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49 Sentences With "meaning anything"

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

At what point does the Michael Kors brand stop meaning anything?
Contemplate for a second, the way distance has seemed to cease meaning anything this year.
The newest technological means of mayhem are cyber, meaning anything involving the electronic transmission of ones and zeros.
" Harington's speech — "When enough people make false promises, words stop meaning anything...lies won't help us in this fight.
Black holes have extremely strong gravity, meaning anything that enters its event horizon, or point of no-return is swallowed up, according to NASA.
Black holes have extremely strong gravity, meaning anything that enters its event horizon, or point of no return, is swallowed up, according to NASA.
Cages used to contain fish are flow-through, meaning anything from the pens - excess feed, fish wastes, and any chemicals - can go directly into natural waters.
FFS, all we want is some fried chicken and to listen to "Flashing Lights" without it meaning anything insidious, but that possibility seems further and further away.
The traditional political categories or identities stopped meaning anything to people at some point and that created this new space for ... whatever the hell we're dealing with now.
The last message finds Jibo announcing the imminent shutdown of it servers, noting that its interactions will soon be limited — likely meaning anything that requires an internet connection.
His whole political appeal has always rested on his capacity for artful ambiguity, for never necessarily meaning anything he says, for amusing and uplifting people, for avoiding hard facts.
" After a moment she adds, "Also there is this shadow – and I say 'shadow' not meaning anything spooky – but there is this ghost that hasn't found its resting place yet.
Even when the cameras seem to be off during the reunion, meaning anything we see isn't put on for television, a teary Tamra begs Vicki to apologize and mean it.
And AT&T is extending its zero-rating policy to the new service, meaning anything you stream through DirecTV now on a mobile device won't count against your data allowance.
" Government aides were also quoted in newspapers as telling Johnson and Gove that any agreement so far was "meaningless" and "not binding," with "full alignment … not meaning anything in EU law.
At last year's festival, I grouped the best work into "cinematic" and "interactive" categories — cinematic usually meaning 360-degree video or animation, and interactive meaning anything that offers some control to participants.
Through the vulnerability, a hacker could take over your account — meaning anything you ever posted on Facebook, or even apps that you connected with using your Facebook account, could have been infiltrated.
The meeting was deemed off the record, meaning anything said falls under a variation of the Las Vegas rule: What happens (or is said) in the meeting absolutely stays in the room.
The bill is widely considered too conservative to pass a narrowly divided Senate, meaning anything the Trump administration could get done with Congress could need a narrower scope, limiting the size of the impact.
But because a jury said Zimmerman's actions were not criminal does not mean that it was asserting that the shooting was right (we should never confuse the verdict with meaning anything other than what it said).
The other thing worth acknowledging is that these are open-back headphones, meaning anything you listen to will be audible to everyone around you and you'll be able to hear everything as if you're not wearing any headphones.
Producers and refiners work in dollars, meaning anything from crude oil sales to rig hire is paid for in that currency, even for transactions between two UK-based companies, while operational costs such as salaries, or local investments in infrastructure are not.
Profits are ripe for the taking: according to data from Northcoast Research, the secondary ticket market—meaning anything outside official channels, including resale sites like StubHub, as well as Craigslist, eBay, and other ticket broker websites—was worth $5 billion dollars as of last year.
From least to most controversial they are: (1) classified or sensitive national security information; (2) information relating to ongoing investigations; (3) grand jury materials (meaning anything obtained by subpoena -- a broad category -- but there's a workaround that Starr used, obtaining permission from a court); and (4) information subject to executive privilege. 5.
Republicans have fewer than seven working days to pass Obamacare repeal If Republicans don't pass Graham-Cassidy by September 30, the end of the fiscal year, they will no long be able use "budget reconciliation" — meaning anything they pass on health care will have to be done on a bipartisan basis, with eight Democrats on board in the Senate.
It was recorded and mixed by Claude Gombard at his Claude King Media Productions recording studio in Johannesburg, during the month of November, 2014. Jonas Gwangwa is featured on trombone and Claude Gombard on guitar, in the piece, which is titled Nomakanjani (meaning "anything and everything").
