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"persuasively" Definitions
  1. in a way that can persuade somebody to do or believe something
"persuasively" Synonyms
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386 Sentences With "persuasively"

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

He explains complex subjects, such as the national debt, persuasively.
Democrats can now persuasively argue that the Russians elected Trump.
He had to color persuasively outside of his usual lines.
I doubt it, unless Democrats will offer something persuasively better.
Still, that was the one most persuasively performed over all.
The connection between environmental disaster and terrorism is drawn, persuasively.
Sandler makes a persuasively unsteady hub for this pinwheeling anarchy.
And he argued, persuasively, that this acceptance has moral consequences.
For that matter, none of the play's characters are persuasively written.
Chief executives rise to the top because they sell untruths persuasively.
There are ways, however, to write persuasively in your everyday life.
Mr Sitapati persuasively demolishes this charge with a careful reconstruction of events.
All of those arguments are persuasively made by reformist thinkers in Islam.
It's a fine show: carefully winnowed, persuasively installed, just the right size.
"What's left is the uniquely human task of writing, persuasively," Heller explained.
And we can make that argument persuasively as we did throughout the negotiation.
When it takes liberties with aspects of the story, it does so persuasively.
The M.T.A. is off to an excellent start in explaining this project persuasively.
All of this is persuasively conveyed in the opening pages of Cleveland's novel.
As Constance Grady writes persuasively at Vox, celebrity lulls us into trusting strangers.
I make Australia's case as powerfully and persuasively as I can, wherever I am.
This brilliantly entertaining biography argues persuasively why his memory, too, is worthy of conservation.
But as economists point out so persuasively in other contexts, to improve requires change.
Finkel's excellent book, neither full of jargon nor dumbed down, speaks persuasively to both.
"Our current 'strategy' isn't really one," as the Cato Institute's Benjamin Friedman persuasively argues.
The director, Antonio Campos, visualizes her isolation persuasively, but without much feeling or depth.
" And Shakespeare, Skal persuasively argues, was a major influence, particularly the bloody tragedy "Macbeth.
These far-reaching back stories persuasively inform how the characters interact with one another.
My purpose here is not to condemn this; others already have persuasively done that.
After all, the case against soaring drug prices is being widely and persuasively made.
But most impressive is Mr. Song, who persuasively conveys a working stiff's political awakening.
Of course, the same arguments can as persuasively be made in favor of dirt.
Partly because Scalia regularly and persuasively expounded on its merits it has gained much currency.
As a number of observers have persuasively argued, Trump is guided by a particular gospel.
McCarthy argues, persuasively, that it's a mistake to see impeachment as an essentially judicial process.
He argues, pretty persuasively, that the taxi and limo companies are fighting a losing battle.
As persuasively conducted by Mr. Abbado, it demonstrated Verdi's considerable skill as an orchestral composer.
The décor is only approximately medieval; I wish it more persuasively evoked the age of chivalry.
Gary Leff, a travel writer, makes this point persuasively on his blog, View From the Wing.
Wade, Williams persuasively argues, because it shared language and values with the decade's social justice causes.
And Sharkey does make heroes, persuasively, of many nice people doing nice things to stop crime.
But he argues persuasively for the mammoth as "a catalyst that drove a revolution in thinking."
A federal judge in Brooklyn argues, persuasively, that the company is not obligated to do so.
This production captures Ms. Rowling's sensibility even more persuasively than did the special-effects-driven films.
Lucia sings of the ghost she witnesses; this dark, misty production feels persuasively haunted and disoriented.
Disney has been more persuasively progressive, however, in its original films of the past several years.
She even conjectures, persuasively, that they don't really want the baby — she's a crafty one, Mary.
Mishra persuasively damns the arrogance of neoliberals, but let's say a few kind words for neoliberalism.
General Mattis and Mr. Trump should be prepared to explain persuasively why he warrants an exemption.
John Herrman makes the case — persuasively — that Twitter ought to let us delete our tweets in bulk.
Mr Yang argues, more persuasively than most politicians, that he chooses his positions on data and evidence.
They'd be 100 percent behind journalists who can adequately and persuasively articulate what the public interest is.
"Democracy and Prosperity: Reinventing Capitalism through a Turbulent Century" persuasively argues that the two are mutually supportive.
You'll also learn how to interview competently and persuasively while still letting your inner self shine through.
Instead, following Sun-Tzu, Israel will need to focus more intently and persuasively on sustainable nuclear deterrence.
Winkler spends several pages on the case but doesn't persuasively explain why Black's argument never took hold.
But Ms. Ruvolo persuasively argued that a long sentence would only turn him into a hardened criminal.
Regular mass shootings answer the gun question easily enough (even if not persuasively to most gun owners).
She argues persuasively that sexual pleasure, however you define it, is not a luxury but a necessity.
Students can use these questions to practice writing persuasively or creatively, or as inspiration for our contests.
This month you'll have unprecedented power to act decisively and persuasively in all matters involving friends and family.
But Barlow's vision was "incomplete," one-time EFF organizer and WIRED alum April Glaser wrote persuasively in February.
" Brexit, O'Toole persuasively argues, "is driven by a force—English nationalism—that its leaders still refuse to articulate.
It's hard to imagine Mr. Hancock could ever have performed the song as persuasively in its original era.
Pollan persuasively argues that our anxieties are misplaced when it comes to psychedelics, most of which are nonaddictive.
He's taught more than 20,000 students how to write persuasively — that's a lot of persuasive writers out there!
In some cases, I adjusted the numbers upward when companies demonstrated persuasively that there had been a miscount.
Mr. Wardle relates that story smoothly and persuasively, but his telling sometimes provokes more questions than it answers.
You might persuasively suggest that life offers plenty of this cycling without your having to seek it out.
Particularly if Alexander persuasively claims that it's the only viable way to discover a core piece of potential evidence.
What I can say is that unfortunately we didn't persuasively explain the benefits of the entire system to consumers.
" Wright persuasively argues that America has "two competing national security doctrines—Trump's and that of his national security team.
He argued very persuasively earlier this month that it is time to get US forces out of the country.
But you've removed their ability to follow you throughout your day, persuasively manipulating your attention toward their own ends.
The responses were split down the middle, with students on both sides of the debate arguing their cases persuasively.
Buttigieg argued persuasively that Sanders at the top of the ticket would hurt all other Democrats running for office.
With a voice by turns brightly crystalline and arrestingly powerful, she persuasively inhabits the role of this chameleon coquette.
You take readers through American history and explain persuasively that we're vastly more polarized now than in the past.
Some argue persuasively that it is cheaper to include non-renewable sources in the power mix to stabilise the system.
You persuasively argue that cyber-libertarianism, favoring no restrictions on the internet trade of weapons and hard drugs, is dangerous.
The episode keeps the action moving while persuasively addressing racial and technological issues that have spurred so much recent conflict.
Their exuberance persuasively captures young people who never give a thought about tomorrow and live only in the passing moment.
He makes that transition so joyously and persuasively I did wonder what the show might be like without Mr. Karl.
"Cows are individuals," Young, an organic farmer of more than thirty years, persuasively argues in this book of clever anecdotes.
Demonstrate powerfully and persuasively that the brash real estate mogul loses his cool under pressure, that he's not presidential material.
The elfin Mr. Keating, the saturnine Mr. Ruddy and the radiant Ms. Street all move persuasively between fragility and strength.
We can only hope so, because the battle against genuine authoritarian threats needs to be waged consistently, credibly and persuasively.
Not an archetype or even a type, she is persuasively individual, in part because of skeptical look on her face.
Any military action that cannot be persuasively explained to the public is probably not a good idea to begin with.
He captures the era persuasively, embroidering the realism with details like Mildred's knee-skimming skirts and Richard's brush-cut hair.
GOP lawmakers who have avoided public comment face a tightening squeeze between party loyalty and conduct they cannot persuasively defend.
