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"point of reference" Definitions
  1. something that you already know that helps you understand a situation or explain something to somebody
"point of reference" Antonyms

205 Sentences With "point of reference"

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

A quick point of reference is with disabled parking placards.
I don't have the point of reference for up here.
If that's their point of reference for me, that's great.
Your point of reference is what you really believe in.
To give you a point of reference, cost information site Howmuch.
As a point of reference, a feather weighs about a gram.
My only point of reference was three months of local news.
She remains a strong point of reference both musically and stylistically.
When you're crushing it, you look to your point of reference.
She was, after all, the original model and the point of reference.
When you're struggling and failing, you look to your point of reference.
You learn nothing from it because everybody has the same point of reference.
He's used me as a point of reference for what components to carry.
As a point of reference, the U.S. median income was $2628,28503 in 22019.
"I use Janis Joplin as a point of reference," Alicia Keys has declared.
Clinton's looks, using their encounter in the second debate as his point of reference.
For a point of reference, consider this 1998 lineup, from a Manhattan manslaughter case.
As a point of reference, only 137.5 million Americans voted in the 2016 election.
At Big Ears, composers serve as a center of gravity, a point of reference.
It's an anchor, a point of reference, a way of rooting ourselves within a record.
The distinction matters because it gives people a point of reference in valuing the business.
The occupied territories in Palestine/Israel are an interesting point of reference in that context.
But the 90s are also my main point of reference when writing about being a teenager.
I don't see much difference between using Giotto or Bill Trayler as a point of reference.
They take as a point of reference a world that has vanished, or is about to.
He was the man who took residents' questions, whose name was a public point of reference.
I don't see much difference between using Giotto or Bill Traylor as a point of reference.
Off the field, though, the modern City has also become a point of reference to many.
I had no point of reference, didn't speak the language, had no knowledge of the customs.
And in rural areas, they can be crucial in giving drivers a geographical point of reference.
BENCHMARK A benchmark is a point of reference or standard against which values can be compared.
The difference is in the point of reference: You bring things here and you take them there.
Overall, a good point of reference for the F11 Pro is the recently launched Vivo V15 Pro.
As a point of reference, Cuba's net exports in 22009 were estimated at less than $220 billion.
Our most recent point of reference is William and Kate's wedding, which actually sounds kind of... good?
As a point of reference, that's double the number of developers in the community as of 2014.
Another point of reference is the "privy," a site in Philly's Old City where outhouses once stood.
It's easy to overuse "Panopticon" as a point of reference, but really, what else would this be?
Your standard of excellence becomes your point of reference, keeping you honest and consistent in all circumstances.
Name-dropping your mutual contact will provide the employer with a point of reference to go from.
It has been theorized that parental facial features are a handy point of reference for genetic similarity.
As a point of reference, I didn't experience any motion sickness during The Blair Witch Project or Cloverfield.
As a point of reference, the reporter noted that the players were usually excited heading into the Masters.
It is really a model, a point of reference for the Italian and, more generally, Western societies of today.
This long-term goal must be the point of reference for Germany's short-term engagement with the Trump administration.
The company said in November it now has more than 10,000 employees working on Alexa, as a point of reference.
As a point of reference, Chicago's immigration court, which has a comparable caseload, has twice the number of sitting judges.
Do you think that, given this is the medium you're working in, it's a natural point of reference to use?
Eyebrows are the frames for your eyes, and people are drawn immediately to this place as a point of reference.
That footage then became a point of reference for artists, who painted over it with oil pigments, frame by frame.
To give you a point of reference: About 6 percent of Americans think the Apollo 103 moon landing was faked.
Nina Braga, Instituto-E's director, says the organization's goal is to make Brazil a point of reference in sustainable development.
"It felt really, really good to have the album be the point of reference or goal throughout everything," he says.
"National borders should not be the only point of reference in the European Union," Ms. Gallagher, the press officer, explained.
"We're trying to make the music service a cultural point of reference, and that's why we're making video," Iovine told Variety.
