure, like that of other members of Trump's Cabinet, has been marked by strife and confusion.
|
|
The two countries are in a tense trade war marked by escalating tariffs on each other's goods.
|
|
THE spots where the bodies fell are now marked by makeshift memorials along the palm-fringed beachfront.
|
|
Tightly marked by Hammers defender Winston Reid, he threw a sharp elbow straight at his opponent's face.
|
|
You know that little gadget on your dryer usually marked by a snowflake or a blue button?
|
|
But her tenure at Our Revolution has been marked by accusations of mismanagement and self-interested careerism.
|
|
Many smooth, paved roads are now marked by jagged cracks -- some so large further passage is impossible.
|
|
Until now, his presidency has been marked by controversies, internal strife and political battles with Capitol Hill.
|
|
With fewer traders able to access to their banks, weekends tend to be marked by low liquidity.
|
|
Known as Chinese New Year or the Spring Festival, the event is marked by parades and fireworks.
|
|
Because it works within its own rhetorical tradition, Amateur is marked by a heavy flavor of conclusion.
|
|
The battle over how to lower drug prices has been marked by finger pointing among all sides.
|
|
They evidently are heading toward a battle, marked by a glowing conflagration far away near the horizon.
|
|
The list of historic occasions marked by Aretha Franklins unique, powerful voice is nothing short of incredible.
|
|
Investor caution has prevailed after a torrid week for markets, marked by an escalation in Sino-U.
|
|
His arms are scarred as well as muscled, and his back is marked by a sizable welt.
|
|
The kitchen opens up into the great room, also marked by French oak floors and marble detailing.
|
|
Trump's campaign was marked by huge rallies that often drew thousands of supporters to hear him speak.
|
|
Mugabe's tenure was marked by a record of human rights abuses, violent suppression of dissent and corruption.
|
|
Most Stone Island pieces are marked by a badge affixed to the left sleeve by two buttons.
|
|
The second day of Trump's presidency was marked by the largest single-day protest in U.S. history.
|
|
In a committee that is generally marked by rare bipartisanship, the partisan divide was on stark display.
|
|
Yes, we live in a society marked by hierarchy and inequality — and, yes, that's intrinsic to capitalism.
|
|
In this moment, in this space, baseball entered a new era that was marked by new technologies.
|
|
The Moon hangs above us like a dusty old rock, devoid of life, pock-marked by craters.
|
|
You'd be hard-pressed to find an aspect of the president's life that isn't marked by grifting.
|
|
Independence celebrations are still a big deal, and the anniversary is marked by parades and army demonstrations.
|
|
A growing number of companies are clamping down on office romances, particularly those marked by power imbalances.
|
|
It was founded by the Romans and has a 2,000-year history marked by revolts and conflict.
|
|
After rain earlier in the week, the final three days were marked by temperatures in the 90s.
|
|
Where Colbert's Trump-related punchlines used to be marked by exhaustion, they're now reenergized with active fury.
|
|
Marked by bravery and loyalty, Captain America's dedication to his team makes him an honorary fire sign.
|
|
But otherwise, his first year in office was marked by anti-LGBTQ action after anti-LGBTQ action.
|
|
" And former President Jimmy Carter said Mr. Bush's administration was "marked by grace, civility and social conscience.
|
|
The F.B.I. visit follows a campaign marked by accusations by several political associates of disappearing campaign funds.
|
|
This era is marked by the Dred Scott decision (1857), the Chinese Exclusion Act (1880), Plessy vs.
|
|
What you might not guess from his music is that Bryan's life has been marked by tragedy.
|
|
Mr. Christie's tumultuous eight-year tenure was marked by funding cuts in education, public pensions and transportation.
|
|
Not the nation state; not religious worship; not the deepest grief of a people marked by hatred.
|
|
Even beyond the actual editing, this episode appears to have been marked by breaches of scientific conduct.
|
|
Both performances are marked by that same sense of dignity, a calmness in the face of danger.
|
|
About 200 types of rare pulmonary diseases fall within ILD, marked by coughing and shortness of breath.
|
|
He ends a remarkable career marked by two sporting events in which he had little previous experience.
|
|
Atlanta is hardly the only American city increasingly marked by wall-size splashes of color and design.
|
|
The Met said use of the technology would be publicized beforehand and marked by signs on site.
|
|
This is not representative democracy, but it is a dialogue marked by inventiveness, substance and dogged commitment.
