It's a Cold War language, and at the time it resonated with the public, it resonated with politicians, to a certain extent it resonated with international audiences.
|
|
And they are not just here tonight because they resonated with audiences Hollywood often ignores, they are here because they told stories that resonated with everyone.
|
|
The conclusion she reached — "all women are Bunnies" — resonated.
|
|
But his message resonated with voters fed up with austerity.
|
|
Even in death Awlaki's message has resonated with American militants.
|
|
When I tasted it, it resonated very powerfully with me.
|
|
Few movies have resonated at the Oscars quite like Titanic.
|
|
Fields also said that their talk "resonated" with the president.
|
|
Nizlek heard about the campaign online, and it immediately resonated.
|
|
Why do you think he's resonated so much with fans?
|
|
Mr Middelhoff's tale of hubris resonated beyond the corporate world.
|
|
His words still resonated inside and around TIAA Bank Field.
|
|
It's an app that also resonated with the TC team.
|
|
It was very special to them, it resonated with them.
|
|
One particular review that has resonated widely is Jackie Aina's.
|
|
Little of what I saw or read resonated with me.
|
|
Their honesty and candor has resonated with millions of viewers.
|
|
The idea of the desert being barren resonated with me.
|
|
But Chicken Boy's unique LA history resonated with the committee.
|
|
His model of peaceful but persistent resistance resonated with activists.
|
|
Despite the edginess, Bowie's work still resonated with the mainstream.
|
|
Why do you think this gun control message resonated now?
|
|
I think it resonated with me for a couple reasons.
|
|
Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump's slogan has resonated with her.
|
|
In Kosovo, the decision resonated well beyond the football pitch.
|
|
But trans people weren't the only ones it resonated with.
|
|
Petersen's essay, which went viral, clearly resonated with young Americans.
|
|
Was there anything that resonated with your situation in Hollywood?
|
|
The street resonated with the sound of musicians at practice.
|
|
Was there one activist's story that resonated most with you?
|
|
Yet his noncommittal debate answers about Darroch resonated much more.
|
|
Some such details resonated with me because of their imagery.
|
|
How their pain resonated with us and caught our attention.
|
|
But throughout that process, her question to herself has resonated.
|
|
The purple label on the record really resonated with me.
|
|
Ms. Smith's story has also resonated on the individual level.
|
|
Did you get the sense that it resonated with people?
|
|
Mily: Everything that you're saying with the #MeToo movement resonated.
|
|
Christine Blasey Ford's testimony resonated with many of those present.
|
|
That view has resonated with drug court judges and sheriffs.
|
|
But I can also see why it's resonated with people.
|
|
The dynamics of yore, she found, resonated in modern times.
|
|
The news of Ms. Kim's death resonated throughout South Korea.
|
|
Reading these questions from our listeners resonated deeply with me.
|
|
Their message seems to have resonated at the state level.
|
|
Which is really to say that it resonated with me.
|
|
However, it is one clip in particular that resonated with people.
|
|
When Brown returned, his voice resonated loudest in protest against McNair.
|
|
That show really resonated with people on such an amazing level.
|
|
I didn't know what it was that had resonated with people.
|
|
And that reluctance may indicate why Norma's death resonated so much.
|
|
"She spoke from the heart, it resonated with me," she said.
|
|
In turn, Apple's efforts in Japan have resonated around the world.
|
|
It resonated so profoundly at the time, and it still does.
|
|
They wanted something that resonated on an emotional level with them.
|
|
I have been there myself, so the exhibition resonated with me.
|
|
I think that's one reason psychedelics have always resonated with Americans.
|
|
What was it about your show that resonated with these people?
|
|
Overall, the generosity of each person involved really resonated with me.
|
|
It really came through that these women resonated with each other.
|
|
Schiff's closing remarks resonated on the Democratic side of the aisle.
|
|
What's one of the first records that ever resonated with you?
|
|
It was a real agenda and it resonated beyond the niches.
|
|
But Frogwares' approach definitely resonated more with me than did Cyanide's.
|
|
It's easy to see why Cixous' manifesto resonated far and wide.
|
|
Whether this message resonated with voters on March 13 is unclear.
|
|
No wonder Donald Trump's message resonated so strongly with this demographic.
|
|
But at Trump rallies, the proposal resonated in a different way.
|
|
No Democrat resonated more with the nation this year than you.
|
|
The letter resonated with countless women who suffer from eating disorders.
|
|
The film, lighter in aesthetic and tone, resonated well with moviegoers.
|
|
The scene where Cate Blanchett portrays a newscaster resonated with me.
|
|
"I can also see why it's resonated with people," he said.
|
|
But the ad actually resonated with Democrats more than he expected.
|
|
This is the landscape in which Trump's "America First" language resonated.
|
|
In the way that John Dean's "cancer on the presidency" resonated.
|
|
States. It also, however, resonated abroad, and particularly in the United
|
|
All of these videos have resonated with Democrats, especially younger voters.
|
|
It is a message that has resonated beyond the United States.
|
|
It was an organ concert and it resonated with me tremendously.
|
|
The charges have resonated and forced Mr. Garrett onto the defensive.
|
|
Instead, telling the actual story of the brand resonated much more.
|
|
It was an incredibly selfless move that resonated with the team.
|
|
Which insights and suggestions from the article resonated with you most?
|
|
Were there particular experiences with other art that resonated with you?
|
|
It resonated with a lot of people in working-class neighborhoods.
|
|
However people viewed him, his actions resonated across the whole country.
|
|
In South Vietnam, the execution image resonated in a different way.
|
|
The fundamentalist message resonated with hundreds of thousands of white Americans.
|
|
As shuttered stores spread across the landscape, their argument has resonated.
|
|
"The themes of the film resonated with them, too," he said.
|
|
What did you see on your trip that resonated with you?
|
|
Although they were intended for children, they also resonated with adults.
|
|
That message appears to have resonated with at least some conservatives.
|
|
Analysts say Modi's nationalist rhetoric has resonated deeply in the north.
|
|
But Molitor had 2808,143 hits, a number that resonated with voters.
|
|
The message resonated with many workers, although some found it condescending.
|
|
"I think it just really resonated with moms everywhere," she said.
|
|
But as a native of the area, he admitted it resonated.
|
|
Kang's insights about the fraught nature of Asian-American identity resonated.
|
|
The show's empathetic viewpoint also resonated in the wake of #MeToo.
|
|
This case has resonated the most in the surrounding rural community.
|
|
"He told me something that really resonated with me," Lopez says.
|
|
Why do you think "Come from Away" has resonated so much?
|
|
Issues that have always resonated with me were race and class.
|
|
She and I have similar names — maybe that resonated with him.
|
|
Years later, I will be surprised by what resonated with me.
|
|
"The pitch has resonated more with more experienced entrepreneurs, " she said.
|
|
But there was something about Trump that resonated with these bikers.
|
|
The results from the Hoosier State resonated deeply across both parties.
|
|
And Trump's preoccupation and fascination with taking him out has resonated.
|
|
"You can see why 'Make America Great Again' resonated," he said.
|
|
Do you think that is why your posts on Twitter resonated?
|
|
The story most likely would have resonated with young women regardless.
|
|
Instead, the words of the victims' loved ones resonated most deeply.
|
|
The project has certainly resonated with audiences at home and abroad.
|
|
It was a funny voice that I thought resonated really well.
|
|
That's what's wild – that her obsession has resonated [with] my own.
|
|
He's created several characters who have really resonated in our popular culture.
|
|
So I think that's why it resonated and that's why it worked.
|
|
Farkhunda's murder resonated in ways previous abuses of Afghan women had not.
|
|
We've had great success with creative concepts that have resonated with consumers.
|
|
What in the book have you found has resonated most with readers?
|
|
"When I read this, it just really resonated with me," said Theron.
|
|
After all, hearing Trump call Mexicans rapists and drug dealers has resonated.
|
|
It was a message that obviously resonated with the district's Democratic base.
|
|
The image has resonated with many, as it has also gone viral.
|
|
One story in particular, from a Facebook user, has resonated with Cooper.
|
|
"We wanted to develop benefits that hopefully resonated with users," he said.
|
|
The family-friendly project resonated with audiences, landing a solid A CinemaScore.
|
|
Clearly, there was something that actually resonated with audiences across the country.
|
|
Recently Twitter user Gabe Rivera articulated a modern annoyance that resonated deeply.
|
|
The actual story is powerful for young women and resonated with me.
|
|
"I'd never met him, but his story resonated with me," Ardeneaux recalls.
|
|
This retrenchment has resonated with officers in Rockford and around the country.
|
|
Gallagher says the story resonated with his own personal experience with struggling.
|
|
PISANI: AND YET TAX CUTS HAVE CERTAINLY RESONATED IN THE STOCK MARKET.
|
|
A popular post by Mulbah Willie seems to have resonated with many.
|
|
Instead, her unbridled happiness at achieving a personal best has resonated widely.
|
|
As one who himself lost an election, Nixon's words resonated with me.
|
|
Given that this realization coincided with the new year, it resonated. Severely.
|
|
A young man was carrying a sign that emotionally resonated with me.
|
|
But his exaggerated style resonated with young boys, fueling sales for Marvel.
|
|
As you've gotten older has that idea resonated even more for you?
|
|
Muay Thai was a whole other animal, and it resonated with me.
|
|
She gives off a very 'real woman' vibe that resonated with me.
|
|
The stories resonated with many of our viewers, and comments flooded in.
|
|
It just resonated with me and I appreciated their words of wisdom.
|
|
It has resonated in a country with a sometimes dangerous work ethic.
|
|
Exploring the spread of fast food on the continent resonated with me.
|
|
But for some reason, at the United Nations on Tuesday, it resonated.
|
|
Hands down, I've never read something that resonated with me so strongly.
|
|
That experience, too, resonated with many women responding to the Facebook callout.
|
|
Much of his work resonated with personal memories of rejection and depression.
|
|
That line really resonated with me because I felt the same way.
|
|
That particular pitch resonated with Gretsch, who invested as an angel investor.
|
|
The show's irreverent style and disregard for established comic formulas resonated worldwide.
|
|
But its ultranationalist leader's focus on decriminalizing cannabis has resonated with voters.
|
|
Trump's message to "drain the swamp" truly resonated with the American people.
|
|
Bernie Sanders's message has resonated with the Latino electorate, particularly young voters.
|
|
Mr. Ryan's ideas have always resonated with the corporate Republican donor class.
|
|
But her message resonated with millions of dispossessed South Africans, commentators say.
|
|
What detail or details from this article resonated with you the most?
|
|
That story resonated far beyond her life, and it still does today.
|
|
It was a refrain that, in recent months, has resonated throughout Indonesia.
|
|
So we took to the internet, where our style of humor resonated.
|
|
There, another part of King's speech resonated with Buffett, according to Schroeder.
|
|
One of Sessions' addresses to the workforce, in particular, resonated with judges.
|
|
"It resonated," said Suzanne Wise, executive director of the Nebraska Arts Council.
|
|
That resonated with me and felt like a potential bipartisan path forward.
|
|
My stepmom framed it in a way that really resonated with me.
