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"peripatetic" Definitions
  1. going from place to place, for example in order to work

280 Sentences With "peripatetic"

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

Some fugues are peripatetic, causing people to travel long distances.
Previously peripatetic, in 1962 he moved to California and stayed there.
The weak pound has dampened traditionally peripatetic Britons' enthusiasm for travel.
They seemed intrigued by my way of life — independent, unmarried, peripatetic.
He was a peripatetic pharmacist from Indiana in his early 30s.
Atlantic salmon and herring are part of this unusual, peripatetic fraternity.
Power's early years exemplified the peripatetic privilege of the global bourgeoisie.
A peripatetic lawyer and activist, Peter Pattakos, fought against the tax.
Among this peripatetic generation of chefs, Mat Lindsay is the homebody.
After a peripatetic romance that took the couple to Jacksonville, Fla.
Some of this biography's strongest chapters detail their peripatetic war years.
Mr. Donnellan has had an even more peripatetic career than Mr. Brook.
Somewhere during this peripatetic sequence of careers, Saba developed an interest in midwifery.
Lauren Edwards was born with sickle cell anemia and had a peripatetic childhood.
Or you can blame the unpredictability of an angry and politically peripatetic electorate.
She is one of the few longtime collaborators in his otherwise peripatetic career.
The family's life of genteel, peripatetic bohemianism was a model Calder would follow.
Thanks to a peripatetic (but happy) childhood, Hanya Yanagihara is an especially adaptable adult.
The characters in "The Life to Come," de Kretser's fifth novel, are similarly peripatetic.
They live horribly peripatetic lives—races are run in every corner of the world.
He often illustrates his points by pulling up Instagram images from his peripatetic life.
Due to his father's calling as a clergyman, he had a somewhat peripatetic childhood.
These all come from nearby institutions, grounding the peripatetic work in a specific local culture.
Gamble played briefly for the Cubs in 1969 before beginning his peripatetic major league journey.
Scrappy, peripatetic, now and then poignant, "Nomad Motel" wants to hit you where you live.
After a peripatetic childhood, he graduated from Rayville High School in Rayville, La., in 1963.
"To get a foot in New York is really important," this voluble, peripatetic chef said.
His peripatetic family collected driftwood and books, and at night read aloud to one another.
Theirs was a peripatetic career: owned by one team, borrowed by others, never belonging anywhere.
Denver defensive coordinator Wade Phillips capped his peripatetic coaching career with a near-perfect game plan.
Now 33, Ms. Maier describes her current life as the antithesis of her artsy, peripatetic upbringing.
Ray's pasison is continuing Hermie's peripatetic project of chronicling Brooklyn, but he hates talking to people.
Mr. Wanders, an internationally renowned product, furniture and interior designer, has taken up a peripatetic lifestyle.
I'll admit I felt less like a weekend warrior and more like a pathetic peripatetic parent.
His specialty is in managing far-flung, diverse enterprises, and his lifestyle is far more peripatetic.
I guess the most important is the protean genius Kurt Schwitters (1887-1948), the peripatetic German artist.
The peripatetic actor-writer-filmmaker Tim Blake Nelson has a rule about not directing his own plays.
And as he is an independent, his truck is smattered with signs of a quirky, peripatetic personality.
Keenum had been waiting his entire peripatetic career for a moment like the one that came next.
Instead, she embodies the peripatetic spirit of her work, in constant flux and always open to reinvention.
Giuliani's peripatetic stumping on behalf of MEK has taken him from the Potomac, to Paris, to Poland.
It is the most complete survey yet staged of this artist's rebellious, peripatetic, yet profoundly unified achievement.
Let's hope some fines and good old public humiliation will protect peripatetic reptiles for years to come.
I grew up in a peripatetic family, following the unpredictable fortunes of my regional-theater-producer father.
Without those skills developing throughout the industry, the latest scheme to reach peripatetic consumers could prove, well, momentary.
Yet there were stretches along his peripatetic travels when he was not associated with murders in those areas.
His brief, but peripatetic résumé has informed his stump speeches, which are peppered with calls for bold reform.
In short, I suspect Steve Bannon is going to fail to corral the peripatetic brain of Donald Trump.
You could enjoy the holiday of a lifetime simply by flipping through the pages of these peripatetic volumes.
There is something peripatetic about it emotionally as well as structurally; adjust your shoes and your expectations accordingly.
There's a name for this peripatetic life style: clinicians, clients, and local officials call it the Florida Shuffle.
In his early years the family had a peripatetic life, living in Kutztown, Pa.; Dayton, Ohio; Mount Dora, Fla.
Her father, Earl Stanley Mount, was a peripatetic building contractor whose property holdings were wiped out during the Depression.
So, in this version, does the rest of the company, onstage throughout as a silent, peripatetic, occasionally dancing chorus.
Brown considers only four elements in his peripatetic exposition on beer but each is examined to the molecular level.
He grew up a peripatetic military brat, and after each of his family's moves religion provided a ready-made community.
Bill Shillady, a Methodist minister in New York, said he has found a way to pastor to the peripatetic Clinton.
The crowd, which ate up the red meat Trump threw them during the frenzied, peripatetic event, didn't seem to notice.
It sounds like your idea is to create a sort of peripatetic dance company, with a foot in several cities.
Dr. Welch, who first taught Mr. Grant 30 years ago, likes to characterize his friend's peripatetic career in an anecdote.
He led a peripatetic life that took him to the Marines, California and, finally, back to the Lower East Side.
The frequent moves throughout Richard Pitino's childhood, prompted by his father's peripatetic career, have had an important influence on him.
