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967 Sentences With "taken it"

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

" The other responds "They have taken it from us.
I've taken it with me on my last three flights.
I've taken it around the world the past three years.
We could have just taken it with the normal hours.
But one fan has taken it to the next level.
She's always just taken it and been the nice girl.
But this episode could have taken it a step forward.
We have taken it all the way to the end.
But Brussels and the government, they've taken it all away.
"Thankfully, I haven't taken it to that level," he said.
Bone, of course, has taken it in his casual stride.
"I think the journalists have taken it personally," Stewart said.
Some of the young ones have never taken it up.
Still no word on who might have taken it, though.
"In hindsight I would not have taken it," he said.
"He has taken it to another level of isolation." video
But Valve Corporation, which runs Steam, has taken it down.
But the natural world, we've just taken it for granted.
TRUMP: Because you — should have taken it all the way.
Pepsi has since taken it down and apologized to Kendall.
Pokémon Go gave me life, and YouTube hath taken it away.
Sometimes I feel like they never have taken it super seriously.
I have stupidly taken it quite personally, which obviously I shouldn't.
Twice, she'd blown up this job; twice, she's taken it back.
Polling has rightly taken it on the chin in this election.
"He has just taken it all in his stride," said Simpson.
So I've taken it, and I feel lucky to do so.
But investors have taken it as a negative signal for stocks.
He said he had taken it as a message from God.
Some airlines have taken it off their flight schedules in October.
In the spring, we've taken it out of another 125 stores.
But Trump's White House has taken it to a new level.
It's this purple one here, I haven't taken it off yet.
I'd taken it as a layered critique of right-wing callousness.
I've only taken it off a handful of times since 2003!
Bauer has essentially taken it upon himself to market the sport.
"People for a generation have taken it for granted," he said.
Some brands had taken it upon themselves to shut down sooner.
Many Twitterstorians have taken it upon themselves to correct the record.
Gray was an extremely tough cookie; she could have taken it.
I've taken it to parents' and grandparents' houses and the beach.
Yeah. And, he's taken it too far quite a few times.
Some of the local priests have taken it more to heart.
"We've taken it quite seriously," he said of the new law.
Say, for example, I've bought a pear and taken it home.
As founders, we've taken it as far as we can go.
Having taken it, every president must be a law and order president.
"She's taken it beyond where everyone else is taking it," Leopold said.
I've actually never taken it off other than for SNL or work.
Those are areas where he's improved and taken it up a notch.
So we've taken it upon ourselves to corral some of the best.
Now they've taken it up a notch, introducing Mega Stuf Oreo O's.
The summer's sell-off has taken it back down to that level.
The shortest route would have taken it over a 32 degree incline.
Others have taken it upon themselves to carry and, consequently, shift it.
We've braided it, added ice to it, and taken it high-fashion.
Some countries have seized the opportunity; others have taken it for granted.
But even when we confronted you, you insisted you hadn't taken it.
But I just think Trump's administration has taken it so far right.
Maybe you would have taken it a little harder then but now?
For many years, many well-informed citizens have taken it as given
Once that information is compromised or taken, it can never be replaced.
Henry wasn't his real name; he may have taken it from Thoreau.
His advisers gave him good counsel, and he should have taken it.
We thought the Ranger was expensive, but Jeep's clearly taken it further.
"What science has already taken, it will not give back," he said.
It has been a long time since I have taken it easy.
LG: That's because Casey Newton has taken it over in your house.
" Giuliani responded: "We've taken it to an extra degree of what he said.
And Santiago would have taken it from her after he knocked her out.
Realizing the site was a bad look, ARM has now taken it down.
Both England and The Gambia had taken it in good humor, he said.
And certainly not to the extent in which people have taken it seriously.
Some activists in Germany have taken it upon themselves to debunk false reports.
I've even taken it to doc appointments and ER visits if I'm scared.
He seems to have been influenced by Minimalism and taken it somewhere unexpected.
Is this a problem with YouTube, who should have immediately taken it down?
What's unclear is if Jordyn and James have taken it a step further.
The right actions years ago could have taken it in a different direction.
Ajit Pai the DJ, for his part, has taken it all in stride.
Some surveys suggested Romney had taken it from him and run with it.
In the past year alone, more than 3 million women have taken it.
We've taken it upon ourselves to conjure up our own ideal juice menu.
If any disciplinary action should've been taken, it should've been with the school.
"I haven't felt that or maybe I haven't taken it personally," she admits.
"I have simply taken it apart, ever so carefully," he told local television.
If you told me this before the series, I would have taken it.
If we had taken it down and banished it to the hinterlands, maybe.
Now, the brand has taken it one step further by partnering with MuslimGirl.
"They've taken it away forever, probably thinking we wouldn't notice," the writer bemoaned.
Most of us have just taken it on the chin and cracked on.
WeWork has just taken it to an extreme that nobody's ever seen before.
Within hours, city agencies had taken it upon themselves to join the conversation.
Many in the city have taken it upon themselves to repair Raqqa's infrastructure.
They have not won admission to the museum; they have taken it over.
So, this coronavirus has taken it down, but it's certainly not oversold yet.
I probably could've taken it a little easier on the bokeh here, though.
Abraham had his chance and, like Mount and Tomori, he has taken it.
"As we look forward, we&aposve taken it out further advance," Raja said.
You wear a lot of black in P.R. and I've taken it on.
I had pretty hair before, but this has taken it up a notch.
"The cast has taken it with a great sense of humor," she said.
Had I had something to knock me out, I would have taken it.
I&aposve actually never taken it off other than for 'SNL' or for work.
Ansari had heard about the ban in the news, but hadn't taken it seriously.
Lopez told Sarah they knew where her phone was: The FBI had taken it.
I've taken it on trips to the United Kingdom, Iceland, the Philippines, and Turkey.
Other commenters have taken it upon themselves to revive Brown's label as an abuser.
I've also taken it golfing and appreciate it's ability to track that as well.
If any action is taken it would be a major blow to TikTok's growth.
S. election charge that has taken it to a 13-1/2 year high.
Henry, a Belgian expat, has taken it upon himself to eradicate all of them.
That's a reason we've taken it pretty slowly, we really wanted to hone that.
I've always taken it on myself to make sure that everyone else is happy.
"If I had known what it was, I wouldn't have taken it," she says.
"Should such a step be taken it would have catastrophic consequences," Zomlot told Reuters.
Like other Appalachian lawmakers, he's taken it upon himself to do something about it.
"If I knew that, I never would have taken it," she told The Guardian.
It was an opportunity, and, with legislation a smoldering memory, Obama has taken it.
But she's also grateful her daughter has taken it upon herself to help out.
A client had paid him eighty thousand euros for it and taken it home.
From the moment the coronavirus emerged in China, President Trump has taken it seriously.
I can't say that I've taken it well — or accepted it without a struggle.
My view is that was a good trade, and they should have taken it.
He thinks many Chinese rappers, in emulating the genre, have taken it too far.
This could hamper earnings, but stock markets seem to have taken it in stride.
He's taken it to another level, too, with how he's engaging with his teammates.
El Chapo was violent, but El Mencho has taken it to a new level.
"His life was not taken: It was given, to his country," he went on.
If he needed more time to answer the question, he should have taken it.
"If such decisions are taken it would be absolutely catastrophic," said Royal, a Socialist.
"We've taken it upon ourselves to handle every aspect of the business," says Mayer.
He'd heard of its antidepressant effects before, but he'd only ever taken it recreationally.
Yet Trump, and some of his allies, seems to have taken it that way.
Countries with dominant religious traditions ranging from Roman Catholic to Confucian have taken it on.
See the court documents filed by 97 companies fighting ban How has Trump taken it?
I've taken it my way but I leave it open for interpretation for whoever's listening.
Now Maryland has taken it a step further, filing what amounts to a competing lawsuit.
But some of them have taken it one step further and developed incredible evolutionary traits.
If taken, it would split that salient in half, putting the northern part under siege.
The company later admitted the survey was a mistake, and has since taken it down.
America has taken it upon itself to become the business world's policeman, judge and jury.
It made it into my bag recently, and I just haven't taken it out yet.
While Google has since taken it down, that didn't stop some from hearing it early.
"We shouldn't have taken it down," Trump said at a rally last night in Cincinnati.
Unfortunately, some fans have taken it upon themselves to attack and slut shame the girls.
