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208 Sentences With "prefaced"

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

He prefaced that line of questioning by adapting Kagan's query.
She prefaced her clips by saying she isn't victim shaming.
It's Jeff with another update, this time, prefaced with exclamation marks.
Perhaps what teletext prefaced was not an information and entertainment service.
In 2016, Macron prefaced Cazenave's book, "The State in Start-Up Mode".
JEFFREY GUNDLACH: That's why I prefaced my remarks the way I did.
Mr Uribe prefaced his proposals by calling for both "urgency" and "patience".
Klock prefaced his talk by admitting Oscar Wilde was no St. Augustine.
The comment prefaced Zuckerberg dipping his toes deeper into politics and policy.
Hashtags are labels prefaced with a "#" character (as in #FlyEaglesFly, for example).
Several prefaced said they regarded the probability of impeachment as very low.
That history prefaced the partition of Ireland in the early 20th century.
" She had other Julianna-isms, often prefaced with "Let me tell you something.
But he prefaced his remarks by saying he hadn't read the final seasons.
Mr. Mofsie prefaced each with a few words on its origins or significance.
Take a look at Esquemáticos (2011), one of Muñoz's projects that prefaced MA4.
"It's insane how invested you guys are, and I love it," she prefaced the announcement.
" He prefaced that remark with a question common during breaking news: "Who took this photo?
Even David Copperfield's famous 1983 Statue of Liberty disappearance was prefaced by such a statement.
Back then Mr. Marcos had prefaced martial rule by suspending the writ of habeas corpus.
When Leona Batemen showed me photos of herself, she prefaced each with "before" or "after" Warren.
In the video, Planet 9 is prefaced with a caption that declares it discovery in 2004.
A similar investigation prefaced the imposition of tariffs on steel and aluminium imports earlier this year.
Even his science fiction is usually prefaced by autobiographical essays written in that same friendly voice.
But conservative legislators often prefaced their questions and concerns with comments about their general opposition to regulations.
It doesn't hurt Warren that every one of the denunciations against her has been prefaced by praise.
" Dickinson prefaced his series of threaded tweets by claiming Johnson had threatened to "dilute my stock to worthlessness.
"Far be it for me to speak for a community which I am not a member," Rae prefaced.
As with almost everything prefaced with "smart" at CES, Hush doesn't strike me as a mass-market product.
But it would be nice if the performance wasn't prefaced by such a crude (and not funny) joke.
In chapters prefaced with delicate book cover illustrations by his older brother, Eric, Orner weaves twin, overlapping narratives.
In the past, BuzzFeed has respected emails prefaced with 'off the record,' but this time they did not.
It further prefaced its work with the warning that it had "not had access to certain critical information".
"This was a very hard piece to write but a story I wanted to share," she prefaced on Instagram.
Sullivan said he didn't agree with Petraeus's sentence; he prefaced the remark by saying he probably shouldn't say anything.
Many election reporters prefaced their reporting with "Hillary's not perfect, but…" or that Hillary was "flawed" in some way.
Hanyu prefaced each routine with a quirky ritual, squeezing Pooh for good luck before he stepped onto the ice.
In 2006, he took Hollywood to task over whether movies that feature smokers should be prefaced with a PSA.
The comedy veteran prefaced the advice by explaining that a lot of people in Hollywood ask her for guiding words.
Though Musk prefaced one email with "off the record," BuzzFeed News did not agree to that condition of the correspondence.
They prefaced their performances with short, demystifying films in which they appeared as ordinary blokes with cheeky senses of humor.
" But Trump prefaced his statement by saying Kim was a "maniac," and added that, "We can't play games with him.
"My son [Monroe's twin brother Moroccan Scott] is tough, but my daughter's super tough," he prefaced of the playground incident.
In the past, though, cautious Democrats prefaced any remarks on guns by explicitly denying interest in banning or confiscating guns.
Jewel-toned separates prefaced a parade of floral gowns — some richly printed, others cut from lace, embroidered, spangled or fringed.
Usually, it's prefaced with a "I can't really say this on Twitter but…" and followed by hesitation, "ums," and questions marks.
