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164 Sentences With "minutia"

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

How fans argue constantly with one another about the most irrelevant minutia and whole conversational dick-measuring contests exist to prove whose mental arsenal of said minutia is better stocked.
There's a 10 to 15 minute dive into the minutia.
She's very much involved in the minutia of her company.
Three seasons, 79 episodes and a world of Trekian minutia.
It was a thing that you followed with incredible minutia.
Fans of minutia will enjoy watching the River Bank's LED display.
It's a lot of bureaucracy and minutia, but that's the point—.
She has learned the minutia of farm policy and rural development.
Montana shows the danger of setting strongmen lose to prosecute political minutia.
The reason all of this minutia matters is because of Ant Financial .
Mr. Cryan, a cerebral British banker, is even getting down into the minutia.
The archive is largely the procedural minutia of running campaigns or state parties.
He's too absorbed in minutia for the album's whole to click into focus.
I zoom in and out on dozens of blurry interior photos to compare minutia.
Rather than obsess over the technical minutia, here's what you actually need to know.
Even the minutia of entering an airport together can speak volumes about a couple's relationship.
And, even if the minutia of the arguments are disputed, it's difficult to reject the microbiome's influence.
Still, as a visually impaired reviewer, I felt compelled to share this bit of accessibility minutia. Color.
Winslow is miles ahead of his age in terms of understanding and executing the minutia of team defense.
There is little reason for someone in this part of the world to follow the minutia of American politics.
Rowling is taking all the trivia and minutia she's had in her head and turned it into a narrative.
Large companies exsanguinate cash while their teams spend eons debating the minutia of a pixel in the checkout flow.
At the same time, it's tempting to roll one's eyes at the time and energy exhausted sniping at minutia.
It's around this time that the channel moves away from the random minutia videos and straight into pop culture.
Regulatory lawyers, those steeped in the staggering legal minutia produced by Brexit, have lately gone from drudges to rainmakers.
Instead, they had her interrogated about minutia by a female prosecutor, Rachel Mitchell, brought in to give them cover.
For Trump, getting bogged down in the minutia and absurdity of Warren's various plans would be a fool's errand.
"He's all feelings and philosophy, much more interested in personal expression than in the minutia of historic details," she said.
But if you really want to nerd out, you can obsess over the minutia of this dress on Chanel's website.
With this system, the robots can perform complex tasks without getting bogged down in the minutia required to complete them.
Jimmy Carter was notoriously consumed with minutia, down to personally approving all requests to use the White House tennis court.
Sometimes you fall into the mundane of it all, the everyday minutia, and it's hard to see the big picture.
The video's popularity is not entirely thanks to the viewers who normally follow the everyday minutia of their favorite YouTubers.
The tech press quickly picked apart the technical minutia of such a proposal, debating whether Musk's idea was technologically possible.
Nitpicking minutia is one thing (and frankly, part of Comic-Con's charm), while dealing with abusive jerks is entirely another.
The book frequently gets bogged down with lengthy explanations on the minutia of the castle and the villages surrounding it.
To be clear: No, we don't need another docuseries that takes apart the minutia of the Nicole Brown/Ron Goldman murders.
But it's also indicative of the minutia in which "Luke Cage" indulges in filling (and at times padding) out its order.
And you're like, "Oh there is another world out there," and it's really ... KS: You're caught up in this small minutia.
Monarchy stans desperate to follow the daily minutia of Markle's life must now rely on curated updates from Kensington Palace's social team.
As fiction writers, we're not expected to be well versed in writing about power, the minutia, subtlety, complexity of it, the heartache.
They stopped by Buzzfeed to play a round of Never Have I Ever that, confusingly, didn't immediately devolve into sexual minutia. Bizarre.
Telling the internet about the minutia of your daily life professionally may have to wait until after Google's inevitable anti-trust lawsuit.[Bloomberg]
Those are the kinds of moments that Shrum believes matter much more to debate success than filling the candidate's brain with policy minutia.
What Nissan calls the "Road to Race to Road" process focuses on the minutia of energy efficiency, says global motorsports director Michael Carcamo.