|
|
Macron's message resonated in a center hollowed out by intra-party factionalism.
|
|
It was a message that resonated with the faithful in the audience.
|
|
Long afterward, the image resonated with Californians fed up with campus unrest.
|
|
Has the Weinstein saga, and Berlusconi's connections to it, resonated in Italy?
|
|
It was no surprise the Soviet Jewry movement resonated in Squirrel Hill.
|
|
The protests have resonated in other marginalised areas, where demonstrations have broken out.
|
|
Through all these accounts, he's resonated with a core audience: African-American millennials.
|
|
A lot of kids really resonated with his lyrics as a young kid.
|
|
But it also resonated because it felt, in many ways, not so unusual.
|
|
It also resonated because it promised an easy solution to a hard problem.
|
|
But the moments that resonated felt, even as they entertained, like anything but.
|
|
We didn't worry about 90 people's opinions, and it resonated through the artwork.
|
|
This clearly resonated with the audience, which when I left, was still clapping.
|
|
Her themes of sex, love, infidelity, family and home have resonated with many.
|
|
Duterte's outlandish promises resonated with a public fed up with crime and corruption.
|
|
This is why that era of De La resonated with many Gen Xers.
|
|
Essentially because the brand's logos in some way resonated with the far-right.
|
|
"The history of the diamond resonated with her on many levels," says Amador.
|
|
And not one of Clinton's proposals or plans has resonated with the public.
|
|
It's clear that something about her story has resonated with Queer Eye viewers.
|
|
But something resonated, and Kioko signed up for a class on a whim.
|
|
I've used many, but the whole articulating hinge idea never resonated with me.
|
|
It's always been on my mind to come, but it resonated more today.
|
|
Student activists said they were pleased that the case had resonated so widely.
|
|
The next scene, taking place in an Islamic stronghold in Africa, also resonated.
|
|
Antonow resonated with Seinfeld's words, googled meditation classes, and learned how to meditate.
|
|
THUMP: What was the first record you remember that really resonated with you?
|
|
Throughout the roadshow, we saw that our story resonated really well with investors.
|
|
The man is later diagnosed with cyclic vomiting syndrome, which resonated with Wilson.
|
|
His immigrant background resonated with millions of Americans who came from similar circumstances.
|
|
The actor said he appreciates how much the film resonated with his fans.
|
|
"There is something about the younger generation who this resonated with," Fulton says.
|
|
But Zakim said he believed his voting rights message has resonated among Democrats.
|
|
It resonated deeply with what was once a core group of Democratic voters.
|
|
But the increased heroin use resonated in another significant and far-reaching way.
|
|
Here are some messages that resonated the most among users in each country.
|
|
The call resonated because it reflects what the vast majority of Americans believe.
|
|
But no model ever resonated with drivers quite as well as the 2911.
|
|
BUT THOSE DON'T SEEM TO HAVE RESONATED THAT MUCH WITH THE GENERAL PUBLIC.
|
|
In the revelry of the Mets' playoff celebration on Saturday, one moment resonated.
|
|
Do you have any theories about why this story has resonated so widely?
|
|
"Obviously the arguments of Knight Vinke never really resonated," the UBS spokesman said.
|
|
"Financial independence is a phrase we found resonated very well," Ms. Davidson said.
|
|
More inflammatory issues such as immigration have apparently resonated more with GOP voters.
|
|
It made it more universal and resonated for a longer period of time.
|
|
He was the foundation, and his movies resonated strongly in the black community.
|
|
Traffic has since fallen, but his success has resonated inside One World Trade.
|
|
Erasmus's declaration (in his "Enchiridion") that "monasticism is not piety" resonated with him.
|
|
But the sound resonated far beyond the region, pretty much from the beginning.
|
|
Their live presence was really impactful and that resonated with us a lot.
|
|
But as an adult watching it, it resonated in a whole different way.
|
|
The focus on families and friendships over rap sheets has resonated with viewers.
|
|
Clearly, hustle isn't lacking in her back to school routine and it resonated.
|
|
But as for why this particular line really resonated with people — who knows?
|
|
What was it about this opportunity that resonated with you and your mission?
|
|
It resonated because French society had gone through a thought process about #MeToo.
|
|
People were really rooting for him and resonated with his story of redemption.
|
|
One anecdote in particular, about Colonel Sanders and Kentucky Fried Chicken, really resonated.
|
|
But his words have resonated far beyond the gates of JNU's leafy campus.
|
|
Gleason also argued that Trump's message resonated among some Democrats in the state.
|
|
For Ms. Kelly, Mr. Trump's CNN event may have resonated in other ways.
|
|
It's true that upward mobility has always resonated deeply in the United States.
|
|
Others said that Chuang's claims resonated with their own experiences at the company.
|
|
He added that it has particularly resonated with poor voters in South Carolina.
|
|
That resonated with core policy goals articulated by the former Illinois U.S. senator.
|
|
" Something about the way he had said it resonated with Mr. Brent. "O.
|
|
On Twitter, many argued that the story's contradictions resonated with their own experiences.
|
|
The topics have resonated with working-class populations outside the typical Republican base.
|
|
The message of these Kennedys resonated with a big tent of various constituencies.
|
|
The criticism resonated with members of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus, such as Rep.
|
|
But I do have to say that Burning Cane has resonated with people.
|
|
The image quickly resonated on social media and got memed because of course.
|
|
Which of these stories in particular impressed or resonated with you, and why?
|
|
That someone did take us seriously meant that we touched something that resonated.
|
|
Her fierce opposition to Trump's immigration policies resonated with the state's large Latino electorate.
|
|
Founders Daniel Chait and Jon Stross "wildly impressed" Hirschland, but their pitch also resonated.
|
|
The show's message of inclusion has resonated with children of all ages and abilities.
|
|
It resonated big-time and, today, the company has around two million active customers.
|
|
The essay resonated, so much so that Lofgren turned it into the 2016 book.
|
|
But I admit that some trends in what I learned resonated with me personally.
|
|
"She just had something that really resonated with me," Derek says in an email.
|
|
He didn't really offer any solid policy proposals that resonated with the public either.
|
|
There is no doubt that Lemonade resonated deeply with many people, particularly black women.
|
|
Rogers said Obama was so emotional because Trump's "ridiculous" comments resonated personally with her.
|
|
Birnbaum also said the company's marketing programs resonated with customers and helped increase sales.
|
|
And the beverage innovation all in our cold platform that is resonated with customers.
|
|
He presented complex, sobering science in a visual format that resonated with the masses.
|
|
The heavy themes of the film resonated with him, Sivan told The Hollywood Reporter.
|
|
The Echo has resonated with consumers and has been a runaway hit for Amazon.
|
|
He was a magical, powerful player who resonated with people who were our heroes.
|
|
The scene resonated with many viewers who took to social media to praise it.
|
|
Still, the irony does not seem to have resonated with his campaign brain trust.
|
|
That's resonated in particular with consumers, who tend to be female, the company said.
|
|
They resonated with me because that's the kind of character I like to write.
|
|
The World War One setting of the game has resonated with players and critics.
|
|
" Adds Josh, "People tell us that what we're doing has resonated in their lives.
|
|
Yet his lurid warning about the dangers of mass immigration resonated with many Britons.
|
|
In hyper-partisan America, these conflicting responses have resonated with very different electoral factions.
|
|
The experience of turning the page on a onetime enemy resonated deeply with Kerry.
|
|
That feeling resonated within me, and I wanted to be a part of it.
|
|
But the idea of power lost and regained resonated with non-Fillory storylines, too.
|
|
This, obviously, has resonated with the billions of people who rely on the service.
|
|
" Sparks posted a similar motivational message recently, writing, "This resonated with me so deeply.
|
|
And that is why a recent New York magazine story really resonated with me.
|
|
"The actual story is powerful for young women and resonated with me," she said.
|
|
Beyoncé's Lemonade has really resonated with Lena Dunham, and she's not sorry about it.
|
|
Something about the band resonated in America more fully than it did back home.
|
|
The tweet, which garnered over 7,000 retweets, seemed to have resonated with women everywhere.
|
|
A spokesperson from First Look Media told Mashable, Chavez's work really resonated with them.
|
|
"Freud is Not Dead," resonated in an era lived under the threat of nuclear
|
|
His right-leaning, anti-immigration views have resonated with Austrians and European leaders alike.
|
|
But her message might not have resonated with a significant portion of her constituents.
|
|
But such products haven't really resonated with the public beyond the early-adopter crowd.
|
|
It wasn't just the boosted numbers of police but also the message that resonated.
|
|
For Chavez, the changes foreseen by the two agreements resonated on a personal level.
|
|
The themes of change and saying goodbye resonated with viewers in a powerful way.
|
|
The return trip resonated because it put his job, and the N.F.L., in perspective.
|
|
But that character has resonated, and I see that, and I'm inspired by that.
|
|
That argument resonated with millions who had not experienced the gains of the recovery.
|
|
Health-care issues have resonated with and energized the Democratic base during Trump's presidency.
|
|
Longfellow's words resonated beautifully with the conference's atmosphere: friendship, love of life and peace.
|
|
They see the world very differently, and the Trump message resonated with them. Absolutely.
|
|
Below, I've rounded up the insights from SIY that most resonated with me. 1.
|
|
That is a message that resonated with some Roma on the outskirts of Bucharest.
|
|
Jae: In The Sopranos, the narrative between Dr. Melfi and Tony Soprano really resonated.
|
|
Yet inside France, and especially outside Paris, Mr. Macron's agenda resonated as class warfare.
|
|
But Sunday night's five-set win over the sixth-seeded Cilic resonated deeply, too.
|
|
Watching Forced Perspective, it really resonated with me because I'm also bipolar type two.
|
|
It really resonated with them — 'It can't be bad if my wife does it.
|
|
The announcement of the Bombardier tariffs resonated like a grenade thrown into the talks.
|
|
"This debate has not really resonated with Australia," said Alex Oliver, the poll's author.
|
|
Fink's 83 letter arguing that companies need to "serve a social purpose" resonated widely.
|
|
They were just words, of course, but Terry could only hope that they resonated.
|
|
Alec's story also resonated with those parents who were simply struggling with the costs.
|
|
Vudu has also dabbled in original programming, but nothing has really resonated with viewers.
|
|
But the way the story has resonated suggests that something is in the air.
|
|
Wordplay VARIETY PUZZLE — Today's quote by the author PAGAN KENNEDY really resonated with me.
|
|
Still, his presentation that day resonated with Aliza Abusch-Magder, a high school student.
|
|
His campaign resonated because it connected with a sizable piece of the Republican electorate.
|
|
I wanted to draw them [voters] with blue … something that really resonated with place.
|
|
The process-oriented work of the artist Shozo Shimamoto, in particular, resonated with him.
|
|
Her message of bipartisanship resonated for several voters who came to hear her speak.
|
|
But she read the Cornell Tech proposal, and its emphasis on applied technology resonated.
|
|
The board's tweets resonated with readers, garnering more than 12,500 likes and 7,300 shares.
|
|
Not surprisingly, the articles that resonated most with our readers this year concerned politics.
|
|
" He added, "And country music, collectively, the way they responded, it resonated with me.
|
|
Trump's economic populism — his attacks on elites and free trade agreements — must have resonated.
|
|
Maybe this is why Young's raw, disturbing, hilarious, and unsparing book resonated with me.
|
|
But his moderate personality and politics clearly resonated with voters in New Hampshire tonight.
|
|
They were true critics in that sense, and that resonated with me as well.
|
|
Benita's tale of triumph after unemployment resonated with strangers of all demographics, ages, and races.
|
|
The product and the heart of what we're trying to do resonated with women internationally.
|
|
But 22018 will go down as the year that the company truly resonated with investors.
|
|
The actor told Deadline why he thinks the movie has resonated with so many people.
|
|
Out of all the people that you met, whose story resonated with you the most?
|
|
Trump's get-tough platform on trade has resonated in these Republican-held districts, Kondik said.
|
|
It found that the more made-for-mobile the content seemed, the more it resonated.
|
|
So that's why the quote resonated with me; I felt it was painful but honest.
|
|
The tweet has resonated with users frustrated by the current system, receiving hundreds of retweets.
|
|
And two years ago, maybe, the alcoholism aspect of it would have resonated more vibrantly.
|
|
"It resonated in my heart that it felt wrong," said Heather, speaking about those policies.
|
|
But one Twitter user, former President Barack Obama, had a response that resonated with millions.
