Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

345 Sentences With "presaged"

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

And it presaged a much more direct attack to come.
The Olympics presaged the imperial pomp of President Xi Jinping.
This presaged the violence they would inflict on striking workers.
Just how bad may be ominously presaged by the title.
And Osweiler laid the egg his entire season had presaged.
A chance meeting between Rudis and Crenna presaged the third.
Increases of that size have presaged economic trouble in other countries.
Children came to know what the lengthening shadows of autumn presaged.
The inversion has presaged previous recessions and is widely watched by markets.
Such a flattening of the yield curve has repeatedly presaged past recessions.
Its terrible 2017 season presaged an American season in which 79,000 died.
Germany's innovation of democracy presaged and fueled America's mass production of it.
This presaged them easily taking back the House in the 2018 midterms.
The power play may have presaged Porzingis's arrival as an NBA superstar.
But it was not so much this act itself that presaged the unraveling.
But there was nothing in his campaign that presaged this level of executive competence.
And he presaged the twentieth-century, American-led boom in his affection for nature.
Jason Cohen, the director, neatly illustrates how the company presaged current trends in technology.
Their cacophonous, gleefully absurdist music presaged forms of punk, new wave and industrial music.
In fact, the last time the bears were this plentiful presaged a sharp turn higher.
Beyoncé's current omnipresence was presaged by a different kind of ubiquity almost two decades ago.
Those drawings presaged her search for fluid ideas about what architectural spaces could be like.
Site publisher Cory Haik presaged the restructuring last week in an op-ed for Recode.
Indeed, the health-insurance assistance provisions of the ACA were presaged in the 85033 stimulus.
Feral House and Amok Books were dispensers of forbidden knowledge that presaged 4chan and Reddit.
Other presidents have been knocked off stride by special elections that ultimately presaged greater defeats.
But they said the same thing about the special elections that presaged the 2018 midterms.
In a sense she presaged if not this technology then our short cultural attention span.
More than any other American writer, Walt Whitman seems to have presaged our present moment.
It really presaged that long battle that went back and forth for quite a while.
QVC's success on television presaged that of retailers on the internet like Amazon and Walmart.
Mr Barr's nomination presaged what is expected to be a substantial staff shakeup by Mr Trump.
Amid a debate that presaged today's fights over data privacy, Congress held hearings into the matter.
It is a brutal truth of the transportation business that change is often presaged with blood.
Highly sensitive, short-term estimates have misled much more often than they've presaged a lasting change.
But another aspect of his personality may have also presaged the shooting: his troubled home life.
An American missile attack in 1998 destroyed a factory in Khartoum and presaged crippling economic sanctions.
His victories in two World Cup events the month after the Olympics presaged a bright athletic future.
A credit gap above 10% of GDP has presaged financial distress in the past, says the BIS.
Then they would probably try to pursue full decriminalization, just as medical marijuana had presaged legal weed.
Its $60, soft-nibbed, walnut stylus, called Pencil, presaged Apple's eventual entry into the world of stylii.
The RBA said whether financial market turbulence "presaged weaker global and domestic demand" remained to be seen.
Frequent, large calving events at the neighboring Larsen B Ice Shelf presaged that shelf's disintegration in 2002.
Go deeper: Learn more about the volatility index VIX — whose rise presaged the market's roller-coaster ride.
But his life — spent among the poor, in love and service — had already presaged Francis's pastoral priorities.
Though this seemed insane outside the Fox News bubble of hype, it presaged a historic presidential run.
Democratic struggles among the white working class in Missouri presaged the party's problems elsewhere in the Midwest.
Alan Greenspan's warning of "irrational exuberance" at the end of 5003 correctly presaged the dot-com bubble.
His arrest presaged a large-scale crackdown on dissent ordered by the authoritarian prime minister, Hun Sen.
And the collective structure of the group presaged the growing interest in combining art and social activism.
Dr. King did not live to see those photographs, but his vision presaged their message of interconnectedness.
In 1987 volatile markets with international uncertainties at the end of the preceding week presaged the Monday crash.
Coming mere months after the triumphant March on Washington, this tragedy presaged the eventual fracturing of the movement.
The letter presaged the intra-government fighting ahead of the White House's decision to temporarily block the line.
Kerby Jean-Raymond's political, narratively rich designs for Pyer Moss presaged today's gestures at activism on the runway.
But European politics experts argue that his rise was eerily presaged by the assassinated Dutch demagogue Pim Fortuyn.
Even before this, all your shows had little elements that presaged some of what we are seeing, right?
Global health In 403, a terrible flu season in Australia presaged an American outbreak in which 79,000 died.
The classic documentary Salesman, which turned 50 this year, presaged our current age of megachurches and Christian influencers.
" Lee, Fundstrat's managing partner and head of research, said such a flattening "has almost always presaged weakness in equities.
Historically, sharp trade balance adjustments have presaged currency gains of 60 percent to 70 percent over the following year.
Momentum is improving from an extremely negative state which has presaged market turns in the past, according to Stovall.
Massive, scooping hips presaged the Ferrari 360 Modena — designed, of course, by Pininfarina — that wouldn't come out until 1999.
"The Sinking Ark" presaged later works like Elizabeth Kolbert's Pulitzer Prize-winning "The Sixth Extinction: An Unnatural History" (2014).
I nursed this grievance for a week or two, though I still didn't understand what it presaged for Fox.
The appearance of mysterious, camouflaged soldiers in Kabul, Afghanistan, and Grozny, Chechnya, presaged wider deployments in 1979 and 163.
The novel caught the sour mood of the dwindling civil rights era and presaged the arrival of the counterculture.
The race in many ways presaged the campaign of Mr. Trump, whose prospects Mr. Miller soon eyed with excitement.
Rather, it's openly crass and crudely commercial model of "education" was presaged by some of our more genuine universities.
At the news conference — held near his home neighborhood, Park Slope — he said the 228 numbers presaged further reductions.
It was not immediately clear whether the ADIC news presaged more mergers or tie-ups for Abu Dhabi funds.
"A wide distribution of price-to-earnings multiples has historically presaged strong value returns," Kostin said in a note Friday.
In focusing on this threat he presaged the phenomenon of Xi Jinping, who has fought against graft with unprecedented zeal.
McConnell struck back quickly in a Twitter message that presaged what a race between him and McGrath would look like.
If Austria in 2000 presaged the recent populist surge, the country's new government, too, may contain glimpses of wider trends.
Democratic wins in Republican-held seats in 85033, 1970, 1974 and 2008 similarly presaged a blue wave the following November.
The fight was presaged by a barrage of fireworks, and a giant light display showing the two boxers mid-fight.
In Indiana, the 2008 Democratic primary yielded a spike in Democratic turnout that presaged a Democratic surge in the general.
One thing I wondered is if it presaged some larger cooperation between the two, on matters even beyond voice assistants.
