Civilization rests on the rule of law, and that rests on respect for officers of the law.
|
|
The table in The Dinner Club rests on a base plate made from multiplex and MDF, which in turn rests on a steel half-orb.
|
|
As such, the film rests on one end of the spectrum where The Room rests on the other, with the book The Disaster Artist landing squarely in the middle.
|
|
" He added, "All that information rests on her shoulders.
|
|
This is because it rests on a foundation of openness.
|
|
All of this is incredibly shaky and rests on nothing.
|
|
The MMA world rests on Brock's bizarrely large shoulders now.
|
|
A Surveyor 3 footpad rests on the dusty lunar surface.
|
|
But Quinn believes the future of InVision rests on execution.
|
|
But the success of "Outlander" rests on Caitriona Balfe's performance.
|
|
The rule of law rests on respect for the law.
|
|
Their future, as they see it, rests on being sustainable.
|
|
Much of President Obama's legacy rests on America choosing Mrs.
|
|
All that aside, their explanation rests on a mistaken premise.
|
|
Biden's campaign rests on his ability to win South Carolina.
|
|
So the burden for GDP growth now rests on productivity.
|
|
This dystopian vision rests on many questionable assumptions, of course.
|
|
I think that rests on the shoulders of the performer.
|
|
Winning the Democratic nomination rests on winning over nonwhite voters.
|
|
The watch rests on the underside, against the wearer's skin.
|
|
Its fate likely rests on the constitutionality of Section 85033.
|
|
What a 'big deal' rests on A budget caps deal.
|
|
But its analysis rests on a pair of big assumptions.
|
|
The decision on whether to fly rests on the pilot.
|
|
The counterargument from Sanders's camp really rests on another point entirely.
|
|
The calculation for the Democrats rests on the danger of defeat.
|
|
Much now rests on how the CNRP handles its new influence.
|
|
That rests on how gigging brings important benefits to the economy.
|
|
They have found a foothold, but it rests on loose rock.
|
|
Facebook's future rests on convincing the developing world to adopt Stories.
|
|
The legitimacy American institutions enjoy rests on more than following rules.
|
|
Taylor's hand rests on a golden throne, adorned in jeweled rings.
|
|
A plane rests on the tarmac in front of a hangar.
|
|
In Minnesota, the state's case rests on the de facto vs.
|
|
Yet, again, it rests on the question of Mr Trump's motivation.
|
|
But blame also rests on his leaders and supporters back here.
|
|
The crux of this case rests on the strangeness of Trump.
|
|
But its magic rests on two simple insights formed decades ago.
|
|
This work rests on an idée fixe: to better protect victims.
|
|
It rests on three pillars: cost control, cultural change and cuts.
|
|
A lot thus rests on the tight race now under way.
|
|
Her lead rests on voters' view of her experience and temperament.
|
|
The Court's influence rests on its legitimacy as an impartial arbiter.
|
|
That rests on an implausible understanding of the Fox News phenomenon.
|
|
The shift rests on increasingly positive reviews from independents and Republicans.
|
|
It rests on the seabed about 16.5 feet below the surface.
|
|
This thesis rests on two arguments that are fundamentally in tension.
|
|
His entire candidacy rests on the idea that he can win.
|
|
A modern production's success rests on how it tames its man.
|
|
The motion passing or failing rests on the shoulders of Sen.
|
|
Mr. Trump's policy rests on a cynical and historically bogus foundation.
|
|
A condolence book rests on a stand, a construction of memories.
|
|
It's obvious that Lee's argument rests on a sleight of hand.
|
|
The rock the pavilion rests on looks like some giant pachyderm.
|
|
The current impeachment "inquiry" rests on the authority of one person.
|
|
You start with a good foundation, because everything rests on it.
|
|
Below: A heavyset man rests on a bench in Jackson, Mississippi.
|
|
A salmon-pink cardigan rests on its shoulders like a mantle.
|
|
Breakingviews The Discovery Communications cable deal rests on some rosy assumptions.
|
|
Our entire family's future rests on these taxes not being implemented.
|
|
An actual ice block rests on the platform, representing a glacier.
|
|
If Fitbit's future rests on selling smartwatches, then the company's in trouble.
|
|
A deal still rests on valuation, people familiar with the matter said.
|
|
A half-finished piece of pumpkin pie rests on your distended stomach.
|
|
In the Chinese tradition the family's future rests on that child's shoulders.
|
|
Believing in this scenario rests on two assumptions that must remain true.
|
|
The device is a glowing orb that rests on a bedside table.
|
|
It's a book that rests on top of almost 100 unmarked graves.
|
|
That case partially rests on 1373 as a justification of federal authority.
|
|
A Secretary of State's authority rests on his relationship with the President.
|
|
His argument rests on multiple false equivalences between the right and left.
|
|
NEW YORK (Reuters Breakingviews) - PayPal's future rests on striking a quadruple whammy.
|
|
S. policy in Syria rests on the U.S. and Turkey working together.
|
|
Our national security also rests on the intellectual development of our youth.
|
|
But one of them rests on the shoulders of Wanda Maximoff, a.k.a.
|
|
Brutality is brutality, and it always rests on a bed of lies.
|
|
Its future as an independent agency rests on who leads it next.
|
|
The region's economic future rests on dairy farming and ecotourism, he said.
|
|
Johnson's point rests on the assumption that we do share certain experiences.
|
|
The support rests on the premise that the rich are suffering more.
|
|
That's why I said the fate of the Republic rests on you.
|
|
A lot rests on Windows 10X being a success for these devices.
|
|
The platform rests on concrete legs that weigh a combined 300,000 tons.
|
|
NEW YORK (Reuters Breakingviews) - Discovery's cable deal rests on some rosy assumptions.
|
|
But it is a self-interest that rests on a moral principle.
|
|
The fate of North America probably rests on resolving this hand crisis.
|
|
Either way, the responsibility rests on the shoulders of Donald J. Trump.
|
|
In the 'sin miedo' (fearless) gold nameplate necklace that rests on my neck.
|
|
Because, again, the good of the entire human race rests on this experiment.
|
|
Its authority rests on the thin reed of public acceptance and political forbearance.
|
|
Their case rests on a previous legal challenge that nearly overthrew the ACA.
|
|
A LOT rests on the shoulders of the euro zone's top central banker.
|
|
Treating toleration itself as a patronising fraud likewise rests on a conceptual muddle.
|
|
In Manganiello's post, Vergara's head rests on his lap with her eyes closed.
|
|
Hope that Mr Mnangagwa will deliver any of these rests on two pillars.
|
|
The code rests on four main pillars: shame, honor, taunt, and finally, revenge.
|
|
It rests on a trite analogy between intellectual and physical barriers between people.
|
|
Instead, she laces her hand around his as it rests on her leg.
|
|
Politically, it rests on a system that predates and survives the Soviet period.
|
|
Economic freedom rests on the empowerment of the individual, nondiscrimination, and open competition.
|
|
By chance or by design, a white cloth rests on a tiled floor.
|
|
Its claim to moral superiority rests on the totalizing depravity of the opposition.
|
|
Having troops to send rests on the voluntary contributions of U.N. member-states.
|
|
The American tech economy rests on the foundations of the military-industrial complex.
|
|
The future of the Democrats and democracy rests on a young, committed electorate.
|
|
The canon of art history rests on the nude, namely the female one.
|
|
A decent society rests on a bed of manners, habits, traditions and institutions.
|
|
The court's legitimacy, of course, rests on more than unanimity or incremental change.
|
|
But this success rests on extremely low interest rates and an undervalued euro.
|
|
The American tradition rests on pillars of self-questioning, self-actualization and disagreement.
|
|
His foot rests on a small skull to show that he overcame death.
|
|
It rests on the assumption that feelings are inherently more trustworthy than facts.
|
|
Trump's plan rests on the free-market principles our side should always champion.
|
|
Its logic rests on an elaborate analogy between holy orders and holy matrimony.
|
|
And stability rests on those virtues: We remain strong by growing and changing.
|
|
It does not replace the individual's stories but rests on top of them.
|
|
Part of the explanation of course rests on the particulars of each candidate.
|
|
This rests on Twitter, Facebook, and Google who let this go completely unchecked.
|
|
President Trump's Medicare-for-all attack rests on fake facts and baseless smears.
|
|
The district court's decision in Execution Protocol rests on the most technical grounds.
|
|
The consensus on climate change rests on a long history of scientific inquiry.
|
|
It rests on the ideal of the Senate's character as an open institution.
|
|
Fred's head rests on my shoulder as I look off into the distance.
|
|
My prediction rests on the belief that we are slowly making moral progress.
|
|
Today's theory — our last — rests on several seemingly solid interpretations early in the poem.
|
|
Success rests on early, visible progress in two areas—employment and relations with Germany.
|
|
The entire history of voter ID laws rests on false claims about voter fraud.
|
|
In Wennmachers' view, communications rests on a single choice: One plays offense or defense.
|
|
Either way ... it's clear Daymond thinks carving out a future rests on her hands.
|
|
Rawls thought that the stability of the ideal society rests on an "overlapping consensus".
|
|
The aversion to paid plasma rests on three reasonable-sounding but largely groundless propositions.
|
|
Indeed, part of the prime minister's appeal to her backbenchers rests on her weakness.
|
|
" But Powell noted that "blame also rests on his leaders and supports back here.
|
|
And yet this whole argument rests on assumptions about which Sunstein is rather rosy.
|
|
The theme rests on a line Louise utters in one of Arrival's closing scenes.
|
|
The problem, however, is that the relationship with India rests on a dangerous bargain.
|
|
The future of a great many Americans rests on the fulfillment of this promise.
|
|
Today, the city's economy rests on three main commodities: stone crabs, alligators and airboats.
|
|
Looks like it all rests on Jennifer Lawrence's highly paid, sometimes blue-painted shoulders.
|
|
The argument rests on the assumption that legally restricting abortion is the minority view.
|
|
The party's legislative strategy rests on those places to make the case for repeal.
|
|
And one of the main columns that that understanding rests on is Russian literature.
|
|
The case against you, as best as I can tell, rests on three charges.
|
|
Instead of a white museum plinth, each artwork rests on two large cardboard boxes.
|
|
The only remaining chance for peace rests on what the United Nations can achieve.
|
|
Another loose piece of string rests on the floor, at the work's right corner.
|
|
Besides spending discipline, the hope for the bulls rests on the weight of history.
|
|
The case for privacy regulation rests on consumers' proving that data collection is harmful.
|
|
In a way, it's what my entire sense of self and purpose rests on.
|
|
One part of its approach rests on a deep suspicion of Christianity and Islam.
|
|
This rests on increased oil output and investment on the part of the government.
|
|
The president's authority rests on trust and discretion, not on triumph of the will.
|
|
Everything, then, rests on the independence and authority of the body charged with impeachment.
|
|
In the meantime, however, the weight of the world rests on his young shoulders.
|
|
In Vo's work, a reconstructed Corona beer carton rests on a vivid red rug.
|
|
Trump's withdrawal in Paris isn't an odd outlier, but instead rests on that foundation.
|
|
When she naps in her bassinet, he rests on the couch, right next to her.
|
|
" In the book's titular poem, fate rests on an errant satellite broadcasting "World's Smallest Pets.
|
|
As a one-woman show, all the designing, marketing, and production rests on her shoulders.
|
|
Since each bud simply rests on your ear, any amount of shaking sent them flying.
|
|
A cup of coffee rests on the bed (a dangerous move with the white sheets).
|
|
Reagan Republicanism famously rests on three legs: religious conservatism, national security conservatism, and economic conservatism.
|
|
Formal education rests on the idea of qualifications that take a set period to complete.
|
|
Karlian Mercado, 7, rests on the rubble that remains of her family's home on Sept.
|
|
Now the drama rests on whether Cooper, trapped in the Red Room, can break free.
|
|
In other words, the Democratic majority rests on districts that elected Republicans three years ago.
|
|
In fact, the classic economic case for free trade rests on the reshuffling of jobs.
