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46 Sentences With "namechecks"

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

A closer competitor (in terms of approach) which he namechecks is TC Disrupt battlefield alum Digital Genius.
She namechecks the former Black Panther and current prison abolitionist Angela Davis without actually engaging with her ideas.
In terms of main competitors at this point, Taslaq namechecks Materialise and Autodesk — including the latter's recent acquisition, Netfabb.
Rounding out the mix is "yì by Jereme Leung," a restaurant that namechecks the Singaporean master of modern Chinese.
Like many of the contemporaries he namechecks, Jimi's sound is loosely defined and cinematic, a product of being online and waywardly soaking up culture.
Mr Cruz demonstrates little more interest in foreign alliances than he does in domestic ones; the only foreign leader he namechecks approvingly is Binyamin Netanyahu.
But to an artist who namechecks her biggest influences as Eminem, Yelawolf, Rihanna, and Skylar Grey, she's ebbing and flowing into whatever genre she's feeling.
"Drink the long draught, Dan …" This hopped-up soccer anthem namechecks Manchester pubs, the announcer for "Match of the Day" and the star player George Best.
"This Samsung telephone — we don't call it telephone" Apple and Sony get namechecks, but Samsung is the only manufacturer to have named devices featured in the track.
As we chat, he namechecks how well ORPHGANG's Afronaut Zu has done, doing lead vocals for Rudimental on tour, or rapper Intalekt and Gee3's Billy Dukes project.
" Clinton namechecks Timothy Crouse's nonfiction book about the 1972 election: "During the 1972 presidential campaign, the reporters who traveled with the candidates were called the boys on the bus.
While their music takes sonic cues from scenes like the psychedelic and soul movements of the 60s, the band also namechecks D'Angelo, Radiohead and Tame Impala as contemporary influences.
No one namechecks her in song lyrics, she isn't taught in MFA courses, and there are no paintings of her except for a few crudely drawn sketches that float around the outer edges of the internet.
While the other artists he namechecks became very famous very young, Healy's formative years involved loving The Get Up Kids and watching metalcore bands like Poison the Well at the now-shuttered Jabez Clegg in Manchester.
Set poolside, on the periphery of the Los Angeles art scene, the play (a coproduction from the New Group and the Vineyard Theater) namechecks Gucci sunglasses, an Hermès Birkin bag, a Tiffany bracelet — items Off Broadway budgets won't cover.
Here's a look at the books she namechecks: Clinton references several classic dystopian novels, which became bestsellers again during the Trump Administration: Aldous Huxley's "Brave New World," George Orwell's "1984" and Margaret Atwood's "The Handmaid's Tale," which was recently turned into a Hulu series.
The scene with Wally Brando (Michael Cera), like so many this season, opens like Pandora's box: it's a nod at the impossibly young, beautiful Brando in the 1953 film "The Wild One"; it namechecks Brando's close friend, Wally Cox; and invokes the old James Hurley, the pouter in a leather jacket who rode through season one and two on a Harley.
It's a heavy but enlightening read, with a strong focus on the power of femaleness in the face of the destructive and specifically male forces that feel prevalent in the world right now, and can be seen in full below: In the powerful piece, she namechecks Trump, religion, and solid binaries as destructive forces in the world, instead highlighting the creative power of women and the feminine as positive influences on the world.
The breakdown also namechecks singer Beyoncé and actress Lucy Liu. The song closes by repeating the chorus and then gradually fading out.
The album opener "Picture Show" (which features Tom Petty on background vocals) reflects Prine's lifelong love of movies and namechecks John Garfield, James Dean, and Montgomery Clift, while "It's a Big Old Goofy World" was inspired by his mother Verna's love of crossword puzzles.
Sleepy Eyed is a 1995 album by Buffalo Tom. The band was looking to move away from the polished sound of their previous album in favor of a more stripped- down, live-sounding approach. The subtitle of "Twenty-Points" namechecks The Ballad of Sexual Dependency, by Nan Goldin.
Denim on Ice is the second album by Denim. It was released in 1996. The band went on their first tour supporting Pulp on their stadium tour. The song "The Great Pub Rock Revival" jokingly namechecks musician Wreckless Eric, who in retaliation penned a scathing response with his group The Hitsville House Band, entitled "Lawrence of Arabia on Ice".