The effort, which also used paid Facebook ads, presaged Russian interference with the 1003 presidential election in the United States.
Because the proclamation presaged slavery's demise, however, African-Americans across the nation joyfully celebrated its anniversary in the years after.
In many of those examples, this level of approval presaged a disaster for a president's party in the midterm elections.
BUT BITCOIN PEAKED OUT IN DECEMBER, AND IT CRASHED, AND THAT SORT OF PRESAGED THE VOLATILITY OF THE STOCK MARKET.
After the German and Chinese economic reports, the bond market responded with trading patterns that have often presaged a recession.
After the German and Chinese economic reports, the bond market responded with trading patterns that have often presaged a recession.
And it presaged a defiant path forward when Trump likely becomes the third president in US history to be impeached.
The remarkable series presaged the ubiquity of immersive environments, wearable tech, sound art, certain types of motion capture, and even wifi.
His larger argument was that the death of these organizations presaged the death of Americans' belief in their communities as communities.
Ailes was known as a master manipulator who in many ways presaged the angry, free-wheeling propaganda that pervades the internet.
Investors, who feared a steep global downturn given an inverted yield curve has presaged several past U.S. recessions, dumped riskier assets.
And that presaged an even harsher step, an order that all virtual-currency exchanges shut by the end of the month.
Mike Nichols's "The Graduate" (1967) presaged the trend; "The Heartbreak Kid" (20163), by Mr. Nichols's onetime partner Elaine May, capped it.
In a pattern that presaged his actions at Tribune, Mr. Ferro became chairman of Merge and replaced almost half the board.
History will record that the Trump presidency presaged the decline of the American Empire as we have come to know it.
Despite the technology's futility in the end, it presaged an array of features and user experiences characteristic of the modern web.
That $3 million sale was presaged by the significant fall from grace of other former high-flying media and tech properties.
Plessy's train-car protest presaged Rosa Park's refusal to give up her bus seat to a white passenger in Montgomery, Ala.
But his skepticism about lowering trade barriers proved prescient, and his unlikely candidacy presaged Donald J. Trump's outsider run in 33.
Their woeful inaugural season of 1966, completed weeks before the first Super Bowl, presaged Atlanta's struggles for the next half-century.
The jazz combo that Bowie tapped for his final album, Blackstar, offered an impassioned instrumental of the song that presaged his death.
" In a response that presaged Blige's reply to Angie Martinez, Franklin reportedly said, "People like to conjecture about the sadness within me.
But most important, Michel dissented from her husband's spare use of paint applied in thin washes of color (which presaged stain painting).
For guidance, I called up the "Bug Chef," David George Gordon, whose Eat-A-Bug Cookbook, published in 1998, presaged the trend.
Past epidemics were also often presaged or accompanied by a major rise in arrestees testing positive for the drug of the moment.
The study offered fresh evidence that the arrival of Homo sapiens presaged doom for numerous species across Eurasia, the Americas and Australia.
It also in many ways presaged the celeb-reality complex, though, crucially, it caught Madonna at a career apex, not in desperation.
He presaged our contemporary Black Lives Matter practice of both naming and resisting black animus while linking such gestures to practical politics.
That presaged Osaka's victories at the United States Open and the Australian Open and her rise to No. 3543, where she remains.
More shockingly, the drive-bys continued at our home, presaged by a call on Andrej's cellphone a day after he was discharged.
This time last year, Beyoncé dropped her single "Formation," which presaged her memorable Super Bowl halftime performance and 2016-defining album Lemonade.
That exodus from formal party activism both presaged and embodied a broader shift from federated mass membership groups to professionalized, staff-driven operations.
" Bannon said Moore's victory in Alabama presaged Trump's recent actions with the Iran deal and Obamacare, per ABC: "That is victory, begets victory.
Changes at YC: As expected, and presaged on this very show, Sam Altman is graduating himself to the chairman's seat at Y Combinator.
Other calving events presaged the breakup of nearby ice shelves during the past two decades, including the loss of Larsen B in 2004.
Calder performed it, unpacking it from suitcases and animating it, and announcing it, in a way that presaged later generations of performance art.
The festival presaged the modern Halloween celebrations, named after "All Hallows Eve", the night before the Catholic "All Saints Day" on Nov. 1.
While the car gives a sense of what designers are thinking, Nissan did not say that this concept presaged any specific new model.
The reunion went better than the summer impasse would have presaged, as Pierre-Paul was genially welcomed back by management and his teammates.
As abruptly as they'd risen, the mountains emptied us into a valley that had been presaged by an increasingly thick mantle of smog.
As much sculpture as functional object, this chair embodied the craft ethos that now dominates high design and presaged contemporary limited-edition furniture.
That lack of support presaged a difficult road ahead as Mr. Macron tries to build a legislative majority to push through his program.
There was no evidence that this presaged a wider revolt, yet, haunted by the mutiny, this is exactly what Dyer and other officers believed.
In bonding through music, these young Catholics and Protestants were engaging in an ecumenical dialogue that presaged movements such as the Catholic Charismatic Renewal.
These campaign lies presaged what would happen during his administration — an administration that, let us not forget, took America to war on false pretenses.
The operation's attempt to hype the threat of radical Islam also presaged the inflammatory messages pushed by internet trolls during the U.S. presidential race.
In that way, McLuhan presaged Facebook, Snapchat, Twitter and their attendant miscues — the Trump presidency, Gamergate, the alt-right — by more than four decades.
Miller recalled that some of the darkest times for the team presaged the most recent golden era of ski racing in the United States.
One of the attendees, who left the Nixon party soon after the early returns presaged the trouncing, still displayed a sense of sang-froid.
Mr. Kassoy's work presaged a theme that in the last year has been adopted by business leaders like Laurence D. Fink of BlackRock, Inc.
Investors also steamrolled the yield curve to its flattest in over a decade, a trend that has historically presaged economic slowdowns and even recessions.
It feels inconceivable that the women of Fox News, of all places, presaged the mainstreaming of the #MeToo movement, but it also makes sense.
Annlinn Kruger Bar Harbor, Maine Toobin is right to point out how Giuliani's bullying behavior as a federal prosecutor presaged his current work for Trump.
I also looked at drawings by Étienne-Louis Boullée, the 18th-century French visionary architect whose cemetery designs for an "ideal" city presaged modern architecture.
This moment presaged one of the spots of the night, when Matt later put Omega through that table with an emphatic violence and palpable frustration.
Their breakup was presaged by an episode of "Transparent," and then re-enacted in a "breakup processing session" at the Hammer Museum in Los Angeles.
In 2016, his narrow loss to Hillary Clinton presaged the similarly historic narrow loss he suffered to her in the race for the Democratic nod.
Assad said on Monday his forces' rapid recent gains presaged the eventual defeat of the nine-year insurgency that sought to oust him from power.
Turns out a 1981 BBC miniseries presaged this exact scenario, providing further irrefutable proof that we do really live in the sickest kind of dystopia.