|
|
It is the crux of his domestic propaganda, and the army's prestige rests on it.
|
|
How much of our political stability rests on the observance of norms or unwritten rules?
|
|
It's a sense that the safety of their ex's next partner rests on their shoulders.
|
|
In the image, Willow sits on her own while Jameson rests on his mother's lap.
|
|
It says that the company's commitment to nondiscrimination rests on two principles: inclusion and respect.
|
|
The theorem's logic rests on the interaction between industries with different degrees of labour-intensity.
|
|
"Gerald's Game" largely rests on a phenomenal performance from star Carla Gugino, according to critics.
|
|
John Kasich As with Bush and Christie, it all rests on New Hampshire for Kasich.
|
|
The notion that the market is efficient at setting executive pay rests on three arguments.
|
|
And actually, quite a lot of the storytelling in that book rests on his shoulders.
|
|
That is where the Justice Department's recent about face rests on a substantively unsustainable position.
|
|
This sort of reasoning rests on a fragile premise—what might be called solution bias.
|
|
The hope at this stage rests on the Britons who understand what is at stake.
|
|
"The claim rests on a faulty premise," said Jim Campbell, a senior counsel at ADF.
|
|
Cohn's fate for the Fed job rests on the success of the tax reform effort.
|
|
His reputation as a dealmaker mainly rests on his early bet, in 1999, on Alibaba.
|
|
Yet Mr Putin's reputation at home rests on increasing Russian territory, not slicing bits off.
|
|
It rests on surfaces diagonally, with its head down and abdomen jutting into the air.
|
|
Ablin believes it all rests on what happens with the U.S. negotiations with North Korea.
|
|
The whole thing rests on the performances, and, thankfully, Cooper and Gaga are both outstanding.
|
|
The success of this movie rests on the fact that the film is genuinely funny.
|
|
The tax overhaul bill before Congress has a professed rationale that rests on economic theory.
|
|
It also highlights how the otherwise empirical process of polling rests on a subjective foundation.
|
|
Like Mr. Rubio in Florida, Mr. Kasich's candidacy rests on a strong performance in Ohio.
|
|
It opens with soft, tape-twisted guitars and rests on patters of condensed drum lines.
|
|
The power dynamic between Josie and Meredith rests on the quicksand of loss and desire.
|
|
Part of the story here rests on the complex dynamics of the French Muslim population.
|
|
Stalin's death mask rests on a marble stand, like a beloved leader, lying in state.
|
|
This is an argument that cannot be countered with data, for it rests on values.
|
|
"Much rests on the shoulders of the Great Communicator," he said, referring to the chairman.
|
|
The responsibility for acts of hatred rests on the shoulders of the proponents and perpetrators.
|
|
But the Indian presence in Afghanistan rests on deeper cultural foundations than United States support.
|
|
Communities' health, well-being and political power rests on a just and correct census count.
|
|
Every ceramic rests on an individually designed plinth and is ready for a closer inspection.
|
|
But the company's strength also rests on its growing presence in a variety of markets.
|
|
Amy Kloubachar of Minnesota whose entire campaign rests on doing well next door in Iowa.
|
|
Democracy depends on people capable of thinking critically and that often rests on reading critically.
|
|
Officer Yanez's guilt or innocence likely rests on which of those competing narratives jurors believe.
|
|
The fate of equal representation for all communities rests on a fair and accurate count.
|
|
It's called "accelerationism," and it rests on the idea that Western governments are irreparably corrupt.
|
|
But the playing field rests on the same shaky ground as it has for years.
|
|
But that narrative rests on a faulty premise; Democrats actually did pretty well on Tuesday!
|
|
Electronic privacy rests on the rules and remedies that apply to the Fourth Amendment generally.
|
|
"Their hope of creating value likely rests on the broadband offer," Kirjner wrote in an email.
|
|
Part of the Russian attribution made by Menn's sources rests on Phineas Fisher's last public hack.
|
|
Unfortunately, the case largely rests on the word of Bella's allegedly drug-addled mother, Rachelle Bond.
|
|
Interestingly enough, the disagreement rests on how to read Justice Scalia's opinion in Sackett v. EPA.
|
|
But this narrow view of the president's options rests on a misunderstanding of basic constitutional principles.
|
|
For him, the might of the state rests on its erasure of history, private and public.
|
|
Ms. Hahn presents an impressive, cohesive body of work, although it rests on many formal precedents.
|
|
A part of Target's plan to compete with Amazon rests on investing in its store associates.
|
|
You need to grasp what it rests on, why it arose, and what it is for.
|
|
The best explanation rests on the nature of his victory, and three different sorts of discontent.
|
|
Starting your own company is a lonely venture — the outcome rests on your two shoulders alone.
|
|
The experience is pleasingly futuristic—even if the upholstery your butt rests on is decades old.
|
|
His view partly rests on whether such a scheme would be administered by the Home Office.
|
|
Benioff and Weiss are a bit different, in that their reputation rests on a single show.
|
|
THE EDIFICE of modern physics rests on two pillars, both built during the early 20th century.
|
|
Election Day is finally here, and the country's future rests on the shoulders of young people.
|
|
There are some aesthetic and physical similarities, but this comparison rests on the idea of reinvention.
|
|
That, in turn, rests on continuity in neighbouring states, reinforcing political elites and their existing priorities.
|
|
Any growth scheme that rests on falling wages is unlikely to endear Italians to Mr Renzi.
|
|
As the saying goes, where you stand on an issue often rests on where you sit.
|
|
The success of UniCredit's plan rests on investors believing it will be a long-term solution.
|
|
Unfortunately, the catalyst for their series of comical mishaps rests on tired and offensive Latino stereotypes.
|
|
And the Constitution that the law rests on did not write us in as fully human.
|
|
Kim's legitimacy rests on his ability to defend his people against real or imagined foreign threats.
|
|
It rests on the parents to choose if they are willing to pay the ultimate price.
|
|
The city of 21.04,0000 rests on the Permian oilfield, the largest oilfield in the United States.
|
|
Today, "reasonableness" rests on a faulty premise that each company can defend itself on its own.
|
|
But language is a conceptual tool, and its truth rests on the truth of its concepts.
|
|
So some of Ms. Delaney's optimism rests on a less grim situation for Canada's oil industry.
|
|
Trump's tweeted claim rests on the findings of a daily tracking poll conducted by Rasmussen Reports.
|
|
The ultimate responsibility, for where we've gotten and how we've gotten here rests on my shoulders.
|
|
The success of many of today's tracks rests on a signature sound of the music itself.
|
|
Much of the dispute rests on the scope of inspections and access to certain suspect sites.
|
|
The idea of "six degrees of separation" rests on a scientific foundation that's dubious at best.
|
|
The country's fate — and the world's — rests on who best flatters America's Grand Canyon of Need.
|
|
The whole painting rests on a panel covered in hand-cut CDs made into a mosaic.
|
|
Much rests on their memories of the strong chemistry they discovered in their first night together.
|
|
The film's particular joy, aside from the colorful costumes and warm soundtrack, rests on the casting.
|
|
So Trump's explanation for the market slide rests on a fundamental misunderstanding of how time works.
|
|
Mr. Swanson's theory rests on the assumption that the new rules would not permit unfair practices.
|
|
When it rests on her lap, she's got more freedom to find just the right angle.
|
|
For many Democratic leaders, the hope for party unity rests on shared loathing of Mr. Trump.
|
|
Usually, the burden of proof for an outlandish claim rests on the person making the assertion.
|
|
The theory of deterrence rests on an analysis of the balance between two roughly equal superpowers.
|
|
"The act's effectiveness rests on clear, consistent and efficient implementation," he said in a statement Monday.
|
|
There is no more tenuous comfort than that which rests on the possibility of another's remorse.
|
|
"The act's effectiveness rests on clear, consistent and efficient implementation," he said in a statement Monday.
|
|
But it all rests on balance, and humankind has upset that fragile system of planet Earth.
|
|
So in a sense, everything rests on Saudi Arabia and Iran being willing to come together.
|
|
" JUNE 18-19 MEETING "Going forward today, much rests on the shoulders of the Great Communicator (Bernanke).
|
|
Not that hard to tell ... Shawn's got his arm around Hailey as she rests on his chest.
|
|
Baker's marketing strategy rests on a marketing truth that's resulted in a boom for user-generated content.
|
|
Once the whole success of a platform rests on one game, that game has to be there.
|
|
Much rests on whether Trump's spending plans go ahead and their wider effect in the United States.
|
|
Regardless of whether it's for recreational or medicinal purposes, the responsibility of providing care rests on physicians.
|
|
The body of a charred animal rests on a roadside as the Camp fire tears through Paradise.
|
|
Trump knows his viability rests on his core group of grassroots supporters who he will never disappoint.
|
|
Yet the EU's credibility as a trade negotiator rests on its ability to speak for its members.
|
|
The actor is fixing his golden horns as his long-haired black wig rests on his shoulders.
|
|
A fallen tree rests on a house after remnants of Hurricane Michael passed through Columbia, South Carolina.
|
|
The viability of Vetted rests on the practicality of performing veterinary services on your living room floor.
|
|
The dual-purpose accessory rests on a charging mat, which sends energy wirelessly into a battery inside.
|
|
Some of the subsequent mess rests on the back of the Fixed-term Parliaments Act of 2011.
|
|
So a lot of this falls on him ," he said, "ultimately party unity rests on the winner.
|
|
The worst I could do was make the wire that usually rests on the neck bounce around.
|
|
The unwritten UK constitution rests on the separation of powers between the executive, legislature and judiciary branches.
|
|
When worn, the backpack rests on your hips like a regular internal-frame pack designed for camping.
|
|
While the child rests on your side, step one of your legs forward, keeping the chest up.
|
|
Mr Poroshenko, whose popularity rests on the war with Russia, casts his internal opponents as Russian agents.
|
|
Otherwise, hope rests on a combination of two things Mr Trump hates: a robust press, and leaks.
|
|
But that does not mean the freedom of the press rests on the fate of Mr Assange.
|
|
After all, his esteem rests on the fact that he knows certain things that others do not.
|
|
It rests on the assumption that an episode from the past has impact the present does not.
|
|
But an activity that rests on exposing children to long-term neurological damage needs a better defence.
|
|
Inevitably such success is shot through with hyperbole but it rests on very solid and tangible numbers.
|
|
Trump's star status rests on his ability to shock and awe - particularly to not stay on script.
|
|
A bone-white ellipsis rests on a surface in front of a woman with short, dark hair.
|
|
Then, the camera rests on Boy's bloody dead body, not daring to look away from the tragedy.
|
|
The whole question of whether Trump is an authoritarian or incompetent president rests on a false choice.
|
|
In the centuries since, we have constructed a government whose survival rests on its checks and balances.
|
|
Yes, but: The study also openly acknowledges that it rests on a range of limitations and unknowns.
|
|
Down in the 9th Congressional District, the strong case for fraud rests on mail-in absentee ballots.
|
|
The cohesion of the dialogue between the pieces rests on the grammar of this global protest language.
|
|
You put one hand on the handle and then the other part just rests on your forearm.
|
|
It has a sleek aluminum body with 28-inch screen that rests on top of a stand.
|
|
The main terminal rests on giant stilts that can be jacked up to keep the foundation level.
|
|
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads Kumo, the giant spider, rests on Notre-Dame Cathedral Basilica, Ottawa. .
|
|
Like Gris, he blurs the "fake" and the "real": a paper bird rests on a wooden perch.
|
|
But its financial model, which rests on volume, is not always an easy fit for western universities.
|
|
But how all this will function ultimately rests on choices that Mr. Zuckerberg has yet to make.
|
|
We might have different reasons why we've questioned our drinking, but it rests on the same premise.
|
|
The case for equities rests on two arguments that aren't changing with the increase in political noise.
|
|
A maraschino cherry rests on top, alien red, stem askew, as if seconds from being sucked under.
|
|
Adelaida realizes her opportunity to leave Venezuela rests on her decision to take on this new identity.
|
|
His company's 108 billion euro market value largely rests on its stake in Chinese internet giant Tencent.
|
|
Though it does serve Democratic interests, it rests on two convincing legal grounds that transcend mere partisanship.
|
|
The essence of the investment philosophy at Alta Capital rests on three pillars: profitability, growth and valuation.
|
|
If the future of Western liberalism rests on Ms. Merkel's shoulders, then it really is in trouble.
|
|
To be sure, nukes provide geopolitical status for a regime whose entire legitimacy rests on military power.
|
|
It's a vision that rests on the conviction that progressive politics must continue past the water's edge.
|
|
Unlike abstract appeals to global humanitarian concerns, it rests on the solid foundations of strong national attachments.
|
|
His corpse rests on a stretcher, its fabric frayed and soiled like the dead man's unbuttoned trousers.
|
|
Part of Lopez Obrador's pitch, aides say, rests on his willingness to say the buck stops with him.
|
|
"This business confidence rests on the pro-growth economic agenda of policymakers," Dimon said in a statement today.
|
|
The perception of Russia's military advantage rests on two main elements, argues Alexander Golts, a Russian military analyst.
|
|
Situated above the tips, the body is an inch-long oval that rests on top of my ear.
|
|
Meanwhile, Chicago rests on her dad's chest as West, 41, rocks a light lilac sweatshirt with two necklaces.
|
|
Support rests on a callable capital mechanism; such callable capital was 53%-owned Russia at end-June 2016.