Several Goldie Lookin Chain songs have been written about him. These include "The Maggot" (Greatest Hits); based on the tune of "You've Got to Pick a Pocket or Two" from the musical Oliver! and "Maneater" by Hall & Oates together with a Steeleye Span hook. "The Maggot" also namechecks Fagin, Dick Turpin, Penelope Keith and Kylie Minogue and features fellow GLC member Mystikal.
"Taxi Driver" is a song by Gym Class Heroes. The song was first released on The Papercut EP, but was also included on the full-length and much more widely released The Papercut Chronicles. In the song's lyrics, frontman Travis McCoy namechecks 26 other bands and artists that Gym Class Heroes enjoy. "Taxi Driver" was the very first video produced for Gym Class Heroes.
The next track "Octavo Día" is a rock-oriented song that refers to God coming to Earth after finishing his work and discovering everything to be in ruins, and decides to quit his job and become a normal man. She also namechecks Bill Clinton and Michael Jackson. Seventh song "Que Vuelvas" is another song inspired by her relationship with Ríos. It was musically compared to Shakira's past single "Estoy Aquí" (1996).
"Eject→Out" is a single by The Mad Capsule Markets. The non-album single features the melodic punk sound which was later apparent on the Park album. The song is noted for having bizarre lyrics (vocalist Kyono refers to himself as variety of things and namechecks Albert Einstein and Adolf Hitler). The album came in a special box packaging, which was used for the "Government Wall" single and later the "Walk!" single.
However, "Castillian Blue" and "Are You Happy?" have a blues guitar sound, with the former sounding dark and brooding and the latter featuring a far more upbeat pop/soul/blues sound. The drum sound throughout most of the album is also of a heavy nature. "Penelope Please" namechecks The Pretenders frontwoman singer/guitarist Chrissie Hynde in the chorus: "You will still be home in time, to watch The Pops, featuring Chrissie Hynde".
It features on the album The Official Album of the 2002 FIFA World Cup, released by Epic Records. The song's lyrics are about the England football team of the time, featuring references to their victory at the World Cup 1966 at their attempts to repeat that success since. It also namechecks the 2002 England Football Team by surname. The single was re released digitally in May 2010, to coincide with the World Cup 2010.
Another song, "Maggot at Midnight" (from Safe as Fuck), namechecks (Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, Nosferatu, The Crystal Maze, Michael Jackson and Jackson's song "Thriller") and features a sample from the television show 'Danger Mouse'. Another short track he features on is called "Maggot's Stand- Up" where Maggot does a short stand-up comic style set; it mostly features scatological references. Maggot also identifies himself as The Hip Hop Vampire, which is one of his aliases.
During his career, which was curtailed by the reduction in racing brought about by the First World War, he rode a total of 843 winners. Trigg made rides in the UK and occasionally in Ireland during the War, and retired from racing in 1918. A music hall song, Jean Loves All the Jockeys, written in 1913 by Fred Godfrey and Billy Williams, and sung by Williams, namechecks Charlie Trigg among a dozen or so renowned jockeys of the day.
The other ballgoers in the scene wear strange and grotesque, but also elaborate and formal costumes and masks. The event's title namechecks Labyrinth's main antagonist, Jareth, the Goblin King. TravelPulse, a publication of TravAlianceMedia, characterized the ball in 2015 as one of five "must-see" masquerade balls around the world, along with the Carnival of Venice, the Surva International Festival of Masquerade in Pernik, Bulgaria, the Fancy Dress Festival of Ghana, and the Grand Masked Ball of Kamel Ouali held in France.
The song is an album track on the Human League's Dare album, recorded at Genetic Studios in the summer of 1981. It was produced by Martin Rushent. Often informally abbreviated TTDAMO, the song is a tribute to the simple pleasures in life which are then juxtaposed against a greater ambition. Philip Oakey namechecks some of his and Philip Adrian Wright's favourite things, an eclectic list from ice cream to Norman Wisdom and the names of the band members of Ramones.
The song references alcohol and cannabis in its lyrics. M.I.A. namechecks several brands of alcohol, notably Chivas Regal, owned by Seagram, which in turn belonged to her then-fiancé Benjamin Bronfman's family. The song was released worldwide as a digital download, under license to XL Recordings and N.E.E.T. Recordings, on 16 June 2010 as the fourth single from the album. The 'Lost My Fone Out wiv Nicki Minaj Remix' of the song was made available in July 2010, and features a guest verse by Nicki Minaj.
