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"parlance" Definitions
  1. a particular way of using words or expressing yourself, for example one used by a particular group

924 Sentences With "parlance"

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

In today's parlance, you might call these homoromantic asexual relationships.
They are also "banged up," to use the players' parlance.
In lay parlance, it could point to a guilty conscience.
Granted, "domain" is a common enough term in web parlance.
You've achieved "presence" in the parlance of the VR industry.
They had to be gorgeous — 19963s, in his future parlance.
The term came into scientific parlance very much after Tolkien.
In the parlance of the city's tabloids, they were taxpayers.
It was to be, in local parlance, a minus campaign.
In police parlance, it is known as a line search.
He would have, in industry parlance, screened the call out.
In Masters parlance, it is a keepsake unlike any other.
Epstein was, in the parlance of the sciences, a marker.
In native parlance, the word denotes Manhattan below Fourteenth Street.
" The term preferred in Russian political parlance is "international terrorism.
In tax parlance, it is known as a 1031 exchange.
In diplomatic parlance, this became known as the JCPOA's snapback mechanism.
" In military parlance, this activity is referred to as "psychological operations.
In Trump's parlance, the "swamp" came to encompass everyone in Washington.
In Trump parlance, he was a total LOSER in this fight.
Dr. Professor explained that, in Latitude parlance, he was my ascendant.
In today's parlance, Trollope saw Dickens as a Social Justice Warrior.
In Trader Joe's parlance, mates are the equivalent of assistant managers.
In intelligence parlance, I think he ought to win by losing.
In the parlance of his craft, Dellin Betances has filthy stuff.
In military parlance, he has plenty of responsibility but no authority.
To use today's psycho-parlance, Peter didn't like himself very much.
But in company parlance, there are also "yellow lines," employees say.
In old movie parlance, this book is a three-hankie weeper.
Strangely enough, people find comfort in this kind of imperfect parlance.
Sheila Michaels, who introduced "Ms." into common parlance, died at 78.
In economic parlance, hiring an executive is a principal-agent problem.
The Women's March was, in internet parlance, about all of the things.
The lawsuit is what is called in legal parlance a derivative suit.
The company describes this "full stack" (an industry parlance) the Aurora Driver.
To put it in modern parlance, Clinton just isn't a girl's girl.
In retail parlance that format is known as "first party," or 1P.
But a lot has changed since that cliché came into common parlance.
A mother, in his parlance, was a woman who helped raise him.
Ms. Michaels, who introduced the honorific "Ms." into common parlance, was 22000.
In the parlance of the NRA, they were good guys with guns.
Adding extra rules, in the modern parlance of software developers, did not "scale".
Its value proposition—to use the Silicon Valley parlance—is a bit diluted.
Or, to use Silicon Valley parlance, it was a feature, not a bug.
Some units, like the satoshi, have made their way into semi-common parlance.
He still uses P.C.s because often, in Jobs's parlance, he needs a truck.
Or, has he created what's known in Washington parlance as an unfunded mandate?
Private equity firms are generally paid, in Wall Street parlance, 2 and 20.
These stories are not, in today's parlance, of the first-person-shooter variety.
In economics parlance, the Mankiw family runs a trade deficit with that restaurant.
But then, to use the parlance of Silicon Valley, there was a pivot.
In the parlance of 2017, Harrison thinks Didion needs to check her privilege.
" The explosion that followed the backdraft made the fire, in firefighting parlance, "run.
It is not something, in the parlance of the region, that is scalable.
To use Chinese parlance, he was both a tiger and a monkey king.
The trip was, in the parlance of the business world, a deal closer.
Its "out-of-the-box experience," to use the industry parlance, is excellent.
For the uninitiated, residents are quick to explain their ways and distinct parlance.
"At times he would talk to me in gambler's parlance," Mr. Miller testified.
In the parlance of basketball, Pachulia went underneath the shooter, which is verboten.
Or, to put it in the parlance of Overwatch text chat: gg wp.
But still, this movie is — to use Moore's parlance — a motherfucking delight. —A.
Very few stay long enough to "age out" — department parlance for hitting 63.
Today the Navy possesses 52 nuclear-powered attack submarines, or SSNs in naval parlance.
With our squad assembled, to put it in modern parlance, we could do anything.
Start with the CLS 24.5 4.53Matic, which is Mercedes parlance for all-wheel drive.
Like, this may actually help bring "groovy" and "wigging out" back into modern parlance.
Or in reality TV parlance: Viall aspired to shift roles from villain to hero.
Google then takes those RECs off the market, or "retires" them in utility parlance.
That would have been, in Bachelor parlance, truly the most dramatic rose ceremony ever.
In startup parlance, this difference is called "burn rate," and for MoviePass, it's astronomical.
These are problems to be solved, or disrupted, in the parlance of Silicon Valley.
She sensed the interview had gone south, and, in today's parlance, she leaned in.
In parlance of venture, you would have not very good product-market fit. Yeah.
In today's political parlance, nothing could be worse than the bloated, inefficient federal government.
Someone, in the parlance of pro sports, would need to step up. Someone. Somehow.
In contemporary parlance severe weather now includes fires like we see in the West.
In alt-right parlance, we may say that Gamergate was cucked by its heroes.
This was a fight that, in fighters' gallows humor parlance, takes years off lives.
This is a Santa who, in the parlance of the times, can get it.
In modern parlance we'd call it a nothingburger, but the bun is missing, too.
But to borrow a phrase from the administration's own parlance, that's actually fake news.
Hi, Carolyn: Common mental health parlance often talks about "accepting" x about y person.
Or should it, in planning parlance, "recede" — essentially abandoning the cliff to Mother Nature?
In betting parlance, the over/under on sports betting becoming legal is three years.
But sometimes wines labeled sec can be noticeably sweet ("tendre" in the local parlance).
The portraits he creates more often defy the usual identity pigeonholes of contemporary parlance.
In ESG parlance, this would be called a strategy of engagement rather than exclusion.
The lust for war — "leadership," in more popular parlance — unites Republican and Democratic leaders.
In military parlance, FirstNet will be the "command and control" network for first responders.
In general parlance, "collusion" means working together, usually in secret, to do something illicit.
Which sports terms are most likely to join the common parlance in the future?
The rule dictates that the receiver must, in official parlance, survive going to ground.
In the parlance of professional sports analysis: This is why they play the games.
In the parlance of the industry, he lost the locker room — and then his job.
We can also say that these clouds are mostly transparent ('optically thin' in astrophysics parlance).
Vanity Fair's Becky Sharp is what we would call, in today's parlance, a bad bitch.
The feeling of not having enough time is known as "time famine" in psychology parlance.
Polity; 200 pages; $19.95 and £14.99 The "Anglosphere" is not a term in common parlance.
ConsenSys runs an internal incubator called ConsenSys Labs that houses startups — "spokes," in company parlance.
The firm's investors — its limited partners, in industry parlance — were only informed early this morning.
Dollar/yen volatility -- vol in traders' parlance -- is nearly a third of early January levels.
Dollar/yen volatility — vol in traders' parlance — is nearly a third of early January levels.
The term unicorn in business parlance was created in 2013 by venture capitalist Aileen Lee.
The pathway (or lane in current parlance) was left wide open for someone like Trump.
The woman looked back toward the procession, called the second-line in New Orleans parlance.
At many cemeteries, plots accommodate two stacked caskets (a "double-depth" grave, in funeral parlance).
Last Day's celebrants have already passively accepted the end, indeed normalized it, in today's parlance.
Handstands and guns appear, ghostly music, exigency — the passage bursts with vernacular gumption, prismatic parlance.
The post spawned numerous imitators, and the language of feeling "attacked" has entered common parlance.
Haus Beauty — which is currently in "stealth mode" in startup parlance, or which has simply not yet launched in normal human parlance — is being run by CEO Ben Jones, the former chief digital officer at Honest Company and its offshoot Honest Beauty, sources said.
A "Gold Star" in military parlance is someone who lost a close family member to combat.
He also nicely blends his own turn of phrase ("our kid") with grime's London-centric parlance.
To lean on the parlance of video games for a minute, you have to level up.
These teams can set up as many integrations (or "zaps," in Zapier's parlance) as they want.
In retail parlance, it's called the gray market — goods that are sold outside their normal channels.
Phrases like chain migration, anchor baby and migrant caravan have entered popular parlance under his watch.
But "the show must go on," as the old performance parlance goes, and so must we.
S&P currently has downgrade warnings - or negative outlooks in rating agency parlance - on ExxonMobil XOM.
Choke Hole has heroes and villains—or, faces and heels, to use the classic wrestling parlance.
In medical parlance, the mosquito is the most likely vector — a bug that spreads the disease.
Britain would probably leave on July 1, 2018, and become a "third country" in EU parlance.
The Giant was now thoroughly "cooked," in the local parlance — dried out by decades of sun.
Not quite a "Festivus for the rest of us," in "Seinfeld" parlance, but in the ballpark.
A match, or in law enforcement parlance a "hit," to CODIS could lead to a conviction.
"In industry parlance, this is called a 'moat,' like the moat around a castle," Town says.
To use the parlance of Love Island, this is 100 percent not my type on paper.
Both funds focus on corporate bonds with strong credit ratings: investment grade, in fixed-income parlance.
It's a classic meet cute, in the parlance of the romantic comedy, but with a twist.
In musical parlance, these are the stems, the individual components of our normal theme music, recombined.
Now that the news is public, however, she can begin, in tabloid parlance, to "flaunt" it.
Old tags can hide new tricks — or new looks, to borrow the parlance of Maison Dior.
JOHANNESBURG — It is, in South Africa's political parlance, the season of the two centers of power.
Applying AI to operations data in this manner has become known as AIOps in industry parlance.
I couldn't use that word in common parlance, even to express an experience I lived through.
Initially, Rockwell wanted to set Blood Brothers in "the ghetto," in the parlance of the era.
In theory, Biden and Sanders occupy separate "lanes," to use the parlance of the operative class.
In the parlance of autonomous vehicle engineering, perception has to be accurate enough to enable classification.
"To use the modern parlance, that's not a thing," Fuchs added, drawing laughter from the courtroom.
The app's suggested route is a cowline - city planner parlance for the fastest route, said Whitworth.
To use the parlance of the games themselves, this should be an "all systems nominal" situation.
They have described it as a pest, looking for ways to "correct" its speakers' uncivilized parlance.
So this is not a problem that, in Washington parlance, you can admire until it goes away.
"Apple launched Siri five years ago with 12 domains," or industry parlance for types of voice queries.
She complains that no one loves her in Westeros — The Realm, in Varys' parlance, only fears her.
The man was unconscious and unresponsive, with an unidentified head wound — "blunt force trauma," in cop parlance.
But Facebook has never revealed how many users (or "seats", in enterprise parlance) it has on Workplace.
"Putting yourself out there," in show parlance, because in eight short weeks, someone is expecting a proposal.
What is also known about Physique is that they, in the parlance of the kids, totally rip.
Technically, in magazine parlance, he's looking in the 'wrong' direction—to the left and without eye contact.
The oil flowed to the surface under its own pressure, known in the parlance as a gusher.
They have dropped almost 20% since April, a plunge classed as a 'bear market' in trader parlance.
It's another example of how strong negative partisanship — or, in conservative parlance, "owning the libs" — has become.
Will the Fed choose to gradually stop reinvesting — "tapering," in Fed parlance — or stop all at once?
Bit by bit, this sort of behavior becomes quickly normalized (in the parlance du jour) and escalated.
" Or, to use Trump's parlance: "Just cannot believe a president would put our country in such peril.
These meats are consumed with such frequency that they've even entered the portmanteau parlance of Filipino breakfast.
Docker's solution lets you easily add the secret to your cluster (or a "swarm," in Docker's parlance).
All the same, Japanese are now embracing the idea of hoomu paatei (home party in local parlance).
In doctor's parlance, the drug had been used "off-label" to treat the disorder all those years.
Soon, many of his reporters will be assigned to new subject areas, or "beats" in newsroom parlance.
Use such parlance and you imply that Sir Frederick Ashton is somehow more elevated than Mr. Balanchine.
The Czech Republic is hardly the only country to grapple with the word "Republic" in ordinary parlance.
In the parlance of the game, Trump takes floating mulligans, usually more than one during a round.
Steam, as information is known in racetrack parlance, has been trafficked for weeks heading into the Derby.
"Your honor, I think in common parlance, we would call that a same-sex attraction," Harris responded.
In urban planning parlance, southeast Brooklyn is a rapid-transit desert, unserved by a single subway line.
In diplomatic parlance, that gesture typically signals that an envoy is being expelled in protest over something.
In real estate parlance, the highest and best use of real estate is not a movie theater.
By common parlance, it's "problematic," but because it is considered art, to remove it would be censorship.
It was definitely a "hot bench," in courtroom parlance, meaning the judges were engaged and firing probing questions.
They have dropped almost 20 percent since April, a move classed as a 'bear market' in trader parlance.
In video game parlance, driving the GT is like racing with the sensitivity ramped all the way up.
At some point he might just cast in (fishing parlance), to see if he could pick up something.
That means the conversation on Twitter is dominated by extremely active (or, in their parlance, "extremely online") users.
Before that, vendors of all manner touted their innovative social, local, mobile solutions (or SoLoMo, in industry parlance).
In contemporary parlance, maybe the word 'extra' would go some way in describing the aesthetic of the diva.
In UK parlance, hacking is known as "equipment interference," and consists of a spread of technologies and techniques.
Though there was a stop literally outside her front door, the Tube was, in local parlance, a nonstarter.
Together you begin performing these religious Rites as a team (Triumverate, in the game's parlance) called the Nightwings.
The term "construct" is "college dorm parlance," Vargas-Cooper writes, a short while before agreeing with Norman Mailer.
A "fangsmith" in industry parlance, Mr Lore begins making vampire teeth by examining a client's face and smile.
In short, while common everyday parlance, these terms do not have a fixed and precise legal meaning. Yes.
Uber on Thursday also announced it had published a guide to why it "deactivates," in its parlance, drivers.
In AR parlance, we call this a heart hug, all thanks to ARKit and the Insight Heart app.
The entire world experienced it a decade ago when the term "Too Big to Fail" entered common parlance.
But he cautions that investors must have an expectation of outperformance, what's known in investment parlance as alpha.
Will the only alternatives available to an older building be modernization — "freshening up," in developer's parlance — or demolition?
Democrats showcased internal divisions rather than a united front and, in the parlance of sports, blew their lead.
This contagion has spread beyond the city to Long Island's North Fork, reduced in realty parlance to NoFo.
In diplomatic parlance, that meant Taiwan was a rock-bottom issue that Beijing was prepared to fight over.
All of these are, in industry parlance, "direct to consumer" offerings, cutting out traditional middlemen like cable companies.
In ordinary parlance, a whistle-blower can be someone who speaks out publicly or provides information to journalists.
They're just embracing newer products including, most recently, IRL (which stands for "in real life" in internet parlance).
About the only part of her that's human is her soul, or "ghost" in the story's poetic parlance.
Intrusion Truth first published snippets on APTs—advanced persistent threats; essentially industry parlance for government-backed hackers—last year.
In football parlance – the language of the beautiful game – one might say they represent something of a banana skin.
They were fighting less for a moral cause than their section of the country — their tribe, in today's parlance.
But GM has yet to reveal a prototype of the truck, known as a concept vehicle in industry parlance.
"Australia and Vietnam are friends and, today, to use Australian parlance, we've gone from friends to mates," Morrison said.