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The strategy rests on Cruz winning Indiana, which awards its 92 delegates on a winner-take-all basis.
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The safety of air travelers and NASA astronauts alike rests on your battered shoulders (and heads and necks).
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My case for guarded optimism rests on one quality the transatlantic alliance has always displayed in abundance: resilience.
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It rests on an assumption that celebrity status bars a person from perpetuating and participating in rape culture.
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She has claimed to have Cherokee ancestry, but this claim rests on family lore and is historically dubious.
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Perhaps the biggest misstep of all is how much of the movie rests on Jake Chambers (Tom Taylor).
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The headset, which rests on the top part of the head like a visor, is sturdy but lightweight.
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The revolution in synthetic biology that's reshaping industries from medicine to agriculture rests on three, equally important pillars.
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The family income rests on the tiny yellow taxi that stands outside the bullet-riddled metal front door.
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But the argument rests on the idea that what's good for Facebook and Google is good for America.
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Africa's past has long been defined by commodities, but its future rests on the productivity of its people.
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Our entire modern world rests on the bottoms of shiny-pants bookkeepers with green eyeshades and sleeve garters.
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"The heart and soul of the government's case rests on the credibility of one witness," Mr. Krantz said.
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Legislative deference to the executive branch rests on a lack of will rather than a lack of power.
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Third, equal representation on the basis of one person-one vote rests on the accuracy of the census.
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Buhari's appeal rests on his incorruptibility, but institutionalized corruption remains unscathed after four years, according to Transparency International.
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Though his renown hardly rests on having been a Times correspondent, Churchill was actually born to the role.
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The Statue of Liberty rests on a 154-foot-tall pedestal, but it's not entirely safe from flooding.
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The case against Google, both in Europe and the United States, rests on sound legal and factual foundations.
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Today, the argument for Super Bowl ads rests on the idea that the game's large audience is unique.
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Elliott's appeal of the suspension rests on the belief that the investigation and appeal were unfair to him.
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But if that story makes for rewarding politics, it rests on antiquated economic assumptions about the global marketplace.
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Despite the right-wing government's actions, there is a broad consensus among Israelis that rests on three pillars.
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It rests on respect for precedent and the idea that court's decisions don't swing with each new president.
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Value rests on what they can produce and how fast, rather than what they are saying and why.
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The purpose of the activism rests on the assumption that Republican senators may be responsive to public pressure.
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When you open it, the tablet rests on top of the keyboard, held in place by the magnet.
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You can't fix a broken foundation by simply building more stories atop the house that rests on it.
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America's celebration of Martin Luther King Jr. rests on the flawed understanding of his historic and contemporary legacy.
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Our foreign policy and approach to the world also rests on the remarkably diverse background of our citizens.
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Though it is expressively shot and crisply edited, the credibility of "Patti Cake$" ultimately rests on her shoulders.
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One hand rests on his hip, the other holds the gown closed at the neck, but only just.
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His head rests on an ochre-yellow fabric, and deftly brushed colors at the top suggest banked flowers.
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The behavior of the AUD rests on Trump's behavior so the leading signals come from the U.S. Dollar.
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Now up on the hill, it rests on a cube of seemingly solid marble — with its own secret.
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Indeed, his company's success rests on its ability to sell a whole system, rather than bite-size solutions.
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" This "assessment rests on the specific historical record," which "focuses on the president's statements about a 'Muslim ban.
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Trade rests on, and reinforces, the idea that, within the proper parameters, people's interests are not in conflict.
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Zhang Huan's 10-feet-long "Buddha's Finger" (2006) rests on the floor at the center of the room.
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My visit left me thinking that Trump's entire strategy rests on a series of fundamental and dangerous misconceptions.
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The head rests on the base of a white ladder that extends upward, matching the white gallery wall.
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Trump's overhaul of Medicaid rests on a fundamental question: What kind of program is Medicaid going to be?
|
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Though the future of Althaibani's marriage rests on President Trump and his administration's policies, she's certainly isn't giving up.
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The longevity rests on his studied neutrality, which has allowed him to be appreciated by both Marxists and capitalists.
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The legal difference between hemp and marijuana, both products of the cannabis plant, rests on the plant's THC content.
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A huge amount of political capital, for everyone involved, rests on the outcome of the vote in the House.
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The crux of "see now, wear now" rests on showing products closer to when consumers want to wear them.
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And while the central ghost story is compelling, the reveal — which rests on rape and racial violence — is uncomfortable.
|
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His hand rests on a piece of paper, a large brown oval with jagged edges painted just off-center.
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What that experience rests on seems basic, but also complex to achieve, and why so many automakers fall short.
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A burned out car rests on the driveway of a smoldering home in the Napa wine region in California.
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The IMF has consistently said that its involvement in the latest bailout rests on debt relief for the country.
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The other now rests on a mantel in Willie Wood's house, where Willie Jr. and his wife now reside.
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The performance of becoming human rests on learning compassion and conscientiousness by witnessing the logical outcomes of their opposites.
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A key plank of PML-N's plan to fulfill their electoral promise rests on the three major power stations.
|
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The center console is a bit too much like those arm rests on airplanes that hide foldable tray tables.
|
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When firefighters are battling flames on a roof, sometimes their entire bodyweight rests on the head of an axe.
|
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The white-columned Georgian mansion, completed in 1950, rests on eight acres in Little Rock's historic Quapaw Quarter neighborhood.
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This double standard rests on assumptions of female biological inferiority and reinforces a prejudice stretching back to ancient times.
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Our national commitment to free speech rests on a thin reed: that we can speak without fear of retaliation.
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PSVR, by contrast, has a padded plastic ring that rests on your head a bit like a hard hat.
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The law was set to take effect last August, but its fate rests on the outcome of the referendum.
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Its Monte Carlo approach rests on the premise that each competitor's performance is unaffected by that of any other.
|
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This view of Trump rests on a belief that political effectiveness is measured by legislative and other policy victories.
|
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China's growth — and the investment that keeps its current account and trade surplus down — rests on a fragile base.
|
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"The future of American freedom rests on the shoulders of men and women willing to defend it," Trump said.
|
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The reputation of Steve Reich, the grandfather of American Minimalism, rests on the propulsive, positive energy of his music.
|
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The bill was passed last week by the Georgia House of Representatives and now rests on approval from Gov.
|
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" In dissent, Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. wrote that "the majority opinion rests on proverb rather than precedent.
|
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Delegate and empower those around you to take responsibility instead of thinking that success solely rests on your shoulders.
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My head rests on my pillow fairly easy at night, there's no big weird shit or deceits or anything.
|
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Part of the power of language, Binet's novel suggests, rests on its slipperiness, its ability to embody shifting meanings.
|
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Acting like the dismantling of the patriarchy rests on the shoulders of my two-year-old son is madness.
|
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It rests on the idea that messy insecurities move tantamount with the black excellence we often want to present.
|
|
But whether or not it's successful, I think, rests on what kind of coverage is on the other end.
|
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Recall that Obamacare basically rests on a 1990s vintage Republican chassis onto which Democrats fastened some additional policy particulars.
|
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But look more closely and you will find that economic growth rests on a surprisingly amorphous base: consumer confidence.
|
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I walk around the tapestry, which rests on the floor, in an attempt to see its contents more clearly.
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For high school athletes, this means much of the onus on anti-doping education rests on coaches and parents.
|
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His grandmother rests on her bed in a pensive mood after calling a relative in Florida's rapidly growing diaspora.
|
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So that's why the deal largely rests on a half-dozen of the company's biggest owners and earliest backers.
|
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Much of Kavanaugh's opinion rests on a distinction between "facial" challenges to an unconstitutional law and "as applied" challenges.
|
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The movie rests on the shoulders of Bielenia — or rather, in his eyes, which photograph as a chilling gray.
|
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It rests on the idea that the involved committees already have been given authority to conduct an impeachment inquiry.
|
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Note that this theory necessarily rests on the assumption that there is more than one competitor in the market.
|
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Her majority rests on those moderates, who have followed her on impeachment despite real risks to their political standing.
|
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The dispute rests on one article in Ms. Morris's most recent will, which was executed shortly before she died.
|
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Its policy of "maximum pressure" in order to get North Korea to denuclearize rests on wide-ranging economic sanctions.
|
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Her planet-saving skill rests on her ability to communicate with aliens and people who can't understand one another.
|
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RELATED: FULL POLL RESULTS IN SOUTH CAROLINA Biden's strong standing in South Carolina rests on support from black voters.
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Soon it becomes apparent that Mike's case rests on Diane and the police brutality case from the series premiere.
|
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Support rests on a callable capital mechanism; such callable capital was 53%-owned by Russia at end-June 2017.
|
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Their worth rests on beliefs regarding their future supply and demand —ultimately, whether they will be successful as money.
|
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But the argument, which rests on data from IQ-type tests that show lower average scores among blacks, persists.
|
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But deterrence rests on the underlying possibility of the use of nuclear weapons; otherwise, they would cease to deter.
|
|
My iPad rests on a movable device, allowing me to zoom in for detailed viewing of my working images.
|
|
This hypothesis—that Mr Ghosn was downed by a corporate coup—rests on resentment within Nissan of the French carmaker.
|
|
In the image, Paltrow's hand rests on top of Falchuk's, as she tucks her pinky between two of his fingers.
|
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It also rests on a common set of ideas: faith in democracy, freedom and respect for the rule of law.
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In addition, the museum rests on top of a parking structure to which Isozaki had to conform his column grid.
|
|
An old rickshaw sits among beanbags and a vase of flowers rests on an ancient oil barrel in the corner.
|
|
Of course, all of this rests on T-Mobile and Sprint getting over the last big hurdle their merger faces.
|
|
" That's great — and legally required, of course — but his response also rests on a few key words: "presented to me.