The song starts with the sound of a vibraphone, chiming the first eight notes from the Westminster Quarters, before the rhythm begins. The lyric namechecks several famous people, between friends and relatives of McCartney who, without a justified reason, knock on the door or ring the bell of his house and he exclaims "Let 'Em In". Famous people as well as McCartney's paternal aunt Gin and his brother Michael, and Linda McCartney's brother John. Phil and Don Everly (known as the Everly Brothers) are named, along with Martin Luther.
The album Marvin, Welch & Farrar (1971), by the British-Australian band of the same name, contains a track named after Don's place of birth, "Brownie Kentucky".. The 1976 single "Let 'Em In" by Paul McCartney and Wings namechecks "Phil and Don" Everly. Jeff Lynne recorded a version of "So Sad" for his 2012 album release Long Wave. Deerhunter's "Basement Scene" "intentionally nods to the Everly Brothers' 'All I Have To Do Is Dream'". Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers recorded a studio version of the Brothers' "Stories We Could Tell" for their Anthology.
The new version of the song became part of M People's signature dance sound and was more typical of their sound in contrast to the softer more serious side of the band as heard on "Search for the Hero"; dancey piano chords, house beats and layers of synths. Lyrically, Heather sings about the arranged meeting with a lover away from everything else. She also namechecks singers Patti Smith ("Patti sang horses") and Stevie Wonder ("Stevie got uptight"). The newer version of this single also features a funky saxophone break in the middle-eight and also during the choruses.
Michael Hogan wrote in The Daily Telegraph: > A counterpoint to Waldemar Januszczak's Ugly Beauty treatise last week, > which insisted that beauty exists in contemporary art if you know where to > look, Scruton's view is much more conservative. ... En route, Scruton > namechecks many of the same modern artists as Januszczak: Carl Andre's > bricks, the kitsch of Jeff Koons and the Young British Artist movement. His > is a passionate argument, eloquently put, if perhaps a reactionary one. Left wing leaning Tim Dowling of The Guardian wrote: > [Scruton's] precis of the history of theories about beauty, from Plato to > Kant, only served to soften his case.
Caroli Fitzgeofridi affaniae, sive, Epigrammatum libri tres, ejusdem cenotaphia, 1601 Affaniae is a non-classical Latin word meaning "trivial, trashy talk", and the epigrams in Fitzgeoffrey's book, generally light in tone, refer to a wide range of his neighbours in Cornwall, friends in Oxford and contemporary writers whose work he admired. It is this abundance of references to Elizabethan writers which chiefly makes his work interesting today. Significant authors he namechecks include Thomas Nashe, Ben Jonson, Michael Drayton, Edmund Spenser, Sir Philip Sidney, George Chapman, William Camden, Barnabe Barnes, John Marston, Joseph Hall and Mary Sidney. Other epigrams suggest the young Fitzgeoffrey was as interested in the work of Continental humanist authors as he was in native English writers.
" It was released as the album's third single, and reached a peak of 43 on the UK Singles Chart. It was the last Dogs Die in Hot Cars single to chart. The third song and second single from the album is titled "I Love You 'Cause I Have To." "Celebrity Sanctum", both the fourth track and fourth single from the album, according to Gareth Dobson of Drowned in Sound, is "a song about vicarious love and image obsession." Dobson called the song, which namechecks celebrities such as Lucy Liu and Catherine Zeta-Jones, "a moving sense of ennui rather than attempting to play it for laughs", whilst The Age said that "[Cameron is] losing himself in the thrall of icon obsession.
"Lover", the title track, is a slow, whimsical, reverb-soaked country and indie folk ballad with waltz tempo, vintage instrumentals, and romantic lyrics that reference traditional marriage vows; it has been compared to Mazzy Star's "Fade into You". In the fourth track, "The Man", Swift imagines the media's treatment of her if she were a man, over a production featuring flashy harmonies, murky synths, and rumbling beats. The song is a commentary on patriarchy and sexist double standards that women experience, and namechecks actor Leonardo DiCaprio. "The Archer" is a vulnerable synth-pop, dream pop, and alternative ballad with a slow groove, artful lyrics and an 80s sensibility, building a tense production with kick drum thumps, reaching a "feverish" climax as it progresses.