That will hopefully force developers to make apps (or, in Alexa's parlance, skills) that feel native to this device.
For the Caldwells, making money by charging scooters — "juicing," in Lime's parlance — has become a part of their identity.
In the Social Darwinian parlance of the day, it risked being served as meat at the Western imperial banquet.
It's important to note that Ronell has not denied Reitman's accusations; rather, she has recast them in academic parlance.
The fourth-generation Apple Watch, "Series 4" in Apple's parlance, is the best, most accessible Apple Watch to date.
Apple is making the iPhone X with only two different flavors of modems (two different SKUs, in industry parlance).
In Engelbrecht's parlance, traditional television is a "lean back" enterprise, and Netflix's interactive plans are a "lean forward" alternative.
There is a bigger problem at hand, and to borrow Silicon Valley parlance, it's a feature, not a bug.
The benchmark is known as the International Swaps and Derivatives Association Fix, or, in Wall Street parlance, the Isdafix.
In the modern parlance of Republican politics, Bush's gentility would be read as insufficient commitment to the conservative cause.
Eventually, however, the New Dealers won the battle, which is why liberalism today means "big government" in colloquial parlance.
In betting parlance, the over/under is five years on when legalized sports gambling will be available outside Nevada.
Most Google Cloud sales employees are at level 5 or level 6 (that's "L5" or "L6" in Google parlance).
Fashion Diary Sulu, gho, kera, kalpak, dishdasha and dashiki sound more like crossword puzzlers than words in common parlance.
In common parlance, due process is the fair treatment that every individual deserves from law enforcement and the judiciary.
If instead you want to feel productive or accomplished in your work, adopt a parlance that propels you forward.
But it was certainly gratuitous, which fits—mascots, after all, are nothing if not Extra in the modern parlance.
In VC parlance, a "down" round is a financing round with a lower share price than the previous round.
The wall of digital maps, charts and images behind him illustrated his A.O.R., agency parlance for area of responsibility.
Prices begin at $12,000 for merely one try at a "live birth," in the unnervingly pragmatic parlance of doctors.
In White House parlance, news of the visit was "embargoed until wheels down" back in Seoul, South Korea's capital.
The game was, in the parlance of hyperventilating announcers, an "instant classic," only this time, the phrase wasn't hyperbole.
In wrestling parlance, he was a jobber: a performer who exists almost entirely to make other performers look better.
So now that Donald J. Trump is president, the giant company, in Silicon Valley parlance, is having to pivot.
But throughout most of his blood feud with Devlin, Starr played the bad guy—"working heel," in industry parlance.
Indeed, the phrase "or other high crimes and misdemeanors" has a legal definition instead of a common parlance meaning.
However, I can make one high-confidence assessment—to use the IC parlance—based on the facts we know.
That's Wall Street parlance — from the early 20th century anyway — for people who bought and sold securities for investors.
In common parlance, the word "grace" means elegance, ease of comportment, a style that charms those who observe it.
Federal rules now require recreational owners to register any drone — or "unmanned aircraft system," in F.A.A. parlance — flown outdoors.
"In Five Star parlance, people say, 'When you get a PS, it's never a good thing,'" Mr. Pizzarotti said.
Often it is put forward as merely good-natured fun or, in the parlance of 2016, "locker room" talk.
As new dealers enter the fair, others get to "graduate," in the fair's parlance, to the main Galleries sector.
Ghosting, in modern dating parlance, is when your beloved vanishes without explanation, having taken what he or she needed.
Being reptiles, snakes are "ectothermic" in biological parlance - "cold-blooded" in layman's terms - meaning their bodies rely on external heating.
These periodic pulsations of light—or light curves, in the parlance of astronomers—is all but negligible in Ultima Thule.
Cultivating broad appeal was not his plan; in the parlance of American politics, he aimed to play to the base.
In conservative parlance, "entitlement reform" is code for cutting Americans' Social Security and Medicare benefits by direct or indirect means.
In the parlance of the Republican primary season, everyone else is, at best, Chris Christie or, more likely, Mike Huckabee.
You'll also unlock weapons, abilities, and buffs ("chipsets," in the game's parlance) so you can come in stronger each time.
Bodies are not assembled as cleanly as plumbing systems, in spite of what common parlance for our reproductive systems suggests.
Each server, or instance, in Mastodon parlance, has a local timeline as well, only visible to users on that instance.
The two names are used interchangeably in common parlance, but their use in films and songs has often raked controversy.
The term "Holocaust" wasn't even common parlance until a 1970s NBC broadcast of a teleplay based on the Nuremberg Trials.
What really happened: First of all, you'll want to call them droids, not robots, in keeping with Star Wars parlance.
Carry trade is industry parlance for using low borrowing costs to buy higher yielding assets such as Italian government debt.
He will not sit in on pitch meetings, for instance, or give specific feedback on scripts — "notes" in television parlance.
Still others went for the glory of obtaining "farthest north"—in contemporaneous parlance, the highest latitude yet reached by man.
Carpet bombing, in military parlance, means to drop a large number of untargeted bombs over a specific swath of territory.
There are usually those used in the common parlance (like coronavirus) and then the scientific names (like SARS-CoV-2).
Oakland, known as "The Town" in local parlance, is often defined by its differences from San Francisco across the bay.
In 2014, he started as a PwC "co-balloting leader," in academy parlance; Ms. Ruiz joined him the next year.
Eradicating Kim's nuclear weapons program ("denuclearization" in the official parlance) or even halting its progress looks increasingly like a fantasy.
But it has great bones, as is said in real estate parlance, with intricate Art Deco details and tile inlays.
It may be shortened, in the parlance of the Limbaugh Belt, to ''libs,'' or expanded to the offensive portmanteau ''libtards.
To use the Hipster Runoff parlance of the time, they seemed like the most chill of the pretty chill, bros.
The brand never signified anything in particular or possessed any cohesive DNA, to borrow the parlance of contemporary marketing strategists.
"I don't know what the pull request status is," Nadella said, drawing on GitHub parlance that refers to proposed project changes.
But he maintained the ECB had many stimulus tools, including more asset purchases - known in market parlance as "quantitative easing" (QE).
In Go parlance it is a "shoulder hit," in from the side, far away from most of the game's other action.
In Bachelor Nation parlance, contestants are immediately damned if they are suspected to be on the show for the "wrong" reasons.
In diving parlance, he and I were "dive buddies," who must never leave the other's side or sight for safety reasons.
Edward and Maureen trumpet "principles" and, in a painful attempt to keep up with modern parlance, congratulate themselves on their "inclusivity".
We are not going to use a blind item to "start a conversation" in the ceaseless-networking parlance of social media.
Even the term "self-mutilation," now common parlance, seems to spring from the 1960s cutter stereotype of the 193s and 70s.
Skylink, best known for its DIY home security system, recently expanded into smart garage door openers (GDO in the company's parlance).
In this telling, Trump is, in important respects, not a traditional conservative, at least as normally understood in American political parlance.
It's out to "change the world," in the parlance of Mike Judge in his excellent send-up of Valley self-importance.
In congressional parlance, though, it is not about reconciling differences between parties but rather of highlighting (and even exacerbating) those differences.
It also has the ability to do multiple exposures and a dedicated mode for selfies (or "self-portraits", in Leica parlance).
Some campaigns are taking advantage of a new feature offered by Comcast called Dynamic Ad Insertion, or DAI in industry parlance.
Berdymukhamedov is commonly referred to as Arkadag, or protector, who in official parlance is overseeing an "era of might and happiness".
She was, in the parlance of her campaign, "widening the electorate"—if not by tens of thousands then by just enough.
Mr. Kardashian, in internet parlance, had doxxed Ms. Jenner — he published personal, private information about her online, seemingly without her consent.
First let me be clear that I don't think their consensual affair was morally wrong or a "sin," in Clinton's parlance.
"In baseball parlance, they were aiming for a single in terms of restoring confidence and they probably achieved it," he added.
At two, the girl had been diagnosed, in the parlance of the day, as deaf-mute and had been sent away.
"Duppy"—Jamaican parlance for "ghost"—bounces over keys and a sax line, a smokey backdrop for Drake to do his thing.
Every single one of them has been "ratioed," which in Twitter parlance means the comments on a tweet outnumber the retweets.
Instead, he showed, it was the product of a dedicated mental faculty that is inborn — in today's parlance, hard-wired in.
In the parlance of college player acquisition, this apparently meant that Miller paid Ayton $10,000 per month to play at Arizona.
In creating a taxonomy of them and sympathetically describing their needs, James makes them feel, to use modern psychological parlance, seen.
Core bond funds that track the aggregate index have a duration of around six years, considered intermediate-term in bond parlance.
The new president says he is determined to make France a "start-up nation," borrowing the vapid parlance of Silicon Valley.
WM: So, the kitchen sink, of course, being in critical complaint parlance, everything is in this movie, including the kitchen sink.
In 000, they bought the house on Laporte — a two-flat, in Chicago parlance, on the city's West Side — for $224,22016.
Yet a string of successful English-language productions has jazz hands and fidgety feet working their way into the local parlance.
It is, in Silicon Valley parlance, a means of reducing friction — a concept that has practically become gospel in recent years.
The British vote to exit Europe — Brexit, in common parlance — threatens to cleave the geography of the world's largest single marketplace.
In traditional Silicon Valley parlance, they're trying to disrupt the mattress store industry, providing low prices on premium foam sleep surfaces.
Back in the olden days, about one in eight Americans was a swing voter, or "floating voter" in political science parlance.
The local comics shop—LCS in the parlance of us adherents—remains the place for a certain breed to get our fix.
The phrase "good night" is the radio parlance used by pilots when executing a handover from one airspace to another, Quest said.
"Most people in my profession had to take out loans for grad school, so it's common parlance in the workplace," she says.
Rumors had swirled for weeks, months even, that Bentley -- aka the "Luv Guv" in local journalistic parlance -- wouldn't make it through spring.
Everyone from Audi to Google has made self-driving ("or piloted driving," in Audi parlance) a central theme of their marketing campaigns.
Images published to the platform are up 952 percent, and 5 billion images are viewed (or "consumed," in VSCO parlance) each month.
When perfect pitch is achieved, it sounds like there is a fifth voice, also known as the "angel's voice" in barbershop parlance.
Misconceptions arising from language Sometimes misconceptions arise because words mean one thing in common parlance and something different in a scientific context.
" So far no definitive results have been gleaned on UBI's efficacy, but in today's millennial parlance, let me "save you a click.
He was happy there, enjoying what is known in Foreign Service parlance as an "accompanied tour" with his wife and two daughters.
This is a long way of saying that Ms. King is black and sounds it, that she seems, in black parlance, real.
Digital human rights researchers have been studying companies in the government spyware business—so-called "lawful intercept" in industry parlance—for years.
The most expensive steak is a 350-gram, grass-fed dry-aged eye filet (or filet mignon in American parlance) for $47.90.
If the item is deemed harmless "cultural debris," in Army parlance — a discarded soda can, for example — then it won't be disturbed.
In the parlance of his tribe, the chief was going to "get his bird pulled" by the SEALs' top leader, Rear Adm.
Today, he pulls a puzzle out of his hat that will both delight and amaze you, to use the parlance of magicians.
The Surface Neo and Surface Duo are not "foldables," the parlance used for an emerging wave of devices with flexible polymer displays.
In modern parlance, it is mindfulness — a quick, secularized adaptation of Buddhist teachings that have been distilled for a modern, Western audience.
So in polling parlance, we are 95% confident that Brown's actual support is somewhere between 55% and 65% of likely women voters.
One-year volatility — or vol in traders' parlance, is also at a record low of 5.48%, down two percentage points this year .
Alternatively, this could be a good weekend for cooking some pantry staples — in our parlance, food that you should make, not buy.
The secret to that early Happy Days feel came in the use of what's called a "single-camera" setup in TV parlance.
Trump is not a mere pawn of history, but very clearly a willful actor — a "big personality," in the parlance of our rules.
Support soldiers, or fobbits in modern parlance, get the scorn of everyone for working safer (albeit critical) operations like logistics and medical support.
It's hardly the first time Trump has switched positions or, in the parlance of an election campaign, "clarified" his standing on an issue.
In conservative parlance, it now refers to any instance in which the user of a social platform did not have a desired outcome.
If Mumbai is synonymous with kaali-peeli (black-and-yellow) taxis, then Delhi has its ubiquitous auto-rickshaws or autos in local parlance.
To find the egg, hunters (gunters, in the parlance of the book) will need an encyclopedic knowledge of Halliday's beloved 23s pop culture.
He and his wife also arrange two major volunteer sessions (known, in local parlance, as "working bees") every year to repaint the chairs.
In the parlance of sports betting, their candidates "beat the point spread," the margin by which a favored team is expected to win.
Design-wise, Synopsis is built for this purpose, as it is synced to music through control voltage, or CV, in analogue synthesis parlance.
As the headline of his obituary in The Dallas Morning News declared, Mr. Sherrod (pronounced SHEHR-ud) was, in Texas parlance, a legend.
That is, in the parlance of prosecutors, the feds could jeopardy the state out, but the state could not jeopardy the feds out.
The first is to produce a pre-election forecast—a prior, in Bayesian parlance—for the likely vote share in every counting area.
Morgan compared the use of the malware — a "network investigative technique," or NIT, in FBI parlance — to peering through a suspect's broken blinds.
To turn up, in Southern rap parlance, is to go over the top, to celebrate wildly, to more or less explode with vim.
In spite of Shailene Woodley's hearty endorsement, this practice, known as pica in the medical parlance, is the one craving you should ignore.
This would be impressive for any broadcaster—or caster, in esports parlance—but it is downright essential in the burgeoning world of esports.
"The portrait," he growls, "is a remarkable example of modern art"— a term that everyone knew was a curse word in Churchill parlance.
And it is, in the parlance of Criterion, "director approved" — Mr. Romero, who died in July 2017, did sign off on this version.
The GOP didn't, in political science parlance, "decide" on a single champion — no one candidate received the bulk of official endorsements before Iowa.
The word's Latin roots are "de" (away from) and "lire" (the furrow of the plow) — or in contemporary parlance, to jump the tracks.
In April they were above par, in bond parlance, or 100, but the day before the bank failed, they were trading around 50.
In true Bachelor parlance, none of these women are here to make friends — in fact, they've been trained to think they're natural enemies.
Corrections officers make the charges — issuing "tickets," in prison parlance — and hearing officers, typically sergeants, lieutenants or captains, determine guilt and decide punishment.
Mr. Anglim had a pact — or alliance in "Survivor" parlance — with two other tribe members to vote another challenger out of the competition.
The paint company's pick is in for 24052, and the news is blue — specifically "Classic Blue," or in company parlance, PANTONE 22020-4052.
That said, despite this policy action, the current level of interest rates remains low and, in Federal Reserve parlance, monetary policy remains accommodative.
On Monday, Weight Watchers announced plans to rename itself WW, as common parlance shifts from an emphasis on diet to one on wellness.
While slum lords, culture wars, and big tobacco have been replaced in today's parlance by gentrification, decolonization, and kleptocracy, Haacke's lessons still apply.
In more careful legal parlance, the phrase "strict construction" connotes an interpretive approach that reads federal powers narrowly and/or enumerated rights strictly.
In the post-Mao period it has been largely replaced in official parlance by euphemisms such as testing a candidate's "political and ideological qualities".
In psychiatry residency, I was trained to focus on what was mentally wrong, and then to "fix" — or, in medical parlance, "manage" — those symptoms.