In Togetherness, and in a lot of your roles, you play a guy dealing with the minutia of life as a thirty-something.
Nostalgia is only heightened when you're homesick, which might explain my preoccupation with the minutia of Australian life of the 1970s and '19703s.
You want to break it open and have the minutia of another person's life spill out in emails, sexts, passwords and Tinder conversations.
Of course, the minutia of the warp is vastly more complicated in explanation and execution, and MagicScrumpy's walkthrough is incredibly detailed in both regards.
The minutia of the campaign, including many stories that political reporters cover for days or even weeks, almost never detectably effect the election result.
Unlike Apple's widely anticipated press conferences, Google's events generally draw a geek audience that's interested in the minutia of smartphone development and Android updates.
On the red carpet, it's common for attendees to list off the minutia of their ensembles to whichever pre-show host is working the broadcast.
But a true Fortnite world cup could reach an entirely different audience, one that isn't as tuned into the minutia of the battle royale game.
What this meansWe've included much of the minutia in this case because a trial and investigation as convoluted and twisting as this one requires it.
"Keepin' It 1600," the podcast Mr. Favreau hosts with Dan Pfeiffer, another former Obama adviser, is a combination wonkfest on election minutia and uncensored forum.
And then you stand there in your jiggle and wobble and decay and jabber on about all the apocalyptic minutia your crazy ass is clocking.
This kind of administrative minutia has never been Trump's strong suit (see the testing fiasco) and it seems very unlikely that he'll take this advice.
At the same time, debates over specific policies and approaches, like Medicare for all, have become unmoored from reality, focused on hypothetical questions and minutia.
Because they don't want presidents getting — I understand they don't want presidents getting tangled up in minutia; they want a president to run the country.
Implementing FRStat also doesn't make fingerprint examiners obsolete, or take away their jobs, Reed stressed—they still compare prints, analyze minutia, and come to a decision.
Flying is where Chui finds his peace—it's an expensive way for him to switch off his brain and enjoy the minutia of first-class service.
It's my hope that this column will be a way to enjoy both the big themes and the minutia of the baseball season, week by week.
All this got me thinking about the minutia of how exactly the Friends cast afforded their lives, and more importantly, what they did for a living.
But Trump has stepped in and scooped up many of the voters who want to burn Washington to the ground and aren't as interested in policy minutia.
The hockey minutia conjures Lemire's popular Essex County, but I was also reminded of deceased Saskatchewan-born player Derek Boogaard, and not just for his given name.
To the casual observer of politics, the details of what went awry for the Trump campaign in Colorado Springs might seem like an irrelevant debate over minutia.
Board a train with a group of Germans and one will soon start grumbling about some minutia: the temperature, the disorderly storage of luggage, a brief delay.
Today, the public would unquestionably devote a far higher level of scrutiny to the day-to-day minutia of a project like these, which center neo-Nazis.
And they have lashed out at the media for covering what they describe as trivial political minutia rather than the national security implications of the hacked emails.
And Clinton's allies fumed at the media's coverage of the leaked emails, saying the focus has been on trivial political minutia rather than the national security implications.
Sources told the Times that the files on Trump are mostly older stories, involving Trump's marital woes, lawsuits or minutia, such as allegations of cheating at golf.
A lot of bands make that kind of record, but this one I think gives a lot of insight into the minutia of being in a band.
But on the other side, they have to deal with the regulatory state and all the minutia that comes with running any business in the 21st century.
Mayor Bill de Blasio has a reputation for being inattentive to the minutia of governing New York City, favoring broad policy initiatives to nuts-and-bolts metrics.
But Bob Parr, Mr. Incredible's secret identity, is bored with the minutia of life in suburbia, and moonlights as a hero, listening to the police scanner after dark.
She'll remind you to care about even the minutia of a friend's day, to be invested in what makes them happy and to enjoy a good man-chat.
Many times, the big stories requiring context and reporting involve the legislative process, and the Albany press corps are experts at condensing this super boring but important minutia.