"Cold War Country Blues" namechecks more of Kennedy's boyhood heroes, Hank Williams, Elvis Presley, John F. Kennedy and Apollo 8 astronaut Jim Lovell. Critic Nic Oliver calls the song, "pure Hank Williams honky-tonk, all toe-tapping melody and acoustic guitar". The song "Brave Captain" is dedicated to the Apollo 8 crew and on "The Heart of Universal Love", Kennedy imagines the earth as seen from the view of an astronaut standing on the moon and looking up at the illuminated planet in the darkness of space. "The Ballad of Neil Armstrong" celebrates Apollo 11's mission commander Neil Armstrong and the song "Irish Moon" is Kennedy's ode to another of the three astronauts, Michael Collins, who piloted the spacecraft as the other two astronauts landed on the moon.
The group form part of an era known as Cool Cymru for the popularity of Welsh music and arts internationally in that period. GLC's first UK chart entry was "Half Man Half Machine", which reached the Top 40 in the UK Singles Chart. When group member Rhys Hutchings was phoned by BBC chart presenter Wes on the Official Chart Show to be informed of this, Xain informed the rest of the band that they had reached number 1, much to the shock of the DJ. "Half Man Half Machine" was a surreal song about Eggsy believing he was a robot, dressing up in foil, and going to the shops to buy cigarettes and crisps. The song namechecks many well-known 1980s 8-bit computer systems including Binatone, ZX Spectrum, Commodore 64, ZX81 and BBC Micro.
Herman Melville in 1860 #"The Piazza" #"Bartleby, the Scrivener" #"Benito Cereno" #"The Lightning-Rod Man" #"The Encantadas or Enchanted Isles" #"The Bell-Tower" In "The Piazza", especially written as an introductory story to the volume, the protagonist idealizes a radiant spot on the mountain he looks upon from his piazza. This spot is a house and one day he goes to the cottage, only to find the unhappy girl Marianna, who longs to see the lucky individual who lives in the white house she looks upon from her window. The narrator understands that he himself has been the object of a fantasy not unlike his own, and leaves thinking how all idealism is an illusion. In addition to numerous biblical and mythological references, which Sealts calls "a familiar Melvillean pattern", the story alludes to Emerson's poem "The Problem", Don Quixote and Paradise Lost, and explicitly namechecks Edmund Spenser.
The story mirrors Orwell's Animal Farm until the Revisionist character, Hannibal, attempts to re-organize the society into a class system, at which point all the animals reject this, execute Hannibal, quarter his body and put it on display. "Behind Enemy Lines" namechecks Black Panther Fred Hampton. Among the rallying cries for black liberation/socialism, dead prez include entreaties for self-respect/love: "Be Healthy" is about eating right ("I don't eat, no meat no dairy no sweets") and has become very popular in the vegetarian and vegan community; "Mind Sex" is about getting to know your lover and appreciate a person's mind as well as their body ("maybe later we could play a game of chess on the futon"; "Discipline makes things easier, organize your life"); and "Happiness" is about warm weather as a tool for the liberation struggle. Dead prez member stic.
With the change of Pep Comics statement of ownership from MLJ to Archie Publications Inc. from issue #57 (June 1946), the transfer from adventure and humor titles accelerated on a publication frequency that varied from 5 issues a year in 1947 to bi-monthly the following year. Top-Notch Comics ongoing series "Dotty and Ditto" had transferred to Pep Comics with issue #57 (June 1946), although it ended in #58 (with a guest appearance in Dotty's dreams by the Shield, Archie, and Suzie). New long-running series began, "Gloomy Gus the Homeless Ghost" in #59 (Dec. 1946), Bill Woggon's "Katy Keene The Pin-Up Queen" a model whose stories were filled with costumes designed by readers (who were given namechecks in the issue their designs appeared in) replaced "Suzie", and Li'l Jinx arrived in #62 (July 1947), replacing Black Hood—who had made two final appearances in #59–60 and revealed his identity to the world, becoming a detective.
As of April 12, 2020, the petition has over 704,000 signatures, including those from Democratic senators and presidential candidates such as Elizabeth Warren, Amy Klobuchar, Ed Markey, Kirsten Gillibrand, Tim Kaine, Cory Brooker and Beto O'Rourke. Swift also addressed a letter to Republican senator Lamar Alexander of Tennessee, her home state, asking him and the other senators to support the act; writing that, "for American citizens to be denied jobs or housing based on who they love or how they identify is un-American and cruel". The release of "You Need to Calm Down" further led to a spike in individual donations to the LGBT non-governmental organization, GLAAD, as the lyrics of the song namechecks the organization: "why are you mad when you could be GLAAD?". In response, GLAAD started a Facebook fundraiser for fans to support the advocacy work for Pride month, with $1300 as a goal since 13 is Swift's lucky number.

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