George and Lacker are among the Fed policymakers who most urge an active fight against future high inflation, or "hawks" in central banking parlance.
This is because, in WTO parlance, a VAT is an indirect tax — it is assessed so that the cost is carried by the consumer.
Next, the Texas senator said he will abolish corporate income taxes, payroll taxes and the estate tax (or "the death tax," in Cruz parlance).
He likes to, in the parlance of the Internet, troll people -- go after a point of perceived weakness or insecurity relentlessly and without remorse.
Green Bay Packers: In injury-report parlance, questionable means quarterback Aaron Rodgers has a 224.4-2100 chance of playing Sunday against the Minnesota Vikings.
The e-mails had been weaponized: what had seemed a passive form of spying was now "an active measure," in the parlance of espionage.
Peacock, as in the board game Clue, each player takes on the role of a political candidate or a "faction," in the game's parlance.
Group One: The last gaspers For the lesser known candidates polling in the low single digits, it is "third and long" in football parlance.
But now, in aeronautical parlance, the drag of the profession threatens to overwhelm its lift, which could mean a hard landing for the industry.
"In common parlance, people would call what the Tories (Conservatives) have published today lies, absolute lies," Labour's economic spokesman John McDonnell told BBC Radio.
Pain, in the parlance of these thinkers, can be understood as formative, as illuminating, or as containing its own truths and forms of pleasure.
"I'm a bright line person," says one investor (or limited partner, in industry parlance), who isn't an investor in either DFJ or Sherpa Capital.
Last spring, for example, Xanax vendor HulkedBenzoBoss began offering direct deals ("DDs," in dark net parlance), as well as customer support, over the app.
A "Minsky moment" in market parlance refers to a point where asset prices crash due to a sudden shift in debt or currency stability.
The N.R.A. and Great America apps, which enable users to friend and message one another, have developed cultures with their own parlance and rituals.
A pilot flying an older aircraft needs to turn the entire plane to figure out what's going on (developing situational awareness, in military parlance).
To disagree with him was seen as a form of heresy or, in the parlance of his followers, a "breach" that would require penance.
As some of the Knicks were, in Mr. Frazier's parlance, wheeling and dealing, a different form of an assist was being practiced in Harlem.
A row of California-style mansions (housing for "the stars" — the generals, in Korean parlance) butted up against a golf course and a pond.
In scientific parlance, MRD's species was a hominin, a group consisting of modern humans, extinct human species and immediate ancestors including various Australopithecus species.
It achieves this by maintaining the government imprimatur for ratings agencies known as a nationally recognized statistical rating organization — an N.R.S.R.O., in industry parlance.
"Most politicians can be evasive; it&aposs part of the parlance of politics," NPR host Scott Simon wrote in an opinion column in October.
But as for when that will be, to use Pompeo&aposs own parlance: We don&apost know when and we don&apost know where.
The plants, called crackers, heat natural gas byproducts, like ethane and propane, in order to break them down, or "crack" them, in industry parlance.
Instead, what we see in "Soft Power" are artists emerging as expert, if sometimes slick, "storytellers," a term now co-opted by marketing parlance.
Or, to put it in the parlance of "1917": While the Producers Guild award is a significant battle won, this war's not over yet.
Adamantly and incessantly, they have characterized questions about the Trump campaign's possible cooperation with Russia as ludicrous — a "witch hunt," in their preferred parlance.
The Airbus A320 final assembly line or FAL in Airbus parlance is a 53-acre facility just a few minutes drive from downtown Mobile.
Giphy, which was founded in 2013 and has raised about $150 million from venture capitalists, is still "pre-revenue," to use start-up parlance.
At first, Something Awful was what we would think of as a blog, though that term wouldn't enter common parlance for a while, yet.
A key difference is that Amgen is changing the sticker price of its drug -- known in industry parlance as the wholesale acquisition cost, or WAC.
It is a "proof of life," in the community's parlance, letting the powers that be know you're there, and allowing you to enter their graces.
In tech parlance, Facebook and YouTube are "optimized for engagement," which their defenders will tell you means that they're just giving us what we want.
However, a spokesperson for Snap tells us that ads will continue to play in between Stories ("mid-roll" in ad parlance) within the playlist feature.
In the aftermath of Chicago '68, the Commission on Party Structure and Delegate Selection, named in common parlance after its successive chairmen, South Dakota Sen.
Over time, however, this added eye began to fade away (it "regressed," in the parlance of evolutionary biologists), and for reasons that aren't fully understood.
Battlefield rules require U.S. troops working as advisers to stay behind what is called the "forward line of troops," known as FLOT in military parlance.
" Congressman Jason Chaffetz put it in more common parlance for TMZ ... "He was up there dangling on the fence, and the Secret Service grabbed him.
It was common parlance in my first year at Edinburgh University for people to say they'd gone to "Slough comprehensive" if they'd gone to Eton.
First, you need to tell the operating system that you're prepared to allow unauthorized apps on your device (apps from "unknown sources" in official parlance).
This is the third risk unique to these small ("light footprint" in Pentagon parlance) operations: They expose troops to tremendous risk by their very nature.
Like the 1776 Matlack Declaration, the Sussex manuscript was written in an exaggerated size, known as an "engrossed" manuscript in the parlance of the time.
Often, Dr Angelov observes, the problem is not the inefficiency of operators but the behaviour of passengers—the "platform-train interface", to use railway parlance.
By August 2014, 600 metric tons of deadly weapons had been destroyed (in the military parlance, "demilitarized") aboard the US Navy vessel MV Cape Ray.
And while the car project under Teller has lost several critical members and faces criticism for dawdling, it is expected to "graduate," X's parlance, soon.
He also holds the rank of marshal in the North Korean military, and is more usually referred to "our marshal" in propaganda and common parlance.
By now, we've gotten used to describing internet trolls in the parlance of warfare: their frothing ranks are an "army" and memes are their weapons.
In wrestling parlance, Hogan effectively forced Gawker to tap out, causing the company to collapse before it could take the case to a higher court.
The new N is for things like mobile apps and social media accounts—it's a "peelable" in design parlance, with elements usable across a brand.
Such a horse would be highly sought after for breeding, but there was an impediment: Gem Twist was a gelding — a castrato, in operatic parlance.
In one he angrily accuses Hong Kong reporters in English of being "too simple, sometimes naive"—a phrase that entered common internet parlance in China.
This comes on the heels of another collaboration aimed at young, style-conscious customers (or "guests," to use Lulu parlance) with wellness star Taryn Toomey.
The Marylanders provided a distraction while the rest of the colonial army beat its retreat, a word almost as unmentionable in military parlance as defeat.
That the league efforted, in football parlance, to tweak its rules and still clung to an inequitable solution inferior to Durbin's feels like pure hubris.
On rare occasions, long-term yields can actually fall below yields on short-term bonds — a "yield curve inversion" in the parlance of the markets.
" The first is, in "Bachelor" parlance, to be swept away on the "journey" and suspend any disbelief that suitors are "here for the right reasons.
Think of them as a co-pilot, not the Autopilot of Tesla's marketing parlance but a wingman that amplifies human skills instead of replacing them.
In today's parlance, Albers might be accused of "cultural appropriation," a negative buzzword that presumes that culture can be owned and controlled, which it can't.
In sourdough parlance, it's a stiff versus a liquid starter; the former has a mellow flavor and the latter a bit of an acidic tang.
Exceeding analysts' estimates — "beating the number," in Wall Street parlance — is crucial for any corporate leader interested in keeping his or her stock price aloft.
It would figure that such an enormous man with long limbs, or levers in baseball parlance, would find adaptations to his swing to be laborious.
"But so far the generic biologic drugs (called "biosimilars'' in industry parlance) have failed to lower costs and make the therapies more accessible to patients.
Here's what you need to know about the virus, known in scientific parlance as 85003-nCoV: What is it, and where did it come from?
At Sing Sing, black inmates make up 57 percent of the population and get 58 percent of the disciplinary charges — or "tickets," in prison parlance.
Over 60 private firms surpassed the $1 billion valuation threshold — making them unicorns in Silicon Valley parlance — in those two years, according to CB Insights.
Many of us have so many preconceived notions about who we are or are not based on attributes that, in internet parlance, are not personalities.
"I think the S.G. has found the right balance," the French ambassador, François Delattre said on Thursday, using United Nations parlance for the secretary general.
The special consideration given to "development cases" — in the parlance of high-end college admissions, that means the children of prominent donors — is well documented.
Those captions, or "alt text" as they're known in tech parlance, are what my screen reader will read any time it encounters a captioned photograph.
Much of this decline can be attributed to people who've simply given up looking for work -- or, in economic parlance, a decline in labor force participation.
When the vast majority of manufacturers reach the end of this process, their polysilicon is as much as 99.999999 percent pure, or "8n" in industry parlance.
That's because while these first-year speeches are often referred to as State of the Union events in popular parlance, they're formally just addresses to Congress.
In jail, because she faced sex charges, Hadley was branded as the worst kind of inmate on the block: an R3, or Romeo in jailhouse parlance.
The test is used to determine whether a right not explicitly mentioned in the Constitution is still, nonetheless, constitutionally protected — an "unenumerated right," in legal parlance.
A perforated panel at the bottom — HexaFlow Vent, in Samsung parlance — helps airflow around the innards of each machine and is unlockable with just three screws.
Anima-lectric As you'd imagine with any high profile Disney Parks property, Batuu will be home to a variety of animated robots, Animatronics, in Imagineering parlance.
He also holds the rank of marshal in the North Korean military, and is more usually referred to as "our marshal" in propaganda and common parlance.
Luckily for us, Microsoft realized reinstalling Windows is a great way to fix a broken PC.In modern Windows parlance, a reinstall is usually called a reset.
After another 7,750 tonnes of net new cancellations yesterday, available LME stocks, or "open tonnage" as its known in LME parlance, stands at just 162,300 tonnes.
The Koch brand - including Koch Industries, the second-largest privately held American company - has become synonymous in political parlance with pro-business policies and libertarian ideology.
I love the parlance, inside jokes, and rawness that these hosts deliver, and Phoebe Robinson, one of the hosts of 2 Dope Queens, is no different.
Baffert, taking to the parlance of Las Vegas, acknowledged that he might have been the headliner last year but is merely a lounge act this year.
So far, however, high-growth areas - "strategic imperatives" in IBM parlance - have failed to offset declines its overall business has seen for the last five years.
Once out of the plan, small savings are typically spent ("leakage," in pension parlance) rather than continuing to be saved and accumulating tax-free for retirement.
United late last week quietly introduced what — in corporate parlance — the carrier is calling a "streamlining" of the food service on all flights under four hours.
They were all easy prey — or, in the parlance of an era when this kind of killing has become all too common, they were soft targets.
Then all of a sudden, one of the protestors turned his back to us, leaned forward, lowered his pants and, in the common parlance, mooned us.
One was Adam Osborne, the developer of the Osborne 1, an early portable computer — a "luggable," in industry parlance — about the size of a sewing machine.
Despite the heat and smoke they encountered, firefighters who were there said the source of the blaze — its "seat," in firefighters' parlance — had not been obvious.
Below is a sampling of some of the alumni — in common parlance, "old boys" and "old girls" (but mostly boys) — who have made names for themselves.
In the case of the Baltimore shooting, however, the bureau took the unusual step of deeming part of that case a "bad shoot" in agents' parlance.
The Talent Hub is an ATS (applicant tracking system, in HR parlance), that will let recruiters manage candidate leads through the whole interviewing and hiring process.
Just like in startup parlance, if you fail to meet multiple goals, your board can decide that you're not going to be running the company anymore.
In legal parlance, to "alienate" something is to exchange it for an equivalent — precisely what individuals do with their rights when they form a political community.
Get that onto some chopped kale and use your fingers to distribute it over the greens – massage it, is the parlance chefs and line cooks use.
Still, at a firm that casts itself as a collector of facts, the dossier is not the equivalent of a finished news article, in journalism parlance.
The Court was upholding a DC Circuit ruling by panel, which the court then declined to rehear as a whole (or en banc, in judicial parlance).
But Prat protested — it is called an objection in racetrack parlance — meaning that the officials had to hear from him what happened and review the video.
Last year, Kansas received a notice of allegations — N.C.A.A. parlance for an indictment — that accused it of widespread rules violations, and it could face severe penalties.
When it moves in the other direction, then it is "risk on," to use trader parlance for when it is time to lay down speculative bets.
To give you some idea, a sixteenth of a strip of Suboxone (a "piece" in our parlance) can sell for $15 here when supply is scarce.
NATO said the meeting "focused on issues related to military posture and exercises" - defense parlance for how to avoid military accidents that might lead to war.
He never hid his sexual contacts with multiple underage swimmers; he was open about their "relationship" — common parlance in the swimming community that normalized child molestation.
Even if the market did fall 10 percent, what would be a "correction," in trader parlance, that wouldn't be a terrible thing for investors, Siegel said.
He points to the signal coming from the difference between the short-term and longer term rates, which is narrowing, or flattening in bond market parlance.
But the stresses of spaceflight on reused boosters — like the rising mileage on a used car, sometimes called "pre-owned" in today's parlance — are much greater.
Goldman estimates that fixed income, commodities and currencies activity — FICC, in industry parlance — will be off 24 percent on a quarterly basis and 16 percent annually.
Democrats have refused to shorten the debate time — to "yield back," in the parlance of the Senate — though in most cases there is little to debate.
If an accused student is found more likely than not to have committed the offense, he or she is "responsible," in the parlance of campus hearings.
Analysts have said HSBC's share price will be capped until it can show revenues rising above costs, in a trend known as 'positive jaws' in industry parlance.
The theorist argued that for the stories in wrestling to be successful the villain – or 'heel', in industry parlance – must be the image of a "perfect bastard".
In today's teen parlance, a burner phone can be a prepaid cellphone or any out-of-service phone they can still get to work on Wi-Fi.
The big broadcast networks, NBC, ABC, and CBS, will also interrupt their regular daytime programming — or "pre-empt" in TV parlance — for special reports carrying the hearing.
Something cool is happening this weekend: Nearly all the big Android smartphone makers are launching a top-of-the-line model, a "flagship" in mobile-world parlance.
Windows on Snapdragon is a 32-bit platform, which means that any 64-bit (x64, in Microsoft parlance) apps will fail to install or run on it.
Now, the company is rebranding to Bounce and refocusing its business to on-demand scooter (that's motorbike in U.S. parlance) rentals for first and last mile transportation.
Failing to deliver on an official deadline for something like a space launch makes, in political parlance, the whole of government look like a pack of morons.
And some pranksters even installed commemorative plaques at the McDonald's location where Prime Minister Morrison allegedly defecated in his pants, or "shit his dacks" in Australian parlance.
And because so many are politically disengaged, their leanings are considered "soft," in campaign parlance: They could be swayed by any candidate with a message that resonates.
Of course, plenty of widows meet a great "chapter two" (widow parlance for a love after loss) and are able to move on to a new relationship.
HoloLens, Microsoft's $3,000 mixed-reality goggles (or "the world's first self-contained holographic computer" in Microsoft's parlance), was only available in the U.S. and Canada so far.
This year, for the first time, the European Banking Authority included complex derivative contracts known in market parlance as Level 2 and 3 assets in its tests.
Sumo offers what's known in industry parlance as a security information and event management (SIEM) tool, while JASK provides a security operations center or SOC (pronounced "sock").