Cruz prefaced his comments by saying that for the first time, he wanted to say exactly what he thought of Trump.
This fable is the third of six chapters in the film—separate Western tales, prefaced by the opening of a storybook.
Many of these remarks he prefaced with the caveat that he knew he shouldn't say them in front of a reporter.
And in the since-retracted Facebook post, Mr. Loeb prefaced his criticism of Ms. Stewart-Cousins with a compliment for him.
The proud new papa prefaced his announcement post by sharing a photograph of himself showing off a tiny footprint on his forearm.
The comments are notably conciliatory — though Greene prefaced his comments with a subtle joke about "having a lot of thoughts" on Fortnite.
The emails prefaced a June 9, 2016 meeting between a Russian lawyer named Natalia Veselnitskaya, Trump Jr., Jared Kushner and Paul Manafort.
And I prefaced the conversation with a fairly long statement about the reality of white privilege and the past horrors of racism.
She prefaced it with the premiere of "Markings," a brief piece for soloist, strings and harp by John Williams (yes, that one).
Jarringly, he prefaced several chapters with quotes from Dietrich Bonhoeffer, a pastor imprisoned and executed by the Nazis, seemingly equating their respective fates.
And this show, as prefaced by its curator and in the catalog's introductory essay, is not intended as a comprehensive representation of India.
The question prefaced with the Logan Act, which prohibits private American citizens to interact with foreign governments on behalf of the United States.
But when the question is prefaced with the qualifier "according to the theory of evolution," agreement with the proposition rises to 72 percent.
Mr. Lauer prefaced one question by saying that "nobody would expect you" to have read deeply into foreign policy before running for president.
Apple prefaced this feature by saying that sometimes your gym equipment can better sense data that your Apple Watch can't, or vice versa.
"Starlings" collects a range of works written between 2000 and 2017, prefaced with an introduction that lays out Walton's relationship to short fiction.
As I prefaced in the beginning, the vocabulary tends to get a little trickier on Thursdays, as an appetizer before the weekend themelesses.
The catalogue of the collection produced at the time was prefaced with a laudatory biographical note … and the full text of the famous letter.
She prefaced the question stating she's legitimately shopping for a candidate to support and was leaning toward Kasich provided he could answer her query.
Allman's colorful outlook is prefaced by a tempestuous relationship with the Mormon Church, of which he was a devout believer until his mid-twenties.
His answer on the Flint water crisis -- prefaced with a fusillade against decades of Democratic misgovernment in Michigan -- was among the night's most memorable.
And subpoenas to former national security adviser Michael Flynn and former Trump Organization lawyer Michael Cohen prefaced the return of key documents to investigators.
" She prefaced the tutorial by saying: "In today's video, I'm going to be doing something that is always very, very highly requested each year.
Held onstage during the intermission between Puccini's first two acts and prefaced by a short assemblage of filmed performance clips, the ceremony was simple.
He prefaced the remarks as "a hypothetical I am going to ask as a thriller writer," and denies he meant any form of violence.
Elshamy prefaced his post by assuring his followers he was not sharing the personal experience to garner sympathy, but rather to further highlight contemporary racism.
"When @MeredthSalenger and I honeymooned in Paris, our friends & family put together lists of places to eat and things to do," Oswalt prefaced the email.
The IRR prefaced its findings with the comment that support for bigger parties like the ANC and DA tends to rise just before an election.
On Twitter, journalists attending the keynote prefaced their tweets about the demo with "no joke" to preempt the eye-rolling and incredulous replies they expected.
This did resonate with many lawmakers, who frequently prefaced their remarks by going out of their way to praise Zuckerberg's success as an American businessman.
In the earnings call, Laguarta prefaced the bit about turning to automation by saying it was driven by a need to make the company stronger.
For example, you can say "Alexa, ask Tile to ring my keys," or a similar command for Google Home prefaced by the "OK Google" phrase.
You can select based on generation, household composition and interests, all prefaced on pages people like and information they've given Facebook and Instagram about themselves.
Trump prefaced his comments by noting that he let Mexican officials know about the harm their trade and immigration policies had caused the United States.
