Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

"succinctly" Definitions
  1. using only a few words that state something clearly

581 Sentences With "succinctly"

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

Its plot can be stated succinctly — or perhaps not.
" Another put it more succinctly: "Bless those whom help!
"The second formula is just fucking stupid," he continues, succinctly.
Veteran astronaut Richard Mastracchio outlined the issue even more succinctly.
So Facebook is advertising on Facebook to put it succinctly.
" Philp put it more succinctly: "The whole purpose is monetization.
" To put it succinctly, Williams says "marginalization equals poor health.
"Yup we chopped it, " Sofia Richie succinctly wrote on Instagram.
It succinctly speaks to why I do what I do.
Carlos Piana succinctly stated why SSPL was indeed open source.
"We didn't make it," Keselowski said succinctly after the race.
Or, more succinctly, the idea that the right team won.
To explain Sim's religion further is impossible to do succinctly.
That single economic fact succinctly explains the rise of Trump.
Forbath has succinctly summarized the core argument of this tradition.
" Or, as Wall succinctly puts it: "We're a different team.
Opener "See You In Hell" sets out their manifesto succinctly.
Let me put this next question as succinctly as possible.
"Fiancé," Mr. Kushner, 33, wrote more succinctly, with a heart.
Can I state it more succinctly, more vividly, more concretely?
But as one reviewer succinctly wrote, "Welcome to the future."
Here's a video that explains the voting process pretty succinctly.
" She put it succinctly: "Woman is not and never has been
" The problems they're facing, he succinctly notes, are "white people problems.
Others succinctly convey a fraught moment, intimate encounter or pivotal discovery.
In the podcast Dirty John, Christopher Goffard explains Meehan's methods succinctly.
Or more succinctly: "People are shitting on each other," Chen says.
Instead of succinctly and clearly answering questions, he rambled and ranted.
" Or to put it more succinctly: "just an album about stuff.
"I didn't like the film," Ms. Morison told one interviewer succinctly.
" Another put it, perhaps, most succinctly: "this new homepage is ass.
When speaking to your child try to speak slowly and succinctly.
On "Weekend Update," co-anchor Michael Che succinctly summarized the story.
For Kramer, Greene's comments in the film sum it up most succinctly.
The scene on Twitter right now is, to put it succinctly, insane.
Put succinctly: it's the decision of a bad ass, rebellious female artist.
Succinctly put, the Rolling Stones want all the fame without any responsibility.
Perhaps he said it most succinctly in his essay, Cargo Cult Science.
" Someone I know on Facebook put it more succinctly: "F--- the vote.
" Mr. Cuban had put it more succinctly: "If I party, everybody parties.
They can be summed up succinctly in three words: Republicans will lose.
A text succinctly explains Watergate, with Ford's pardon of Nixon below it.
As the Italian historian Massimo Montanari succinctly put it, food is culture.
Their view is most succinctly articulated in this line from a Spacenews.
It's a question that can't be answered succinctly and perfectly right now.
In an interview with The Verge last year, Anderson put it more succinctly.
And it was amazing to see how everything just came together so succinctly.
" Kay explains it to her husband succinctly: "You represent consumer capitalism to her.
"Tell your staff to p*ss off with the fence," he said succinctly.
The lipstick is a deep red shade named, quite succinctly, F*ck Kavanaugh.
To put it succinctly: for humankind, the good stuff is all behind us.
" The branding strategy summed it all up succinctly: "Taco Bell is something else.
There's so much in the Goodlatte bill that it's hard to summarize succinctly.
More succinctly — when would one kind of "green" take priority over the other?
Mark Kelly explained more succinctly: "He's been squished back to normal height." video
Will: To succinctly answer your question is that we've probably always done that.
Updates can be delivered succinctly, in advance, through a few written bullet points.
"The higher the temperature, the higher the rate of consumption," Hollesen said succinctly.
But it turned out that those texts didn't really convey succinctly the disappearance.
The articulate, who speak succinctly and clearly but whose words are seldom persuasive.
Lundqvist explained succinctly how he isolated his emotions, especially amid intense playoff pressure.
" Mr. Musiker put it a bit more succinctly: "Tara is more Anna Wintour.
The inconsistencies of the heart are expressed so succinctly that laughter fades into reflection.
Without any commentary, Wolf succinctly shows us a moment in which the world shifted.
Narcos does a fantastic job of succinctly summarizing information with cheeky, documentary-like sequences.
The song succinctly expresses the theme of the episode: Everything serves as a reminder.
As with most topics, Drake's feelings about muffins are too complex to summarize succinctly.
It is perfectly and succinctly rendered—a self-contained story in a single blowjob.
" Or, as Hans Noel put it succinctly, Trump is "identity politics for white people.
By replying to questions succinctly witnesses typically escape without letting slip anything too revealing.
University of California Berkeley professor Carl Shapiro succinctly demonstrated why in a 2017 paper.
" The Huffington Post succinctly headlined one story "Why Education Isn't a 2016 Campaign Issue.
Your resume should succinctly reflect your experience and use concrete examples wherever you can.
Buttigieg succinctly captured the GOP's 2020 strategy: Paint Democrats as socialist no matter what.
Their sound is most succinctly described as primitive brutal death with compressed guttural vocals.
Clare V.'s cotton bandanna, for one, gets the message across succinctly and stylishly.
Wallach sums it up succinctly—people who express these fears are afraid of change.
This is a work of fiction, a category of writing succinctly defined as invention.
Most succinctly, we call it conspiracy theory, and it has long been with us.
It's an utterly terrifying idea and, as Lucius Fox succinctly reminded Batman, "This is wrong."  
There's almost no way it will wrap up succinctly with a pretty bow on top.
Bloomberg's Matt Levine has explained this very succinctly, so I'm just going to paraphrase him.
As one of the cohort teams puts succinctly, you're good separately but you're magic together.
"It really embodies the spirit of the Internet," one user succinctly explained on the subreddit.
An amicus letter from the New York Council of Defense Lawyers explained the issue succinctly.
" Goense succinctly explained the effect of all this: "You're taking away the help I need.
The incorrectly capitalized, jingoistic message is counterintuitive, encapsulating the whole debate around anthem protests succinctly.
Perhaps the remarks of the Governor of Minnesota Mark Dayton, express the feeling most succinctly.
And with the production truck providing the perfect background, Collinsworth captured that feeling pretty succinctly.
When Mr. Davidson announced his retirement in 2002, Mr. Eustis summed up his achievement succinctly.
Ms. Tom put it more succinctly: "I don't think there's any shutting us up anymore."
As succinctly as possible, these are the facts: The Trump campaign never colluded with Moscow.
Musk responded succinctly, indicating he knows of the problem and is working on a solution.
Mr. Jacobs simply posed the question more gorgeously, and succinctly, than pretty much anyone else.
Voicing your opinion succinctly in one tweet is more powerful — and presidential — than a rambling address.
Bob Pittman, CEO of iHeartMedia, a provider of streaming music and digital radio, put it succinctly.
Or, as he more succinctly put it on his Facebook event: "Watch out for landmines, friends!"
Adams described the role succinctly last year at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health.
David M. Schizer, a professor and dean emeritus at Columbia Law School, put the matter succinctly.
"Stuff like that is just wrong," former Empire star de la Fuente succinctly said on set.
Applicants should combine a knowledge of finance with the ability to write informatively, succinctly and wittily.
Sandberg succinctly outlines what so many women have experienced and the change they want to see.
For my emails, I wrote about three paragraphs max and asked my questions clearly and succinctly.
Katie Crutchfield, or Waxahatchee as she's known professionally these days, is dope, to put it succinctly.
He proceeds succinctly through broad swaths of history and the racist historical texts that accompany it.
This sums it up pretty succinctly: The shooters manifesto includes "send them back" and "fake news".
Finally, lest the phrase "preventing genocide" be lost on some Americans, let us put it succinctly.
The Senate staff memo succinctly lays out just how egregious the FBI's decision was in 22019.
" According to Kawasaki, succeeding in business "is about being able to communicate very succinctly, very effectively.
"Video caught her licking other peoples' donuts while saying she hates America," he wrote, incredibly succinctly.
There's the sense that Fontaine manages to distill other people's stories more succinctly than her own.
He set out his ideas succinctly in 1977 in a landmark article in the journal Science.
ASMI, as it's more succinctly know, was started by Dr. James Andrews, the famed orthopedic surgeon.
"it really is just an easy, friendly hangout vibe kind of thing," Markiewicz puts it succinctly.
As Mr Weigel succinctly states, this was "music that copied nothing, and could be replicated by nobody".
Even through a crackling Skype connection, his answers came through clearly and succinctly, his words slightly accented.
I'd send it back and say whatever you're telling me you have to tell me more succinctly.
The reason is simple, as executive chef David Fritsche of Washington's Swiss-themed restaurant Stable succinctly explains.
The text message you get in return is somewhat less sensitive, but gets the point across succinctly.
Or, to put it more succinctly, "It's A Christmas Carol meets Boyz N the Hood," jokes Reynolds.
I asked Vaucher a few questions about her work and life, which she answered frankly and succinctly.
" He sums it up succinctly: "Sugar is a bit like the salt and pepper of the bar.
Research and analytical skills, an ability to write informatively, succinctly and wittily, and insatiable curiosity are essential.
He uses humor and anecdotal material throughout his disclosures in a way that succinctly presents his teachings.
" Another official I spoke to put the same point more succinctly: "Clearly the world has disappointed him.
The prescription that the authors give is succinctly, if nonspecifically, captured in the title of the article.
" The title of another poem puts the problem succinctly: "The Monster Made of America Dreams of America.
In proposal meetings with companies like Amazon, Wong's ability to succinctly pitch an idea helped him succeed.
" Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis purportedly summed things up even more succinctly: "We must make our choice.
Conservative pundit Ben Shapiro put it most succinctly: Obama lecturing us is LITERALLY how you got Trump.
" Charap, at RAND, puts it most succinctly: "The threshold for bad stuff happening in the Russia-U.
The shift is succinctly registered in contrasting works by two of the exhibition's very few female artists.