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Indonesia is the world's biggest Muslim-majority nation and the Rohingya issue has resonated there.
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But her presence resonated, attendees said, communicating a measure of solidarity in a wrenching moment.
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Despite Ehrenreich's efforts, this radical message hasn't resonated among them as widely as she hoped.
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Their new vision resonated with executives at Illumina, a company that makes gene-sequencing equipment.
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I used one of those cheap, drugstore pens to underline the sections that most resonated.
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And the debate over background checks at the heart of the proposition has resonated nationally.
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O'Rourke, who is also the father of young children, said Cruz's answer resonated with him.
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Mr. Trump's message of clawing back lost jobs has resonated most in distressed manufacturing regions.
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The Mulloy-Patty victory came on a day that resonated beyond the world of sports.
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"The success of our strike in March resonated [with workers] nationally and internationally," said Dolber.
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"Clearly our message hasn't resonated, especially with people in the middle of the country," Rep.
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On this economic platform, Trump won many votes in the communities where this message resonated.
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Whether it's the branding or the taste, something about Oatly has similarly resonated with consumers.
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That resonated with people—and media—and his career became almost like history-in-action.
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In tests, PF Chang's found that the American bistro concept resonated best with Chinese customers.
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In fact, Horses has resonated so much that its impact can be still felt today.
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Read CNN's Maeve Reston on how Warren's departure from the 2020 race resonated on Thursday.
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I think that's why boxing resonated with me so much even as a little girl.
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Sinema's message of moderation and centrism appears to have resonated with voters in the end.
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Their message of nationalism and traditionalism has resonated in a society disoriented by rapid changes.
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Even with Lordstown's relative durability, Mr. Trump's vision of an industrial comeback resonated in town.
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Historically, the federalist philosophy of states taking the policy lead has resonated with political conservatives.
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That day, the anniversary of slavery in the United States effectively ending, resonated with him.
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The empowering self-love anthem and its fierce music video obviously resonated with the public.
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As a former senior executive myself, I found that some of what they described resonated.
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Mr. O'Connor's message of perseverance has resonated on Chapman's campus and beyond, Ms. Ledbetter said.
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A speech by the mayor, Mitch Landrieu, has resonated nationally but drawn criticism back home.
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The story has resonated, at least in part, because pregnancy discrimination is still common today.
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Kiefer must have found something exceptionally interesting there, something that perhaps also resonated inside him.
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His anti-establishment message resonated strongly with Americans and catapulted him to the White House.
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Lewis' amended speech still resonated as a cri de coeur against racial apartheid in America.
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The message resonated with Kentucky's rural Democrats, and McGrath won the primary, shocking the establishment.
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Sasha's every burp was a foul bubble and each snore resonated like a broken drum.
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But Ms. Brealey gave the character a dignity and depth that resonated with the creators.
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Manuel acknowledged environmentalists' arguments against drilling haven't resonated with Republicans the way opponents had hoped.
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Both men were signature vocalists, deploying power that resonated in a variety of sonic contexts.
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"What resonated was that the food was ambitious, without apology or explanation," Mr. Akuto said.
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The story resonated widely in the Pacific Northwest, and has many concerned about the future.
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CO: I definitely see how your work resonated with Kraus when she wrote the book.
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Fantastic as these fables might be, they have clearly resonated with many people in Hong Kong.
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The above tweet has over 10,000 likes — looks like it resonated with a lot of travelers.
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She also recounts a Ted Talk she listened to about relationships that really resonated with her.
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I think the thing for me that resonated the most was just the pain of others.
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Tyler Riley, a 27-year-old from Weehawken, New Jersey, said Yang's argument resonated with him.
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I'm not posting commentary, I'm just posting examples – my hope was that they resonated with people.
|
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The message has resonated with Democrats in Washington, including U.S. Treasury Secretary Jack Lew and Rep.
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Well, apparently shortly after midnight on Wednesday, her tweet resonated with someone else: President Trump. Seriously.
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If anything, the part about her feeling like she "was being conned" seemed to have resonated.
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What really resonated with me was when Trump said his comments were just locker-room talk.
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Its argument resonated with Woong Chang, a server and bartender who moved to DC in 2009.
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I think it resonated with a lot of viewers last week that everyone's going after Sheryl.
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Lindsay explained that the idea of a big, princess-y wedding dress never resonated with her.
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It resonated with people, and the YouTube video has since been viewed over 6 million times.
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The message resonated in Redding, which residents say has been hit hard by the economic downturn.
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"Making this film was a survival contest, and that's what has resonated with voters," she said.
|
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But it's not a complete surprise that "Mario Kart Tour" resonated with iOS and Android users.
|
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Meghan's emotional eulogy at her father's funeral resonated with many, including her View colleague Sunny Hostin.
|
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Labour's positive campaign resonated with some locals whose personal wealth has not grown alongside the economy.
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"I think it resonated with a lot of people who have had similar experiences," she says.
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That's one reason the jobs issue has resonated so differently with so many millions of voters.
|
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Her story and what she went through resonated with a lot of people across the country.
|
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Her tweet clearly resonated with many people as it gained almost 430K likes and 84K retweets.
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Most of all, both of them resonated with a viewership hungry for a new Survivor hero.
|
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As to why their relationship has resonated with viewers, Jeffrey is puzzled, but has his theory.
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What are the two or three books that most resonated for you and that you'd recommend?
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The Stanford prison experiment resonated with me deeply when I was first taught it in college.
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CNN: Princess movies have been around since the beginning of time, but this has really resonated.
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He's quick to pinpoint this as the reason why the game resonated with him so much.
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Adrift in space, Dent struggles to find meaning in life, an experience that resonated with Musk.
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She worked with her performance coach, Marina Galante, whose history in gymnastics immediately resonated with Ziff.
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It clearly resonated with the crowd, 'cause they were cheering him on as he kept going.
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"He was able to articulate a vision that resonated with people, that was real," she said.
|
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President Donald Trump was in Wisconsin on Tuesday, but his words probably resonated most in California.
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"I was really touched that you enjoyed our arc and resonated with the character," he wrote.
|
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This approach has really resonated with progressives in New Hampshire, where Sanders leads in most polls.
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Still, something about the episode resonated with people — and twenty years later, the story still works.
|
|
How have the recent videos of police killings in Baton Rouge and Minnesota resonated in Philly?
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Ever since the first match in 1952, the fixture has resonated far beyond the cricket field.
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"We never came up with a good soundbite that resonated with people," Aguilar said of Coloradocare.
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His occasional feelings of inferiority in the face of this new life resonated deeply with me.
|
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"Apple is responding to what has resonated with customers," said analyst Jan Dawson of Jackdaw Research.
|
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Which aspects of the local culture resonated with you the most in the spots you visited?
|
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" Lowe adds that the people who were performing "really resonated with me and didn't feel premeditated.
|
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Something about that just resonated so clearly with me and I just went to those places.
|
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"This really extended our appeal and resonated with Gen Z users," said Match CEO Mandy Ginsberg.
|
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Such appeals have resonated more broadly with a public worried about security, migration and economic stagnation.
|
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And he has a kind of fragility that resonated with what I was trying to convey.
|
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Yet Trump's anti-immigration message — focused on "making America great again" — seems to have resonated here.
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Jean Rutter, Editor on the National desk: I enjoyed seeing how Times journalism resonated with students.
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Nothing of what they heard or read resonated with what they actually did for a living.
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"It's a product that resonated with our grandparents and not with the current generation," Axler said.
|
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While his endorsement did not carry the day in 1993, his quotable quip resonated for years.
|
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The message, so far, has not resonated with voters, according to a recent public opinion poll.
|
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What is clear is that the gloomy forecasts of economic pain have not resonated with voters.
|
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There is a sense that Guardiola's ideas, in particular, have resonated far beyond the Etihad Stadium.
|
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His message on the economy resonated with rural voters as they turned out in big numbers.
|
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The video resonated with Mr. Netzer, who had visited another migrant worker community, in Wimauma, Fla.
|
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That message has resonated with lower-income voters, and helped drive Mr. Trump's string of successes.
|
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While many had stories that resonated on a national level, they campaigned hard on local issues.
|
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Beyond museum walls, Nefertiti has as an icon has resonated far beyond both Egypt and Germany.
|
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The sky-high spike resonated with a public increasingly outraged by the cost of prescription medications.
|
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But the divide on whether to welcome migrants or deport them has resonated in Mexico, too.
|
|
This made my job more difficult, but the underlying message resonated: the insistence on reallocating power.
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FH: What movie resonated with you as a kid, and made you want to make movies?
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His unabashed progressive politics has been viral on social media and resonated deeply with young people.
|
|
A number of things resonated with me, and I sat down to start writing about it.
|
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"We don't have a lot of culture of dissent at Amazon, but it resonated," she said.
|
|
It would make him part of a chapter of history that has always resonated with him.
|
|
He also seemed to have a unique, pulsating idea that resonated with women, particularly wealthy ones.
|
|
I think all these investors resonated by seeing there's a real opportunity to make an impact.
|
|
They found out quickly that their broad affinities resonated with an unnamed cross-section of listeners.
|
|
SHOSHANA SILBERMANLAWRENCEVILLE, N.J. To the Editor: Nathan Englander's article resonated with me in a powerful way.