On Tuesday, the production's opening night at the Joyce Theater, Mr. Koubi prefaced the performance with a charming speech from the front of the auditorium.
"Apparently the internet thinks that I'm ageless or that I've sold my soul to the devil, so I'm going to see if that's true," he prefaced.
But the current president (the kind whose name is often prefaced with terms like "embattled") has moved to the opposite extreme: betting on luxury resort development.
Turx prefaced his question by saying that he has not seen anyone in his community that would accuse Trump or his staff of being anti-Semitic.
" But even Brown prefaced his letter by noting that, while Chanler has reaped significant profits, he has also identified "lead exposures that exceed Proposition 65 standards.
The bracket was released into the wild on Wednesday afternoon via the Obama Foundation's Twitter account, prefaced with an inspirational quote they received from a supporter.
For some respondents, the question was prefaced with an unattributed statement that some people worried that the law would allow discrimination against gay men and lesbians.
Once the group finally does start to open up, their anecdotes are sometimes prefaced with notes of caution that they've never told it to anyone before.
"It was never my intent to take credit for what I said or give a specific credit because of how I prefaced my speech," his statement said.
Rather than plist files, it's based on crontab files, which are lists of shell scripts/shell commands (jobs) wherein each job is prefaced by a CRON expression.
He prefaced it as if to buffer the blow -- by listing some of America's own shortcomings: the racial divide, for example, and women's struggle for equal pay.
" When a journalist prefaced her question by congratulating the filmmakers on an "interesting" film, Hoffman chipped in: "That's not a good word ... you really didn't like it!
"We know that psychotherapy is a very good thing, where we can go very in depth about what makes us 'us,' and resolve our problems," he prefaced.
Before drummers (who typically play in New York City subway stations) started performing as the lights flooded the runway, Uribe prefaced his collection with an uplifting sentiment.
But when she knew she had a good joke coming, she prefaced it with a small, sideways smile: Her mind was a half-step ahead of yours.
She needed to sell books, and therefore prefaced that later, darker, text with a bit of extra fiction about the idea coming to her in a dream.
The commercial was prefaced with a voiceover that said the Sinclair station agreed to air it because the broadcasting company supports sharing both sides of an issue.
The president, a longtime supporter of Brexit, awkwardly prefaced his visit by warning that Prime Minister Theresa May's "soft" Brexit plan could kill a potential U.S.-U.
Kit Harington said that he felt things would get much much darker before they got better, but prefaced his remarks by saying he hadn't read the final seasons.
American military adventures in this region have been prefaced on dubious assumptions about what the U.S. could (or should seek to) achieve in societies we do not understand.
Sanders prefaced his comment with opposition to "the authoritarian nature" of the Castro regime, but he also touched a third rail of Florida — and Latin American refugee — politics.
The literal doctor was known for delivering any manner of news in the worst way possible, so that even moments of comfort and relief were often prefaced with dread.
Trump's criticism of the Fed was prefaced by some admiring comments about China, where, unlike the United States, the central bank is not insulated from the government's immediate demands.
He protested, and the paper seemed to accede, but, when the issue came out, he found that his interview had been prefaced by an editor's note disavowing the text.
Sir Philip prefaced many of his replies "with due respect", or "respectfully, sir", clearly suggesting that in fact he had very little respect for any of his parliamentary interrogators.
Clinton also took issue with Mr. Lauer's handling of Mr. Trump: "You've had a very different background, in business," Mr. Lauer told Mr. Trump as he prefaced a question.
Dunford prefaced his Asia trip with a trip to Hawaii to meet with US Pacific Command, and will visit also visit key ally Japan, as well as regional superpower China.
"Any advice has to be prefaced with the caveat that there's a lot of talk about what's going to occur, but we have no idea what will occur," said Blitz.
Since none of us know who Barack Obama is, the editor graciously prefaced the article by revealing the man's identity in one of the greatest editor's notes of all time.
"Any offer that was made to Time Warner was prefaced with the notion that the key up-and-coming leadership within Time Warner would not be jettisoned," Mr. DiClemente said.
He prefaced his meeting with another series of Twitter posts on Tuesday, accusing Attorney General William P. Barr of misrepresenting aspects of the special counsel's investigation to protect Mr. Trump.