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The authors' conclusion, however, rests on their assumption about the margin for error built into the projects they looked at.
|
|
Blindspotting rests on a kind of racial ambiguity that is hard to reconcile if you're not from the Bay Area.
|
|
One rests on the fact that the Allies never signed a peace treaty with Germany after the second world war.
|
|
It rests on a richness of ideas and the ability to steer them through the bureaucratic process that is government.
|
|
That is hardly the case: Much of Obamacare's success or failure rests on the decisions the Trump administration will make.
|
|
Pew Research Center has documented the influence of passion, noting that it rests on the ends of the political spectrum.
|
|
That decision largely rests on House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, as any impeachment proceedings would start in the House of Representatives.
|
|
"A system that rests on anything other than authority downwards and responsibility upwards cannot really make decisions," he tells Strasser.
|
|
Mr Babis is a pragmatist who knows his country's success rests on Europe's integrated supply chains and open internal borders.
|
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Part of his thesis rests on what he considers appealing new fashions, including fresh takes on bomber jackets and denim.
|
|
A recovery in production from both countries means the onus to cut rests on Saudi Arabia and its Gulf neighbors.
|
|
Success rests on implementing and delivering practical, realistic, long-term solutions that make the world cleaner, safer and more sustainable.
|
|
In Sikander's etching, the tree rests on the bottom zone of the pictorial space, its branches permeating her hidden face.
|
|
Importantly, Phantom's case rests on whether the company deliberately and explicitly set out to facilitate criminal activity with its products.
|
|
The only hope that FP has of a lighter sentence rests on his decision to snitch on South Side Serpents.
|
|
Three young men sit in a small room with tablets and a radio that rests on two packs of cigarettes.
|
|
It's the largest amphibian on the planet, a gargantuan (though harmless) beast that rests on river-bottoms hoovering up fish.
|
|
Whiting was quick to add, however, that this interpretation rests on the reported allegations surrounding Trump proving to be accurate.
|
|
If there is hope yet, it rests on the shoulders of A24, an independent film company based in New York.
|
|
Much criticism of the West's central bankers rests on the myth that they are wholly responsible for rock-bottom rates.
|
|
This is because the Canadian-American alliance, going back at least to World War I, rests on many shared commonalities.
|
|
Globally, women's achievement of optimal sexual and reproductive health rests on the realization of a wide range of human rights.
|
|
The foreign conglomerate du jour benefits and the area stays alive, but the town's bulwark now rests on softer ground.
|
|
Although casualties were down and the security forces appear to have exercised restraint, the respite rests on a knife's edge.
|
|
At the end of the day, whether or not Instagram impacts your mental health rests on a lot of factors.
|
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The integrity of the global financial system rests on this, but it is only as strong as its weakest link.
|
|
Apple's reasoning for why consumers lack standing to sue rests on a case from 1977 known as Illinois Brick v.
|
|
Instead, he kept the memento and asked Rivera to sign the bat, which now rests on Parmelee's mantel at home.
|
|
The full-size rocking bed, which rests on a platform suspended within a metal frame, is connected to a motor.
|
|
One Bunker Hill, built as the headquarters for Southern California Edison, the electric supply behemoth, rests on a steep slope.
|
|
Second, the legitimacy of an open-borders policy rests on the idea that America itself is an illegitimate, counterfeit country.
|
|
Meade has, however, avoided corruption scandals in office, and part of his appeal rests on his status as an outsider.
|
|
This is your moment to remind adults that our democracy rests on our ability to disagree without attacking each other.
|
|
John Kasich's only hope for the Republican presidential nomination rests on an extraordinary turn of events at the party's convention.
|
|
Players in the Dark Zone from outside your group show as "non-hostile agents" when your aim rests on them.
|
|
We meet at his restaurant NOA (both "ship" and "knife" in Estonian), which rests on the seafront just outside Tallinn.
|
|
In a body-on-frame design, the engine rests on a large frame, which absorbs a lot of the stresses.
|
|
Background reading: • The future of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau as an independent agency rests on who leads it next.
|
|
Two stories underground, beneath offices where engineers design iPhones and MacBooks, the building rests on 692 huge stainless steel saucers.
|
|
It was aggressively promoted by Instagram influencers — those model/advertiser/guru hybrids whose entire project rests on smoke and mirrors.
|
|
The princess holds a goat whose head rests on her left shoulder, and she gazes at us over her right.
|
|
Mr. Gantz's 61-seat majority in Parliament rests on the support of 15 lawmakers from the predominantly Arab Joint List.
|
|
Mr. Gantz's 61-seat majority in Parliament rests on the support of 15 lawmakers from the predominantly Arab Joint List.
|
|
The case for public roads rests on the assumption that private industry won't build roads that reach the whole country.
|
|
The central bank is independent, but its future leadership rests on the most political of questions: Who is in government?
|
|
China is easily Australia's largest trading partner, and a lot of our economic prosperity rests on stable relations with them.
|
|
But whether the strike will help the president win over more voters rests on factors largely outside Mr. Trump's control.
|
|
After Nicole and Dion zap the creature into submission, the camera rests on the black cloud that survives the confrontation.
|
|
When Chidi is stripped of responsibility and anxiety in the new version of the neighborhood, he rests on his laurels.
|
|
The sea otter rests on a real water bed, floating on its back, often arm in arm with a mate.
|
|
So the quality of any individual "fall TV season" often rests on how good the broadcast networks' new programs are.
|
|
The decision to fly or not, in small-aircraft operations, rests on the pilot, CNN transportation analyst Mary Schiavo said.
|
|
The results will help to accurately determine the minimum diameter for sustainable exploitation, a figure that currently rests on guesswork.
|
|
Hope rests on the central bank, which has shaved 10 basis points off the interest rate on reverse repurchase agreements.
|
|
I get out of bed and walk into the kitchen, where a pink cake box innocuously rests on the counter.
|
|
But a cadre of scientists and policy activists are now pushing back, saying that biomass energy rests on deceptive accounting.
|
|
First is that they were going through an equity plan that rests on the assumption that all white people are racists.
|
|
Modern history is a sensitive subject in China as so much of the party's legitimacy rests on claims of its achievements.
|
|
Facebook's VR future rests on people finding new worlds that they want to step into — how will Oculus make this happen?
|
|
Financial journalist Bethany McLean argues that the U.S. fracking boom rests on a shaky, debt-laden foundation that may be unsustainable.
|
|
Most of the argument that Logan had a hand in what transpired rests on Logan's final smile, which is admittedly ambiguous.
|
|
As the closing evening of the Republican convention showed, much of the justification for Trump's candidacy rests on this tired playbook.
|
|
On the float, an American eagle can be seen on one of Trump's shoulders while Putin's head rests on the other.
|
|
A second Gloria, lacking a base and tipped on its side, rests on a rotated kettle-like shape on the left.
|
|
The tower, in turn, rests on a 203,220-ton steel jacket foundation, which is anchored to the seafloor 290 feet down.
|
|
Putin's strategy rests on determined modernization of Russia's armed forces, and he has dedicated more than $700 billion to this effort.
|
|
Mr McConnell's syllogism, equating single-payer health insurance systems with socialism, government and Europe, rests on a set of deep archetypes.
|
|
The financial support rests on the condition of direly needed reform in the areas of corruption, subsidies and public-sector spending.
|
|
The fear of turning away Trump voters rests on the assumption that he will attract more voters than he drives away.
|
|
Facebook's VR future rests on people finding new worlds that they want to step into; how will Oculus make this happen?
|
|
Second, it rests on the incorrect assumption that Donald Trump won because of policy, rather than culture (more on this below).
|
|
But the bulk of the movie rests on Storm Reid, and the young actress proves more than up to the challenge.
|
|
A French president's power rests on the ability to get laws through parliament and much will hang on June's parliamentary elections.
|
|
While the spacey meditation rests on a heartbeat-like drum pattern for most of its duration, it eventually dissolves into noise.
|
|
Its fate rests on the still unproven strategy of adapting the model of low-cost short-haul travel to longer routes.
|
|
The man hunches over quietly, his eyes cast downward as his foot rests on what appears to be a stray tire.
|
|
And like New Orleans after Katrina, the future of Mexico Beach now rests on Americans' resolve to rebuild what was lost.
|
|
The plan for the country's economic reinvention rests on a number of pillars, including youth empowerment, social organization and women's empowerment.
|
|
Largely, this rests on the misconception that there is a comprehensive and complete record of criminal information held by the government.
|
|
In an undated, lovely still-life photograph, a little heap of the intoxicant rests on a box of Bold laundry detergent.
|
|
A brilliantly colored sea slug — Felimare picta — rests on the north coast of the Balearic island Minorca in Punta den Siulet.
|
|
With a body-on-frame design, like what's used in most pickups, the force from a trailer rests on the frame.
|
|
The Democrats' hope for a blue wave rests on female voters coming out to register their displeasure with the president's party.
|
|
The cult of personality functions the same everywhere; it rests on the inaccurate notion that the face somehow represents the nation.
|
|
" The report also said the Obama guidance "rests on a provision whose validity cannot be squared with the Supreme Court's holdings.
|
|
There is something tiresome and incurious about the film's romanticism, which rests on the canard that girls aren't really into music.
|
|
If you need to use your hose for a sprinkler that rests on the lawn, this design is a bad pick.
|
|
The effect is offset by Rudolph's cautious, closemouthed smile, which rests on her face as easily as powder on a puff.
|
|
Still, Trump's path to a victory is narrow, and any realistic chance rests on his winning Ohio, North Carolina and Florida.
|
|
In fact, I would ask, what if that tranquillity, that peace of mind, rests on the rotting corpses beneath our feet?
|
|
The Justice Department's reputation and the credibility of the rule of law rests on the impression that such a situation prevails.
|
|
That reign rests on a claim on the bodies of women and children, as a right of property, made by men.
|
|
The humor of the show rests on Beetlejuice and his desire to return to human form, and Brightman is brilliantly cast.
|
|
Many analysts also worry that the West Bank government, whose scant remaining legitimacy rests on delivering a peace deal, will collapse.
|
|
The whole scene rests on an ebony veneer base with a retrograde-hour movement that has an eight-day power reserve.
|
|
His sales pitch to the EU ahead of the crucial European Council summit on October 17th-18th rests on two arguments.
|
|
It's a state of mind that you create in a potential adversary, and it rests on a couple of foundational criteria.
|
|
Her pigment-smeared palette, which rests on a wooden shelf attached to her easel, is angled downward, jutting toward the viewer.
|
|
Before Judd heads out on the evening of his murder, the camera rests on a photo of him as a child.
|
|
" And the truth rests on the shoulders of those whose jobs it is to provide information: "journalists, the protectors of news.
|
|
The popularity of Scandi noir rests on the contrast between the banal surface of Nordic societies and the nefarious activities underneath.
|
|
America's economic system rests on the uniquely powerful collaboration of the public and private spheres, a distinct advantage over global competitors.
|
|
Which is why, in an interview with NPR, DeWine said he believes much of the fault rests on these companies' actions.
|
|
Three small vases sit on the shelf, and a diptych of vases rests on the floor in front of the painting.
|
|
The Vive has a foam face guard that goes around the perimeter of the goggles and rests on your forehead and cheeks.
|
|
Trump is an unconventional Republican in many ways, but his political standing rests on the solid support of the traditional Republican Party.
|
|
Furthermore, we are constantly being asked to somehow "prove" our love, as if it rests on shifty ground because of our bisexuality.
|
|
You insert the larger, flatter side of the toy in the vagina, while the smaller side rests on the clitoris and vibrates.
|
|
Secret Window rests on a twist that might have been less obvious pre–Fight Club: Shooter is a figment of Mort's imagination.
|
|
Vance rests on a doctrine known as "Younger abstention," which prevents federal courts from interfering with an ongoing prosecution in state court.
|
|
One hand rests on the wheel that tortured the saint, the other holds a palm frond that looks similar to a paintbrush.
|
|
The camera in 2017 is our phone, our mobile computer, our social lives, and it rests on the tripod of our hand.
|
|
The city today rests on that soft lakebed atop a layer of clay, all of it cupped underneath by hard volcanic rock.
|
|
Mr Macron's best hope now of restoring his authority rests on persuading the public that the protest movement is no longer reasonable.
|
|
But it's quite within the range of possibility that control of either or both chambers rests on a few very narrow outcomes.
|
|
Its operation rests on the assumption that the chip—the machine tasked with carrying out those instructions—will perform its job correctly.
|
|
The thesis rests on the idea of production cycles, and the journey from the frontiers of innovation to the backwaters of standardisation.
|
|
Or that Anderson, of all filmmakers, deserves leeway because his entire cinematic oeuvre rests on pushing stereotypes to their exaggerated aesthetic limit.