But purists worry that turning a quasi-outlaw, peripatetic pursuit into a theme park amusement will destroy its endless-summer romance.
He was a big, talented, peripatetic TV star, who, at times, was his own worst enemy, too often clashing with management.
His debut, "Songdogs," follows a young man's peripatetic efforts to understand his parents' troubled marriage, and shares a similarly graceful style.
"Around the Fourth of July, it's like a war zone with all the fireworks," said Ms. Holland, the peripatetic Levittown resident.
The increasingly peripatetic nature of youthful lives today drives a hankering for some stability via identification with selected concepts and communities.
He also chronicled in poems his peripatetic road journeys, mostly to points west, in the collection "Greyhounding This America" in 1988.
That skill sends her on her peripatetic way through nameless towns, meeting and losing forgettable men, until she lands in Farr.
One might know all of that coming in — that Paik was an artist who was peripatetic, prolific, collaborative and fiercely interdisciplinary.
The peripatetic lives of these tramp printers, as they were known, are the inspiration for artist Chris Fritton's crowdfunded Itinerant Printer Project.
If Mr. Bell was an NBC lifer with command of the control room, Mr. Purcell has had a much more peripatetic career.
Books of The Times There are two kinds of spy-hopping in "The Travelers," Chris Pavone's third and most furiously peripatetic novel.
Born in Mississippi, Overstreet had a peripatetic early childhood until his family moved to the Bay Area, where he spent his adolescence.
By the time it came to do the show, I had gone back to being a peripatetic actor flying around the world.
After graduation, she left town and embarked on a peripatetic life, living in different cities in Arizona; Colorado; Wyoming; and finally Hawaii.
A great preponderance of these extant and neglected notions had been proposed or refined by a peripatetic English polymath named Geoffrey Hinton.
As his child I have lived a peripatetic life, but have always been able to maintain connections with my family in Pakistan.
At the beginning of a peripatetic career, Marsden Hartley (1877-1943) made his home state, Maine, a major subject of his work.
Ms. Huong's Facebook page suggests that she led a peripatetic lifestyle, moving between hotel rooms in Cambodia and Malaysia in recent weeks.
He and Dr. Campbell hope that future experiments will follow human athletes' peripatetic immune cells after exercise and track how they influence health.
"Large, ambitious and unavoidably, dizzyingly peripatetic, this is a once-in-a-lifetime event," wrote Roberta Smith in her review in The Times.
There was the dedication to success, the willingness to live a peripatetic lifestyle, flitting from country to country, rarely settling anywhere for long.
Ever the peripatetic family caregiver, I rarely stopped to inhabit my mother's world: the one with no past, no future, just the present.
Peripatetic. Ambulatory. Pedestrian. Our diplomacy push-pull with North Korea is rife with the recurring imagery of our chief decision-makers ambling … somewhere.
The couple settled here in Wales; Elizabeth mostly stayed home and Morris lived a peripatetic existence, traveling and writing and then traveling again.
"Cats really trigger people's emotions," Moseby told me, sitting behind the wheel of her truck, littered with the detritus of a peripatetic life.
The peripatetic not-quite-candidate hasn't yet managed a stop in South Carolina, an omission that will signal different things to different people.
Eva, a waifish daughter of a well-off peripatetic family, came to London as a child, and turned to drugs as a teenager.
She's never known her Mexican father, and has led a peripatetic existence with her white mother, Gina, and her mother's abusive ex-boyfriend.
At the time, she was settling into a training site outside Philadelphia, the latest move in her peripatetic existence as an elite skater.
At the beginning of a peripatetic career, Marsden Hartley (2212-2423) made his home state of Maine a major subject of his work.
Forceful and sometimes fractious, Mr. Morris had a peripatetic career that included stops at most of the major postwar centers of American photojournalism.
He began his peripatetic career in New Jersey reporting for The Passaic Herald News, The Jersey Journal and The Star-Ledger of Newark.
But as the most travelled of Congo's peripatetic singers, possessed of a distinctive and beautiful voice, he often seemed to stand for them all.
Yannis Pitsiladis's own life has been peripatetic, evident in his Greek ancestry, his South African accent, his advanced degrees obtained in Scotland and England.
This is the same wry, peripatetic series at heart, a vision of urban life as a web of stories connected by wisps of smoke.
Volatile and peripatetic, buffeted by depression, alcoholism and estrangement from loved ones, he would reach for his books or his notebooks and steady himself.
Widowed in her mid-30s and childless, she never remarried, pursuing instead a peripatetic, religious life as a guest in convents all over Italy.
Museums & Galleries At the beginning of a peripatetic career, Marsden Hartley (230-1943) made his home state, Maine, a major subject of his work.
The notebook — and Cristiano's narration — becomes a portal into a peripatetic life marked by fleeting friendships and relentless privations, countless miles and backbreaking labor.
Like Reynolds, Leonardo DiCaprio's Rick Dalton speaks with a twang and hails from Missouri (one of several states Reynolds lived in during a peripatetic childhood).
Until then, he had led a fairly peripatetic existence, with brief stints as a deckhand, motorcycle mechanic, and a worker on fruit and vegetable farms.
This is a big, diverse country, encompassing not just urban centers and peripatetic young people, but small towns and 50-somethings with chronic knee trouble.
Davis led a peripatetic life after the Civil War, staying for a few years in Memphis and dabbling briefly there in the life insurance business.
Daniel Lippman, 26, who has been helping Mr. Allen with Playbook since 2014 — and is a peripatetic emailer and scene-maker himself — will assist them.
Even as a player — a peripatetic striker in England's lower leagues — Drewe Broughton said he always studied, driven by a desire to understand his physiology.