This volcanic actor's entrance in the lopsided new revival of Lanford Wilson's "Burn This," which opened on Tuesday at the Hudson Theater, is prefaced by a fanfare of violent pounding.
"What I discovered about myself is that I'm a nervous eater," the singer prefaced his hilarious September 2016 story, adding that he followed through and binged on various foods, including cheeseburgers.
"We've still got the commitment to 'further gradual increases' ahead now prefaced by 'some' which many thought would be dropped altogether," said Brian Coulton, chief economist, at Fitch Ratings in London.
We prefaced this question for some respondents with information about Mr. Cook's discrimination concerns, for others with a description of Mr. Cook's business philosophy and for the remainder without any preamble.
If anything, the US-Kurdish relationship was precisely the opposite: A pragmatic arrangement built to combat a mutual enemy and prefaced with a specific interest in mind — wipe out ISIS's caliphate.
"We've still got the commitment to 'further gradual increases' ahead – now prefaced by 'some' – which many thought would be dropped altogether," said Brian Coulton, chief economist, at Fitch Ratings in London.
"A Brief History of Seven Killings" is James's most virtuosic verbal performance: it is prefaced with a cast list of seventy-six characters, and employs almost as many first-person voices.
On Friday, Shostakovich's Symphony No. 2212 is prefaced by Varèse's "Amériques" and a new piece by Esa-Pekka Salonen, "Pollux"; for Sunday's matinee, Bernstein's "Chichester Psalms" introduces Beethoven's Symphony No. 2247.
"When it comes to anything that has to do with trivia about people's personal lives or things that's going on in their careers, I don't necessarily pay too much attention," he prefaced.
Each chapter of the book is prefaced by an "Estimated Reading Time," alerting readers that they should expect to spend approximately seven minutes and two seconds poring over Chapter 8, for example.
On March 20, he revealed publicly that the FBI had been investigating the Trump campaign since last July -- in a House hearing which prefaced the House investigation almost spiraling out of control.
Sharing her story on the Grammy winner's new The Swift Life app, the fan named Stephanie prefaced her post by saying she had contemplated whether or not to post about her experience.
Guns N' Roses prefaced its grandiose hit ballad "November Rain" with the instrumental second half of "Layla" by Derek and the Dominos, the obvious model for the former song's guitar-hero finale.
The superb chorus Schola Cantorum Reykjavík prefaced the orchestral concerts with a selection of a-cappella pieces, including Leifs's Requiem, which is as spare and sad as the Organ Concerto is savage.
Seven years later, while New York's had shown a modest rise, Rio's had jumped to 63 per 100,000 inhabitants, a threefold increase that prefaced an even greater blood bath in the 1990s.
All the lawyers interviewed as well as Mr. Leroy prefaced their remarks by saying that short of being inside Mr. Abdeslam's head, it was impossible to say exactly what he was thinking.
The actual message payload, the thing to be communicated to other users (read: content), is prefaced by a command (PRIVMSG) and is transported in the form of a parameter to that command.
"The only people whose unsolicited opinions i care about are trans people and the girls have responded to this editorial in a way i think might be worth addressing," she prefaced her caption.
My Kijiji ad, titled "Omcan shawarma/gyros vertical broiler, barely used," became prefaced by two words: "REDUCED PRICE" and then "MUST GO." At the start of summer I decided Kijiji was too passive.
I have a very vivid memory of watching The Road Warrior with them, and they prefaced it with a preamble about how this was my first experience seeing it, and why they loved it.
Her husband, Geoffrey Hoare, also a journalist, would briskly correct the spelling, enliven the prose, and unearth the lead—which she tended to bury five paragraphs down, prefaced, cryptically, with "according to certain sources".
" Early on in label conversations—eventually won out by Matador—another contender prefaced their conversation with, "We signed a lot of women already, so we'd have to hold off a while on signing you.
"There are people whose jobs it is to fix things for celebrities," Etheridge prefaced the song, to which host Andy Cohen replied, "the Olivia Pope of Team Angelina," referencing Kerry Washington's character in Scandal.