They follow the tracks like sailors once followed the North Star, the railroad their only point of reference in unfamiliar country.
You are often restrained to be in a fixed position or platform which gives you only a single point of reference.
It's also a good point of reference when I look back during our mid-year review to see where we're tracking.
Only at a Sanders rally could an Iranian nationalist overthrown by a CIA-inspired plot count as a point of reference.
Walking down centerline street you can't recognize it — you don't know where you are because there is no identifiable point of reference.
If your point of reference is something like Samsung's Galaxy range, you'll be quite at home, and I did adapt over time.
So as long as i can find that point of reference and be comfortable with it, I can usually just make [it].
Antholis said in his statement Friday that the rally has been "a regular point of reference" in the conversations about Short's appointment.
To give you a point of reference, the average U.S. professional earns an annual bonus of $1,797, according to Accounting Principals. 10.
Benedict has become the point of reference for traditionalists and conservatives who disdain Francis' informality and his focus on inclusiveness over doctrine.
Valuation is not being disclosed, but as a point of reference Kreditech was valued at around €500 million in its last fundraise.
An impeachment trial is different in many respects from a criminal trial, but the criminal process provides a useful point of reference.
As a point of reference, Modest charged a monthly fee to its larger customers — $200 — and a percentage of transactions for smaller businesses.
"Basically, I wanted no point of reference any more of a time when I was smaller, or larger," Malcolm wrote on her blog.
As a point of reference, the global fixed income market is about 100 trillion dollars, of which the United States comprises one-third.
This gave the team a point of reference, allowing the researchers to find the ages of the 70,000 red giants in the map.
Quick point of reference -- the piano Lennon used to write "Imagine" sold back in 2000 for an insane $1.7 MILLION ... to George Michael.
"I want an audience, particularly the younger audience that looks through photos online, to see an empowering point of reference," the designer explained.
"It" seemed like a linguistic game, using ambiguous pronouns and referring to a life-changing event without providing a clear point of reference.
Square Capital is still an increasingly important point of reference for the company, such as its callouts in its most recent earnings reports.
To deal with that, some designers program in a "virtual nose", just visible to the user, to serve as a point of reference.
For me, SAP has embraced that, and somebody like Bill, it's probably his point of reference is more a global one than anything else.
Ng will also produce the series, serving as a great point of reference for writer/showrunner/executive producer Liz Tigelaar (Casual, Nashville, Life Unexpected).
Sound objects, above and below the map, would give a point of reference for players, beyond their ability to pick up on noisy footsteps.
"And if your point of reference is the canned kidney bean at a salad bar, I totally understand if you hate beans," he said.
Now, she logs onto YouTube daily, and it's her first point of reference every time she needs to learn to apply a specific look.
Taking a magnifying glass to the defining elements of identity, artist Michael Reeder works from a curious point of reference: people he's never met.
Actually, the iconic British girl band is an apt point of reference, considering the striped highlight made a resurgence in the UK last year.
For us, though, the time of their divorce remains a potent point of reference, a shared experience that offers a wellspring of barbed humor.
For Kesha, we already have a point of reference because her trial was so public, and her desire for personal and creative freedom so clear.
The 1950s are also a point of reference for "the good old days," because Malcolm X's 1960s represents a decade of rupture from that narrative.
And as a point of reference, another sales enablement player, Seismic, last December raised a Series E of $100 million at a $1 billion valuation.
When you live abroad, it's all too easy to frame your experiences through your most familiar point of reference: how things are done back home.
"As places of historic pluralism, these landmarks will be highlighted as a point of reference for what is possible elsewhere in the world," Arboleda said.
One point of reference for a stripped-down album like this is Rick Rubin's work with Johnny Cash, which feels so bone-dry and exposed.
As a point of reference, after its Series A two years ago, it was only valued at around $33 million post-money according to PitchBook.
Diving into her work requires a lot of concentration, not only to follow the strange animations and movements but to find a point of reference.
Because for him, and for Gabrielle Chanel, the city is "a point of reference — the city where nothing is impossible" (as a news release said).