The divorce, combined with his demanding and peripatetic schedule, was clearly hard on his children: a daughter, now 20, and two sons, 13 and 15.
Shaking his head, Parker pointed to Manu Ginobili and mentioned another N.B.A. player of comparable ability who had made millions more across a peripatetic career.
But despite Handke's peripatetic visits, he never seemed to know it, or never seemed to know it as anything other than a figment or delusion.
So when I interviewed the peripatetic Ito by Skype recently (he was in Dubai, by way of Marrakesh and Kuwait), that's where we started our conversation.
If these simple, but long overdue, process protections can be restored, perhaps Director Comey's peripatetic media and Congressional escapades may actually produce some good after all.
Although based in the West Coast, Baillie is a peripatetic filmmaker, traveling across the US, searching for footage to use in his dense, montage-based films.
Meanwhile, I resigned from IRI after Iraq's first democratic election in more than half a century and began my own series of peripatetic twists and turns.
The court has been very quiet: during a recess of nearly four weeks, only the peripatetic Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg has made news, of a sort.
Monday marks a half-century since the execution of Guevara, the peripatetic Argentine doctor, named Ernesto at birth, who led guerrilla fighters from Cuba to Congo.
She began coaching at Old Dominion as an assistant, which led to a peripatetic run of head coaching jobs at both the college and professional levels.
Limited production capacity prompted it to fly patties to Europe from its only plant in America (hence your correspondent's peripatetic patty at Honest Burger in London).
Along this peripatetic path it was in the realm of language — of poetic rant and anarchic wit, and enigmatic inscription — that Picabia showed himself most inventive.
H. Blairman & Sons has recreated an English Arts and Crafts study, profuse with ceramics and metalwork, including a severe toast rack from the great, peripatetic Christopher Dresser.
She had no insurance for the cameras because she said the annual cost, with her peripatetic lifestyle, was nearly as much as the cost of the equipment.
"This is the same wry, peripatetic series at heart, an intoxicating vision of urban life as a web of stories connected by wisps of smoke," he added.
That's why we've started the "Startup Dispatch" series: a sporadic, peripatetic project in which we'll roam across the US, reporting on up-and-coming tech hot spots.
And of the 30 or so buildings the peripatetic Whitman lived in during his time in New York City, 99 Ryerson is the only one left standing.
But, to lighten her busy and peripatetic schedule, she is saying goodbye to Ballet Theater, where she has performed as a guest artist or principal since 2003.
This peripatetic but thoroughly engrossing survey reveals an artist who has operated for more than 30 years in the gap defined by feminism, painting and popular culture.
This peripatetic but thoroughly engrossing survey reveals an artist who has operated for more than 2592 years in the gap defined by feminism, painting and popular culture.
Her work also includes two memoirs: "Borrowed Finery" (210), about her peripatetic childhood, and "The Coldest Winter: A Stringer in Liberated Europe" (21978), about her young womanhood.
Before her modeling career took off, she had already learned to speak Danish, Swiss German, English and Inupiaq, an Eskimo language, the result of a peripatetic youth.
On her peripatetic journey, she brings with her several voyagers, including a priest from Burkina Faso, a retired French nursery-school teacher and a Gabonese-French dancer.
The cup to me represented my freedom, and it really launched me into my sort of peripatetic life — and my ability to keep moving when things fell apart.
It is an intriguing, peripatetic, at times beautiful affair of 60 works from 1943 to 2003, with paintings on canvas and paper, watercolors and several kinds of prints.
I left Manhattan in 1988, the morning after marrying a peripatetic advertising executive whose career would take us to six different cities over the course of 26 years.
Since their parting, Alice has led a peripatetic existence under many assumed identities — touring China as a magician's assistant, working in a hospital, acting as a field biologist.
But their marriage won't bring their peripatetic ways to an end: Ms. Stebich is some 2,400 miles west of Manhattan — and Ms. Radice and her home and job.
Mr. Shore is revealed not only as a peripatetic explorer but also a restless experimenter with new photographic technologies, from stereoscopic slide shows to print-on-demand books.
I did not use one at all until my 40s, when I first visited the New York Maker Faire in Queens, N.Y., and my wheelchair use remains peripatetic.
The peripatetic lifestyle of professional golfers, who spend 20 to 43 weeks a year on the road, places a premium on comfort, convenience and, in some cases, community.
There, Prior helped revitalize the career of Olaf Kolzig, a peripatetic goaltender who spent the better half of his first eight years as a pro in the minors.
Rory, now a peripatetic journalist, comes home to figure herself out, see old friends and walk and talk with her mother through the town's tourism-brochure-perfect snowscape.
Peripatetic by inclination and by calling — filmmakers spend a lot of time on the road making and promoting their work — Varda traveled widely, collecting images, faces and friends.
Mohamed A. El-Erian — an economist, former investment manager and peripatetic commentator (with whom I share service on the board of a research organization) — offers a bit more hope.
If Aristotle's theories of peripatetic learning are correct, then all the walkers are professors; they all have something to teach, and we all have something to learn from them.
With so many people now living a peripatetic lifestyle from city to city around the globe, this is also question others interested in VR have frequently tossed my way.
For years, he was known as the "homeless billionaire," for his peripatetic life in which he lived in fine hotels around the world but did not own a home.
Mr. Blame was largely self-taught and entirely sui generis: a handsome, strong-nosed, gravel-voiced charmer with a peripatetic country background who reinvented himself as a London dandy.
James Franco has had a peripatetic career, with roles in movies large and small and on television, too (most recently in HBO's The Deuce, in which he plays twins).