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|
He said the topic resonated with him because he had fallen in love with another boy.
|
|
And many of you wrote in to let us know how much their stories had resonated.
|
|
But the obsessions of the most intense partisans have not fully resonated with the broader electorate.
|
|
While he got only perfunctory applause, his message resonated with some in the business-heavy audience.
|
|
"It resonated with people," said Avital Chizhik-Goldschmidt, a journalist who often writes about Orthodox issues.
|
|
The idea of dirt spoons and gold spoons has resonated in popular culture in recent years.
|
|
His "persona" was so effective, and resonated so deeply, because it was simply who he was.
|
|
Baldwin's account has resonated throughout much of Asheville, dominating local news coverage and coffee shop conversations.
|
|
For some, the opportunity to express how a novel had resonated had a surprisingly therapeutic effect.
|
|
Franco had just died, and this sort of dirty humor resonated with Spaniards at the time.
|
|
That is what Emmanuel Macron has promised, a promise that resonated with the people of France.
|
|
And given GOP lawmakers' focus on acquitting the president quickly, it's likely that this case resonated.
|
|
They failed and were imprisoned, but their anti-establishment message resonated, catapulting Mr. Chávez to stardom.
|
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The stamp of approval that a Berkshire investment can provide clearly resonated with Home Capital's board.
|
|
The ground floor resonated with the sounds of the piano lessons given by his wife, Natalie.
|
|
You resonated from the barbershops to the airwaves to the streets of every hood across America.
|
|
Was there anything in the way the interviewee expressed their emotional experience that resonated with you?
|
|
It apparently resonated quite widely in this parish, which he won by more than 50 points.
|
|
Still, his testimony — somewhat influenced by his appearance in full military garb — resonated with the public.
|
|
From there, they took those sketches to about 100 different people to see what resonated most.
|
|
In addition, the president's aggressive trade policy hasn't resonated with Missouri voters, according to the poll.
|
|
Ted Lieu (D-Calif.), it was the medical community's response that really resonated with the public.
|
|
The post has resonated with thousands of people, garnering more than 1,600 shares and 3,700 likes.
|
|
Rang De Basanti resonated with audiences because it urged action and thought over passivity and disdain.
|
|
"That idea really resonated for us and we wanted to get it right," Mr. Gansa said.
|
|
Conservative elites are mostly free traders, but Trump's protectionist rhetoric resonated with some grassroots Republican voters.
|
|
That resonated with me recently as new accusations against the R&B singer R. Kelly emerged.
|
|
But Mr. Abubakar's campaign focused on an issue that resonated with many voters: improving the economy.
|
|
Did that argument, do you think that resonated with the company when you talked with them?
|
|
Something that resonated with me was this emphasis on the cyclical nature of violence and revenge.
|
|
"Nothing really resonated any different," Tex tells PEOPLE, as he begins to let out a bellowing laugh.
|
|
Awlaki's message has resonated with some of the more infamous perpetrators of terrorism in the States. Maj.
|
|
" Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau joined those mourning Cohen's death, saying his work had "resonated across generations.
|
|
It resonated with the lyrical themes of struggle within oneself and viewing it on a larger scope.
|
|
And seeing how his message was already shared more than 30,000 times, it's clearly resonated with many.
|
|
In her home, however, she could continue to accumulate and rearrange objects that resonated with her emotionally.
|
|
It resonated so deeply because it tapped into all these veins of latent biases and divisive narratives.
|
|
Popularly known as Jokowi, his everyman image resonated in 2014 with voters tired of the old guard.
|
|
I thought if the GIFs I sent resonated with people, I could have a conversation with them.
|
|
Undoubtedly, social media is part of the reason the students' message has resonated so far and wide.
|
|
The messages they shared with me off stage resonated just as loudly as their sets on stage.
|
|
But there were disconnects in his life that began to pile up, and they resonated with Rowe.
|
|
Trump's rhetoric resonated with them, as he seemed to be the only candidate listening to their frustration.
|
|
As someone who recently got a haircut, Google's presentation yesterday at I/O really resonated with me.
|
|
And it probably resonated with audiences so much due to the personal touches from Russell's own life.
|
|
Raisman, a two-time gold medal Olympian, made a powerful statement that has resonated beyond the courtroom.
|
|
But just because Aladdin resonated so well with little girls of color, doesn't mean it was perfect.
|
|
The investigation clearly resonated with MacBook owners, because soon after, more than 17,000 people signed a Change.
|
|
But because the 2012 version resonated with fans, that's the look that ended up on Brie Larson.
|
|
Her words clearly resonated with fans, as they commented and reacted to her tweets in the thousands.
|
|
"It really spoke volumes that there are so many women who resonated with that post," she says.
|
|
But it appeared unlikely on Monday that Schiff's lofty closing remarks had resonated among those GOP senators.
|
|
The idea that sensuality trumps heartbreak, which features heavily throughout much of Colette's work, resonated with me.
|
|
It's the 17th annual shindig, to celebrate the people who resonated in the mag during the year.
|
|
It was very anti-establishment, which is of course something that resonated with my pretty early on.
|
|
"I'm the child of a mixed marriage so it definitely resonated," Negga told PEOPLE at the premiere.
|
|
This food-as-medicine approach is something that has resonated very deeply with Rawat and her family.
|
|
His first piece I saw was "Unreal Estate" which resonated with the ideas in the album Nøthing.
|
|
You mentioned that a lot of what she said in Humans of New York resonated with you.
|
|
The chain recently concluded its limited-time offer of Texas-style chili, which resonated well with customers.
|
|
The issue may have resonated in California's 10th District, where 34 percent of eligible voters are Hispanic.
|
|
The Cambridge Analytica imbroglio resonated much more widely with the public than the company's previous privacy missteps.
|
|
Church bells once resonated as markers of shared destiny, signaling events from the momentous to the mundane.
|
|
When Merkel opened German doors to more than 1 million refugees, AfD found a theme that resonated.
|
|
He was eager to share the game, and his story resonated deeply among Cuban-Americans in Miami.
|
|
It's a message that has resonated with investors and made Celmatix a leader in the femtech industry.
|
|
Thomas later said she received mail from women worldwide who said her character strongly resonated with them.
|
|
One section that really resonated with me was "Wade in the Water," a depiction of a baptism.
|
|
His succinct, "It's the economy stupid," resonated with Americans, and he won the first of two terms.
|
|
Google's outright denial of her story, she said, resonated with others who have been through similar experiences.
|
|
One of our best-read stories this week seems to have resonated far beyond its target audience.
|
|
Clinton's pro-union shout out at the debate resonated widely, many of Wisconsin's labor activists remain skeptical.
|
|
I find characters whose stories resonated with me, and whose ultimate fates I still sometimes wonder about.
|
|
As a teenager, that message resonated with me too, even though I was halfway across the world.
|
|
It really resonated, and made the whole thing so much more enjoyable and medicinal, in a way.
|
|
Popularly known as Jokowi, his everyman image resonated in 2014 with voters tired of the old guard.
|
|
This dichotomy resonated with Lou Wilson, an L.A.-based improv comic you may recognize from American Vandal.
|
|
"It was then when I realised that something I helped create really resonated with people," said Wright.
|
|
To be honest, it's simultaneously moving and terrible to hear that the piece resonated with so many.
|
|
Their version of freedom, he found, had an existential bent, a brooding autonomy, that resonated with him.
|
|
Bernie Sanders's economic populism resonated with far more people than anyone supposed a year or two ago.
|
|
Some union leaders attributed this to his populist messages on the economy that resonated with union voters.
|
|
He wasn't supposed to be this kind of politician, which is why this controversy resonated so strongly.
|
|
Her story resonated with others, but she felt uneasy being a touchstone for athletes struggling with depression.
|
|
The film's underlying edge of rage at the privileged resonated deeply then, and does so especially now.
|
|
Decades after the leads ran dry and the searches stopped, the disappearance of the Lyon sisters resonated.
|
|
When asked about what part of the 1980s resonated most with the singer, Urban cited electronic music.
|
|
That sentiment resonated here in the Central Valley communities of California, where Christian conservative values run deep.
|
|
Tell them specifically why it resonated with you, and quote specific parts of the blog or article.
|
|
In 2016, Sanders' pitch resonated in Michigan and among workers in the state's hollowed-out manufacturing sector.
|
|
She has gone through a lot and I'm sure that it resonated with a lot of viewers.
|
|
"I kind of resonated with your story because of how much you love your mom," Kylie said.
|
|
And her forceful questioning style, matching that on conservative outlets like Fox, has resonated with MSNBC's viewers.
|
|
Medium removed the post on Sunday, but not before it resonated with some of Trump's closest allies.
|
|
Unilever was forced to confront the possibility that the Axe Effect no longer resonated with adolescent dudes.
|
|
TikTok, a video sharing app, has also exploded in popularity, while IGTV hasn't resonated nearly as much.
|
|
While the voices of Americans resonated in Congress this time around, we know we can't remain silent.
|
|
As a state senator, Lesko worked on a lot of local issues that resonated with her constituents.
|
|
But his connection to the Dodgers resonated most, and not just because of the tip to Gibson.
|
|
She acknowledged that her findings had resonated on social media, where some treated them as a sensation.
|
|
From the first debate, even given little opportunity to speak, every thought he expressed resonated with me.
|
|
It resonated with me because — first of all, all the princesses are great, don't get me wrong.
|
|
Its story of psychological and physical confinement resonated with Garfein's own personal history as a Holocaust survivor.
|
|
Interpreted and repackaged across the internet, it has resonated widely beyond France, including in white supremacist circles.
|
|
His words have resonated through generations — because they strike a chord to which Americans continue to respond.
|
|
Ramani said the "opportunity to touch so many lives" resonated after she heard about the company's mission.
|
|
The L.S.U. quarterback's comments after winning the Heisman Trophy resonated with a region that struggles with poverty.
|
|
My household is in the midst of A.P. exam anxiety, so this puzzle really resonated with me.
|
|
One reason I think that some of these moves haven't resonated is that they feel so abstract.
|
|
"Our creative and value offerings have not resonated with consumers in an heightened competitive environment," he said.
|
|
Karl Marlantes's article resonated deeply with my experience growing up in Illinois during the 1950s and '60s.
|
|
On Sunday's "Insiders," the Australian Broadcasting Corporation's political editor, Chris Uhlmann, filed a segment that resonated globally.
|
|
"I think that resonated with a lot of the Volkswagen managers I talked to," Mr. Thompson said.
|
|
Oliver was a widely popular writer whose grounded, unadorned writing style resonated with people across the globe.
|
|
But her blog resonated with a large and diverse audience because it offered unfiltered encounters with motherhood.
|
|
Because the crime problem was centered in urban areas, tough-on-crime politics resonated in blue states.
|
|
But the way he talked about it resonated much more deeply than anything his rivals could muster.
|
|
Trump openly disdained traditional conservative elites — making a populist case that resonated with working-class white voters.
|
|
Their message resonated here in this town of roughly 40,000 people, a town that has struggled with violence.
|
|
On one hand, I respect the fact that that's the writing that oftentimes resonated with people the most.
|
|
But after a speech in front of a packed convention crowd, Yang said he thought his message resonated.
|
|
This time the brand resonated clearly with an audience in a way that ... It was just clearly special.
|
|
Front Row Sean Baker, a filmmaker whose fame has hitherto resonated mostly underground, broke the surface in 2015.
|
|
Their breakup resonated because, it seemed, Peter Kraus had some genuine commitment issues he needed to deal with.
|
|
President Zelenskyy ran on a platform of unity, reform, and anti-corruption, which resonated with the entire country.