"Let me see if I can put this succinctly," he said, taking a sip of his wine.
And, while a little banter can help build a rapport, focus on getting your points across succinctly.
But the saying "what gets measured gets done" describes succinctly why data is a prerequisite for action.
He could succinctly make his pitch, articulating what the business was all about, the early backers said.
Put more succinctly, the original Star Wars trilogy suggests that the chosen one can come from anywhere.
You have to succinctly explain what just happened and in a way when we really don't know.
One work from 1985 for instance, "He Says, She Says," succinctly explores how gender manifests itself in conversation.
To put it succinctly: that&aposs one small snap for man, one giant Instagram-worthy moment for mankind.
"My job is to start conversations," he said succinctly, in one of the few times he was succinct.
A commenter on Sprave and FairTube's video announcing the meeting's cancellation put it more succinctly: "Commence Operation: Shitstorm."
From her Twitter account, she explained both succinctly, with humor, and with an appropriate amount of exclamation marks.
The ideal candidate will combine the ability to write informatively, succinctly and wittily with a knowledge of finance.
An ability to write informatively, succinctly and wittily, combined with numeracy and curiosity, matter more than prior experience.
" In a recent TV program, he put it more succinctly: "My heart has traditionally beat toward the left.
Asked if he thought he had won the game when the ball left his bat, Pham responded succinctly.
" Benante sums it up even more succinctly: "You have to please yourself, but you also have to deliver.
" Essentially, hatred of the word becomes a cultural phenomenon, or as Thibodeau succinctly puts it, "a hipster trend.
Or to put it more succinctly: We weren't our authentic selves, and the relationship suffered as a result.
But more succinctly: When was a time when watching someone else win made you feel like a winner?
The section of the show called "Holy War and the Power of Art" deals with this horror succinctly.
More succinctly, Bigner said: "I have never seen anything like that in my 50 years of cancer research."
To put it more succinctly, he is the ungainly chicken of late-stage capitalism come home to roost.
Former President Barack Obama laid this concern out succinctly when he campaigned for Northam in Richmond last month.
" Or, as writer and curator Alexandra Stock put it succinctly to me: "Tall poppy syndrome at work here.
" She then succinctly summed up the empowering takeaway: "Who gives a F what anyone else thinks of you?
As succinctly as any writer of epitaphs, Hewitt observes that the "work had grown stronger than its creator."
This grounded quality is enhanced by Martin's gift for succinctly evoking more than what's merely on the page.
Perhaps the cult of Callas is so enduring because she so succinctly embodied the tragedy in her voice.
Venus Williams, whose terse news conferences are becoming a trademark, summed up the abrupt shift in momentum succinctly.
CHRISTOPHER BAILEY, SEATTLE To the Editor: Frank Bruni succinctly expressed my sentiments about the rabid, hysterical Trump haters.
"Trump's tax plan: prioritize cuts for the rich, say he isn't," as New York Magazine succinctly puts it.
The Oscars for score have gone through a series of changes that is completely impossible to summarize succinctly.
"We won the game," Collins said, succinctly, and for a 4-5 team, that fact excused the mistakes.
Richard Flanagan's article was compelling reading and succinctly reflected the appalling leadership void the Australian community is facing.
It's best to approach the conversation pragmatically and succinctly in a safe space with few distractions, Pierce said.
Think of your summary as an opportunity to succinctly outline who you are and what you're looking for.
Good, bad, painful; it's an end to all this ridiculousness and sets up what's to follow pretty succinctly.
"No to the wall," Stacy Wallace-Albert wrote in all capital letters, succinctly summarizing the opinion of many neighbors.
LONDON (Reuters) - Former world BMX champion Liam Phillips sums up the brutal nature of his adrenaline-fuelled sport succinctly.
It sets up what he's about, and the themes of the movie, in an appropriately nihilistic way, very succinctly.
But as writer Craig Stone so succinctly put it in one tweet, you will — and it'll be worth it.
I've never stopped being amazed at its ability to communicate so succinctly things that cannot be put into words.
" Or as Bee so succinctly distilled their admonishments: "Save us from fascism, but don't be a bitch about it.
Former U.S. congressman Beto O'Rourke may have summed up the field's collective view most succinctly while campaigning last month.
"If I listen to it and like it, then I'll want to work with the band," he says succinctly.
"White nationalists are the irregular forces—the voluntary militias—of the actually existing political-economic order," she states, succinctly.
" Ms. Hicks succinctly dismissed any suggested discrepancy in an email: "There are no changes being made to the plan.
The premise of this book can be succinctly stated: Most of what we believe is likely to be wrong.
His use of the word "embodied" describes succinctly something I have been calling "pre-verbal" and "visceral" for years.
They're well spoken, capable of succinctly expressing life's darkest moments and making some of this generation's greatest love ballads.
" Freud's colleague and contemporary Abraham Arden Brill put the matter more succinctly: "We never lose what we highly value.
More succinctly, they write, Rational dislike of the other party may be more difficult to overcome than irrational dislike.
In the clip, Miller went on to succinctly pick apart the way the criminal justice system prosecutes sexual assault.
The judge succinctly explained his reasoning in his response to the 6th Circuit in the Ohio AG's mandamus case.
" Peter Georgescu, chairman emeritus of Young & Rubicam, has put it perhaps most succinctly: He sees capitalism "slowly committing suicide.
Put succinctly, the inspector general report's core conclusions are directly at odds with the four assertions in McCarthy's tweet.
"I do not believe that a vote in 2002 is a plan to defeat ISIS in 2016," she said succinctly.
" Anti-Defamation League President Jonathan Greenblatt put his thoughts on the action's timing more succinctly: "I think it's tone deaf.
Scobie put it succinctly to BuzzFeed News: "Meghan will always be damned if she does and damned if she doesn't."
NYU Stern Professor Aswath Damodaran, who is often called Wall Street's Dean of Valuation, succinctly summed up the Tesla debate.
You succinctly described the conundrum faced by electricity markets adapting to renewable energy ("A world turned upside down", February 260th).
One man summed up his feelings rather succinctly: "Hooters is about as inappropriate and controversial as a beige Toyota Camry."
To put all of that more succinctly: To get universal coverage, no matter the route, you need lots of revenue.
Munger went on to rattle off a list of his best advice, each lesson succinctly delivered in bite-size form.
For example, your résumé objective can be a place to succinctly but overtly acknowledge points that might raise an eyebrow.
Opening track "Deepwood" not only displayed a more polished version of the band, it succinctly melded the band's disparate influences.
The hymen is the baby teeth of the vagina, as Jen Gunter, an OB-GYN who's incredibly online, succinctly tweeted.
It's hard to imagine a song that feels more like Chicago, or a song that more succinctly captures Chance's appeal.
Middle Child succinctly poses questions about gender identity and the preconceived notions we have about others based on physical appearance.
" She succinctly portrays the curator and collector Sam Wagstaff (who was also Mapplethorpe's lover) as "a bohemian in patrician's clothing.
To put it more succinctly, an editing error just reshaped the NSC and potentially the United States' foreign policy agenda.
Ms. Parker, who now works at YouTube, described succinctly the issue of who really paid the price for his sins.
The title of her latest album, "Sound of Red," an impressive collection of original compositions, sums up her music succinctly.
Adnan al-Zurfi, a Shiite member of the Iraqi Parliament who has lived in the United States, put it succinctly.
The insider turmoil looming over the Grammy Awards was summed up pretty succinctly early in the ceremony on Sunday night.
Jared Leto, who meandered the room in a biblical Gucci ensemble, succinctly described the evening as "fantastic" and breezed onward.
I've just found the more succinctly I state it, the easier it is for others to digest (hand gestures help).
One reader put the issue succinctly: Are you trying to give the right wing more to criticize The Times for?
But perhaps more importantly — or at least succinctly — there is ample evidence to suggest that Trump did break the law.
It's a thorny argument but not too hard to explain, and Warren has been explaining it succinctly at campaign stops.
"When the world is really dark, it's a moment where you want things to be very gentle," she says succinctly.
Rutledge, who is married to professional baseball player Josh Rutledge, took it all in stride — shooting Hudson down gently and succinctly.
Both designs feel similarly potent: You no longer see them in the wild, but for a time, each succinctly signaled destruction.
If forced to say most succinctly what Afterglow is about, I'd say it's about Rosie, Eileen Myles' beloved, late pit bull.
In Vanity Fair last year, Joanna Robinson succinctly summed up a lot of the backlash, from the reasonable to the reactionary.
" At the end of his program, Chris Cuomo summed things up succinctly: "Trump says he wants to 'make America great again.
And as the social media manager of the Western Australia Police Facebook page has so succinctly pointed out, "drugs are bad."  
And it'll be a big adjustment for users accustomed to finding creative ways to succinctly cram their thoughts into 140 characters.
" And Theodore Glasser, a communications professor at Stanford University, put it succinctly: "ISIS kills 30+ in Brussels: Big story, page 1.
" Put more succinctly to CNN's Jeff Zeleny earlier this week, Heitkamp said, "He's going to say some mean things about me.
Once again, cranky Mr. Acker gets one of the episode's best lines, this time by succinctly, and graphically, describing the image.
" Rob Cope from Philadelphia put it more succinctly: "I have never gleaned any information from a debate that affected my vote.
The Washington Post's Jeff Stein succinctly captured on Twitter why this could be a powerful issue for a 2020 Harris campaign.
This point was made succinctly by Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (NY) during a news conference held just before Wednesday's hearing.
Nancy Sinatra, who sang the 1966 hit "These Boots are Made for Walkin'," succinctly replied to Trump with her own tweet.
The title of her latest album, "Sound of Red," an impressive collection of original compositions, sums up her music pretty succinctly.
"We're going to win," Blackburn, 66, said during a recent interview with Reuters, succinctly summing up her view of the race.
" Dr. Fisher puts it even more succinctly: "One of the major effects of cocaine is to make people act like dickheads.
" He said it even more succinctly on the podcast: "I'll forgive a lot of stuff, but lack of expertise is death.
Taubman's point was succinctly summed up earlier this month, when Macy's released the list of 2300 stores it had marked for closure.