With Ms. Miller playing a fast, rolling groove, Ms. Staaf capers and collides through the song's blues form, paying homage to Williams's starkly articulate right hand and peripatetic left.
Perhaps because of her own peripatetic childhood as a refugee and immigrant, the importance of family is central to her professional life, which is defined by a strong maternalism.
Museums & Galleries This peripatetic but thoroughly engrossing survey reveals an artist who has operated for more than 30 years in the gap defined by feminism, painting and popular culture.
A Trump fan reportedly offered Barron a mediagenic golden doodle a few months ago, but Mr. Trump begged off, according to the New York Post, citing his peripatetic schedule.
Habits from her peripatetic adolescence—when she never really tried to hold on to friends, because she knew that she'd soon be moving again—have been hard to shake.
In the northeast corner of the Lyceum, there was a garden, which possibly led to the peripatos, or shaded walk from which the promenading Peripatetic school derived its name.
For a few hours, before she returns to Manhattan for the workweek and a peripatetic existence planning other people's fantasies, she is in the midst of her own orangery.
The peripatetic writer A.J. Liebling, who contributed hundreds of articles to The New Yorker, liked to say that he could write better than anyone faster and faster than anyone better.
But to a Veteran, a peripatetic career path is counter intuitive to their military ethos; you stay with the mission, you learn, grow, improve and get promoted, step-by-step.
Paul Erdős, the famously eccentric, peripatetic and prolific 20th-century mathematician, was fond of the idea that God has a celestial volume containing the perfect proof of every mathematical theorem.
In Passage/s, his exhibit at London's Victoria Miro gallery, Do Ho Suh presents a medium-spanning exploration of what it means to be at home in a peripatetic world.
"I feel fairly sure that I could address the entire world if only I had a place to stand," said the wry, peripatetic American artist Jimmie Durham in the 1980s.
Read: A Surge of Migrants Crossing Into Quebec Tests Canada's Welcome The novelist Claire Messud, the daughter of a Canadian mother and a French father, had an unusually peripatetic childhood.
"This is the same wry, peripatetic series at heart, a vision of urban life as a web of stories connected by wisps of smoke," Mr. Poniewozik wrote in The Times.
His own life turned peripatetic when he moved to Los Angeles and began working in lighting and stagecraft for Bonnie Raitt, Neil Diamond, Bon Jovi and the Jacksons (Michael and Janet).
Frank O'Hara's 1964 "Lunch Poems," a set of imagistic, peripatetic musings on a city in motion, are beloved in part because they manage to articulate the balance of work and life.
But the call of the Sea of Thieves is unrelenting and like those skeleton crews of pirates long dead, your fate is a peripatetic existence to rival that of clever Odysseus.
These persuasive testimonials are scattered among the dances, festivals and interstitial sections in which the energetic, very peripatetic Mr. Gomes quiets down and settles in for some intimate on-camera sharing.
As a peripatetic advocate of the economic interests of the United States and of his own bank, he was a force in global financial affairs and in his country's foreign policy.
For the renovation, the stylist and her son — her "accomplice," as she calls him — drew on their shared passion for the outdoors, the history of caravans and Moretti's own peripatetic career.
All of this — inflating a bedraggled group of peripatetic refugees weeks from our border into a disease-ridden terrorist "invasion," an urgent, imminent "national emergency" — amounts to a kind of willed delusion.
The students I fell in with at the language institute were young, out of college, still in college, peripatetic men and women, some in a midlife crisis, others in a quarterlife one.
Over the years, those who have worked with Alexander in Silicon Valley describe him as an affable, peripatetic and endlessly energetic business development exec who delivers the goods no matter the cost.
In the course of a singularly peripatetic career, that curiosity has most often taken Mr. Herzog, who will turn 74 on Labor Day, into frontier zones where civilization gives way to wildness.
In one scene, the two sit at the kitchen table, eating potatoes that Ms. Akerman has prepared, telling her mother that even she, the peripatetic artist, has mastered a few domestic skills.
The Irish Open tees off at Ballyliffin Golf Club in County Donegal this week — the first time the tournament has visited the remote county in the event's long and somewhat peripatetic history.
Centered on Walker Street, these galleries — a mix of Chelsea refugees, peripatetic veterans of downtown and a few new kids — have imparted fresh energy to one of Lower Manhattan's last ungentrified zones.
His peripatetic research made him a widely acknowledged expert at a time, the 19913s, when interest in traditional cultures was on the rise, in tandem with the burgeoning counterculture in Western countries.
RuPaul Andre Charles and his husband, Georges LeBar, split their time between New York, California and their Wyoming ranch, a peripatetic lifestyle that RuPaul has embraced ever since he was a teenager.
On his second night in Hanoi, however, he kept an unusual appointment: dinner with Anthony Bourdain, the peripatetic chef turned writer who hosts the Emmy-winning travel show "Parts Unknown," on CNN.
Lear" can grow numbing, it's because at a certain point Uglow finds herself — as biographers of such social, peripatetic figures often do — writing a lot of variations on: "And then he went here.
There's a nearly peripatetic sense of the poet's mind as it searchingly makes its way, never haphazardly but without ever showing a desire to resolve the existential tensions made manifest in his consciousness.
The first act is conventional enough: a six-person drama by Emily Mann about the peripatetic life of Ms. Steinem (the perfectly cast Christine Lahti) and the people and issues that shaped her.
Now that they have a child, though, their peripatetic ways are shifting; they're soon to start renovating a permanent residence for themselves in Hampstead, originally a stable block on an 18th-century estate.