One study showed 490 athletes at last year's European Games in Baku had taken it.
But since finding GLOO's more interesting uses, I've never taken it off of my favorites.
I just wanted the Golf R 400, and Dieselgate has taken it away from me.
But for Guillorme's quick and soft hands, he might have taken it to the dome.
I haven't worn it any less, or taken it off for prolonged periods of time.
"I'd probably have taken it even further if I'd thought about it at the time."
" 'You shouldn't have taken it down,' " Mr. Trump recalled telling one of his campaign workers.
But the new mom's taken it a step further: She gave herself a push gift.
Even young children have taken it for epileptic fits and now they've stopped having them.
But if they wanted the Earth, why hadn't they simply taken it these many years?
His brother had taken it upon himself to raise the family's voice with the president.
I would have taken it as bad luck and found a new place to stay.
So if this middle path is so bad, why has the Obama administration taken it?
I've only taken it once at a party, but that wasn't really a good experience.
They seem to have taken it on the chin and let him off the hook.
Both parties do it, but Democrats have taken it to a whole new scientific level.
Now he's basically passed on control to Shari Redstone, or she's taken it from him.
The FDA recently approved the first pill that can track whether a patient has taken it.
One person is being asked to cede power to someone they feel has wrongly taken it.
While she proudly posted Thursday's new cover online at first ... she has since taken it down.
I didn't take my loot and make sure that no one found out I've taken it.
Kim Kardashian has taken it back to basics after she was robbed at gunpoint in Paris.
"You may have taken it as a direction, but that's not what he said," Risch responded.
I think I would have taken it and put in a narrative prior to the comments.
"He takes that very seriously and has taken it to heart," said HHS spokeswoman Caitlin Oakley.
And now they&aposve taken it to an international intrigue degree involving the former Soviet Union.
Yoshikawa is aware of the criticisms that surround her and has taken it all in stride.
Teachers at Wadleigh have also taken it upon themselves to share Kinvolved data with their students.
Or maybe taken it on accident—it's the same black Away carry-on that everyone has.
But these days, you might consider whether to share a pic before you've even taken it.
"You will just have taken it from one spigot and put it into another," Quigley said.
This rally has also taken it up to roughly where Wall Street analysts expected, said Gibbs.
Even when measures to "minimize" metadata are taken, it may still be used to identify people.
As many people who've taken it are well aware, the birth control pill is a pain.
It's pretty easy to scare your mother, but this son has taken it to another level.
That's why I have taken it very seriously since I have identified myself as a Republican.
The Resistance will have to ask something more of the people who have taken it up.
Had anyone ever described Mr. Giuliani as diplomatic, he might have taken it as an insult.
One time — and now our daughter has taken it up as a habit, on her own.
When the shot was eventually taken, it went wide, and the Americans went on to win.
Under normal circumstances I would not have taken it, but I needed work after a layoff.
She'd just married and had these crazy pictures taken; it was no wonder she was panicking.
I don't think I have taken it all in really as I have been so busy.
RISCH: You — you may have taken it as a direction, but that's not what he said.
Amazingly, U.P.S. could not explain how it got there or what had taken it so long.
However, in America we've taken it to the absurd where the media seemingly controls the government.
The president hasn't taken it well, and he took another shot at Conway on Fox & Friends.
A separate caption misstated where that photo was taken: It was in Sevran, not Sevran Cotterets.
Or that when someone was excited about me, I wish I hadn't taken it for granted.
THE NEIGHBORHOOD I don't really mind that N.Y.U. kids and investment bankers have taken it over.
We're so glad that this is happening again, they should've never taken it out of schools.
We've never taken it lightly; we're just so honored to be a piece of that puzzle.
Nothing. So I've taken it into my own hands to create a definition of the brand.
If I would have seen something like that, I would have taken it away from him.
Perhaps as a result of how common it is, designers have sometimes taken it for granted.
He had not lost the ranking; Johnson had taken it from him by playing great golf.
Even if they were there ready to wire the money, we would not have taken it.
That's just the end of a species, which evolution has taken it to its dead end.
As a result, the modding community has taken it upon themselves to make Murray's game better.
Like, I think I would probably have done something really bad if I hadn't taken it.
The Russell 2000, comprised of small-cap stocks, has taken it on the chin in recent weeks.
And Fox has perfected it, the others have taken it and done their own versions of it.
Irving says he understands why LeBron may have taken it personally, but sincerely doesn't give a crap.
And then Instagram's taken it even further, thanks to the efficiency of both sharing and consuming content.
I don't know about you folks, but it's been a long time since I've taken it easy.
At only 21, Carr-Hummerston has taken it upon himself to act as the group's authority figure.
So, if yours suddenly goes missing, ask your furry roommate if he's taken it for a spin.
He'd just come out as gay, and his mother hadn't taken it as well as he'd hoped.
But it's like you've taken it out of the tank and it's not there the next day.
Even health data like how many steps you've taken, it turns out, can be pretty revealing information.
We always knew Elon Musk was an ambitious guy, but now he's taken it up a notch.
If your data was taken, it has very likely been sold, laundered, and put back into Facebook.
In lieu of a national law, some states have taken it upon themselves to enact family legislation.
But now, one Sicilian town has taken it to the next level — by offering homes for free.
I've taken it as my responsibility to say something with my platform, the small platform I have.
I've just carried on really, the same as I've always been, except I've taken it very seriously.
There was also a conviction that the forces that had taken it away were still in control.
"They wanted the world to know that they had taken it from the federal government," he said.
"That's a big thing to take on, and nobody knew he had taken it on," she said.
It is human nature to avoid discomfort, but you all have taken it to a new level.
David asked the city what happened, and a spokeswoman told him it had been taken it down.
Several states have taken it upon themselves to use pardons as a political tool, Ms. Das said.
There are more blogs that have taken it on, but it's not institutionally part of the business.
Everyone I know who has bought a house in the past few years has taken it out.
I've recently taken it on a four-day trip, and I didn't need to bring a charger.
The group quickly returned to the aircraft that had taken it to the area and was evacuated.
Farage shares this fervour, but hasn't quite taken it to the same extremes as the High Sparrow.
"This has taken it from ridiculously overbought to somewhat oversold," Maley told CNBC's "Trading Nation " on Tuesday.
" He said CNN has "really taken it too seriously and I think they've hurt themselves very badly.
" Then, the contract dispute kicked into gear, he said, and "the private providers have taken it away.
It was the passion of somebody who has been deprived of freedom — and has taken it back.
I don't think I've taken it off a single day since I bought it three years ago.
Another angle: One talk radio host has taken it on himself to fight Brexit supporters every day.
But Song could not find his bag: another freshman with the same last name had taken it.
With this in mind we have taken it upon ourselves to suggest some improvements for nightclubs in 2016.
And that visual part of the storytelling, I don't think I've ever taken it to the extreme before.
" And my response was "The legacy can't help but be tarnished, because they've taken it off the air.
Divergent's Shailene Woodley has taken it one step further, and stayed at Standing Rock to protest the pipeline.
Promised action not taken It is not for lack of popular support that the government does not act.
Further, Musk has attempted to comply with the settlement by tweeting less — showing that he's taken it seriously.
At the ripe age of 290, I have taken it upon myself to speak out against nuclear proliferation.
Sesame Street has now taken it upon itself to try to change that, at least a little bit.
That's taken it below the yield on a three-month Treasury bill, causing an inversion of the curve.
The manufacturing sector in particular has taken it on the chin, the biggest victim of slower global growth.
Britain has declined to adopt the technique, but countries from Sweden to South Korea have taken it up.
On Friday the Syrian army said it had taken it back, along with a handful of other settlements.
I had first taken it last April, during a trip to Tuk's spring festival called the Beluga Jamboree.
She had taken it out sometime prior to April 19 and she didn't know there was this risk.
That's why we've taken it upon ourselves to come up with a few suggestions for each of them.
If that action is taken, it is not clear whether the Justice Department would comply with the subpoenas.
I haven't taken it off since she gave it to me, and I don't think I ever will.
Third was MDMA, or ecstasy, with around 15 percent of men and women having taken it before sex.
But, since then, there have been more Russian sports stars who have been found to have taken it.
The Trump administration has taken it much further, however, declaring war on reporting of White House goings-on.
Well, Henry Rollins has taken it upon himself to find everything [John Olson's] ever released [with American Tapes].