Over the next six years, it would share thousands of images, facts, sprites, and other obscure minutia from the world of Mario, ranging from fascinating to downright creepy.
It's certainly the genesis of the famous level of detail in her forecasts, her desire to reach each of her readers with the minutia she believes they deserve.
They're ultra-busy filming and shooting ad campaigns and walking red carpets and giving all of us something to talk about beyond the minutia of our own daily existences.
Sanford, who still hasn't decided if he will back his party's presumptive nominee, acknowledged Trump has successfully connected with voters even as he glosses over the minutia of governing.
Traditionally, major Sims games let you live out the minutia of a character's life, whether that's choosing how to decorate your house or what kind of career you'll pursue.
"You know, when we kind of get caught up in the minutia, the details that make us different, I think there are two ways of seeing that," he said.
As I noted earlier, the Ray isn't for someone that wants to track every minutia of their workout, nor is it designed to be a smartwatch type of gadget.
It includes elements of tic tac toe, true or false, and trivia that mixes pop culture minutia like "Is Amber Rose's butt real?" with serious inquiries about U.S. history.
From the bureaucratic minutia to the deep introspection, submitting a college application is possibly the biggest achievement of your kid's life to date — assuming you are letting them lead.
For anyone who appreciates object history, the museum is a full afternoon of fun parsing through the minutia of spy days past, with or without the help of a guide.
This visual minutia might seem inconsequential, but Google developed its system from the ground up to ensure future designers will be able to easily update the emoji as they change.
The negative energy she identified, which she explained could be my energy or that of someone close to me which I had absorbed, was an obsession with cleanliness or minutia.
Of course, not every long run ends in a startup conceptualized, but it can free you from concentrating on the minutia of building your business long enough to think big.
"Getting lost in the minutia of this, I think, confuses voters and is a waste of time," Durbin said of the Democrat-on-Democrat attacks on competing health care ideas.
The Planet 13 Superstore is being built remarkably close to the Strip—about a 10 minute walk—but they can't construct on the Strip because of some lingering legal minutia.
At 203 years old, he still swims through basketball minutia, consuming at least four games' worth of film each night in order to unveil opposing player tendencies, strengths, and weaknesses.
The Centrocaspian Dictatorship is the sort of random historical minutia that's rarely included in big-picture storytelling, and that's what Neidell's YouTube documentary series "The Great War" tries to address.
The network was ideally equipped to feed the seemingly endless public appetite for even the tiniest morsel of Simpson minutia, prompting better-known outlets like CNN to mimic Court TV's efforts.
But "Yellowstone," a modern-day western airing on Paramount Network, gets bogged down in minutia and politics, and generally winds up being about as exciting as watching a zoning-commission meeting.
The chief of staff is the president's gatekeeper; his role is to push away the distractions and minutia to allow the president to focus clearly on the task at hand. Gen.
Miller does an amazing job illustrating the minutia of day to day life in a way that anyone who has awkwardly tried to make conversation with a bank teller can connect to.
The books in his series contain real moments from his time in the service, and he manages to distill the minutia of military culture into an accessible way that feels completely real.
Since publishing a story on this topic just yesterday, I've received hundreds of comments via tweets, DMs, and emails from fans arguing about the minutia of what exactly has drawn their anger.
Last year, my favorite example of calm tech was Minutia, an art project turned photo app that limits the amount of time you can interact with it to one minute every day.
If nothing else, the show should be a boon to recappers and websites that parse the minutia of such shows -- a cottage industry that didn't exist when the program premiered on ABC.
I write about the things that bother me, and one of the things that bothers me is how we're continually dehumanized by the minutia and the pettiness of the world around us.
The universal translator, the substitution cipher language or just having everyone speak English: These are much more attractive options for a studio that doesn't want to bog itself down in unnecessary minutia.
The minutia of the intense debates can be found in the archives of the Talk page, where users can each make a series of points, then rebuttals with more and more indentations.
The fleeting data they are collecting — the minutia of what is happening in the game — is the lifeblood of sports betting, perhaps the most crucial and valuable element of the entire industry.