By the time the novel was published, Chatwin had been a professional peripatetic for a decade; seven years later, at the age of 48, he would be dead of an AIDS-related illness.
"I often feel as if Ackerman's ramblings work by tricking my brain into believing it is drifting off, emulating the peripatetic workings of the dreaming mind," the New Yorker's Nora Caplan-Bricker agreed.
His father was an assistant coach at the University of Southern California at the time, and he had a peripatetic childhood as Joe Gibbs moved to different teams in the National Football League.
Although he got his start here — and much of his work is characterized by a breezy, West Coast irreverence — he is a quintessentially peripatetic artist, who doesn't seem anchored to any one place.
After a peripatetic art career, including studies at different art colleges and a brief involvement in a graphic design studio, he auditioned for the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art and was accepted in 240.
Magazines and restaurants tend to succeed when they convey simultaneous signals of accessible warmth and exclusive cool, and Mr. Truman has fashioned a peripatetic career out of mastering the balance between those two temperatures.
Mr. Vallas owns California Pacific Airlines, known as CP Air, his latest venture in a peripatetic business career that has included stints in areas as varied as land development and other aviation-related ventures.
Employees rarely had any idea where their peripatetic boss was because he seemed to be constantly moving between homes, offices or borrowed premises in Florida, Washington, New York and occasionally Los Angeles or London.
Meena Alexander, a poet and scholar whose writings reflected the search for identity that came with a peripatetic life, including time in India, Africa, Europe and the United States, died on Wednesday in Manhattan.
Bites If food lovers gleaned anything about Francis Mallmann from the 2015 "Chef's Table" episode that chronicled his culinary journey, it's that the peripatetic Argentine chef finds joy in open flames and remote locales.
Following the similarly brief life of his next band, Ginger Baker's Air Force, a jazz-rock outfit with a saxophone section, Mr. Baker led a peripatetic life and stayed largely out of the spotlight.
Why it matters: Uncertainty about a handful of unprecedented phenomena — like the grinding trade war with China, the peripatetic Brexit debate, and President Trump's government-by-tweet — is inflicting pain on the global economy.
Among her Gaumont titles are "La Femme Collante," a risqué charmer about a maid with an amusingly sticky tongue, and "Le Matelas Alcoolique" about a peripatetic mattress with a drunken man sewn into it.
Museums & Galleries This peripatetic but thoroughly engrossing survey, which closes on May 25, reveals an artist who has operated for more than 33 years in the gap defined by feminism, painting and popular culture.
Mr. McGurk's peripatetic travel schedule as special envoy allowed him to moonlight as a negotiator for the Americans held in Iran, since he could easily arrange trips to Geneva for meetings with Iranian security officials.
Photo: GettyOn Tuesday, the president of the United States began his day with his usual peripatetic stream of tweets that appear to be random but are surely formulated according to a deliberate and thoughtful plan.
Mike Mayo, a banking analyst with CLSA, refers to what he calls the 21992 C's in describing what ails the big European banks — a number of which he has worked for during his peripatetic career.
This piece by Mark Singer captures Mr. Trump at a delicate time, while colorfully illuminating The Donald we've come to know: peripatetic, attention-craving, and always feeding quotes to reporters — and complaining about their coverage.
So there is a touch of pathos in learning, from Mr. Lithgow's personal patter, that he first got to know "Haircut" when his father read it to him and his siblings during their peripatetic childhood.
Lenders clustered around big military bases throughout the South, where they could target service members, most of them young, low-paid and living the kind of peripatetic lives that made them ideal payday-loan customers.
She has had an uncharacteristically peripatetic career with little overseas experience, in contrast to many of the journalists who have risen to the top after decades-long slogs at various stations of the Times cross.
CreditCreditVincent Tullo for The New York Times "I feel fairly sure that I could address the entire world if only I had a place to stand," the peripatetic American artist Jimmie Durham said in the 1980s.
Throughout their peripatetic careers, which took Mr. Richardson to Los Angeles and Mr. Robinson to New York, they have texted with each other daily, vowing that they'd return eventually to their native city to shoot something.
This peripatetic show is set for the first time in New York, where the former C.I.A. officer Carrie Mathison (Claire Danes) is working for an outpost of the German foundation that employed her in Season 5.
In present-day New York City, a focused young woman prepares for a recital on the violin, the instrument for which she has sacrificed both her social life and a sense of closeness to her peripatetic mother.
Today, Instagram is bigger than ever and using in-line ads to generate revenue, while Hipstamatic has had a more peripatetic existence, switching to in-app purchases, and, at one point, laying off all but six employees.
KARMEI YOSEF, Israel — When David Woo and Margalit Shinar decided to buy a house after 28 years of a peripatetic life together, Israel was the only option for the couple, but it was not an obvious choice.
When Samuel Johnson (no relation to the eighteenth-century writer) is killed by a gun-toting madman while his toddler son looks on, he begins a peripatetic afterlife that stretches from the nineteen-sixties to the present.
Mr. Fabiano's New York engagement was nearing an end, and he would soon have to resume the peripatetic life of an opera singer, spending up to 10 months a year traveling, with engagements booked years in advance.
And although postmodern pedagogy often demands that we displace dominant narratives or overturn them completely, artists today are finding their way back to center in a reassertion of their control over this country's peripatetic sense of self.
But the second paper, by Caroline Wagner of Ohio State University, in Columbus, and Koen Jonkers of the European Commission's Joint Research Centre, in Brussels, suggests that these peripatetic individuals certainly do benefit the countries that host them.
Happy for any distraction from re-alphabetizing, I sat down with the book produced for artist Fred Wilson's 1994 project Mining the Museum, commissioned by The Contemporary (a peripatetic institution currently on hiatus) and the Maryland Historical Society.