Michaels is credited with having ushered back into English common parlance the honorific as an alternative to "Mrs." and "Miss", titles that mark a woman's marital status.
It even repeated a reference to "broadly balanced" risks - central bank parlance for a situation where the odds on positive and negative surprises are roughly the same.
There's the Houstons' son Joel, the guitarist, singer and (in Hillsong parlance) Worship Leader, who frets over boilerplate lyrics that he fine-tunes days before the show.
Neither aggressive criminals (the "wolves" in gun culture parlance) nor meek victims (the "sheep"), gun carriers see themselves as valiantly straddling a moral space of heroic violence.
In diplomatic parlance, this is discussed as the sequencing of implementing the 14 points of the cease-fire accord known as Minsk II, signed in February 2015.
In 2013, 93 percent of unaccompanied minors in the United States — or "unaccompanied alien children," in the chilly parlance of the law — came from those three countries.
Republican political strategists say few issues have proved as effective at rallying loyal voters as invoking the special counsel investigation — a "witch hunt," in Mr. Trump's parlance.
Set against such ambition, the words "second headquarters" or, in Amazon parlance, "HQ2," which proved so beguiling to the media, politicians and local governments ultimately mean little.
"Yesterday evening, I was forced to confront one of those defining choices — styled, in the parlance of extortionists — as an offer I couldn't refuse," Mr. LaPierre wrote.
"I was forced to confront one of those defining choices, styled, in the parlance of extortionists, as an offer I couldn't refuse," he wrote to the board.
According to general relativity, you would not notice anything untoward — "no drama," in the parlance — as you fell past the edge of a black hole toward doom.
But she was typecast, in the parlance of the Hollywood press at the time, as a "sex kitten" and spent much of the 1960s in B-movies.
How Mr. Tillerson's translates Mr. Trump's vow of "America First" into the kind of polite diplomatic parlance that will maintain vital ties will be a significant test.
This is a story about the fans, or, in the parlance of Phish devotees, the "Phans," who will swarm New York City over the next two weeks.
Those comparisons will get "easier" in Wall Street parlance in coming months, with the third quarter set to mark a low point in the recent earnings cycle.
Almost a thousand people attended, many of them pastors, there to be "equipped," in church parlance, to return home and help churchgoers make sense of their lives.
That, in Twitch parlance, is what streamers call viewers who come to their channels, park their single viewer count and watch, but rarely ever interact with chat.
In one, you can point your phone's camera at an object and be told its color, either in crayon parlance ("seafoam green") or more technical nomenclature ("cyan").
But Scaparrotti, who is also a U.S. Army general, told defense ministers that Russia was seeking, in military parlance, "escalation dominance," according to people briefed on the discussions.
So Senate Republicans are not ruling out the "nuclear option" -- DC parlance for changing the rules so that it takes only 51 votes for confirmation instead of 60.
Because numbers like those suggest that both Buttigieg and Harris still have lots of room to grow, or in the parlance of the NBA Draft -- coming June 20!
For the many who aren't familiar with Infiniti parlance, the QX260 is the company's three-row crossover that slots between the gargantuan QX290 and the all-new QX27.
Dania Ramirez's brand-new Latina Cinderella, however, comes from entirely different realm and "book," in OUAT parlance, than the one fans have seen over the last six years.
To some degree, the housemates have to be serious about finding their "real" match — and in the show's parlance, that means following your heart rather than your libido.
Here, in the social media and meme-friendly parlance of political combat that has come to define the Donald Trump era, was an opportunity to own the libs!
In electronic security parlance, that is what is called a "brute force" attack, and all it takes is time and patience to submit a large number of passcodes.
Known in industry parlance as a "robo-adviser," Wealthfront and its peers like Betterment have turned up competition and put pressure on fees across the wealth management industry.
It entered common parlance in the late 1970s, particularly after the publication of "Sexual Shakedown: The Sexual Harassment of Women on the Job" by Lin Farley in 1978.
"In common parlance, we're talking about ankle bracelets, and we found at bus station, there are overflowing bins of ankle bracelets that have been cut off," she said.
Treyger also joins a now four-person leadership team — including Senkut, Sundeep Peechu, and Wesley Chan — that has, in the parlance of the startup world, been crushing it.
The primary outstanding issues have been based on how to finance at least a portion of the budget agreement, or in congressional parlance, finding pay-fors or offsets.
And while hoverboards are not specifically named in the ban, the details of Segway's patents outline much of what anyone would describe as a "hoverboard" in current parlance.
That will almost certainly result in significant writedowns on bonds' principal - haircuts in bond parlance - but investors reckon the securities are still a good buy at current prices.
In the 1970s Trump sought recognition for his accomplishments as a real estate developer years before he had, in the parlance of the trade, put two bricks together.
In fact, Alexa does an even better job of ensuring you don't need to move, because there's no remote-controlled remote control (RCRC, in Onion parlance) to misplace.
Sure, except for all the reasons not to — like, in the parlance of Jim Comey, oh fuzz, this is about to snowball, I need to contain and deflect.
While Yaka's Davis Cup experience came in a deciding match, Pellandra took the court in what is called a dead rubber, a meaningless match in Davis Cup parlance.
The internet is a critical tool for spreading false information – or disinformation in the parlance of information warfare – to either manipulate or demoralize a nation and its people.
Like with boards, it's easy enough to change the roadmap by just dragging the different larger chunks of work (or "epics," in Agile parlance) to a new date.
Contemporary NBA parlance frowns at that phrase, but scorers who don't need a screen and can fill it up from anywhere on the court will always be useful.
In startup parlance, this is being transparent with your board about what you are going to do with your investors' capital and then being honest about the results.
In the parlance of Congressional budgeting, if you have an idea that scores positively — in other words, if it raises money without raising taxes — you have struck gold.
Mr. Rich, who declined to comment for this article, transformed the front page — "the wood," in tabloid parlance — into a venue for criticizing and often ridiculing President Trump.
In current wine parlance, sommeliers might refer to this wine as "crunchy," like biting into a juicy apple in which the sweetness and the acidity were precisely balanced.
On average, tech stocks have jumped — or "popped," in Wall Street parlance — 2000 percent on their first day of trading over the past 22 years, according to Dealogic.
Daniel O'BrienCollingswood, N.J. To the Editor: Dear Robert Mueller: I am an ordinary American citizen who would very much like to hear in layman's parlance about your investigation.
" A 2013 Washington Post article chalks this up to strategy: "Traditionally, Popeyes has been focused on the 'urban' market, which in retail parlance can be code for 'black.
GIFs like this one, in which one or more "characters" are labeled in a way that transforms the action of a GIF into allegory, are common meme parlance.
We settled on the town because it is so rich in natural beauty—or "gorges" in local pun parlance—and it has a thriving arts and science scene.
The person, preferring to stay anonymous, noted Firstminute would charge fees and take a share of the profit on the fund's returns, known as "carry" in industry parlance.
"In show-business parlance, Donald Trump is a show runner," said Al Cross, a longtime Kentucky political journalist who has known Mr. McConnell for more than 30 years.
Additionally, RH has morphed into a hospitality business, with profitable restaurants and even a food, wine, art and design compound, to use RH parlance, in the Napa Valley.
In theater parlance, a show is "frozen" when — on a designated rehearsal day, usually about a week before opening night — no more fixes, cuts or additions are introduced.
Audi has finally heeded enthusiasts' calls and is bringing the fire-breathing RS6 Avant (that's station wagon in Audi parlance) to the US market for the first time.
By going against the wishes of the majority and triggering a powerful backlash, Mr. Leung has committed, in the parlance of Chinese communism, the sin of ultra-leftism.
Pickering was fed up with the incompetence of his "computers," the common parlance for humans who computed, in this case, crunching the numbers to arrive at astronomical calculations.
In this case, the bureau hierarchy controlled both the investigation and the charging decision from Washington, a scenario known in FBI parlance as a "special," the lawmakers said.
Ngo has not only documented antifa activities but published at least one member's full name alongside a picture — "doxxing" her, in internet parlance, and exposing her to retaliation.
Let's go through what each number ranking, or seed, in the parlance of March Madness, means, and the details of each roll in the hay (or silks, or furs).
If there is ever going to be "convergence, " in NGO parlance, between the government's health systems and the ethnic health systems, maintaining continuity and community ownership will be essential.
Instead Wall Street had become, in Clinton's parlance, "just one street," just one industry among many, one problem among many, one stop on the speaking circuit among very many.
Who cares that this messes with decades of canon, and will likely be re-written (retconned, in the comics parlance) in a future comic, making the entire mess pointless?
Due to their size and position, the engines on the Max create lift when the airplane enters a steep climb (or, in aviation parlance, at high angles of attack).
To see if these claims were valid, BuzzFeed News recreated the ISU system that highlights scores far above or below the average — or outside the corridor, in skating parlance.
"This was, simply put in plain parlance, an act of God," Garcetti said of the fire, which has scorched nearly 700 acres so far, according to Curbed Los Angeles.
If you have one of Nikon's lenses with lens-based stabilization (Vibration Reduction, or VR, in Nikon's parlance), the results will be even better since they work in conjunction.
And it emphasizes the fact that that poorer (or "Lower," in the film's parlance) women still see this enforced hyper-femininity as a privilege in some particularly horrifying ways.
Paired with a carbon fiber monocoque — Monocage II, in McLaren parlance — what this obsessive pursuit of optimal airflow means for the driver is a list of extreme supercar specs.
It's a Cinderella story about a "hooker" — to use the film's parlance — named Vivian (Julia Roberts), and the wealthy businessman, Richard Gere's Edward, who falls in love with her.
Facebook's Ad Library includes data on political ads that were active on its platform but subsequently got pulled (made "inactive" in its parlance) because they broke its disclosure rules.
The New York Post recently ran a story on how people who have low ratings (and low, in Uber parlance, means under a 4.5) have trouble getting cars quickly.
Writers — often known in our romantic parlance for being tortured, starving or blocked — can have a love-hate relationship with productivity, fearful that therein lies the road to hackdom.
But since Dozier has "volunteered" to give up his appeals and face the execution chamber, in death penalty parlance, the fight over Dozier's future is almost at an end.
Syria's government has said that although it will abide by the agreement, it would continue fighting "terrorism" wherever it exists, parlance for most armed rebel groups fighting government troops.
His works have become a shared global parlance; the term "Shakespearean tragedy" evokes a rise-and-fall narrative even if the listener is not intimate with the works themselves.
From curb to gate, zigzagging between retractable barriers, from one pinch point to the next—in industry parlance, this is your travel ribbon, flowing, or jamming, through the terminal.
So Troutt met with his WinStar brain trust and decided to enter a swift front-runner by the name of Gettysburg — a rabbit, in the parlance of the racetrack.
To use the parlance of our times, it's old school, and it's hardly much of an update on the old machine, which is why we like it so much.
But in the parlance of a long-gone era, we devote little ink to the interesting question of how the president spends the dark hours, after the workday ends.
The lawsuit also accuses White Plains of having failed to establish police guidelines for dealing with emotionally disturbed people, or E.D.P.s as they are known in law-enforcement parlance.
One of these flags was an early version of a shadow ban: The 'twit bit' is a flag that basically labels a user as a "loser," in BBS parlance.
The app, which is part of Pages and is called Digital Books in new iOS parlance, allows users to create multimedia books just as they would create regular documents.
I urge anyone reading this who is confused as shit to come visit us and experience the feelings of the 905 (the 5ive 5eeling, in hypebeast parlance) for themselves.
We settled on TEN because it was tied to a specific definition of [the Japanese word] Banzai, whereas the others seemed somewhat more arbitrary ("green-paintish," in constructor parlance).
But unlike their real-life counterparts, these campaign reporters ("embeds," in political parlance) were part of a fictional comedy set to debut in January with a six-episode run.
Critics call the profusion of high-tech, advertising-centric booths — kiosks, in the new parlance of phone companies — one piece of a broader sell-off of Britain's public space.
Before the phrase "make America great again" entered common parlance, Tea Partiers devoted a distinct portion of their communications to discussions of American exceptionalism, and efforts to destroy it.
I am referring to the endless self-flagellation among well-educated liberals — "the elites," in pejorative parlance — about their failure to "get" the concerns of white working-class voters.
Mathematical formulas can then calculate whether a challenged map is part of the pack in its partisan tilt or is at the extremes — a "statistical outlier," in redistricting parlance.
Under Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection laws, the companies have been exchanging debt to lenders for equity in the company, known in financial parlance as a debt-for-equity swap.
In the parlance of Capitol Hill, many of the Democrats' proposals were "messaging amendments," intended to put Republicans on record as opposing popular provisions of the Affordable Care Act.
Lisa says she has spent "thousands of hours" in dressing rooms with other women, helping them find clothing that will "catalyze confidence," in the parlance of the company's tagline.
Past impostors, known as catfish in social media parlance, have switched gender or sexual orientation, pretended to be their sons or girlfriends, and even invented babies and dead pets.
But by finding small points of connection, the result is feeling like you're in on the joke, and in the parlance of 2019, feeling "attacked" is a good thing.
In Wall Street parlance, SkyBridge is primarily a fund of funds, buying stakes in hedge funds like those run by the billionaires Paul E. Singer and Daniel S. Loeb.
Funds that focus on companies that follow environmental, social and governance principles — ESG in market parlance — have been attracting billions of dollars in investor cash while posting respectable returns.
Pentagon officials say they go to great lengths to prevent civilian casualties, abandoning some strikes altogether if the risk to civilians — "collateral damage" in military parlance — is too great.
Some Chinese intelligence operatives pose as journalists at those agencies and at smaller state-run outlets, using "nonofficial cover," in the parlance of spies, experts on Chinese espionage say.
Some Chinese intelligence operatives pose as journalists at those agencies and at smaller state-run outlets, using "nonofficial cover," in the parlance of spies, experts on Chinese espionage say.
Molten and bluesy, Mr. Barron is equally indebted to the tweaked angularity of Thelonious Monk and the graceful parlance of Hank Jones; he's one of jazz's unassailable piano gurus.
This is called, in Bang Bar parlance, a U. The chicken or pork can also be piled over a bowl of rice, but the bread is really very good.
In the parlance of astronomers, a "family" of asteroids is a collection of space rocks with a common origin—a "parent" asteroid that fragmented after a collision with another rock.
The partially redacted government document, referred to as a 5K1 letter in legal parlance, said that Sater went undercover and was instrumental in weakening the Mafia's presence on Wall Street.
These interlopers, or "coycrocks" in the island's parlance, bring with them a strong whiff of the outside world as their unfamiliar ways shine a new light on Lark's questionable traditions.
Bone crushing—extreme osteophagy in the scientific parlance—is a trait exhibited by just a handful of mammalian scavengers and predators today, including the spotted hyena and the gray wolf.
"Facebook took advantage of unsuspecting kids, one of whom employees referred to as a 'whale,' using casino parlance to refer to the child's high volume of purchases," their complaint says.
While there are no statistics, it is rare for defendants charged with serious felonies to represent themselves — go "pro se" in legal parlance — and that's particularly true in federal court.
It's hard to believe we owe such a simple joke construction to Saturday Night Live, but it was the comedy show's "Wayne's World" sketch that propelled "Not!" into common parlance.
The common parlance was to call them the "three muses," although Dior himself termed them his "mothers" — a trio of women who effectively gave birth to him as a couturier.
Investigators later found syringes in the bucket, along with a fatigue-fighting agent known in racing parlance as a milkshake, according to hearing transcripts from the state's Horse Racing Board.