Holding the opposite view is Marie (a persuasively pained Kelly McAndrew), who believes that outside the "enclosure," the environment is toxic.
As she persuasively shows, marches need not be the apex of a movement's rise; they can also be its generative soil.
Rhetoric teaches how to speak persuasively, produce something to say on every occasion, and make people like you when you speak.
Mr. Ma paints a persuasively bleak scene that could use more psychological and philosophical nuance to go with its painstaking grimness.
And though his voice wasn't as singular, Julian in "The Julian Chapter" was often persuasively rougher and self-congratulating than sweet Auggie.
This past, Dunbar-Ortiz persuasively argues, undergirds both the landscape of gun violence to this day and our partisan debates about guns.
Then, just two years ago, the law professor John Pfaff made the argument, persuasively, that the key factor was simply prosecutorial overreach.
Part of the appeal, Robertson persuasively argues, had something to do with post-Civil War nostalgia for the purity of wartime regimentation.
" Besides, he added, a Democrat who speaks persuasively about religion has a potentially huge tactical advantage: "Think ahead to the general election.
By contrast, the historian Lori Ginzberg argues persuasively that racism and elitism were enduring features of the great suffragist's makeup and philosophy.
These positions allow the moderates to most effectively and persuasively articulate differences with the president, as well as find potential compromises with him.
But as the paper persuasively shows, even if you know money is more important, valuing time could lead you to a happier life.
Every photo shouted happy escape, but never so loudly—never so persuasively—as his beats had shouted it, not all that long ago.
However, he said more recently that retired Marine Corps General James Mattis, his nominee as secretary of defense, had persuasively argued against it.
Yet Trump TV, as The New Yorker's Ryan Lizza and Talking Points Memo's Josh Marshall have persuasively argued, seems like a pipe dream.
And others have argued better and more persuasively than I could that Senate impeachment isn't the primary or best reason to do it.
Perhaps, as Matthew J.X. Malady persuasively argued at Slate, we should just call the whole thing off and ditch the email closer altogether.
Never a plutocrat, Smith nonetheless argued persuasively that certain arrangements of private wealth enhancement could at least permit the poor to live tolerably.
A bunch of economists have argued, pretty persuasively, that with modern computers, the government could do your taxes for you with no problem.
"The style of no-compromise sacrifices things that are too important for readers to surrender without a second thought," Mr. Packer persuasively cautioned.
But Smith argues — persuasively, to my mind — that a more talkative Obama would hurt the causes that matter to Obama and his allies.
In the past decade, many researchers have argued persuasively that the brain-disease model of addiction has gained more prominence than it deserves.
However, he said more recently that retired Marine Corps General James Mattis, his nominee for secretary of defense, had persuasively argued against it.
Her images are gripping and unconventional, her discoveries palpable and personal as she writes persuasively in defining the genius of the Roebling family.
As this excellent Mattermark piece argues persuasively, if you're betting on long-term technological change, short-term GDP isn't what you should worry about.
And Taylor persuasively offers that vision to the world in her new book, The Body Is Not Apology: The Power of Radical Self-Love.
And whether the incomparable cheerfulness and brightness bestowed by the sight of a too-tall sunflower might also be persuasively rendered in drinkable form.
And the drug companies argue, persuasively, that prescribing drugs for off-label uses is not only widespread but regularly alleviates illness and saves lives.
Eric Topol, a cardiologist and author, argues this persuasively in a just-published book, Deep Medicine: How Artificial Intelligence Can Make Healthcare Human Again.
Economists Sergio Correia, Stephan Luck, and Emil Verner released a working paper (not yet peer-reviewed) last week that makes this argument extremely persuasively.
How could the party, some wondered, continue to persuasively demonize Democrats if their president is going behind their back to reach compromises with them?
The film persuasively argues that any fraud at Abacus occurred at a low level, and that the bank dealt with it swiftly and properly.
The paper argued persuasively that the phasing out of lethal "town gas" in Britain in the 1960s and '70s caused a decline in suicides.
But the fact that both sides have a line of argument does not mean those arguments are persuasively equal or cancel one another out.
Weigend argues persuasively that in this "post-privacy" world, we should give our data freely, but that we should expect certain protections in return.
"We all know about the student loan debt, but I've never heard anyone so persuasively link it to the slowdown in business startups," she said.
She acknowledges a variety of errors and inconsistencies, mostly the results of a belabored anonymization process, but otherwise persuasively explains many of the lingering issues.
Miss Saldon, a 30-year-old development consultant who says she converted to Islam five years ago, published a persuasively eloquent letter in Indian newspapers.
So far, most of Trump's establishment critics have failed to persuasively explain how they would create well-paying jobs and improve working people's bargaining power.
Most teachers agree that the standards are a step forward, because they ask students to think critically, write persuasively and solve real-world problems creatively.
He's closing in on the national polls, and Nate Silvers persuasively argues that Sanders has been experiencing a genuine upswing, outperforming expectations in recent primaries.
This anomaly stems from the dual sovereignty doctrine, which as one amicus brief in the case persuasively argues, was made up in the 19th century.
Walt persuasively contends that Washington's bungled interventions in Afghanistan, Iraq and Libya helped propel Trump, who has consistently derided foreign policy experts, to the presidency.
Hawke plays Lars, the robbery's would-be mastermind, who appears too ridiculous to be persuasively dangerous but who is also meant to be somehow irresistible.
And while Mr. Carell bounces and sags persuasively, the characterization is finally so soft that Bobby comes off as more needy and pathetic than threatening.
I don't believe that anyone persuasively accused of what Christine Blasey Ford says that Kavanaugh did to her has any business on the Supreme Court.
If he did, then Ford's testimony will be persuasively corroborated by Kavanaugh's own calendar, by Judge's book and by the independent business records of Safeway.
But Calipari's public stance was probably delivered more cleanly and persuasively than it would have been even through a sit-down with a friendly reporter.
Analyst Ben Thompson has argued persuasively that Facebook "squashed" Twitter's growth thanks to its constantly evolving, algorithmically based timeline, which surfaced better posts to its users.
But there's no doubting the panache of an album that includes four minutes of unadulterated wash cycle, persuasively framing the exchange in terms of meditative bliss.
Overall, the history argues persuasively for the Senate voting on any nomination submitted by President Barack Obama and judging the nominee on his or her merits.
The documentary persuasively argues that the charges were wildly implausible, and that homophobia against the women, who had been in lesbian relationships, contributed to the convictions.
Nepali Maoists rose to power because they persuasively fused class and identity and promised to address the country's multilayered discrimination based on caste, gender and geography.
Thanks to Mr. Comey, Republicans can now argue more persuasively that she neglected the public interest, took risks with national security and broke faith with voters.
Her new book, "Writers & Lovers," set in 1997, begins in mourning and frustration, but it more or less persuasively opens out to genuine, even giddy, hope.
MICHAEL PETIT, PORTLAND, ME. To the Editor: Philip Klein argues persuasively that health care should be a "flexible system" that turns decisions over to the states.
And he talks, persuasively, about what a customer-service business like that taught him about courting people rather than confronting them, about pacifying instead of inflaming.
Because the Arctic is a place of "astounding complexity" — a point he argues persuasively — many scientists were slow to understand the portentous changes they were witnessing.
Mariani persuasively numbers Stevens among the twentieth-century poets who are both most powerful and most refined in their eloquence, along with Rilke, Yeats, and Neruda.
Mr. Trudeau speaks persuasively about Canada's leadership on climate, but in reality he's trying for the impossible: to convince every side that he can please them.
Perhaps more important, it's the time to discover how persuasively they can explain the parts of their biographies and records that cry out for some explanation.
Modern civilizations are haunted by crimes like this; "I, Olga Hepnarova" persuasively suggests that the only understanding we can have of them is a terrifying one.
When one reaches the trio of the hare, grass, and bird — described persuasively as "miracles" of art — one will likely find it impossible to argue otherwise.