|
|
Hinting at Folds' vulnerability, the song resonated with millions and became a Top 20 hit around the world.
|
|
They really like the sound, and I think it's resonated — no pun intended — with a lot of people.
|
|
" He added, "They scare you to death, and then you find out it all resonated at some point.
|
|
The second time I saw the film, though, the importance of this particular detail resonated much more strongly.
|
|
Trump's strong messaging has resonated with ranchers in the area, but they say a Trump wall isn't enough.
|
|
President-elect Trump ran on need to revitalize the American economy, and this message resonated with American voters.
|
|
There was something perfect and blissful about this easily consumed little nostalgia nugget, and it resonated with consumers.
|
|
I think this has proven especially true in the Alabama election, and imagine that's why your announcement resonated.
|
|
They weren't acting like this was anything but a regular-season game, and that definitely resonated with me.
|
|
Big Meech -- who's serving hard time until 2032 -- sent Meek a personal message that seemed to have resonated.
|
|
The warning has resonated in London, which for decades has served as a haven for Russia's wealthiest families.
|
|
The film's realism and authenticity resonated with Taiwan's audience; it won the Taipei International Film Festival's audience award.
|
|
The message has resonated with the voters — largely white, largely working class, largely male — who constitute his base.
|
|
The series has resonated with many fans thanks to its unflinching depiction of bullying, sexual assault, and suicide.
|
|
But then, the team stumbled upon a series of archival photos that resonated deeply with the brand's mission.
|
|
My students' struggles with low self-esteem resonated with me as I remembered feeling unattractive as an adolescent.
|
|
This may be the reason why the campaign has resonated powerfully with numerous women of South Asian origin.
|
|
His campaigning on pocketbook issues which affect ordinary Russians has resonated in Russia's rust-belt cities as well.
|
|
It resonated with Republicans, Independents, and Democrats — many of whom had previously cast their ballots for President Obama.
|
|
When did you start being a Nicki fan, and what aspects of her music really resonated with you?
|
|
Many House Republicans come from deep red districts where Trump's message to crack down on illegal immigration resonated.
|
|
While she still disapproved of Sanders' unruly hair, the consistency of his anti-corporate messaging resonated with her.
|
|
However, polling has shown the tax policy has not yet resonated with voters as much as Republicans hope.
|
|
Kagan's explicit embrace of textualist methodology has resonated with conservatives, both on the Court and outside of it.
|
|
But Brunson's case has resonated with U.S. President Donald Trump and more particularly with Vice President Mike Pence.
|
|
The "certainty that our stadiums are already built compared to our opponent ... [also] resonated quite well," said Flynn.
|
|
Some of the artists resonated with me in a way that a big brand like Nike never could.
|
|
Nevertheless, his pitch has resonated with people who only care that he is now a threat to Trump.
|
|
"Looking back, I think the novelty of such a background resonated with HBS's search for diversity," Rivkin said.
|
|
With Snickers brand online, using, "You're not you when you're hungry," has really resonated with those younger consumers.
|
|
It resonated with many, including Pittsburgh Mayor Bill Peduto, who made the viral image his Twitter profile picture.
|
|
Mr. Tibbetts's words were widely shared and resonated with others, who praised him for his call for decency.
|
|
The episode brought more attention to a national conversation over Confederate monuments that, for some in California, resonated.
|
|
The three speeches resonated as a broad rebuttal of the doctrine that Mr. Trump has made his own.
|
|
One explanation is that Trump's choice of the campaign slogan "America First" resonated with the non-interventionist crowd.
|
|
It's a line he has used before though, and it hardly resonated after almost two hours of debating.
|
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We're close to the same age, and the message of "High School Never Ends" definitely resonated with me.
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As a teenage boy, the song resonated for me because of its themes of adventure and male friendship.
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The art was my language, and I began to see how people resonated with what I was creating.
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It has resonated with that group of people in a different way than it resonates with everyone else.
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To some in the room, however, Mr. Trump's emphasis on sovereignty and the sovereign rights of nations resonated.
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Through its many iterations, Mr. Conn said his research showed that the F.A.O. brand still resonated with customers.
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"What resonated with me was the way the sisters joined the personal circles" of the artists they championed.
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She also recorded playful, lighthearted songs like "Drive Slowly So We Can Chill" that resonated with many Egyptians.
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That history and this place resonated for her, Ms. Brown told them, her braids cascading down her back.
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"The thing that resonated with us is that Wilde was unapologetic about who he was," Ms. Testone said.
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Critics of the Bothwell Ranch sale have largely appealed to nostalgia, which has resonated with longtime valley residents.
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Lyrics such as "Childhood is such a strong memory/That we hope to flee it with integrity" resonated.
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That's why the will-they-won't-they tension of Jon and Ygritte in Season 3 resonated so well.
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Street vending has been a common entry point into the city's economy, and the attack resonated with vendors.
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"I read Joan Didion's 'The Year of Magical Thinking,' and it really resonated with me," Ms. Chiquet said.
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The message has particularly resonated with young, male Democrats, independents and some Republicans, according to Reuters/Ipsos polls.
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Larry Hurto, 68, a Sanders supporter from Newton, Iowa, said Buttigieg's message resonated with many voters - including him.
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CEO Hubert Joly told analysts Wednesday that Best Buy's "improved experience" in stores and online resonated with customers.
|
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The team at CNN Digital looked back on the stories that resonated most in this frenetic news year.
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"As a parent, Yumi's mission immediately resonated," said co-founder and co-CEO of Warby Parker Neil Blumenthal .
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Cory is an inspirational orator who, perhaps due to lack of specificity, has not resonated with our voters.
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He said that other parents have resonated with the quiet or small moments of parenting that he depicts.
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The burger chain recently concluded its limited-time offer of Texas-style chili, which resonated well with customers.
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Those are surprises that are affecting, no matter how much Cal being specifically Doctor Manhattan resonated with me.
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The pitch has resonated with Adrian Basora, an independent, undecided voter who attended the mayor's town Sunday afternoon.
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It posted more than 100 times a day, including many overtly political messages that resonated widely on Twitter.
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When Lamoureux-Davidson scored in the sixth round of a tiebreaking shootout, her shot resonated throughout the sport.
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This was just over lunch, and the things Demme told me have resonated with me to this day.
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He wasn't supposed to be this kind of politician, which is why this controversy has resonated so strongly.
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The Vermonter's focus on income inequality and his broader point that the system is rigged against working Americans resonated.
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It also deeply resonated with Sanders and shaped his roughly two-month tenure at the top of the agency.
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"In the May 4 era, the students' behavior resonated with the whole country," said Peking University graduate Yang Tinghan.
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But for some reason, it was Sarah Kerrigan's tale told through the novelization that resonated with me the most.
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For me what resonated was housing and prices, but for others it is about cool neighborhoods, the food scene.
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Playboy's vision of feminism might have resonated in the 1960s as women fought to end the sexual double standard.
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While thinking about making an app, Alper found that, at least anecdotally, the idea resonated with friends and acquaintances.
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" Covering Trump: Marlow said the site is "admittedly right of center" and that Trump "resonated specifically with Breitbart's readers.
|
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There were a number of doctors I could see there, but Dr. Guntupalli's name and reputation resonated for me.
|
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So, it was that kind of a message that resonated with us and with a whole community of people.
|
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Then there was Jean Blanc, who was able to really express himself in a way that resonated with me.
|
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It turned out, the sellers had started their family in the house, and Frank said he thinks that resonated.
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In short, ideas like a travel ban targeting Muslims have always resonated with some Americans in times of fear.
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And it resonated: in May, it became the first album by a Korean act to top the Billboard 200.
|
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The theme of the campaign really resonated with me and I hope to inspire others by celebrating my story.
|
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Both calls were prudent, but when the Astros continually failed to cash in on scoring opportunities, those calls resonated.
|
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Over the years, what we were doing really resonated with artists and athletes and all kinds of different people.
|
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It resonated with me in a big way because I almost made the same "tradeoff," as she called it.
|
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That really resonated with the audience and it's one of the reasons she's going to be missed so much.
|
|
The incident resonated with Indian doctors, many of whom are poorly paid and overworked compared with their foreign counterparts.
|
|
One particular tweet resonated, with thousands praising the longtime Michigan lawmaker for posting what the president struggled to say.
|
|
"Its hybrid cloud strategy has resonated with enterprises where this is a more realistic and flexible approach," Voce said.
|
|
And it especially resonated in parts of those states where local manufacturers had faced strong competition from Chinese imports.
|
|
Jobs very much cheapened the appeal of Pepsi, but the fact that it even resonated with Scully is telling.
|
|
Those attacks resonated among conservatives, even if Trump ended the last debate with slightly more speaking time than Clinton.
|
|
But it resonated with the large number of Americans who worry that immigration poses a threat to American values.
|
|
Of the chapters in Price's book, the one called "Putting the Dope in Dopamine" resonated with me the most.
|
|
There was little doubt, however, that regardless of its politics, the content had not resonated with the American public.
|
|
Trump's promise to keep Mexican "undesirables" out of neighborhoods and homes resonated with older and white Spanish-speaking Latinos.
|
|
" Chief DeLeo said Professor Markel's murder had "struck a deep chord within this community that resonated around the country.
|
|
The 29-year-old's body positive message has resonated with countless fans, not to mention other plus-size models.
|
|
It was the African-American committee members who made the recommendation, Pettit said, and the idea "resonated" with him.
|
|
He also ripped the 85033rd president's handling of the Iraq War, a message that resonated with war-weary voters.
|
|
Huckabee referenced the anti-establishment fervor that has characterized much of the 2016 election, arguing Trump resonated with Americans.
