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125 Sentences With "peripheries"

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

At first it employs only the stage's peripheries, but it builds until it moves those peripheries: The dancers propel two of the white walls across the stage and tip the rear one over.
But not all the world: wired metropolises yes, vast peripheries no.
The dancers occupy the peripheries of the stage — front, back, and sides.
Their future — and that of the planet — lies on the urban peripheries.
The characters we have grown to love orbit on the peripheries of this rivalry.
Thirty years later, international concern is focused on China's peripheries: Xinjiang and Hong Kong.
It's always supported things on the peripheries, and it's brilliant that it still does that.
It points, perhaps, to the underlying — yet pervasive — influence of work created on the peripheries.
It's on the peripheries of these characters that the production has begun to look stale.
I arrived as carloads of young people spilled out onto the peripheries of the square.
In Mr Macron's cities, and Ms Le Pen's peripheries, France is poised to go either way.
THE most nightmarish dystopian worlds are both familiar and incongruous, existing on the peripheries of possibility.
They thrive in the power vacuum of Rio's peripheries, offering what Mr Alves calls "false security".
We can put in work in one direction, and have it pop up in our peripheries.
That heart-shaped circuit board controls several peripheries that correspond to different parts of her body.
" It concludes: "To recreate Brazil it is necessary to see that the peripheries are the center.
Such structures dominate the peripheries of cities across what was once the Soviet Union and Eastern Bloc.
Sometimes two dancers are still at the center, while those on the peripheries move; sometimes the opposite.
As a photographer and a traveler, I'm always fascinated with communities on the peripheries of mainstream cultures.
Artists work within interstitial domains, at the peripheries, margins, and boundaries of both formal and conceptual methodologies.
This is doubly likely when the peripheries are also where the empire rubs up against suspicious neighbours.
What had once been used to control the peripheries was now being used to control the core.
I've experienced these anti-Semitic undercurrents since my first introductions to the very peripheries of the genre.
Reports like this force sex work arguments to the peripheries, leaving unexamined the vast mainstream of the industry.
Glimpsed from the peripheries of gender and sexuality, history confesses concealed depths and old stories reveal unsuspected trajectories.
It seems that the threat Iran perceives from its peripheries is so acute that prompts brazen and provocative reactions.
A guy called Greg Faye wrote the foreword, who was this young kid on the peripheries [of the scene].
It existed in the peripheries of my brain as that show about bros that my own brother worshipped around 83.
Some travel in or near the orbit of elite power; others are drawn from the lower orders and geographic peripheries.
As the much loved, socially awkward child of a single mother, male role models remained almost exclusively on my peripheries.
For the two to be reconciled, Mr Denham believes, England must be given a parliament to match those in Britain's peripheries.
Epigeneticists, once a subcaste of biologist nudged to the far peripheries of the discipline, now find themselves firmly at its epicenter.
Often built on the peripheries of overpopulated cities, these modern developments are funded by a mix of private and public organizations.
It follows tensions last year over the closure of urban landfills and the continuing accumulation of garbage on the city's peripheries.
Being Russian-speaking and pro-Ukrainian, Mr Zelensky covered most of the country, with the exception of the eastern and western peripheries.
The divide between, say, Islington and Havering will increasingly be replicated elsewhere as Manchester, Leeds and Birmingham soar ahead of their peripheries.
"Rural areas and the peripheries, the places where people feel like nobody, are home to the League and Five Star," he said.
At this time the music was a sensation in the urban peripheries but was lacking the interconnectedness and economic power of a scene.
France is also struggling to integrate generations of immigrants, failing to create anything like enough jobs for those stuck on the cities' peripheries.
It is always breathing, alive on the peripheries, there if you're willing to look for it (the internet has made this even easier).
Hungarian and Polish government bond yields tracked a rise in Bund yields, ignoring a decline in some bond yields in the euro zone's peripheries.
Revolutions and a couple of world wars brought monarchies tumbling down across Europe; they clung on only in the southern, northern and western peripheries.
Even Ramzan Kadyrov, who leads the 1.3-million-strong statelet of Chechnya at the southern peripheries of Russia, has 2.2 million followers on Instagram.
The streets are simultaneously threatening and thrilling, most of the stages are set on the peripheries of the city which hip-hop made cool.
In France the "gilets jaunes" protests have brought populist fury from France's peripheries into the heart of Paris and wrecked Macron's centrist-technocratic plans.
As Francis said to us, go to the peripheries where the Church has not been serving people or where people need it the most.
I started my first show at Mocad, "Parallels and Peripheries," which is Part 2 of a series that started in South Florida [Miami Beach].
More than a few reminded me of Novogratz's wrestling friends—scrappy lower-middle-class kids from the peripheries of New York or Naples or Moscow.