" "Clearly, the Secretary of State decided that he couldn't answer those concerns substantively or persuasively, and so concocted an emergency so he wouldn't have to do so.
Anything that further erodes faith in his honesty makes it more difficult for him to persuasively advocate for Republican priorities — including on health care and tax reform.
But at the AAAS meeting Brett Finlay of the University of British Columbia, in Vancouver, persuasively filled in some of the blanks in the case of asthma.
When she's not maintaining a stony silence about her father's most controversial policy proposals, she speaks persuasively, if vaguely, about important issues, like job training and infrastructure.
But as the finale's depiction of the closing arguments laid out, the issue wasn't that she argued for one thing and he argued more persuasively against it.
He says, persuasively, that he can build a closer connection with voters in this diverse district than the underachieving establishment old-timers he is fighting to outdo.
His famously moist televised debate performance in 1960 haunted him; so did his failure to seem as persuasively presidential — as good-looking, basically — as John F. Kennedy.
Copywriters write persuasively to grow a brand and encourage readers to buy a company's product, while a content writer is paid to write articles or blog posts.
Then came the director Patrice Chéreau's searing "Elektra" at the Aix Festival in France in 2013, with Ms. Herlitzius at its center, persuasively both wounded and wounding.
Many musicians and music aficionados also contribute Opinion pieces to The Times, where they write passionately and persuasively about music's influence in their lives, culture and society.
Sklenicka celebrates Adams's work and persuasively situates it in an era characterized both by drastic cultural changes and by the persistence of old expectations, conventions, and biases.
"The Triumph of Injustice" persuasively argues that the wealthy accepted high taxes and largely shunned tax avoidance during those decades because huge fortunes were considered un-American.
Faith communities have lobbied persuasively for this tax cut on the principle that every great society is measured by how it cares for the least among us.
"It was the first book to make the case so persuasively that home cooking did not need to apologize for not being restaurant cooking," Ms. Wilson said.
But as you argue persuasively, Alissa, the movie is essentially on the side of telling people what they want to hear, as opposed to what's actually happening.
Footwork, technique (in sequences of turns, the head often "spots" front rather than in the direction the pirouettes are traveling), lines and accentuation show many persuasively idiomatic nuances.
In coming elections, the battleground will be to most persuasively navigate the grievous worries of what appears to be the clear majority across the world's most advantaged populations.
As an unprecedented new exhibition persuasively argues, it is through this lesser-known aspect of his work that the master of Aix-en-Provence found his artistic voice.
They cannot, for example, simply impose themselves on buffer states, where leaders hold competing agendas and need to persuasively promise their constituents that they are defending national sovereignty.
She felt that when she was seen from the front she looked persuasively feminine, and even striking, with abundant hair that framed her face, and wide-set eyes.
Legs and claws are steamed rather than boiled, on the theory — persuasively backed up here — that this results in more tender meat and better preserves its innate sweetness.
"Parsifal" can persuasively be a parable of ecological disaster, of tormented nationhood, of — as in the Metropolitan Opera's far more interesting production — the great rift between the sexes.
Even if those traits were persuasively related to the plot, there would be the problem of the plot itself, which is about as subtle as that deer head.
There's a real wow factor to the studio's renderings, to the graphical details and spatial dimensionality that persuasively suggest quotidian existence and our own chairs, floors and trees.
And if that empathy shades into overstatement by the play's end, he has already managed to create a persuasively sad and funny worldview that extends beyond the solipsistic.
With the common core standards and emphasis on reading nonfiction and writing persuasively, I always get nervous about seeing too many "I" statements in the papers I receive.
This study was one of the first to persuasively show that being physically active could lower someone's risk for heart disease, while being sedentary had the opposite effect.
Surveying recent municipal efforts to ban use of the technology by law enforcement, Bruce Schneier argues persuasively that we need to take a broader view of the issue.
As Terry Galway's excellent book Machine Made: Tammany Hall and the Creation of Modern American Politics argues persuasively, a good machine was not just a mechanism for extraction.
Placed in the center, a wheelchair with a video projection of Harsono interviewing one of the survivors from the 1947 massacre persuasively sets the pensive tone for the exhibition.
Uber has flatly rejected calls to make its drivers employees, arguing persuasively that switching to a formal employer-employee relationship would be bad for both Uber and its drivers.
Yet the authors argue persuasively that the liberal order of the past 70 years has been better than any of the alternatives and is well worth striving to preserve.
But Salazar has spent the days since the Tablet and City and State articles defending herself — at times persuasively, at times not — against the charges leveled in the pieces.
Peirce persuasively recasts Roxelana as a pragmatist adept at navigating both palace politics and international relations, and as a pioneer who established a more powerful role for Ottoman women.
But doing so consistently and persuasively is very hard, argues Mr Meyers, who says that there is no indication of a false flag in the Indian power-plant hack.
"She continued "I consistently see women who could improve their skills in the area of presence and would benefit from seeking guidance on how to talk persuasively and powerfully.
It is an unresolved legal issue whether election "dirt" qualifies legally as a thing of value, but former Federal Election Commission counsel Larry Noble argues persuasively that it should.
As Gooper and Mae — Brick's slick brother and alarmingly fertile sister-in-law — Brian Gleeson and Hayley Squires persuasively ground their characters' comic gold-digging in a fetid earthiness.
November, shortly after a video of the New Jersey governor talking about his mother went viral, Jeff Greenfield argued persuasively at Politico that demographic trends could explain the softened Republican
Although Ms. Diamond is clearly herself a powerfully smart writer, you come away from "Smart People" feeling like you've attended a marathon series of seminars, not a persuasively drawn drama.
She has carefully established a political career that will likely take her to White House, an accomplishment that argues persuasively against the depiction of her as a meek, submissive woman.
Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook's chief executive, has said it's "pretty crazy" to believe that fake news influences people in any significant way, but Tufekci persuasively lays out evidence to the contrary.
Other cast members play multiple roles persuasively, with Ms. Quan having fun with Huong, cranky but not above making her own lascivious moves on Quang (before he's met her daughter).
In this new landscape, evoked through maps, petrified trees and unnerving photographic projections, even the trenches were not safe, and this show persuasively argues that ecological ruin had psychological effects.
Toward the end, Seymour argues, movingly and persuasively, that the experiment was a success, but not in the way its architect had intended, and not with results he could recognize.
In a recent essay in Foreign Affairs, Oriana Skylar Mastro, a North Korea expert at Georgetown University, argues persuasively that the US fundamentally misunderstands China's relationship with the Kim government.
And while Enduring Images doesn't always illustrate how a film viewing might bolster real-life organizing, it persuasively demonstrates the role of cinema in broadening the Left's rhetoric and agenda.
One of his assistants, acquainted with the boys since their childhood, persuasively made the case for allowing them to approximate the unrestrained style of play associated with Amateur Athletic Union teams.
His critics, like Krugman, have argued persuasively that Sanders is being either too idealistic or too cynical (and his supporters too naive) about the scope of change he's likely to deliver.
Perhaps it knows that if it's going to persuasively make a case to consumers that it's worth spending upwards of $2,000 on a bulky headset, it's going to need some help.
Goldstein "argued very persuasively that it was all about rare variants and we were all going down the wrong road looking at the common ones," Collins said in a telephone interview.
But the film, which so persuasively treats law enforcement racism as a systemic problem, can't figure out how to treat violence against women with the same kind of rigor or nuance.
In Mr. Ricks's sly 2004 book "Dylan's Visions of Sin," he persuasively compared Mr. Dylan at various points with personages as distinct as Yeats, Hardy, Keats, Marvell, Tennyson and Marlon Brando.
At the time, Fiance argued persuasively that the school — known for its academic rigor —  has largely and unwisely been overlooked by angel investors and VCs alike, sometimes owing simply to proximity.
The tenor Michael Slattery, alternately raw and pure, is persuasively childlike without mugging; John Moore and Talise Trevigne, as his parents, rise to more mature passions, their desperation and hurt plain.