The extraordinary peripatetic camerawork and fluid editing (the cinematographer is Drew Daniels; Mr. Shults is the editor) bring characters together, even when they're not talking to one another, the rapid lateral pans mapping relationships with revelatory geometric precision.
The vitality and prescience of the best paintings here make you wonder what would have happened had Savinio devoted more time to painting, while making it clear that his interests remained peripatetic and polymorphous, even within one medium.
Her father, Frederic, owned a clothing store before joining the Army during World War II; he remained in the Army after the war and gave his family a peripatetic life as he was assigned from base to base.
Having returned from India as a bushy-bearded, barefoot, white-robed guru, Ram Dass, who was born Richard Alpert, became a peripatetic lecturer on New Age possibilities and a popular author of more than a dozen inspirational books.
"They really have no idea who I am, and that's okay, because I was a kind of peripatetic actor, on the road all the time, and I really wasn t in the moment," he said in the press room.
It is a subtle reminder that despite a peripatetic life that at one point brought him to New York, where he was Yoko Ono's companion for two decades after John Lennon's death in 1980, Mr. Havadtoy's roots are Hungarian.
To many farmers and residents, the peripatetic visitor from the tropics responsible for their dousing—an "atmospheric river" (known colloquially as the Pineapple Express) that is hundreds of miles wide and carries more moisture than the Amazon—has outstayed its welcome.
Most schools give at least some of their pupils all-class music lessons, but from the 22016s until the 2200s most councils also paid for peripatetic staff to travel around schools, giving one-to-one or small-group instrumental tuition.
One is peripatetic: Mick Jagger's stamina as he covers what must be miles of footsteps per show, roostering and gesticulating across a very wide stage with a runway into the audience — and singing nearly all the way, melodic and expressive.
Stone reached out to his friend Randy Credico , whose peripatetic career included time as a standup comedian, a radio talk-show host, and the director of the William Moses Kunstler Fund for Racial Justice, named for the late civil-liberties lawyer.
Armenia was one of five Foreign Service postings my parents had during my peripatetic childhood, and for me it was a vast territory of teenage resentment, a place of exile where my first boyfriend and my BMG music subscription couldn't follow.
Good-naturedly dodging his mother's entreaties to settle down, the peripatetic and engaging Kasliwal scours the world for outrageous gems (a recent find was an old 10-carat mine diamond at a Las Vegas antiques show) and the best parties.
" Valerie Velardi, Williams's first wife, believes that his peripatetic childhood and giftedness went hand in hand, resulting in a "very rich private life" that made it "hard to get in deep with someone who's used to taking care of himself only.
Peru, after a 36-year absence, will be at soccer's World Cup in Russia next month, and Guerrero, in the twilight of a peripatetic career, was to be there to lead the team out as its captain and star striker.
When Knopf eventually received the manuscript for "Mountain," it appeared that its peripatetic author — who had lived abroad, mostly in Paris, since 1948 — had typed the story out on all sorts of typewriters and on many different kinds of stationery.
SYDNEY (Reuters) - Scott Hend might not be the best known Australian golfer but the peripatetic world number 75 says he is happy to handle the burden of his country's hopes at the Rio Olympics after a rash of high profile withdrawals.
Murray is a like a "Buddhist trickster figure, a reincarnated peripatetic monk who uses humor to awaken and enlighten," according to "Saturday Night Live" writer Tom Schiller, as paraphrased in "The Big Bad Book of Bill Murray" by Robert Schnakenberg.
We're all living peripatetic lives on the internet — moving from MySpace to Facebook, from Flickr to Tumblr — and I'm not sure what I'll do if one day I can't find that perfectly spontaneous moment of a tween explaining what it means to gossip.
Mom and Dad worked hard, after all, and the last thing they'd ever do would be to spend three figures on a pair of sunglasses for a hapless, peripatetic boy wont to losing, breaking, and generally obliterating every little thing in his path.
Longtime Harvard Law School Professor Alan Dershowitz, who has been called "the nation's most peripatetic civil liberties lawyer," according to his university biography, said the situation "may be the worst violation of academic freedom" during his 55-year association with the school.
Ms. Chang was pregnant and then a new mother during the eight-year course of this peripatetic project, and it includes photos, installed irregularly in a plywood labyrinth, showing one or another small bowl filled with breast milk she pumped while traveling.
I wouldn't say I'm a veteran at this point — talk to my predecessor Jada Yuan for that — but I'm a lot more comfortable with this hyper-peripatetic existence now than I was in the first two weeks, which felt like two months.
And at the beleaguered brand also known as Lanvin, Olivier Lapidus, son of Ted and peripatetic design name (he has done stints in Japan and China, and moved between fashion, housewares and hotel design), will become the third creative director in two years.
So the scientists fitted out cages, added locked running wheels, and let young, healthy, normal-weight, male mice loose in them to roam and explore for four days, providing the researchers with baseline data about each mouse's metabolism and natural peripatetic-ness.
During a monthlong pilgrimage to Japan, they visited Tokyo, Kyoto and small fishing villages along the coast, and he has fond memories of the family traveling around the country by train with their backpacks — a peripatetic mood that he channeled in the collection.
Part of this is a peripatetic, immigrant narrative: born in Alexandria, Egypt, he came of age in Beirut, Lebanon, before leaving the former French colony for Paris after civil war broke out, and later landing in the United States via a Fulbright Scholarship.
Sunday brings "Marona's Fantastic Tale," about the peripatetic life of a Labrador mix; the film's director, Anca Damian, will do a post-screening Q. and A. The festival will also offer video games, virtual reality experiences and titles for those hardest-to-please moviegoers, teenagers.