I get that, it's literally nobody's business, but in my line of work I like to give other women a point of reference and connection.
Over the years, she met other Jews and in time her elegant Palermo apartment became a point of reference for the community during the holidays.
The "pie scene," which feels initially like an act of cinematic self-indulgence, becomes a crucial point of reference, like a constant in a complex equation.
As a point of reference, daily newspaper circulation peaked in the U.S. at about 60 million households and today, cable television reaches approximately 100 million households.
As a point of reference, one of CommonBond's competitors, Social Finance (SoFi), raised money last year at what was thought to be a $4 billion valuation.
Since the widely beloved show serves as Faith's point of reference for time travel, there are sure to be some hilarious exchanges between these two characters.
But describing physical reality — giving readers images and scenes that don't require a point of reference — is one of the most reliable ways to write well.
Mr. Clause's channeling of Ms. Midler will not be drag, he stresses; "Rufus Does Judy at Carnegie Hall" is a better (and obvious) point of reference.
In an interview earlier this week with Fox News's Sean Hannity, Trump used Israel's wall as a point of reference as he advocated for his wall plan.
"For everyone, he remains a positive point of reference," said Michal Luczewski, the program director for the Center on the Thought of John Paul II in Warsaw.
These kids were mostly white, middle class and formula-fed, and they created a less-than-ideal point of reference for an increasingly multicultural and breastfed population.
The equator — which passes through Murillo's native country of Colombia and, therefore, carries a personal significance — becomes both a point of reference and a nebulous geographic construct.
As a point of reference, Lyft — which has been in New York for a little over two years — performed about 40,000 rides a day as of September.
This ruling doesn't necessarily mean that you could post a reaction video that republishes someone else's video in its entirety, but it does provide a point of reference.
"That way we all have a point of reference to go back to, just in case somebody forgets or doesn't check in with other people," said the chairperson.
Mom helped to create the timeline of events for the accident — a key tool that served as the main point of reference for all the investigators moving forward.
Lincoln has frequently been singled out for praise by Trump and used as a point of reference when he is when pondering the impact of his own presidency.
"Maybe as a Jew i relate it to all of the Holocaust footage because that's my only point of reference for such an image of humans," he said.
It is as if there is no point of reference, no rock to kick because our information bubbles — our epistemic worlds — are constructed to fit our political bias.
The future of AVs is a whirl of hype and uncertainty, but AV technology has been used in mining and construction for decades — an often overlooked point of reference.
Instead, it turns out, that selfie is just there as a point of reference in case you don't have a mirror nearby (or have forgotten what you look like).
" Designer Silvia Venturini Fendi, the Fendi Creative Director for Menswear, Accessories and Kidswear, also mourns the loss of Lagerfeld, whom she calls her "mentor and my point of reference.
Only days after legislators passed Oklahoma's statehood act in 1906, for example, they passed laws referencing the Creek Nation's boundaries as a point of reference in a surveying law.
As a New Yorker (I know, I know), my point of reference for ASTORIA is in the New York City borough of Queens, but this one is in ORegon.
Amazon runs 15 marketplaces around the world, and the international reviews can serve as "another point of reference" for customers to find quality products on its site, he said.
Maren Morris "Rich" So look: I am using Westworld as a point of reference of this Maren Morris video to get you into it because it's the more relevant one.
On the SME banking front, a good point of reference is SME banking app Tide, which has been around for significantly longer than Starling's much more recently launched business account.
Cruise plays Nick, who's kind of like Indiana Jones if Indiana Jones's main point of reference for dealing with ancient burial sites was having watched all of the Indiana Jones movies.
I listened to him too much and [his music is almost] too mythical, but [that doesn't change the fact] that he's a point of reference for any up and coming rapper.
They always refer to European standards in which everyone looks alike, but I've realized I can be my own point of reference and become a role model for others like me.
The sensational affair -- which has since become a point of reference for Trump's defense today -- forced the Senate to invent a gallery pass system just to manage the intense public interest.
Besides being a fun point of reference for Spotify users, this sort of data can help reinforce the company's brand message — that Spotify is more than just another streaming music app.