Travis Rieder, of the Berman Institute of Bioethics at Johns Hopkins, in his book "Toward a Small Family Ethic," persuasively discusses the ecological costs of having children on an endangered planet.
It's as if we're being allowed to hear most, but not all, of the scores that impel the dancers; she's one of the rare choreographers who can bring this off persuasively.
Mr. Nanjiani plays himself (and very persuasively, too), while Zoe Kazan goes light and dark as Emily, whose good-natured heckling during one of Kumail's stand-up routines leads to romance.
A 2017 book by Dr. Bandy X. Lee and colleagues, "The Dangerous Case of Donald Trump," outlines very clearly and persuasively the real threat of Mr. Trump's power as our president.
"Sister Play" is a whimsical piece that not always persuasively melds playful and dramatic passages with moments of a philosophical nature as the characters inwardly express thoughts about their lives and relationships.
For instance, my colleague Robb Willer has found that when people empathise with individuals on the other end of the political spectrum, they can actually argue more persuasively for their own position.
Hannah's journey is persuasively grim and not without surprises; ultimately, it becomes a meditation on the possibility that a woman can create her identity by controlling the terms of her own disappearance.
They have shown him television clips of surrogates who have defended the most damaging moments from Mr. Bloomberg's past, like his defense of racially biased policing practices, more persuasively than he has.
The chick in the next bed, Violet (Juno Temple, persuasively feral), keeps harassing Sawyer, though Sawyer is given a friendly welcome by another inmate, Nate (a sympathetic, egregiously badly lighted Jay Pharoah).
"Wish fulfillment," Hollinghurst replied, not altogether persuasively, when I asked him what resources he drew on to create the character of Will, a handsome aristocrat who lives a life consecrated to pleasure.
Cowen also argues, persuasively, that America tops the world in the quality of its corporate management — if Chinese firms were managed equally well, they would be up to 50 percent more productive.
He is also a provocative wine writer, both in his annual catalogs, and in his philosophical 2010 book, "Reading Between the Wines," in which he argued persuasively for wine's centrality to culture.
You can watch it for days — indeed, weeks, months and years — on end without ever encountering a persuasively contrary opinion, at least one that isn't instantly derided as unworthy of serious consideration.
Responses were split down the middle, with students on both sides of the debate arguing their cases persuasively, using a compelling combination of logic, ethics, emotion and statistics to support their claims.
Rather, he argues persuasively, it is the Thirty Years' War of our time, growing out of the ruins of twin totalitarian regimes in Iraq and Syria, and it is far from concluded.
The most persuasively sinful moments are on the opener, "Meet Me in the Hallway," another soft musical moment that doesn't bother to find the hope that's on the other side of decay.
"I don't think anybody in the history of law has ever been able to prove a negative so persuasively, by so much documentary evidence, as I have," he told The New Yorker .
Some of the citizens in the town advocated for putting a fence around the cliff, but others more persuasively made the case for simply parking an ambulance down below in the valley.
Perhaps foremost, the documentary asserts -- provocatively, if not entirely persuasively -- that the media and prosecutors assumed the worst of Carter because of an uncharitable view of teenage girls as being manipulative and cruel.
In his underrated 2011 book The Origins of Political Order, Francis Fukuyama persuasively identifies strong religious movements that exercise authority outside of kinship networks as the key to establishing the rule of law.
It didn't get America out of the low-rate, low-growth slump entirely, however, which allowed Mr Obama's critics to argue, persuasively if not correctly, that the stimulus had not worked at all.
And we published two related lesson plans, "For the Sake of Argument: Writing Persuasively to Craft Short, Evidence-Based Editorials" and "I Don't Think So: Writing Effective Counterarguments" that offer additional teaching ideas.
He said that while advocates always try to answer questions as persuasively as possible, he sensed that attorneys gave "special solicitude" to Kennedy during the rearguments, knowing his would be the decisive vote.
Yet he persuasively explains the danger of underestimating a business that, by one estimate, generates $4 billion of revenues a year and also plays a critical role in systems worth about $4 trillion.
In December, I gave a presentation titled "Crapstraction to Like Art" to students at the New York Academy of Art, and they defended Figgis, persuasively, for having a vision beyond her application style.
Junger argues persuasively that postcombat psychological problems must be understood as a problem of reintegrating to society on such terms, at least as much as they are due to the trauma of war.
In Berlin's repetitive, obsessive circling of the same events, told almost-but-not-quite true to life, ideas arise organically, and more persuasively, from quiet, repeated depictions of small and seemingly unimportant events.
Mr. Reed persuasively embraces the story's Alice in Wonderland weirdness and also makes it a seamless piece with the action sequences, as in one witty kitchen fight that would make Claes Oldenburg giggle.
In June, Barry Lynn, an academic with New America, had persuasively written in favor of the European Union's antitrust fine against Google, only to find himself ousted from New America several months later.
But while Hamlet's relationships with others — with his family, and with Ophelia, Horatio and even Laertes — are all compellingly and persuasively rendered, it's a dead man to whom he is most magnetically drawn.
A new study by Hendrik Bessembinder, a finance professor at Arizona State University, demonstrates persuasively that while investing in the overall stock market makes sense, the obstacles facing individual stock pickers are formidable.
"Leaders of business and finance from both sides of the Channel need to get together and persuasively explain to their respective political representatives why the EU and the City need each other," Giancarlo said.
Such threats have not been lost on other leading European politicians seeking office this year, the vast bulk of them distancing themselves persuasively from a broad range of positions taken by the Trump administration.
Many prominent economists argue persuasively that the biggest macroeconomic problem we face in the 21st century isn't a lack of investment capital or willing workers, but a global savings glut and chronically weak spending.
Lindsey persuasively depicts the female veterans' perspective as well, especially in Colleen (who visits a V.F.W. hall to confront an assailant) and Evie M. (whose imminent suicide is delayed by the machine of routine).
Forbes's Scott Mendelson has argued persuasively that the situation with The Interview had a chilling effect, causing major studios to back off from potentially incendiary political movies, and this can only worsen that trend.
That capaciousness makes her perfect for Lynch's world — she can persuasively occupy a zone at once bizarre and normal, wooden and natural, glamorous and deranged — but it also characterizes her performances throughout her career.
The sparks fly fast and persuasively — Rae and Stanfield make sense right away — and you're soon cozying up with the couple while they share stories and increasingly heated looks in a dimly lit restaurant.
None of this is to say, obviously, that Trump has personally thought through all these issues or familiarized himself with the charts and graphs that could make the case for low interest rates persuasively.
The origins of Gandhi's world view in Europe's fin-de-siècle culture are also becoming clearer: Leela Gandhi persuasively links her great-grandfather's outlook to an antimaterialist tradition that flourished in late-nineteenth-century Britain.
More persuasively, this is not the first (although it is the most explicit) time Posner has expressed sympathies towards conditioning the application of the Constitution's original meaning on the prevailing winds of modern public passions.
If Trump can argue persuasively that some of China's market interventions don't fall under WTO rules, that could liberate the US to use unilateral measures like blocking Chinese imports if China doesn't modify its behavior.
Tulsi Gabbard had an effective critique of Kamala Harris's past actions as a prosecutor while Michael Bennet persuasively argued that we need to be discussing the important issues of today, not from 50 years ago.
These will be uncomfortable but necessary topics to explore if the Catholic Church wants an era of renewal and its leaders hope to reclaim the ability to speak more persuasively to a diverse public square.
Playing to the gallery with a second-act entrance by way of the School of Funny Walks, Mr. Shearsmith makes something persuasively pathological out of Norman's loyalty to Sir, albeit at considerable cost to himself.
"From the very beginning of his military career, Smith argues persuasively, Eisenhower was a shrewd political operator who concealed his acumen and ambition behind an affable facade," Wendy Smith wrote in The Los Angeles Times.