"Severe one month declines in the price of oil has not presaged market weakness, quite the contrary, actually," the firm wrote in a research note Sunday.
That has its perils: a few years ago ham-fisted efforts to tinker with Hong Kong's curriculum caused a backlash that presaged the more recent unrest.
The digitization rush was presaged as recently as 2013 in The Congress, Ari Folman's loose adaptation of a Polish science fiction novel from writer Stanisław Lem.
Their rise not only greased the wheels of economic development but also presaged the arrival of the data-driven, algorithm-mediated economy of the 22014st century.
Krinsky cited how the 20-day average trading range has narrowed to the lowest levels since mid-2014, which historically hasn't presaged stock prices going down.
In Shakespeare's telling of the death of Julius Caesar, the death of a great leader is presaged by uncanny dread—lions from nowhere roam the streets.
The leaner operation of Mexican Summer offers a more-intimate, safer space, even as Pink's presaged deconstructions of cherubic-diva-cosplay manifest disingenuously in mainstream pop.
The dot-com bubble and crash in 2000/2001 presaged the recession of that era, which ended with the explosive and volatile Google IPO of 2004.
Richard Curtin, chief economist for the survey, noted that two of the larger monthly drops — in October 22020 and December 1980 — presaged long and deep recessions.
Investors have been jittery since last week's brief inversion between the 20.9021-year and 10-year U.S. Treasury yield curve, which has presaged several past U.S. recessions.
For Radio Imagination, Christovale is putting together two screenings featuring experimental shorts by black filmmakers that draw upon science fiction and Afrofutrism, genres that Butler's work presaged.
That presaged a legal battle in a terrain where Nigeria's most senior judge was controversially suspended by Buhari last month after allegations he breached asset declaration rules.
And while he won re-election last year, a 2017 referendum that only narrowly gave him new authority over the legislature and judiciary presaged his weakening support.
A week before the killings, investigators believe Mr. Santos attacked a 38-year-old homeless man in an incident that presaged the deadly beatings, the police said.
Mr. McCabe's memo reflects the anxiety of the early months of the Trump administration and presaged a relationship with law enforcement that has only grown more strained.
To many, that pause presaged the complete elimination of the program, known as IER, contrary to calls from tech giants and Silicon Valley investors to keep it.
That pre-debate Facebook Live broadcast by Donald Trump, which combined farce, dystopia and reality-TV in three tawdry minutes, presaged the tone of the encounter that followed.
The rally in Charlottesville was presaged by a push to remove statues honoring members of the Confederacy and the resulting backlash from white nationalists and other racist groups.
Just as Gamergate presaged the weaponization of the internet, the #BoycottBlizzard campaign outlines the growing challenge of balancing democratic ideals with the lure of profit in authoritarian countries.
Rapid increases of this magnitude have presaged financial trouble elsewhere, from the banking crises that ripped through the West a decade ago to Japan's stagnation in the 1990s.
Some 2,700 ground-launched ballistic and cruise missiles with ranges between 13 and 5,500 km were destroyed in a deal that presaged the end of the cold war.
The lights came on in a seemingly random sequence, but gradually the subjects realized that one color always presaged pain and another was always followed by comfortable warmth.
Andrew M. Cuomo who are facing federal corruption charges, had been presaged almost since its announcement in 2014, when the governor wondered aloud the miracle of the concept.
He resumed a solo career that had begun quietly in 1969 with "Canaxis," an album of tape loops that presaged the ambient work of artists like Brian Eno.
In 1990, Z'ev began working with the Dutch house-music producer DJ Dano on high-speed tracks that presaged the hard-edged underground dance music genre called gabber.
Last week's inversion of the U.S. bond yield curve, which have presaged several past U.S. recessions, triggered a shakeout in financial markets worried about a slowdown in global growth.
In recent years, large concentrations of long or short positions have usually presaged a reversal in the price trend, and hedge fund positions had become very lopsided by April.
Such an inversion of the yield curve has presaged enough recessions in the past that investors are wagering the Fed will be forced to ease policy just as "insurance".
Some Republicans came to believe that defaulting on the country's debts was a legitimate tool in their campaign against him, kamikaze tactics that presaged the wrecking ball of Trumpism.
An inversions in the U.S. yield curve has presaged several past U.S. recessions, raising fears the decade-long expansion in the world's biggest economy might be nearing its end.
An inversion in the U.S. yield curve has presaged several past U.S. recessions, raising fears the decade-long expansion in the world's biggest economy might be nearing its end.
The debate has garnered attention nationwide, less for the laws' repercussions for local businesses than for the wholesale airing of misogyny which presaged the vote on the House floor.
Decreases in satisfaction with school, family, appearance and friends presaged increased social media use, and increases in social media use preceded decreases in satisfaction with school, family, and friends.
Insatiable demand for U.S. Treasuries drove longer-term yields to one-year lows and flattened the yield curve in a way that has presaged economic recession in the past.
Those losses presaged the Tea Party-fueled Republican sweep in 2010, a year that saw Republicans seize statehouses across the country to take control of the decennial redistricting process.
That arrangement came apart when Colonel Qaddafi was ousted and killed in a bloody uprising in 2000, an event that presaged the migrant crisis that has since bedeviled Europe.
" But Amelia's depressive episode was solely presaged by Link's demand for the paternity test, Amelia's secret refusal to get one, and her "Dance"-ending text asking Link for "time.
Judge Sullivan had presaged his ruling when he chastised Mr. Flynn during that hearing for suggesting the F.B.I. had duped him into lying to the agents who questioned him.
Civilian aircraft in Warsaw Pact nations were grounded while the Soviets launched three dozen spy-plane flights over Western Europe to assess whether the mobilization presaged a sneak attack.
The pro-European camp used to tell us that joining the euro was a good idea, and that to stay outside presaged disaster; instead, we've seen a meltdown in Greece.
And their unashamed consumption of a brand of media that nakedly catered to them arguably presaged the flourishing romantic comedy resurgence we now appear to be in the middle of.
China's total debt-to-GDP ratio has risen from less than 150% before 2008 to more than 260% today; in other economies, such increases have often presaged severe financial stress.
But Mr Carney's remarks presaged a change in attitude towards oil companies by governments, financial regulators and investors that has become clearer since the Paris climate-change agreement last December.
The game changed for Hammer with the success of its 1955 film The Quatermass Xperiment, a science fiction feature whose alien antagonists presaged the studio's true calling card: monster movies.
Yields on 10-year Treasury bonds dropped below shorter two-year rates for the first time in 12 years, when the same the yield curve inversion presaged the 2008 recession.
The narrowing between the 10- and 2-year Treasury bond yields has intensified this year, leading investors to fear a yield-curve inversion — a development that's traditionally presaged economic recessions.
I first glimpsed the extent of the disaster he presaged for Bosnia when we met in Belgrade, the Serbian capital, six weeks after the first shots were fired in Sarajevo.