On top of the outermost layer of your roof (or the waterproof membrane, as it is known in roofing parlance), a protective mat or layer of insulation is laid down.
The gunman — an "active shooter," in police parlance — was spraying bullets from a semiautomatic rifle at doctors and others, moving toward the roof and, according to fractured reports, setting fires.
The fat horns were ringed, one for each year, which is how hunters determine a ram's age, and the tips were battle-worn and ragged, or "broomed" in hunting parlance.
The driver gets out, opens the trunk — or in Northern Irish parlance, the boot — and out stumbles the dancer and choreographer Oona Doherty, like a fighter ready for a match.
If, in the parlance of this universe, the original was a Ninja, sneaking up on an unsuspecting public, this one's a Homer: good for mild amusement but not much more.
But, perhaps because I was a straight white male from a nominally Christian household, I was more bothered by the word "kook," surfer parlance for unskilled outsider — as in, me.
De Guindos also said he was optimistic that EU governments would "soon" reach a deal about a common fiscal facility - political parlance for a common fund designed to fight crises.
Factor in the "greenshoe," Wall Street parlance for additional shares set aside to cover exceptional investor demand, and Cuervo is hoping to raise 17.5 billion pesos from its initial offering.
" (Without Mr. Apatow, 49, the term bromance might not be in common parlance.) Earlier in his career, he produced the short-lived cult-TV classics "Freaks and Geeks" and "Undeclared.
Their point, rather, is that the United States is much more powerful — winning by so much, in Trump's parlance — that Chinese gains don't register very much on a global scale.
Since Facebook's IPO, a glut of highly valued startup companies — called 'unicorns' in Silicon Valley parlance — have stopped short of tapping public markets as a source of cash to fuel growth.
But it's also a movie that revolves around social and cultural conflicts: The vampires are the wealthy, well-dressed elite, prohibited from intermarrying with the werewolves (or lycans, in Underworld parlance).
Taken from women who suffered brain-death at some point in their pregnancy ("stillmothers" in the game's frequently chilling parlance), the BBs are connected to both the living and the dead.
In response, Scott Keller, the Texas solicitor-general, noted that the justices largely left it to the states to decide who qualifies as mentally retarded, or, in today's parlance, "intellectually disabled".
Several years earlier, Adams had put his money into a scrappy startup that marketed laser technology, and later it sold for more than a billion dollars—a "unicorn," in investor parlance.
He is, in the parlance of Dark Souls, a "hollow": Someone who becomes cursed with the inability to die, and fades over decades into a thin shadow of their former self.
The 2018 version of this are the absurd assertions that George Soros is paying for, in the favored parlance of Fox News, an "invasion" of Central Americans into the United States.
But paper ballots don't help much if you use machines to tabulate them and those machines are compromised — so it's especially worrying if those are, in engineering parlance, black boxes, i.e.
In intelligence parlance, a tear line is a mark on a sensitive document where all the information below that line has been cleared for release — the not-so-secretive background info.
And while we often refer to it as the NAACP, the nation's oldest civil rights organization has kept the word "colored" in its name long after it has left common parlance.
If Tapia finds himself overmatched at higher levels, no one can even say for certain if "cookie cutter-ing him," to borrow Wilson's parlance, would even jive with someone so unique.
The older bicycles won't head to the trash heap, but can be replaced with new components from the next generation of bicycles because they are "backwards-compatible," in true tech parlance.
" In social justice parlance, when an illicit bias is reflected and goes unchallenged in our social and governmental institutions (like, for example, the courts), the bias is considered to be "systemic.
She initiated coverage on some of the splashiest US cannabis names — known as multistate operators or MSOs in industry parlance — including Curaleaf, Green Thumb Industries, Cresco Labs, Acreage Holdings, and MedMen.
His father is the center of an elaborate personality cult and is commonly referred to as Arkadag, or protector, who in official parlance is overseeing an "era of might and happiness".
A teen-age girl, Anna (Galatéa Bellugi), claims to have had a vision—an apparition, in Church parlance—of the Virgin Mary, and only one of them is available for interview.
This is commonly called an "incubation" in Silicon Valley parlance, and on Tuesday Greylock announced its incubator had hatched Abnormal, an email security startup, with $24 million in Series A funding.
After months of working 14-hour days in living rooms and coffee shops and soliciting investments from family and friends ("angel investors," in startup parlance), they're able to broaden their headcount.
This doesn't just matter to those already in the grip of ED. The concept of "thinspiration" long ago crept beyond the bounds of eating-disorder terminology and into our mainstream parlance.
In a reddit thread posted Wednesday morning, one user described a persistent scammer who impersonates well-respected player groups ("guilds," in World of Warcraft parlance) and sends private messages to targets.
In Republican parlance, "entitlement" programs mean food stamps, housing assistance, Medicare and Medicaid health insurance for the elderly, poor and disabled, as well as other programs created to assist the needy.
Trump also appeared to anticipate a question on reports that her husband had maligned African countries and Haiti, adopting White House parlance to dismiss those stories for being anonymously sourced. Mrs.
And venture capital money meant that highly valued start-ups — "unicorns," in Silicon Valley parlance — were able to remain private for longer without turning to the public markets for fund-raising.
This led, in the common parlance, to the assumption that your beliefs are determined by your group's privilege or lack of privilege, by where your group is within the power structure.
According to a recent study by IHL Group, a research and advisory firm, stockouts (industry parlance for the aforementioned out-of-stock scenario) cost retailers nearly $1 trillion per year globally.
Increasingly, she has been used as a target striker, a No. 9 in soccer parlance, rather than in her preferred central midfield position as an instigator, a creator, a No. 10.
He has used the politics of the moment—negative partisanship, in the parlance of political science—as armor, blaming the Democrats and the media for things that are obviously his fault.
In traditional Wall Street parlance, a bull market ends and a bear begins with a drop of 20 percent from the market's last peak, which happens to have occurred on Aug.
In spite of his inexperience, Gerson decides to take his 8-year-old son, Owen, over the falls in a light inflatable rubber kayak known, in rafting parlance, as a ducky.
With the Iowa caucuses looming, Presidential hopefuls who have already inundated the e-mail inboxes of voters—the "spray and pray" technique, in P.R. parlance—may want to rethink their strategy.
Conversations with five central bank sources show policymakers are wary of seeing long-term yields creep back up as the ECB's stock of bonds ages, or "loses duration" in market parlance.
But the investment came in at a lower valuation than its Series A — a "down round," in startup parlance — which was $93 million pre-money, according to startup data firm PitchBook.
I think one of the key things about this is to say, what are the ways that we can either increment what is in the current parlance, is terms of service.
In First Amendment parlance, a law that forces speakers to receive government approval in advance of speaking (including publishing) is called a prior restraint – the most insidious form of government speech restriction.
In the parlance of casino and nightclub operators, where big spenders are often referred to as "whales," Low was the biggest whale Las Vegas, Saint Tropez, and New York had ever encountered.
I got to see the bluer-than-turquoise (Opalescent Silver Blue, in Jaguar parlance) car in person during Jaguar's Tech Fest event today, and I have to agree with the Ferrari founder.
The local agent for a Sydney merchant named Robert Towns founded it in 1864 to make it easier to export cattle from his employer's huge inland ranches (or stations, in Australian parlance).
Should these bonds be downgraded to junk—thus becoming "fallen angels", in the parlance of debt markets—some investors, such as insurance firms, would be required by their mandates to dump them.
Those users — called "data subjects" in GDPR parlance — can ask for their information to be deleted, to be corrected if it's incorrect, and even get delivered to them in a portable form.
Adventurous concoctions featuring local flavors such as chicken rice, curry, pineapple tarts, and "kopi" — coffee in local parlance — are going head-to-head in the battle to emerge as Singapore's next cocktail.
Tappeiner is using Anki's newly unveiled software development kit—an SDK, in coder parlance—that he says even the greenest of coders can use to tweak the behavior of the toy robot.
The whole situation could have been designed in a lab to encourage fans to root for a romance between the two — or, in fandom parlance, to ship them — and ship they did.
One question hanging over hard-to-tether digital groups is whether they should be forced to register a "permanent establishment", tax parlance for a taxable presence, in countries where they make sales.
The "Jewish Question," or "JQ," is common parlance for anti-Semites and neo-Nazis, as the term stems from the phrase "Final Solution to the Jewish Question," a reference to the Holocaust.
According to the New Hacker's Dictionary published by MIT Press, the words "hacking" and "hacker" (see below) in mainstream parlance have come to subsume the words "cracking" and "cracker," and that's misleading.
Trello, the lightweight project management service Atlassian acquired for $425 million earlier this year, is finally bringing its extensions (or "Power-Ups" in Trello's parlance) to both its iOS and Android apps.
The shuttle diplomacy soon resulted in an informal offer — known in government parlance as a "Queen for a Day" proffer — in which Assange identified what he wanted and what he might give.
A new generation of more powerful roadside bombs — improvised explosive devices, or I.E.D.s, in military parlance — became a signature of the fighting in Iraq and Afghanistan, yielding an epidemic of blast injury.
A "liquidity event" is Silicon Valley parlance for one of three outcomes: listing the company on the stock market, selling the business or letting a private equity firm buy out early investors.
Probably the most annoying aspect of Samsung devices is their inclusion of inferior apps made by mobile carriers like Verizon Wireless and AT&T, known in tech industry parlance as carrier bloatware.
What does feel familiar in "The Handmaid's Tale" is the blunt misogyny of the society that Atwood portrays, and which Trump's vocal repudiation of "political correctness" has loosed into common parlance today.
A large number of weapons have been removed — or "vaulted" in Epic parlance — and they include clingers, pump shotgun, poison dart trap, scoped revolver, suppressed assault rifle, thermal assault rifle and balloons.
While Slack, which recently went public, has become so synonymous with the space that "Slack me" is now part of workplace parlance at many companies, Lee says Swit isn't playing catch-up.
Upon completion, however, it will be, in sailor's parlance, a baldheaded (meaning it lacks topsails), gaff-rigged (a simple sail configuration that can be tended by a smaller crew) two-masted schooner.
The Knox debrief was later included in the DHS's regular election security meetings — "syncs" in Fed parlance — which have convened every week inside the bowels of the federal government since January 202053.
In South African parlance, things happen at two speeds: "Just now" — which could be anywhere from 10 minutes to two weeks to who knows when — or "now-now," which means, well, now.
Some people confuse Album of the Year with Record of the Year, since albums used to be on physical records and, thus, the two terms are often used interchangeably in common parlance.
Praised in the Russian news media as a young talent in 2005, when she was just 21, Ms. Shevchenko worked on cyberdefense projects but embraced the symbols and parlance of criminal hackers.
Three law enforcement officials described a newfound interest among prosecutors in taking on smaller gun cases — referred to in law enforcement parlance as one-man, one-gun cases for their narrow impact.
What we're not seeing yet is the counterbalance of human decency and moral certitude that's also important to what could now, in the parlance of our times, be called the "Fargo" brand.
It's almost like Arrington's downfall was nothing more than, in startup parlance, a failure to scale; as if he just didn't steal quite enough money for success to become its own justification.
In Republican parlance, "entitlement" programs mean food stamps, housing assistance, Medicare and Medicaid health insurance for the elderly, poor and disabled, as well as other programs created by Washington to assist the needy.
But doesn't "queer" (combined with nonbinary pronouns) automatically unravel the term "straight," which has historically meant being sexually inclined toward people of the opposite sex, "square" (in 1950s parlance) and prone to conformity?
Were it less "elastic", in economists' parlance, the share of output going to energy production would not, outside a few oil shocks, have remained so stable over the past 150 years (see chart).
In the penultimate episode, the five women at the show's heart — the Liars, in fan parlance — finally defeated their stalker's latest ploy, an elaborate device that was part map and part board game.
The finished VR experience casts groups of players as internet users — netizens, in the parlance of the film — who have ventured into the digital world to help Ralph and Vanellope with a mission.
And indeed, the prevalence of obstructed labor, or "fetopelvic disproportion," in the parlance of the researchers, has also increased over time, according to recent data from the World Health Organization and other agencies.
Mueller was assigned to H Company—Hotel Company in Marine parlance—part of the 2nd Battalion of the 4th Marine Regiment, a storied infantry unit that traced its origins back to the 1930s.
President Obama assembled a Federal Reserve Board that was probably more in favor of easy money ("dovish" in the parlance of Fed watching) than any Board in the modern history of the Fed.
Gates, a case where a panel on the DC Circuit ruled in favor of detainees and then the court declined to rehear the case as a whole (or en banc in judicial parlance).
Even if they were merely above average in the grand scheme of things—talented "scrubs," in gaming parlance—they recognize what they are up against and where their designers have let them down.
The "what are those" Vine is one of the most famous to ever hit the now-defunct platform, spawning dozens of riffs and parodies as well as a permanent place in internet parlance.
These include Google saying it now scans six billion Android apps every day on smartphones around the world to look for dodgy apps (known as Potentially Harmful Apps or PHAs, in Google's parlance).
In Russia, parties are defined as "systemic opposition" and "non-systemic opposition," according to current political parlance, with the former being opposition in name, but in fact backing Mr. Putin on most matters.
"A woman cannot be herself in the society of the present day, which is an exclusively masculine society," Henrik Ibsen wrote in 1878, proving himself, in 2017 parlance, to be a woke bae.
But there is a huge gulf between the popular cinematic image of raptors—or dromaeosaurs, as they're known in paleontological parlance—and the actual animals that roamed our planet millions of years ago.
Official descriptions of the President's calls with foreign leaders -- termed "readouts" in Washington parlance -- offer administrations the chance to characterize in their own terms the diplomacy conducted at the highest levels between countries.
Because of that frequent-flyer status — I am a "Platinum Medallion," in Delta's parlance, for 2019 — I got a free upgrade to Delta's extra-legroom seats, branded as "Comfort Plus," for both flights.
This is someone who is well-versed in the multi-hyphenate parlance of intersectionality; someone who wears a bell hooks T-shirt and could easily recite the academic's greatest essays, chapter and verse.
The explanation, echoed by many Republicans who see the bill as their best chance to repeal the Affordable Care Act, has reignited a debate over what counts as a cut, in budget parlance.
It has become "Must See TV." Despite the apparent bedlam, special care is taken to make sure that the plotlines, in industry parlance, "hook," and that the characters always say crazy, unexpected things.
According to a 21 Texas A&M University study, roughly 242 percent of American nonprofit solicitations include these tokens of appreciation — "donor premiums," in fundraising parlance — upfront or as a reward for donating.
In Republican parlance, "entitlement" programs mean food stamps, housing assistance, Medicare and Medicaid health insurance for the elderly, poor, and disabled, as well as other programs created by Washington to assist the needy.
Salesforce announced some new developer tools today, designed to make it easier for programmers to build applications on top of Commerce Cloud in what is known in industry parlance as a "headless" system.
The Future Circular Collider, as CERN refers to it, has no such specific purpose because under the Standard Model, that higher energy range is barren of new particles — a desert in the parlance.
But no Democratic nominee before Ms. Warren had ever proposed so many new taxes and spending programs, and leaned so heavily into the argument that they would be, in economist parlance, pro-growth.
At that time, Carlyle and other firms were preparing public offerings, and the industry lobby seized on a little-discussed element of the reform efforts: the "enterprise-value tax," in private-equity parlance.
Blitzing Curry as he comes around a screen means, in NBA parlance, putting "two on the ball," which is more likely to result in an open shot a pass or two down the line.