Bradford's new work in the exhibition Shade: Clyfford Still / Mark Bradford persuasively argues that the Abstract Expressionist movement can and should be approached from a social and political perspective to fully reveal its revolutionary nature.
In the article, Libertarian Paternalism Is Not an Oxymoron, Richard Thaler, father of behavioral economics, and his colleague Cass Sunstein explore the science underlying opting in, arguing persuasively that people are biased toward the status quo.
Dr. Kimberly Hamlin, a professor of history and global intercultural studies at Miami University, has argued persuasively that the Miss America Pageant gained popularity starting in 1921 precisely because it challenged American women's newfound political power.
More than 30 years later, the trauma of the four-hour-long assault continues to have repercussions, and Dr. Douglas argues persuasively that rape is an experience that one can never really relegate to one's past.
But the historian Nicolas Barreyre argues persuasively that the veto shattered the Republican coalition, giving Democrats control of the House of Representatives and leading to partisan corruption hearings that discredited the administration and helped end Reconstruction.
But Chernow persuasively makes the case that Grant was its most-forward thinking and innovative general and that, while he had equals as a tactician, his ability to manage, mobilize, and deploy enormous armies was unsurpassed.
Conversely, if Sanders builds a policy process (and policy staff) that designs tighter policy and is able to absorb and persuasively respond to critiques of that policy, he'll put a lot of those concerns to rest.
James speaks persuasively about the intellectual purpose of refusing certainty and straightforwardness—he is a very persuasive person in general—but I found, as I read the book, that I often felt adrift in the stream.
At the beginning of this, you were explaining how the bundles have great value to customers, lots of people have argued that persuasively, it seems pretty clear that, like, you're better off paying one small fee.
Sarbanes, who along with his staff has helped organize the anti-corruption push, said it was important for Democrats to acknowledge that, as Trump argued so persuasively on the campaign trail, their hands are dirty, too.
In his book, Reed will "persuasively" argue evangelicals have a duty to defend the incumbent Republican leader against "the stridently anti-Christian, anti-Semitic, and pro-abortion agenda of the progressive left," according to the description.
Keith Baird, a linguist from Barbados who rose to prominence in the 1960s arguing persuasively against the use of the word Negro and in favor of the term Afro-American, died on July 13 in Atlanta.
The Brookings Institution has persuasively argued that the AHCA would amount to near-wholesale elimination of Obamacare's ban on discrimination against people with pre-existing conditions, and may even allow employers to hollow out employee health benefits.
Even in the persuasively wintry duets of "Facing North" (1992), there is a sense of togetherness that emerges from the richly dissonant interweaving of two buzzing throat singers, and from the overlapping of toned inhalations and exhalations.
Mr. Chace, working with a small crew that includes the talented cinematographer Sean Price Williams, persuasively recreates a vision of an earlier Havana filled with glamorous true believers, menacing military men and cocktail chatter about revolutionary aesthetics.
To make it short, it is hard to persuasively dispute that the president is not above the law under the Constitution, and that he can certainly act in ways that would legally amount to obstruction of justice.
No one writes more persuasively about the natural world, the ways of animals both wild and domestic, rural roughneck mores, hunting and fishing, food, drinking, the writing life and, of course, male lust: reflexive, resistless, defiantly unfashionable.
The fixes Mahler is advocating are necessary, but until they are folded into a plan that makes the trains more convenient and comfortable, it will be hard to sell a subway fix he so persuasively argues for.
But in a letter this month, the American Council on Education, which represents about 1,700 colleges, argued persuasively that rescinding the rule, instead of perhaps modifying it, would damage the interests of students, colleges and the public.
" As for the work in the new book, no less than The New Yorker's art critic, Peter Schjeldahl, can barely hide his surprise when describing the quality as astonishingly high, the portraits "honestly observed and persuasively alive.
You can imagine a scenario in which this argument reads more persuasively—if Scalia were a young justice, cut down with cosmic unfairness years before the president who nominated him imagined his seat would be vacant once again.
The Finnish President mentioned that and talked about it most persuasively, the number of days that you can navigate the Northern Sea Route has been going up dramatically of late, which means that we'll have better transportation capabilities.
The Finnish President mentioned that and talked about it most persuasively, the number of days that you can navigate the Northern Sea Route has been going up dramatically of late, which means that we'll have better transportation capabilities.
"The Court finds that this evidence persuasively demonstrates that mapdrawers intentionally packed and cracked on the basis of race (using race as a proxy for voting behavior) with the intent to dilute minority voting strength," the majority wrote.
That, incidentally, is music to the ears of climate-change deniers and those who profit in the short term from ignoring a problem that has been persuasively documented by scientists to the satisfaction of most of the world.
Every single time Democrats have run someone for president who was perceived as not able to speak to the center of the country, not able to speak persuasively speak outside the base of the Democratic Party, they've lost.
In discussing the retreat itself, he persuasively highlights the essential role played by the Royal Navy, which often is overshadowed by the tales of the fishing boats, yachts and other small craft that retrieved thousands of besieged soldiers.
The proposed legislation "is a home run for private equity investors," said Victor Fleischer, a law professor at the University of San Diego who has spent years arguing (persuasively, in my view) that the loophole should be closed.
Still, trouper that she is, she rose impressively to the biggest moment of all with a stirring reading of the towering Chaconne that concludes the D minor Partita, decidedly more Romantic than Baroque in style yet persuasively delivered.
The report about black veterans argues persuasively that former soldiers like Mr. Dorsey were targeted for assault because black men in uniform challenged the white supremacists' idea of black inferiority and were seen as potential leaders in insurrections.
To the Editor: Steven Levitsky and Daniel Ziblatt argue persuasively that democratic institutions are underpinned by informal norms about fair play, and note several ways in which these codes of political restraint have been weakened in recent decades.
She argues persuasively that the growth of the for-profit sector is a rational response to a service economy in which there are fewer living-wage jobs, and employers invest less and less in training their work forces.
In the movie, Elizabeth and Darcy (Sam Riley, a persuasively brooding presence), sling metaphoric arrows at each other now and again, but they're so busy fighting the zombies overrunning the country that their actions invariably drown out everything else.
The author of defining books on George Washington and Alexander Hamilton—the latter formed the basis for a hit Broadway musical, after Lin-Manuel Miranda read it on holiday—Mr Chernow argues persuasively that Grant has been badly misunderstood.
It was during acoustic performances of "Love Yourself" and new song "Insecurities" that Bieber most persuasively reminded the crowd that despite all the things that happened over the past few years, he's first and foremost a damn good musician.
So it's striking that he keeps returning to the intangible, the realm of phantasm and reverie, on "I Had a Dream That You Were Mine," his persuasively moody new collaboration with the producer and multi-instrumentalist known as Rostam.
The pooled results persuasively showed that exercise, especially if it is moderately strenuous, such as brisk walking or jogging, and supervised, so that people complete the entire program, has a "large and significant effect" against depression, the authors wrote.
Though my heart is in creative nonfiction, prose, and countless genres of fiction, I am required to create curriculum that teaches all students, from the potential engineer, to nurses, to artists, how to communicate persuasively and effectively in writing.
Hochberg persuasively argues for the dismissal of partisan ideologies in the context of trade deals as the United States seeks to solidify itself as a leader in the increasingly globalized and technologically advanced world in which we now operate.
As Sal, owner of the neighborhood pizza palace that becomes the nexus of racial conflict, Aiello persuasively evokes the confusion, exasperation and hurt of a man at the mercy of upheavals and transitions he can neither comprehend nor accommodate.
But if Ms Ford does testify this week and Mr Kavanaugh persuasively denies the accusations under oath, the committee could still manage a vote on September 20th or 21st—and concerned Republicans may give the nominee the benefit of the doubt.
How much more difficult it will become for the average consumer to defend against this sort of fraud when the AI on the other end of the call can persuasively talk you into whatever its creators have programmed it to do?