Even Kim prefaced her recollection of the night by mentioning her own vulnerability to an attack like this — she knew that her Snapchat updates provided the robbers with information they needed for the heist.
Most of the plot revolves around dudes with messiah complexes, the oldest trope in all superhero fiction, and episode 4 should be prefaced with a warning for its depictions of sexual violence against women.
Cink posted the news on Twitter and prefaced the short statement by saying that Lisa had been his biggest supporter since he was 15 and "it's now time for me to return the favor."
While her early work was more traditionally journalistic, over time she has stripped away context (most testimonies are prefaced with only a name, age, and profession) and relied increasingly on collages of unattributed quotations.
Near the end of the debate between New York governor Andrew Cuomo and Cynthia Nixon, his Democratic primary challenger, one of the moderators prefaced a question to Ms. Nixon by referencing her net worth.
Trump prefaced his trade action this week by insisting he views China as a "friend" and said he has "tremendous respect" for Xi. "They are helping us a lot in North Korea," Trump said.
Everything here's prefaced with Shumpert's swagger, jumping in every few bars by rapping "You hate that you love it you know it / You hate that you love it admit it," his voice cracking up constantly.
"I want to make sure this isn't interpreted" as criticism of Judy Shelton, Powell prefaced his response to a question about whether the U.S. should return to the gold standard from Jennifer Wexton, a Democrat.
Ocasio-Cortez prefaced her reading by pointing to data from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, a United Nations research group that has released catastrophic projections on the unchecked effects of man-made climate change.
Regularly prefaced as "the Meryl Streep of France," she's starred in more than 100 features over five decades, worked with an exhaustive list of auteurs and even served as jury president of the Cannes Film Festival.
Both Intel and Microsoft thought this was a good idea to get new hardware onto the landscape, but both of them prefaced this thinking with the caveat that these machines could not be "full-powered" PCs.
In his first answer of the debate, Buttigieg referred to President Donald Trump's conduct as impeachable, but prefaced it with a curious declaration: "The constitutional process of impeachment should be beyond politics." from start to finish.
Grand proclamations about an "axis of evil"prefaced wars that killed hundreds of thousands of Arabs and brown people, human beings tabulated as mere casualties, the sanctity of their lives incinerated just like the twin towers.
The lawsuit noted that Fox News's website describes Mr. Carlson as the "sworn enemy of lying" and that he prefaced his claims about Ms. McDougal by saying, "Remember the facts of the story — these are undisputed."
I am open to increasing the numbers on the Supreme Court," she said, responding to a woman who asked about enlarging the court and prefaced her question with a complaint that McConnell "stole a Supreme Court seat.
All of this has prefaced the president's latest attacks against the whistleblower, and the ones his critics see as most dangerous: An assault not just against the whistleblower's information or the process, but against the man personally.
Like Spotify, SoundCloud's suggestions will also explicitly be tied to a particular song or artist you've just played or liked and will even be prefaced with a similar introduction ("Because you played…" or "Because you liked…", e.g.).
" Asked if the law was being violated in letter or spirit in Waters' case, the State Department official did not directly answer, but prefaced a description of Waters' role as being "consistent with the Vacancies Reform Act.
Mr. Buttigieg has evolved from setting Medicare for all as a long-term goal prefaced by intermediate steps to describing it as a possible result, but not an imperative, of a system based on the public option.
Collins, speaking at a hotel in Rockland, Maine, prefaced her announcement with a lengthy speech about health care and lamented the effect of "hyper-partisanship" in Congress on health care ever since Democrats first passed the Affordable Care Act.
"When approaching the topic of "shETHER" she prefaced it by saying: "I do not condone or recommend the tearing down of another female, that's not what I do [...] I think we work so much better when we work together.
"Before I share what specifically he said, I would like you to keep in mind that this is an actual quote from the actual President of the United States," Kimmel prefaced before showing his audience a clip from CNN.
Extraordinary appearance Kelly prefaced his criticism by drawing on his own experiences losing a son -- which he rarely discusses publicly -- to paint a picture for Americans of the ultimate sacrifice only a sliver of the population will ever know.