And, in that capacity, it is my job to communicate the science around health to the American people very, very, very succinctly.
He succinctly summed up Wall Street's feelings, calling Mr. Sanders just as polarizing as President Trump, while being worse for the country.
He uses exclamation points and all caps and adjectives, all to so succinctly express what's on his mind, at that exact moment.
It's like Bob Dylan sang so long ago in "One Too Many Mornings," summarizing a breakup as succinctly as anyone ever has.
Specific > General "An ideal subject succinctly portrays the intent of the email, while also being uniquely tailored to the recipient," Greenley says.
You don't necessarily have to become the next J.K. Rowling, but an ability to succinctly communicate without errors will always pay off.
Zac Gill from Wilmington, N.C., put it succinctly: I am a firm believer that art and artist should very clearly be separated.
Ms. Franklin was, to put it succinctly, "one of America's greatest singers in any style," wrote The Times's music critic Jon Pareles.
" Yevgeny V. Dzhemal, an activist lawyer fighting the mass land expropriation, put it even more succinctly: "They were bastards under Ukraine, too.
But she is also an artist who can tell her own story sincerely and succinctly, with neither self-aggrandizement nor false humility.
For the most part, it does its job admirably: succinctly describing each work in detail and providing enough illustrations to inspire delight.
" More succinctly, "We oppose any form of amnesty for those who, by breaking the law, have disadvantaged those who have obeyed it.
"Walks and doubles in the second inning — two walks, two doubles, four runs on the board," Yost succinctly described Skoglund's rough inning.
Never before has someone so succinctly doled out relationship advice telling you to DTMFA, and especially not in a catchy pop song.
Kathy Cramer puts the question more succinctly in "The Politics of Resentment": why would someone without teeth not support government-funded dental care?
" Or, as one post put it more succinctly, "I'm going to drop bombs on Hillary's many email-scheme lies, then announce no prosecution.
The idea is captured most succinctly, perhaps, by the subreddit r/Eyebleach, a forum where users post and discuss "wholesome" images and videos.
Rare is a film title that perfectly conveys its subject matter more succinctly than the upcoming genre-bender Pride and Prejudice and Zombies.
TJ's is known for rolling out an ultimate assortment of festively-flavored products succinctly tied to our favorite seasons and their respective celebrations.
The strategy succinctly — and rightly — prioritizes Chinese and Russian threats and proposes a battery of changes to accelerate competitive countermeasures at the Pentagon.
Embracing 'aberrant geniuses'The issue with Google's culture is most succinctly summarized in a quote from former Google CEO and Alphabet Chairman Eric Schmidt.
If you have tons of relative experience, you'll want to describe it all as succinctly as possible, while still getting your message across.
Democrats slam alleged politicization of Trump State Department after IG report MORE (D-Md.) put it more succinctly during a hearing last March.
His core principle succinctly echoes European policies and standards, as well as the standards advocated in civil-rights lawsuits since Estelle v. Gamble.
Our writer Jon Russell succinctly sums up the case against Messenger Day and the same Snapchatification of WhatsApp with its new Status feature.
"Get out of Tampa," Yankees outfielder Brett Gardner said succinctly in a somber clubhouse moment after he struck out to end the game.
"I am absolutely delighted with the new jewels, which capture succinctly what I love most about modern art: the spontaneity," Mr. Graff said.
On his latest record, the succinctly titled Care, the Chicago artist has embraced directness in a way unlike that of his previous releases.
" She summarized her opposition to the majority succinctly: "The United States of America is a nation built upon the promise of religious liberty.
" John Henry has put it a little more succinctly: European soccer, he said early in his Liverpool tenure, is like the "Wild West.
" Born in Hong Kong, she now lives and works in Queens, and succinctly describes her artistic philosophy: "Gaze into the abyss and giggle.
" Spicer succinctly describes what happened next: "Hillary walks over to the f---ing squirrel and hands him a signed copy of her book.
In every Uber story I write, I get to a paragraph that aims to succinctly note all the recent scandals at the company.
"You want them to be able to quickly and succinctly say what their business is," former NFL running back Robert Smith told CNBC.
For us, on the other hand, "the West" is the liberal-democratic tradition; the one most succinctly expressed in the Declaration of Independence.
Or to put it a bit more succinctly, when taxing the rich, all we should care about is how much revenue we raise.
Now, he succinctly sums up what makes Pixar stories so great in an explosion of sleekly-cut clips, concept images, and graphic visuals.
As FiveThirtyEight put it succinctly last week, "Ann Selzer Is The Best Pollster in Politics," and it gives Ms. Selzer a coveted A+ rating.
"Said succinctly, while we see the topline story improving from here, ... we find the risk-reward less appealing," the bank said in a note.
The theme is: an airplane…that is taking off…and the 'characters' (could be played by real crew??) must explain the safety procedures succinctly.
The Handmaiden's categorization as an erotic thriller should help you understand what to expect, but it's a hard movie to pin down so succinctly.
Kickstarter puts this particularly succinctly: "We don't oversee projects' performance, and we don't mediate disputes between users," it states in its terms of use.
Put more succinctly: it's great to kick butt in January and February, but the very best teams do the same in May and June.
Caroline Mala Corbin, a law professor at the University of Miami, succinctly rejected the idea of corporations as having the capacity for religious belief.
Knowledge of the field, an ability to write informatively, succinctly and wittily, and an insatiable curiosity are more important attributes than prior journalistic experience.
A 2015 article by a team of data privacy researchers explained the problem succinctly: Once released to the public, data cannot be taken back.
Is a guy who occasionally grows verbose worse than a president who succinctly boasted that one of his assets is "being, like, really smart"?
There's a track called "Billow," which succinctly describes the movement of Straus' music: it twirls beautifully, then becomes one with the world around it.
Lead single "You'll Never Find Me," captures the Korn ethos quite succinctly, with its overarching theme of spiraling self-doubt and depressive self-destruction.
The contrast between the bright crop field and the drab skyscrapers succinctly captures the confrontation that the work stages between rural and urban space.
Who lives, who dies, and who tells the story — as Hamilton so succinctly put it — matters now perhaps more than it has ever before.
Then, in the meeting, you want to succinctly explain that you've decided to move on, express gratitude for the experience, and discuss an end date.
With that technology on the horizon, now is an ideal time for designers to reimagine how intersection signage could communicate all this information more succinctly.
" No other message has been weaponized as succinctly and with such devastating injury against the LGBT movement in recent years as "men in women's bathrooms.
He's selfless and generous with his skills, ideas, and time, depicted most succinctly in the scene where he solves the mystery of a "treasure" map.
Maybe this will teach McCaughey a valuable lesson, succinctly summed up by one Twitter user: "don't kick the hive if you don't want the sting."
There's no doubt that Mourn will continue to bestow greatness and an understanding of how to succinctly put emotions to riffs, so enjoy the ride.
By striking the right balance of pitching succinctly and reading the room, entrepreneurs can plug a business without driving off friends and family, experts said.
I wanted to investigate an industry called the prefab market, a space which allows you to get from Point A to Point B very succinctly.
As author Chris Cancialosi, a recognized expert in leadership and organizational development, succinctly puts it:  An agency's values must serve as a compass or manifesto.
Told that Mats Wilander, a former No. 1 turned TV analyst, had said closing out matches becomes harder later in a career, Federer succinctly disagreed.
The record of Arab-Israeli peace efforts can be summed up succinctly: Nearly every time the Arab side said no, it wound up with less.
Put succinctly, Veidt drops a giant inter-dimensional squid on Manhattan, killing about three million people to save the lives of hundreds of millions more.
It began with news footage to succinctly sum up who he was and what happened to him after the squid attack that ravaged New York.
I'll be posing a lot of questions (hopefully more succinctly) this weekend to VR filmmakers and I'll keep you updated on whether these questions get answered.
" No drivers reported being trained on matters of workplace safety, and as one UK-based driver succinctly put it, "honestly it seems they take on anyone.
Lyrics immortalized by Edwin Starr in the 1970 Vietnam protest song, but for me it kind of grabs your attention and makes the point rather succinctly.
It's a sly referential jest that succinctly encapsulates the connective tissue between her employment of Black meme culture and continued exploration of Black women's bodily autonomy.
They force a more graphical approach to news, where text is broken up by or overlaid on images, and videos are cut as succinctly as possible.
The country's leaders put their aim succinctly when they outlined their plans for 2017: there shall be "no big ups and downs" in the housing market.
The singer took to social, Retweeting the magazine's cover image, captioning it succinctly with the "okay hand sign" and "smiling face with heart-shaped eyes" emojis.
To try to answer your question a little more succinctly, I think that the No. 1 topic that we would not joke about was national security.
"The Internet is making the world smaller," he says, succinctly summarizing the circumstances that led to his appearance on one of the summer's biggest releases yet.
A Twitter Party — which usually begins after some serious celebrity drama breaks out — involves a trending hashtag that succinctly summarizes whatever scandalous event is at hand.
This longstanding conundrum — the mind-body problem — was succinctly described by the philosopher David Chalmers at a recent symposium at The New York Academy of Sciences.
Perhaps the underlying Russian attitude was succinctly summed up by Khrushchev, whom Serov quoted as uttering a blunt Russian expression after being briefed on the case.
He's one of the NBA's best scorers, passers, and ball-handlers, with timeless strength and a skill-set that succinctly meshes with the league's modern aesthetic.
Emily from Georgia succinctly put it this way: People are not allowed to say what they want to because too many people get hurt and offended.
But it was Mr. Bush's fellow Texan, Senator John Cornyn, the No. 2 Republican in the Senate, who perhaps summed up the former president most succinctly.
Mr. Tunbjork's photo of an elderly person in a wheelchair being pushed along an icy dead end street, Mr. Odbratt said, sums up the perspective succinctly.
This Kirby and this Instagram meme account explain it much more succinctly than anything else: Earlier this year, every single member of the Deadspin staff quit.
But this is a quibble, and along with the increasing intensity of approaching midnight, the writing becomes more artful and succinctly poetic as the story proceeds.