Experts told Live Science that this Australian saltwater crocodile (a "salty" in Aussie parlance) was unusually large, even for its hefty species — though it wasn&apost the biggest size crocodiles like this can reach.
No footwear company had yet made a running shoe with an all-wool upper (in footwear parlance, the "upper" is the entirety of the shoe that encases your foot and connects to the sole).
Her nation was what's called a "revisionist" power in international relations parlance, meaning a country that is attempting to upend the political status quo and create a new international order whose terms they dictate.
For instance, now companies will be able to create an unlimited number of "workspaces," which is Slack's parlance for different instances of its app that have a one unified login system and various channels.
But they also said there were more signs that large asset and pension managers - "real money" in market parlance - who bet heavily against the pound last summer were cashing in more of those gains.
"The Glory of the World" is Mr. Cockrum's first venture as a commercial producer, through a separate entity he established called Knight Blanc, which is, in theater industry parlance, "enhancing" the production at BAM.
Their concern includes instances where the informant, or "confidential human source" in bureau parlance, offered to assist Medina in attacking the center, and even suggested that he link the attack to the Islamic State.
And when they feel threatened — "activated" in political science parlance — they look for strongmen-style leaders who promise to take whatever action necessary to protect them from outsiders and prevent the changes they fear.
But "Domains," in bot parlance, are areas of expertise, and a key tenet of good bot design is that you keep your domain tightly focused in order to lessen the chance for mistakes. Zoom.
In the parlance of the 1930s, to be a ''progressive'' was suddenly to be a ''fellow traveler,'' someone who never joined the Communist Party but who felt that the Communists might have a point.
The detachable DUM (Distinctly Un-Magical, in MrSpeakers parlance) cable has been improved from the stiff one I tested with the Ether Flows, and it produces no noise from rubbing against clothes or surfaces.
While some of those firms, known in industry parlance as the "wirehouses," have said they will continue selective recruiting, it has left an opening that Wells appears to be stepping into, the sources said.
We count six camo shops and five small cell stores as we drive into downtown Altar, which is a plaza, in cartel parlance, that the Sinaloa cartel and Los Zetas are currently battling over.
A lot of those higher-density population areas also happen to be home to a lot of internet exchanges (in industry parlance, IXes) — buildings where different internet providers connect their networks to one another.
Last week, a driver watched his Model S ram into the back of parked trailer while he was trying to "summon" it, in Tesla parlance, from a parking space without sitting behind the wheel.
Those companies are also competing with a variety of startups solely focused on financial services technology — fintech, in Silicon Valley parlance — that offer a variety of tools and services that are underpinned by lending.
The Los Angeles-based company closed a $5.5 million financing round in February that valued it lower than its last funding round in December 2014, something known in industry parlance as a down round.
One of the biggest objections the banking industry has had regarding Dodd-Frank is the level at which banks are considered too big to fail — systemically important financial institutions (SIFI), in the legislation's parlance.
But it's also true that Trump is the protest candidate — the "change agent," in prognosticators' preferred parlance — at a juncture unfavorable to an insider like Clinton, who's no darling of voters to begin with.
Erickson, who is now 41, is a conservative absolutist who made his name in the mid-2000s by "blowing up" — in the Twitter parlance he jovially employs — Republican leaders he viewed as insufficiently principled.
Fans are flocking to nightclubs and music festivals to see their favorite local rappers and D.J.s perform, while English terms like flow, freestyle and even diss have made their way into popular urban parlance.
Shawn and other pioneers of modern dance were given to addressing their audiences intelligently; Mr. Skybetter's lecture, though entirely in the intellectual parlance of today, was in that tradition, linking Shawn to Mr. Weinert.
A hint of perspectival space emerges from the shallow chevron of denim (the "yoke," in trouser-makers' parlance) at the painting's top edge, opening up the space à la Richard Diebenkorn's "Ocean Park" series.
Much of Britain's receding status comes from its decision to abandon Europe — Brexit, in the parlance — and to remove itself from a realm of some 500 million people that sprawls from Ireland to Greece.
In Navy parlance, Goose is Maverick's RIO (radar intercept officer), but Homer would recognize him as a classic Hetairos, a sacrificial friend whose death is a crucial moral and emotional test for the hero.
In Navy parlance, Goose is Maverick's RIO (radar intercept officer), but Homer would recognize him as a classic Hetairos, a sacrificial friend whose death is a crucial moral and emotional test for the hero.
" The issue of whether countries should be assured of some aid to rebuild from storms or droughts, or to relocate citizens if need be, is known in United Nations parlance as "loss and damage.
He had faced a swirl of investigations while in Congress, including into fund-raising schemes, but ultimately pleaded guilty to using off-the-books employees — "delivery boys," in Mr. Grimm's parlance — to skirt taxes.
This week, a regional field director for the Bernie Sanders campaign was fired for tweets that demeaned—acidly and in the extremely online parlance of cruel detachment—the current crop of Democratic presidential candidates.
Biblical allusions abound, alongside references to Greek mythology (Roy spends most of his journey on a rocket named Cepheus — a major player in the myth of Andromeda and Poseidon, aka Neptune in Roman parlance).
I am what's known in sideshow parlance as a "natural born" — a person born with a physical abnormality on my left hand that, in the heyday of sideshows, might have made me a star.
In Audi's parlance, the A8's autonomous features translate as the "AI traffic jam pilot," meaning the car can take control of the driving in slow-moving traffic at up to 60 kilometers per hour.
In an unscheduled review on Monday that prompted a selloff in South African assets, it cut the sovereign rating for external debt to BB+, one notch below investment grade - or "junk" status in market parlance.
More than 100 were submitted, creating an unusual seven-hour session on the Senate floor — dubbed "vote-a-rama" in Capitol Hill parlance — on legislation often explicitly designed to force Republicans to take unpopular stances.
The service has been compared ad nauseam to Twitter, from which it borrows its basic structure: short messages from users, retweets (or retoots, in its parlance), chronological timelines updating in real-time, and so on.
Thanks to their agreement with the G.O.P., members of the I.D.C. had enjoyed the perks of committee chairmanships, which come with the power to steer legislation and handsome bonuses (known as "lulus" in Albany parlance).
So far, these battles are mostly being lost — it seems that vegan (or "plant-based" in the newly popular parlance) food has finally started to take hold, and that the tides might actually be shifting.
There's a simple reason why all of this high-flying, or high-jumping in Jessica Jones parlance, action works: it's brought to life by a legion of dedicated women who keep everything rooted in reality.
I was enamored with its weird post-soviet vibe and mission-based gameplay, which, at the time, felt like a major sophistication from other FPS games (or, DOOM Clones, in the parlance of the day).
The Hogben Test was, for quite some time, the only humane way of using an animal to detect whether an adult lady woman was "in the family way," in the common parlance of the day.
Instead of the man responsible for what ails the country—or, in his parlance, what is making America great again—Stone appears to be exiled from both the Republican Party and Donald Trump's inner circle.
Pavel said the Western military alliance has ways, known in military parlance as strategic communication, to counter Russian disinformation and he did not expect Moscow to be able to generate popular protests against the deployments.
This creates the phenomenon of what, in Steemit parlance, are called "whales," high value accounts with the voting power to assign sizeable rewards, whose support can make or break an aspiring writer on the site.
So the nuns' speedy sale was deemed legally invalid by a judge, and Katy Perry's hopes and dreams of living in a former Catholic convent rose from the dead, to use Catholic parlance, ha ha.
He was ultimately persuaded by friends who were alumni — or "former students," in the university's parlance — including the legendary wildcatter Michel T. Halbouty, who, like many Aggies, wore his treasured class ring long after graduating.
As for beer, I'd opt for lower-alcohol styles that you can drink over the long haul — "sessionable," in beer parlance, as you can consume a lot without flagging over a long session of drinking.
In Fed Cup parlance, the doubles match was a dead rubber, and it was the softest of re-entry vehicles for Serena Williams after more than a year away from the tour she once dominated.
He discussed his book over coffee and explained how in "The West Wing" parlance, he was not the one in the walk and talks, but the one handing the papers to those walking and talking.
It pokes fun at people's repeated willingness to be seduced by seemingly lovable new public figures, as well as their predictable rejection of those figures when they become, as internet parlance would have it, problematic.
Their temptation to overreach is rising, fed by the perception that President Trump (in his political supporters' parlance) is a "snowflake" — talking a big game but more interested in self-absorbed summitry than military strikes.
On Thursday, however, the federal judge overseeing Mr. Guzmán's case, rejected nearly all of his requests to loosen the restrictions he is facing, which are known in prison parlance as special administrative measures, or SAMs.
Among the signs of health: Two of this season's plays announced that they had recouped their capitalization costs, meaning, in industry parlance, that they are hits, and can generate profits until they close this month.
The company is calling this new idea the Icon Series, a collection of virtual costumes (or skins, in gaming parlance) that go beyond borrowing characters in popular media properties and instead use real-life people.
While some readers may roll their eyes at Mr. Gates's use of the word "cowboys" to refer to Australian farmers — harmlessly misplaced parlance — it would be difficult to describe him as anything less than intrepid.
Today it sits covered with paint, its three stories blasted — or, in graffiti parlance, "blessed" — with the signature scrawls, robots, zombies, cigarette-smoking goldfish, leering eyeballs, dripping bananas and other work of 125 graffiti artists.
Despite presiding over the Empire State during its first full decade of abolition in the 1830s, he was a Jacksonian Democrat, one who sympathized with southern slavery, a "doughface" in the parlance of the times.
But both LG and Samsung have display-manufacturing subsidiaries, and it wasn't entirely certain how many others would be able to offer up the same or similar edge-to-edge (or, in Samsung parlance, Infinity) displays.
But on June 2 and 3, a number of Lumiere's machines had spit out far more money than they'd consumed, despite not awarding any major jackpots, an aberration known in industry parlance as a negative hold.
Iron man (or iron woman—WWE's still working out the parlance) matches have a long history, which the Roadblock match fits into neatly: they are meant to showcase technical ability and chain wrestling, along with stamina.
In Anglo-American legal parlance, "Blackacre" is a standard placeholder used to denote a fictional piece of land, often a bequest, much as the term "John Doe" is used to indicate a fictional or anonymous individual.
Specifically, Pai was admonished over his "lack of candor," a term that in federal parlance roughly translates to "withholding information that should be disclosed," which is to say, the chairman was not accused of lying outright.
In gaming parlance, there has long been a casual/hardcore divide between the games that are easy to pick up and play and those that require hours of practice and patience just to learn the fundamentals.
The jacket, in Outlier parlance, is an "experiment," a limited-release garment that indulges every bit of the otaku flair for which Outlier has been known since Abe Burmeister and Tyler Clemens founded it in 2008.
In the video obtained by Motherboard, the trainer acknowledges that Facebook has been disabling the accounts of victims who post about receiving unwanted dick pics, or "unsolicited adult nude genitalia imagery sharing" in Facebook's own parlance.
How drug deaths are reported on in the media—and in turn how they are discussed in common parlance—is often misleading and sensationalized, loaded with prejudice about drug users and perpetuating potentially dangerous urban legends.
Last year, he and Business Leaders for Michigan convened an ambitious effort called Launch Michigan to bring together key stakeholders, in its parlance—businesses, philanthropic organizations, and teachers' unions—and fix what ails the state's schools.
So at first, watching Kai smear Cheetos puree on his face and dry hump Donald Trump's face on Fox News, I assumed that he would be, to adopt Buffy parlance, the Big Bad of the season.
In currency market parlance, that suggests the Bank of Japan (BoJ) could intervene at any time to sell the very yen traders are trying to buy—something the central bank already does on a frequent basis.
It also has an "adaptive selfie" feature built in, which will detect whether you're taking a solo or group selfie — a groufie, in Huawei parlance — and will automatically expand to a wider angle for the latter.
Thus, it's not surprising that a remix of "Despacito" by Luis Fonsi and Daddy Yankee featuring Justin Bieber would, to employ the modern parlance, "go off"—but the degree to which it has exploded was unprecedented.
So-called alternative employment arrangements, in the parlance of the Bureau of Labor Statistics, including gig economy jobs, have grown from representing 10.1 percent of U.S. employees in 2005 to 15.8 percent of employees in 2015.
The most exciting footage from any drone race is when two quadcopters are right on each other's tails, swapping back and forth between leader and follower, and even bumping each other — trading paint in NASCAR parlance.
They're smart, realize the word "stagnant" means "coma" in NBA parlance, and have the momentum of a new stadium to help push them through understandably sluggish tendencies that will soon settle in, if they haven't already.
"If we are going to borrow parlance from Spinal Tap: 10 is loud, 85033 is crazy; he turned it up to 11 on the dial," he continued, referring to a scene in the 1984 comedy film.
You have your heroes, but having a strong force of complementary unit-types is vital to navigating the missions, and in multiplayer the heroes (or elites, in the game's parlance) are summoned via a gatherable currency.
In 2013-14, for example, investigators found that nearly 90 percent of DraftKings' customers lost money, suggesting a major gulf between the casual players — or "minnows," in betting parlance — and the professional players known as sharks.
If the company doesn't upgrade, it's possible that tenants — or "members" in WeWork parlance — could be unwittingly sharing their data with hackers who gain access to the network through outdated or substandard tech, the sources said.
There on a recent night the chef "paired" (to use fine-dining parlance) room temperature Joven with fanciful dishes like Santa Barbara sea urchin in yuzu Jell-O and grilled wild Spanish octopus with fennel pollen.
Torrential rainstorms have unearthed a corpse, washed up in its very own pine box on a par-3 golf course — a "long-term decomp," in cop parlance, meaning the remains are sans flesh and all bones.
At yoga studios around the country, teacher training is a popular way for instructors to supplement income from one-off classes and for students to advance in skill level — to deepen one's practice, in yogi parlance.
Every time you glimpse the duo in their two-dimensional tabloid selves, they're clad in baseball caps and big jackets, attempting to, in DM parlance, "enjoy a stroll" — despite the strange cameras tracking their every move.
But before then, Machado still has baseball left to play for the Los Angeles Dodgers, who acquired him from the Baltimore Orioles for their postseason run — a high-profile rental, in the parlance of the game.
Here in Macapá, a city of 370,000 in northern Brazil, an elite squad of camouflage-clad police officers from the Environmental Battalion regularly patrol the Amazon River for pirates, often called water rats in local parlance.
In labor economics parlance, this is known as the skills gap, meaning that employers expect new hires to come in on day one with more advanced skills or deeper learning than the actual job candidates have.
The Socialist Party has been reduced to a few senior figures allied with Socialist President François Hollande and a handful of so-called insubordinates, or "frondeurs" in French parlance, who nevertheless consider one another sworn enemies.
We can assume that, in Trump parlance, the president will assert that not only is the state of the union strong but that it is better than under any president in the history of the union.
From the depths of the internet comes to us one clip of an owl in parts unknown, riding what appears to be a Segway miniPRO hoverboard (self-balancing scooter, in the company's parlance) or something like it.
The penguins, called Roy and Silo, "exhibit what in penguin parlance is called 'ecstatic behavior': that is, they entwine their necks, they vocalize to each other, they have sex," the New York Times wrote at the time.
There are tens of thousands of "mass incidents", or protests in Chinese government parlance, every year, over everything from pollution to illegal land seizures, which are often swiftly put down by China's stability obsessed ruling communist party.
So he found a company that sold the certificates (Apple parlance for the license to distribute private iOS software) and used that certificate to start distributing GBA4iOS to anyone who chose to download it from his website.