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The language of "Gary" is marked by the play's high style, by its pathos and its rhythm.
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This period was marked by murders and bombings carried out by far-right and far-left groups.
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His tenure at the C.I.A. was marked by turmoil and questions about the politicization of the agency.
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His anarchic, unhinged characters are typically marked by a coiled energy that gradually spins out of control.
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There is a new vanguard of production, founded on science and technology and marked by permanent innovation.
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Despite efforts like this, Mr. Arpaio won another term in an election that was marked by irregularities.
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The enclave has emerged as the city's latest culinary hotbed, one marked by experimentation and international flavors.
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His 2016 bid for the Democratic presidential nomination, however, was marked by anemic poll and fundraising numbers.
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But what I had envisioned as an entry point into a new world was marked by sorrow.
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The early 2000s were marked by a set of practices that can only be described as abusive.
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Across the Tasman Sea, New Zealand trade was marked by falls in health care stocks and materials.
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" The UK's trading future with the world's least developed countries, Chin said, is "still marked by uncertainty.
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The day was marked by a stream of recesses and haggling among lawmakers, according to multiple reports.
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Center of the fray Gowdy's congressional tenure has been marked by central roles in high-profile investigations.
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Dilma's administration was marked by a few key wins and quite a few more shows of ineptitude.
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Mostly it's marked by a refusal to cater to any one notion of what makes a classic.
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About 200 types of rare pulmonary diseases fall within ILD, marked by coughing and shortness of breath.
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Streaming Two new Netflix Originals are war movies, but very different ones, marked by their temporal settings.
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Lawyers and rights groups say China's justice system is marked by torture, forced confessions and arbitrary detention.
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The people described a chaotic process marked by last-minute decisions, staffing turnover and little financial oversight.
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He had a cautious outlook, but in hindsight, his presidency was marked by acts of political courage.
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His candidacy alone was marked by hate crimes across the south in cities like Charleston and Charlottesville.
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The 500 km (350 mile) frontier was marked by British army checkpoints, frequently targeted by IRA gunmen.
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Snowstorms blew through Times Square while ice, marked by thousands of bootprints, gathered on roads and sidewalks.
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The utilities have faced a series of fines and a summer marked by supply shortages and hosepipe bans.
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The birth defect is marked by small head size that can lead to severe developmental problems in babies.
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The protests have been marked by signs, speeches and, at times, scuffles between cabin crew and Eva representatives.
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The festival has been marked by controversy over the inclusion of two movies from video streaming company Netflix.
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Like many new presidents, Donald Trump's first days in office were marked by a flurry of executive actions.
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Cryptocurrencies have been marked by volatility this year, often seesawing 10 or 15 percent in a single day.
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But his rule has also been marked by a rise in tensions between the diverse country's ethnic groups.
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Nor can a paper ballot be hacked from a server abroad once it is marked by the voter.
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Bitcoin itself has fallen more than 70 percent from its high, marked by volatility on its way down.
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Photo: AmazonThe insidious nature of technology is often marked by silent consequences like addiction, surveillance, and online harassment.
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Emery struggled to control his temper and his career was marked by several confrontations with teammates and coaches.
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If Wood's 20s were marked by changes across every aspect of her life, what do her 30s mean?
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The first half was marked by two things — Illinois' inability to make shots and Iowa's efficiency on offense.
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The world is more prosperous than ever before and yet our societies are marked by uncertainty and unease.
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Venezuela is mired in a deep economic crisis marked by widespread food and medicine shortages and crippling inflation.
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In an election season marked by animosity, egos and insults, this feud transcends media, politics and state lines.