Hallberg manages to satisfyingly wrap up most — though not all — of the characters' stories almost as deftly (and much more succinctly) as he brought them all together.
The trailer for Umbrella Academy, based on a series of graphic novels co-written by My Chemical Romance frontman Gerard Way, sets up the dynamics quite succinctly.
The artists include Mick Rock, who photographed Bowie's various personas throughout his rise, and Helen Green, known for succinctly animating Bowie's haircut repertoire into a single GIF.
"It's going to be incumbent upon the applicant, the one trying to get a job or a position, to help communicate that succinctly and effectively," he said.
To put it succinctly, that basically means the label — and, now, Braun — will profit from sales and use of Taylor's old music for the rest of forever.
One tech industry insider put it succinctly: "If you don't take him seriously or find him to be really smart, you're not watching the right television show."
Put more succinctly, Open Homes is great for Airbnb's brand, something that its Super Bowl commercial suggests it's willing to pay a lot of money to maintain.
Removing the headphone jack from a phone is problematic; the most obvious reasons have been discussed to death — most succinctly summarized by Owen Williams over on Medium.
"I recently heard a young artist succinctly describe the 1960s dance aesthetics as 'They cracked an egg on their head and called it dance,'" Ms. Coates said.
Prosecutors showed jurors an April 2015 email exchange between Manafort and Gates discussing higher-than-anticipated taxes, which Gates said succinctly summarized the frustration felt by Manafort.
"The West Family Christmas Card 2019," Kim succinctly captioned the snap, which features her, Kanye, North, Saint, and babies Chi and Psalm all huddled on the stairs.
She delivers her messages calmly and succinctly, and though she's only been on the job for a few months, she's already made several memorable — and quotable — speeches.
Above Mamout's portrait was a quote from Benjamin Franklin that encapsulated all the emotions I was feeling, and so succinctly: "A republic, if you can keep it."
Indeed, Badgirl$, who run through their story succinctly, sprinkling its enthusiastic retelling with X-rated anecdotes, are keen to point out the anomaly of their success story.
The woman who has been a purveyor of Texan-flavored "black yeehaw agenda" (along with her sister) before fellow Texan Bri Malandro so succinctly named it, is here.
Lewis put it even more succinctly when I visited CNS a week and a half later: "So we practice striking them, and they practice nuking us," he said.
"24 Jen Neundorfer, founding partner at Jane VC, succinctly explains her fund's thesis of investing in female founders as, "investing in an overlooked asset class that is overperforming.
Scott Bixby, a reporter for the Guardian, summed it up succinctly -- emojis of a series of white faces followed by a black emoji and then a woman's face.
"How is John taking off my jewelry 'relationship goals' like your fuckin' boyfriend won't take your necklace off jfc leave him," she put it succinctly, and, well, wisely.
Catherine E. Lhamon, an Obama administration vet who ran the Education Department's Office for Civil Rights — which made great strides for trans equality — sums up the issue succinctly.
Prime anxieties of the female experience are succinctly summarized in the two minutes and 45 seconds of HUSH, a short film by artists Avery Wheless and Brandon Tyson.
It's hard to succinctly describe the plot of Game of Thrones: It's an incredibly complex tale of intrigue involving over 673 principal characters and numerous fully realized civilizations.
Although she's been married to the same man since she was 303, the unions she evokes so concretely and succinctly are too different to all be her own.
Jeff Freeman, Rahway, N.J. TO THE EDITOR: Re "Inconvenient Indeed" (July 12): The article succinctly outlines the disagreements in the environmental movement on how to address climate change.
This is all to say that learning about and using Ethereum—most succinctly described as a distributed computing platform based on a public ledger—can be unbelievably dull.
To put it more succinctly, Donald Trump is a lowlife degenerate with the temperament of a 10-year-old and the moral compass of a severely wayward teen.
"The premise of this book can be succinctly stated: Most of what we believe is likely to be wrong," according to a review in The New York Times.
"Catch and release" has had a way of seeping into news coverage because it so succinctly describes a complex set of responses to illegal immigration and asylum law.
"The wide-ranging influences and products of his work speak succinctly to popular culture within the context of the history of art," the museum's director, Chris Bedford, said.
Clay Krupp from N.C. said succinctly: I believe that this picture is used as a symbol that we are running out of solutions for our current event problems.
To put it succinctly, Andela is a startup — backed by $180 million in venture capital — that trains and connects African software developers to global companies for a fee.
What else could signify a smashing victory — or a new and brilliant future — so succinctly as the likeness of a vanquished leader, smashed to rubble on the ground?
After all, Cordingley put it succinctly in her original announcement: "So let's remember that this is all low-stakes video game stuff we're dealing with here," she wrote.
But it does not work because, as Margaret Thatcher succinctly put it, the problem with socialism is that at some point you run out of other people's money.
"Stated succinctly, Donald Trump said U.S. District Judge Gonzalo Curiel, who is presiding over a class-action lawsuit against Trump University, is sticking it to him," Buchanan added.
A spokesperson for the company summed up the matter succinctly: "The rumor of Samsung acquiring Tidal is not true," he said in an interview with Variety on Friday.
I did my best to succinctly capture this moment in American history in " Trump's America ," but each one of these five scandals is worthy of its own detailed book.
With those types of issues, it's best to anticipate concerns ahead of time and work with legal counsel to properly manage them so that they can be succinctly explained.
The above graphic shows Venezuela's oil revenues (in 2000 dollars) against the rate of inflation - and it symbolizes the story of Venezuela's recent economic history as succinctly as possible.
The Washington Post's Robert J. Samuelson explains the mechanics of this succinctly, however he argues that China would be doing almost as much harm to itself in the process.
"thank u, next" is the first pop song I've heard in a long time which acknowledges, artfully, succinctly, and sincerely, the value of giving yourself time to be alone.
Bob Corker (R-TN), who sits on the Senate Budget Committee, summed up the status of talks succinctly this week: "I don't know anything about it," he said Tuesday.
" Or, more succinctly from Amanda Marcotte on Twitter: "The notion that Hillary Clinton, who has basically worked 16-hour days for years, is too soft is 120% about gender.
The state, for example, is required to file a proposed one-page informational sheet by noon Friday that "clearly and succinctly" explains the process behind obtaining the voter credential.
Joel Gibbard of Open Bionics—which partnered with the Deus Ex team to model a prosthetic arm after one the game's protagonist uses—made the case for customization succinctly.
A bold new ad in the Philippines succinctly breaks down what it feels like for people in the closet who have to keep their personal lives separate from family.
Summing up the crew's ethos, Paul Marmota expresses himself succinctly at the film's conclusion: "There is no reason not to feel proud about where you come from," he says.
"This primary, to sum it up succinctly, everybody in this room is familiar with Donald Trump, candidate, pledging that as President Trump he would drain the swamp," Brooks said.
Mononymous French comic artist Emma explained it succinctly in a viral comic for The Guardian, which begins with an overworked mom, preparing dinner for guests and for her children.
In his half of the letter, Gates succinctly outlines the environmental and economic quandary that the world faces: a growing population, growing demand for services, and increased energy use.
"As defendants have stated succinctly during this litigation, 'a plaintiff may not complain that one hand is being overcharged while the other hand is robbing the store,'" Preska wrote.
" Veronique de Rugy with the Mercatus Center wrapped it up succinctly, writing, "A bad idea is a bad idea, no matter how quickly or how slowly it is implemented.
" Donald Green, who's serving life in North Carolina for a drug conspiracy that included murder and other crimes, put it most succinctly: "I see him just like President Trump.
Guillermo del Toro has made better films than this one, but there may not be an image that succinctly sums up his work as well as that singular moment.
Miloni shares a close bond with her family's live-in housekeeper, and their conversations before bedtime succinctly reveal another way in which hierarchy casually plays out in the everyday.
Great leaders clarify their higher purpose by: The ones who succeed are able to develop a competitively advantaged direction for advancing their agenda — a direction they can succinctly communicate.
In "The Greatest Nature Essay Ever," Doyle sets out the principles of effective nature writing so succinctly that it is arguably a two-page master class in environmental writing.
My colleague Matt Yglesias put it succinctly in noting that being a Kent taught Superman about humanity about hope and about being good: Obviously characterizations of Superman have varied.
But the refreshing irreverence toward calcified pieties of high art and culture that would drive all their subsequent efforts was succinctly embodied in these sweetly comical and deceptively unassuming pictures.
" Styles is game and succinctly answers questions like, "You're British — can you explain photosynthesis?" and "There's a rumor on the internet that you have four nipples — have you heard that?
This lets it succinctly describe a huge array of colors with very little data by saying, this pixel has this bit value of color, this much brightness, and so on.
" Equinor's Saetre put it even more succinctly at the Stavenger conference, with the words of U.S. rock star Bruce Springsteen emblazoned on the big screen: "Nobody wins unless everybody wins.
In a conversation with our own Ron Miller, Sami Atiya, the president of Robotics and Motion at industrial automation giant ABB, did a good job succinctly contrasting the two worlds.
Be able to succinctly summarize your brand You should always have ready a two- to five-word description of who you are and what you are doing with your life.
The two-and-a-half minute ad takes the form of a thank you note penned to its users around the world, and it succinctly covers what makes Twitter unique.
The idea that men and women can't be friends isn't new, but When Harry Met Sally was the first major cultural event to make the case succinctly, and with humor.
The size of the U.S. presence in Afghanistan waxes and wanes, gains are made then lost, and nothing really changes—which is what Trump so succinctly captured in his tweet.
After blocking her out of a red carpet photo-op on the tarmac in Tel Aviv, the President reached for his wife's hand, which she quickly but succinctly batted away.
It so succinctly sums up everything she had learned over the course of "1989" while simultaneously providing a glimmer of hope to its listeners that their storm too shall pass.
Their case was made most succinctly in a confidential letter written in January 2018 to Mr. Mueller by the president's lawyers at the time, John M. Dowd and Jay Sekulow.
But it is in Cher, as the singer, actress and emoji-loving Twitter warrior Cherilyn Sarkisian Bono Allman is more succinctly known, that Bob Mackie, 79, found his perfect muse.