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|
Also: If you haven't read it, this poetry by a Foxconn worker who committed suicide really resonated with me.
|
|
Polling suggests Trump and the GOP's efforts to reshape the American health-care system have not resonated with voters.
|
|
Bernie is from Brooklyn and takes the 30,000-foot approach with broad themes that have resonated with the electorate.
|
|
Both bank branch workers and some corporate-level employees told the Wall Street Journal the letter resonated with them.
|
|
His aggression has resonated among working-class white men who feel emasculated by economic disruption and changing gender roles.
|
|
His message resonated with white blue-collar workers, who saw their government helping other countries while leaving them behind.
|
|
MTV found that "The Hills" theme song, "Unwritten," resonated with audiences, regardless of whether they had seen the show.
|
|
The violence in Virginia fanned national debates about race and free speech, and has resonated politically and socially since.
|
|
But Green's simple and G-rated message clearly resonated with Hand and the pair of relievers who followed him.
|
|
While Oracle lost that particular battle, its message seems to have resonated in the nation's capitol: Lawmakers including Sen.
|
|
On paper, it shouldn't have worked, but Dontnod managed an endearing story about two young women that deeply resonated.
|
|
Because she was raised in a Sufi household, the culture she's found in Senegal has resonated deeply with her.
|
|
The message seems to have resonated: The post has been shared over 72,500 times in less than a week.
|
|
Such frank admissions of frailty has resonated with Britons as has his natural ease when mingling with the public.
|
|
And when I would perform the song live, I would try out different lyrics to see which ones resonated.
|
|
What resonated was when he went after us, and after the most powerful tool of a self-governing nation.
|
|
During the hearing Judge Crotty made a point that still resonated when he made his decision six hours later.
|
|
Loud serenades of "Zuuuucc" resonated through the soccer venue, where Norwegian and Swedish flags billowed above the makeshift rink.
|
|
But the incomprehensible tragedy that befell Tang Gongwei's family resonated with me in a way the rest had not.
|
|
Mr. Fields later said during a telephone call with analysts that he felt their remarks "resonated" with the president.
|
|
This message has resonated with Austrian voters, a majority of whom think their country is on the wrong track.
|
|
It was a small moment, probably forgettable for most people, but it resonated for the 36-year-old Donovan.
|
|
I feel like Anubis has resonated deeply with a lot of your audience, why do you think that is?
|
|
A lot of people approach us to say that it resonated with them, which is all you hope for.
|
|
I was experiencing bad dudes, I was experiencing people critiquing my appearance, and so it still resonated with me.
|
|
The argument resonated because it is true that patterns of ownership and control in the economy are racially skewed.
|
|
Her cooking has resonated with patrons like Noor Shams, a Bangladeshi food blogger who now lives in Astoria, Queens.
|
|
And they took strong candidates with a winning combination of political credentials and personal experiences that resonated with voters.
|
|
I think what has resonated is that the film brought it down to a very personal, very specific level.
|
|
The opinions held by executives have always resonated beyond their own industries, but their importance is more pronounced today.
|
|
But the ride-hailing service's fate has resonated so deeply in London because it has disrupted more than transportation.
|
|
" Ms. Obser said that there was "a spirituality there that I can practice that has really resonated with me.
|
|
It's not the only way to read the phrase, but you can imagine why it resonated the most online.
|
|
When Ms. Guerry circulated the letter from the class of 1984, she found that Dr. Blasey's story resonated deeply.
|
|
The argument had to be considered and eliminated as it resonated with many Americans and threatened the Constitution's ratification.
|
|
The accomplishment resonated in her native country, which does not have much of a golfing tradition, particularly for women.
|
|
It resonated in a strange way with me about how our government officials felt about us and our families.
|
|
Yet by putting out a message that resonated with people online, Mr. Trump hacked through every established political order.
|
|
He said those brands resonated with target audiences or genres "big enough to matter" and have strong global presences.
|
|
Dr. Reiffel (it's pronounced like rifle) was an inventor with dozens of patents, but the Telestrator resonated the most.
|
|
In particular, her struggles conceiving resonated with me, since I had two miscarriages between my second and third child.
|
|
I always loved Big Bird as a child, I saw him be misunderstood sometimes and that resonated with me.
|
|
One thing Hunter does have a hunch about, however, is why Euphoria resonated so deeply with so many viewers.
|
|
One of the many reasons mentorship resonated so deeply with me was because, professionally, I've always been pretty lost.
|
|
However shallow it may have sounded, and however much mocked, it resonated deeply, and we recall it even today.
|
|
It was private at first, but friends urged me to make the post public, as it resonated with them.
|
|
Pyongyang's central message — that the United States was the aggressor and the North but a small, peace-seeker — resonated.
|
|
" Mattis observes that when his advice about "keeping faith with allies no longer resonated, it was time to resign.
|
|
Sanders' message of economic populism resonated especially among blue-collar voters in the poor, rural corners of West Virginia.
|
|
Her hands come together in what one Twitter user called a "walrus clap," but it resonated around the world.
|
|
Heavy bedding and other compression items have resonated, metaphorically and psychologically, as transitional objects for a population under stress.
|
|
It&aposs a constant feeling of being lost in translation, and that&aposs something that definitely resonated with me.
|
|
"When the NFL deal was announced, it resonated even louder [with other sports leagues]," Noto said of Twitter's strategy.
|
|
Both times, the distorted guitars and echoes behind him resonated and uplifted, giving his introspection a dream-like feel.
|
|
THUMP: What were the first records that resonated with you as you found your way into the club world?
|
|
She's thrilled when little goths, especially little black goths, approach her to say the Rochelle character resonated with them.
|
|
This resonated deeply with readers at the time who were trapped in the midst of this change — like me!
|
|
His bid for immigration is based largely in a deeply emotional fear of foreigners that has resonated in his base.
|
|
Turner called them the forgotten victims of war, which is why the non-profit's mission resonated so deeply with him.
|
|
"I had seen 20 minutes of it and it hadn't landed with me; it hadn't resonated with me," he said.
|
|
But the star forward's success in leading her team to glory made a statement that resonated far beyond partisan politics.
|
|
The antithesis to Victoria's Secret's bombshell branding, Aerie's body-positive grassroots advertising campaign has resonated with the retailer's target shoppers.
|
|
Both clubs came close to complete oblivion, and the collective trauma felt by their fanbases resonated strongly with supporters elsewhere.
|
|
The Leave campaign's demand to "take back control" resonated because it applied to more than just Britain's relationship with Europe.
|
|
Any artist I had resonated with previously in my short life had either belonged to my parents or died already.
|
|
So Nigatu, a former BuzzFeed staffer, decided to tweet out a part of the piece that really resonated with her.
|
|
Looking into the sentiment, the analytics say 30 percent of the tweets resonated with joy while 25 percent had anger.
|
|
Prince's "America" resonated with every welfare check, block of government cheese and awful health care my mother and I received.
|
|
Monáe, Kiyoko, and Halsey's stories resonated deeply with fans, who showed them much love, admiration, and support on social media.
|
|
The performance was moving and powerful, sending out a message that was deeply personal yet resonated with the whole audience.
|
|
But it would not have resonated so far and wide were it not for the first two factors listed above.
|
|
This message has clearly resonated with Austrian voters, a majority of whom think their country is on the wrong track.
|
|
I identified most strongly with David Rudolf, whose intellectual dialogue about the nature of guilt and innocence resonated with me.
|
|
If such ideas are hardly original, they have resonated more than usual thanks to Mr Macron's talent for soothing nerves.
|
|
The transformation resonated with him, but he wasn't sure how best to approach it in the age of the iPhone.
|
|
Whenever he found something confusing, Castilla stayed calm and listened carefully until he found a piece of information that resonated.
|
|
A young Dreamer posted a story on Humans of New York that has resonated with hundreds of thousands of people.
|
|
Meredith Masony of "That's Inappropriate" recently posted a video that quickly went viral because it resonated with so many women.
|
|
The parallels he discovered — identifying a weakness and developing a personalized plan to help a child succeed — resonated with him.
|
|
That such a "liberal revenge fantasy" resonated as a serious idea spoke to the undiminished power of the presidential mythology.
|
|
For the shoot, Raisman was tasked with choosing words or messages that resonated with her to write on her body.
|
|
Rubio's message as a first generation American doing things his parents would have never thought possible really resonated with her.
|
|
It resonated with us as women of the African Diaspora as, similarly, we're not monoliths; we, too, have multiple identities.
|
|
If the two of them both resonated with the "Greed is Good" speech, that could say something about their relationship.
|
|
The speech drew tremendous response, and resonated in the press, and Life magazine featured a profile of her very prominently.
|
|
Lorde's descriptions of growing up in a world that didn't acknowledge her as a powerful being resonated deeply with me.
|
|
It's called collective narcissism, and it likely helps explain why Trump's slogan "Make America Great Again" resonated with some Americans.
|
|
His compliments about her dancing resonated so much that she was able to overlook all the ones about her looks.
|
|
It was a model that resonated with those who couldn't wait around all day for a package delivery, myself included.
|
|
This resonated with Americans who saw the United States bearing the costs but reaping few benefits of the global order.
|
|
It was just a goofy couple of lines in a video game that, for whatever reason, resonated with the internet.
|
|
The murder of Nipsey Hussle resonated with TMZ users like few other stories, and Joe Biden's had a week, right?
|
|
That pushback resonated with the Palestinian Authority, whose political star has faded amid internal squabbling and a politically emboldened Netanyahu.
|
|
As someone who lost her father at 11 years old, certain things really resonated & I found myself crying multiple times.
|
|
And it turned out that once he gained the legitimacy of being a real challenger to Clinton, his message resonated.
|
|
Justice, equality, freedom, solidarity, socialism—those ideals all resonated—but democracy struck me as mealy-mouthed, hollowed out, and corrupted.
|
|
This has resonated with our community and also the investment community who see the value in what we are creating.
|
|
It's clearly resonated, and is dealing with topics many teens want to talk about but haven't found the right way.
|
|
She was the type of teacher who resonated with teachers because of her young age, her enthusiasm, and her kindness.
|
|
The Rolling Stone story resonated with many who saw it as a battle cry against sexual violence on college campuses.
|
|
As a company founded on the principles of the First Amendment, this random display of community and free speech resonated.
|
|
Various people had tried to help him, but it was Bramble's story on the news that really resonated with him.
|
|
And I think that message has resonated, which is why we haven't seen final guidance out of the FDA yet.
|
|
"We have seen a trend in the past where weakness in China has resonated on other global markets," he added.
|
|
So it is unsurprising that the recipe trademarked by Mr. Copeland, who died in 2008, has resonated across racial lines.
|
|
And I could never discern a consistent messaging strategy that every Republican candidate could deploy that resonated with their voters.
|
|
Democrats campaigned against the law and say their message that it primarily benefited wealthy individuals and corporations resonated with voters.
|
|
The cities where Donald Trump's promise to throttle what he calls unfair competition resonated most profoundly during the presidential campaign.
|
|
When Khloé Kardashian attempted to become pregnant and underwent fertility treatments, her struggle resonated with many viewers on the show.
|
|
The company tried with "Assassin's Creed" and the Jake Gyllenhaal vehicle "Prince of Persia," but neither film resonated with audiences.
|
|
In Lahore, Khan's message resonated with many of the bandana-wearing young men waving PTI's green and red-color flags.
|
|
What resonated was not the Bears' swagger or defensive dominance, but their regret: that they won only one Super Bowl.
|
|
" When asked if she believes what she had to say resonated with Pelosi, however, Talib replied bluntly, "I don't know.
|
|
The battle was called Justin Trudeau's first major environmental challenge, but it resonated outside of Nunavut and around the world.
|
|
"There are a lot of things that resonated with Larry," Hillel Cooperman, one of the lead designers, told Business Insider.
|
|
"Every piece resonated personally with him," Beth Greenacre, the curator of his collection since 28, said in a telephone interview.
|
|
I know many of those viewers, and I'm sad to say that message probably resonated with a lot of them.
|
|
And her victory really resonated with a lot of people in Brazil, including in the favela where she was raised.
|
|
A separate fog bank enveloped onlookers as a series of extended synthesized notes resonated, building and waning in overlapping waves.
|
|
It's not a good feeling to get hate mail every single day, but you know that it resonated with people.
|
|
Her message that billion-dollar lab companies were ripping people off with costly, outdated, and unnecessarily painful technology deeply resonated.
|
|
Steve Bannon's Breitbart was a populist voice during the primary season, which is why its audience resonated with Trump's message.