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Stafford said this type of injury is marked by severe pain that can last for weeks to months.
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Kate Spade's second quarter was marked by an unnerving slowdown in comparable sales, which continue to pressure margins.
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Today's one-state reality — marked by settlement expansion, terror and incitement — leads only to further bloodshed and violence.
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But the world is still marked by a combination of high asset prices and high levels of debt.
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Overall, the situation is marked by confusion, even as the administration reportedly draws up a revised executive order.
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We want others to see that our union is marked by achievement, love, friendship, respect, and unconditional support.
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Marked by their bright white appearance, high-color temperature LEDs may distract drivers, particularly those who are elderly.
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His art has become iconic, with an instantly recognizable style marked by bright, saturated colors and swirling skies.
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This year, Brooklyn's Prospect Park is celebrating its 150th birthday, marked by an opening bash this past weekend.
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Today's Trump-Kim Jong-un summit was marked by dozens of moments equally as shameful as this one.
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"Finishing touches to my heart," she said in the caption, marked by a heart and music note emoji.
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Across the Tasman Sea, New Zealand trade was marked by falls in consumer discretionary and health care stocks.
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He's referring to a system of gods slaying gods, of violence beyond human understanding, marked by unfiltered rage.
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Bolin's case was marked by multiple overturned convictions before guilty verdicts stuck in each of the women's deaths.
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A ruling will come amid a presidential campaign that has been marked by harsh Republican rhetoric over immigration.
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For the better part of six decades, Caitlyn Jenner's inner life was marked by shame, confusion, and isolation.
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In keeping with the album's title, Fortune's discography has been marked by adversity with an almost uncanny regularity.
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London IPOs in 2017 already outpace 2016, a year marked by volatility and a string of pulled listings.
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Oi's in-court reorganization, the nation's largest ever, has been marked by disputes between management, bondholders and regulators.
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It was down 16.6 percent in a year marked by Britain's June vote to exit the European Union.
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New Year's 220 was marked by bone-chillingly low, sad temperatures in much of the continental United States.
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Security forces are being redirected to the polls, as Haitian elections have tended to be marked by unrest.
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Microcephaly is a condition marked by a baby's abnormally small head size, which can result in developmental problems.
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And so began a brutal back and forth between the two candidates, marked by petty tweets and insults.
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Any form of hijacking is marked by violently wresting property (whether tangible or intangible) from its legitimate owner.
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Governance at Porsche and Volkswagen was for decades marked by an in-house rivalry between the two clans.
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Karnaca is marked by sharp class divide, hostility to immigrants, corrupt law enforcement, and bodies in the streets.
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Laurer's career, like that of many professional wrestlers, was marked by a series of unhappy twists and turns.
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Even the people-power revolutions of 20 years later were as marked by their differences as their similarities.
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A high level of interest is marked by a score of 9 or 10 on 10-point scale.
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Father Flynn's early years at the church were marked by murders more or less on every nearby block.
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She represented the Maré, [a series of favelas in northern Rio marked by military disputes and organized crime].
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In a career marked by rivalries and unusual techniques, Sakuraba's struggle against the open guard is often overlooked.
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The hearings have been marked by fighting between Democratic and GOP lawmakers and protests in the hearing room.
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The condition, called peripheral artery disease, or P.A.D., is marked by diseased or blocked arteries in the legs.
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The U.S. and China are in a tense trade war marked by escalating tariffs on each other's goods.
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To be sure, Trump's cultural war is largely racial, marked by attacks on Muslim immigrants and black athletes.
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The last two years have been marked by gun violence and mass shootings — shattering families and whole communities.
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The beginning of his second term in 21912 was marked by an inauguration which closely resembled a coronation.
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This White House has been marked by a level of scandal and hypocrisy heretofore unseen in American politics.
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It was the mid-1990s and a turbulent period for the country, marked by bombings and economic reform.
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The last five years were marked by serious reminders that security threats are ever-present and ever-evolving.
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This year—2019—has been marked by the biggest trade war so far in the twenty-first century.