"Should such a step be taken, it would have catastrophic consequences," Husam Zomlot told Reuters in an interview.
I think the direction they've taken it, the anger and frustration with us as adults, is very appropriate.
But what's most interesting about the hypocrisy argument is that many Republicans themselves have already taken it up.
And she's taken it a step further, so that her theme hits you like a one-two punch.
How would a photograph have been different if a black man or a black woman had taken it?
Theft would finally become impossible, at least technically; wherever a Fairbike was taken it would still own itself.
The women in the locker room could not find it and did not know who had taken it.
They were co-writers on a Ronald Reagan documentary, but Mr. Bannon had pretty much taken it over.
The Senate has not taken it up and Obama has threatened a veto, and lawmakers are discussing alternatives.
"I think some people have taken it very literally, thinking that she might be pregnant," Turner told THR.
"They would have taken it downstream and carved it in the area," he said in a phone interview.
They do this in Italy, and many universities in the United States have taken it up as well.
I've taken it on the chin for 60 years about my atrocious Cockney accent in the first movie.
In retrospect, Carole Baskin probably should have taken it more seriously the day her mailbox exploded with snakes.
This course has been available as optional training since June 2019, and 1200+ participants have already taken it.
What distinguishes this one is that the town has taken it upon itself to keep the perimeter plowed.
So we've taken it upon ourselves to create 206 trophies that Snapchat should be awarding us with. 1.
But the Nasdaq has really taken it on the chin: It has plunged nearly 8% already in October.
In any event, if it needed more time to do a good job, it could have taken it.
Versions of Smith's bill passed the GOP-controlled House three times, but the Senate hasn't taken it up.
But even if she was offered the job, Whitman said she wasn't sure she would have taken it.
Ola, Uber's competitor in India, has also taken the hardware approach — but it's taken it one step further.
I do think there were signals from her campaign that showed that she would have taken it seriously.
"Because you should have taken it all the way; I don't think Bill did anything wrong," he said.
But Meghan has taken it all in stride, acing each outing with grace as she learns the royal ropes.
So, her grandparents have taken it upon themselves to wait outside their house every morning around the same time.
EU officials say Turkey's post-coup crackdown on civil rights has taken it further from complying with EU membership.
Strombo returned the flag to the fallen soldier's family, having taken it from the man's body 73 years ago.
The case has been transferred to Paris-based antiterrorism prosecutors, a measure of how seriously officials have taken it.
But later Price's response changed, and he said he'd heard the criticism and concern, and taken it to heart.
This is like betting on a losing horse after the trainer has taken it out back and shot it.
You know, I'm so focused on my business now, and I really haven't taken it out for a stroll.
If he had had the chance to avoid that pain with a vaccine, he would have happily taken it.
So I felt like I had taken it as far as I could and like I needed a rest.
But in general, Wall Street hasn't taken it seriously yet, so we all get down to business next week.
In honor of the occasion, we've taken it upon ourselves to create a definitive ranking of Dahl's children's books.
But millennials have taken it much farther, he says, and want first-hand experiences of lives in different places.
"That is not to say we have taken it off the table," Mr Mnuchin said of the border adjustment.
Since then Antofagasta and Freeport McMoRan have taken it in turns to lead the miners in the annual talks.
Shortly after we had taken it, I was sent home and she just stood there with her mouth agape.
So look, I know this sounds ridiculous but I've taken it upon myself to investigate this particular name trend.
He had taken it because Mr Fujimori should not be allowed to "die in prison—justice is not revenge".
Some states have even taken it upon themselves to plow roads and clean toilets that fall under federal jurisdiction.
But she had taken it for about two years, and it shrank a large abdominal tumor by 78 percent.
We can make a great Olympics, but if some steps are not taken, it can be a big failure.
"I didn't understand that he had taken it a different way, otherwise I would have stopped him," she said.
The Senate passed the resolution, but the House, which has a larger Republican majority, has not taken it up.
So these kids would've come in, taken it as a prank, then didn't know what to do with it.
They had either stolen it from us or bought it from someone, who had taken it from our house.
Although it has since risen by 6 percent, that has only taken it back to the levels of 2009.
But you might have worried that if she said "yes," he would have taken it out on her later.
In fact, many Canadian citizens have already taken it upon themselves to make good on the prime minister's promise.
I think this is where pitching coaches have taken it to another level, utilizing all the information they have.
She hadn't taken it off more than a few times in the past 35 years, and now she couldn't.
Dear Sugars, My fiancé's 82-year-old grandfather died last year and his mother has not taken it well.
In fact, its 11 percent rally since then has taken it to fresh new highs, back to early 2014.
"If we hadn't taken it to Broadway, after doing it in London, it would have been mortifying," she said.
But neither Sanders nor Warren nor their 2020 Democratic rivals have taken it upon themselves to address this issue.
Can you imagine putting up something and saying, "Did you read my thing?" and Facebook has taken it down?
In the 216.9 years since the abortion pill became available, 21 million women across the country have taken it.
In the 16 years since the abortion pill became available, 2.75 million women across the country have taken it.
Companies tout transparency, but Truaxe has taken it to a level that may actually cause the company to implode.
We can host a great Olympics but, unless certain steps are taken, it can be a total failure, too.
And I had taken it for granted at the time, but I realized in retrospect that it was really helpful.
"I certainly thought there was a point in the game where we had kind of taken it over," Smart said.
The Red Keep needs food to survive the coming harsh winter and they've taken it from the recently conquered Highgarden.
A medicaid expansion in all the states that have taken it up and, obviously, they all should take it up.
"He's actually very respectful of that [and] people might have taken [it] the wrong way in the tweet," she said.
Because we've taken it for granted, being the only woman at work — you forget that it isolates and endangers you.
It's that potential value for advertisers that's taken it to a $12.5 billion valuation in its most recent financing round.
Shameless seems to have lost its grip on many different fronts, but Frank's story line has taken it too far.
Millions and millions tuned in to see Chewbacca Mom in the mask; fewer kept watching once she'd taken it off.
Considering the imminence of 2016's polarizing presidential election, I've taken it upon myself to do my own social research.
If there was a simple or elegant solution available to Republicans on health care, they would have already taken it!
I'm hoping, from the reactions to it by Americans, no one's taken it as anything other than an American movie.
Drawn to its beauty, Ms. Jagger had taken it home with the intention of casting it, but changed her mind.
No book I publish will be perfect, but I need to feel I've taken it as far as I can.
He added that Home Depot "has taken it to the next level" by offering customers services like same-day delivery.
But Democrats say House Intelligence Chairman Devin Nunes, a Republican from California, has taken it to a whole new level.
In the United States, where there are no such requirements, shareholders have taken it upon themselves to change board composition.
A "former software engineer for Google and Facebook" has taken it upon himself to optimize our flawed measuring cup design.
Yeah, I told you guys last time that I'd taken a Twitter break, or I'd taken it off my phone.
But those titans of finance have taken it a step further and provided advice around how investors can protect themselves.
This is when they learned Luber had been recommended to be fired and that the CDC had taken it back.
And still others have taken it further and are making appointments to break bread together in groups big and small.
Day acknowledged that Swatton had been a "bit shocked" at the news but said he had taken it like a professional.
"There are cities that have been taken it upon themselves to pay for the costs [of lead abatement] themselves," Fegan said.
It is an animal, we cannot prosecute it otherwise if it was a human we would have taken it to court.
A precipitous fall that has taken it from being worth circa $1.2 trillion to its current more modest $700 billion valuation.
Regretfully, the result was something different, a page that wasn't in line with Arm's collaborative culture, so we've taken it down.
And they would have taken it away, if the building management had not stopped them and made them hand it over.
Twenty-two years ago I tried to push the technical envelope and now Alyssa has taken it to the next level.
Even if she was offered the job, Whitman told CNBC in September that she wasn't sure she would have taken it.
Some brands like Adidas have even taken it beyond athletes to entertainers and icons like Kanye West and now Kendall Jenner.
"To cater for the training audience's high expectations the level we have taken it into is unprecedented" is all he said.
Even so, "I'm not bearish, per se, of high yield, but we have taken it down" in our portfolios, Peters said.
The ringgit has taken it on the chin since Donald Trump's surprise win in the U.S. presidential election on Nov. 8.
The Regent Theatre in New Zealand has taken it upon themselves to fix that mistake, at least in their own bathrooms.