With the Russians, though, Mr. Tillerson repeated what has become an increasingly hard line in the administration against the kind of warming ties that President Trump presaged in his campaign.
Mr. Lighthizer has also been harshly critical of China, and in a 2010 Op-Ed article in The New York Times, he presaged some of Mr. Trump's talk on trade.
Appearing on national television on Monday, Assad said the rapid military gains presaged the eventual defeat of the nine-year-old insurgency against him although it could still take time.
Yet its earlier success presaged the rise of other Chinese start-ups, such as the drone maker DJI, and demonstrated the power of the country's fast-growing e-commerce sector.
To render Doctor Manhattan as a more Adonis-like image of a hero is to ignore what Watchmen is, however, and that is what presaged the controversy around Snyder's depiction.
Five years later the pianist and composer Sun Ra invited him into the Arkestra, a path-blazing ensemble that presaged multiple strains of avant-garde jazz and Afro-Futurist art.
But in some ways, this presaged the current struggle of those who don't adhere to the gender binary to get the press to refer to them by a preferred pronoun.
Mr. McConnell's strategic affront — announcing just hours after Justice Scalia's death that he would refuse to even consider a replacement — was presaged by other Republican moves over the last two years.
Minority Report came out the year after the 2001 World Trade Center attacks, but it presaged a wave of concern about governmental overreach that became commonplace in the decade to follow.
The spread between the yields of shorter- and longer-duration Treasury bonds slipped below zero earlier this year, a so-called yield curve inversion which has presaged recessions in the past.
The enormous concentration of hedge fund positions that presaged the sharp drop in oil prices starting on March 8 seems to have dissipated and the immediate outlook appears much more balanced.
This devastation was presaged by numerous omens, including one that foretold the coming of conquerors from distant lands riding on the backs of animals, who would vanquish and rule the Aztecs.
And with talk of an "emerging Democratic majority," he presaged a time when their votes—which had elected George W. Bush, George H.W. Bush, and Ronald Reagan—would no longer matter.
Because an inverted yield curve has often presaged recessions, this prompted a wave of news coverage that even risked becoming a self-fulfilling prophecy, if businesses and consumers pulled back further.
It presaged how the Republican-controlled State Senate would become an obstacle to the mayor's agenda — a situation he made worse when he tried to swing the Senate to Democratic control.
Mr. Pastor recently wrote a book on President Trump and California, "State of Resistance," and in an interview talked about how California's dysfunction in the 1990s presaged what is happening now.
Conspiracy theorists believe that sightings of "black helicopters" presaged the military takeover of the United States by aliens, the United Nations or even federal agents seeking to enforce the wildlife laws.
The closing of the fan club, which presaged Shprygin's arrest and arson attack, was viewed as a punishment for his championing the Russian fan violence at the European Championship in France.
The film solidified writer-director Rian Johnson and Levitt's places as indie Hollywood darlings, and presaged their later partnership in 22013's Looper, another Johnson-penned film with a serpentine plot.
But it presaged a similarly overlooked passage in his nomination speech — in which he promised to look out for people in Ferguson, Missouri — and his much more hyped recent "black outreach" campaign.
Just as rising bond yields in the 1960s presaged the inflationary battles of the 1970s, so falling bond yields in the 1990s and 2000s foreshadowed today's struggles with deflation and slow growth.
It may have presaged the distorted, Marilyn Manson-influenced body horror on 1997's occasionally industrial Come to Daddy, but beyond their drum'n'bass leanings, all the two share is a pockmarked humanity.
The release of this album, with its attendant rave reviews, presaged his next incarnation, his most recent reinvention in a career of amazing reinventions -- it could not more forcefully have bespoken aliveness.
While hits like "Little Red Corvette" will be his lasting legacy, his prominent battles against the music and technology establishment also presaged an era when the recording industry ceded power to musicians.
Theatrical protests that others staged on Wednesday spoke to the grievances that have remained unresolved since the protests in 2014 and presaged more clashes to come in and outside the legislative chamber.
Huxley presaged genetic engineering — his test tube babies are the true precursors of CRISPR babies — but so far we've passed on his multisensory "Feelies" and stuck with the good old-fashioned movies.
Joshua Wong and Agnes Chow, student leaders of the pro-democracy demonstrations in Hong Kong five years ago that presaged the current protests, were arrested on Friday morning, their political organization said.
Joshua Wong and Agnes Chow, student leaders of the pro-democracy demonstrations in Hong Kong five years ago that presaged the current protests, were arrested on Friday morning, their political organization said.
In that respect, it presaged D'Angelo's Voodoo and Black Messiah, Kendrick Lamar's To Pimp a Butterfly and Damn, Kanye West's "Jesus Walks" and The Life of Pablo and Chance the Rapper's Coloring Book.
Financial markets went into a tailspin last week after U.S. 2-year yields traded above those of 10-year paper, an inversion that has presaged previous recessions and is widely watched by markets.
Occidental Petroleum's recent jaunt to Omaha aboard a corporate jet presaged a $10 billion investment from Warren Buffett, and now the plane has traveled to the hometown of oil major Royal Dutch Shell.
That version, played on its Game Boy portable game device, presaged the current era of smartphone games, a world where titles like Candy Crush and Clash of Clans command billion-dollar price tags.
That instance was not even one of the six blocks by the 6-foot-8 Lydon, but it presaged the problems Middle Tennessee would have — even well-executed plays failed to reap rewards.
But the founders' willingness to devote the time to thoughtfully reach consensus and together defy conventional wisdom presaged a huge success: Their startup was accepted into a premier accelerator program and is thriving.
Vice President Mike Pence's cold shoulder to the visiting North Korean dignitaries at the Games presaged for many that the temporary respite of sports diplomacy would give way to a dangerous military crisis.
These were the years when Jalal Al-e Ahmad's 1962 essay, "Occidentosis," a fervent call for Iranian cultural independence, galvanized resentment toward the United States-backed royal family and presaged the coming revolution.
Record sellers often slapped cautionary stickers onto the "Last Poets" album ("Recommended for Mature Adults Only") in yet another moment that presaged the conflicted relationship that hip-hop would have with the mainstream.
Trump, perhaps inadvertently, had presaged the new U.S. pro-Taiwan impulse by accepting a congratulatory telephone call from President Tsai In-wen after his election, shocking Beijing and the U.S. foreign policy establishment.
The unity expressed in such accusations and insults presaged the coalition that the radical-left Syriza and right-wing nationalist Independent Greeks would forge in January 2015 — and that is still in power.
This turnout was presaged for the past six months by the huge crowds The Donald generated all across the nation — and the extraordinarily high TV ratings of the five GOP debates he attended.
More centralized control over these mostly independent apps was already presaged by last year's abrupt exits of Kevin Systrom, Mike Krieger, Brian Acton and Jan Koum, the founder pairs of Instagram and Whatsapp, respectively.