On Europe's peripheries, Poland's far-right Law and Justice has not yet set up a Catholic monarchy, nor Greece's far-left Syriza a people's republic.
What follows in the second gallery moves the viewer into a contemporary period, where the distinction between the center and its peripheries is melted away.
Islam is wisely presented not as a monolithic culture, but a global one with many centres and peripheries; artefacts range from Spain to Nigeria to Indonesia.
Jaroslaw Kaczynski, head of Poland's ruling PiS party, told Rzeczpospolita daily that adopting the euro would mean that Poland would become permanently consigned to European peripheries.
"What often happens is writing by women and about women — and I'd extend that notion to the romantic comedy — gets pushed to the peripheries," she says.
Now both authoritarian adversaries seek to displace America and its allies from their respective geographic peripheries and to re-order the world according to their dictates.
"Confidence weakened in Germany and France, but we expect some improvement in peripheries - Italy, Spain, Ireland - driven by a rebound in services," said Apolline Menut at Barclays.
Many found themselves not just out of a home, but pushed to remote peripheries of the city without access to social networks, public transportation, or employment opportunities.
With its focus on art from Indonesia and Southeast Asia, this year's edition of the Biennale Jogja offers a fresh take on discussions of centers and peripheries.
His descriptions, like the ones found on Ricci's maps, convey images of lands, watery masses, and curious inhabitants of disparate regions extending far beyond China's physical peripheries.
Tens of thousands of others have left the peripheries of Paris and Lyon, where Muslim populations are rising, and have retrenched in neighborhoods with larger Jewish populations.
"The pope wants to give his priority to the peripheries," Bishop Fabien Raharilamboniaina of Madagascar said in Antananarivo, the capital, where Francis appointed a cardinal last year.
But although he, and Renzo Piano, may be right in thinking there is more energy in the peripheries than the centres of large cities, IKEA no longer agrees.
The mood at the start, he says, was positive and laid back, with people of all kinds coming together in an upbeat manner as police lined the peripheries.
These products and services might not appear to have very much in common, but they all sit on the peripheries or edges of the traditional health care system.
"With their ear-like handles and dark peripheries, they might be items of Etruscan pottery," Rob Sharp wrote in his review of the show on the website Artsy.
The prophets tended to emerge from the peripheries at moments of chaos and change, said the theologian, whose book "The Prophetic Imagination" has been a seminary staple since 1978.
"Magic, the world of the jinn, demons, and exorcism are still around in most Muslim and other societies, even if they've been pushed into the peripheries by polite society."
The history is manifest in the wide expanse of the city's peripheries, where outsize warehouses, many of them apparently unused and empty, are interspersed among the crush of apartments.
"I notice the subtle intention of authorities to push poor people to the peripheries of Bucharest or even beyond," said Irina Zamfirescu of the human rights group Active Watch.
Large urban centers and their peripheries would see a lower rate of displacement, and also benefit more from the creation of new jobs that likely require more skills and education.
It is fair to say at this point PKK has a strong incentive to take the war beyond the peripheries in the south east to the heart of Turkish capital.
So I imagine you see a lot of innovative potential in many of the kids who have already been absorbed into organized crime or exist on the peripheries of society?
Among the structures deemed illegal and unsafe are many artists' newly built studios on the northeast peripheries of the city, where the forever-expanding urban agglomerate meets shrinking rural land.
Sky-high valuations have priced many Chinese workers out of the market, creating a nation of "mortgage slaves" and "ant tribes" - graduates forced to live in cheap properties in urban peripheries.
Croft credited better training of Iraqi military personnel over the last few years and more intricate coordination between air and ground forces for helping push ISIS back to the country's peripheries.
What's more, Sebes' unconventional genius inspired not only the generation of managers who succeeded him, but also an elusive sort of supporter who exists on the peripheries of the present moment.
Pope Francis on Saturday told priests and bishops at the cathedral in Mexico City to go to the peripheries, work with families, and connect with parish communities, schools, and the authorities.
It is on the peripheries — which are really the epicenters — that Adam Green's call to action offers an alternative path to simply learning and repeating the canon in exhibitions and collections.
"As its core weakens, its peripheries will become more dangerous," Charlie Winter, a senior research fellow at the International Center for the Study of Radicalization at King's College London, tweeted on Thursday.
"The main concern for Darfur and those in the peripheries in the south and west," he said, "is to see him held accountable for crimes that are far more violent and damning."
Then there are the people who have not even been able to get jobs in this economy—left-behind people in left-behind places, getting by on the peripheries of the deep hinterland.
The alternative biennial can be seen as a chance to contest the balance between centers and peripheries in the Caribbean and Latin America, as their relationship with the United States and Europe evolves.
By rejecting cities for urban peripheries, Mr. Berger merely replaces paved sprawl with artificially green landscapes, and the social isolation of cul-de-sacs with that of one-way loops and automated deliveries.