Perhaps understandably for a documentary about documentaries, parts of "Five Came Back" can get a bit wonky, veering into the minutia of the technical innovations used to obtain some of the war footage.
It seemed early on that this is less an exercise than a tale, so I found myself letting some of the minutia wash by without worrying too much about whether they were breadcrumbs.
And while it's tempting to only talk about Iranian missiles and Mexico border walls, it's crucial to not overlook the minutia of the Senate Banking Subcommittee on Securities, Insurance, and Investment right now.
Spending has gone to drones, advanced facial recognition cameras, and other digital surveillance systems that track the minutia of what Xinjiang's Uyghur population read, share in private messages, or who they speak with.
The newest iterations build on that with an even greater range of customizable options, adding more sensor and button layout options, along with new Flux software to manage the minutia of mouse settings.
For the most part it's classic Glass, commenting with gusto on the minutia of life with the occasional input from the band to punctuate jokes or add a little flair to a story.
This passion for esoteric minutia will delight a certain kind of reader — and if you enjoy keeping track of the distinctions between the Houses of Westeros, you might be that kind of reader.
He's become a master at using the minutia of everyday life as a stepping stone for profoundly ironic or shockingly poignant observations on how we either stay alive or fail to do so.
The minutia: Though the four carriers worked together on the app, none of the authentication data is shared between companies – a hypothetical rogue employee at T-Mobile couldn't access an AT&T customer's information.
I asked about the meme stuff, the Wolf Eyes Instagram that posts endless snark about impossibly obscure sub-culture minutia, and nobody had the slightest interest in it being included in the festival's narrative.
I'm always worried at a new place that too much of my time is going to be spent explaining how the excruciating minutia of it works, and why it should work that way always.
Still, despite the morning show's comedic overtones, the trio frequently digress into musical minutia, with recent topics including 1960s bubblegum popster Tommy Roe and country music star Randy Travis, along with plenty of Beatles lore.
What the end game is there is still a mystery, as the episode dives into the minutia of the FBI chase for the rest of the episode -- talk about an agency missing the big picture.
That bonus material ranged from relative minutia (X-Wings gearing up for light speed) to fan catnip (Kylo Ren searching the empty Millennium Falcon on Starkiller Base), but it was still a pared-down selection.
There is a great deal of racism on the right, obviously, yet the tunnel-vision focus on the comparative minutia of the offensive rhetoric of a crowd of nobodies distracts us from the getaway car.
Basically the history of the McCarthy era — the paranoia, the agency's sinister yet amateur machinations, local politics, informants, the suppression of civil rights — is thrown at you as raw, inchoate data, as enveloping, exasperating minutia.
Also, the real breakthrough here would be if Misty can do successful mapping of its environments, so developers can write simple navigation code like, "Go from this room to that room," instead of worrying about minutia.
In a typical fighting game, players memorize the move-set of their favorite characters, learn the hard counters and combos of that character, and then dive into the minutia of memorizing the frames of each animation.
At every turn, She Who Tells a Story emphasizes the importance of even the most mundane minutia of womanhood, while grounding the larger, more easily abstracted questions of international conflict in the realities of lived experience.
Robert Caro has been knee-deep in the day-by-day minutia of the 260s for years, ever since Lyndon B. Johnson crossed the decade's threshold in the fourth installment of Mr. Caro's mammoth, multivolume biography.
The 2012 Obama-Romney MOU is typical; at 19923 pages, it covers minutia like the specific placement of the podiums: "equally canted toward the center of the stage" at an angle to be approved by the campaigns.
Eventually it was Daugherty's sometimes-annoying habit of geeking out on the minutia of county government, coupled with a great affinity for "The Office," which inspired the ad campaign that pushed the limits of traditional political advertising.
The minutia of the investigation have become so engrained in the President's day-to-day patter, one sometimes forgets how complicated the whole thing was -- or the revelations that have been discovered as part of Mueller's probe.
I found in sleeping that the minutia you're able to achieve with the adjustments go a long way in alleviating pain and pressure — as it turns out, I do well with my legs and head just barely elevated.