"Landscapes mark children," wrote Robert Hughes, the Australian art critic whose book of collected essays, The Spectacle of Skill, is prefaced with this frank admission: I am completely an elitist, in the cultural but emphatically not the social sense.
The latest attack prefaced by a manifesto in the United States occurred last month in El Paso, Texas, resulting in the deaths of over 20 people and drawing the attention of lawmakers who compelled Watkins to speak on Thursday.
Cook called again for new privacy regulations Apple's CEO also prefaced his statement by saying that "we don't have to look very far" to see the dangers of a world in which everything people do online is tracked and monitored.
The event featured short speeches by City Council members; high-profile artists, from lead Broadway performers to David Byrne; and Department of Cultural Affairs Commissioner Tom Finkelpearl; and immediately prefaced a committee hearing of a resolution Van Bramer introduced in March.
The most common phrase you'll hear when you ask people about constipation is: "I hate to be graphic, but…" This is how dietician Ashley Lytwyn prefaced her explanation of why, physiologically, you might feel constipated while on the popular ketogenic diet.
When Waters asked Mnuchin why his office had not responded to a letter from her office regarding President Trump's financial ties to Russian banks, Mnuchin prefaced his direct response to the question with a series of formalities — mostly compliments to Waters.
It's neither the time nor the place for kibbitzing or moralizing, and it's certainly not appropriate for a press secretary to lay down special rules for who gets to ask questions or how those questions need to be prefaced or proffered.
Morrow reportedly prefaced the talk with sixth through 12th graders by saying she would use the N-word to describe growing up as a child in what she described as an "all white, racist community" in Dubuque, Iowa, in the 1970s.
Faber, who has said that he predicted the 1987 stock market crash, made his comments after a lengthy critique of socialist policies which were prefaced by a reference to this summer's violent demonstrations in Charlottesville, Virginia, in which one woman was killed.
Officials have used language in recent weeks that in the past has prefaced intervention to weaken the yen but most major banks have come to the conclusion that Tokyo will not do so until the currency gets closer to 100 per dollar.
A press release included a glossy photo of the leads, and the film itself was prefaced in theaters by an animated logo and a theme song meant to make clear that, yes, you are witnessing the birth of the Dark Universe franchise.
Penn described chatting with Guzmán, gaining his trust — Rolling Stone prefaced the story by saying it was "submitted for the subject's approval before publication" — and organizing a more formal two-day sit down interview that was supposed to take place eight days later.
The "Final Report on Negro Subversion" prefaced a long engagement between the F.B.I. and organizations seeking to realize black rights, which included the surveillance of Martin Luther King, Jr., as well as the Bureau's COINTELPRO efforts to destroy the Black Panther Party.
It's been almost a week since Frank Ocean opted out of releasing Boys Don't Cry, a new LP with an impending arrival date that was reported by The New York Times and prefaced with hour after hour of meditative, Apple-sponsored woodworking.
Ari Grobman and Dave Goldman from Lumus prefaced that it was a very raw prototype and only had one lens, but as I looked through it, the content pretty much covered the field of view from my nose to my wider periphery.
The show allowed viewers to monitor the collective need for an enemy of the state... Aliens, ghosts and the paranormal replaced communism and prefaced the current Islamophobic climate while the destabilising force of neoliberalism remains an undetected, invisible man in the room.
Its headline, "In Olympics, let's focus on the winner of the race — not the race of the winner," prefaced a critique of American Olympic officials who had praised the diversity of the squad headed to this month's Winter Olympics in South Korea.
Before raising these tweets Cherry prefaced her questions by saying they relate to "the very active debate on social media about trans rights" — which she said contains "considerable abuse on both sides of the argument", emphasizing that she "deplores any abuse directed at trans people".
But if every legitimate feminist grievance must be prefaced with 'but this doesn't really count because other people have it worse' — that feeds into the right wing take that, if you're not a woman in Saudi Arabia, you shouldn't be complaining in the first place.
In Bangladesh's capital Dhaka, HRDs report that murders of their colleagues are often prefaced with a series of threatening phone calls, with boys in black shirts hanging around near their homes for some time before the activist is eventually murdered in a machete attack.