After uncharacteristically steady markets in 2017 which continued with buoyant growth in January, a market downturn —presaged by sharp equity declines in February — was bound to come, the head of Switzerland's biggest bank said.
Even as the White House staffers presaged a speech that would highlight unity, the damage from years of heated partisan rhetoric is showing, with each side viewing the speech through its own distinct lens.
"The Afghan government would have reacted strongly against M.S.F." In 2011, M.S.F. opened the hospital in Kunduz, a location it chose because it believed, presciently, that the province's bloody past presaged a violent future.
Girlboss is the multi-media brand for women founded by serial entrepreneur Sophia Amoruso, whose last company, Nasty Gal, presaged the direct to consumer trend before collapsing under the weight of its own ambition.
Still, it was what came next, during the post-match interview—the tears, the sisterhood, the kind of compassion that can only be born of flesh and heart—that presaged the future of sport.
Ms. Ingraham honed her craft in college at The Dartmouth Review, the undergraduate right-wing journal that earned national recognition (and some revulsion) for stunts that, in hindsight, presaged the antics of Breitbart reporters.
It also presaged the contentious relationship Mr. Ponte would have with the Investigation Department, whose recent inquiries focused on the agency embarrassed the commissioner and ultimately led him to announce his resignation on Friday.
The Salvadoran family's story of struggle in U.S. immigration detention presaged what was to come: Trump's "zero tolerance" policy that led to more than 133,300 migrant children being separated from parents in recent weeks.
In many ways, when Ailes first crafted Fox News in 1996, he presaged the modern internet — a network rife with invective and commentary, a slow burn of anger on every hour of the day.
OnePlus fans should take a particular interest in this phone, as historically Oppo's F-series has presaged the design of an upcoming OnePlus device to a certain degree due to the companies' shared supply chain.
Dick Durbin, a Democrat, in remarks just before the CR vote, touted how the past few days of deal-making not only was how the Senate should work but presaged a new age of cooperation.
Though such a condition has repeatedly presaged past recessions, Dudley said he was "not convinced" of that this time, noting if it were not flattening the Fed would be "behind the curve" in raising rates.
The build up of hedge fund long positions between January and May coincided with rising oil prices but eventually presaged the rally's demise ("Risks rise as hedge funds place record bet on oil", Reuters, May 3).
That December, a man shot and killed two officers in Brooklyn, after posting on social media about his anger over the deaths of Mr. Garner and Mr. Brown — a case that presaged the killings in Dallas.
Tracks with titles like "The Way of the Tree of Life" land with colossally cosmic thuds—like a spiritual pulsar, bridging the gap between it and the thousands of years of ecstatic music that presaged it.
The build up of hedge fund long positions between January and May coincided with rising oil prices but eventually presaged the rally's demise ("Risks rise as hedge funds place record bet on oil", Reuters, May 3 ).
The unofficial referendum, in which only Greek Cypriots voted and was carried by more than 95 percent in favor, presaged by more than 20 years the violent division of the island between ethnic Greeks and Turks.
So it was with much distress that within hours of Keflezighi's lunch of salmon, chicken, and beet salad on Tuesday that he learned another major career moment—this time, bowing out—had been presaged by violence.
The book takes a startlingly elegiac, wistful, poetic turn in the final story, which focuses on the 2017 hurricane that flooded the city, perhaps presaged in this collection by that prefatory image of an overhead grid.
The dollar's peers, notably the safe-haven yen, got an additional boost as falls in long-term Treasury yields deepened the inversion of the U.S. yield curve, a phenomenon that has presaged several past U.S. recessions.
And recessions are often presaged by certain signals: rising jobless claims; falling home sales; an inverted yield curve; wage pressures that impact corporate margins; exogenous shocks, including oil spikes; or destabilizing valuations in key asset classes.
The heavy spending strategy — which presaged a similar approach taken by fellow billionaire Michael R. Bloomberg — appeared to be at least partially responsible for the boost in the polls that Mr. Steyer enjoyed in South Carolina.
But many did not realize they were also visiting the site of an earlier attack that, while less deadly, presaged an era of terrorism fears in New York City that many believe culminated in September 238.
According to The New York Times report at the time, he was concerned that Americans wouldn't back the move, which bore some similarities to bombings years earlier in the Gulf of Tonkin that presaged war in Vietnam.
Alarm bells started ringing last week when yields on U.S. 10-year notes fell below two-year yields for the first time since 2007, an inversion that has presaged previous recessions and is widely watched by markets.
His recruitment of the Free Democrats to vote for Mr Gauck presaged the end of their centre-right coalition with the Christian Democrats (which led to the current grand coalition between the Christian Democrats and the SPD).
A significant part of what makes the current generation of roleplaying games feel so vibrant—its burgeoning, albeit imperfect, space for women, minorities, LGBTQ, the spaces for the political and non-traditional—was presaged by White Wolf.
His livid criticism of that campaign, which he likened to a "medieval call to a crusade," presaged what happened next: He took back power in 2012, and set about undoing every element of Mr. Medvedev's little thaw.
AMMAN (Reuters) - Syrian President Bashar al Assad said on Monday his forces' rapid recent gains in their Russian-backed military offensive presaged the eventual defeat of the nine-year insurgency that sought to oust him from power.
That panel on Friday was stocked with women, each of whom presented new research that revealed a systemic bias in economics and presaged a move by the field's leaders to promise to address some of those issues.
Her strident musings on the fickle fame cycle, which Hill warned about on the album as well as her frequent big-ups to Nina Simone, presaged discussions of how the industry discards and dishonors black women musical geniuses.
Yes, it was a crowded field this time in a way that it was not in 2016, when Sanders won by almost 23 percentage points over Clinton, in a way that presaged their long and peevish nominating contest.
Alarm bells started ringing last week when U.S. 2-year yields traded above those of their 10-year counterparts for the first time since 2007, an inversion that has presaged previous recessions and is widely watched by markets.
That Mr. Freedom's solution to most problems is to bomb them and wreak havoc remains a scathing indictment of American foreign policy, and, on the bonus side, presaged the modern superhero (and general blockbuster) obsession with mass destruction.
Global financial markets took fright this week after an inversion in the U.S. bond yield curve - which has presaged several past U.S. recessions - raised fears of a world economic slump and sent investors stampeding out of riskier assets.
The result not only presaged Clinton's inability to win over white, working-class voters in the general election, but underpinned Sanders' argument that, in running again, he could succeed where Clinton failed in a race against Donald Trump.
In his limited time, Mr. Smith finds room for informative digressions on the biology of lead poisoning, the history of water delivery and the 2001-10 contamination of the Washington, D.C., water system that presaged the Flint disaster.
His hand-embroidered mash-ups of found and invented imagery presaged our post-Internet comfort with appropriation, as well as the strange courtship between digital and traditional crafts that's dominated so much art in the last two decades.