The word "contagion" succinctly captured why there was chaos: Investors were worried that the novel coronavirus, combined with an oil shock, would invade the global economy and cripple its growth.
Mason, in a paper released last month, "Ideologues Without Issues: The Polarizing Consequences of Ideological Identities," puts this point succinctly: "Identity does not require values and policy attitudes," she writes.
In a clip from the '70s, she walks along the beach near her Malibu home, succinctly analyzing the self-destructive arrogance of the era's male-dominated rock-n-roll culture.
Even if some languages express certain concepts more artfully, or more succinctly, it's precisely because we recognize the phenomena to which they refer that we're delighted by knullrufs and Kummerspeck .
Here's a portion of Obama's speech where he succinctly laid out his concerns: First, how do we give everyone a fair shot at opportunity and security in this new economy?
It's a long and complicated story that I will try to tell succinctly, but I'm very glad you asked because I've been dying to talk about it anywhere besides Twitter.
" Becoming a parent isn't totally ruled out for Andie because, as they succinctly point out, "there are other ways to have children that don't involve pushing them out through your uterus.
This sequence succinctly captures the subterfuge of Aamis, which had its world premiere at the Tribeca Film Festival last month and plays at the New York Indian Film Festival this week.
" Chyna put it succinctly on Good Morning America: "The moral of the story is, like, he doesn't respect me, so if you can't respect me, you have to respect the law.
Neighborhood Joint Greenwich Village's bohemian landscape eroded long ago, but a succinctly named cash-only Spanish restaurant that opened in 1966 on West 13th Street called Spain has stayed the same.
The Embroidery Project, as she calls it, has been part of museum group shows in London, Vienna and Singapore, and wall labels beside each piece succinctly explain how it was made.
Willmore succinctly explains what makes Widows so great, where Ocean's 8 failed to leave a strong impression: They don't like each other right away, and they aren't instantly great at crime.
"I also look forward to working closely with you to advance peace in our region because you've noted so succinctly that common dangers are turning former enemies into partners," Netanyahu said.
In general, companies were more worried about the costs of taking a more liberal stand on such issues, a point basketball legend and Nike pitchman Michael Jordan made succinctly in 1990.
To put it succinctly: The president of the United States lied to the country about his commercial relationship with a hostile foreign government toward which he has a strangely accommodating policy.
The titles of her works are all snippets of private conversations she's overheard, and they succinctly capture feelings related to self-worth, dating, the state of the world, and much more.
" ICA director Elsa Longhauser put it succinctly when she told Artforum: "[James] champions the values that ICA LA holds in highest regard — critique of the familiar and empathy with the different.
They are generally busy, and likely have many people who want their ear, so make sure to give your name and state, and get to the point as succinctly as you can.
Less succinctly put, MCE is like other real-world-based AR games in that it lets you travel around a virtual version of your area, collecting items and participating in mini-games.
Kim publicly and succinctly takes people to task when need be, where a fight is perhaps necessary while Swift is forever in a slow-burn against someone else's past indiscretion toward her.
The site was founded in 2008, after U.S.-based Wang realised there wasn't yet anything like a rage comic in China's nascent social media scene that could succinctly express emotions as efficiently.
To put it more succinctly: Dickinson is like The Favourite, retooled either for the YA audience of Gossip Girl, or for literature nerds looking to tune in, turn off, and drop out.
"Speaking to the New York Times this week, Ferguson, now a psychology professor at Stetson University, summed up the data succinctly: "The data on bananas causing suicide is about as conclusive. Literally.
He succinctly sketches in Hitchcock's apprenticeship — how he absorbed lessons in chiaroscuro from the German Expressionist master F. W. Murnau, and the art of montage from the great Soviet director Sergei Eisenstein.
Bee ran through the Weinstein scandal quickly and succinctly, sparing time for a jab at his "I came of age in the 60's and 70's" comment because that's no excuse.
For instance, a drawing of neurons in the cerebral cortex succinctly illustrates the flow of information, with tiny arrows indicating how axons start in other brain areas, then connect with local neurons.
Caro makes the same point more succinctly when writing about "The Power Broker," recalling how he was swept away by the scandalous material he was discovering and an accompanying sense of duty.
Milo Yiannopoulos has exploited this environment for everything it's worth, making his rise nothing less than a "grotesque convergence of politics and the internet," as Guardian contributor Dorian Lynskey succinctly describes it.
"As our world continues to shift and technology brings us closer together, big tech will need roles like the chief scientific officer to bridge technology and its role in society more succinctly."
The concept of "Dark" can be hard to explain succinctly, but the show focuses on three generations of a family in Germany, and a time-travel conspiracy that slowly begins to unfold.
GREENBURGH, N.Y. — It took less than 90 seconds on Monday for Steve Mills, the Knicks' newly anointed team president, to succinctly describe a vision of the future for his victory-challenged club.
To that end, when pressed to describe the difference between his bar of mostly beginner players and Ms. Hoarfrost's athletic center, Mr. Jung succinctly said, "At Paddle Palace, people change their shoes."
Al-Gharbi challenges a widespread Democratic assumption (succinctly articulated in a recent book by Ruy Teixeira, "The Optimistic Leftist") that guided the two Obama campaigns as well as Hillary Clinton's 2016 bid.
Fintech futurist Brett King puts it even more succinctly: technology companies and large consumer brands will become gatekeepers for financial products, which themselves will move to the background of the user experiences.
In a 2017 interview with Morning Consult, Thomas Ordahl, chief strategy officer of the brand consulting firm Landor, succinctly explained how Chick-fil-A has been able to weather these constant controversies.
Making sense of it all In computational terms, first the linguistic and acoustic features are isolated, condensing the large amount of data into manageable sets of features that succinctly captures their important nuances.
Her ultimate, on the other hand, seems built to serve exactly the opposite purpose: To give your team that big push it needs to turn a game around or close it off succinctly.
In displaying everything but my wife's text message, and letting me read it in the gaps, my phone succinctly betrays the lie at the heart of the information age: that communication is simple.
Marlins 2, Mets 1 Sitting in the visitors' dugout at Citi Field on Tuesday, Barry Bonds succinctly described the night's pitching matchup between the Mets' Noah Syndergaard and the Miami Marlins' Jose Fernandez.
The ideal candidate is a well-informed observer of the arts, able to write succinctly for a general audience, with an active social media presence and a knowledge of photography and image editing.
Outside the museum, Miami-based George Sanchez-Calderón's sculpture "AMERICANA" (2014/2020), with that word in large, polished stainless steel letters, succinctly questions what we mean by Americana, Americanness, and, indeed, American art.
"Old enough to fight, old enough to vote," a slogan used by students from World War II through the Vietnam War, succinctly illustrates youth frustration with the voting age at the time, 21.
And former South Bend, Indiana, Mayor Pete Buttigieg succinctly argued again and again that Sanders would sink the Democratic ticket in November, dragging House members and senators in swing states down with him.
He recently took part in a new BBC Radio 1 game (the succinctly named "Perv Pad"), which involved reading out some of the most NSFW fan comments people have posted about him online.
Ruan says although most of the founders he backs are from referrals, he considers candidates who send good cold emails, pinpoint a big issue, and demonstrate how they plan to fix it succinctly.
The same sentiment was expressed more succinctly -- and more sarcastically -- last month in "OK, boomer," New Zealand MP Chlöe Swarbrick's unforgettable retort to someone who heckled her during a speech on climate change.
" In a Free Beacon article titled "Five Idiotic Moments in the Most Recent Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez Interview," Alex Griswold put it more succinctly: "So yeah, conservatives are looooving this whole Ocasio-Cortez phenomenon.
At the September event at the Economic Club of Washington, he succinctly summed up his thoughts on how best to solve not only the homelessness crisis but other problems of poverty and inequality.
I have never read someone so succinctly, eloquently, and urgently explain the roots — capitalism and imperialism — of the climate crisis, and how those roots grow up into the forest of our culture/popular imagination.
MediaMatters describes the situation succinctly: …after she took questions from the reporters yesterday about the email saga, the press focused in on the fact in reviewing her private emails, Clinton found roughly 60,000 messages.
As Vox's Alex Ward sums up succinctly, US military intervention is so complex, and the institutions involved in it are so entrenched, that it's exceptionally difficult for any US president to back out entirely.
There's a quote by Jefferson at the end of "Nobody Speak" that deals with this very succinctly: "Our liberty depends on the freedom of the press, and that cannot be limited without being lost."
Or to put it more succinctly: It's PR. There is no accountability if rules are self-styled and therefore cannot be enforced because they can just get overwritten and goalposts moved at corporate will.
In any case, Jack McCollough of Proenza Schouler summed up the situation pretty succinctly, standing next to his co-designer, Lazaro Hernandez, backstage after their show and accepting the air kisses of the crowd.
Referring to the time Trump mocked a disabled New York Times journalist — and really every other group or person he has already targeted — Streep succinctly summed up why this isn't acceptable or even productive.
The two men shot the shit for awhile—they've been friends for decades, with Austin a central piece of Heyman's criminally underrated WCW faction, the Dangerous Alliance—before Heyman succinctly explained WWE's business model.
Tribe has summed up the decision succinctly: The Supreme Court's sin in Citizens United is not that it has been wrong to recognize and embrace the libertarian values that inhere in the First Amendment.
Wiseman's ode to life in a by-most-accounts-idyllic community-run town very succinctly captures the coastal Maine way — a wry French-Canadian frankness in the face of the tiresome forces of nature.
Born to Guyanese immigrant parents, Scarville's tenderhearted odes to her parents illustrate it is possible to communicate love succinctly and profoundly, but only if you're willing to do the long, hard emotional labor required.
Anne Thompson of New York perfectly summed up the drastic lengths Weinstein would go for his films succinctly, using 2003, the year four of the five Best Picture nominees were Miramax films, as her example.
As a joke, it failed, and in a statement released Monday night, Harmon succinctly apologized for it: In 2009, I made a 'pilot' which strove to parody the series Dexter and only succeeded in offending.
Bob Corker (R-TN), who sits on the Senate Budget Committee, summed up the status of talks in the upper chamber succinctly last week: "I don't know anything about it," he said in early June.