Racial classifications meant little for this family, and Hosea Easton was later to write against their meaning anything intrinsic.William Cooper Nell, The Colored Patriots of the American Revolution (1855), p. 33; Google Books.James Brewer Stewart, Abolitionist Politics and the Coming of the Civil War (2008), p.
Typical practice for ships was to have two furnaces in each boiler. Smaller boilers might only have one, larger boilers commonly had three. The limitation in boiler size was the amount of work each stoker could do, firing one furnace per man. Larger ships (meaning anything above the smallest) would have many boilers.
Lambertia orbifolia was first formally described in 1964 by Charles Gardner from a specimen collected at the Scott River by Alfred John Gray in January 1945. The description was published in the Journal of the Royal Society of Western Australia. The specific epithet (orbifolia) is from the Latin words orbis meaning anything circular and -folius meaning "-leaved". Two subspecies have been named (Lambertia orbifolia C.A.Gardner subsp.
Japa Yoga, mantra repetition, is one of the easiest and most effective direct approaches to developing a successful meditation practice. When one utilizes a mantra, that mantra represents and invokes in one's system a particular aspect of the "cosmic vibration."Sivananda, S. Japa Yoga. (n.d.) Swami Satchidananda explained that mantras don't have to have personal meaninganything that calms and uplifts the mind when repeated could be considered mantra.
Despite the game not meaning anything in the standings, the Explosion continued their winning ways Tuesday night, defeating the Seattle Mountaineers 133-119 in an International Basketball League game played in front of 2,066 fans at the Everett Events Center. The Explosion was led by Rashaad Powell, Donald Watts and Justin Murray, all with 21 points. Murray added 10 rebounds and five assists, and Powell tacked on four assists.
KXUA's format is totally non commercial. KXUA, in principle, does not play any music that has appeared on the Billboard Hot 100 in the last 50 years, however, for functional reasons the rule typically forbids the top 40 from the past 40 years. Eclectic music, mainly the newest arrivals, plays all day long and genre-specific shows air evenings and weekends including some talk shows, spoken word shows, and old time radio broadcasts. Freeform shows, meaning anything and everything, air mainly after midnight.
Not meaning anything. It was later made into a film of the same name, along with a comic book adaptation by Barbour Christian Comics. The title refers to both the physical hiding place where the ten Boom family hid Jews from the Nazis and also to the Scriptural message found in Psalm 119:114: "Thou art my hiding place and my shield: I hope in thy word....""Literature notes on the Hiding Place". PinkMonkey. 2006. Accessed on May 31 of 2008.
Many theorists, including Alfred Adler, Carl Jung, Karen Horney, Anna Freud, Otto Rank, Erik Erikson, Melanie Klein and Heinz Kohut, built upon Freud's fundamental ideas and often developed their own systems of psychotherapy. These were all later categorized as psychodynamic, meaning anything that involved the psyche's conscious/unconscious influence on external relationships and the self. Sessions tended to number into the hundreds over several years. Behaviorism developed in the 1920s, and behavior modification as a therapy became popularized in the 1950s and 1960s.
"Welsh" was probably used as a pejorative, chauvinistic, and xenophobic dysphemism,Eric Partridge, Words, Words, Words!, 1939, republished as in 2015, p. 8 meaning "anything substandard or vulgar",Kate Burridge, Blooming English: Observations on the Roots, Cultivation and Hybrids of the English Language, , 2004, p. 220 and suggesting that "only people as poor and stupid as the Welsh would eat cheese and call it rabbit",Robert Hendrickson, The Facts on File Encyclopedia of Word and Phrase Origins, 1997, as quoted in Horn, "Spitten image"cf.
Scaphism, also known as the boats, or mistakenly as cyphonism, is an alleged ancient Persian method of execution. The word comes from the Greek , , meaning "anything scooped (or hollowed) out". It entailed trapping the victim between two boats, feeding and covering them with milk and honey, and allowing them to fester and be devoured by insects and other vermin over time. The practice is considered to be a purely literary invention of the Ancient Greek literature as it has never been attested in Ancient Persia (primarily Achaemenid Empire).