Compare that to Apple at 15 just as a point of reference... I think we will look back at this quarter as representative of the best days of Netflix are behind it.
As a point of reference, the company last raised $60 million (£45.5 million at today's exchange rate) in July 2015, in a Series C round led by GV (then called Google Ventures).
Instead of using a party that reminisces the 1950s as a point of reference, it should use its own party values of diversity and inclusion to judge how these efforts hold up.
For point of reference, Margaret Thatcher resigned as Prime Minister in 1990 when she got the support of 204 Conservative members of parliament (or about 55 percent) in a no-confidence vote.
That latter point of reference proves key, as the movie labors to pay off its premise, delivering not much more than an amusing stroll through its gallery of over-the-top characters.
The Truman Show delusion might seem novel to outsiders—no doubt because of the link with the Hollywood film—but really, it's a common paranoid psychosis, attached to a modern point of reference.
As a point of reference, in May of last year, when the company raised $58 million, it had sold 50,000 cars to date and was on track for $200 million in annualised revenues.
Within the Nike app, I used my phone's camera to capture an empty space where the floor meets the wall as a point of reference, with the app's guidance ensuring a level plane.
Ali challenged America to face up to its political hypocrisy and to acknowledge its moral shortcomings as the common point of reference in any serious discussion of war and race on both shores.
As for how much money is on the line ... it varies from project to project, but as a point of reference -- Cardi gets around $100k a show and $60k for nightclub walk-throughs.
Which is to say: We have absolutely no common point of reference with the worldview, or moral compass, or first premises of the closed-society decision makers who control the North Korean state.
Lopez Obrador told a regular news conference ahead of the talks that they would focus on bilateral cooperation, and that officials would review a document that would serve as a point of reference.
In this exhibition of garments that radically reconfigure the human body, footwear that accepts no logic of what a shoe might be and uncozy furniture, Dadaism does seem an apt point of reference.
Its creators have compared it to Tamagotchi, but another point of reference is obviously animator David OReilly's "relax 'em up" Mountain (where you just look after mountain, insomuch as a mountain needs looking after).
As a point of reference, Kinniry said he expects stocks to return about 6 percent to 8 percent, and a balanced stock and bond portfolio to earn about 5 percent annually, net of fees.
If he proceeds, the indictments must be the first point of reference for the president as he meets next week with the leader — and former intelligence chief — of the country that orchestrated this attack.
The American cardinal, who is one of Pope Francis's fiercest critics and a point of reference for Catholic conservatives worldwide, said he was immediately terminating his relationship with the Dignitatis Humanae Institute think-tank.
As a point of reference — and a sign of the consolidation and competition in the market — earlier this year Experian acquired another credit scoring service in the UK, ClearScore, for the equivalent of $385 million.
While everybody throws around market predictions, and it's hard to know how accurate they are, as a point of reference, consider that IDC predicted a public cloud market value of $95 billion for last year.
Its extensive use of superimposed multiple-operative optic perception presents the viewer with no single point of reference, no orientation, no top, no bottom, no left, no right, and no separate parts to its whole.
As a point of reference, LinkedIn last week said it has around 13,000 courses on its site now — an inventory that it was able to boost in part by way of its acquisition of Lynda.com.
The big-screen Mysterio has his comic-book counterpart to thank for his talents, of course; in a phone interview with Mashable, producer Kevin Feige cited Steve Ditko's art as an obvious point of reference.
Within seconds of drawing the vapor into my lungs, I felt as though a Category 5 mental storm had blown through my head, obliterating every familiar point of reference: self, then time and finally matter.
By skillfully weaving well-worn (and well-loved) sci-fi settings through the game's core, RimWorld counts on the player's familiarity with similar stories to be a point of reference in a world of immense possibilities.
The state court found "a sufficient commonality of interest" in regards to B and C. The court's findings will likely be an important point of reference in future suits seeking to reclassify gig workers as employees.
The craggy chunks of ice that break away could be the size of football fields or cities or maybe even whole states—but without a point of reference it can be next to impossible to say.