I just watched all of Sex and the City for the very first time, and I've attempted to collect my thoughts as succinctly as possible to share the SATC experience with my current dating generation.
His administration imposed a hardline immigration agenda that included separating children from their families — "kids in cages," as Matthews succinctly sums it up — while preying on blue-collar white fears with harsh anti-migrant rhetoric.
It also made a valiant attempt to decipher a political candidate's placard placed on the side of a house, correctly identifying his target as the House of Representatives, and boiling down his campaign promises succinctly.
The popular (and tragically non-canonical) Gilmore Girls ship Rory/Paris succinctly encapsulates the idea of this pairing: Rory, the sweaterboy, is studious, smart, responsible, and a poster image for the wholesome girl next door.
Jen Chae, a vlogger and blogger, succinctly explained this feeling on Twitter: How unnecessary to make fun of Asians on the #Oscars when Hollywood isn't even evolved enough to give Asians Asian-specific roles yet.
Now, a lot can be speculated regarding what or whom Jenner's Coachella cap is intended to refer to, but we've got to admit: It does succinctly sum up our feelings about festival dressing these days.
If you don't prepare, or at least know how to answer the question succinctly, you could miss a key opportunity to impress the hiring manager, or worse, actively lose their interest and derail your interview.
A digital sign above the Lake Pontchartrain Causeway Bridge, the 23-mile span that links suburbs teeming with Saints diehards, stated succinctly how its administrators viewed the outcome: "We were robbed," CNN affiliate WGNO reported.
Someone who is a much better writer than I am could do a better job of succinctly describing how the only (as in only) thing this guy is interested in is promoting his brand/name.
James Stavridis, a retired Navy admiral now serving as dean of the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University, succinctly lays out the reasons the military can't ignore climate change in this piece.
The wall also becomes a projection screen for some of the production's most memorably visceral images, including a living one that succinctly, unsettlingly and spectacularly conjures the rot at the heart of the work's world.
In "Meditation," Mr. Abraham drove his point home succinctly, but this foray into social commentary, while serious and timely, was underdeveloped: I was sure the second section was about to start when the curtain fell.
In four languages, it cautions against the steep, exposed 12-mile hike, but it's the illustration — of a muscular blond hiker, burned red and projectile vomiting on all fours — that most succinctly communicates the message.
In an interview with Savannah Guthrie, attorney Michael Avenatti succinctly responded "yes" when asked whether his client had a sexual relationship with Trump in 2006, whose youngest son, Barron Trump, was born the same year.
Letters To the Editor: At the hearing of the House Intelligence Committee on Monday, Representative Adam B. Schiff of California, the ranking Democrat, succinctly recounted the "coincidences" about Donald Trump's operatives' contacts with Russian intelligence.
The reason I'm engaging in this "chit chat, get a number, rinse, repeat" song and dance on a Tuesday night was not to to "cuff a winter boo", as Cardi B has so succinctly put it.
I have no words to explain succinctly, only memories from my childhood when I was called the baby prince, and then the young prince, and now there's a hesitation, a slight pause before acknowledging my rank.
I thought this was going to be a moment when Dunham (disguised as Hannah) used this platform to succinctly nail why we should believe women when they come forward with sexual assault allegations about powerful men.
Max Levchin, Glow's co-founder and a well-known member of the PayPal mafia, succinctly responded to a TechCrunch inquiry regarding the deal via e-mail: "Fairly sure you got this particular story wrong," he wrote.
As OnMessage founder Brad Todd put it so succinctly last Thursday on MSNBC's Meet the Press Daily last week, "Voters take Trump seriously but not literally, while reporters take Trump literally but not seriously," he said.
It laid out, accurately and succinctly, the details of the Russian cyberattack on the American election in 2016, which is part of the larger Russian strategy of waging cyberwar against democratic nations throughout Europe and America.
" Cornell William Brooks, Jealous's successor at the NAACP, put it more succinctly, noting, in the words of one of his friends, that when you run the NAACP, "You're like the de facto president of Black America.
The succinctly conceived, linguistically charged exhibition lends itself easily to book form, and the accompanying catalog is filled with stark scans of the implements from the show and poetic descriptions of what our worldly impulses mean.
Evans' pitch went like this: He would build an online platform organized into tidy sections—immigration, health care, education, the economy—each with a series of questions of the kind most Americans can't succinctly answer themselves.
That word, "immersive," will undoubtedly feel overused as people talk about the ride, but there&aposs no other way to succinctly describe just how cool it feels to step into the various areas of this ride.
Kettlewell's experiment on "industrial melanism" became a staple of high school biology textbooks because it succinctly illustrates how species can, when subjected to intense environmental pressures, evolve in a matter of years rather than over millennia.
A New York Times editorial made the point succinctly, deeming it monstrous that Congress should lay a tax penalizing individual toil while exempting from this special levy the receivers of income from dividends, interest, or rent.
Many found it odd that he would so publicly lambast Secretary Clinton in an extended press conference instead of simply and succinctly announcing his reasoning and determination that the FBI lacked grounds to prosecute Secretary Clinton.
In the opening scene of Halabi's video work "Mnemosyne" (183), her grandmother sits on a cream-colored couch and directly addresses the camera, calmly and succinctly telling the story of the scar that marked her husband's forehead.
Brower says that while Trump's agenda might not on its surface appear to succinctly dovetail in certain areas with those of the President, the first lady does utilize strategic partnerships with other parts of the Trump administration.
Formerly employed by the telecommunications company Optus, de Sousa became a hero for multiculturalism in January after he calmly and succinctly responded to outraged Facebook complaints about a Sydney Optus store that had put up Arabic signage.
By January of 2017, Lipslut's very first product was born: a mauve-y pink liquid lipstick succinctly named "F*ck Trump" decorated with Warhol-esque images of President Trump with his lips coated in hot pink lipstick.
The veteran political journalist Alec MacGillis succinctly made the point Friday in a Facebook post: The behavior the President of the United States advocated can have chilling, fatal effects in a city and increase -- not decrease -- crime.
In a surprise turn, and without mincing words, the former first lady succinctly dismissed the philosophy popularized by Facebook executive Sheryl Sandberg during an appearance this weekend before an audience of 19,000 at New York's Barclays Center.
No wonder, then, that Doc Watson, the pitching coach for the Class A Stone Crabs, answered succinctly about how the Rays can minimize the injury risk to McKay, who ranks among the top 21918 prospects in baseball.
MSNBC's Chris Hayes put that idea succinctly in 12, stating that being able to move forward in life while not answering for transgressions is a true sign of having power: Power is all about who gets forgiven.
That image, in which both animal and human are shown lying on the sidewalk, seen from a high angle and blending in with the muted colors of dirt, succinctly captures a mix of abjection and societal indifference.
Daring Fireball's John Gruber put it nice and succinctly:  It's more like having a watch that doesn't keep accurate time and fixing the problem by no longer wearing any watch, rather than fixing or replacing the broken one.
Ronald Lee, director of the Centre on the Economics and Demography of Ageing at the University of California, Berkeley, puts it succinctly: "We don't really know what population ageing will be like, because nobody has done it yet."
When Counselor to the President Kellyanne Conway referred to "alternative facts " earlier this month, she succinctly encapsulated the ongoing narrative of some governments propagating the shadowy, Orwellian world of "disinformation" that has risen to prominence in recent months.
It's a silly gag, but one that succinctly speaks to the history of Asian-American actors—including Jeong, in most of his prior roles—being confined to very specific, and often offensive, ideas of Asianness in Hollywood films.
"Obviously, the Congress which set us up has the authority and should review our actions at any time they want to, and in any way they want to," once succinctly testified a president of the New York Fed.
" As Timberg succinctly summarized, "Such factors have helped shape a platform that gives politicians license to lie and that remains awash in misinformation, vulnerable to a repeat of many of the problems that marred the 2016 presidential election.
One of his most famous works is "Every Building on the Sunset Strip," a self-published accordion-folded book from 1966, which, like "Twenty-Six Gasoline Stations" before it, is a photographic work succinctly described by its title.
" Actually, Barbara said she wanted Danielle put in jail or, as Dr. Phil succinctly put it, she "wanted to give up my car-stealing, knife-wielding, twerking 13-year-old daughter who tried to frame me for a crime.
The dueling images of a president on the edge and a conservative Congress soldiering forward explain succinctly why almost all elected Republicans here have quietly supported Mr. Trump through his travails — or at least not chastised him too loudly.
In a Senate Foreign Relations hearing on U.S. policy toward Russia, David Hale, the department's undersecretary for political affairs, succinctly summed up the findings of the U.S. intelligence community in response to questioning from the panel's top Democrat, Sen.
I was struck by how Ranee succinctly and clearly discussed the work, even as she addressed everything from its politics and subject matter to the studio processes of the artists in the show and her personal relationships with them.
The New York Times captured the dynamic succinctly: When asked by reporters clustered on the blacktop outside the West Wing if Mr. Trump had command of the details of the negotiations, Mr. McConnell ignored the question and smiled blandly.
In his latest book, On the Future: Prospects for Humanity, cosmologist and astrophysicist Martin Rees addressed the issue of colonizing Mars rather succinctly: By 2100 thrill seekers... may have established 'bases' independent from the Earth—on Mars, or maybe on asteroids.
Anxiety and depression starter packs, evil Kermit memes, the bingo boards of symptoms—they've all shown that no mental health issue is so complex that it can't be analyzed succinctly, reduced to a meme and shared by thousands who relate.
And the week before that they did a show on Three Billboards Outside Of Ebbing, Missouri and they were to succinctly describe my dissatisfaction with that film in a way that I was never able to put together in my head.
Since 2013, he has probably been known best for LiarTownUSA, a Tumblr blog that has an intensely devoted following but is impossible to characterize succinctly except by saying that Tejaratchi, in addition to being extremely funny, is also a Photoshop virtuoso.
Asked by Ryan Reilly of HuffPost if it was "an impropriety for you to come out and sort of spin the report before people are able to read it," Barr succinctly replied, "No," before ending the press conference shortly thereafter.