"He and Jack Newfield were obsessed with the minutia of who donated money and what they got in return," said William Bastone, who started at The Voice in 1985 as an intern to Barrett and now runs thesmokinggun.com.
Obviously, it's up to companies to treat their employees like human beings, but there's no reason for us as consumers to make it harder for them to do that by clogging up their inboxes all day with minutia.
There's obviously ample affection for the comics in Edlund's world -- a trait common to any good parody -- but the approach is broad enough that one needn't be steeped in superhero minutia to appreciate the gags, though that surely helps.
The rest of the industry has gotten used to following his coverage of Apple, and taking his endless stories on the minutia of what is happening inside Cupertino's product almost like an official preview of the change log to come.
Every artist must grapple, at times, with the inadequacy of a single image to capture a larger truth, but the discipline, focus, and spontaneity apparent in Kallianiotis's portraits of Pennsylvania's small towns and cities capture something monumental in life's minutia.
There's the refusal to look me in the eye; directing all decision-making questions to the male colleague in the room, even when I hold a senior title or position; and small-minded questions or comments directed at me about domesticity or minutia.
As companies like Facebook and Google have swelled with all the minutia of our daily lives — our likes, our searches, our calendar invites — there is increasing awareness of the risks to our privacy as these large data guzzlers suck up our digital selves.
For those of us not well-versed in the minutia of tile and trim and fixtures (which, let's be real, is most of us), it's a beyond intimidating task, compounded by the fact that contractors can be non-communicative at best and dishonest at worst.
The idea seems a little far out there, but it's an area where a number of companies today are competing –  whether that's bots that will remember the minutia of our day-to-day lives, or even tools to augment our human intelligence with computing power.
A TV show is an excruciating level of minutia that you have to go down to in order to make it never bump for the audience, because otherwise, the scene in the finale where June goes to see her daughter doesn't mean anything to you.
The south wall is a grid of plastic drawers with the sticker labels, each filled with the minutia of dressing someone for a photograph: belts, underwear, thongs, hosiery, white T-shirts, unitards, leggings, Spanx, and socks from tube to knee-high to ankle to sport.
So you have this paradigm shift, where now people want to go to where the art is being made, and if cinema is doing big, pulpy, popcorn spectacles, but TV is getting into the minutia of the form, and building characters, then people will flock to that.
Team fight outcomes are the biggest focus of competitive Overwatch broadcasts right now, but with a little extra information on the screen, viewers and casters can dive into the minutia, examining exact strategies that make the professionals so good at the game and so interesting to watch.
I'm not going to break down the minutia of the drama currently unfolding in and around Team 10, the group of prominent YouTubers helmed by Jake Paul, but just know that it will all be worth it if it results in a biopic starring John Early.
Billing specialists, which can cost up to $200 per hour or take up to 35 percent of any savings they find, dig into the minutia of medical invoices to make sure you were not overcharged and don't pay anything that should be covered by your insurance.
There's some songs that are about basically being on the other end of my twenties and there's another song called "Ground Work," which is about the minutia and wheel-spinning that touring can be a little bit—especially with the Gamblers, we were going pretty hard.
Are you guys having that discussion internally at CNN about how you might cover this election differently, and not just because there's 20 people, but really thinking through how you're gonna deliver what's important about what they're doing and saying versus the day-to-day minutia?
What he means is that Packet allows you to rent space in its global network of data centers and handle all the logistics of installing and monitoring hardware boxes, much as WeWork allows companies to rent real estate while it handles the minutia like resetting the coffee filter.
We rented some longer focal length Master Primes, as well as our favorite Master Prime 100mm macro lens— which took the gallium setup to another level because we were able to focus on the very interesting minutia during the audio-driven experiments and really create some otherworldly shots.
The Maes came first (1655, as opposed to Vermeer's 1670), and offers a full inventory of minutia in the life of the lacemaker, depicting her tools, her earnings (a money bag hangs under the shelf), the drab little desk at which she sits — even a calendar, marking the specific day.