|
|
The camera never fully rests on them, leaving them to be general "evil alien" types for the first part of the invasion.
|
|
And given the bad-faith arguments it rests on top of, it's not at all clear what Facebook can do about it.
|
|
And when the time comes to vote, the decision rests on whom they can trust to do the least amount of harm.
|
|
One of the enduring strengths of a well-written profile rests on both the journalist and subject opening up to each other.
|
|
Sinkholes are particularly common in Florida, which rests on a nearly unbroken bed of limestone, according to the Florida Sinkhole Research Institute.
|
|
Trump's foreign policy vision rests on the fallacy that all transactions are zero-sum, with an obvious winner and an obvious loser.
|
|
"The doctrine rests on a recognition that the president and subordinate officials require some confidentiality in order to operate effectively," Columbus argues.
|
|
And one reason for it is the complexities of a right-wing media apparatus that rests on a foundation of partisan rage.
|
|
Columbia's union-busting rests on the argument that student workers aren't workers at all, but are instead future scholars in the making.
|
|
And if you wear glasses, then there's no pressure on those anymore either because none of the weight rests on your nose.
|
|
Good diplomatic and economic relations with the EU are in Turkey's self-interest -- and Erdogan's domestic popularity rests on Turkey's economic success.
|
|
American consumers kept up an epic shopping spree last month, and the fate of the U.S. economy rests on keeping it going.
|
|
Its fate rests on the still unproven strategy of adapting the success of low-cost short-haul travel to long-haul routes.
|
|
Lawyers for New Jersey-based J&J have said the case rests on a "radical" interpretation of the state's public nuisance law.
|
|
The projector rests on the roof on the truck in a specially designed stand, while the screen locks into the trailer hitch.
|
|
The anti–rent control rhetoric rests on the argument that rent control discourages developers from constructing new buildings, further aggravating housing shortages.
|
|
The central claim, then, that campaign donations implicates First Amendment interests may be less the true today, and rests on unstable grounds.
|
|
Flake's effort to reassure people with preexisting conditions rests on the assumption that political pressure will convince governors to maintain coverage protections.
|
|
BARUUNBUREN, Mongolia (Reuters) - Buddhism is one of the world's oldest religions, but its fate in Mongolia now rests on very young shoulders.
|
|
The weight of a lot of expectation rests on the record's shoulders, as is always the way with 'return from hiatus' releases.
|
|
Ms. Piven's promotion of mass disruption rests on the idea that it deserves credit for the biggest progressive achievements in American history.
|
|
The Soniat House Hotel rests on both sides of famed Chartres Street in three nineteenth-century townhomes with Spanish wrought-iron balconies.
|
|
AMLO's popularity rests on the belief that he will end corruption, bring down crime, and redistribute ill-gotten gains to the people.
|
|
Dozens of women have accused the comedian of sexual assault, but the criminal case rests on what happened in a single encounter.
|
|
"The ultimate responsibility, for where we've gotten and how we've gotten here, rests on my shoulders," Mr. Kalanick wrote in his email.
|
|
The local government is constructing new buildings nearby, a vote of confidence — even if it's one that rests on raised cinder blocks.
|
|
DALLAS — An eight-foot cross rests on its side, near an assortment of other crosses and a menagerie of police uniform patches.
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The claim that Putin is richest man in the world rests on the assumption that he has front men managing his money.
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His approval rating rests on the job he has actually done for three years, and for which he is seeking re-election.
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Mishustin excelled at the most important task under Russia's model of state capitalism, which rests on massive government spending: efficient tax collection.
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Instead, Trump's plan to pay down the nearly $20 trillion national debt rests on bolstering economic growth through tax cuts and deregulation.
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Much of their defense of the president, both in the Senate and on television, rests on delegitimizing the House inquiry she blessed.
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"Kadyrov's rule rests on propaganda, fear—and real popularity," Gregory Shvedov, the editor of Caucasian Knot, a news Web site, told me.
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" There is, he adds, another consideration: "The whole Putin system rests on two pillars: the military and the export of energy resources.
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The brewery's success certainly rests on high-quality beer, a strong brand that has acquired a halo despite its tiny marketing budget.
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The government thus rests on an unfamiliar electoral coalition living in parts of the country that the Conservatives do not know well.
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Yet the system for hiring passport officers likely rests on the faulty premise that applicants have essentially equal skill in recognizing faces.
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" Read more " _____ Hate to be a downer, but — whether this signifies prosecutions to come rests on what was behind the plea deal.
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Gunnar Myrdal's book The American Dilemma (which predates Huntington's argument by several decades) rests on similar logic but is focused on race.
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The ultimate success of these devices rests on whether the companies see an increase in both passenger retention and new rider acquisition.
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Barnette's concept rests on the juxtaposition of her father's activism, and its resultant government surveillance, with his role in the family unit.
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While the roller is moving beneath your legs, your entire body weight rests on your arms — so my abs definitely felt the burn.
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"Our democracy rests on the ability of all individuals, regardless of race, income or status, to exercise their right to vote", she wrote.
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But that characterization of Thursday's decision rests on a selective and misleading reading of recent history and how the internet has been regulated.
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"Our democracy rests on the ability of all individuals, regardless of race, income, or status, to exercise their right to vote," she said.
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The fairing rests on the top of the rocket, and it acts as a shield for satellites that SpaceX launches for its customers.
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The plaintiffs' challenge rests on firmer ground than another emolument lawsuit in New York, which was dismissed for lack of standing in December.
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The teardrop-shaped machine rests on the mother's breasts under her bra, and collects milk in a pouch that's stored inside the device.
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It rests on the belief that individuals learn themselves more fully in interaction with others, and that there is virtue in collective power.
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Set aside, for now, his crotchety-great-uncle charisma, and the idea that Mr Sanders is a major force rests on two myths.
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The remote science outpost rests on Antarctica's 500-foot (150-meter) thick Brunt Ice Shelf, which is showing signs of an imminent collapse.
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But does a queen wear a floppy veil, which rests on Amber's head like a the water-logged hood of a disposable poncho?
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America's federal structure rests on three pillars: a congress to enact laws, an executive to administer them, and a judiciary to settle disputes.
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Trump's campaign for president rests on the notion that he is a successful businessman and that he will run the country like one.
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In February, she shared a serene snap of herself breastfeeding her son while 5½-year-old daughter Willow Sage rests on her lap.
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And Trump's pledge to restore the postwar economic boom and racial homogeneity of Eisenhower-era America rests on magical thinking, economically and politically.
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The case of Hogan, whose real name is Terry Bollea, rests on the argument that Gawker violated his privacy by publishing the tape.
|
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CNN&aposs reporting surrounding Trump&aposs reported foreknowledge of the 2016 Trump Tower meeting rests on the shoulder of one man, Michael Cohen.
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The crux of the suit rests on California's Unruh Civil Rights Act, which bars businesses from discriminating based on a person's gender identity.
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It's a performance that rests on an understanding that humanizing someone and making them likable need not be the same thing at all.
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A comprehensive strategy to both prevent terrorism and promote peace and prosperity in the Arab world rests on four separate but interwoven elements.
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Built in 1782, the nine-bedroom, three-bathroom historic building known as the "Old Stone House" rests on the US and Canadian border.
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His entire campaign now rests on pulling off that feat on a national scale — and convincing Republican activists that it would be legitimate.
|
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Donald Trump's nearness to the presidency rests on two separate accomplishments — or, if you prefer, two separate institutional failures — that are often conflated.
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McCarthy said in a statement her determination, a legally binding decision to maintain the fuel efficiency rules, rests on an extensive technical record.
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It's important to note that this model is only as good as the data it is fed and the assumptions it rests on.
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Dr. Horvath-Cosper's legal case rests on a little-known aspect of the Church Amendment, which was adopted in 1973 after Roe v.
|
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That situation underlines how quickly the world is moving to a form of economics that rests on owning the richest possible data resources.
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That proposition rests on the simple truth that counterspeech is by far the better remedy to the extent that particular statements are made.
|
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Trump's claim rests on a brand-new DOJ Office of Legal Counsel opinion, which repeats previous OLC claims that Judge Bates unequivocally rejected.
|
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It's important to see that this process — like that whereby a poem is written — rests on two requirements that have to be met.
|
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With a legal system bursting at the seams and over 2 million people locked up, a heavy burden rests on those resisting reform.
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Zelinsky said the prosecution's case rests on five false statements Stone made to the committee related to WikiLeaks and its founder Julian Assange.
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The industry's plan rests on a mix of alternative fuel, improved operations such as direct flight paths and new planes or other technology.
|
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This theory rests on the idea that a victim of childhood sexual abuse is more likely to go on and commit sex crimes.
|
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"Reich Richter Pärt," which runs through June 2nd, is a more satisfying construction, probably because it rests on organic connections among the artists.
|
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The giant staircase, which anchors the center of Times Square and rests on top of the TKTS booth, opened 10 years ago today.
|
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Here, Biden has been unique and the contrast clear — of all the Democrats, Biden's entire qualification rests on being the quintessential establishment candidate.
|
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But it's not, and treating it as such rests on a basic error about the way polarization, and indeed American politics itself, works.
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Ultimately, building a greener, more resilient, independent grid rests on whether there is enough money and political will to see the vision through.
|
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The Supreme Court will soon rule in another case that rests on whether a U.S. Food and Drug Administration approval preempts tort claims.
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The transplants were from a donor with a mutation in a protein called CCR232, which rests on the surface of certain immune cells.
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That means the ice, which rests on the bottom, gets thicker and more massive as you move in the direction of the pole.
|
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Bivens, in other words, rests on something comic book fans will recognize as the Spider-Man rule — with great power comes great responsibility.
|
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United States rests on the assumption that, when Congress repealed a single provision of Obamacare in 2017, it actually dismantled the entire law.
|
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In other words, the FCC's entire argument rests on an increasingly flimsy legal technicality that only a higher court or Congress can address.
|
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But the criminal case rests on what happened in a single encounter with Ms. Constand in 2004, at his home in suburban Philadelphia.
|
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Some education experts say that Bridge's plans for an international chain of low-fee, for-profit private schools rests on a flawed assumption.
|
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With the animal on the verge of extinction, the fate of the subspecies rests on Sudan's ability to conceive with the two rhinos.
|
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With the FCC now widely viewed as a rubber stamp for industry desires, the onus rests on localities to pick up the slack.
|
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In such a scenario, our fate then rests on whether the Taliban seeks to re-establish safe havens in the areas it controls.
|
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RELATED: FULL POLL RESULTS IN NEVADA Nevada's three-way race rests on the demographic and political divides that are driving the contest nationwide.
|
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It may now be up to Congress to reaffirm one of the fundamental concepts that much of the American financial system rests on.
|
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"The fate of the republic rests on your shoulders," Obama told supporters in Chapel Hill, calling Trump temperamentally unfit to lead the nation.
|
|
But in the end, Central Park Tower's financial fate rests on those views, and the emotions they will stir in today's global rich.
|
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There will always be people who find that the true marker for a city is not its structural blueprint that it rests on.
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"Our democracy rests on the ability of all individuals, regardless of race, income or status, to exercise their right to vote," she wrote.
|
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While the canvas on the top rests on those making up the sides, it does not fully span across the vertical on right.
|
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And, in an echo of founder-dominated tech firms, too much responsibility rests on Ms Baker, who chairs both the foundation and the corporation.
|
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AWS is already the clear market leader in the cloud infrastructure market, but it's never been an organization that rests on its past successes.
|
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Papadopoulos is a key witness in the Trump-Russia case, and Page hasn't even been indicted — suggesting the case indeed rests on solid ground.
|
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The Technics SP-10 MKIII direct-drive turntable on the left rests on a vibration-smothering, 210-pound slate plinth (quarried and cut locally).
|
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And yet, a lot of nutrition research today rests on just that kind of information: people's self-reporting from memory of what they ate.