Had she not taken it back [that morning], I would have hidden it in my own bag before our eggs came.
The car had been parked at the Sandringham Museum, but Prince William has taken it out to prep for his son.
The test was such a joke to Williams that she actually forgot she had even taken it, she told Vanity Fair.
We have also taken it partially apart to move from one room to another, and this only takes about 15 minutes.
Various activist and vigilante groups across the country have taken it upon themselves to protect India's cows, sometimes resorting to violence.
I've had mine for more than three years and have taken it on more trips and adventures than I can remember.
"The market has taken it a little bit on the dovish side," said Sharon Zollner, senior economist at ANZ in Auckland.
"People make mistakes, it doesn't mean that they can never be forgiven, I think that they've taken it seriously," Khosrowshahi said.
Since then, the media class has taken it up and it's become almost like an extension of the workplace for them.
U.S. leaders have long tapped CEOs for advice, but the self-styled CEO president has taken it to a new level.
Officials believed at the time that someone might have picked up her phone and taken it somewhere else, Big Hair said.
There just is a little bit of surprise that people haven't taken it serious that this guy needs to be investigated.
But it wouldn't have been the first time that a politician had taken it upon himself to operate a subway train.
In truth, the thought had occurred to him, but he had never taken it seriously, let alone said it out loud.
"He could have taken it away entirely six months ago; he chose to give Congress the six months ... to fix it."
Lockport, however, has taken it a step further and has begun testing facial recognition to control who can access a campus.
In front of stadiums filled with multimillionaire superstars, fans have taken it upon themselves to help those who need it most.
If somebody had at that moment offered me a parking space, I would gladly have taken it, no matter what the cost.
Feeling fatigued, some have taken it upon themselves to drastically reduce their routines; others have turned to dermatologists for professional medical care.
If they wanted to take the case to rule on by June, the thinking is, they would have taken it up already.
Some major cities have taken it upon themselves to raise their minimum wage, including Seattle which went to $15 earlier this year.
"Because we've taken it for granted, being the only woman at work — you forget that it isolates and endangers you," Portman said.
I might have taken it the furthest, but I'm not the only one who checks FiveThirtyEight more than three times a day.
"I would have taken it no matter what the pay was," said Morris, who is studying for a master's degree in education.
Even though Paris Fashion Week is just getting underway, the 24-year-old supermodel has already taken it by storm (per usual).
I thought I knew what that was, but they've taken it to the next level, and they're really making it something else.
This is a really good thing — someone ought to be doing this work, and it's great that Eisenman has taken it on.
As with the major party candidates, outside spending groups have also taken it upon themselves to launch ads in support of Johnson.
Borrowing clothes from your significant other may be a common practice, but Kim Kardashian has taken it to a whole new level.
Instead of waiting for brass plaques and new signage, some have taken it upon themselves to change the signage around the building.
Don't forget: Pepe's creator, Matt Furie, tried to reclaim the symbol from the hateful groups that had taken it for online use.
The group started in Finland as an anti-immigrant street gang that has taken it upon itself to "police" migrants in Europe.
I was in Ibiza in '65 and everyone on the scene was talking about acid, but only a few had taken it.
It's a problem that even those who have taken it upon themselves to chronicle the game's history have had to contend with.
The travel ban's taken it on the chin in the lower courts, where judges have ruled for a nationwide halt to it.
The insurer said the loss did not affect its profit outlook for the year, because it had already taken it into account.
Because she had taken it for so many years, and it was OK year after year, it just got off the radar.
Trump has taken it a step further, arguing that beyond new laws, he wants his supporters to monitor elections for suspicious activity.
Workers in France reap similar gains—more stable, higher paying jobs—because their government has taken it upon itself to regulate wages.
"If that was the motorcycle, we would have just taken it," Julia Silva, one of two women on patrol that night, joked.
It was not in the house, nor at Ranka Jewellers; rumour had it that a creditor from Mumbai had taken it away.
Homeland Security provided much of the funding for the project in its early years, and since 2012, State has taken it on.
Now a terrorist with a racist worldview has taken it upon himself to co-opt a cause and mow down innocent officers.
"It's a big zero" Rohrabacher said of he meeting, according to Corn, before making the comment that anyone would have taken it.
Working in a wide range of fields, they have all taken it upon themselves to build a more just and livable future.
She's taken it on herself to try to get a caseworker for him and his mother, and just to try and help.
No one died at the club, they died in hospital, but no one will have taken it more seriously than those guys.
"If you would have given me this opportunity in December and January, I would have taken it in a heartbeat," Woods said.
The far right and Islamist extremists have been early adopters of new technologies, and they've taken it to a whole new dimension.
My mother had given me that ring, and the only time I had taken it off was for surgery the prior week.
The New Museum seems to have taken it upon itself to produce spectacles that are as moving as they are eye-filling.
As the NBA's self-appointed Directed of Nickname Operations, I have taken it upon myself to compile a taxonomy of NBA nicknames.
While many scholars theorize the Oracle burned bay leaves, since they were sacred to Apollo, others have taken it a step farther.
Micro-bags have trended before in fashion, but styles like the Jacquemus Insta-famous Chiquito have taken it to new (tinier) levels.
Chile will hold the COP25 climate summit in December, having taken it over from the original host, Brazil, after Bolsonaro was elected.
By 2002, the Supreme Court had taken it a step further, ruling in the case Department of Housing and Urban Development v.
But, in the suit, France claims Steele has taken it too damn far ... and now, he wants the guy to pay up.
Steve and Bill have taken it from an idea to one of the greatest and most universally admired companies in the world.
When Mr. Xi started his high-profile anticorruption campaign in 2013, many investigative journalists had taken it as a cue for action.
There were widespread reports that a small container of Gandhi's ashes was missing from the memorial, suggesting that vandals had taken it.
Instead, it feels as though you spent a few hours exercising your brain as if you had taken it to the gym.
The bank had taken it over in a terrible state of disrepair, then sold it to the girl for next to nothing.
"If I knew from the beginning how this job would impact our mental health, I would never have taken it," one said.
Since guards are rare, some parents, including Ms. Matteucci's wife, have taken it upon themselves the task to fend off unauthorized visitors.
Maeslau has taken it to sauna festivals across Estonia and rents it out to steam lovers for 75 euros ($85) a day.
"Gerrymandering has taken it off the table at the House level, but at the other levels it's a really interesting state to watch."
"If I had the option to be put under, like, dental surgery instead of a fitting, I would have taken it," she explained.
Here is what you need to know about Ambien, as well as its common side effects and other celebrities who have taken it.
The eggplant, the peach and the open tongue emoji are handy when sexting, but the adult website Pornhub has taken it next level.
Clouthier's team later told her she had taken it too far, but she says she was feeling overwhelmed and needed to subdue him.
Your third or fourth favorite pizza place is now addressing America's crumbling infrastructure and has taken it upon itself to start repairing potholes.
So over all, I've taken it as good news that tipping culture seems to be spreading to every cashier's counter in the land.
"I think this is the most undone the hair has ever been and the most we've ever taken it," Turner tells PEOPLE exclusively.
In fact, she's already taken it in the form of Myrcella Baratheon (Aimee Richardson), who was poisoned at the end of season 6.
Though past presidents, including Barack Obama, have allied themselves with the Saudis, Trump has taken it to another level with his unqualified support.
The overall tone of the series since Bethesda has taken it over has also gone from stark and serious to campy and absurd.
But now it appears that a neo-Nazi has taken it one step further by targeting Iowans with racist robocalls about her death.
I hadn't taken it off since my mother became critically ill, afraid that if I did, she would take wing and stop living.
They know the game inside out, because they've taken it on — and won (or lost and learned a lesson or two) — several times.
They decide one of two things: either somebody has already found it and taken it home, or the whole story is a hoax.
She wouldn't have become Miriam Schapiro if she had not (in Yogi Berra's words), upon encountering a fork in the road, taken it.
While it's unclear when exactly the photo was taken, it is apparent that the two are enjoying each other's company after being apart.
Either way, let's hope the mermaid trend can die a quick and painless death now that we've taken it to the furthest extreme.
"The market's taken it well, it's demonstrated that they are able to secure debt in this challenged environment," Investec analyst Marc Elliott said.
That has taken it to levels last seen in 22019 in the depth of its worst economic recession in the last 70 years.
Modern usage of the word has taken it from an apology to another piece of verbal flotsam that has little or no meaning.