The Institutional Revolutionary Party, to which President Enrique Peña Nieto belongs, was plagued by continued failings in the investigation of the forced disappearance of 43 students, as John Oliver so succinctly summarized in his recent segment on the Mexican elections.
Edward Shorter, a historian of psychiatry at the University of Toronto, summed up this view succinctly: "We've come to a place, at least in the West, where it seems every other person is depressed and on medication," he told the Times.
That is to say, we're looking for artists who understand the world more succinctly when it is translated into the visual and sensory realms; who refer to art, rather than politics, to learn about humanity and the state of the world.
"How else, except in the clarity of dreams, are you supposed to see the world all around you that's hidden by the light of day?" one character asks, succinctly formulating one of the metaphysical paradoxes that underwrites all of Eisenberg's work.
" Diane Ravitch, a former assistant secretary of education appointed by President George H.W. Bush — and a fervent critic of the growth of standardized testing in American education — puts it succinctly: "The A.P. has become a cash cow for the College Board.
Put succinctly, the claim is that the roughly 93,500 people who registered to vote in New Hampshire on Election Day 2016 with out-of-state driver's licenses were shipped into the state as part of some sort of Democratic conspiracy.
To put it succinctly, no matter how much the Democratic nominee runs up the score in states like California and New York, it won't matter if they can't win in a handful of the aforementioned states that Trump won in 2016.
" Or as William Gale, co-director of the Tax Policy Center who served as a senior economist under President George H.W. Bush, put it succinctly then: "It exacerbates preexisting and longstanding trends, rather than aiming to partially compensate for them.
No doubt Trump thought the real catastrophe was the blow to his ego that came after he made an internet celebrity out of San Juan, Puerto Rico mayor Carmen Yulin Cruz, who succinctly shamed him for his hurricane response (or lack thereof).
Alexa Ura with the Texas Tribune summarized the situation succinctly: The more than 20 clinics that have shuttered since HB 2 took effect can't just reopen for business: They'll have to reapply for licensure, which is no walk in the park in Texas.
The former Daily Show host, whose retirement immediately plunged the nation into darkness, appeared on David Axelrod's The Axe Files podcast Monday, where he succinctly summarized Donald Trump's hypocrisy (or at least a slice of it) and concerns about Hillary Clinton's campaign.
Still, particular starring turns on Saturation II — their second of three Saturations promised this year — come from Kevin Abstract (who scorches earth on "JUNKY"), Dom McLennon (who dexterously rides "QUEER"), and Ameer Vann (who sums up Brockhampton's sudden rise succinctly on "TOKYO").
My mind was blown by how succinctly Midori was able to communicate the basic alignments within kinky sexual desire—and help us find the words to express where our appetites lie at any given point in time (because yes, they do change!).
The actress made headlines for succinctly calling out Matt Damon's disappointing response to the #MeToo movement, and on Tuesday sat down with the New York Times to talk about how the tidal wave of allegations of sexual harassment and assault has rocked Hollywood.
Here's an informative video New Scientist made about the phenomenon, which succinctly points out, "they all whoop together if you tap on the hive": Now here's another video of a large group of living organisms going "whoop whoop": Yup, those are Juggalos.
There are a few very good reasons for that, which the Huffington Post's Ryan Grim succinctly summed up: Taylor and Baer have been really sketchy about the whole thing, and since the accuser is anonymous, journalists can't do anything to verify her claims.
Valencia's official press release puts it quite succinctly: eSports has quickly become a multimillion euro industry and Valencia once again has shown themselves to be on the cutting edge by setting up a team that will fly the club colours around the world.
Alex Descas, one of the actors with whom Denis has worked longest, and who credits her with writing complicated, realistic roles for black actors at a time when few others did, described her artistic mode succinctly: "Film is not theatre," he told me.
" I'm personally starting to lose my patience with most satire, in a media age where it's become increasingly exhausting to separate jokes from reality, something Emily Nussbaum put so succinctly in a recent piece: "how do you fight an enemy who's just kidding?
One of the strangest of these lingering regrets for BoJack is how his onetime director, Kelsey Jannings, was fired from the film they were working on after they defied the producers to go on a wacky misadventure too complicated to explain succinctly.
For Michele's 2018 cruise show, staged in Florence on Monday evening, the selection of faces was more succinctly themed: Alongside the models were five musicians of varying degrees of fame, plucked from the edgy independent music scene in countries from Australia to Italy.
In the acrylic on canvas "Shoot to Kill" Lovelace succinctly evokes problems of gun legislation and racial hatred: Two arms reach across in front of the stars and stripes — not to clasp each other, but to be the first to grab a handgun.
Representative Hakeem Jeffries of New York, the No. 5 House Democrat, who perhaps most succinctly summed up his party's response: "We are not paying a $5 billion ransom note for your medieval border wall," he wrote on Twitter, with a castle emoji.
But it was perhaps Representative Hakeem Jeffries of New York, the No. 5 House Democrat, who most succinctly summed up his party's response: "We are not paying a $5 billion ransom note for your medieval border wall," he tweeted, with a castle emoji.
" Asked if he had relished the chance to counter Canseco in print, Rodriguez replied succinctly: "Everything that I did, I tell you how I did it — with a lot of discipline, a lot of conditioning, a lot of passion about the game.
As Moira Donegan states it succinctly in a recent essay for Bookforum, Dworkin's "inflexible opinions" on pornography and sex work have "fallen dramatically out of fashion;" Rebecca Traister, who cites Dworkin as an inspiration in her book "Good and Mad," says the same.
But the phenomenon of conservative Christian opposition to Harry Potter succinctly encapsulates many of the forces that were at play within that group two decades ago — and illuminates a whole group of young adults who felt excluded from the world around them.
Burning questions If Bran knows everything that has happened and is going to happen, and is the only person who can succinctly explain what the Night King wants, why does he spend most of his time waiting around in courtyards and staring at trees?
Cannaord's analyst Alex Brooks put it succinctly, speaking of Seadrill specifically but it could stand for the Energy industry in general: "the outlook for further work is terrible, and multiple rigs remain uncontracted through 2016 with many more coming off contract in early 2017."
" David Stryker, an infectious disease doctor in private practice who has contracted with Presbyterian and served on one of its boards for over a decade, put it succinctly: "When I started practice, the hospitals were there to help me take care of my patients.
While I, a scholar, was disappointed by how succinctly the film did away with the allegations of religious abuse that loom over the real events, I did leave the theater considering a secondary career in exorcism (which is apparently more needed than ever these days!).
As Susskind succinctly summarizes, economists largely agree that while machines have sometimes completely substituted for everything a worker does (think of elevator operators), more frequently, they complement workers' jobs, taking over some routine and predictable tasks but in the end making workers more productive.
New York Times Magazine reporter Nikole Hannah-Jones succinctly explained why this matters, and what a more one-size-fits-all approach to politics misses: When your most left candidate condemns "identity politics" to embrace some raceless notion of class solidarity it shows fundamental flaw.
But don't take my word for it: Listen to Jay Z. In a new video op-ed for the New York Times, illustrated by artist Molly Crabapple and produced by filmmaker and journalist dream hampton, Shawn Carter succinctly narrates the story of the War on Drugs.
While these headlines can paint a bleak depiction of Mississippi, local artistic and musical communities are making sure to quickly respond to Governor Bryant's recent string of discriminatory measures, and perhaps none are more explicit than an anonymous thrash punk EP succinctly entitled Fuck Phil Bryant.
Nowhere is this dizzying interconnectedness more succinctly illustrated than in Colin McMullan's "Clouds Filtered through Trees" (2019), which consists of an almost-seven-foot tall water cooler that resembles a laboratory beaker and dispenses rainwater captured from the museum's roof and filtered through white pine tree sapwood.
KLAUS LACKNERDirector, Centre for Negative Carbon EmissionsArizona State University Tempe, Arizona Human cloning* Your World If article about human cloning succeeds admirably in succinctly recapping pivotal developments in the science of cloning and regeneration, and in anticipating further advances ("Chips off the old block", July 15th).
While many still view opting out of the paid work force to take care of children as akin to babysitting, I have argued for years that, as Ms. Shulevitz states succinctly, "care is work," but work with no pay, and no fixed breaks or vacation days.
"Today I have learnt that responding succinctly and in perfect jest to somebody heckling you about *your age* as you speak about the impact of climate change on *your generation* with the literal title of their generation makes some people very mad," she wrote on Facebook.
One of the earlier tweets about this content dump, posted on February 20, captures this attitude succinctly: While a content dump of this size is not technically a breach or hack, or even a "leak," it is still highly disconcerting, and potentially dangerous for the models involved.
" 'The original sin of slavery' Castro succinctly and directly explained his support for paying reparations to African-American families whose ancestors were slaves, telling the audience that payments are needed because the United States has "never fully addressed in this country the original sin of slavery.
What I enjoyed most about TLOP were all the parts when Kanye wasn't actually rapping, which I didn't expect because I always liked his earlier albums mostly for the lyrics (is there anything more succinctly poetic than "I live by two words: 'fuck you, pay me'"?).
Some months ago, this painting was lying in Pepperstein's studio alongside many other works in preparation for three different exhibitions, and although it belongs to none of them, it succinctly presents the relationship of Pepperstein to Russian history and to the concept of historical time in general.
Commissioner Clyburn summed the day's proceeding up sadly and succinctly, with a reference to the commission's earlier approval of zero-rating programs: "I could go on pointing out how this administration enables providers to provide free data to consumers," she said, "but not if they are economically poor."
But as my TC colleague Romain Dillet succinctly puts it: "Social payments is not a product; it's just a feature" — which is another way of saying there's a race on to see which of these startups can scale fast enough to be the winner-takes-all network for Europe.
As Google CEO Sundar Pichai's note to employees succinctly put it, "To suggest a group of our colleagues have traits that make them less biologically suited to that work is offensive and not OK." Whether or not Damore's views should have led to his firing is a different matter.
Anyway, the long and short of it is that Trump probably knows there are already movie ratings, maybe doesn't know that the MPAA does provide content advisories (but not as succinctly as television does), and is maybe suggesting, off the cuff, that movies start doing what TV does.