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That's one of the biggest risks of Trump's personal diplomacy approach: The whole enterprise rests on Trump and Kim maintaining a good personal relationship.
|
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Deere's defense of Trump on LGBTQ rights — like many gay Republicans' — rests on a vivid conviction: None of the president's stances are actually discriminatory.
|
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A married couple rests on a rainbow flag during the first day of civil registration for same-sex marriages in Taipei on May 24.
|
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The fate of two families rests on one bark, one growl, one sniff in the wrong part of the anatomy at the wrong time.
|
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Their argument rests on a flawed assumption: that the majority for Leave in 2016 means any resulting deal reflects the will of the people.
|
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First things first, your saucer stays on the table and your tea cup rests on it with the handle pointing to your three o'clock.
|
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A bird song carries through the open corrugated metal roof that rests on an exposed brick fence and a pair of two-by-fours.
|
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A small bouquet of pink and white flowers rests on a table, in the 40-something temperatures, a reminder of a family's inconceivable loss.
|
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Why it matters: The Russian system rests on the extraction of natural resources, primarily oil and natural gas, which is sold abroad by oligarchs.
|
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He comes across as a cardboard cutout on valium and I'm a little bummed that this intriguing new turn rests on his slumping shoulders.
|
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We have to seize this opportunity because it's our shared responsibility; the difficulty task of repairing and restoring our organization rests on our shoulders.
|
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The production rests on heavily processed guitar strums, evoking the unsettled warmth of the Los Angeles afternoon the song's various protagonists are experiencing together.
|
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But Pakistani army officials are undeterred by the scepticism and insist they will finish the job as the country's security rests on this fence.
|
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"The future of internet freedom rests on our ability to fix social media," said Adrian Shahbaz, the nonprofit's research director for technology and democracy.
|
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It's not just that we are morally impotent; the continuation of our comfortable lives rests on the continuation—on the success—of that impotence.
|
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In any case, as we shall see, such vehement opposition to open immigration usually rests on empirically false assumptions about the results of immigration.
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Finally, our analysis rests on the assumption that the residuals from our regression are a reliable proxy for the value added by a university.
|
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The survival of any social-media business rests on "network effects," in which the value of the network grows only by finding new users.
|
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Existing evidence suggests that the program provides minimal benefit and that the entire ObamaCare physician quality metric enterprise rests on decidedly shaky evidential ground.
|
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In some ways Enderal is not quite as tight as the Bethesda-built world it rests on, but in some crucial ways it's improved.
|
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"[T]he Commission's revised case still rests on a theory that just doesn't fit the reality of how most people shop online," argues Walker.
|
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The crux of the decision rests on Bărbulescu's employer having failed to adequately inform him in advance that it might be monitoring his communications.
|
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But the entire business model — what the philosopher and business theorist Shoshana Zuboff calls "surveillance capitalism" — rests on untrammeled access to your personal data.
|
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VandeHei's theory that "CEOs are America's new politicians" rests on the fact that corporate leaders now wade into politics more than they used to.
|
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Kik isn't accused of fraud; it's accused of not properly registering the offering with the S.E.C. This rests on what, exactly, Kik was offering.
|
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But the extreme example actually rests on a more pervasive phenomenon — namely, the under-enforcement of the criminal law against some groups of offenders.
|
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ARK's hyper-bullish valuation rests on a surge in Tesla's revenue to more than $180 billion over the next five years from $13 billion.
|
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Much of the city's future rests on a transit system that has fallen into a decrepit state, just as New York's population has boomed.
|
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Microsoft&aposs future rests on forging strong ties with corporate customers, and it relies on a special framework called "horizons" to guide its partnerships.
|
|
What I haven't seen pointed out much, however, is that Trump's racism rests on a vision of America that is decades out of date.
|
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The case rests on a subtle legal argument: WhatsApp is attempting to punish hackers for targeting WhatsApp users, not for illegally breaching WhatsApp servers.
|
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Per the property's description, it rests on a lot of more than 12,500 square feet which includes "lush backyard gardens" and two master suites.
|
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Mr. Trudeau's political fate largely rests on his ability to win over fickle voters in Quebec and Ontario, the two most populous Canadian provinces.
|
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A decision to buy shares of Houston-based Schlumberger rests on the possibility of more worldwide drilling, "something that is already happening," Cramer said.
|
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"The ultimate responsibility, for where we've gotten and how we've gotten here, rests on my shoulders," Mr. Kalanick wrote in the email to employees.
|
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The Portal TV is a small camera device that rests on top of or below your TV set, turning it into a videochatting device.
|
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Brennan's opinion, in other words, rests on something comic book fans will recognize as the Spider-Man rule — with great power comes great responsibility.
|
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But it is not clear how far the plan, which rests on selling billions of dollars of new WeWork bonds to investors, has progressed.
|
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Our confidence in these beliefs rests on our confidence that our sensory apparatus, our eyes and ears, delivers accurate information about the natural world.
|
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The allure of Patient Zero rests on the ways in which the figure allows us to assign responsibility and blame when an outbreak occurs.
|
|
A helpful tool in coming to an answer rests on discernment, a concept beloved by Jesuits, and, more recently, Pope Francis (himself a Jesuit).
|
|
Although millennials often have the reputation of being narcissistic, that rests on little more than the fact that they post selfies on social media.
|
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A lot of the responsibility for the film's success rests on Adam Scott, who proved his dramatic chops earlier in 2017 with Big Little Lies.
|
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Purse: Every week Field tests have shown that purses sometimes carry traces of E. coli, most often on the bottom, which rests on germy surfaces.
|
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The focus therefore rests on its statement, due at 1800 GMT, and any clues it offers as to when interest rates could be hiked again.
|
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It is a striking passage to choose, but also a misleading one—implying that Trumpian success, in essence, rests on a talent for bamboozling rubes.
|
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The "API-powered economy" — that is, apps whose operation rests on using APIs — have been forecast to generate $2.2 trillion in the next 10 years.
|
|
Speaking of the stakes, I appreciated Michael and Eleanor laying them out so plainly: The fate of the world rests on a girl from Arizona.
|
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" Overall, it's the general troll playbook, which rests on being able to express terrible opinions while retreating under the cover of "I was just joking.
|
|
China's new power rests on a 20-fold increase in economic output since the late 1970s, when pragmatic leaders set in train market-led reforms.
|
|
But, as I noted above, the case is different where the motion rests on assertions about a particular judge's religious convictions rather than mere affiliations.
|
|
Lawyers say their case, which has been updated in recent weeks, rests on conversations among participants and describes planning that preceded the August 2017 rally.
|
|
And Senator Sanders's plan really rests on making sure that governors like Scott Walker contribute $23 billion on the first day to make college free.
|
|
Surveys of US public opinion show that broad American support for Israel rests on the sense of a shared democratic identity between the two countries.
|
|
The new government's majority also rests on an unwieldy coalition of other defectors from UMNO and veteran opposition politicians with relatively little experience of government.
|
|
But the core of the filing itself rests on the limits of the FBI's request and the limitations of the All Writs Act in general.
|
|
" However, Powell did add that other officials, including Clinton, did deserve some criticism, writing, "But blame also rests on his leaders and supports back here.
|
|
But plenty of well-known companies, whose competitive edge rests on brands or patents, have much higher ratios or even negative book values (see chart).
|
|
An edifice of asset prices and borrowing rests on the assumption of permanently low and stable interest rates, making it more fragile than it looks.
|
|
Much of Luna's case rests on his adherence to the Texas Utilities Code and whether or not he did, in fact, properly mark his cables.
|
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Everything we have made of our world rests on our ability to cooperate on a global level — by sharing a powerful layer of fictional reality.
|
|
Apple wisely included palm recognition too, so when my hand inevitably rests on that giant trackpad it doesn't send the cursor flying across the screen.
|
|
The mania for tech platforms that match cars with riders rests on the idea that they can turn car-hire into critical urban-transport infrastructure.
|
|
I feel like the last third of all my movies rests on Daniel's shoulders, because he delivers such an integral component to the filmgoing experience.
|
|
His right arm sits in his pocket and his left on rests on the back of her chair as he looks down below on her.
|
|
The responsibility for destroying noncompliant cannabis products rests on the dispensaries, not the state—the government won't be dispatching special trucks to pick up weed.
|
|
How this development came to incorporate ideas of ecological sensitivity, affordability, and community rests on the planner Al Boeke and his landscape architect Lawrence Halprin.
|
|
This argument flies in the face of all the economics I have been taught, which rests on the foundation that people (economic agents) are rational.
|
|
His whole strategy rests on the idea that Missourians have grown tired of career politicians like Roy Blunt who have been grandfathered into political power.
|
|
The justification for these controls rests on a simple story: drug prices as a whole are spiraling skyward, preventing sick patients from affording needed medications.
|
|
The theory rests on the assumption that those resistant cells need lots of energy to maintain their armor against the medication meant to kill them.
|
|
"Mike Bloomberg for president rests on the not-impossible but somewhat unlikely circumstance of either Donald Trump or Ted Cruz versus Bernie Sanders," Rendell said.
|
|
The cornerstone and bedrock of that trust rests on the ability to protect sensitive sources of information and the means by which it was collected.
|
|
Ghosn's defense partly rests on the contention that his deferred compensation arrangements were vetted internally and by outside consultants, people familiar with the matter said.
|
|
For the Men, that core rests on the relationship between Perro and Chiericozzi, who started the project from the ashes of another band, Fucking Hell.
|
|
" In a recent interview with The Guardian he went further and stated that "the attention economy is directly undermining the assumptions that democracy rests on.
|
|
The government's defence of the burkini ban rests on worries about religious tension and public order after recent terrorist attacks, coupled with two underlying principles.
|
|
I mean, in a way, Facebook rests on top of all of the work product of not only journalists, but everybody just sharing whatever. Sure.
|
|
As the president describes it, the implementation of much of the Singapore agreements rests on faith — on the good will generated through the negotiation process.
|
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"The future of American freedom rests on the shoulders of men and women willing to defend it," Trump said in front of the Lincoln Memorial.
|
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"The future of American freedom rests on the shoulders of men and women willing to defend it," Trump said in front of the Lincoln Memorial.
|
|
The Sandy Hook families' case rests on whether the company negligently entrusts a buyer with a weapon, which is an exception to the federal law.
|
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In terms of his brand, AMLO's brand of populism (at the moment) rests on openness, inclusivity, and equity, not on closed borders, hate, and fear.
|
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And so much of our social structures rests on this very longstanding divide between the public world of men and the private world of women.
|
|
" His insistence that Mexico will pay for a wall between the two countries "rests on an utter misreading of, and contempt for, our southern neighbor.
|
|
Each chunk rests on a matching pedestal of pink, yellow, white or black made from soap, garbage bags, ceramic and plaster tiles or old tires.
|
|
Tuck away at Hacienda Del Sol Guest Ranch Resort, a Moorish-inspired stay that rests on 34 acres at the base of the Catalina foothills.
|
|
At the broadest level, Mr. Trump's tax avoidance undermines the entire tax system, which rests on the foundation that every citizen pays a fair share.
|
|
Confidence that Republicans can limit House losses to 20 seats or fewer and retain control of that power center rests on Mr. Trump's position stabilizing.
|
|
As the future of humanity essentially rests on his shoulders (no pressure), Theo must risk everything and even learn how to feel hope once more.
|
|
"One of the hard things is the partnering, when the body really rests on another body and they fold around each other," Mr. Kittelberger said.
|
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Massie's ability to do this rests on there being a lack of quorum, meaning a majority of members — at least 216 representatives — are not present.
|
|
It stands nearly 2880 feet tall and 9 feet wide on the ground (it rests on its tail before transitioning to horizontal flight after liftoff).
|
|
The company's argument rests on a premise that's been a cornerstone since its early days: that Uber is a technology company, not a transportation one.
|
|
A historic ruling against Johnson & Johnson over its talcum powder products rests on uncertain science — but reveals a very real trust problem for such companies.
|
|
"A lot of what we teach in constitutional law classes rests on unspoken assumptions about how people in the government will behave," Professor Strauss said.