Aaron Sorkin's best script, a dolphin-skin-smooth nightmare, and Jesse Eisenberg's best performance, megalomaniacal paranoia at its most delicious, nailed (spiritually, if not entirely factually) Facebook's slippery origins and presaged its assaults on privacy, democracy, and consciousness.
In the U.S. bond market, the two-year/22-year yield curve briefly moved back into inversion territory overnight, a shift that also occurred last week and hit financial markets amid worries that it presaged a sharp global downturn.
MORE STIMULUS Alarm bells started ringing last week when yields on U.S. 10-year notes fell below two-year yields for the first time since 2007, an inversion that has presaged previous recessions and is widely watched by markets.
In the U.S. bond market, the two-year/2150-year yield curve briefly moved back into inversion territory overnight, a shift that also occurred last week and hit financial markets amid worries that it presaged a sharp global downturn.
In the U.S. bond market, the two-year/10-year yield curve briefly moved back into inversion territory overnight, a shift that also occurred last week and hit financial markets amid worries that it presaged a sharp global downturn.
"The arms deal was the most graphic loss of innocence of post-apartheid South Africa and it presaged the corruption we are seeing today," said David Lewis, the executive director of Corruption Watch, a nonprofit organization based in Johannesburg.
In our age of infotainment—presaged by Vine and sealed by the ballooning popularity of TikTok, we now prefer the micro-clip to the hours-long slog—perhaps the focus should instead be on the fraction, not the whole.
In retrospect, the tangle of wildly divergent pre-album singles that presaged the ANTI drop feels less like an artist throwing darts to see what stuck and more the work of one trying to escape the burdensome chains of expectations.
The many heated moments at the town halls leading up to the passage of the Affordable Care Act, also known as Obamacare, may have presaged the Democratic Party's ensuing electoral challenges and the lasting controversy of Obama's signature domestic achievement.
Even in 2011, the episode presaged the now ever-present dialogue about cutting back, dropping out, and disconnecting: At a dinner, the table marvels at a woman who, without regret, has risked her memory and her eyesight to remove her implant.
In 1993, even before Amazon went online or Google was incorporated, Mr. Aiken, as a dispirited lawyer producing a baseball trivia calendar on the side, joined the Guild and started generating news releases that presaged the portents of electronic publishing.
The band's unwillingness to crack down on amateur concert recordings, much to the displeasure of its record label, created a far-flung, decentralized network of tape-traders that dramatically increased the band's audience and presaged online social networking and viral marketing.
It's an amazing time, and he presaged so much of this and he was projecting into the future from the first time I met him, by '72, and I believe it was very specific in that it was a Buddhist thing.
We talked to Cannell by phone to broach just how impactful Brussel's technique actually was, how he tried to get into the mind of a serial bomber, and whether these bombings presaged the era of modern terrorism and constant fear.
Protesters and counter-protesters alike were responsible for outbreaks of fighting and violence that presaged the tragedy that we sadly witnessed, in which a man drove a car into a crowd of people, killed one woman and wounded several others.
And D. J. Patil, President Obama's chief data scientist, observes that it was data compiled by the Department of Health and Human Services that enabled journalists at ProPublica to discover the spike in opioid prescriptions that presaged the current addiction crisis.
He notes, as well, that in 1999, when AOL began its $165 billion play for the Time Warner colossus, the deal presaged the current Digital Ice Age, in which tech (Netflix, Amazon et al.) is slowly slaying the Hollywood dinosaur.
We should not forget that it was the withdrawal of Russian co-operation troops in 1992, not the Soviets' cessation of formal combat operations in 1989, that presaged the collapse of the Najibullah regime and the eventual Taliban takeover in 1996.
What once again stood out was that you could really hear Wurtzel's voice in the writing; it was conversational — often starting her sentences with "Look," — and chock full of pop culture references in a way that presaged blogging and internet culture.
William A. Norris, the federal judge who ruled in 21980 that the Constitution's equal protection clause guaranteed that gay people could serve in the military — a decision that presaged the Supreme Court's legalization of same-sex marriage — died on Jan.
He faced a massive defection from inside his own party on the tax issue, and a cultural assault from Pat Buchanan's nativist, isolationist 1992 primary campaign that may have fatally damaged his candidacy and presaged President Donald Trump a quarter century later.
However, that has not been the case for some time as artificial forces, defined here as unusual and unprecedented global central bank policy, have driven valuations to levels that have, in prior cycles such as with HY spreads, clearly presaged trouble ahead.
Over two decades ago its stereoscopic imagery presaged the virtual reality headsets of today, although it was limited to monochromatic graphics and your neck inevitably ached while leaning down to play it on the awkward tripod of sorts the device sat on.
He strategized that the state could achieve its goals by combining military, cyber, diplomatic, economic and cultural tools -- the same grab bag of tactics that presaged Russia's annexation of Crimea and incursion into Ukraine and morphed into its meddling in the US election.
" Ms. Swift's appearance back in the country fold was presaged earlier this week when Little Big Town, which won its fifth straight vocal group of the year award on Wednesday, announced that the pop singer had written its latest single, "Better Man.
In hindsight, the series presaged what would come to be a new gold standard for television: big budgets, A-list talent and an auteur creator — in this case Steven Spielberg, whose Amblin Entertainment spent up to $22 million per half-hour episode.
But New York also spawned Ms. magazine and through Gloria Steinem and Gail Sheehy presaged feminism; it popularized "radical chic" and other cultural memes; and it punctured (and in some cases perpetuated) myths about who wielded power in a constantly changing city.
In the show's finale, in 2015, Knope—whose tribulations eerily presaged those of Hillary Clinton, down to a hacking scandal—was headed to the White House, her steely sunshine having warmed her friends' lives, from her libertarian boss to her cynical millennial intern.
In the end the big reset that's been presaged all season did transpire, but it was not a science-fiction or supernatural phenomenon — à la "Back to the Future," or the "Superman" clip we saw near the end — but a coding one.
When they came bursting out of L.A. in '08 clothed in vintage formal wear and ruffled tuxedo shirts, playing breezy Brazilian Tropicalía mixed with early '70s psychedelic soul and romantic pop, there wasn't much about the band, much less their name, that presaged this.
In 2014, my colleague embarked on a 48-hour binge, liking every single post that came his way — an experiment that ended with a ravenous News Feed sending him down a dark, polarized rabbit hole that in many ways presaged the hyperpartisan hellscape to come.
Financial markets went into a tailspin last week after the Treasury yield curve briefly inverted when short-term yields traded above those of long-term paper - the inversion has presaged previous recessions and is widely watched by markets as a harbinger of a downturn.
There are dozens of stories about the birth of her fourth child, as though it had to be presaged by some acknowledgment on the part of the universe, but the most familiar has it that Tota was dancing when she felt a sudden pain.
His victory came just months after a far-right rally in Charlottesville at which an anti-racist protestor was murdered; it presaged Democratic victories later that year in Alabama, where Doug Jones took Jeff Sessions's old Senate seat, and in the following year's mid-terms.