He really came into camp in good shape and arm felt really good and he's taken it and run with it so far.
"Even if this (auto) step is taken it just removes what was a retaliatory measure to begin with," noted ANZ economist David Plank.
In a savvy move, Boccato has latched onto a currently popular color-and-shape-based aesthetic and taken it to a material extreme.
It's softer than XTRMNTR, but we couldn't make another one as hard as that—we'd taken it as far as we could stylistically.
A sizable faction of people on the internet have taken it upon themselves to exonerate Avery, or at least to reopen his case.
It is cleaned and maintained (and its keys occasionally repainted) by keyboard enthusiasts who have taken it upon themselves to do the job.
Once you've already made a sign and taken it to a protest, it's easier to just bring it along again in the future.
The justices have taken it up at their private conference eight times and will consider it again at the conference scheduled this Friday.
Another picture caption misstated where a portrait of Neri was taken; it was shot outside her Los Angeles studio, not in her backyard.
We've taken it upon ourselves to use our own money to buy wipes and gloves for others which are very difficult to find.
Officials believed at the time that someone might have picked up her phone and taken it somewhere else, Sheriff Lawrence Big Hair said.
Hartline said that if Reinking had said something more threatening -- such as, "I'm going to kill you" -- he would've taken it more seriously.
He's taken it to England and Canada with no issues, but didn't remember he had it on him until it was too late.
In Kaganda, Kenya, 45-year-old Nicholas Muchami has literally taken it into his own hands to solve this problem for his community.
LS: Hijab is solely a spiritual practice, but unfortunately there have been people who have taken it, including governments, to control women's bodies.
Since putting it together, we've taken it apart and reassembled it again while moving apartments and it was just as seamless and easy.
But I decided to go off the pill about four months ago, and since then, we've taken it in turns to buy condoms.
But Herbo has taken it in stride, growing up quickly—remember, he's only 20—and communicating a nuanced perspective on the city's problems.
Thankfully, a certified master of pain has taken it upon himself to create a hot sauce that pleases as much as it punishes.
Some men have reclaimed the word, but it should never be used to describe someone unless you know they've taken it back for themself.
" The actress concurred, "If I had the option to be put under, like, dental surgery instead of a fitting, I would have taken it.
This time the involvement of both siblings, and Lee Hsien Yang's decision to leave the city-state have taken it to a new level.
And while they ultimately had to keep their tight uniforms on during the official team competition, at least one member has taken it off!
Compared to other career-aptitude tests, this one is one of the most popular; more than 8 million have taken it since its inception.
Like me, he had taken it up some years before and was now fighting on the super competitive northern Muay Thai and kickboxing circuit.
She has taken it upon herself to shepherd those new tools into existence—and now says the standards that we need are almost ready.
" Swift said she takes the precautions because "websites and tabloids have taken it upon themselves to post every home address [she's] ever had online.
Well, some makeup artists on YouTube have taken it a step farther, re-creating the craziest looks on Snapchat on their actual, IRL faces.
But today, as one Twitter user pointed out, tabloids such as The Mirror, The National Enquirer, and more have really taken it too far.
He wore an ankle bracelet but had taken it off during a period in which he was allowed to look for work, Deenihan said.
The Attorney General should not have taken it upon himself to describe the Special Counsel's findings in a light more favorable to the President.
Seeing that time is everything, we've taken it upon ourselves to search the web for you and gathered several options fit for every foodie.
The biggest clue of all is: Don't look for the treasure any place where an 80-year-old man could not have taken it.
"He has taken the PD—my PD—torn out its roots, and taken it elsewhere," he says as he waits to take the platform.
But it's still pretty new, so some doctors might not be down to prescribe it to their patients until more people have taken it.
While Bodnar may have provided the initial spark for giving, Kai has taken it to bonfire levels - and not just at Christmas time, either.
The Wizards have been good with their perimeter triad on the floor all year, but they've taken it to another level during this run.
Trump's first military foray into Syria last week was a bit of a surprise to the market, but it has taken it in stride.
First off, if you find that your disposable water bottle, Coke or smoothie has gone missing — someone may have honestly taken it by mistake.
It gave back some of the gains, which had taken it to highest level since Britain voted in June to leave the European Union.
Huawei has taken it one step further and is offering everyone who pre-orders the new handsets a free Sonos One speaker worth £199.
In the absence of a federal mandate, five states, including New York and California, have taken it upon themselves to pass paid leave policies.
I've taken it with me from home to home in my youth, dorm to dorm in college, and everywhere I've lived as an adult.
Drivers have mostly taken it in their stride, and Mercedes' four times world champion Lewis Hamilton suggested people would soon stop talking about it.
Earlier this year, Chuck E. Cheese's parent company scrapped a deal with a special purpose acquisition company that would have taken it public again.
One of the broadcaster's employees, Samira Ahmed, has taken it to court, accusing it of paying a man much more for the same work.
In recent times, however, Wakanda had taken it on the chin — flooded by Namor the Sub-Mariner and ravaged by a team of supervillains.
It has performed well every time I've taken it out, and I haven't found a pain that the massager hasn't been able to soothe.
Its cloying, cakey perfume had reminded her of her mother, she supposed, though she'd taken it out only once or twice to sniff it.
He seemed to have taken it as an omen that the way the spoon fell would indicate how things really stood in the world.
"I believe she has seen it now and taken it lightly, which I expected as she fortunately did have a good sense of humour."
Apple's app groups photos into collections based on when and where photos were taken; it can also organize photos by faces, similar to Google.
I'm sure whatever the system was in place didn't perform as was intended, and we shouldn't have taken it down, we didn't mean to.
Additionally, as a fact sheet from the National Women's Law Center indicates, many companies have already taken it upon themselves to conduct these analyses.
And while America will always be home to the O.G. donut-croissant mashup, one bakery in London has taken it to the next level.
Whatever turn is taken, it will be sustainable—this new moon squares off with Saturn, the planet of time, initiating changes that really stick.
In a savvy move, Daniel Boccato has latched onto a currently popular color-and-shape-based aesthetic and taken it to a material extreme.
The industry has taken it upon itself to cut calories, focus marketing on low- and no-calorie options, and reduce package sizes, Goetz says.
But once again, pesky scientists have taken it upon themselves to understand the potentially negative impact of long-term potato intake on blood pressure.
Brayan told me he has taken it upon himself to comfort the youngest newcomers, telling them their parents wouldn't like to see them cry.
The authorities and ordinary people have taken it upon themselves to remove debris, and thankfully, we can drive through major roads in San Juan.
It was a two-way street: The institution of art has taken it in, but the form itself also changed the institution of art.
The two met at an Oprah Winfrey event in 2005, and Mr. Talley had taken it upon himself to help her with her wardrobe.
You practice finishing, and you go back and study film, instances where I should have passed, instances where I should have taken it myself.
Some hotel owners have taken it on themselves to protect their own beaches, but intervening on one section of is not effective, said Torki.
Yes, earlier that day, I had taken it off and tossed it onto my bed like a bear throws salmon bones onto a rock.
Just before the beginning of the interview, he'd pulled a Xanax out of a prescription bottle with the name scratched off and taken it.
" Senator Jim Risch, Republican of Idaho, responded to Mr. Comey, "You may have taken it as a direction, but that's not what he said.
On a more granular level, a few senators have taken it upon themselves to smooth the ruffled feathers between Mr. Trump and foreign leaders.
"A variety of factors have taken it from being a closely contested state to much more of a slingshot for Trump," Mr. Garin said.
One woman who was planning to major in psychology had taken it and three other courses as a freshman in the fall of 2014.
The gift was several years old by this time, and I had taken it along on trips before and left it empty each time.
Mobileye has taken it even farther, planning to launch a self-driving ride-hailing business in partnership with Volkswagen and Champion Motors in 2022.
He seems to have taken it upon himself to become the platform&aposs supervillain, and is repeatedly called out by creators for his behavior.
It's taken it from the realm of the solitary, confined experience and brought it back to a mainstream commercial environment, but with a twist.
Some schools or programs, like the recent announcement from Cornell's medical school, have taken it upon themselves to pay for all costs for students.
We here at MUNCHIES have taken it upon ourselves to find you a recipe that condenses the best parts of summer into stick form.
I asked Saunders, given the company's problems, who else he thinks was up for the CEO job or would have taken it besides Soltau.