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Just as in the "Great Race for Mercy," the journey forward will be marked by complexity and challenge.
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Beijing's steamy summer months are often marked by dramatic rainstorms, one of which in 2012 killed 37 people.
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Bits Special Section WASHINGTON — United States history is marked by modernization efforts aimed at leaving no one behind.
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Cases of epilepsy, a chronic brain disease marked by recurrent, unprovoked seizures, can range from mild to severe.
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The work depicts a stack of Chinese texts, their pages curling and crumbling and marked by Chinese characters.
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Amid a presidential campaign marked by fears about the country's economic future, the American jobs machine keeps chugging.
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THE TAKEAWAY: It has been a campaign marked by nastiness, insults, lewd comments, false claims and conspiracy theories.
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He worried that racists now felt liberated in a political atmosphere marked by anti-immigrant and nationalist language.
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A healthy relationship is marked by good boundaries and an attachment to a real person you've actually met.
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The trail cutting through Alaska's tundra to the Bering Sea coastline is marked by darkness and steep climbs.
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Sometimes I think the torture of being marked by nature itself is worse than the misery to come.
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This is sure to be a day marked by the Venusian themes of aesthetic beauty, love, and money.
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" A different article that same day described the televised hearings as "marked by Judge Thomas's expressions of disgust.
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Our drive there is marked by ups and down, stress and glee, as orders give way to cancellations.
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Deeply divided along ethnic lines, following independence struggles marked by violence (though it lasted far longer in Zimbabwe).
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For Dalio, that final stage is marked by sharing the knowledge, or "principles," he's obtained through his journey.
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Brown's time with the Raiders was marked by a cryotherapy mishap, helmet debacle, and eventual request for release.
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Puerto Rico is trying to escape a crisis marked by a 45 percent poverty rate and rampant emigration.
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In recent years, he has acknowledged that the couple's marriage had been marked by his violence against her.
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The "one country, two systems" arrangement and the Basic Law, Hong Kong's mini-constitution, are marked by uncertainty.
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Clinton developed a respectful relationship over their decades in Washington, though one marked by slights and awkward rivalries.
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During summer visits home from college, she would play pickup with Azura, their matchups marked by stylistic contrast.
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The days since the agreement have also been marked by confusion over the timetable to reach a deal.
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Typically, the end of the incubation period is marked by the onset of symptoms like coughing and fever.
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The previous year too was marked by uncertainty-inducing events like the U.S.-China trade war and Brexit.
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Protests in previous weeks were also marked by mass detentions, with riot police arresting more than 2,000 people.
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It was instead a collective effort marked by strict rules, but also by discontinuity, paradox, and cognitive disruption.
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It is marked by the fresh flavors of red fruits and herbs and an intriguing touch of funk.
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His first years in office were marked by a barrage of spy convictions, some clearly meant as revenge.
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Unfortunately, it is also a moment of thudding obviousness in an episode otherwise marked by its philosophical nuance.
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Instead, the years since Oslo have been marked by rounds of failed negotiations and escalating cycles of violence.
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Recent cycles have been marked by starkly different voting behavior on the part of first-timers and veterans.
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We write these introductions (we call them billboards) with every anticipated pause built in, marked by an ellipsis.
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Six years later, her body marked by large pale swaths, Deanne is a model for cosmetics company CoverGirl.
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This powerful novel is marked by moving prose, vivid characters and a balance between compassion and merciless realism.
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I had moderate alcohol use disorder, a "chronic relapsing brain disease" marked by loss of control over alcohol.
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But it will also have to navigate a more uncertain international context marked by renewed great power competition.
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The bike path has its own design touch, a centerline marked by white daisies rendered in reflective paint.
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The approach of summer in Berlin is best marked by heated debates about which lake is more perfect.
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The virus causes a disease called COVID-19 that's marked by fevers, coughing, and occasionally severe lung infections.
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Recent history is marked by chains that closed for good after second bankruptcies -- Gymboree and RadioShack, for example.