|
|
The Paris Agreement rests on a foundation of transparency and good faith: Countries are supposed to report and submit for verification their carbon emissions data.
|
|
Ghosn's legal defense partly rests on the assertion that his compensation arrangements were vetted internally and by outside consultants, people familiar with the matter said.
|
|
Our ideals, such as promoting democracy, will work to our advantage only if we first restore order — a project that rests on American hard power.
|
|
The threat is imminent, and the case against pre-emption rests on the misinterpretation of a standard that derives from prenuclear, pre-ballistic-missile times.
|
|
But, everything Trump said today rests on what wasn't said publicly -- whether we are communicating with the Iranians privately about how to deescalate and negotiate.
|
|
That vision rests on other companies building wallets and services that compete with Facebook, which has the built-in advantage of its 2.4 billion users.
|
|
"Because all of the progress we speak of as Democrats rests on the ability of voters to be heard and to participate in our process."
|
|
Venus, younger and paler than she might appear in earlier Baroque visions, rests on silks that are miraculously dry as she floats across the water.
|
|
Expanding into ready-to-wear, a move she is considering, would be a challenge, because her reputation rests on craftsmanship, and she risks cheapening it.
|
|
The path rests on winning the Obama coalition of nonwhite voters; many older black voters in particular have so far signaled their loyalty to Biden.
|
|
But the decision of whether it gets a vote by the full House rests on Pelosi, who ultimately decides what gets brought to the floor.
|
|
"I hate to put pressure on you, but the fate of the republic rests on your shoulders," Mr. Obama said at rally in North Carolina.
|
|
Because all of the progress we speak of as Democrats rests on the ability of voters to be heard and to participate in our process.
|
|
The problem is that the part of the vehicle's body that rests on the jack could bend, allowing the vehicle to slide off, the report said.
|
|
One of her picks is Lady Million by Paco Rabanne, which artfully rests on its side and is a beautiful addition to your dresser or vanity.
|
|
"I don't think that the framework for movement forward on climate change rests on any single country or indeed on any single government," Richard Samans said.
|
|
The current policy rests on the notion that trans individuals suffer from psychological disorders and require medical intervention in order to be entitled to full citizenship.
|
|
The speaker rests on four springs, and the top of the stand has an isolation base plate that's integrated into the bottom of the speaker's cabinet.
|
|
Lawyers for New Jersey-based J&J argued in court papers that the state's case rests on a "radical" interpretation of the state's public nuisance law.
|
|
The semi-public combat between Mr Bannon and Mr Kushner rests on an argument about something much larger: namely, the purpose of Mr Trump's presidency itself.
|
|
This might be a sensible approach, but it rests on shaky legal grounds and depends on keeping both Mr Hunt and Mr Stevens in their jobs.
|
|
Given India's massive conventional military — not to mention economic and demographic — advantages, Pakistani national security thinking rests on "asymmetric" forces, including terrorist proxies and nuclear weapons.
|
|
She argues that the appeal of GUTs, supersymmetry and the like rests on their ability to explain "numerological coincidences" that do not need to be explained.
|
|
Vertepac says 95 percent of the load rests on the hip belt, with the rest on the shoulders in order to keep the load under control.
|
|
The Ryanair solution is not popular among all cabin crew, whose job satisfaction partly rests on having some sort of control over the routes they fly.
|
|
In other emails, Powell writes that the investigations into the 2012 Benghazi terrorist attack "is a stupid witch hunt" but that some blame rests on Clinton.
|
|
But Magic Leap's next phase rests on its ability to do something wholly unconceivable to early Magic Leapers: It needs to succeed as an ordinary company.
|
|
The track rests on a hook so catchy that it that feels like it carries through the song's entirety as she bends and twists her words.
|
|
Bruenig's claim that this is a lie rests on switching his definition to the first type of churn, the one that counts any change in plan.
|
|
Justin Bieber won't be chasing waterfalls on his Hawaiian vacay because he's staying in an INSANE crib that rests on top of a few of 'em.
|
|
But the Pence's argument also rests on the idea that churches and other congregations are restricting their speech for fear of something that has not happened.
|
|
Evans's argument rests on the idea that Title VII, through use of the word "sex," also protects employees from discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation.
|
|
The entire Silicon Valley philosophy rests on the idea of rewarding individuals for hard work, talent, and ingenuity — regardless of race, class, or country of origin.
|
|
"Senator Sanders' plan really rests on making sure that governors like Scott Walker contribute $23 billion on the first day to make education free," she said.
|
|
Their preservation rests on activities of conservationists such as Kiponda as these turtles face numerous threats and indications of their extinction in the next 50 years.
|
|
But where the "Black Radio" albums flaunt the prowess of a live band in the studio, the new release rests on a foundation of sampled material.
|
|
Torshin is "actually just a friend," Butina's lawyers wrote, adding that she should be released from jail as the government's case supposedly rests on circumstantial evidence.
|
|
I wrote last month how that conclusion, which came about as part of Justice Department's efforts to prosecute Vice President Spiro Agnew, rests on shaky ground.
|
|
"How could the government successfully claim that the proclamation rests on security needs if it is excluding Muslims who satisfy the proclamation's own terms?" he asked.
|
|
The flourishing of immigrants and their ability to efficaciously navigate life in America rests on others' willingness to provide aid in ways both large and small.
|
|
That faith rests on the belief that they have the best organized effort of any Republican candidate — an opinion that is widely shared by independent experts.
|
|
" It rests on a repeated sample of "Bobby Sox Idol," by the calypso singer Wilmoth Houdini, and then turns to the melody of "My Favorite Things.
|
|
" This case rests on an assumption that, in Chait's words, "some kind of narrative focus is going to be necessary to frame the case against Trump.
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"The ultimate responsibility, for where we've gotten and how we've gotten here rests on my shoulders," Kalanick wrote in a company-wide email obtained by Gizmodo.
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The accuracy of the final census count rests on the results — with big implications for how the parties are represented in Congress for years to come.
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"Our announcement sends a message to the world that a brighter economy rests on being green," said Stringer, a trustee of New York's five pension funds.
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The IMF's sunnier forecasts rests on the idea that the Trump Administration will usher in an era of higher deficit spending and growth-friendly tax reform.
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The severity of the tickets often rests on preexisting personal grudges from local authorities, a common attitude since street vendors are often unfazed by being cited.
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The base of the block, however, is dematerialized with a glazed ground story: it looks as if the tower miraculously rests on thin planes of glass.
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"Papi Chulo," a buddy comedy set in Los Angeles that rests on outdated racial tropes, begins with the meltdown of Sean (Matt Bomer), a local weatherman.
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It's pretty common for heroes in adventure movies (and, not coincidentally, in video games) to discover that the fate of the world rests on their shoulders.
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And though she never said it exactly, she played the point with her usual expertise, and has chosen the mantle that now rests on her shoulders.
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But this compact rests on the celebrity's ability to seem to move easily between the elite and the masses, to be aspirational and approachable at once.
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But this compact rests on the celebrity's ability to seem to move easily between the elite and the masses, to be aspirational and approachable at once.
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Adolescence Teenagers are drafted into a sexual culture that rests on a harmful premise: On the heterosexual field, boys typically play offense and girls play defense.
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The article could leave readers with the impression that the accused are blameless, as responsibility to prevent such behaviors still apparently rests on the victims' shoulders.
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The whole sales pitch for the Trump tax plan rests on the claim that everything is different because we're now part of a global financial market.
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There is ample evidence to the contrary, but the court's legitimacy rests on public confidence that the court is not, in the end, a political institution.
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Every time a clown asks you to sniff the flower in his lapel then squirts water in your face, the laugh rests on a minor humiliation.
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A rooftop of thin concrete slab rests on walls of brick and glass that organize the house into a maze of indoor, outdoor and intermediate spaces.
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Their pushback rests on strong footing: The C.B.O.'s analysis of the impact of Obamacare were closer to the mark than those of most other forecasters.
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"Our transparent design rests on the bridge of your nose, allowing others to see your face including your smile," wrote Ao Air in a press release.
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In each case, the question about how best to allocate tasks rests on the same calculation, which involves identifying the best alternative use of your time.
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As the Russian chess grandmaster Gary Kasparov -- himself a harsh critic of Putin -- has noted, the entire structure of Russian political power rests on one man.
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As he told The Paris Review, in 503: The book, which is a masterpiece, rests on a lie by omission that seems to me morally hideous.
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Uber's model rests on entering new markets with predatory prices and temporary driver incentives that eventually give way to perpetual wage cuts and worsening working conditions.
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Even though Clinton is running against a man whose entire platform rests on a foundation of stoked anger, she still has to be cool, controlled, steady.
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Intel's plan rests on its ability to "stitch together" its CPUs, the processing brains, with its memory chips, its semi-customizable computing chips and its software offerings.
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An unmarked white semi-truck rests on orange steel plates—Rent Me, they proclaim—protecting the soft ground outside a glass-fronted office building in Westminster, Colorado.
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Sony has even switched up the placement of the phone's fingerprint sensor, which now rests on the phone's back instead of its side like on previous Xperias.
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As we have stated in our plan, the survival of culture in this city rests on its people, mostly of color, Black, Indigenous, queer, and working class.
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At the very least, a committed originalist could still develop a refined grasp on new science, to make sure his centuries-spanning logic rests on good facts.
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The show's premise rests on the cast being giant, sloppy messes, but one of the selling points of Family Reunion was that they had supposedly grown up.
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It rests on the presumption that an economy that manufactures at a certain pace then needs a mode of transportation to move those goods domestically and internationally.
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What's wrong with overcrediting Cruz for being brave is that his bravery rests on the same logic that drives the Trump candidacy —individual defiance of the mainstream.
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But with political freedom now a thing of the past, the government's legitimacy rests on it delivering the prosperity it has long promised to all its citizens.
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The lawsuit against the organizers of the notorious 2017 white power march in Charlottesville, Va., rests on chat room conversations and a 19th-century civil rights law.
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The analogy to civil disobedience rests on the insight that the law, whether domestic or international, can lead to unjust outcomes and establish unjust structures of power.
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At some point the bones went missing, so the mystery of the Nikumaroro castaway rests on Hoodless's measurements and on the state of forensic anthropology in 1941.
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A decorative wooden box containing some of her son's ashes rests on a table in the front hallway, next to photographs of her boy over the years.
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A Latinx figure on the left has long hair braided with light blue, pink and white ribbons, and one foot rests on a cracked riot police helmet.
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Yet such competition would threaten Mr Putin, whose 83% approval rating rests on the idea, reinforced by state propaganda, that there is no alternative to his rule.
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The archetypal story of assault, Kipnis is quick to point out, rests on an assumption of feminine passivity, where the asymmetry of power only goes one way.
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In the final piece, which rests on the floor instead of on the wall, colored threads extend beyond the sewing ring, allowing the image to remain undefined.
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"South Africa's continued inclusion in WGBI rests on a local currency investment grading rating from S&P and Moody's – presently two notches away," UBS analysts told clients.
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The question is where do you draw the line, and that is a decision that rests on the shoulders of the person sitting in the Oval Office.
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Our civilisation, you say, rests on certainties such as the understanding of nature through science and the delivery of justice through law, and not on the unexpected.
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The taboo against nuclear weapons rests on three pillars: policies to prevent proliferation, norms against the first use of nukes (especially against non-nuclear powers) and deterrence.
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This rests on the Utopian premise that the dark forces of European history—nationalism, fragmentation, demagoguery—would simply dissipate in the pandemonium of the EU's sudden collapse.
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In other words, the operational burden of American foreign policy now rests on the backs of one twentieth of half of one percent of the American people.
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But this critique rests on a false choice between an Electoral College that acts like a pliant, ceremonial relic, and an unprecedented but constitutional Electoral College coup.
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It's basically Peak FJM (who knew we had further heights to scale!), and your opinion on this video essentially rests on your level of tolerance for that.
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Maher's insult of Trump was a personal one, while Barr's attack on Valarie Jarrett rests on a centuries old anti-black trope linking African Americans to apes.