Every so often, word circulates on the Internet, and in the peripheries of the mainstream media, that people with red hair, like polar bears and coral reefs, are not long for this world.
And in the name of environmentalism, an ideology that comes from the cities, we make the only people who actually need their cars, those on the peripheries, pay for the most expensive gasoline.
Even though Ratkiller aka Mihkel Kleis chooses to operate more on the peripheries of Tallinn's underground scene these days, he's an artist that everyone in the city seems to sing the praises of.
Several large online poker sites, most notably Party Poker, closed their American operations, and although it was still possible to play online poker, the whole industry had been pushed to the peripheries of legality.
The hunt for Lebensraum is driving young entrepreneurs to explore the neglected peripheries of big cities, such as Boston's South Side ("Southie"), Seattle's South Lake Union Area and San Francisco's twin city of Oakland.
There are plenty of stories about artists who retreat from the public spotlight, but fewer get told about those who lead ostensibly unremarkable lives, individuals existing on the peripheries of geography, scenes, and sound.
These efforts mapped the OMZ and found that it was practically anoxic (meaning no oxygen) in the center offshore region between Oman and India, and featuring low oxygen levels, or suboxic waters, around the peripheries.
Amigo the Devil is a strange, hard-to-define entity that hovers like a slightly vengeful ghost around the peripheries of metal, dark folk, and Americana, claimed by none but with roots in all three.
Declining internally, and increasingly encircled along both its eastern and western peripheries, Russia is far less capable of playing a constructive role in Eurasia's evolution than it was prior to its annexation of Crimea in 2014.
"The wealthiest neighborhoods in Buenos Aires just send their waste to the peripheries and it's received by these people who live at the edges of the city," said Francisco Suarez, an anthropologist specializing in environmental issues.
In a time when few painters seem concerned with the problems or progress of painting, a group appears on the scene ready to reach out to the peripheries of its territory, and thereby expand its language.
His trip to Ecatepec was barely 20 miles away, yet it delivered Francis to a different world, one emblematic of what he often calls "the peripheries," the neglected places at the edges of wealth or political power.
Against this turmoil, Gill's close allegiance with the diverse, and variegated, cultures, traditions and people on the peripheries, and her stalwart commitment to photography as an agent for social reformation, serve as necessary acts of citizen protest.
But for Francis, who has made attention to the Catholic peripheries a hallmark of his papacy, much of the trip remained focused on improving the relations between the church leaderships, to benefit his flock on the ground.
The fictional world lies on the peripheries of the real one—creating a similar feel to "The Handmaid's Tale"—and Mr Mercurio's dark scenario has tapped into a mood of uncertainty, political rivalry and paranoia about government surveillance.
Blunt speaking and hailing from Sudan's impoverished peripheries, he appears to be something of a working class hero for some rural folk sidelined by Khartoum's elite, be they conservative Islamists like Bashir or the sit-in's bourgeoisie leftists.
For as a revised master plan for Ethiopia's capital enters implementation stage, slum clearance has stepped up a gear and the focus moved away from the city's peripheries after mass protests against evictions and displacement there last year.
A few years later, she teamed up with a fellow oncologist, Clark Haskins, and their group quickly earned a reputation for providing excellent care, traveling to the peripheries of the state to bring services closer to rural patients.
It's a woozy piece that—if you watch it for long enough—actually feels a bit like being on ecstasy; your vision turning soft focus at the peripheries as you trace new shades and forms in a swirling sea.
Morocco and Algeria have the richest hip-hop scenes in the Middle East and North Africa region, Mr. Aidi said, in part because of their connection to the immigrant communities in the French urban peripheries where hip-hop is very popular.
"People whose only contact with immigrants is with the Filipino servant who takes the dog for a walk in the evening are in favour of immigration, but they have no idea of how immigration is lived in the peripheries," he said in July.
What emerges from Mapping Modernisms is that Modernism was not a process of diffusion from Western centers to non-Western peripheries, as it is traditionally constructed in Western narratives, but rather a complex web of mutual influences and exchanges across the globe.
Destroying the Amazon to stimulate the economy in the short term, as Mr. Bolsonaro proposes, will only displace more small farmers, nut gatherers and fishermen toward the peripheries of cities such as Manaus or Belém, where the favelas grow day by day.
They recently released "(Zus)," a visual essay by the French photographer Benoît Fougeirol with text by Jean-Christophe Bailly, structured around the 11 "Zones urbaines sensibles" of Paris's banlieues that presents the Brutalist peripheries as a failure of both the state and imagination.
Here, I refer to the multitude of real-estate agents who have achieved an expertise at exploiting artists in order to transform the perception of such peripheries as far more central, and thus far more expensive, than they were before the installment of the artwork.