Self-assured, peripatetic and unfailingly dapper — he favored dark double-breasted suits and the occasional neckerchief, and once made the cover of Men's Vogue in Italy — Mr. Enwezor never doubted that an African had every right to take the lead at Western art institutions.
He lived in High Falls, in Ulster County, N.Y. When James Kalm, a peripatetic videographer who records many New York gallery openings, buttonholed Mr. Nozkowski at one of his and asked what advice he would give to young painters, Mr. Nozkowski looked into the camera.
This kind of low-level data is largely missing from cleanup efforts, which gave rise to the name, which refers to both the peripatetic founder Ellie and the symbol indicating missing or omitted information Ellipsis uses computer vision to find plastic waste in water systems.
He has been estranged from his family since then — Douglas is expected to testify for the prosecution in Los Angeles — and for years led a peripatetic life, moving restlessly among California, New York and Texas, even as he became a suspect in three murders.
Left parentless and penniless by this event — a one-car crash in which their mother falls asleep at the wheel, exhausted from two jobs and two children — the sisters steal out of their small New Jersey town in a peripatetic search for a different life.
It is divided into three sections: "Avant-Gardes," focused on his seminal exhibitions of contemporary art of the '60s and '70s; "Utopias and Visionaries," which explores exhibitions about early 20th-century utopias, modernists, and mystics; and "Geographies," examining his Swiss identity and peripatetic later career.
The artist's peripatetic childhood in a military family taught her from a very young age what it meant to be on the move, and from her earliest practice in 1992, the notion of dislocation and its antithesis of permanence has been pervasive in most of her work.
Artists Space, the venerable nonprofit gallery that was founded in SoHo in 1972 and has spent most of its peripatetic existence in that neighborhood, will close its main space there on Greene Street in June because its landlord is planning to build a penthouse atop the building.
The painting crowns a long period that began after 18952, when an alcoholic breakdown ended Munch's twenty-year streak as a peripatetic rock star of Symbolist sensations—life-changing then and ever since for many, including me—of which "The Scream" (1893) is only the most celebrated.
For example, there is Art in Flux, which was birthed in Harlem in 2012, and has had mostly a peripatetic existence since then, doing pop-up shows until March of this year where they were granted a display space by Harlem Properties at 163 Malcolm X Boulevard.
There were lean times as well as the feasts — I saw all the pitfalls of not being able to control your social calendar as much as your income or where you earn your income, the peripatetic nature of it all, whether it was touring or filming or whatever.
Famously peripatetic through his 20s, proudly outrunning the IRS through his 30s, untethered from a savings account until his 40s, and blowing the doors off his 50s with a television franchise and a cordial relationship with Barack Obama, he seemed like the ultimate example of getting better with maturity.
In framing Western expansion as a story of "peripatetic Americans" who "fled farming and civilization for a wild life in an unspoiled natural world," she ignores generations of historians who have told a more complex story of settler colonial capitalism, and its tragic meaning for the indigenous populations.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads LOS ANGELES — This week, in addition to the Art Los Angeles Contemporary Art Fair in Santa Monica, there are two independent art fairs happening, Dave Muller's peripatetic Three Day Weekend project, the chance to interact with Erwin Wurm's One Minute Sculptures, and more.
At an age when most performers have long retired from the footlights and the brutal, peripatetic life of an international star, Mr. Aznavour continued to range the world, singing his songs of love found and love lost to capacity audiences who knew most of his repertoire by heart.
CASAUS'S PROFILE MAY have risen with the city's green wave, but his peripatetic style remains indebted to his itinerant past: Born a few hours southeast of Paris, in the Burgundy countryside of Dijon, his earliest memories are of tilling his grandfather's enormous vegetable garden and eating its tomatoes.
At 10, he auditioned successfully for the Royal Swedish Ballet school, and after graduation spent a peripatetic near decade dancing with a succession of European companies: the Norwegian Ballet, the Royal Swedish Ballet, the Ballet du Grand Théâtre de Genève, the Gothenburg Ballet, back to the Royal Swedish Ballet.
But Obama's attempts to engage foreign populations -- especially young ones -- have been especially overt, reflecting the political method of a president who as a former community organizer looks to build coalitions from the bottom up and who has been shaped by diverse ethnic and family heritage and an unusually peripatetic upbringing.
Harbaugh's conspicuously peripatetic career — three seasons at the University of San Diego, four at Stanford, four in San Francisco and now two at Michigan — has bred fears that despite a $9 million salary, the highest in college football and comparable to N.F.L. pay, he will soon leave Ann Arbor again.
That coach, Josh McCown, had turned an unplanned hiatus from the N.F.L. — he was still on standby for any team with a sudden, urgent opening — into two seasons volunteering with the Mavericks, in 225 and 26, that he considers a point of demarcation in his peripatetic career but also his life.
Trump will have a Senate majority of 52 Republicans; the Democratic minority will total 46, with two independents who caucus with them, including the peripatetic Bernie Sanders of Vermont who, having lost the presidential nomination during his trial run as a Democrat, has since reverted to his previous status as an independent.
It also embodies his singular, often peripatetic creative life, which began as a traveling musician with punk proclivities a decade before he moved to New York, a decade-long day job at Topps Chewing Gum Company, where he became a design director, and, in due course, a visual artist who still plays music.
But even if he demurs, those who do run could learn something from the peripatetic Texan about shattering old political shibboleths; about the value of genuinely listening, the power of empathy and the need for an authentic, connecting narrative that can help lift our divided country out of the morass we're in.