|
|
She lost, but Bush said she learned how to connect with voters and find a message that resonated with them.
|
|
While Mr. Bhalla, who is a lawyer, was humble in talking about his victory, it has resonated well behind Hoboken.
|
|
Do you think the fact that "4:44" paired a rapper with a single producer resonated with the Grammy audience?
|
|
The divide over whether to welcome migrants and facilitate their passage or apprehend and deport them has resonated in Mexico.
|
|
Her message that billion-dollar lab companies were ripping people off with costly, outdated, and unnecessarily painful technology resonated deeply.
|
|
Where his words resonated with me, it would make me aware of hidden currents of cruelty in my own thinking.
|
|
A Course in Miracles resonated with Williamson, and she decided to bring it to others with A Return to Love.
|
|
This message has clearly resonated with primary voters, who have repeatedly listed Trump's financial independence as central to his appeal.
|
|
I just wanted to build a nice town that resonated with my values and where I would want to live.
|
|
The video, posted Sunday night to Facebook, resonated widely because it depicted a seemingly harmless man being victimized and mocked.
|
|
The feature resonated with many readers, and infuriated others who questioned why it was a sports story to begin with.
|
|
The importance of self-love is an idea that has resonated with many fans who have struggled to accept themselves.
|
|
Trisha's development of an abstract narrative and a formal language resonated with a lot of people in the visual arts.
|
|
"When J.F.K. said that we were going to send a man to the moon, that resonated with us," he says.
|
|
Those words resonated for Louis Moore, an associate professor of history at Grand Valley State University, who appreciated Jackson's subtlety.
|
|
Tony Romm at The Washington Post has the story: The pleas for regulatory relief resonated with lawmakers, led by Rep.
|
|
That resonated with me, as I've been spending a lot more time on Instagram lately — at the expense of Twitter.
|
|
So while the ad certainly resonated online, it likely caught the attention of its other intended target: Mr. Trump himself.
|
|
This idea has resonated with founders — who are both signing up to the service and also coming in as backers.
|
|
Cleveland Cavalier Kevin Love's assurance earlier this month that "everyone is going through something" resonated with a lot of people.
|
|
McCormick also learned that telling her personal story resonated more with scholarship committees than generic essays about her academic goals.
|
|
It's probable that one social media manager saw that the content resonated with followers and decided to make something similar.
|
|
Mr. Nakasone's calls for a stronger military and for a larger role in the world for Japan resonated with Reagan.
|
|
Mr. Santopietro said the musical, which he saw as a boy, resonated with theatergoers because it symbolized freedom from oppression.
|
|
Epstein did not learn about the anomaly until after he migrated to Massachusetts, in 1989, but the idea resonated immediately.
|
|
We'd like to know which particular topics really resonated with you in 2019 and what your predictions are for 2020.
|
|
When they watched Wim Wenders's "Wings of Desire" together, Longstreth asked Coffman to write down dialogue that resonated with her.
|
|
As CNN discovered when it visited a Likud stronghold in Beersheva, that message resonated strongly with many blue-collar Israelis.
|
|
The images of Hungarians being clubbed and beaten by government security forces resonated deeply, and Mr. Orban seized the moment.
|
|
The moment resonated for executives: Amazon was not accustomed to being forced to respond publicly on its policies and operations.
|
|
But the message resonated with the top-seeded Celtics, whose 104-87 victory at the United Center was sorely needed.
|
|
" Clearly, the story has resonated with Hopkins -- who said, "When I see Jazmine Barnes' face, I see my own daughter.
|
|
Obviously the reach of that album has been huge, but why do you think it's resonated with so many people?
|
|
That one and the adrift one, the surfer who got caught out to sea, those things really resonated with me.
|
|
The model tells PEOPLE Now that Winfrey's words about equality resonated with her personally, as one-half of an interracial relationship.
|
|
Her strategy of running as an unapologetic liberal who attracts new voters to the polls resonated in a rapidly changing state.
|
|
A video compilation of him yelling this word into the camera was uploaded onto YouTube, and it really resonated with everyone.
|
|
Trained at London's Slade School, El-Salahi sought to make art that was both modern and resonated locally in the Sudan.
|
|
That sentiment resonated with viewers for a reason; we reach for it when we're confronted with the darkest parts of humanity.
|
|
Still, Trump's "drain the swamp" message resonated because there is widespread belief that government is corrupt, and Washington is a mess.
|
|
"We are pleased that our arguments resonated with the court," Lumiere's lawyers, Jonathan Halpern and Jon Friedman, said in a statement.
|
|
KOTH resonated with me not only because it was familiar, but because it reflected my own complicated view of my hometown.
|
|
They have a lot more freedom to produce content that they like, and that's why it's resonated so well with fans.
|
|
"This is a prime example of a picture that really resonated with him and he's really open about that," Pylkkanen said.
|
|
Even so, Mr. Ghaffar Khan's message of nonviolence resonated deeply with Pashtuns and others all over South Asia, Mr. Siddique said.
|
|
The band resonated in a similar way in America, which had been transfixed by the Vietnam War and the Watergate scandal.
|
|
This line has resonated with the many critics that the court, the supreme judicial authority in the European Union, has attracted.
|
|
LebaenesePapi's post apparently resonated with the Twitterverse, who retweeted his call to action more than 156,000 times as of Tuesday morning.
|
|
"Even though my mom knows we are all playing characters, it still resonated on an emotional level for her," she says.
|
|
These boxes, which revolve around a different theme each month, have resonated with curious and adventurous palates all over the world.
|
|
That's likely why her video has resonated with so many people — and even caused some to literally cry over their breakfast.
|
|
Something about his witty observations of the people and situations he encountered at his seemingly dull day job resonated with people.
|
|
The real-life Hamilton's experience, passion, and ambition resonated deeply with Miranda, who is deeply concerned with the American immigrant experience.
|
|
So I felt that resonated with the Fanon quote—the world we engage with today is based on a Western model.
|
|
Nuclear contributes about 30 percent of South Korea's electricity, but Moon's push for change resonated with public concerns over nuclear safety.
|
|
And if what I said resonated with one person, it was worth my digging up old memories and broadcasting them live.
|
|
The minute-long wordless commercial resonated across Twitter with an outpouring of praise for the adorable presentation of a serious message.
|
|
He also offered rationale for his victory in the Michigan Republican primary, saying his economic message resonated with the state's voters.
|
|
Asked why he believes the song has resonated with so many people, Millard says he thinks its universal message has helped.
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So I had jokes about that, jokes about pissing your efforts away at an art school, and that resonated with people.
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Written by Australian blogger Constance Hall on Sunday, the post has resonated with hundreds of thousands of parents around the world.
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Panelist Scott Jennings, former special assistant to President George W. Bush, was talking about why Trump's remarks resonated with his supporters.
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His message that the forgotten man is forgotten no more resonated so strongly that it won him an impossibly difficult election.
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The catch: The psychiatrists' warnings have resonated mainly with Democrats — Republicans haven't engaged, and the White House has pushed back aggressively.
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To Ida, it resonated just a wee bit of other memorials, built and unbuilt, which was probably shrewd on Roy's part.
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The crime resonated in pop culture, fitting into a narrative about an era popularly defined by excess and entitlement run amok.
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Priebus and Trump came back way, way later after they realized that Clinton's tweet landed and resonated with people like us.
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Bellucci, who had to learn Serbian for her role, said the movie's portrayal of love between two adults resonated with her.
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The rising cost has made it difficult for many families to afford, prompting a public outcry that has resonated with legislators.
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As one of the best-known Protestant leaders in China, Mr. Gu was influential, and his criticism resonated beyond the region.
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For the young Pessoa, this message resonated, since it turned his own tendency toward hesitation and withdrawal into an artistic virtue.
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Although same-sex marriage was not legal in every state, some companies showed support early on and that resonated with consumers.
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The election returns suggest a harder line on immigration resonated with voters more strongly than Social Democratic calls for social equality.
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What resonated with me was that Bill's fund was up eight times and then down 90% and then up 12 times.
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Nike ended up squashing the number exchange, and Davis chose No. 3 instead, but said the gesture still resonated with him.
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Despite the hand-wringing of politicians and journalists, the shows have resonated with people who have little faith in the state.
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"We loved making that show, but unfortunately it never resonated with audiences like we hoped," Mr. Simmons said in a statement.
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Image courtesy of the artist Along with the teachings of Buddhism that life is suffering, it resonated deeply with the artist.
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Yet the tough lines on trade and immigration resonated with a segment of the GOP base, as well as some independents.
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CEO Mark Parker told analysts in September that the ad resonated with consumers both in North America and around the world.
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The fate of the boys has even resonated as far as Russia, where soccer's World Cup is reaching its final stages.
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"She has a very strong message," Devine said, drawing a parallel with how a similar message from Sanders resonated in 2016.
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But he's struck a populist, anti-corruption message that has resonated with millions of Ukrainians suffering from poverty and government graft.
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Last week's story on the statements made by Representative Ilhan Omar, and the Democrats' response to them, clearly resonated with readers.
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The #MeToo moment and allegations of men sexually harassing women, in particular, has resonated more with some women than with others.
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The theft of Oñate's foot resonated with land activists and scholars, and even in the writings of poets like Martín Espada.
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"It's almost as if I didn't have a choice, and this is what resonated the most out of everything," she said.
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The job that most resonated with her started out part-time as a server in an up-and-coming Brooklyn restaurant.
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"We found that economic message particularly resonated with Latinos and we saw in Nevada that play out very well," Tulchin said.
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The name "chloroquine" resonated with the man's wife, who asked that her name not be used to protect the family's privacy.
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Background reading Ross on the G.O.P.'s third-party pipe dream and why Bernie Sanders and Donald Trump resonated in 2016.
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That concept is something that also resonated with my close friend [the artist] Dave Choe, so we always joke about that.
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But an underlying part of this weekend's initiative has resonated with players even more: the relaxing of those unforgiving uniform rules.
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Her subjects — family life, children, sex, aging — lay close to hand but resonated with deeper meanings, often enriched by biblical allusions.
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"He told me something that resonated with me," ABC News reported Jennifer Lopez saying at a fragrance launch event in September.
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It was a gruesome and horrifying assault that quickly resonated across the globe, because the victims were citizens of the globe.
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Having been a part of the entertainment industry for years, Fields said she resonated with her character in a special way.
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Ms. Ruurs said that she had received calls from teachers who told her the book resonated with students from refugee families.
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Finally, there is the narrative of America First, the narrative Donald Trump told last year, and which resonated with many voters.
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Yes, Ms. Chiuri is an Italian designer at a French house; Mr. Weinstein's trial may not have resonated quite so far.
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Those figures illustrate the windfalls possible when rival promoters collaborate, and that message resonated immediately with other deep-pocketed boxing businessmen.
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"Michaela's journey resonated with me deeply as both an artist and an activist who understands adversity," Madonna said in a statement.
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The teenagers' bravery, she said, resonated with her, given some of the sacrifices her family made during the civil rights era.
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Backstage, she told reporters the story resonated with her as a child of a Chinese-American father and South Korean mother.