I've taken it on trails in Moab, Marquette, Giant Sequoia National Monument, and many other places and I'm always amazed at how well it handles.
Just because such investigations "are not always widely disseminated to the public does not in any way mean that they are not taken," it said.
The bigger the database, the better—only about a million people have taken it all off, as it were, and gotten their whole genomes sequenced.
" Canadian law does not require mandatory labelling of GM products, and CBAN has taken it upon itself to "track GM foods to keep Canadians informed.
But researchers at MIT are promising similar results generated so quickly that your smartphone can correct and retouch a photo before you've even taken it.
While improving pizza crusts seems like an impossible task, Pizza Hut has taken it upon themselves to turn their new pizza crusts into grilled cheeses.
But thieves in Iceland have reportedly taken it up a notch, stealing around 600 computers that are used to mine bitcoin and its crypto-cousins.
Kidman may have taken it a bit too far at one of Urban's recent concerts — but she made up for it in the best way.
One fan has taken it upon themselves to animate his world in a brief fan film, bringing it to life in an eerie short video.
What's more, beauty buffs have taken it beyond their eyes and lips to create some unique looks that are perfect for Halloween and music festivals.
Brent crude futures traded at $53.89 per barrel, erasing gains made earlier in the week that had taken it a 1 1/2-year high.
Markets have definitely waited for the decision who will be designated as the central bank head and I think they have taken it in positively.
We understand the urge to celebrate in a BIG way when it comes to birthdays, but this guy may have taken it a bit far.
"A doctor suggested my friend take a certain drug, but she'd taken it before, and she told him it hadn't worked for her," she said.
This week, someone in America has taken it upon themselves to mail bombs to George Soros, Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton, Joe Biden, the Democratic Rep.
It is offered on a voluntary basis for use in schools, libraries and parent-teacher groups all over England, and many have taken it up.
Komaki has taken it to a new level by creating a body suit that looks like a doll and lets you move like a human.
Click here to view original GIFDrones are all the rage, but Disney has taken it to the next level with this synchronized drone light show.
Later that day, opposition troops belonging to eastern commander Khalifa Haftar did the same from the identical spot to show they had taken it back.
And, of course, there's Brainy Ben, who seems to have taken it upon himself to fix whatever's going on up there in his own noggin.
Simons seems to have taken it to heart: Take it in, process the pain, then work on adding your own story to the American quilt.
Last year, he put the 12-bedroom, 12-bathroom home up for sale for $27 million but has reportedly since taken it off the market.
The way the picture is taken, it looks like Kourt is still somewhat in motion, like she threw her arms around her friends and — oops!
So in light of the glorious advertising talent on show, we have taken it upon ourselves to collect the best Australian commercials airing this year.
The internet has taken it upon itself to transform the giant blue bags into some of the most unexpected items (an Ikea bag thong...really?).
"We had taken it off the website after Black History Month, so there were people who'd missed out that still really wanted it," Omondi said.
While better-educated people living in cities have quit smoking or never taken it up, the habit persists in rural areas and the developing world.
But modder Rated-E Mods has taken it one step further beyond Nintendo's retro console revival, with the even tinier, Raspberry Pi-based SNES Micro.
Google's reliance on backlinks has taken it from two guys in a garage near Stanford to one of the most valuable companies on the planet.
Now, one of the hackers at the center of the movement has taken it into the next logical phase: He's selling pre-hacked DJI drones.
They accused Slager of altering the crime scene by moving the Taser closer to the handcuffed body so he could claim Scott had taken it.
While many candidates have pledged to not accept money from corporations and have ruled out forming super PACs, Warren has taken it a step further.
Meanwhile, local election directors such as Cook County, Illinois' Noah Praetz, have taken it upon themselves to develop election cybersecurity plans, despite no federal backing.
Mr. Peters has taken it for visits to towns across the Netherlands, and was preparing to do the same in Norway when the collision occurred.
The drop in semiconductor comes as many hot tech stocks, like Apple and Netflix, have taken it on the chin amid a broader tech selloff.
Past presidents have had close connections to members of the media of course — but Trump and Fox have taken it to a whole new level.
He took the ACT college admissions test without practice and got a 27, about the 86th percentile, a high score for having taken it cold.
It is true that both parties manipulate the confirmation process when they are in power, but current Republican leaders have taken it to an extreme.
Researchers continued to provide solanezumab to patients who had taken it during the initial studies and also allowed the placebo groups to switch to solanezumab.
And they said there was little reason for someone like Sharapova to have taken it to treat her medical conditions, as she says she did.
With autonomous cars, you see these videos from Google and Uber showing a car driving around, but people have not taken it past 80 percent.
And, in the meantime, no matter where the video was taken, it provides a startling reminder that humans have a huge impact on the ocean.
Some fans have taken it upon themselves to create an ideal, edited version of the track list, picking their favorites and cutting off the excess.
So far, I've taken it offshore, leaving it atop, beside, and on occasion beneath a carelessly-strewn array of anchors, chains, tools, and fishing tackle.
He remembers looking down and seeing his pistol in his hand "like magic," before he even realized he had taken it out of his holster.
Most of the alleged Trump facts Tingle has taken it upon himself to correct deal with Trump's attempts to conceal his alien origins from humanity.
Scott had kidnapped this icon of timeless chic and taken it on a journey to McDonald's: the jacket was ketchup-red, its trim bright yellow.
The dollar index was lower on the day, erasing a gain that had taken it to a fresh one-year high of 95.65 earlier Thursday.
Domi, only 21 and in his second N.H.L. season, has taken it upon himself to host a number of his younger teammates at the house.
Mr. Mayberry said that although he started the program, the Eagles had taken it to a new level because of its prominence in the community.
At the same time, some vocal Democratic activists like billionaire Tom Steyer have taken it upon themselves to push for impeachment being on the agenda.
ADAMS It continues to be a slow absorption of Philip's orchestral music into the regular repertoire; I'm surprised that more conductors haven't taken it on.
But Moller may ultimately end up being vindicated, because many have taken his idea of street-worthy personal aircraft and taken it to the next level.
But NASA's really taken it to extremes: It's transported space shuttles strapped to one, and cut a gigantic hole in the side of another, for stargazing.
But the woman has also taken it upon herself to be the patron saint of glitter (hell, she even starred in a movie by the name).
All the states that have taken it up for people up to a 25% of poverty you're talking about something that represents a very progressive change.
Sanders took a position more critical of Israel, saying that though "Israel has a right to protect itself from terrorism," they have taken it too far.
This month his institution sent its famous Cyrus cylinder (pictured) to Mumbai as part of a journey that has already taken it to Iran and America.
Some men have reclaimed the word, but it should never be used to describe someone unless you know they've taken it back for themself. Gynesexual/gynephilic
After BuzzFeed News exposed the scheme, some intelligence officials privately argued that they had not taken it seriously, and that they were merely humoring those involved.
Lambert, on the other hand, has taken it more slowly with the public confessionals and debut of her new relationship with fellow country star Anderson East.
In general, she continued, the BDSM scene has taken it upon itself to educate law enforcement bodies as to the ins-and-outs of their subculture.
"Over the 19 years before my accident, I had really taken it for granted that I can have so much control over my hand," said Burkhart.
"The biggest clue of all is: Don't look for the treasure any place where an 80-year-old man could not have taken it," he adds.
Trump has merely taken it a step farther by consistently using the word "we" to distinguish his white male support base from women and ethnic minorities.
She had taken it weeks before the interview, but it sounds like she's still a little under its spell when she rhapsodizes about life and death.
When those precious lives are taken, it forever tears apart the lives of thousands more -- the friends and families who loved them, and who always will.
Curry has taken it to yet another level this season, averaging 29.8 points, 5.3 rebounds and 2.1 steals per game, all of which are career highs.
I've taken it in a different direction, but it still has the core elements and switches to more of a Touchy Subject vibe half way through.
Plumlee had the single largest increase in assist rate from the 2014-15 to 2015-16 seasons, and this year he's taken it a step further.
Armando Damian, of Los Angeles, called police to say that a man responding to a Craigslist ad had taken it for a test drive on Jan.
But if you had told me we'd be in this position when we started, I would have taken it a hundred times out of a hundred.
One of our most beloved athletes, Tristan Thompson, has taken it upon himself to date Khloe Kardashian and by doing so, invited the curse into Cleveland.