According to an earnest new cover story that came out today in Wired, Evans is doing ........ this: He would build an online platform organized into tidy sections—immigration, health care, education, the economy—each with a series of questions of the kind most Americans can't succinctly answer themselves.
Meanwhile, Hacksaw Ridge was directed by Mel Gibson, a man who's been involved in more controversies than we can succinctly list here, but let's just start with the anti-Semitic remarks he made in the 2006 and allegations of abuse against his ex-wife and call it a day.
A lot of that stems from how succinctly Weinman dissected the main source of humor in Family Guy — an abundance of references to '70s and '80s pop culture meant to masquerade as jokes — at a time when the references seemed new enough to provoke laughter in those who recognized them.
The framing when Nick unbuckles his pants, with Serena Joy standing out of focus to the side, is amazing for how succinctly it encapsulates so much of what Gilead represents: the rarity of private moments, the currency of women's bodies and the fear of violence in the face of absolute control.
But the fight also reflects a sincere frustration in the trans community over transphobia being treated as marginal and forgivable; my colleague Katelyn Burns makes the point brutally and succinctly: There's not a single candidate in the field who wouldn't sacrifice trans rights for enacting their signature piece of legislation.
As someone who used to run companies, you can try to remind people that one day someone may look at this out of context and, "Please be careful what you write," but you need people to do their jobs too, which is to communicate directly, succinctly, powerfully, off the cuff, on the fly.
At the White House, Sean Spicer, the press secretary, said that the Trump administration "will use all of the tools of national power, in coordination with our international partners, to cut off ISIS's funding, expand intelligence sharing and deny ISIS geographic and online safe havens," succinctly summarizing the Obama administration's strategy as well.
"In principle, an October Surprise would work by shifting voters' attentions and causing them to focus on some aspect that causes some voters to either change their vote or change their likelihood of voting," Joshua D. Clinton, a professor of political science at Vanderbilt University, wrote me in an email, succinctly summing up the stakes.
In August 2019, after conducting a command-wide review of the ethics and culture of an organization that had suffered myriad embarrassing incidents of illegal, immoral and unethical behavior -- including Gallagher's alleged offenses -- RADM Green published an "all-hands" guidance that succinctly outlined what he would do to get that force back on track.
So to sum it up succinctly: Theresa May and the current government she is running are liars, this song is about her being a liar, if you have any kind of heart please disregard your taste in music and play it from your open bedroom window/car/ice cream van so as more people will hear it.
While conservatives have gotten in the habit of attacking Ocasio-Cortez for allegedly not being well-versed in policy details, she in fact succinctly and accurately described how progressive marginal tax rates work while discussing her proposal, which she's pushing as part of a plan to finance a "Green New Deal," during the 60 Minutes interview.
As the Democratic Party made gains in the House and Republicans did the same in the Senate, Ashley Jardina, a political scientist at Duke, succinctly described Tuesday's outcome as an expression of our increasing division: While the Democrats did well, the results of the election illustrate how deeply divided the nation is around issues of race and immigration.
Elaine, whose vocation is succinctly captured in the title of Anna Biller's new film, is first seen driving north from San Francisco in a bright red convertible with a matching set of luggage in the back seat and a slightly contrasting shade of lipstick on her mouth and on the stubbed-out cigarettes in the car's ashtray.
From their earliest days at the FBI Academy, special-agent trainees are instructed to draft documents that succinctly capture the relevant, salient portions of an interview: Stick to the facts; no suppositions or opinions allowed; only describe items or utterances that demand description; anything you put on paper will be subject to scrutiny from seasoned defense attorneys.
But I never would have realized just how good a sweater that sweater was had I not heard a voice next to me whisper, so softly and tenderly, 'Sweater,'" Menta told me in a Twitter DM. (Oh yeah, we're friends now.) "It summed up so succinctly what I knew every person in that audience was thinking.
Many of its findings were chronicled more succinctly in Anderson Cooper's 2015 CNN special "#Being13: Inside the Secret World of Teens," most notably the stress caused by the minute-by-minute monitoring of one's status and popularity, the bullying and harassment that take place routinely online, and exposure of younger and younger children to overtly sexual content on the web.
Speaking to the sole, anonymous entity behind the page feels like I'm conversing with a fusion between a political ambassador and a customer service representative, which turns out be exactly what is intended once I ask exactly what the page is about: "T2R is my combination home-decor live-webcam-girl customer-support consulting brand," the nameless personality succinctly explains.
One paragraph succinctly summarizes the new study from a team of Harvard researchers led by Ben Sommers: Using a timely survey of low-income adults, we find that Arkansas's implementation of the nation's first work requirements in Medicaid in 2000 was associated with significant losses in health insurance coverage in the policy's initial six months but no significant change in employment.
The gritty brick façade (Burckhardt simply painted brick-like shapes onto the cardboard) sports the kinds of urban details that accrue on many New York City buildings: an advertisement for a locksmith; a sign announcing 24-hour surveillance; graffiti; leftover wheat paste posters from the last presidential campaign (Vote Trump) and I'm With Her) alongside another sign succinctly announcing #Not my President.
AMERICA'S JEWISH WOMEN A History From Colonial Times to Today By Pamela S. Nadell Considering that the very definition of Judaism and what it means to be a Jew has changed so much over the last three centuries of American history, it's a near impossible endeavor — yeoman's work — to capture succinctly the role of Jewish women over that long span.
The omnibus issues in this anthology remain at the hidden center of what's ailing the world: issues of confinement, freedom, agency, individuality, the space and privilege to express the dimensions of one's struggle for mental health afforded by class and race, the evolution of psychology and medical treatment, the terms we use to describe illness and disease, or, put succinctly, trauma.
Despite the large number of works on display (approximately 150, according to the press release), the exhibition succinctly fits into several living-room-sized galleries without feeling crowded, and there's a real sense of movement from one space to the next, thanks to the succession of thematically related groups designed to underscore the evolution of Modigliani's approach and, more importantly, the divergences within his famously consistent oeuvre.
He succinctly presents a story of human grief: of mothers falling apart on streets stained with their teenage boys' blood, tight-lipped and somber as reporters file in and out of their homes — or raging against the public show trials of their loved ones in the pages of newspapers and on cable TV, when no trial of their sons' killers will ever come to pass.
The film starts (rather unexpectedly) with text over oil paintings that explain, succinctly and powerfully, the migration of African-Americans after slavery to the north, in search of work and a more equal society — only to be met with racism, restrictive housing practices, and "white flight" to the suburbs, all of which, as the subtitles tell us, led to heightened racial tensions by 1967.
Bloomberg's Sahil Kapur summed it up succinctly in a tweet on Monday: Trump: Democrats did itKelly: It's a deterrentMiller: We did it and we're proudConway: We did it & we're not proudSessions: It sends a messageSanders: It's biblicalNielsen: It's not a policy Democrats and prominent Republicans have criticized the Trump administration and urged it to end the practice — which it has the power to do immediately.
With regard to the opioid epidemic, the series examines its small-scale and suspicious beginnings; however (save a few words on screen as an epilogue) The Pharmacist focuses on Schneider's own efforts and doesn't give viewers an overview of the entire epidemic or succinctly epitomize other dynamics at play in its narrative, such as the racial divides contained in New Orleans or the damage inflicted by Hurricane Katrina.
Steven Pearlstein, a columnist at the Washington Post, in his 2018 book "Can American Capitalism Survive?" describes this negative feedback loop succinctly: As a society, we are now caught in one of those self-reinforcing, downward spirals in which the erosion of social capital, government dysfunction, rising inequality and slowing rates of economic growth are all feeding off each other, with more of one leading to more of all the others.
It connoted as succinctly as possible to others, "Well, he's not a Republican, but he sure isn't a Democrat either," even if I wasn't drinking the Ayn Rand Kool-Aid and thinking magic dirt will transform everyone on the planet into prosperous, intelligent, self-reliant types who would all enjoy a standard of living beyond anything we could presently imagine and respect each other's rights if only that dang government weren't in the way.
EditorsNote: updates first and last notes with Nunez taken off roster Altuve hits 93 homers as Astros roll in Game 29 HOUSTON — Presented a lengthy, rhetorical question seeking perspective on his historic three-homer game, Houston Astros second baseman Jose Altuve responded with a simplicity matching his successful approach at the plate, cutting to the chase with a one-word answer that succinctly summarized if he previously enjoyed such an incredible, singular performance in his career.
Alan Krueger, a professor of economics at Princeton who was the chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers from 2011 to 2013, put the case against the Republican tax bill succinctly in an email: Several components of the House bill favor physical and financial capital over labor and human capital — namely, the lower rate for passive pass through income, the repeal of the estate tax, the big cut in the corporate tax rate, the failure to end the carried interest loophole, etc.
To sum up very succinctly, his reflections on this context led him to reframe the issue as a loss of painting instead of an end to painting, a pivotal nuance, and from there to lay down the foundations for a concept of the artwork as the object produced by the loss of painting a very different conclusion from Donald Judd's specific object, and one that allowed painting to continue as a viable proposition instead of having to defer to sculpture in order to remain true to the literalist doctrine, as Judd would have it.
The new paper proves that the class of problems that can be verified through interactions with entangled quantum provers, a class called MIP*, is exactly equal to the class of problems that are no harder than the halting problem, a class called RE. The title of the paper states it succinctly: "MIP* = RE." In the course of proving that the two complexity classes are equal, the computer scientists proved that Tsirelson's problem is false, which, due to previous work, meant that the Connes embedding conjecture is also false.
Brendan Nyhan, a professor of government at Dartmouth and a contributor to The Upshot, made the case succinctly: Trump has flouted the norms of American elections and governance at every turn, including calling for the jailing of an opposing candidate, encouraging violence against protesters, endorsing the torture of prisoners, suggesting he might not respect the results of the election, falsely claiming that millions of illegal votes were cast, failing to resolve unprecedented conflicts of interest or to even disclose his tax returns, and attacking a federal judge based on his ethnicity (and that's of course a highly incomplete list).

No results under this filter, show 581 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.