With his Zabar's bag in tow, Delaney explains his treatise on the trope of the unspeakable and the everyday, citing himself "a 45-year-old black, gay male who cruises the commercial porn theaters along Eighth Avenue and above 43rd Street in the mid and late 1980s," as its peripatetic case study.
In PAST TENSE (Delacorte, $26.993), Lee Child's peripatetic hero wanders with a purpose, all the way to his father's birthplace in Laconia, N.H. Reacher's search for his roots in this sad old mill town ("a horrific tableau of clouds of smoke and raging fires") is surprisingly sentimental, but brace yourself for the subplot.
The only child of a champion surfer turned peripatetic hippie, he grew up chasing "pockets of weird outsider counterculture" in Guadalajara, Sun Valley and New Zealand, which — along with the irreverence of Marcel Duchamp, the dapper style of Gianni Agnelli and the artful chaos of Picasso's interiors — left formative fingerprints on his world.
Whether the Chicago brass would be recognizable in a blind test is open to debate — many of the regional styles that once differentiated orchestras have been sanded over in this age of jet-setting maestros and more peripatetic players — but it is still considered one of the jewels of the orchestral world.
For most of the couple of years preceding, we'd been cobbling together a masterpiece of experimental filmmaking—actually, a semi-related skein of filthy, profane sketch gags centered on the peripatetic wanderings of a character (I use the term loosely) named "Headless," defined chiefly by the fact that he wore, or was, a full-head rubber Tor Johnson mask.
For 21997 years, starting in 229, he led a peripatetic life while gaining a reputation in the commercial photography world: he studied photography in Santa Barbara, California, worked as bartender in New Orleans, Louisiana, and published his photograph of the ballet choreographer William Christiansen in Dance magazine and of the literary critic Leslie Fiedler in Playboy.
A lyrical sense of movement, both literal and metaphorical, perhaps related to Edwards's own peripatetic migrations from Texas to Ohio to California, emerges in the exhibition, as well as his political affiliations, including the civil rights movement in the US, anti-imperialism and anti-colonialism internationally, histories of Blackness in America, and abiding studies of Africa.
"Roma" is dedicated to Liboria Rodríguez ("for Libo"), the woman who raised him in a house like the one in this movie, where every so often you can see a jet passing overhead, a vision that points to a distant, peripatetic future, even as it suggests that Cuarón never left this place, its women and its love.
The story that Esquinas sold about his peripatetic life of golf and gambling with Jordan, which allegedly involved Jordan running up a $1.2 million debt over a ten-day golf binge in San Diego—a debt Jordan supposedly played down to $908,000, negotiated down to $300,000, and ultimately paid $200,000 of—was bigger than the ones that had come before.
The exhibition covers her prolific six-decade career and traces her peripatetic travels from San Francisco to Paris and New York, before finally settling in LA. When: Sunday, April 17, 1–3pm Where: The Container Yard (353 E 4th St, Downtown, Los Angeles) Sprawling across 34,000 square miles, the greater Los Angeles Area provides a virtually limitless canvas for the proliferation of street art.
When: Opens Sunday, January 29 Where: Hammer Museum (10899 Wilshire Boulevard, Westwood, Los Angeles) Jimmie Durham has had a long and peripatetic career, from his hometown of Washington, Arkansas, to a period as an activist with the American Indian Movement, to the downtown New York art scene of the '80s, and later Mexico and Europe, where he has lived for the past 20 years.
Ms. Andrews and Ms. Hamilton, together with Ms. Rofé, spent a week last winter mapping out the show's narrative arc and writing the pilot episode at the actress's home in Sag Harbor, N.Y. The peripatetic Ms. Andrews, a widow since the death in 2010 of the director Blake Edwards, now considers Sag Harbor, a former whaling village (where Ms. Hamilton also lives), her primary residence.
As she put it in an interview last year, her works are colored by the "vocabulary of flight, borders, what it is to be separated from your family," and the realities of being a peripatetic, dissident "other" in the US. But her work also reflects on the exodus of contemporary refugees, exiles, and migrants from locations where power, resources, territories, and borders are contested.
Last Friday, seven days before his departure from the White House, Mr. Obama sat down in the Oval Office and talked about the indispensable role that books have played during his presidency and throughout his life — from his peripatetic and sometimes lonely boyhood, when "these worlds that were portable" provided companionship, to his youth when they helped him to figure out who he was, what he thought and what was important.
And, in the adjacent gallery, Jasper Johns, now 87, is represented by over 30 years of his peripatetic late style, from "Between the Clock and the Bed" (1981), with its intimations of a figure and spreading light amid abstract hatch marks (its identically titled inspiration, by Edvard Munch, is on view at the Met Breuer) to "Regrets" (2013), a large, dark, dense work that circles back toward abstraction.
Howard Finney, the highly professional but frustrated commanding officer of the New York Police Department bomb squad; Dr. James A. Brussel, an eccentric gun-toting psychiatrist and assistant commissioner of the New York State Department of Mental Hygiene, who is concerned about risking his career by predicting the bomber's personality traits based on his crimes; and Seymour Berkson, the peripatetic publisher of The New York Journal-American, who is desperately seeking to spare his newspaper from the Hearst Corporation's bean counters.
In "Obama's Secret to Surviving the White House Years: Books," Michiko Kakutani writes: Last Friday, seven days before his departure from the White House, Mr. Obama sat down in the Oval Office and talked about the indispensable role that books have played during his presidency and throughout his life — from his peripatetic and sometimes lonely boyhood, when "these worlds that were portable" provided companionship, to his youth when they helped him to figure out who he was, what he thought and what was important.

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