Mattis, 66, is believed to advocate a stronger line against Moscow than the one Trump outlined during his election campaign and has argued persuasively in private talks with Trump against the use of waterboarding, which simulates drowning, as an interrogation tactic.
Americans argue, persuasively I might add, that immigrants who qualify should be able to adjust to lawful status in the United States and eventually take steps to obtain lawful permanent residence by virtue of time spent as good and valuable residents.
Like Mr. Fuller and like so many veterans of the old studio era, Mr. Hanson used genre cinema to develop his art and craft, as in "The River Wild," a thriller in which Meryl Streep persuasively takes on Kevin Bacon's villain.
The lawyers who petitioned the court for an outside prosecutor argued persuasively that the state's attorney's office, which would ordinarily handle such a case, had been effectively captured by the Police Department and was incapable of handling the matter objectively.
In "Pumpkinflowers: A Soldier's Story" Mr. Friedman has written a top-notch account of this under-analyzed war, persuasively arguing that it heralded a new style of combat in the Middle East, though no one knew it at the time.
Her bewilderment is affectingly and persuasively embodied by Mr. Steggert, a gifted actor in his 30s who assumes the aspect of a child in a dress without any assistance from a feminine costume, a wig or even a toddler's lisp.
To revisit the show now is illuminating, as it reveals how persuasively the medium of podcasting can tell a story—the ascent of Hillary Clinton to the Presidency—in such a way that it seems not just plausible but inevitable.
Ms. Blain-Cruz, the fast-rising director whose earlier credits include the Signature Theater's stunning production of Suzan-Lori Parks' "The Death of the Last Black Man in the Whole Entire World," doesn't find a similar, persuasively sustained perspective here.
Pretty/Dirty persuasively argues that her involvement in commercial pursuits is overshadowed by her skill at rendering reality in any style she chooses, while reflecting changing cultural concepts of beauty and consumption in ways that are both modern and prophetic.
" Menashi cited commentator Christina Hoff Sommers, who had written the essay "The War Against Boys" earlier that year and who he said argued persuasively against "the prevailing view among educators is that girls are disadvantaged, and systematically victimized, in American schools.
Perhaps more persuasively, for the purposes of convincing the justices to grant review, Facebook argued that the 9th Circuit's holding on TCPA liability for defendants that automatically dial stored numbers is contrary to the 3rd Circuit's 2018 decision in Dominguez v.
The most impressive performers here are the most naturalistic: Ms. Regina's Irene is put upon but resourceful, and Toussaint Jeanlouis's Dooley Wilson (Sam in "Casablanca") persuasively likens the studios' loaning of actors among themselves as a kind of human trafficking.
They anticipate that some Republicans could be made to squirm if Democrats are able to persuasively press the issue of why a witness like Mr. Bolton would not be allowed to resolve some open questions if he was willing to testify.
This episode puts too fine a point on it by having Ray die the way he does — I'm reminded of Lisa Simpson dreaming of her brother getting impaled on her Nobel Peace Prize — but it does strike a persuasively tragic note.
Is there a leader in Europe who can persuasively make the case that NATO isn't just the cheapest available option for European security, but also the best vehicle for a liberal and democratic identity — and therefore worthy of far greater investment?
For the Sake of Argument: Writing Persuasively to Craft Short, Evidence-Based Editorials Our suggestions on how to guide students through the writing process when writing editorials — from brainstorming a topic to publishing their work — and all the steps in between.
But she does persuasively argue against possible explanations like homework load and the Great Recession by looking at the onset of mental health trends, the timing of external events, and whether those are linked to negative effects on a person's well-being.
We also have two comprehensive lesson plans — For the Sake of Argument: Writing Persuasively to Craft Short, Evidence-Based Editorials and I Don't Think So: Writing Effective Counterarguments — that were written to support students in crafting their own editorials for our annual contest.
At the height of its military successes, the Islamic State was releasing 38 pieces of news and propaganda on social media daily, the majority of which was used to attract potential recruits by falsely, but persuasively, depicting utopian life in ISIS-held territory.
Few of his colleagues have the ability (or imagination) to be so persuasively both solemn and witty: At one point, "Towards a Brighter Hue" (2004) reaches a moment of frenzied violence, then the violinist (here the inspired Olivia De Prato) stops abruptly.
Boasberg, who was appointed to the bench by former President Obama, wrote that the Trump administration failed to persuasively argue that the FBI would not be able to properly tackle national security threats if the program was altered to better protect citizen privacy.
Boasberg, who was appointed to the bench by former President Obama, wrote that the Trump administration failed to persuasively argue that the FBI would not be able to properly tackle national security threats if the program was altered to better protect citizen privacy.
Critic and VICE contributor Katelyn Burns wrote about this last year, using this particular sequence to contextualize some of Rowling's other statements and behavior on Twitter and to persuasively make the case that Rowling is transphobic in very familiar and common ways.
Bazelon persuasively indicts prosecutorial excess, arguing that the lawyers who work in the more than 2,000 prosecutors' offices around the country bear much of the responsibility for over-incarceration, conviction of the innocent and other serious problems of the criminal justice system.
Peter Sanders and his co-authors arguable persuasively in a paper for Harvard's Kennedy School of Government that use of $100 notes in legitimate transactions is rare, and legitimate circumstances in which a handful of $20s wouldn't be just as good is very rare.
And Bell-Scott, who was an editor of the important anthology "All the Women Are White, All the Blacks Are Men, but Some of Us Are Brave," persuasively suggests that Roosevelt's influence contributed to what would be Murray's most lasting mark, on women's rights.
Legal scholar Elise Boddie has written persuasively about how a color-blind approach to admissions stigmatizes and demeans the dignity of students of color because it denies them agency over how they present themselves and renders invisible an important aspect of their personal experience.
As Wayfair and GrubHub were tanking last month, shares of General Electric were improving persuasively off a low base and some of the best performers in the S&P 500 included Apple, Charter Communications, truck-maker Paccar and legacy-tech stalwart Hewlett-Packard Enterprise.
As Haspel prepares for confirmation hearings before the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, the question is not whether her past will haunt her, but whether she can persuasively argue that her experience with harsh interrogations has convinced her not to allow their use again.
Which means that teachers, lawmakers and school leaders will need plenty of the qualities that Tough promotes so persuasively: grit in the face of rising economic inequality, curiosity to look beyond settled educational dogma, persistence and self-control when budgets shrink and attentions wane.
Though the field of artificial intelligence is bent on creating robots that seem realistic — ones that can pass the Turing test by persuasively mimicking human beings in conversation — the subfield of fembot creation seems more fixated on creating something physically perfect but mentally deficient.
Teachers tell us they use these questions to help students practice writing persuasively; as inspiration for lessons; as jumping-off points for class discussions and debates; or just to encourage student engagement with current events and with other young people from around the world.
While there are some things that everyone should know, much of what will help students in college and beyond are skills: the ability to speak and write persuasively, to reason and engage with one another's reasoning and to think about core content in complicated ways.
Lipman managed to fold in a reference to Harvey Weinstein, but if there's one thing missing, it's a consideration of how sexual harassment, and the perhaps less quantifiable issue of why men fear ascendant women, lead to the disparities that she documents so persuasively.
And with the exception of those who went on aerial raids to make their livings, no one else pulled off a bomber jacket quite so persuasively as Mr. Shepard did in his breakthrough film role as the pilot Chuck Yeager in "The Right Stuff" (1983).
But don't forget that less than a quarter of Democrats call themselves "very liberal" -- and in general, Democratic voters are older, more moderate and more blue collar than you might think if you gauge opinion only on Twitter, as Harry Enten has persuasively argued.
Kurlantzick, an expert on Southeast Asia now at the Council on Foreign Relations, argues persuasively that the so-called secret war in Laos — which eventually was discovered by the press — set a pattern for future conflicts and especially for the Central Intelligence Agency's paramilitary role.