To assume that immigrants steal jobs is to assume that work is a zero sum game: If I get work, I've taken it away from you.
And because of the way Facebook's advertising products work, once data was taken, it remained valuable to data brokers, who collate and compile information for advertisers.
There's always been a certain amount of dishonesty in politics, but Trump has taken it to a new level — and seems to be making it work.
However, we have had no knowledge that such an offer was actually made and would be surprised in any case if she would have taken it.
With its indeterminate instrumentation and its tinge of academe, few pianists have taken it up with ease or regularity — and fewer still of Mr. Trifonov's imagination.
She has also taken it upon herself to tell whoppers about less salacious matters, including the trend in black unemployment and how diversity visas are issued.
He and the two men in the film, Wade Robson and James Safechuck, said that some fans had taken it even further, with threats of violence.
All involved with the movie have dubbed it a satire, but some on the right have taken it deadly seriously, despite having only seen a trailer.
My job recently reclassified me (demoted me), and I've taken it as a sign to get out of my profession and get my writing life started.
Still, even if it didn't reveal any blazing new truths, Mr. Abrams makes affecting music; I was glad to have stayed put and taken it in.
You might just as easily have taken it for a sauce, because of the dish chicken Marsala, or a person for whom that sauce was named.
It seemed like every time my picture was taken, it appeared, but I think that gave an impression that I was out more than I was.
Fashion&aposs all about taking risks, but a Komodo dragon has taken it to another level by hitting the beach with a turtle as a hat.
The campaign's Palestinian founders initially called for changes in Israeli policies, but many supporters have taken it up to oppose Israel's existence as a Jewish state.
She said she had taken it out again to better understand what the founders meant by setting the standard of "high crimes and misdemeanors" for impeachment.
I'd taken it for granted that such a thing would exist, as I took most scientific progress for granted, the vaccines and the high-speed Internet.
Rather, he said, he had taken it on himself to try to convince Ms. Stewart-Cousins to "look inward" for answers, rather than to the governor.
Librarians in Buffalo speculated to The New York Times in 1991 that Mr. Gluck might have taken it home to read and forgotten he had it.
They found that even if every man who was eligible for shared parental leave had taken it, that overall figure would only have been 5 percent.
" He also noted that, "clearly with the acts that he has taken it would seem there would be no role for him to govern the Syrian people.
Eventually we learned that Apple had taken it upon itself to employ some battery management tactics that slowed down older iOS devices to compensate for degraded batteries.
Well my favorite thing is Jared and Ivanka ... all the Washington publications have taken it on themselves to be as specifically as like the D.C. social scene.
He had taken it under the pretense of editing it, but the footage was only returned to Tan — without sound — four years after Cardona's death in 2007.
Serena told me that the respondents to her note had taken it upon themselves to weather-proof their own notes and even provided their own drawing pins.
I will say, I do think the women who I've invested in, and I've invested in many women, have outperformed the men and taken it more seriously.
He said Trump's statement that he could "stand in the middle of 5th Avenue and shoot somebody" without losing voters may not have taken it far enough.
Previous wealthy presidents have, however, taken it upon themselves to reassure the public that they are not self-dealing by placing their assets in a blind trust.
"These researchers have really taken it upon themselves to advance this technology this way without asking the rest of us if we really want to go along."
Now, the company has taken it a step further by announcing a standalone VR headset — one that does not need a phone or a computer to work.
MSCI's broadest index of Asia shares also lost 0.3 percent overnight after five straight days of gains had taken it to the highest level since late August.
We spoke to Lyn about the day of Ross' arrest, and why she's taken it upon herself to get him pardoned, regardless of how difficult that seems.
Armando Damian, of Los Angeles, called police to say that a man responding to a Craig's List ad had taken it for a test drive on Jan.
The Democratic nominee on Thursday suggested that Trump and his followers were an aberration from the GOP as a whole, but they had not taken it captive.
But some teachers or school administrators who've taken it on themselves to make sure students are eating healthfully take their healthy snack policies a little too far.
Amid this confusion and chaos, some Bulgarians on the southern frontier have taken it upon themselves to make the country as inhospitable to asylum seekers as possible.
He wanted ... Do you think he wanted ... If he'd taken down the story ... Right, if we had taken it down ... ... do you think he would've called it?
Iran's English-language Press TV aired a video that it said "shows the process through which the IRGC have halted the ship and taken it into custody".
I had some kind of basic thoughts about it, and I've taken it to other people who are brighter and smarter than me, and they've expanded it.
Now that Holliday is expecting, this vocal contingent has taken it upon itself to express those alleged fears, not only for Holliday, but for her unborn baby.
Well, the Kings have taken it to a new level: In related news, when they're not throwing contract terms GIF parties, the Kings listen to our podcast.
Texas is already notorious for passing restrictive abortion legislation, but a new law that went into effect at the beginning of 2016 has taken it even further.
Brazil, already mired in economic and political crises, has also taken it lumps, as a recent nationwide truckers strike tipped its currency and stock markets into freefall.
And now I've taken it upon myself to build prisons and build walls and construct laws and taxes and forms of governance as if I am native.
Left with no other choice, we've taken it upon ourselves—through a thorough process of logical reasoning, cyber-detection, and admittedly unverifiable (though crucial) guesswork—to investigate.
He has taken it to his native Chile, where he runs a pediatric orthopedic 2000D-printing laboratory, and has had recent requests for the plans from Nigeria.
Tillerson on Assad: "Clearly with the acts that he has taken it would seem there would be no role for him to govern the Syrian people." pic.twitter.
In the face of all this bad news, some Trump supporters have taken it upon themselves to, essentially, make up poll numbers that look favorable for Trump.
Had he grown up in a place where the sport was not a central part of the culture, he said, he might never have taken it up.
This is most likely due to the sizable grant the NFL promised, which is a good argument for not having ever taken it in the first place.
Later it would occur to me that the doctors probably gave Josh the same speech about hindering the other's progress, and he had taken it to heart.
The bit of red yarn to one end suggests it had been hung up to dry, and the shop owner had taken it down to show me.
The unified action underscores how, with few laws to regulate Silicon Valley, employees have taken it on themselves to change how the companies operate in the world.
I ran back to the original gate, where the delta agents searched the plane but said that the cleaners must have taken it off the flight first.
Dixon had visited the property in the 1980s, after the woman had taken it over from her father; he had even made some custom furniture for it.
It has taken it upon itself to expand — rapidly, relentlessly and aggressively — into every market it can find (often subduing the local soccer culture in the process).
Since 2016, Wenman has taken it as his mission to press the state-run German museum to release the original scans, using Germany's freedom of information laws.
It pulled out of a dive that had taken it to its lowest level in six months against other top currencies including the euro and the yen.
Nearly 800 present and former EPA officials have signed a letter opposing Pruitt; many have also taken it upon themselves to call U.S. senators to voice their disapproval.
Juliane Pokini told CNN the family got the seed from her brother-in-law, Dickie Marciel, who had taken it from his parents' avocado tree in Kailua, Oahu.
He had taken it to Africa with him when they filmed Ali and he was letting all of the people there listen to my album on his Walkman.
I wasn't sure that Hujar had actually taken it but I thought of it as a riddle I couldn't solve, and that's how I thought of Hujar too.
Much was left vague: timetables, verification and indeed what denuclearisation means; North Korea has long taken it to include the removal of America's security commitment to South Korea.
"Health care has taken it on the chin because of Hillary [Clinton] risk and fears that the M&A cycle is over," she said, referencing the 2016 elections.
Even though I was well-versed in procuring Plan B (I'd taken it three times over the past decade) what I hadn't really understood was how it works.
And appalled Twitter users have taken it upon themselves to highlight and defend Lewis's many years of activism and action, while simultaneously condemning Trump's less than honorable behavior.
Celebrities have been loving the undercut lately (fans include Kylie Jenner, Cara Delevingne and Rosamund Pike), but none of them have taken it to quite this level yet.
Sharapova tested positive for meldonium at the Australian Open in January, having taken it before each match even though the substance was banned at the beginning of 2016.
And if reasonable action is not taken, it will become increasingly difficult to stave off unreasonable restrictions — which are favored by many Democrats and much of the judiciary.
However, it was published, and when we were told about it we should have taken it down immediately rather than try to amend it to be more acceptable.
New FCC Chairman Ajit Pai has taken it on the chin recently, which should be expected considering that many of his views run contrary to the previous chairman's.