Washington (CNN)The Senate's top Republican and Democrat on Sunday presaged the floor battle to come this week over Supreme Court nominee Neil Gorsuch, offering opposing views on the likelihood of his confirmation that set the stage for a "nuclear" showdown when the chamber votes.
The New York Times called the contest in 1993 "the Race Race," not least because Mr. Giuliani accused his opponent of retreating into "black victimization" and, in another move that presaged Mr. Trump, had off-duty firefighters and police officers act as poll watchers.
The talks between Mr. Khalilzad and the Taliban, while full of caveats, have raised some parallels to Henry A. Kissinger's talks with North Vietnamese leaders, which presaged the American pullout from South Vietnam in 1973 and the collapse of South Vietnam two years later.
Indeed, the German chlorine attacks against French, Algerian, British and Canadian troops around Ypres -- site of the war's most relentless fighting -- in April 1915 presaged a world in which weapons of mass destruction became at least a permanent background anxiety and often a source of intense terror.
Yet beneath the finger-pointing and the victim-blaming and the accusations of panic lobbed against a people that know a little something about persecution, there is the same old bigotry — the hatred of Jews that has presaged the death of so many seemingly civilized societies.
Drawn mostly from MoMA's unrivaled Miró collection, this fabulous exhibition is best when tracing the artist's brilliant early twists on Modernism and their swift ascent to "The Birth of the World," a 1927 masterpiece that presaged the drips and stains of radical painting two decades hence.
Yet that's exactly what happened on Wednesday, when the House Judiciary Committee passed a Republican-authored bill approvingly citing Hafez al-Assad's 1980 crackdown on the Muslim Brotherhood — which culminated in the 1982 Hama massacre, a mass killing of civilians that indirectly presaged the current civil war.
A different kind of therapy is offered, in the form of drinks that blur medicine and pleasure, like kvass, a 1,000-year-old concoction of fermented rye whose flavor profile oddly presaged Dr. Pepper, and Barbie-pink kisel, cranberry juice thickened with potato starch, evoking a melting Popsicle.
" The NAS report's conclusions, as described in an article by longtime federal district judge turned Harvard law professor, Nancy Gertner, presaged PCAST's: "It questioned whether the underlying research justified the claims forensic scientists were regularly making in courts throughout this country, claims that they had been making for decades.
Source: FactSet The good news: While there are some parallels between July 2007 and 2017 — elevated equity valuations, a mature economic expansion, high corporate debt levels and broad expectations of improving earnings in the year to come — the crucial factors that presaged the '07 market peak are not present.
Now I have a question for you, one involving another way in which men's and women's wear are in dialogue: Was the Rick Owens Mastodon show — which presaged in January many of the motifs he repeated in February for women — as memorable for you as it was for me?
The example he set with his pies — impeccable ingredients riding crusts as fine as fresh bakery bread, steamy and crisp from the wood-fired oven — presaged America's embrace of craft pizza and opened minds to the idea that superlative pies could be the measure of a great chef.
MIDLOTHIAN, Va. — The Liberal Women of Chesterfield County did not exist when Representative Dave Brat, propelled by Tea Party-infused energy, shocked the Republican establishment in 2014 and defeated the House majority leader, Eric Cantor, in a primary triumph here that presaged even greater political upheaval two years later.
While Fry was exceptional in some ways — an impressive student who graduated from Harvard having created an influential literary magazine with his friend Lincoln Kirstein, a co-founder of the New York City Ballet — there was little about him that would have presaged his outsize acts of bravery.
It's perhaps not surprising that the industry's embrace of diversity and representation also presaged a year in which people started obsessively talking about the movies again, from endless memes about the shocking ending to Avengers: Infinity War to endless debates over the pop music politics of A Star Is Born.
It's not necessarily the end of the bull market, but a 5, 10 percent move to the downside, which is being presaged by the fact that all of these commodities are really not moving up, is a very, very interesting possibility," Schlossberg said Tuesday in an interview on CNBC's "Trading Nation.
The Park Avenue apartment where Mr. Kagan lived with his wife, Erica Wilson — a needlepoint queen whose public-television show presaged the Martha Stewart era of do-it-yourself home improvement — was a wild, quirky monument to his career, complete with seemingly every major piece of furniture he ever put his stamp on.
Da Nang, Vietnam (CNN)When President Donald Trump awoke on his first day in Asia to news that a gunman had massacred more than two dozen people at a church in Texas, it presaged a week of events back home that -- in a well-worn pattern -- have overshadowed his attempts at diplomacy abroad.
Asimov wasn't the first to bemoan sharing, but his inquiry presaged a decade in New York dominated by a new type of cuisine, one defined less by provenance or a chef's palate than by the way it was meant to be consumed, with each diner taking a single bite before relinquishing the plate.
Presaged by academic pioneers like Harry J. Elam Jr—who forewarned how it "remains exceedingly attractive and possible in this post-black, post-soul age of black cultural traffic to love black cool and not love black people"—Jackson remixes a familiar pedagogy with refreshing insight, digging into the tangled politics of appropriation.
The Dutch system's rules presaged the rules in the Affordable Care Act on preexisting conditions: guaranteed issue (nobody could be denied health insurance because of their medical history), community rating (nobody could be charged higher premiums for their health status), and an individual mandate (everyone must carry insurance or pay a penalty).
In a brief news conference that presaged the charm offensive to come, Mr. Johnson said he was confident of getting the approval of Parliament for what he called a "great deal," not just for Britain but also for "our friends in the E.U." Matina Stevis-Gridneff contributed reporting from Brussels, and Anna Schaverien from London.
Commissioned by a Philadelphia discothèque owner in 1967 to write a piece for the opening of the club, Riley taped the Harvey Averne Dozen's soul single "You're No Good" off the radio and transformed it into a 20-minute track that presaged the future of dance music edits and hip-hop's sampling and looping.
And looking further back in history, it was Pennsylvania Democrat Harris Wofford's surprise win in the 1991 special election to replace the late U.S. Senator John Heinz that signaled a shift towards the Democrats in the state and nationwide that clearly presaged Bill Clinton's victory over George H.W. Bush for the White House a year later.
The new material was presaged by a mysterious darkening of the band's social media presence, and the Paul Thomas Anderson helmed video for early highlight "Daydreaming" that surfaced days later features bandleader Thom Yorke trudging determinedly through warehouses, beaches, and other people's houses to come to rest sprawled out by a fire inside a snowy mountainside cave.
Mr. Bush's tenure was shorter than he had hoped, and ended ingloriously in a lopsided defeat at the hands of an upstart governor from Arkansas, Bill Clinton, presaged by a huge drop in Mr. Bush's approval rating from nearly 90 percent at the time of the 1991 Gulf War to the mid-30s in the summer before the election.