Networks of river channels chiseled into Mars persuasively argue that liquid water once flowed across the red planet, but the current thinking of many planetary scientists is that Mars remained frozen through much of its history, punctuated with episodes of melting and flowing water.
Citing psychological studies, John Judis persuasively argued in Vox that being reminded of death makes people more likely to support order-promising right-wing leaders: In October 2003, the researchers began testing whether George W. Bush's appeal stemmed in part from mortality fears awakened by 9/11.
Meg Fischer from South Carolina persuasively attacks several points commonly used in favor of testing, and offers up solutions: Standardized testing was created to make money for organizations who claimed that they would accurately test students on their skills for the lives they were prepared to lead.
Perhaps appropriately with some irony: Back in 1960, when he was still a young literary gun on the rise, Roth delivered a controversial speech in which he said that postwar American reality had become too big, varied and chaotic for novelists to replicate persuasively for their readers.
"The writer at last begins to examine himself honestly, without compromises," Frank Rich wrote of "Biloxi Blues" in The New York Times, "and the result is his most persuasively serious effort to date — not to mention his funniest play since the golden age" of his first decade.
Slater is pithy, readable and generally fair, although I wish she had engaged more thoroughly with the defense of antidepressants, mounted perhaps most persuasively by Peter D. Kramer in his recent book "Ordinary Well," which explored flaws in the studies that examined the efficacy of antidepressants.
Even so, her confusion starts to make sense given this story, which turns on her involvement in a ludicrous kidnapping scheme that's neither persuasively real enough to believe nor fantastical enough to work for the fairy tale that Ms. Hamilton seems to be trying to create.
"Mannahatta" was published in 2009, and its classic, bookly virtues — visual beauty, wit and imagination, all underwritten by deep scholarship — persuasively deliver its most astounding revelation: Manhattan in the 17th century had more ecological communities per acre than Yellowstone, more than most rain forests or coral reefs.
The DOJ investigation may add firepower to the cause — but, as Matt Stoller argues persuasively here, it seems much more likely that the DOJ investigation will punish the president's political enemies ("biased" Google and Jeff Bezos-run Amazon) rather than require Facebook to (say) spin off Facebook and Instagram.
While it didn't have the same dramatic impact, the double bill of "Trouble in Tahiti" and "Clemency" also boasted a strong cast, including the persuasively haunted soprano Turiya Haudenhuyse, who didn't overdo the indignant mood that can be easily overindulged in portrayals of Dinah, Bernstein's claustral 1950s housewife.
In his planned discussions with North Korea's leader, President Trump can persuasively argue that the fate of the Iran deal was sealed by the unilateral nature in which it was negotiated; by its failure to adequately address congressional concerns; and because it was deeply unpopular with the American people.
O'Toole's book doesn't purport to be as exhaustive as Cooper's or Berg's; her project was born from her interest in World War I, and as she persuasively shows, American foreign policy throughout the 20th century adopted Wilson's war-forged liberal internationalism, in word if not always in deed.
Few painters today engage with the challenges of new technology as persuasively as Jacqueline Humphries, who is presenting an ambitious and formidably intelligent exhibition of fresh work at the Dan Flavin Art Institute — housed in a former church here in the Hamptons, and managed by Dia Art Foundation.
Lesson Plan | Persuading an Audience Using Logos, Pathos and Ethos Lesson Plan | For the Sake of Argument: Writing Persuasively to Craft Short, Evidence-Based Editorials Lesson Plan | I Don't Think So: Writing Effective Counterarguments B. Have a Debate There are many ways to hold formal and informal debates.
Katja Nicodemus, a longtime Berlinale observer who is a reporter and critic with Die Zeit, said in an email that this year's program seemed "intriguing and persuasively curated," but noted that, like Dieter Kosslick, the new doppelspitze had not been able to attract the top ranks of auteur filmmakers to Berlin.
The Billie Holiday classic "God Bless the Child" has inspired so many singers to trample over this wounded reflection on poverty, need and the humiliation of the have-nots that it was a shock to hear it persuasively delivered on Tuesday evening at Café Carlyle by the offspring of Hollywood royalty.
Kansas Republicans appear to have thumbed their noses at the party establishment on Tuesday in the primary for governor, failing to persuasively back the sitting governor, Jeff Colyer, and instead leaving room to elect Kris Kobach, the state's secretary of state — and quite possibly the most pernicious public official in America.
Adaptations of Shakespeare, from "West Side Story" to "The Boys from Syracuse," have flourished from time to time, but it is notable that the early, more strongly plotted plays are remade most persuasively: the musical adaptation of "Othello" (which starred, of all people, Jerry Lee Lewis) remains a memorable oddity.
Vanessa is Virginia's compatriot in her youthful struggles — against their half brothers, against their father's neuroses and neediness, against their beautiful mother's aestheticized misogyny — and in her adult work, and Gill writes persuasively about the sisters' escape from the Stephen household, their marriages and their efforts to make books and art.
As Nate Cohn persuasively argued in The New York Times, Cruz's advantage is deeply entrenched in the demographics of Wisconsin: It's a state where the Republican population skews towards groups that are generally less-inclined to vote for Donald Trump (the college-educated; Protestants active in church life; whites of north European ancestry).
With 24/7 access to its library of streaming instructional content, you'll learn how to speak persuasively and confidently, how to supervise a high-profile project efficiently, how to coach your direct reports to improve their performance, and how to prevail over procrastination to better manage your time and achieve your goals.
Now, the challenge for Mr. Obama as he shifts gears for the final months of his presidency is to find a way to acknowledge that the political divides he promised to bridge have only grown deeper and more acrimonious — while arguing persuasively that the way to rise above them is to elect Mrs.
This is the tradition of radical love most powerfully and persuasively articulated and represented by Martin Luther King Jr. This is a tradition that insists that love has the power to bind us together in a common purpose, that love gives us the confidence and courage to stand up to injustice and suffering.
And while Soros has written very candidly and persuasively about the pitfalls of casino capitalism — most notably in a 1997 Atlantic essay, subsequently expanded into a book called "The Crisis of Global Capitalism," in which he acknowledged the destabilizing effect of financial markets — that doesn't make him any less of a symbol.
"Only an informed electorate can develop its opinions and persuasively petition its elected officials to act in ways which further the aims of those opinions," federal Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly wrote in late November, ordering the Pentagon and OMB to process records requests about Ukraine military aid before the end of the year.
Ms McClendon argues, persuasively, that much of what Americans think they know about denim draws on a set of "origin myths", crafted and disseminated by manufacturers over many years, both individually and in campaigns run by the Denim Council, an industry group of clothing-makers and textile mills that was active from 1955-75.
Nobody could watch, say, the Duke-Maryland games of the early '00s, which featured eight or nine future pros and were contested in front of rabid crowds and a national television audience, and persuasively argue that the game was better when jump shots required two ungainly seconds of setup before being fired from the hip.
It would have to propose a new set of regulations to register and track people from particular countries during their time in the US. And it would have to argue, as the Bush administration did, that it wasn't using Muslim-majority countries as a proxy to "invidiously discriminate" against Muslims — something it might struggle to persuasively do.
While that narrow view of the ex post facto clauses is effectively the law of the land, prominent scholars like professor Evan Zoldan at the University of Toledo argue persuasively that the prevailing narrow view is wrong: Ex post facto laws should prohibit both criminal and civil laws that impose new consequences for already-committed conduct.
So suggests a new survey by the venture firm Atomico that persuasively argues that Europe's tech scene is instead being fast propelled forward by three new trends:  a well of so-called "deep tech;" a growing number of tech hubs across the continent; and expanding interest by corporate investors, non-tech companies, and foreign giants in European tech startups.
Hacker and Pierson argue persuasively that the 20th-century change that enabled them to create extraordinary wealth for all was "effective governance" — reflected in such crucial foundations of a "mixed economy" as better physical infrastructure, health care and education for the ­masses, and generous funding for "blue skies research" that made possible everything from antibiotics to the Internet.