And then there's the $3 trillion market-size number — a staggering number by any measure (as a point of reference, there is only $1.7 trillion of physical US currency in circulation, according to the Federal Reserve).
As the group headed out on the first day, Plaisted used an iceberg in the distance as his point of reference for navigation, only to discover that they had circled it and were mistakenly heading south.
While he may not have any face time in the billion-dollar Marvel franchises in which the character has appeared, Gunn acts as the point of reference for his fellow actors, filmmakers and visual effects technicians.
The play is a postcard from an era that we have thankfully moved past, a point of reference for our hard-won success over the last half-century and our arrival in an infinitely better place.
Perhaps to know that the even the faintest light is still present within the current darkness may offer another point of reference: how we might retrieve a sense of the spiritual within a material world gone amok.
There's a thrill to being included in the show, even if that inclusion is just as a point of reference for the startling number of Asian jokes that were made during my five days in the audience.
CLEM: Murder and Money in the Gilded Age (Johns Hopkins University, $21963) has an intriguing point of reference: The post-Civil War era, when the economy was unregulated, speculators abounded and con artists had a field day.
A point of reference being discussed is the economic recovery plan agreed by EU leaders in December 2008 during the financial crisis, when they pumped 200 billion euros - or 1.5% of GDP - to boost confidence and demand.
"Berets have transcended the military uniform and have become a symbol of creative independence—think Basquiat—as well as activism," says trend forecaster and fashion designer Geraldine Wharry, citing the Black Panthers as a key point of reference.
The artist has become an "important point of reference for younger generations of artists who are revisiting the art of the 60s and 70s," said Ludovico Pratesi, an art critic and the curator of the show in Pesaro.
These were people who had come of age when Skins—and Skins Parties—was an actual thing as opposed to a quaint point of reference like new rave or property ownership for people under the age of 45.
It is difficult to describe what the Los Angeles Clippers were like in the late 1990's and early 2000's, mostly but not entirely because there is no point of reference in the NBA that presently exists.
Hotel de Berri, a Luxury Collection Hotel, the former home of Italian fashion designer Elsa Schiaparelli, has rooms starting at $490 in August that include breakfast (as a point of reference, room rates in July start at $790).
One prominent, if dated, point of reference to predict how time-consuming a privilege-related legal fight might be is the half-century-old showdown over President Richard Nixon's Oval Office audiotapes that eventually reached the Supreme Court.
Facebook's main purpose may be about setting out guidelines for minors all in one place (up to now, Facebook has offered some advice throughout different areas of its support and help pages, with no single, central point of reference).
It has become a point of reference across European soccer: over the course of the season, I have spoken to a dozen or more coaches in almost as many countries who are dazzled by the work Klopp has done.
It also means the GLAS has only one point of reference for activity in the home, and if you don't move in front of the thermostat for a period of time, it will aggressively set itself to its efficient away mode.
As a point of reference, Uber China was lagging Didi in all the metrics that are considered key to 'winning' in this sector: Didi had raised more money, it was valued higher, and it alleged that it had a bigger footprint.
As a point of reference for what kind of profit they might expect, the Financial Times reported that Taylor Swift's per-show gross for Reputation increased by $1.4 million, including two dates in July at FedEx Field, home of the Redskins.
As a point of reference, there are more people in Appalachia who identify as African American than Scots Irish, so where were the essays that dove into the complex negotiations of Appalachian-ness and blackness through the lens of the election?
Following are the key points of the deal: * Make Spain a point of reference in social rights in Europe; defend freedom, tolerance and respect democratic values * Consolidate economic growth and job creation, combat precarious labour conditions * Fiscal justice and budget balance.
Depending on the year of your birth and your streaming media habits, you may have a different point of reference—Bill Murray or Natasha Lyonne—for the phenomenon of living the same day of your life, over and over again.
One leak claimed that the S9/S9+ would start at 841 euros ($103) and 997 euros ($1,144), respectively, while another claimed the prices would be 899 euros ($1,031) and 999 euros ($1,146) (in the Netherlands, giving us a good point of reference).