" Mattis prefaced that acknowledgment of the president's prerogative, highlighting a philosophical commonality that Mattis apparently no longer felt comfortable acting upon: "Like you, I have said from the beginning that the armed forces of the United States should not be the policeman of the world.
At her April class, she prefaced the meditative soundscape with a disclaimer about snoring: It's fine to do it, even expected, but you may feel a tap on the shoulder and a nudge to move onto your side so that you don't disrupt your neighbors.
The White House on Tuesday evening said it would halt all cooperation with the Democratic investigations, a decision prefaced by the State Department's decision that morning to block a key witness, U.S. Ambassador to the European Union Gordon Sondland, from being deposed on Capitol Hill.
Brave, or simply recklessly stupid, I prefaced my appeal by reminding him of the fact that I had served as one of his personal bodyguards on his first visit to Afghanistan to inspect the integration of agent investigators with their military counterparts in late 2003.
" Tapper, the host of CNN shows "The Lead" and "State of the Union," prefaced his comments that past presidents decided not to meet for direct talks with North Korea because "the concern was, you don't want to give North Korea that kind of prestige.
He also has made a point of correcting reporters when they omit women from statistics, like at Wimbledon in 2017 when he interrupted a reporter who prefaced a question by saying that Sam Querrey was the first American player to reach the semifinals there since 2009.
The printed version was prefaced with the phrase "From the Staff of the Virus Research Laboratory by Jonas E. Salk, M.D.," and a United Press account quoted him as crediting his original three assistants, who had joined him as early as 1949 — Dr. Youngner, Army Maj.
On the night of his victory, he prefaced his speech with a solitary walk out from under the arches of the Louvre, a former royal palace, to a stage in front of the modernist glass pyramid in its courtyard, accompanied by Beethoven's "Ode to Joy", the European Union's anthem.
Article continues after the video below While I prefaced this piece with a spoiler warning, I feel that going beyond "some people you've known to be a part of Batman for, like, forever get bumped off" is unnecessary here—it's better that you see it all unfold for yourself.
The greenback was also pressured by a rallying euro, which hit a more than six-month high against the dollar on Monday after Germany's Angela Merkel prefaced a summit of G7 leaders later this week by saying a "too weak" currency was behind her country's massive trade surplus.
The greenback also came under pressure from a rallying euro, which hit a more than six-month high against the dollar on Monday after Germany's Angela Merkel prefaced a summit of G7 leaders later this week by saying a "too weak" currency was behind her country's massive trade surplus.
Then he led Franell to say at length that there's more competition in broadband now than ever, though Franell's experience as a small rural provider for a few thousand people is hardly representative of the national state of things (being honest, he prefaced his response with this information). Rep.
Gallagher was found not guilty on murder charges during a highly unusual trial that was prefaced by the removal of the chief prosecutor, who was accused of trying to spy on the defense and a journalist, and had a dramatic confession by one of the prosecution&aposs witnesses.
David Pepper, the chair of the Ohio Democratic Party, prefaced a Sunday night post to his social media accounts with praise for DeWine and LaRose — both are Republican officeholders whom Pepper has worked to defeat in the past — before proposing an extension to the vote-by-mail period.
His case has not been helped by the undulating explanations his cohort have offered for the meeting which, prefaced by a now-public e-mail chain titled "Russia - Clinton - private and confidential," was also attended by Trump's son-in-law, Jared Kushner, and his campaign chairman, Paul Manafort.
When I was in college, in a freshman "great books" seminar ripe for a culture clash moment, my professor — recognizing the possibility that there were both Jews and Christians in the class — prefaced our discussion of the biblical Book of Job with a statement that's stuck with me ever since.
While he prefaced the statement by saying he doesn't, "want this to come off the wrong way," Rawlings was looking to put together the kind of record that people would be happy listening to while they work on their car in the garage or whistle along to washing the dishes.
" The Newsweek reporter-turned-novelist Ward Just prefaced "To What End," his 1968 personal account of a war that was "slipping beyond irony to tragedy," with an epigraph by Harold Pinter about the malleability of the real and the unreal: "The more the acute the experience the less articulate the expression.