The word "bungee" originates from West Country dialect of the English language, meaning "Anything thick and squat", as defined by James Jennings in his book "Observations of Some of the Dialects in The West of England" published 1825. In 1928, the word started to be used for a rubber eraser. The Oxford English Dictionary records early use of the phrase in 1938 relating to launching of gliders using an elasticated cord, and also as "A long nylon-cased rubber band used for securing luggage". "Bungy" is the usual spelling in New Zealand and other countries.
The next day, James and Alisa remove from each family's home all food, drinks, spices and condiments that are non-local -- meaning anything grown or produced outside of the prescribed 100-mile radius. The six families, who were previously unaware that the vast majority of the food in their home was grown and produced well over 100 miles away, are now left with mostly empty cupboards and pantries. Items removed from homes included such staples as bread, milk, eggs, potatoes, rice, pasta, oil, coffee, sugar and salt. The families are left facing their first challenge when trying to prepare breakfast the next morning.
In the creolized form of Chinook Jargon spoken at the Grand Ronde Agency in Oregon, a distinction is made between siwash and sawash. The accent in the latter is on the second syllable, resembling the French original, and is used in Grand Ronde Jargon meaning "anything native or Indian"; by contrast, they consider siwash to be defamatory. The Chinook Jargon term for a native woman is klootchman, an originally Nootka word adopted in regional English to mean a native woman or, as in the Jargon, all women and also anything female. It originated as a compound of Nootka łūts 'female' with the English suffix -man.
He and Donna live beyond their means, trying to maintain appearances. He buys Donna a lovely house and car, none of it meaning anything to himself. At Donna's urging, Colin takes a job with the loan shark, Trevor Riley, whereupon his father, Stanley, cuts him out of his life.Episode 2.6, at 9:59 Colin takes out a life insurance policy with the intention of disappearing and being declared dead, in order for he and Donna to start a new life together. He and Donna each have separate reservations to fly to Turkey with him flying on 8 November 1982 and she following on 10 January 1983.
Whilst attending a funeral in his home district of Qacha's Nek in late 2006, Mosisili gave a speech which quoted a Basotho idiom, "Se sa feleng sea hlola", meaning "anything that does not finish/end is not good". Some believed that he was referring to his term in office and his embattled political party. Armed men attacked Mosisili's residence on April 22, 2009, apparently intending to kill him; three of the attackers, one of whom was reportedly a soldier, were killed by police, and Mosisili was unharmed. Six people appeared before a South African court in July 2009 on charges of helping in the attempt.
In 1900, Meredith Nicholson wrote The Hoosiers, an early attempt to study the etymology of the word as applied to Indiana residents. Jacob Piatt Dunn, longtime secretary of the Indiana Historical Society, published The Word Hoosier, a similar attempt, in 1907. Both chronicled some of the popular and satirical etymologies circulating at the time and focused much of their attention on the use of the word in the Upland South to refer to woodsmen, yokels, and rough people. Dunn traced the word back to the Cumbrian hoozer, meaning anything unusually large, derived from the Old English hoo (as at Sutton Hoo), meaning "high" and "hill".
The Mancunian accent is less dialect heavy than neighbouring Lancashire and Cheshire accents, although words such as owt (meaning 'anything') and nowt (meaning 'nothing') remain part of the Mancunian vocabulary. Particularly strong examples of the accent can be heard spoken by Davy Jones of The Monkees who was born in Openshaw, Mark E. Smith (Salford- born, Prestwich-raised singer with The Fall), the actor John Henshaw (from Ancoats) and Liam and Noel Gallagher from Burnage band Oasis. The actor Caroline Aherne (raised in Wythenshawe) spoke with a softer, slower version of the accent. Stretford-raised Morrissey – like many Mancunians, from an Irish background – has a local accent with a noticeable lilt inherited from his parents.