As a point of reference, in late 2016, around when the company — founded in Zurich and now co-based also in San Francisco — had raised a Series A round of $9.7 million, the company had tracked only 7 Ava babies due in 2017.
Fifpro then stepped in on Tuesday to ask that Muntari's punishment be reversed, saying in a statement, Muntari was well within his rights to approach referee Daniele Minelli, as the first point of reference, to make his grievances known and seek a solution.
The prewar version of the Austro-Hungarian empire became a point of reference for Mises and those who joined the study circle he organized: It had been a multi-ethnic empire that lowered barriers to trade while not insisting on cultural homogeneity.
Tandavanitj points to science fiction author JG Ballard's The Drowned World as a point of reference—how the novel's characters exist on the edge of precipice (in a world flooded by climate change), but simply keep going with a lack of sentiment.
The removal of the sites makes it even more difficult when our traditions are oral and when those regions are desecrated and removed and demolished, it's hard to find the point of reference to bind your story to the landscape you're from.
Terms of the acquisition are not being disclosed, but as a point of reference, BrightBytes was valued at $120 million when it last raised money, in 2015 — a $33 million round led by Insight Venture Partners, with participation from Bessemer, Learn Capital and Rethink Education.
In the past three months Start Today has distributed to just over 303m Japanese customers, free of charge, its "Zozosuit", a skin-tight, full-body suit covered in around 350 fiducial markers, small objects that can be used as a point of reference for measurements.
Out of context, with no point of reference from which to draw, you might think that "coffee" was some sort of cult — a dangerous one that draws you right in, with serious repercussions should you dare to remove yourself from its folds. Fatigue. Restlessness. Exhaustion.
Three-hundred plate appearances and 21 starts into his Major League Baseball career and George Herman Ruth, the Sultan of Swat himself, is the only point of reference for what the Los Angeles Angels' right-handed pitcher—and left-handed batter—has done so far.
" Mayor Nicola Alemanno said, "With this community of American monks, the value that St. Benedict has for Europe assumes a global significance," adding: "They have become a spiritual and cultural point of reference first for the city, then for Umbria and then for Italy.
As a point of reference, consider that the licensed spectrum currently in use has an estimated value of nearly half a trillion dollars, but the social welfare generated from wireless services using this spectrum has a direct market value of roughly $5 trillion to $10 trillion dollars.
Despite the fact that most people living outside of the five boroughs only have that one Sex and the City episode as a point of reference for this city-wide takeover, it's looked on fondly by most New Yorkers as marking the official kickoff to summer.
He is less pathetic than the professor played by Emil Jannings in Josef von Sternberg's "The Blue Angel" (which serves as both a model for "Submission" and point of reference within it), and Angela is hardly a siren in the mold of Marlene Dietrich's cabaret singer.
Everyone believes they can pull off this kind of joke, but in practice it's one of the hardest types of humor, because when it doesn't work, there is nothing to fall back on — no subtext, no context, no wit, no easy point of reference to cling to.
During both the opening stretch of the debate and subsequent ones, her prescriptions were the point of reference, her priorities set the terms of the discussion, and she was the candidate to whom the debate's moderators kept returning so that she could respond to her rivals' invocations of her.
Courses can be both selected by employees as well as recommended by employers and their HR managers who can use LinkedIn's analytics products to both monitor employees progress but also look at the wider range of what is being studied as a point of reference, and curators at LinkedIn itself.
If Happy Gilmore did not directly anticipate the golfing boom that immediately followed its release, it certainly preceded it, and gave people too young to enjoy the, uh, finer points of Caddyshack and Caddyshack II a point of reference from which to build an understanding and love for the game.
Diaz notes how important it was to her as a high school student when her history teacher would talk about Jan Laverty Jones, the first female mayor of Las Vegas who has now endorsed her campaign, and how she valued having a woman in city government as a point of reference for herself.