A crisis of professionalism defines his administration, in which backstabbing is the new glad-handing, firings are cruel, exits are ugly, the turnover is jaw-dropping, the number of unfilled positions is mind-boggling, and many officials have titles that are prefaced with "acting" — a modifier with multiple meanings in this case.
He began his session with the news media with what he called a "plain-English" description of what the Fed had done and why, a contrast with the practice of his predecessors Janet Yellen and Ben Bernanke, both Ph.D. economists who prefaced their appearances with long prepared statements loaded with monetary policy jargon.
He began his session with the news media with what he called a "plain English" description of what the Fed had done and why, a contrast with the practice of Ms. Yellen and her predecessor, Ben S. Bernanke, both Ph.D. economists who prefaced their appearances with long prepared statement loaded with monetary policy jargon.
Both the DOT and President Barack Obama prefaced the release of this document with comments yesterday that indicated the general tone and intent of the full guidelines, which include recommendations designed to help guide the interpretation of current laws related to roads and driving in the context of autonomous cars, and to help with the formulation of new regulations.
The softboi is there, too, in the duplicitous response to #MeToo from figures like Prime Minister Boris Johnson, who went out of his way to write a comment piece lauding "this extraordinary feminist movement" less than a month after yet another tabloid infidelity scandal prefaced the news that he and his wife of 25 years were divorcing.
Fighting for political prisoners led directly to the current campaign to end mass incarceration; "the look" of afros and leather jackets prefaced the ways that many Black artists and creatives use style and fashion on Instagram; the cross-pollination between poets and popular musicians during Black Power parallels our own renaissance of political hip-hop and R&B.
" That was Mr. Springsteen's postscript to the opening two-hour stretch of his concert at Madison Square Garden on Wednesday night: a complete performance of his 1980 double album, "The River," prefaced by "Meet Me in the City," one of the many outtakes from the album issued last year in the boxed set "The Ties That Bind: The River Collection.
Article continues after the video below Related: Watch VICE's short documentary on the real superheroes of Montreal While I prefaced this piece with a spoiler warning, I feel that going beyond "some people you've known to be a part of Batman for, like, forever get bumped off" is unnecessary here—it's better that you see it all unfold for yourself.
The announcement was made on Twitter this afternoon with a prefaced note from Kalanick that read simply, "Some news..." Since Kalanick stepped down from Uber in July of last year, he's remained an outsized influence in the day-to-day operations at the ride-hailing giant thanks to board seats Kalanick controlled as part of the deal he cut with the company alongside his resignation.
If she emerges with a clearer sense of her own priorities and values and an ability to articulate them with conviction, she may be better equipped to navigate the complicated calculus of politics … " Wesley Lowery of The Washington Post: "A lot of early in the race punditry around Kamala was prefaced on the assumption that she'd be a shoo-in/favorite with black voters.
When Ms. Swift first moved in, "No Trespassing" signs appeared around the property's perimeter that were prefaced with, "I knew you were trouble when you walked in," a coy reference to one of her own lyrics that irritated some locals, as did her shoring up, with the blessing of Rhode Island's Coastal Resources Management Council, the property's eroding armor stone sea wall and planting a chain-link fence at its edge.
This article originally appeared on VICE UK. Well I don't know about you, but I don't have a fucking clue how to do my job after ten days of not doing it—I am cheese now, I am the cheese man, my legs are made of them little Lindt things and my blood pulses thick with gravy, I cannot comprehend anything that is not prefaced by that magical Christmas-themed BBC logo card with the twinkling snow effect and that little alive sprout—and I am looking at my laptop screen just bewildered.
It quickly became incredibly popular, to the point that Michael Jackson once mandated that anyone who visited his Neverland estate would be subject to either a water balloon or super soaker attack (check out a video of Jackson talking about how much he loves Super Soakers here; his words are prefaced by a video of him unwrapping them at Christmas with Elizabeth Taylor.) Still, Johnson (who declined to be interviewed for this article) shouldn't be remembered for the Super Soaker as much as he should be remembered as the guy who possibly fucked up the curtains in his bathroom because he made a weird water pump.

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