A newer generation of military historians—for instance, John Mosier, in " The Blitzkrieg Myth" —argues persuasively that the blitzkrieg happened mostly in panicked headlines, that the German tank corps had outrun its supply lines, and that France was in no worse shape in May of 1940 than it had been in a similar moment in 1914.
Bret: That's going to require someone who doesn't seem too "coastal" in his or her cultural sensibilities; who speaks persuasively and soberly to middle-class needs and anxieties; who won't be massively outspent by the president; and who will be able to shrug off his attacks and convey a sense of decency, good judgment and excitement.
Amy's status as Ferguson's soul mate and ideal sexual partner — "the indispensable other who dwelled inside his skin" — is so persuasively established that it's profoundly disorienting to come across alternate scenarios in which she's Ferguson's cousin (his widowed mother has married her uncle) or, most inconveniently, his stepsister (his divorced mother has married her widowed father).
" As persuasively as anyone before him, Smith presents a strong story of how a successful military mission quickly unaccomplished itself; turned into quite something else ("the United States was going to bring democracy to the country"); and then festered into what Donald Rumsfeld himself, in his memoirs, judged to be "a long and heavy-handed occupation.
It will have to propose a new set of regulations to register and track people from particular countries during their time in the US. And it will have to argue, as the Bush administration did, that it isn't using Muslim-majority countries as a proxy to "invidiously discriminate" against Muslims — something it might struggle to persuasively do.
The existential threat Trump represents has to be devastating  to those whose identity and understanding of the world was tied to the status given in certain circles to the capacity to speak and write persuasively and compellingly about complicated policy matters, or to those who had mastered how things were done in Washington, and expected long sinecures in that game.
Playing the young Helen Keller — a rigorous role that required her to act, persuasively but without sentimentality, the part of a deaf-blind child subject to fearsome rages; to learn the manual alphabet; and to engage nightly in an ad-libbed, highly physical onstage fight with Ms. Bancroft that could last nearly 21985 minutes — she won critical plaudits and enduring fame.
In his studies of the humanist Coluccio Salutati, chancellor of Florence in the late 215th century, and in two sweeping works, "'In the Footsteps of the Ancients': The Origins of Humanism From Lovato to Bruni" (21989) and "The Two Latin Cultures and the Foundation of Renaissance Humanism in Medieval Italy" (22001), Professor Witt persuasively revised previous ideas about the evolution of Italian humanism.
The ribbed cashmere sweatpants Mr. Kors showed can be persuasively traced to any number of similar styles produced by Italian designers and shown recently at Pitti Uomo in Florence; the fanny pack and neck-hung mobile phone tote to Miuccia Prada; the lightweight sweatshirt-like jacket to a collection of down-filled coats sold as "shirts" by Comme des Garçons about a decade ago.
It was in an earlier best-selling volume that Weatherford persuasively argued that the 25-year blitzkrieg mounted by Genghis and his cavalries — who, in "the most extensive war in world history" beginning in 1206, swept mercilessly and unstoppably over the Altai Mountains to their west and the Gobi Desert to their south — brought civilization, fairness, meritocracy and avuncular kindliness to legions of undeserving satrapies across Eurasia.
GUTFELD: Thing is though, it&aposs like you have to -- what Trump is doing is he is looking at this guy as the hostage taker and in order to get the hostage taker to release the hostages, you use everything you have persuasively to get him to put down the gun and I think what we&aposre seeing is a long process of getting this guy to put down the gun.
When you visit a website like ours — or virtually any website, really — a host of sensitive data about you is instantly broadcast to tens or hundreds of advertising companies that in turn send the data out to thousands of advertisers who can then bid on serving up their ad to the individual being targeted with, critics persuasively argue, none of the privacy protections GDPR says it will enforce.
But I have to say that Bebchuk paper, which is coauthored by Roberto Tallarita, the associate director of Harvard's program on corporate governance, argues quite persuasively that the purported new stakeholder paradigm is little more than feel-good corporate P.R. that will enable unaccountable decision-making by CEOs and corporate board members whose economic incentives are aligned almost entirely with those of shareholders – not workers or community members.
Millennial favorites like Spotify (ranked ninth with good scores across the customer obsessed, ruthlessly pragmatic and persuasively innovative categories), PayPal (ranked 20th, with high scores for measures of ruthless pragmatism), Chick-fil-A (ranked 30th, also with high scores of pragmatism), Etsy (ranked 35th, which Prophet notes is a brand that is targeted yet inclusive), Trader Joe's (ranked 41st) and Uber (ranked 49th) all claimed spots on the index's top 50.
Here's The New York Times's Frank Bruni, an early Buttigieg cheerleader, on the appeal of South Bend's mayor: Few of [his] rivals grapple as persuasively as he does with what's on the line in this election: not just the need to prevent four more years of Trump but also the need to pull America out of its partisan death spiral and rediscover the common ground, civic grace, and cultural glue that have been lost.
" In that book, which made her a household name in Canada, she persuasively posited that, whereas the controlling idea of English literature is the island, and the pervasive symbol of American literature is the frontier, the dominant theme in Canadian literature is survival: "Our stories are likely to be tales not of those who made it but of those who made it back from the awful experience—the North, the snowstorm, the sinking ship—that killed everyone else.
Professor Alan DershowitzAlan Morton DershowitzHow this impeachment will play out Sunday shows - Guns dominate after Democratic debate Dershowitz: 'Too many politicians are being subject to criminal prosecution' MORE, who has made a study of impeachment, has argued persuasively that the framers, in using the term "high crimes and misdemeanors" as the key standard for impeachment, meant that an impeachable offense must at least be a crime, not just any crime, but a "high crime" equivalent in gravity to an act of treason or bribery.
Huawei's end of year financials showed its consumer devices business is now its main money-maker, while the majority of its revenue is not derived from the U.S. market Huawei's end of year financials showed its consumer devices business is now its main money-maker, while the majority of its revenue is not derived from the U.S. market And the U.S. has its reasons for working to stymie Huawei's efforts to expand the reach of its networking technologies, as this excellent Twitter thread from Adam Townsend persuasively argues.
" In Gillespie's view, Paul "seemed likely to bring what [Reason editor-at-large] Matt Welch and I had called 'the libertarian moment' to fruition: Here was a guy who was talking seriously and persuasively about reducing the size, scope, and spending of the federal government in every dimension; who was attacking police abuses in Ferguson, [Missouri]; calling for an end to the drug war; and reaching out to black and Latino audiences in serious ways; and who said of illegal immigrants, 'If you wish to work, if you wish to live and work in America, then we will find a place for you.
It is far more challenging to communicate persuasively how transgressive Yves Saint Laurent's tuxedo evening suit for women — the famous "Le Smoking" — must have seemed when introduced in 1966; or to frame for viewers the symbolism worked into a suit from a 2003 Viktor + Rolf show inspired by fashion's favorite androgyne, Tilda Swinton, and featuring a jacket with multiple collars from which the head of a pale Swinton lookalike emerges like that of a luna moth shedding its chrysalis; or to annotate the geopolitics underpinning the creation of a skirted man's suit from his audacious 1985 collection titled "Afghanistan Repudiates Western Ideals" by an unknown named John Galliano.
The book persuasively illustrates what an ineffectual congressman he was, apart from cozying up to the Koch brothers, Betsy DeVos and other rich Republican donors; the clumsiness and vanity of his one term as governor of Indiana, for which he did something that predecessors hadn't and "ordered up a collection of custom-embroidered clothes — dress shirts, polo shirts, and vests and jackets — decorated with his name and the words Governor of Indiana"; the strong possibility that he wouldn't have won re-election; his luck in being spared that humiliation by the summons from Trump, who needed an outwardly bland, intensely religious character witness to muffle his madness and launder his sins; and the alacrity with which he says whatever Trump needs him to regardless of the truth.

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