Number one is easy: the biggest trend to come from American rap recently is musicians who release their bars with all the parlance of a toddler with a dummy stuck deep in the crevices of their mouth.
In church parlance, the terrain of Mount Sinai is described as "Theobadistos", trodden by God; this refers to the belief that Moses, a patriarch revered by all monotheists, had his encounter with the divine at the summit.
In 2004, a fast-deflating Howard Dean lost one-third of his hard-core supporters in Manchester (the cherished "number ones" in political parlance) in the eight days between the Iowa caucuses and the New Hampshire primary.
While the TGIT favorite has unfailingly remained a soapy treat for loyalists, the Shondaland drama also consistently threatened to take its plotting over a narrative cliff – to speak in OPA parlance — leaving nothing but fiery wreckage behind.
Details of life inside the FLDS can be found in excerpts from multiple FBI reports of witness interviews -- 302s in bureau parlance -- that place what once was easily dismissed as mere rumor squarely in the public record.
When the music-speaker company Sonos went public on Thursday, it was Index's fifth billion dollar cha-ching moment — or in the parlance of Silicon Valley, an "exit" — far more than any other year in Index's history.
There's a lot of forward momentum around tokenized securities, so much so that based on their current trajectory, I believe security tokens are going to become a common part of Wall Street parlance in the near future.
What we don't know about mosquitoes Aegypti mosquitoes are the primary vehicle -- or vector, in scientific parlance -- for spreading Zika, the virus that has been associated with the neurological birth defect microcephaly, and with Guillain-Barre syndrome.
Under a government accord published on Friday, Italy's two anti-establishment parties said the government could pay debt it owes to companies and individuals by issuing bonds that can be traded — known in market parlance as IOUs.
The seventh-generation Bristol Ridge A-series APUs — that's AMD parlance for "Accelerated Processing Units" that include a CPU and GPU on the same chip — feature CPU cores based on the new Excavator architecture alongside Radeon graphics.
He settled on a shortsighted plan to compel veteran agents off their "desks" — bureau parlance for supervisory oversight of a line squad — and force them down to headquarters, if they desired to remain part of management ranks.
Sugarplums, traditionally, have little to do with plums, and from the 17th to the 19th century referred to a variety of small candies with a hardened sugar shell (and then, in popular parlance, to a sweet person).
Technically, it's the front portion of a tricycle (and who can forget how fun those were), but in modern parlance, a Third Wheel is a person who hangs out with a couple with no other people present.
JENNIFER STEINHAUER Baltimore draws hordes of tourists to its aquarium, but on my day trips to Charm City from my home in Washington, I am drawn to the American Visionary Art Museum, or, in local parlance, AVAM.
Green discussed what she viewed as her nebulous status as a "social justice warrior" or SJW — a derogatory term the alt-right has applied to feminists and progressives, which has become common parlance in ideological internet debates.
Indeed, when constructors put a Q or Z where it doesn't really belong — "doing it for the 'Gram,' " in the parlance of our times — they may find themselves accused of lewd acts against a certain board game.
That first march and rally ("a gay-in" in the parlance of the era) were staged on the first anniversary of the days of uprisings that followed a police raid at the Stonewall Inn in Greenwich Village.
Michael took Lucy to a nearby urgent care center, where the doctors had no more luck with the tweezers — called forceps in medical parlance — they had on hand and suggested he take her to the emergency room.
Given the FSB's insistence on lines of continuity back to the early Bolshevik Red Terror, it seems safe to assume that the fulfillment of such "special tasks," in security service parlance, is built into the FSB's DNA.
For internet-connected appliances, "reclamation" can entail work by nonprofit foundations to maintain the code for abandoned products, creating an "island of misfit toys," in the parlance of the famed 1964 Rankin/Bass stop-motion Christmas special.
And when I was introduced to Korean skin care, it was through a brand called Missha whose products were considered duplications (or dupes in beauty parlance) of brands like SK-II but at a cheaper price point.
However, to seize and ultimately keep items related to the crime—such as cars, cash, and jewelry—the burden of proof is only a preponderance of evidence: in normal parlance, "more likely than not", or 51 percent.
As it stands, the policy, called an "operations order" in department parlance, allows officers to view not only their own camera recordings but also those of colleagues before they complete reports or make official statements to investigators.
At a job fair he meets an organization called Skills for Chicagoland's Future that I helped found that helped coach him to gain confidence to go on an interview and explain the skills he had in current parlance.
Using reinforcement-learning algorithms, the bots were given around a day or two to devise their new body parts and come up with effective locomotion strategies, which together formed a walker's "policy," in the parlance of AI researchers.
In return they are entitled to treatment and drugs from public and private doctors and hospitals, although they must also pay a portion of the cost of treatment (a co-payment, in American parlance), subject to a cap.
As one of its conditions for re-entering a power-sharing arrangement, Sinn Fein is demanding greater emphasis on "legacy" issues, which in its parlance generally means prosecuting soldiers and policemen for acts of violence during the Troubles.
P. Diddy, Nelly, and Kid Rock were also part of that show, but the only two performers anyone remembers are Timberlake and Jackson, and how their actions brought the terms "wardrobe malfunction" and "nipplegate" into America's common parlance.
For those of you who haven't had the pleasure, which I'm sure is pretty much all of you, let me take a moment to introduce you to West Allis, or 'Stallis' as it's known in the local parlance.
Carey emphasizes the importance of pilots' teamwork in a multi-crew cockpit without explaining that these characteristics are achieved through Crew Resource Management (CRM), aviation parlance for interpersonal communication, leadership, and decision-making protocols that help assure safety.
Thus, the great console gender shift happened: I moved on to playing on une Playstation (and 2, and 3, and so on), la Dreamcast, une Xbox… but for some reason the Nintendo consoles lagged behind in popular parlance.
The April accident, which SpaceX and NASA referred to as an "anomaly" in the bland parlance of aerospace engineers, is under investigation, although the astronaut team has been given "remarkable" access to the SpaceX-led inquiry, Behnken said.
The plans for alternate transit options—or in L train shutdown parlance, survival—during that year and a half of darkness are still being hashed out, by MTA officials in boardrooms and in community meetings across the city.
The TrackPad carries over the same unfortunately named Glass Force Touch technology that you'll find on the 2015 version of the laptop, trading a true mechanical click for a haptic one — or, rather, Taptic, in the Apple parlance.
The fossils these arrow worms—or "chaetognaths" in scientific parlance—left behind contain visual traces of soft tissues, in addition to skeletal features, which is a valuable factor in pinning down their place in the tree of life.
" The Time's Up red carpet talking points are under wraps, but people in the know said that women, and probably a few men, will be — to use the parlance for saying pretty much anything these days — "speaking out.
For killing more enemies and completing more missions, players are rewarded with a never-ending progression of ever-so-slightly more powerful weapons and armor — or, in video game parlance, "loot" — which is doled out with algorithmic randomness.
The markets have continued their dismal tumble, and the White House took the extraordinary step of correcting (or, in Politico parlance, "walking back") three separate untruths the president managed to deliver, despite seemingly sticking to his prepared remarks.
You can have it on your Aleppo eggplant toasted sandwich (or toastie, in Australian parlance) with fermented chile and sumac onions, or on your Turkish baked eggs where it swims in the spiced tomato, topped with pistachio dukkha.
In the parlance of the moment, Britain appeared destined for a so-called hard Brexit, in which it would sever itself from the single marketplace, raising the prospect that tariffs could ultimately constrain trade across the English Channel.
Onstage at the premiere, Costolo played down his role in the show, but Kumail Nanjiani, who plays Dinesh Chugtai, said that his value was in encouraging more and more daring choices (in improv parlance, "heightening") for the show.
His father, Francesco Pinto, pours an ombra ("shadow," literally — glass of wine in local parlance) for a Rialto fish merchant speaking Veneziano (a dialect quite distinct from Italian) with a woman rocking a child in a baby carriage.
Sébastien Maire, the city's chief resilience officer, said the motto - which has been used for centuries - came back into common parlance after the 1910 flood that swamped Paris, and again after militant attacks in November 2015 killed 130 people.
Alias Grace is set in 19503, years after the conviction, when a group of Grace's supporters who think she's innocent hire Dr. Simon Jordan — an alienist, in the day's parlance — to examine her with the aim of exonerating her.
But it didn't grow that quarter, either, and it's been a major sticking point for the company as it tries to make up for the decline in its cost-per-click with volume (called "paid clicks" in Google parlance).
That in turn has hammered profits at hedge funds and banks' FX trading divisions, though some are asking whether the dollar's blistering 22008 percent rally since mid-April will mark a turn for vol, as known in market parlance.
But in the current, eighth, iteration of the show, which debuted June 26, MTV flipped the shtick by including only sexually fluid participants who are attracted to all genders, so that, in the parlance of promotional materials, anything goes!
That original page, or canonical page in Google parlance, is by nature a slower loading page containing more ads and with a potentially lower bounce rate, which is the percentage of viewers who only view one page before leaving.
Today, the company announced its Snapdragon 8cx platform, "the most extreme Snapdragon ever," in Qualcomm's parlance, which still leverages some of the company's mobile expertise and building blocks, but which was built from the ground up to power PCs.
It lacks the high purpose of the Obama administration's wholesale reconfigurations—or resets, in diplomatic parlance—of how the U.S. engages with countries like Russia, Iran, and Cuba, which involved an active agenda over years to change ossified relationships.
They're looking for players who teams listed with generous proportions in media guides: the 5-foot-10 guy—or, to use scout parlance, the 5103 (for that last ⅜ of an inch)—who had been reported at six feet even.
As demand for these options has picked up, one-month implied measures of sterling volatility — or "vol" in market parlance — has increased rapidly, making short-dated sterling options more expensive in comparison with similar-maturity options on other currencies.
They did, however, understand "the art of the deal," in today's parlance, that if they were to in fact unite the states and form a more perfect union for their constituents, everyone was going to have to make concessions.
Section 230 states that an "interactive computer service" (to use the parlance of the time) cannot be held liable for content posted by its users, who the law considers to be "publishers" and therefore responsible for their own content.
In the parlance of traders, the bank is called "a flow monster," meaning it makes its money by capturing a piece of the trillions of dollars of bonds and stocks that are the lifeblood of today's global financial system.
Kenneth P. Thompson, the Brooklyn district attorney, who died last week from cancer, had been a congregant for decades, and his memorial service — his homegoing, in church parlance — was to be celebrated at the Christian Cultural Center on Saturday.
And yes, not only does he prefer the insertive end of anal intercourse, he's what we in the industry call a "total top," meaning that his butthole, in the crude parlance of homophobes everywhere, is a one-way street.
Ratings agencies have reacted by relegating the credit ratings of many countries and firms ever lower down the scales, with once-vaunted developing countries such as Brazil and Russia now ranked sub-investment grade - or junk in common parlance.
The Met's head of exhibitions, Quincy Houghton, did just that, and Monsignor Marini's office asked for approval — a "nihil obstat" in Vatican parlance — from the first section of the Secretariat of State, which is responsible for general church affairs.
To use the parlance of pain, Almodóvar decided to rip the Band-Aid off: If he was going to let the whole world know what's been hurting him, he had no intention of milking any of it for sympathy.
Using the Litvak indictment in an unrelated case is certainly unconventional, but because his name became a verb in the trader's parlance, there is at least a chance the court will admit evidence that might not otherwise be permitted.
Mr. Shiraishi's "Dawn of the Felines," which examines the lives of three women working for an escort agency — a "health express," in Japanese parlance — harks back to the social protest themes prevalent in many of the original roman pornos.
When you throw in the $7.7 billion invested in Uber and $4.6 billion in Didi earlier this year — "significant subsequent events" in the parlance of the report — the funds have spent $40 billion of their eventual $106 billion pool.
The broader investigation, he said — called a 15-6 in military parlance — will seek to clarify the purpose of the building that was bombed, as well as whether it was used by people other than members of Al Qaeda.
" While analysts expect the market to stabilize once premiums rise and more young, healthy people sign up, some observers have not ruled out the possibility of a collapse of the market, known in insurance parlance as a "death spiral.
The total ban on political ads, however, does not extend to so-called issue ads — "cause-based" advertising in Twitter parlance — addressing topics like "economic stewardship" or "economic growth," according to a fact sheet the company supplied to press.
When Treasury Wine Estates, one of the world's largest wine conglomerates, invited me to California for a rare view into how its inexpensive offerings are — in industry parlance — "created from the consumer backwards," I was prepared to be appalled.
" His description of capitalism as a moral and social system as well as an economic one, she wrote, "provided the intellectual basis for my approach to those great questions brought together in political parlance as 'the quality of life.
It was Con Law 101 or, in the parlance of today's popular instructional manuals, Impeachment for Dummies, offered by four law professors known for distilling difficult concepts to academic audiences and a broader public through their commentary and analysis.
When someone says they were hacked by an "advanced persistent threat" (APT)—parlance often used for allegedly government backed hackers—you might imagine some well organized, secret hacking unit that only uses the most sophisticated and specially crafted tools.
One way Yinglish words may differ from their Yiddish origins is that they tend to be charged with emotion — verklempt, which in Linda Richman parlance means "choked up with emotion," actually comes from the Yiddish farklempt, which is associated with grief.
News of a strike began circulating last week, as workers at a San Fernando de Henares (MAD4, in Amazon parlance) facility prepared for a three-day action to follow up a two-day strike those same workers held in late March.
It's equipped with sensors that enable positional tracking, so you can freely move around a room without bumping into your surroundings (what's known as "six degrees of freedom" in VR parlance), and uses the same touch controllers as the Rift.
The monoliths — "doors," in the film's parlance, because people can walk through them — variously drive people insane, entice them to enter by showing them the lives they desire and otherwise steal the objectives of monoliths from better science fiction movies.
So within each level of power, women are more oppressed than men, but that does not necessarily mean that a wealthy white woman — a Wife, in the parlance of The Handmaid's Tale — is more oppressed than a poor man of color.
But the Squad (in Twitter parlance) is clapping back, calling out the terms of the debate and refusing to kowtow to party leadership — just as Pelosi now seems to be joining them — in a sign that those terms might be changing.
In pick-up parlance, the concept refers to the idea that women are driven by the fear of slut-shaming to put up "token" resistance to having sex, but that this resistance can be overcome with a range of PUA techniques.
Chtonobdella tanae, as the two-millimeter-long, one-millimeter-wide leech is known in scientific parlance, is the first new invertebrate species without chitinous or calcified tissues, like a shell or exoskeleton, to be described using computed tomography (CT) scanning.
In this theory, if the US fails to act, especially when it's said it will, America's enemies abroad will be, in the common parlance, "emboldened," believing they can now get away with more aggression and other forms of bad behavior.
Confirming what sources told Reuters earlier this month, Draghi said the ECB would only come to Italy's rescue if the country subscribed to an adjustment program with the European Stability Mechanism (ESM) — political parlance for a bailout with strict policy prescriptions.
Their sound lands somewhere between the energetic scrappiness of bands like Joyce Manor and the syrupy sweetness of 90s bands like Letters To Cleo, with a little math rock twist thrown in, but to summarise using the modern parlance: it bangs.
The term "fake news" outlived its usefulness almost as soon as it became common parlance, and is perhaps only valuable now as a marker for whether journalism that paints President Donald Trump in an unflattering light has reached his desk.
The open-source nature of most cryptocurrency systems means that it's trivially easy to make copies of the software (or "fork" its code, in developer parlance), make some modifications to the protocol and release it as a new, wholly separate system.