Donna MitchellFull name printed on boarding pass in Episode 2.6 (Daisy Haggard) is the wife-cum-widow of Colin Mitchell Having grown up lower class, on the same council estate as Trevor RileyEpisode 2.6, 41:59 she and Colin live beyond their means to maintain appearances. Viewing Colin as smarter than Riley, she wants them to share in Riley's wealth; at Donna's urging, Colin takes a job with Riley. Colin buys her a lovely house and car, none of it meaning anything to himself. In order to get away from Riley, she and Colin each have separate reservations to fly to Turkey with him flying on 8 November 1982 and she following on 10 January 1983.
This early work in historical analysis of law and legal thought laid the basis for Unger's contribution to the Critical Legal Studies movement. The movement itself was born in the late 1970s among young legal scholars at Harvard Law School who denounced the theoretical underpinnings of American jurisprudence, legal realism. The participants were committed to shaping society based on a vision of human personality without the hidden interests and class domination of legal institutions. Two tendencies of the movement developed, one, a radical indeterminacy that criticized law as meaning anything we want it to mean, and the other, a neo-Marxist critique that attacked legal thought as an institutional form of capitalism.
Two early works point to the agenda Firrell has explored extensively in mature works. Lucid Between Bouts of Sanity, published in a tri-lingual edition in 1996, is a manifesto in four sections exploring the reductive nature of action, the flaws in language, the difficulty of meaning anything accurately to anyone, and the possibility of using a constrained and reduced language to find a new expressive power. "I felt it must be possible to describe the limits within which all language must operate and so designate a clearly defined space for my own experimentation." Page of Lucid Between Bouts of Sanity, artist's manifesto, trilingual edition, published 1996 The manifesto was published in French, English and Russian and distributed at the ICA Cafe in London and the Literaturnoye Kafe (Saint Petersburg).
A definition of "matter" more fine-scale than the atoms and molecules definition is: matter is made up of what atoms and molecules are made of, meaning anything made of positively charged protons, neutral neutrons, and negatively charged electrons. This definition goes beyond atoms and molecules, however, to include substances made from these building blocks that are not simply atoms or molecules, for example electron beams in an old cathode ray tube television, or white dwarf matter—typically, carbon and oxygen nuclei in a sea of degenerate electrons. At a microscopic level, the constituent "particles" of matter such as protons, neutrons, and electrons obey the laws of quantum mechanics and exhibit wave–particle duality. At an even deeper level, protons and neutrons are made up of quarks and the force fields (gluons) that bind them together, leading to the next definition.
He found initially that the police file on the case and the transcripts of the wrongful death suit brought by Tirella's family were missing from archives where they would normally be kept, but was able to find some of those documents later. They showed that the investigation into Duke had been cursory and compromised by conflicts of interest (shortly before the medical examiner arrived at the hospital, for instance, Duke had hired him as her personal physician, meaning anything she told him was protected by doctor-patient privilege). What Lance was able to find showed that Duke's account of the incident had changed and was inconsistent with the evidence. The parking brake could not have been released the way she said she had, and all Tirella's injuries were above his waist, which suggests he was not trapped between the car and the gates when it broke through.
However, modern x86 processors also (typically) decode and split instructions into dynamic sequences of internally buffered micro-operations, which not only helps execute a larger subset of instructions in a pipelined (overlapping) fashion, but also facilitates more advanced extraction of parallelism out of the code stream, for even higher performance. Contrary to popular simplifications (present also in some academic texts), not all CISCs are microcoded or have "complex" instructions. As CISC became a catch-all term meaning anything that's not a load-store (RISC) architecture, it's not the number of instructions, nor the complexity of the implementation or of the instructions themselves, that define CISC, but the fact that arithmetic instructions also perform memory accesses. Compared to a small 8-bit CISC processor, a RISC floating-point instruction is complex. CISC does not even need to have complex addressing modes; 32 or 64-bit RISC processors may well have more complex addressing modes than small 8-bit CISC processors.

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