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The strategy for combatting MS-13 rests on one of the core premises of American immigration enforcement: undocumented immigrants have far fewer legal rights than citizens do.
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The future of the American national security space enterprise now rests on the ability of the Air Force and the intelligence community to seize upon emerging technologies.
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The screen mounts in the hitch, like the True Drive-In, but the projector rests on a stand away from the truck — complete with removable sound shelf.
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Whether he can succeed where Clinton failed rests on voters accepting Biden's anti-Trump message and his apparent goal to restore the America that existed before Trump.
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The future of the European Union (EU) rests on the bloc's ability to find a diplomatic answer to the migration crisis, German Chancellor Angela Merkel said Thursday.
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German Chancellor Angela Merkel said today that the future of the European Union rests on the bloc's ability to find a diplomatic answer to the migration crisis.
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The notion that an aggressive media can tackle this responsibility independently rests on the myth, as the sociologist Michael Schudson called it, of the Watergate-era media.
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While paintings from this era, such as his "Revolutionary Family" series, have risen to the top of the auction market, this artist never rests on his laurels.
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Military might rests on industrial might, a big problem for a country that estimates it lost 66,000 manufacturing enterprises over the first 16 years of this century.
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You can see the emotion in Rabbit's face as it rests on his Future's shoulder, signifying how internally relieved he is to have earned his mentor's respect.
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The stakes are too high—saying the fate of humanity rests on them isn't hyperbole—to exclude or otherwise drive away great talent because of implicit biases.
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A president's diplomatic power rests on the value of his words; in order to deliver, Trump needs both the domestic and international support to back his up.
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The story rests on two central questions: Why is Martin Gilmour, a minor success as an art critic, being interrogated at a police station in the Cotswolds?
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But much of their success rests on the shoulders of people like Ms. Winter, who finds herself balancing the challenges and advantages that national focus can bring.
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His eyes do not meet mine, his head rests on a propped hand, and he is completely absorbed in a Bach piece he'd been learning to play.
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And liberal democracy sides with adaptable family models, while Christian democracy rests on the foundations of the Christian family model; once more, this is an illiberal concept.
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Game of Thrones' reputation as a "feminist" show largely rests on its depiction of the brutality of the medieval patriarchy, contrasted with the vibrancy of its women.
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At the center of the dark room, a hard drive rests on a pedestal, with a network of wires radiating from its base towards the four walls.
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"The article's conclusion that enforcement of the federal securities laws has flagged rests on deeply flawed methodology," said Stephanie Avakian and Steven Peikin, the heads of enforcement.
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This approach rests on turning pre-existing debt owed by a bank's holding company into new equity at the subsidiaries where the bank does all its business.
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In minority communities, the gatekeepers are usually self-appointed guardians whose power rests on their ability to define what is acceptable and what is beyond the bounds.
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The argument Turley makes ultimately rests on the tired premise that the President is essentially above the law and can fire officials for any reason he pleases.
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While the bill could weaken protections for people with pre-existing conditions and result in much more expensive insurance, the effect ultimately rests on states and insurers.
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The sensor uses ultrasonic waves to identify where the finger rests on the side of the phone, and the gauge measures force through strain on the surface.
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Belief that America faced an imminent threat rests on trust in President Donald Trump and his administration, yet the president has consistently denigrated his own intelligence agencies.
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Effective resistance rests on the understanding and advocacy of citizens who value the contribution of science as an evidence-based discipline to the quality of their lives.
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Pursuing a national policy that rests on a sanction-free, Bashir-led Sudan is dangerous and will likely imperil the lives of millions of people in Sudan.
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Doubts are creeping in because Norwegian's fate rests on the still unproven strategy of adapting the success of low-cost short-haul travel to long-haul routes.
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The President's claim that Medicare-for-all would break the bank rests on a study by the Mercatus Center, which receives funding from the conservative Koch brothers.
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The need to answer them rests on what happens with DACA, and whether Congress seeks a narrow fix, or rolls the dice on seeking a broader solution.
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His central pitch to the electorate — that he will "Make America Great Again" — rests on the promise of a revitalized economy in which U.S. workers come first.
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Although Soviet communist ideology had universal pretensions, Putin's legitimacy rests on a narrower but, for his neighbors, no less problematic motive: the revival of the Russian empire.
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Bernard Vatier, a lawyer for Orange Bank, said the Apfelbaums' claim "rests on lies and inaccuracies" and reiterated that the bank faced no risk from the lawsuit.
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America's highest court rests on a precipice, with many rights -- those related to abortion and university affirmative action, to name just two -- teetering on a single vote.
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Salman's argument rests on a 2014 ruling from a New York appeals court, which threw out a pair of insider trading cases against former hedge fund traders.
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The piece is very simple in construction: A metal pot rests on a high pedestal; inside of it play the sounds of Ukrainian nationalists protesting and rioting.
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And, legally, it rests on the contention that the requirements themselves will make those people healthier, since improving health is the stated purpose of the Medicaid statute.
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The statue rests on a plinth of coral stones originally cut from the ocean by African slaves and used in the construction of St. Croix's colonial buildings.
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When he uses a knee brace, in "Precision Bearing (…) Brace" (2015), it rests on a pedestal like the image of an item up for sale on eBay.
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But as Bailey noted, the challenge rests on whether the hashtag, and tweets like Perry's, will connect back to how misogynoir plays out in our everyday lives.
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Their opposition to these contraceptives rests on the claim that a pregnancy begins at fertilization, instead of at implantation (as recognized by physicians and even the federal government).
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Lil Wayne's legacy is too vast to pin to any one thing, but as much as it rests on his own songs, it is tied to his features.
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But there's a heavy weight that rests on my chest as a Black woman observing a barrage of 'Blacks beaten down by whites; Blacks saved by whites' stories.
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After all, the entire thing rests on the firmly held assumption that the average white person would need a religious reminder to accept a black person as equal.
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The GOP strategy to pass health care and tax bills without any Democratic help in the Senate rests on a careful sequencing, and Obamacare has to come first.
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That imbalance leads some market watchers to say that any significant leg higher for stocks rests on the earnings picture improving, as opposed to valuations going even higher.
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Molly experiences a mild comeuppance regarding her own superiority complex, but it rests on the assumption that college acceptance is a pure meritocracy, and that she's misjudged everyone.
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The memory foam pad that rests on your forehead is removable and cleanable, and the thermals have been completely redesigned so heat is piped away from your head.
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The country's political system rests on a social compact between the ruling elite and the population in which is based in part on the distribution of oil revenues.
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Given how much rests on the man's shoulders, and how ill-suited he is to the presidency, the focus on Mr Trump's character is both reasonable and necessary.
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After all, the fate of this complicated plan to take down some international terrorists while maintaining a cleverly orchestrated romance with an actual spy rests on her shoulders.
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Still another batch of concerns rests on Facebook's ability to properly implement the know your customer (KYC) regulations that are required of banks and other financial services institutions.
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"The charges rest on a beam of concordant elements," Manteaux said, acknowledging that the case rests on circumstantial evidence since the doctor was not caught in the act.
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His strategy rests on mobilising alienated conservatives, in particular the millions of white evangelical Christians who, his team believes, can swing elections when they are galvanised to vote.
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Although Human Rights Watch has yet to establish the exact location and date of the killings shown in the video, the video's authenticity rests on many known elements.
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Ten years ago many Indians believed in China's pronouncement that it would be a different kind of world power, one whose power rests on economic development, said Xavier.
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The Samburu legal case rests on the principle of adverse possession, whereby someone who has lived continuously on a piece of land for 12 years can gain ownership.
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Why it matters: The GOP's hope for achieving meaningful reform —involving health care, taxes, or infrastructure — rests on Trump keeping an open line of communication with congressional leaders.
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"Much of Trump's agenda rests on this idea that the boundaries of rights and citizenship are conterminous with race," New York Times columnist Jamelle Bouie wrote on Monday.
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In the meantime, long may PEN continue to fight for her, for the freedoms on which a liberal society rests, on without which no literature can have value.
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It rests on the assumption that the Democrats should have been able to win the presidency in 2016 easily and the failure to do so rests with Obama.
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"Rappler's work rests on its own freedom to impart information, and more importantly its vast readership to have access to its public interest reporting," the U.N. experts said.
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Quicken is contesting the lawsuit, saying the government's case rests on 55 mortgages out of 246,000, and that it has got its facts wrong about 47 of those.
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Like all the other "Barbershop" movies, this one rests on a bedrock of conservative values: It's a celebration of small business, hard work, family ties and communal solidarity.
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"Our future success rests on our ability to compete on a level playing field in the Pacific Rim and TPP presents us with that golden opportunity," he said.
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The attempt to revoke or deny American or British citizenship instead rests on citizenship of another state—in these cases, Bangladesh and Yemen, the country of Muthana's parents.
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That effort's only chance at success rests on the convention freeing delegates who are currently bound to vote for Trump based on the results of their states' primaries.
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Though brawnier pullers tend to fare well, success largely rests on strategy — the angle of the tug, the timing of a surge, the precise positioning of each finger.
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The defense of globalization rests on viewing Americans primarily as consumers, not workers, based on the assumption that we care more about low prices than about low wages.
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Abbe Gluck, a Yale Law School professor who supports the ACA, said Kavanaugh is "smart enough to see that the Texas challenge rests on a completely ridiculous" argument.
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Overlooking the sleek booths of the main showroom is a dimly illuminated space where a curious white orb rests on the floor, surrounded by colorful concoctions in containers.
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A few stapled white pages labeled "Wellness Recovery Action Plan" catch the light from the passenger window; a tiny American flag inscribed "Better days!!" rests on a console.
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But the answer to this question of why Cohen didn't register as a lobbyist rests on precisely what it was that Cohen was doing for his corporate clients.
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The movement's most persuasive argument rests on a study published in 22015 by the prestigious medical journal The Lancet that established a link between measles vaccines and autism.
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But I did not realize the degree to which the launch of a makeup line by someone like Rihanna really also rests on the amplification of — dozens, hundreds?
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Warren's comments could be seen as a message to Sanders, whose argument for staying in the race rests on superdelegates flipping their support from Clinton to his campaign.
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It rests on people like Baker, partisans who come to realize the danger of governing in a nation where the truth is whatever you want it to be.
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But the deeper flaw in progressive thinking on Israel — the flaw that has resulted in this efflorescence of bigotry — isn't that it rests on a faulty factual foundation.
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It turns out that capitalism rests on the foundation on some level of people not wanting to be assholes, but Trump is just willing to be an asshole.
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Plus, the entire story rests on a likely fake account of emotional abuse as a way to sell a product that is, in all likelihood, a dangerous laxative.
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Strange bonds transpire: a head rests on someone's behind; a foot prods a butt; a penis pokes through two bodies; hair is intertwined with hair and other body parts.
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Part of their justification, they explain, rests on Trump's own tweet from June 6, where he cited the dangers posed by the countries, not the citizens of the countries.
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Future venture capital funding for digital health largely rests on two factors: the health of the economy as a whole, and the dynamics driving investment in health care innovation.
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That rests on the shoulders of Troy's father Dean Fairbanks (Obba Babatundé)Dean Fairbanks wants Reggie to overcome his trauma, and his words are helpful, even if they're trite.
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Ideally, of course, the cafeteria would be a classroom in which to counter these unhealthy forces, but the fiscal survival of any school food program rests on student participation.
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A lot of the poor reproducibility—and thus, presumably, many of the unhelpful results—rests on details of the way that researchers keep their animals, or run their experiments.
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The camera pans over Jack, looking at his family adoringly and rests on the television screen just as Randall's last available Pac-Man succumbs to one of the ghosts.
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Despite its scale, "The Ivory Game" shows that right now, the fate of Africa's elephants rests on the efforts of individuals and small embattled groups scattered across the globe.
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In 2006 President George W. Bush's NSS argued that American security rests on two pillars: promoting freedom, justice and human dignity, and leading a growing global community of democracies.
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