These measures are based on the argument that China is improperly violating the intellectual property rights of American firms operating in China, either through counterfeiting, patent infringement, the forced sharing of technology or industrial espionage — all "cheating" in the president's parlance.
Since 85033, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration has considered the ingredients that companies add to food as either approved "food additives" or substances considered "generally recognized as safe" — GRAS in agency parlance — under the conditions of their intended use.
Lures is a word in FBI parlance, but it's not a reference to spies -- it means enticing a "criminal defendant to leave a foreign country" so they can be arrested and prosecuted in the US, according to Justice Department regulations.
Coming up with what in Hill parlance is known as a "pay-for" is tremendously challenging for legislators, because there will be some constituency or group very vocally opposed to essentially any new tax hike, fee, or spending cut that's proposed.
Wang Qishan Shortly after taking power in 2012, President Xi boldly announced he was going to tackle China's endemic corruption, warning both low and high-level officials, or "flies and tigers" in Chinese parlance, they would be in his sights.
But all that success comes with a caveat: If the work draws any negative attention – a "bad story" in Trump parlance – the president could cut off access, publicly distance himself, or spread the word that you are out of favor.
Shah was not gunning for any post, said the official who had worked with him, but added that he would be ready for any government responsibility as Modi's "man of the match", using the cricketing parlance beloved of millions of Indians.
For the past few months he and his crew have been cultivating top-shelf marijuana in growhouses scattered around the area that they then sell (or "donate," as is the parlance of the hazily legal California cannabis industry) to local dispensaries.
More than anything, though, the precipitous drop seemed to attest to an increasingly unmistakable reality: Britain's vote to exit the European Union — Brexit, in common parlance — has put its commercial relationships with the world on uncertain and potentially perilous ground.
But Cisco dropped that approach last year, choosing instead to help customers manage "hybrid" cloud arrangements — industry parlance for using a blend of operations in a company's own data centers and those operated by a growing number of cloud services.
When he died of colon cancer in October, the ensuing Times obituary, modest in length, generated a readership that by any newspaper's standards was astonishing: in digital parlance, almost 22018 million page views (as of a week or so ago).
The photo shoot, directed by Boots Riley, is paired with an essay by Ayana Mathis on the variety and resonance of black male voices in American letters, and it is anchored by a two-page spread — or "reveal," in magazine parlance.
Taking turns, they worked for $210 an hour in the prep kitchen or for $25 an hour during the event — what in catering parlance is called the fiesta shift, when time is a cruel overlord and small mistakes have huge implications.
Mr. Iger can still use his world-class collection of content rights — Marvel superheroes, the Disney Princesses, "Star Wars," Pixar's beloved characters — to roll out Disney's planned streaming service (known in industry parlance as an "over the top" business) in Europe.
" The writer and director Lena Dunham told me that what she often admires about Gerwig's dialogue is the contrast between erudition and naturalism — "In one breath she'll be referencing a superobscure book and also utilizing the awkward parlance of our times.
As a parent of a child with special needs — who is, in special-needs parlance, "very involved," meaning deeply affected, extremely different from me — a central question of my life is what he is understanding, how differently he apprehends the world.
Sometimes, on the days when Supreme releases new product — a drop, in scene parlance — I'll pass by the gaggle of gawky teenagers held behind barriers on Lafayette Street and wonder about all of the potential energy vaporizing into thin air.
If a road win in Game 1 of the Western Conference finals was a case of the Golden State Warriors being "greedy," in the parlance of Coach Steve Kerr, Game 2 on Wednesday must have been an experiment in generosity.
When we talk about the prevalence of domestic violence and child abuse—when some of us find ourselves inside family units that perpetrate these crimes—we acknowledge that, in horror movie parlance, the violence is coming from inside the family.
Although the official being transported -- the "protectee" in security detail parlance -- may have different goals to accomplish at a given meeting or event, the mission of the security detail is always the same: to safeguard the protectee from harm and embarrassment.
I'm not sure if it was the confinement of the tube, the length of time I was inside, or the needle in my arm administering contrast — a very burn-y substance — but I was, in old fashioned parlance: fucking terrified.
Mr. Cotton, whose prowess on the harmonica earned him the nickname Superharp (the term "harp" is common parlance for the harmonica), released some two dozen albums, with small and larger ensembles, for a variety of labels, including Alligator, Vanguard and Telarc.
On that fine bluebird day, I came as close to "shredding the gnar" — ski parlance for speeding down the mountain — as a wobbly-thighed, AARP-eligible woman could, flying down the Ciampac piste as the Marmolada glacier glistened in the distance.
First, Geas always has been desperate for recognition -- not the kind of recognition most people seek, but rather recognition as a "capable guy," in mafia parlance, a person willing to commit any act of violence no matter how heartless or brutal.
An intimately reported and beautifully rendered work of nonfiction about a pair of 17-year-old boys — "unaccompanied alien children," in the chilly parlance of the law — who come to the United States to escape the gang brutality of El Salvador.
From the mid-21s until a few years ago, the house was the headquarters of the China Institute in America, and is now on the market for $2125 million (at 265 feet wide, it's known as a superwide in broker parlance).
Given that identity was not baked into the original internet protocols, and given the difficulty of managing a distributed database in the days before Bitcoin, this form of "self-sovereign" identity — as the parlance has it — was a practical impossibility.
Mr. Shanahan said he wanted to discuss with American and South Korean military commanders how to make sure that troops from the two countries remained in a state of readiness — military parlance for being able to fight should hostilities begin.
In fact, it's arguably queerbaiting — common fan parlance for the homophobic act of presenting a character as straight while dangling subtext clues (and in some cases, external direction by creators) for fans to tease the idea that they could be queer.
After the seesawing of the company's stock when it debuted in 2012, regulators have gradually tightened rules and there has also been a glut of highly valued startup companies - called 'unicorns' in Silicon Valley parlance - that have been delaying their public offerings.
For those looking to go—in the parlance of the tagline—"all in" with the film's heroes, the DC Comics back catalogue is filled with stories that build out the mythology and ideas introduced in the movie, from Atlantis to Apokolips and beyond.
So every time Ganymede reaches the "new moon" position (or, in official astronomy parlance, when it's aligned "in syzygy"—pronounced sizz-ee-gee), it's in the right place to cast its shadow onto Jupiter, and to eclipse the Sun wherever that shadow lands.
But Orphan Black had proved to executives that a noisy fandom — the #CloneClub, to use the Orphan Black parlance — could cut through the din of Peak TV, in which a show can easily come and go from television without anyone even noticing.
In response, Scott Keller, the Texas solicitor general who has appeared before the justices several times in the last few years, noted that Atkins largely left it to the states to decide who qualifies as mentally retarded, or, in today's parlance, "intellectually disabled".
" However, it's not clear to what extent the melodies in the test linked to at the top of the page are solely the work of AI. One of the key feature of DeepBach is that it can, in AI parlance, be "constrained.
The eight banks considered to be of global systemic importance (G-SIBs, in banking parlance) must meet not only the capital and leverage requirements agreed on by international supervisors after the crisis (see article) but also additional surcharges levied by the Fed.
If a tennis player throws a match — or in this spot-betting era, a game or a set — there generally has to be a direct link to a gambler or, to use industry parlance, a corrupter in order to generate a viable case.
At its height, officials say, the planning for Nitro Zeus involved thousands of American military and intelligence personnel, spending tens of millions of dollars and placing electronic implants in Iranian computer networks to "prepare the battlefield," in the parlance of the Pentagon.
Altered Carbon is set centuries in the future, in a world where humanity has overcome mortality via a technology that allows human consciousness to be transferred from one body (or "sleeve," in slang parlance) to another, assuming the client can afford it.
The study also showed a decrease of fewer than 10 basis points in the real income of German households from tariffs on the automotive sector even after taking into account cross-country production linkages, known as global value chains (GVC) in economic parlance.
So the FCC upped the ante by declaring that the Internet should be governed by the same set of rules that governed the telephone system in the days of the Ma Bell monopoly (in regulatory parlance, that they fall under "Title II").
Moreover, Kim Jong Un's sudden "commitment" to holding "denuclearization" talks — a quarter-century-old canard — in North Korean parlance means the end of the U.S. extended nuclear deterrence to South Korea (and Japan) and the abrogation of the U.S.-South Korea defense treaty.
Smoke taint, in the parlance of the industry, occurs when smoke is absorbed into the plant and concentrates in the fruit, altering a grape's chemistry, and ultimately its taste and aroma - but not in a way likely to win wine-tasting ribbons.
Macron later described the meeting as "extremely frank and direct" which in diplomatic parlance means Macron took an aggressive position with Putin, demanding the protection of French and Western security while seeking a dialogue in good faith about ways to improve relations.
As grime artists were absorbed into the city's cultural marketing plan—Dizzee recorded one of the official songs of the Games—the hooded sweatshirts and, in the parlance of London policing, the "antisocial behavior" of their young fans came under increased scrutiny.
Monday's hearing in a Maryland federal court largely focused on the definition of "emoluments," an obscure word in modern parlance that the plaintiffs -- Washington, DC and the state of Maryland -- argued was used more commonly in the time the Constitution was written.
He laid out six "pillars" for WeWork as it moves forward:Member and employee experience: Claure emphasized the experience "as the core differentiator" and explained how the company would support community teams — in-building staff who serve tenants, called "members" in WeWork parlance.
A report in the Alaska Dispatch News this week has shone a light on the rise of killer whale "depredation"—that's fishing parlance for when a catch is plundered, in this case by orcas—and how it is affecting the lives of fishermen.
But while choosing the music was often collaborative, tracking down the performers and songwriters for permission — or clearance, in music supervisor parlance — fell to Ms. Malone, a former rock publicist who had been largely unfamiliar with the underground world of internet rap.
"FMV" is military parlance for full-motion video, the kind that unmanned aerial vehicles such as the Predator and Reaper shoot in Iraq, Afghanistan, Somalia and other war zones—sometimes right before firing a missile or dropping a bomb on some suspected terrorist.
Subverting a software update system (a type of "supply chain attack" in security parlance) is usually associated with international espionage and intelligence operations — not with run-of-the-mill attempts to steal credit card numbers or banking passwords — and for good reason.
Eventually Huber meets a man who might be called — to slip into the parlance of this charming foodie's travel memoir — her guardian angel, the chef Bruce Aidells, who magically appears at key moments and helps Huber land a job as a recipe tester.
In rap parlance, cranberry sauce is more likely to be used to denote the color of a new sports car (see: Pusha T's Ferrari, 50 Cent's Porsche) than a gelatinous side, while Cage has even threatened to insert his appendage into the turkey.
It's the difference between the report's criminal prosecution standard of proof "beyond a reasonable doubt" and a lower standard — the preponderance standard of "more likely than not" — relevant for counterintelligence and general parlance about facts, and closer to the proper standard for impeachment.
"In contemporary parlance, any situation that requires making a series of unguided choices, or that provides an opportunity to go back and re-make a series of choices that turned out badly, is referred to as a 'Choose Your Own Adventure,'" it reads.
But as the city's vacant industrial landscape was given over to commerce during the last decade or so, the stores that sprang up became enormous — venues for "destination shopping" in the marketer's parlance, which suggests a kind of leisure the experience never provides.
Strzok's notes from the FBI agents' interview with Flynn, known in bureau parlance as a "302" for the form an agent fills out, offer several more details about multiple conversations between the Trump aide and the Russian ambassador after the 2016 election.
A former marine turned entrepreneur and now hurricane-relief fundraiser To get there, Perales is adhering to an aggressive growth strategy of owning multiple units of each brand, then either building new locations or acquiring existing company-owned stores ( "refranchising," in industry parlance).
INVISIBLE AMERICANS The Tragic Cost of Child PovertyBy Jeff Madrick It's a paradox of American childhood poverty that experts routinely devise the most complex solutions for it — or in recent parlance "innovations" — most of which are elaborate, costly or otherwise impractical to implement.
This week, the State Senate and the State Assembly issued analyses of the governor's proposal, estimating that those various "revenue actions" — in the parlance of budget types — could produce an additional $20163 million, beyond the millionaires' tax, during the state's next fiscal year.
She read and came up with video ideas for her book channel, PolandBananasBooks, and began uploading skits, reactions to book-to-movie adaptations and book hauls (in internet parlance, a haul is when someone shares the items they've bought during a shopping spree).
The phlegmatic protagonist also gets a needed antagonist in the Art League's fiercely micromanaging leader, Carlotta, who is categorized in the book's pixilated New Age parlance as "a bossy negative energy field" but could be more bluntly described as a piece of work.
Art is an inherently hopeful gesture, and as institutions increasingly become forums ("laboratories," in the current parlance) for new ideas — not just places to show off wealth or wield "soft power" — they can be places to heal and ponder how to move forward.
But, like the 1975—arguably the other big pop-stars of Gen Z—she does so with the parlance of the internet, whether that's writing every song in lowercase on sweetener, or quote-tweeting fans in a language that falls between text-speak and emoji.
The trio of elephants, Beulah, Karen, and Minnie, never asked for legal representation, but the lawyer in charge of the NhRP suit, Steven Wise, argues that they're legal persons with the fundamental right to bodily liberty, or in the parlance of lawyers, habeas corpus.
The latest security weaknesses, known in industry parlance as "zero day" vulnerabilities, rank among the most critical ever found in HANA, the engine that runs SAP's latest database, cloud and other more traditional business apps, according to Onapsis, the security company which uncovered these issues.
Yet in the first few years after 93/11, a nuanced take on America's place in the world was more than most Americans could handle (as evidenced, perhaps, by War of the Worlds' lukewarm reception — it was, in the parlance of the day, "too soon").
And while Tumblr, where transformative fandom has found its most visible home, has quietly fueled mainstream pop culture for a decade by funneling memes and fandom terms into common cultural parlance, it's also been written off as nothing more than a silly platform for teens.
This tale of territorial empire, he suggests, throws light on the histories of everything from the Beatles to Godzilla, the birth-control pill to the transistor radio—even on the use of the word "America", which entered common parlance surprisingly late, spreading only after 1898.
A strong signal would be if the individual is a founder or prominent member of a hate organization (or, "h8 org", in Facebook parlance); medium would include the name or symbol of a banned hate group, or using dehumanizing language against certain groups of people.
So if you ever gave Twitter access to, say, Instagram, an old HTC phone or — as Twitter co-founder Ev Williams found out this week — Foursquare, that other service is a potential way (or "vector" in security parlance) for hackers to get at your account.
It's famous primarily thanks to William Shakespeare's play "Julius Caesar," in which a soothsayer warns the Roman leader to "beware the ides of March," which in the parlance of the times just meant the middle of the month (every other month had an ides, too).
There are the blue-blood organizations—"krewes," in Carnival parlance—that have been parading since the late 1800s, when the festival was introduced to the city by French settlers, and whose membership is generally limited to those born into the right (always white) families.
Sometimes in cyber-parlance these are called APTs or "Advanced Persistent Threats"— hackers skillful enough to breach complex systems quietly and stay inside them for a long time, something that is best done with the time and money that only a government's resources can provide.
From there, you can travel to notable landmarks and take over gyms, which is Pokémon parlance for a kind of group HQ. To take a gym back from an opposing side, you'll have to travel to that location and do battle against the opponent's Pokémon.
On Credit Suisse's newly renovated trading floor in New York, several bankers, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, grumbled that Mr. Thiam had "lost the building," which is Wall Street parlance for chief executives who no longer command the respect of their traders.

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