"When my friends tell me they are going to China, I always advise them not to stop at the shopping centers, the ultra-luxury hotels and the skyscrapers, but also to go out to the peripheries to get a better picture of real China," he wrote.
I suspect that this recrudescence will come from the peripheries of today's established political and intellectual empires (it's a long time since I've read anything thought-provoking or original from publications with "New York" in their titles or from professors with chairs in the world's ancient universities).
Once again, Pope Francis is offering a powerful, profound and much-needed lesson to the entire world about how to love unconditionally our brothers and sisters on the peripheries and the grave perils of what he calls a "throwaway culture" that casts aside the weak and defenseless.
While discussions of centers and peripheries have long been part of discourses across the globe, this biennial, offers a fresh and urgent take, featuring 52 artists, and an array of working styles, materials, installation experiences, and performances across three main locations and additional sites throughout the city.
The Supreme Court must end its dancing around the peripheries of Roe by pretending the central issue is how far women need to drive to seek abortions, or by alternately weaponizing Roe to attack states' rights by overriding the will of duly elected legislators working to protect the helpless.
He sits, as ever, at the center of a global web of information drawn into the U.S. intelligence community in Washington, D.C., analyzing the latest economic and political trends from a God's-eye view in order to monitor the telltale twitches of danger at the peripheries of American power.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads It's been quite a while since "outsider art" — the not wholly satisfactory term coined by the British art historian Roger Cardinal in 1972 — has occupied the art world's peripheries, far from the insiders' world of top-tier galleries, museums, and the market.
"The main role of ventilation corridors is to reduce the blockage of wind by the city to facilitate a heat exchange between the city and its peripheries and the spread of pollutants," Wang Fei, vice director of the Beijing Municipal Commission of Urban Planning, was quoted by Xinhua as saying.
Sure, you could sit on your stoop or walk to a nearby park, but there's something to be said for making a day of it, taking the 1 train as far as it will go, until you can see trees in both peripheries and feel you've left the city altogether.
In 21693, the Afrikaner National Party came to power and began instituting ever more elaborate systems of racial categorization, determining who could live where and with whom: nonwhite South Africans were pushed to the peripheries of cities and towns, and were divided, based on their tribal background, into ten rural regions, called Bantustans.
Mr. Bashir's history of oppression and economic mismanagement ensured that protests weren't limited to Khartoum but were spread across the country, even in marginalized peripheries like El-Gadarif in eastern Sudan and Nyala and El Fashir in Darfur, where the regime has killed thousands of people and destroyed hundreds of villages in counterinsurgency.
A little after midnight — the magic hour for tango everywhere — these other dancers cleared to the peripheries of the floor to watch Mr. Garcia and Ms. Sottile dance three numbers, in alternation with the younger Adrian Veredice and Alejandra Hobert (who have studied with them and have themselves been a tango couple for 20 years).
By plucking the highest achievers from all over the country and encouraging them to cluster together in the same few cities, it robs localities of their potential leaders — so that instead of an Eastern establishment negotiating with overlapping groups of regional elites (or with working-class or ethnic leaders), you have a mass upper class segregated from demoralized peripheries.
When, as a child, he and his family eventually settled in America, it was in the greater D.C. area; by the turn of the century, he was recording on the peripheries of New York's underground scene, in part due to his relationship with Vordul Mega from Cannibal Ox. Those early recordings developed into Backwoodz Studioz, a label that woods operates to this day.
And after a third of a century in which John Paul II made the papacy "a rallying point for resistance to the redefinition of Christianity," the church is led by a pope who has no use for the culture-war schema of resistance and accommodation — who sees the church called to "go to the peripheries" rather than strive to restore Christianity as the vital center.
Apart from the future of transport, other themes still open include exact remuneration rules for the posting of workers, which is profitable for companies because of the wage gap in the EU. While the estimated 2 million posted workers only make up a tiny fraction of the bloc's workforce, the issue has driven a wedge between the richer states at the center and their poorer peers on the peripheries.
"Chicken Lady" (1989), a large work made of corrugated roofing, a colorful embroidered quilt left behind by her close friend, the artist Ann Wilson, and a painted text from a letter she received from Marian Doherty, an A.I.R. intern (also reproduced in the gallery) is among the works that reinforce this claim, referring to a notational character in Hammond's universe of misfits on the peripheries of gender and social class, a fictional woman who lived along a riverside with her chickens.
They are those spaces in the peripheries of our vision, glimpsed from the corner of the eye on our daily commute or maybe half-remembered from explorations as a kid; those wastelands that seem to defy the capitalist definitions of usable or workable, they run wild between the urban and the rural environment as a strip of old common, a fenced-off belt of trees, an abandoned, rough, wildflower-filled patch beside a housing project, highway, office block, mall, mill or warehouse.

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