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Although the troop came together under difficult circumstances, the members' stories have resonated with city officials and donors around the world.
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Last year I undertook research into the role and impact of the gender of candidates and how that resonated with voters.
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They were excited about all the new menu items, but there was one in particular that really resonated with one alum.
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That guiding mission has resonated well with an important set of early adopters that have helped propel Tesla&aposs mainstream popularity.
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It was a message that resonated with the NFL, Atlanta beating out Miami, Tampa and New Orleans for the 2019 showcase.
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The eyepatched icon echoed Tony Montana on "Hey Young World," and that resonated in a major way with an adolescent Ross.
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Had Marvel decided to launch this superhero franchise during the Obama era, it would have still resonated, but not like this.
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The issue of Germany and migrants has resonated for Mr. Trump for more than a year, people close to him say.
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Ms. Haney was a compelling spokeswoman for the brand, which resonated among millennials and college-age customers with money to spend.
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Donald Trump is not a rural person, but his message resonated strongly with the rural folks I have spent time with.
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Letters To the Editor: "Girls Can Still Be Tomboys," by Lisa Selin Davis (Op-Ed, April 19), truly resonated with me.
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The message resonated with many British voters and unnerved Conservative legislators, who feared UKIP would hurt them in the 2015 election.
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Some British polls suggest that Corbyn's ideas were popular, with reporting suggested they particularly resonated with voters ages 18 to 24.
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Like all of Trump's most memorable rhetoric, the inaugural address succeeded because it resonated with a very specific slice of Americans.
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It's the reason why ESPN's and FX's O.J. Simpson features resonated with younger baby boomers, Gen X-ers, and older millennials.
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The symbolic experience of older black men teaching the younger generation how to clean and load a musket resonated with me.
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Trump's comments about the importance of the free market in providing affordable healthcare and holding drug companies accountable resonated with her.
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Yeah, X-Men in particular is a series that seems to have resonated with a lot of people from marginalized communities.
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This sentiment resonated among right-wing politicos, who saw Scalia as a bastion of conservative sense in the nation's highest court.
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Trump won the Republican primary because Republican voters resonated to his anti-immigration message rather than Bush's promise of lower taxes.
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This doesn't mean Sanders's youth base was imaginary, or that they didn't support him because his policy ideas powerfully resonated with them.
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The halls of any Nokia house resonated, for some years, with energy and belief that we could achieve anything Beyond Nokia member
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Knowing that people resonated with this design, that I loved and that I put all this energy into, was an amazing feeling.
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I just felt there was a lack of products in the natural hair world that Latinas really resonated with in the market.
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In an interesting plot twist, the depressing sentiment not only resonated with many Americans, but it grabbed the attention of Chelsea Clinton.
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Brunson's case has resonated with President Donald Trump and particularly with Vice President Mike Pence, who has close ties to evangelical Christians.
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It's been years since the Waterloo-based former tech titan has released anything that resonated, despite a last-ditch embrace of Android.
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Both books resonated with readers upon their release, and the authors were praised for their writing and the depths of their intimacy.
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Their message resonated at the regional party conference in Wernigerode, where delegates voted 52-51 against pursuing negotiations on a grand coalition.
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But there was something about "Hello, I Am Fat" that resonated across the many incarnations of internet culture that have come since.
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This conversation particularly resonated as the deaths of Trayvon Martin, Jordan Davis, and Eric Garner, among others, permeated through the national media.
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Once I really made the comparison that Kylo Ren was probably a difficult child much like Calvin, it really resonated with people.
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Based on conversations with NRA members approached outside the convention hall, the message that police must be protected from scrutiny has resonated.
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"Gary's story resonated because it was about a man being bigger than his job title," Mr. Russo's cousin Andrea T. Goeglein said.
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But the more urgent question is this: What does it say about fans who resonated with one tragedy and not the other?
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The group's holistic approach to helping struggling people level-up in life has resonated with thousands of fans all over the world.
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"That idea really of starting with something small and planting a lot of seeds really resonated with me," Pritzker told VICE News.
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That message resonated with DC Republicans, and Shah Bharara won the second-highest number of votes at the party's convention this month.
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Wired has proclaimed that "It's time for an RSS revival" and it has resonated with well-respected thought leaders like Brad Feld.
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By opposing civil rights, the Republican party was essentially promising to preserve difference and prevent change — a message that resonated with authoritarians.
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Her song "Birthday Girl", resonated so strongly with fans, says the singer born LaNeah Menzies, that it became something of an anthem.
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Instead of choosing Disney movies or the dogs we thought looked "super cute," we went with the dogs that resonated with us.
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The fact that our story resonated with Moët shows how supportive the brand is towards accepting people from all walks of life.
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" McEntire has drawn on her life experiences to write lyrics that have resonated with fans, including "How Blue" and "Somebody Should Leave.
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This is why the practice of rooting for other Black people is important and resonated with so many when Rae named it.
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The tweet brought in 1.4k likes — the comparison clearly resonated with fans of both the real-life couple and the fictional one.
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Still, Kinnaman's point — that we need to be choosier about what we recycle — has resonated with environmentalists and waste management experts alike.
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"He wants to make America great again and I think that theme has resonated with a lot of people," Mr. Branstad said.
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As someone who grew up there, it all just kind of resonated with me and brought back a flood of great memories.
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His image as a patriot appears to have resonated with those who voted in the election, which saw a historically low turnout.
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An unabashedly passionate depiction of the work of AIDS activists in Paris in the early 1990s, it has resonated deeply with audiences.
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Still, the power dynamics apparent in the image resonated with criticism of the treatment migrants are receiving during the clampdown by Mexico.
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The game may have only occupied a few seconds of screen time, but the familiar outlandishness of the concept resonated with fans.
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But he did express confidence that it resonated at the highest levels, and might even spark a new probe of the incident.
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"Michaela's journey resonated with me deeply as both an artist and an activist who understands adversity," the singer said in a statement.
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Trump's anti-trade rhetoric and his general attitude of economic pessimism seem to have resonated particularly strongly with voters in these states.
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The rising cost has made it difficult for many families to afford EpiPens, prompting a public outcry that has resonated with legislators.
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On a day when the nation and the world were focused on the horrors unfolding in Pittsburgh, Trump's stupid umbrella moment resonated.
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The July 2014 chokehold death of Eric Garner, who, like Martin and Brown, was unarmed, resonated the following fall with professional athletes.
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Neither resonated with Academy Awards voters, failing to yield a single Oscar nomination between them (and in Beasts' case, angering theater owners).
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" The meaning resonated with him, so he got it tattooed right after he'd signed a publishing deal and "had a little money.
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So there [could be] benefits to your own health, and that was something that resonated really well, actually, with the race fans.
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A clear-eyed opponent of two totalitarian governments, Milosz articulated a determined embrace of freedom that resonated during the cultural cold war.
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He said her focus on consumers and the middle class is the kind of rhetoric that resonated with Sanders supporters in 2016.
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" When I asked Lévy why the notion of the great replacement had resonated so widely, he dismissed it as a "junk idea.
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But once Prime Day is over, it's always fun to go back and see what deals resonated most with Business Insider readers.
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And he used amazing rhetoric about the life and plight of black people in our country that resonated strongly in my house.
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In an interview with BuzzFeed News, Guminiak opened up about why the tweet she called "honestly iconic" resonated so much with her.
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The sweet moment truly resonated with Burruss, who names Ace blowing out his candles as her favorite part of the special day.
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The "rigged system" that resonated with Trump and Bernie voters is rooted in seething anger towards Wall Street and the Washington establishment.
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And it's a message that has resonated with audiences — not the least being the film's star herself, 15-year-old Elsie Fisher.
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"All of this to me just resonated in our time period, and so I thought the juxtaposition was really important," Dawson says.
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The attacks on Murphy's Goldman past have resonated little with voters, according to Patrick Murray, director of the Monmouth University Polling Institute.
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I think so many people resonated with Dr. Ford, what she said, experiences that we have had, experiences that we have experienced.
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His message resonated with the majority of Americans weary of continued troop commitment after six years of occupation and high U.S. casualties.
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There is no denying that Donald Trump's message of defending workers resonated in areas that had been adversely impacted by foreign competition.
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Though she later regretted having used the word "Nègres" — a French equivalent of "Negroes" — her condemnation of Western-designed Islamic fashion resonated.
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It's something that resonated with Jonas, who wondered if he would have tried to join a fraternity if he'd gone to college.
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Director Howard said he was inspired by the powerful imagery of Dante's "Inferno" and how it has resonated through centuries and generations.
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Trump's message resonated with people in coal country, and Republicans want those same voters to get out to vote again this year.
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Kaari Upson's work resonated with the excesses and liberties that characterize the relationship in Hollywood between powerful men and less powerful women.
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Then unfamiliar with his skating, Morita's grace and creativity resonated with him, immediately drawing comparisons to Mark Gonzales' artful, yet poised approach.
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Brunson's case has resonated with President Donald Trump and particularly with Vice President Mike Pence, who has close ties to evangelical Christians.
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The England manager's refreshing approach — a mix of calmness, humility and realism — has also resonated, and made him a social media sensation.
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Instead of a tidy resolution, however, the episode has resonated with a growing anxiety in Kenya and set off a broader debate.
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That resonated instantly with my own belief that nature has immense spiritual power and that human beings are inextricably connected to it.
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The killing of the dissident writer Jamal Khashoggi inside the Saudi Consulate in Istanbul has resonated internationally in an unusually powerful way.
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But images of the dead whale resonated in Indonesia, a country that has started to reckon with its outsize use of plastics.
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I read Whiplash, which is Joi Ito's book about the nine principles of the Media Lab, and it really resonated with me.
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" According to The New York Times, Comedy Central's president Kent Alterman believes the show, which first debuted in January 2015, "hasn't resonated.
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The brand's boutiques are welcoming, with an accessibility that has resonated with fans who might find some other high-end jewelers intimidating.
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The president repeatedly referenced China on the campaign trail, and his message that cheap Chinese imports decimated American manufacturing resonated with voters.
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And this character would not have resonated at all, to the extent that she does in this movie, without the close-up.
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But Trump's pro-coal, anti-trade message and outsider status has resonated with some blue collar union members frustrated with Washington politicians.
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We asked listeners to talk about the readings that resonated with them, and to share their own tales of love and loss.
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We asked New York Times readers to share a song or a set of lyrics by Tom Petty that resonated with them.
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But it resonated because its tale of monsters and plucky outsiders channeled the heart as well as the aesthetics of its influences.
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It did not take Pillar long to learn how deeply his one-word outburst, which was picked up by a microphone, resonated.
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After discussing a problem and suggesting how to handle it, Ms. Marshall asks her clients what tidbit resonated with them the most.
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The group became his vehicle for exploring jazz qua jazz, playing vital music that resonated down the corridors of its own history.
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Though Bryant&aposs popularity dipped and sponsors dropped him following the allegations, the persona of ruthlessness and hard work resonated with fans.
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When he questioned the GOP leadership for not following normal procedures on health care and crafting the bill in secret, it resonated.
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