The party has failed to win any significant races since President Trump's election, and the fundamentals are weighted in their favor in Virginia, where the president is deeply unpopular and the last time a Republican won a statewide top-of-ballot race was in 2009, when Bob McDonnell's election as governor presaged Republican gains nationally the following year.
Mr. Stewart recalls that Mayor Jimmy Walker endeared himself to New Yorkers in 1932 by staging a "We Want Beer" parade during Prohibition and that Mayor La Guardia, in a nanny-state imperative that presaged Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg's campaign against the Big Gulp, banned the sale of artichokes because the market was controlled by organized crime.
If Mr. Biden's first debate held out the possibility of a rocket-like ascent by Ms. Harris, this one may have presaged a different trajectory for the race — one that has the former vice president persistently unable to quell resistance on the left, but with no singular rival emerging anytime soon as a focal point for that resistance.
If Mr. Biden's first debate held out the possibility of a rocket-like ascent by Ms. Harris, this one may have presaged a different trajectory for the race — one that has the former vice president persistently unable to quell resistance on the left, but with no singular rival emerging anytime soon as a focal point for that resistance.
The fact that Wilson — the president of a nation more than 3,000 miles removed from the closest battlefront, a nation directly involved in the war for less than a year at that point — presumed to dictate conditions for peace at all was remarkable, and it presaged the outsize role the United States would soon take on.
Castro's decision to relocate his contingent to the heart of black New York quickened the falling out to come and presaged key pillars of Cuban foreign policy over the course of the next half-century: the explicit conflation of Cuban sovereignty with worldwide liberation struggles, particularly in Africa, and the strategic leveraging of U.S. moral hypocrisy in service of revolutionary ideology.
Actor George Clooney was asked at the Cannes Film Festival on Thursday if his new movie, "Money Monster," presaged a future under a Donald TrumpDonald John TrumpPossible GOP challenger says Trump doesn't doesn't deserve reelection, but would vote for him over Democrat O'Rourke: Trump driving global, U.S. economy into recession Manchin: Trump has 'golden opportunity' on gun reforms MORE White House.
But he ended up finding a path to victory that the autopsy report's authors had apparently written off (though some of their messaging recommendations presaged it) but other conservative analysts had identified: to mobilize conservative low-propensity voters, specifically whites without a college degree, and gain back ground in the Rust Belt and Upper Midwest — Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Ohio, Michigan, Wisconsin, and Iowa.
Early ideas about the possibilities of a phonographic film projector inspired new uses of the then radical technology of film, and as early as 1922 Moholy-Nagy foresaw a time when the phonograph would be transformed from an instrument of reproduction to one of production; his ideas presaged the music of such later luminaries as Karlheinz Stockhausen and John Cage.
If you've ever sparred with a Radiohead fan, you know that "OK Computer" 's wobbly first steps toward avant-electronica presaged a generation of gear-headed punks, and that "Kid A" 's abandonment of guitar cliché gives it an unmatched stature in the indie alternative canon—the single "The National Anthem" (2000) manages to make baritone saxophone sound like record scratches.
When he found himself at the brainstorming session, Gunning had recently completed his second tour as a sort of Johnny Appleseed for A.I.: Starting in the 1990s, he has founded hundreds of projects, from the first application of machine-learning techniques to the internet, which presaged the first search engines, to the project that eventually spun off as Siri, Apple's voice-controlled assistant.
Nick Fury in the then-groundbreaking tag scene of the first "Iron Man" film in 2008 that presaged the emergence of a greater shared universe and the notion of a superhero team in the form of the Avengers, "Far From Home's" end sequence puts Fury to clever use once more as the MCU prepares to enter what Marvel Studios refers to off-screen as Phase Four.
It isn't the form of communication in the United States, but so much of what the middle-brow tastemakers sneer at in the ring presaged the carnival world we live in now: Trump, a McMahon on the cabinet, the obsession with being "in the know" when you're convinced what you're seeing is kayfabe, the return of high dudgeon oratory via the art of the promo.
For Sneed, Mayer's work presaged trends of social engagement and participatory art in the 1990s and 19823s — as in the example of Thomas Hirschhorn's monuments to philosophers that become community platforms in the low-income neighborhoods in which they are built — while also belonging to a wider historical narrative of the influence of 1970s feminist art on today's socially engaged, participatory ways of making art.
A presciently-titled Wired article from 2001—the headline "When Gamer Humor Attacks" is a lot less innocent post-Gamergate—charted the meme's rise from a flash video to forum mainstay, and its description of the world's response presaged what happens today when a new meme emerges from the ether of the web to freak out the Olds and the Normals: A sign of simpler times?
Still, Professor Czitrom's evocative account reveals that the nexus between politics, policing and biblical trespasses in the late 19th century introduced the term "organized crime," spawned the Patrolmen's Benevolent Association, demonstrated the power of mass media and even presaged reality television shows when George Appo, a notorious swindler, and Tom Gould, owner of a disreputable saloon, played themselves when "In the Tenderloin" opened at a theater on the Bowery.
And it presaged the release this week of a new Gap video campaign featuring Rumer Willis (daughter of Demi Moore), T J Mizell (son of Jam Master Jay), Coco Gordon (daughter of Kim Gordon), Lizzy Jagger (daughter of Mick Jagger), Chelsea Tyler (daughter of Steven Tyler) and Evan Ross (son of Diana Ross) — all of whose famous forebears once upon a time also made their own Gap ads.
The fourth night's theme is "Make America One Again," a much vaguer unifying principle than Monday's "Make American Safe Again" (which presaged a night full of attacks on Hillary Clinton's national security record and stern warnings about the threat of "radical Islamist terrorism," which was always referred to by that name) and Tuesday's "Make America Work Again" (which had a business/economy theme, albeit a looser one than the national security theme of night one).
This faith persists against all contrary evidence provided not only by the Trump era—in which the party has, among other things, abetted Trump's attacks on Biden's own son—but also by the Obama era, during which Biden saw, as his own recollection of the Garland saga illustrates, the GOP both frustrate Democrats with strategic intransigence and lean in to a conspiratorial racism that presaged Trump and will endure after his presidency.
The third night's theme is "Make America First Again," a much vaguer unifying principle than Monday's "Make American Safe Again" (which presaged a night full of attacks on Hillary Clinton's national security record and stern warnings about the threat of "radical Islamist terrorism," which was always referred to by that name) and Tuesday's "Make America Work Again" (which had a business/economy theme, albeit a looser one than the national security theme of night one).
"I always say, to students in particular, 'I know you all think we all hate each other, but we haven't had a single incident where a congressman from South Carolina came over to the Senate and almost beat to death a senator from Massachusetts' " — an allusion to the infamous May 1856 episode in which the pro-slavery Democratic congressman Preston Brooks stormed across the Capitol and badly beat Charles Sumner, an abolitionist Republican senator, with a walking cane, a nation-dividing scandal that presaged the Civil War.

No results under this filter, show 345 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.