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His tenure was marked by disputes with the Trump and some of his other advisers over trade policies.
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The anniversary weekend was marked by a much heavier police presence, which also drew criticism from some activists.
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The report wrapped up a yearlong investigation that was marked by infighting between the committee's Democrats and Republicans.
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Her tenure was marked by the demise of the daily press briefing and an acrimonious relationship with reporters.
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It&aposs marked by playful, colorful architecture, and is even home to a Burning Man-like arts festival.
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The game was marked by aggressive head-locks, face-gripping and incessant grappling in front of the goals.
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Beyond partisan divides, the President's ratings continue to be marked by sharp divisions by gender, race and age.
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It was good-humored, confident and marked by determination, not anger, and utterly nonviolent: not a single arrest.
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Khan's childhood would have been marked by privation and conflict—if he had any childhood to speak of.
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The last decade has been marked by a growing embrace of this diversity of grapes, wines and styles.
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The last decade has been marked by a growing embrace of this diversity of grapes, wines and styles.
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The emphasis will be on the group's most outrageous moments, marked by lots of intoxicated excess and infighting.
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Contributing Opinion Writer SÃO PAULO, Brazil — This year has been marked by widespread social convulsion in Latin America.
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That meeting was ultimately marked by widespread discord, and it's unclear whether the raids in Chechnya were discussed.
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They are also marked by low productivity, disease, high infant mortality, lack of potable water and poor infrastructure.
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It's simple, fun, easy to play in short bursts, and marked by a distinctive and surreal deadpan humour.
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The life of Kim Peek, for example, depicted in miniature portrait, was marked by extreme ability and disability.
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She overcame a childhood marked by abandonment and mistreatment and somehow managed not to become bitter or broken.
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Pressure is building on Maduro, a socialist, to resign amid an economic crisis marked by widespread shortages and hyperinflation.
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Whitney Houston's childhood was marked by sexual abuse that haunted her into adulthood, her family and friends have alleged.
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The remains of Angel Castro and his last wife rest in a grave marked by a semicircle of stones.
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The one year anniversary of Gray's death has been marked by stories about how "nothing has changed" in Baltimore.
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The spring of 2016 has been marked by death after death after death on TV. Some have proved controversial.
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Apple's Search Ads appear at the top of App Store pages, marked by a blue tint and "Ad" marker.
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The roundabout marked by Mexico's Angel of Independence was surrounded by protesters calling Trump a fascist, racist and xenophobe.
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And I was allowed to get smarter, more mature from those mistakes rather than be forever marked by them.
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Though the election was marked by negativity and heartache, the sense of camaraderie in the air today is undeniable.
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With disaffection with the entire political class running high, Sunday's vote was also marked by relatively high abstention rates.
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But consumption remains underpinned by a strong labor market, marked by the lowest unemployment rate in nearly 50 years.
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The convention, which began on Monday and runs through Thursday, has been marked by largely peaceful protests so far.
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And Kim already has warned of potential economic difficulty akin to the 1990s, which was marked by widespread famine.
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If successful, it would mark Congo's first democratic transition after decades marked by authoritarian rule, coups and civil war.
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She also developed preeclampsia, a pregnancy complication marked by high blood pressure in someone who doesn't normally experience it.
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The election was marked by a low turnout, amid threats by the Taliban that it would target polling stations.
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The past few years have been marked by regression on almost all criteria, from the judiciary to media freedom.
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"In an environment marked by deflation and low raw material prices, we continued to privilege volume growth," Bulcke said.
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The USMCA was agreed last year after 15 months of sometimes acrimonious negotiations marked by episodes of U.S. brinkmanship.
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I ran past bushes and rock formations marked by little, black smoke clouds flecked with red — seemingly denoting danger.
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Looking at the exterior, the Hiroshima House is marked by an awkward and bulky form that is visually heavy.
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The 2016 Oscars were marked by heated controversy over the stark absence of nominees of color in top categories.
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The virus can cause microcephaly, a birth defect marked by abnormally small head size and developmental problems in babies.
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