By drilling down into the minutia of Duchamp's role(s) as administrator, archivist, art advisor, curator, publicist, reproduction maker, and marketing art salesman, Filipovic (the current director and chief curator of the Kunsthalle Basel) manages to both contradict and deepen Duchamp's indispensable dandyism, transferring his general bohemian ideals from attitude into work.
Many of those working in America's spas and massage parlors are Asian immigrants, and when we dive into the minutia and complexities of their lives, we find systemic racism compounded by stigmatization and victim-blaming used against these community members to make them seem less worthy of dignity and respect than other immigrants.
This isn't the first time we've seen anthologies that delve into the minutia of the Star Wars universe: the Tales anthology series edited by Kevin J. Anderson went into the background of scenes like Mos Eisley Cantina and Jabba's Palace, fleshing out minor background characters, and providing a wealth of cool details about those characters.
He divides his time between organizing the Muza5k, an annual marathon that visits eight different pizzerias to uncover the city's best slice of mozzarella, and obsessively visiting the city's pizzerias to collect anecdotes and discuss the minutia of pizza culture for a book that will recount its story and the compulsive fanaticism pizza elicits here.
Note that the published valuations are largely irrelevant in terms of market behavior, as distinct from the demands of green-eyeshade accounting minutia, because no one should believe that the investment community fails to recognize that changes in prices yield up-and-down movements in the quantity of reserves that can be produced profitably.
Moreover, the way-inside Batman jokes -- including a litany of gags about earlier movies, such as a character referencing "that time with the parade and the Prince music" -- will fly over the heads of kids, while the visual barrage risks becoming tedious for adults, or at least, those who aren't extremely well versed in DC Comics minutia.
Berry is an admitted superfan of the show, and with only three weeks to build the space and knowing how passionate SBTB fans are about the minutia, wanted to make sure every aspect of the experience was perfect: He even made the waitstaff pass a SBTB trivia test, knowing they might get random questions about the series from patrons.
The only thing missing is an appearance from everyone's favorite bodyguard, Brock Samson, so here's a compilation of his best moments: Known for its blend of pop culture minutia, dark humor, and on-the-nose parody, Christopher McCulloch's satire of comic book heroes and villains has been an Adult Swim mainstay over the last 15 years.
Just as one might look at the Earth — either from a distance so far that the whole is visible but details utterly undetectable, or close enough to see only some of the minutia that make the whole so breathtakingly beautiful — one can only look at music with either a total inattention to detail or a dramatically limited scope.
They reveal a City Hall in regular contact with public relations firms over the minutia of press strategy: whether to remove a fence to make a better backdrop for an event in Harlem; a lengthy discussion of how to discredit rival cities in a bid to host the Democratic National Convention in Brooklyn; whether to solicit a politician to speak with a reporter.
"I think we got to a point where we were stressing out so much about all the minutia that it just became not fun anymore," says Anka, noting that going from an upstart band to one playing Riot Fest in the span of just a few short years can make it so you're never enjoying your successes, just racking them up.
The U.S. Department of Justice sued to block the deal this past November, and now after long last, the antitrust trial that will determine the deal's fate is about to start tomorrow with opening statements, following a snow delay today in Washington, DC. This case is sprawling — the Justice Department intends to present 519 exhibits already — and much of the case will hinge on technical legal minutia.
Despite the fact that obsessing over relationship minutiae seems like a holdover from a simpler time (2007 was also a year when people blogged about minutia for fun!), a quick survey among acquaintances revealed that yes, sudden repulsion still happens to people, including "good people" who don't usually have dirtbag knee-jerky reactions to things that happen around them (and who wouldn't "next" someone unless they had a good reason).
Some reporters, including Newsweek's Kurt Eichenwald and Paul Singer at USA Today, have now documented an extensive trail of Trump's dubious record of transparency when it comes to lawsuits against him: The overwhelming focus on the complicated minutia of Clinton's server has created the impression that while Trump may have his outright sexism and a slew of sexual assault accusations, Clinton is much more secretive and willing to go to great lengths to keep her actions private.

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