" — Ottessa Moshfegh, on the adaptation of her novel, "Eileen," in an interview with Harper's Bazaar New Books From Shakespeare "It was very comforting to have a point of reference where you could get books and, if you were starving, you knew you could get a place to sleep and a bowl of soup.
The subtitle of "Good Booty" lays claim to "American music," but Powers quickly acknowledges that she means "American popular music," and her central point of reference for the erotic potential of music remains rock (Creole dandies, gospel performers, rappers and music as "a vocabulary of freedom" are all described in terms of rock).
Having a point of reference is great, saying, "It's like a black metal thing with a bit of this in it"—I mean, you sound like a pretentious dickhead when you rattle off five genres for the one thing you're doing–but at the same time people get way too swept up in it.
Bullard told Reuters in an interview the bursting of the tech bubble at the turn of the century was a more fitting point of reference for corporate debt markets today, rather than the housing market around 2007, because it was a case where individual investors were at risk but not the economy as whole.
He began with a grid that was pretty atrocious — you'd think someone might've helped him out with a ruler here — but the images he drew in those janky boxes showed a stunning level of accurate detail for some little kid who had just come back from the theater ... and had no other point of reference.
After seeing the play Impressions d'Afrique, Duchamp started producing paintings depicting mechanized sex acts such as "Le Passage de la Vierge à la Mariée" (The Passage from the Virgin to the Bride) (1912), and the masterful "La Mariée" (The Bride) (1912), an inescapable point of reference for the avant-garde of the 20th century.
Terms of the deal are not being disclosed — VMware said in a release that they are not material to the company — but as a point of reference, when Heptio last raised money — a $25 million Series B in 2017, with investors including Lightspeed, Accel and Madrona — it was valued at $117 million post-money, according to data from PitchBook.
As a beginning point of reference, Isaac Asimov's Three Laws of Robotics require: (85033) a robot must not harm humans; (2) a robot must follow all instructions by humans, except if following those instructions would violate the first law; and (3) a robot must protect itself, so long as its actions do not violate the first or second laws.
For women, particularly those who were in our twenties or younger when this decade began, our only point of reference for women's rage had been photographs from the anti-rape movements of the '60s and '70s, or marches called "Take Back the Night" — women occupying city streets at hours when decent women were supposed to be safe at home.
Frogger and Space Invaders are as much a point of reference in Isle of Dogs as The Seven Samurai or Star Blazers, the anime series that made its way to American UHF in the late 1970s; for the most part, the future in Isle of Dogs is less digital than the present, with the exception of the government's drones and drone hounds.
We read Guillaume IX of Poitier's "In the Great Sweetness of Spring" together, and one passage in particular became a point of reference: "Our love moves in this way: / like a branch of the hawthorn tree / …I want my God to let me live / to have my hands beneath her cloak again…" A similar combination of rawness and sensitivity is what gives Acheson's work its potency and range.
By contrast, Hans Haacke's characteristically incisive "Star Gazing" (2004), in which a red-T-shirted figure is hooded in the stripes of the U.S. flag, is an obvious point of reference and evocative of the current mood (the Abu Ghraib prisoner torture scandal, etched in the public imagination by the image of a hooded man atop a box in a "stress position," broke the same year), but the work's connection to upside-downness is less clear, which dilutes its impact in the context of the show.
Top tier candidates Joe BidenJoe BidenThe Hill's Morning Report - Sponsored by AdvaMed - House panel expected to approve impeachment articles Thursday Democrats seek leverage for trial Democrats spend big to put Senate in play MORE, Elizabeth WarrenElizabeth Ann WarrenThe Hill's Morning Report - Sponsored by AdvaMed - House panel expected to approve impeachment articles Thursday Warren, Buttigieg duke it out in sprint to 28500 The Memo: Pelosi-Trump trade deal provokes debate on left MORE, and Bernie SandersBernie SandersThe Hill's Morning Report - Sponsored by AdvaMed - House panel expected to approve impeachment articles Thursday Warren, Buttigieg duke it out in sprint to 6900 The Memo: Pelosi-Trump trade deal provokes debate on left MORE have no point of reference on what makes the free market work.

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