"If there had been an alternative I would have taken it, but there was no alternative," Macri said in a speech marking the country's bicentennial independence day celebration.
And a doll lost at the beach sets in motion the narrator's psychological unraveling in "The Lost Daughter," when the narrator realizes that she herself has taken it.
Individuals have taken it on themselves to install solar panels, trailing cables down the side of buildings to keep fans whirring or to power televisions and other appliances.
In fact, investors seem to have taken it as a positive: Facebook's stock price climbed after its announcement on Wednesday, adding about $40 billion to its market capitalization.
A surprisingly large number of people out there are so certain they'd smang the exiled Whovillian, they've taken it upon themselves to describe the scene in poetic detail.
This idea made me much more sympathetic to the excess and overt displays of skills of these artists, although I'm not sure how they would have taken it.
If Don Jr. had been delivered a crate full of stolen Clinton documents at that Trump Tower meeting with a shady Russian lawyer, he would have taken it.
With Everything Now, Arcade Fire joins the vast litany of artists who've taken it upon themselves to explain Why Modern Kids Suffer and Why Millennials are Ruining Society.
At almost the same time, TMZ published the ultimate receipts: blurry but real photos of Ms. Kufrin taken, it looks like, after her engagement, snapped by a bystander.
In the absence of a federal plan for this problem, states including California, Connecticut, Illinois, Maryland and Oregon have taken it upon themselves to create their own solutions.
The pollsters warned that they asked about the general election but believed some respondents may have taken it as a question about their preferred candidate in the primaries.
Economists have often taken it as a given that there is an inherent trade-off in which the larger the social safety net, the fewer people will work.
So he hired a chief technology officer two decades older than him who had previously founded his own start-up and taken it on to a successful sale.
"Should such a step be taken, it would have catastrophic consequences," Husam Zomlot, the Palestine Liberation Organization's top representative in Washington, told Reuters in an interview on Monday.
While SWIFT did not say how much money was taken, it said the bank quickly identified the fraudulent payments and arranged for the stolen funds to be frozen.
A history of Lyft Lyft's journey has taken it from an upstart sharing service for college students to one of the largest ride-sharing companies in the world.
In the story about Amy Schumer and the unfortunate joke, as soon as the self-described fan realized that Schumer had not taken it in stride, he apologized.
"We had taken it off the website after Black History Month, so there were people who'd missed out that still really wanted it," Omondi told Refinery29 back in 2017.
Instead, a new generation of It girls has taken it upon themselves to bring back some of the era's most celebrated fads, from statement hair accessories to crop tops.
Smiles has taken it upon himself to show us how to make a proper seafood tower; one worthy of the most lavish despots or the booziest of backyard parties.
The roots of Cameroon's linguistic rift date back to 1919, when Britain and France divided the country between them, having taken it from Germany after the first world war.
Here's some news to soothe the soul: Noted clay-eater Shailene Woodley has a new boyfriend, and she's taken it to Instagram, so you know the love is real.
Luckily for us, but not so much for him, women (and some men and probably also people of other genders) have taken it upon themselves to shut him down.
For households who have had their electricity cut off, a group of activists calling themselves the "I Won't Pay" movement have taken it upon themselves to reconnect the supply.
He is not involved with any of the several Christian militias that have taken it upon themselves, in Iraq and neighboring Syria, to defend their villages against IS onslaught.
Apple fans and detractors alike both seem to have taken it for granted that the iPhone X would be as good and as well received as it has been.
If you polled the business community six months ago and said, We guarantee you're going to have a 25 percent tax rate, they would have taken it and run.
The second novel in the "Hospital" trilogy even won Chinese sci-fi's top honour in 2017, the first time so subversive a book had taken it, says Mr Song.
Conan O'Brien, Kevin Hart and Ice Cube have taken it upon themselves to teach Conan staffer Diana Chang how to drive — so everyone on the road better watch out.
"I had taken it all very lightly," she says of her run for the senate—so much so that she volun­teered to help supervise the vote count that day.
I personally have never really taken it upon myself to investigate the racial background of these artists but I don't recall ever meeting any other black GIF artists... yet.
Since blockchain is still in its early days and without any clear leaders, yet, some women in tech have taken it as an opportunity to make a significant impact.
This isn't the first time states have taken it upon themselves to tweak their signage in hopes of dissuading some stoned 16-year-olds from becoming would-be thieves.
Perhaps the most interesting detail to emerge from this excellent interview was Condit's admission that, were there any other path to number-one-contendership available, he'd have taken it.
Teeny Round Diamond Necklace, $215I ordered the Teeny Round Diamond Necklace, and I really haven't taken it off since I first put it on more than four months ago.
Now, following the Black Lives Matter movement, a photographer has taken it upon herself to continue disrupting stereotypical ideas of what it looks like to be a Black father.
"Fortunately William has taken it in his stride — he just came back down the plane to see if we were ok and joked that he was flying!" she wrote.
Others were relieved that the D.E.A. had moved to allow more institutions to grow marijuana for research, but not taken it off the list of the most dangerous drugs.
"If you'd have given Senate Republicans this exact situation in January 2015, they would have taken it before you got the last word out of the sentence," Holmes said.
If you had told me at the start of the year I could bet against the Jets winning three straight games, I would have taken it in a heartbeat.
I am still wearing my orange safety vest when I walk over, but even if I had taken it off, they might have noticed I wasn't wearing any shoes.
As BioWare rolls out a patch today to improve parts of Mass Effect: Andromeda, including some of the awkward facial animations, some fans have already taken it upon themselves.
But some companies have taken it upon themselves to close these gaps, whether it be through hiring practices, catering products toward LGBTQ people, or contributing resources to advocacy organizations.
People who aren't professional historians have taken it upon themselves to preserve the memories of the country's many killings, famines, uprisings and government crackdowns — 4/4 is just one.
The bribe was more than ten times their monthly salary, no one else was there, and they could have very easily taken it and no one would ever know.
Security experts told NPR that, given the image's angle and the time at which it was taken, it could have been taken by the USA-224 American spy satellite.
The unified action by workers underlines how, with few laws to regulate Silicon Valley, employees have taken it on themselves to change how the companies operate in the world.
Bird, which declined to provide information about accidents, offers helmets to active riders for a $1.99 shipping fee, and about 30,000 people have taken it up on the deal.
More than 60 percent of CBD users have taken it for anxiety, according to a survey of 5,000 people, conducted by the Brightfield Group, a cannabis market research firm.
I want us to protect that [the word Negro] and not let that go just because people have taken it and associated it with these terrible behaviors and attitudes.
Because journalism hasn't had enough attacks from men in power in 2018, Musk has taken it upon himself to attack the Fourth Estate beyond his usual earning call hijinks.
Mr. Mélenchon, who has a history of sparring with the mainstream news media, has taken it up a notch, using the internet to bypass rules governing equal media exposure.
"Nobody can ignore what has happened in France and Europe in terms of security over the last few months and we have taken it fully into account", he added.
Pelosi, long known for her top-down leadership style, has taken it to extremes these past few weeks as the House nears the final stages of the impeachment inquiry.
With little relief and plenty of new craters on the horizon, residents in Indianapolis have taken it upon themselves — and taken to social media — to vent, warn and meme.
Some suggested that if the Mets had kept quiet, the umpires would have left the tarp on the field and not taken it off, resulting in a Mets win.
"If I could have signed (a contract) to be in the third round, feeling this way, weeks or days or a month ago, I would have taken it," said Federer.
"Adulting Day" comes as more and more millennials have taken it upon themselves to learn the skills they're lacking, such as cooking, according to a December CBS New York report.
"If I knew what the side effects would be of the medication, I would have never taken it," Bible said of Risperdal, which he took in the early 2000's.
"The extremists of the White House have taken it upon themselves to carry out a coup in Venezuela," Maduro told the BBC in a rare interview with the foreign media.
"The NT Government considers it prudent to wait until this work is undertaken before any decisions regarding the future of ridesharing transport services in the Territory are taken," it wrote.
The jobs number took June 15 off the table, but events on Brexit since then would probably have taken it off the table even if the economy was looking good.
Wayne still sounds like Wayne, whereas proteges like Young Thug and, in this case, Kendrick, have taken it the extra mile, sounding wholly unlike themselves and simultaneously becoming new people.
"If you haven't stayed up on it and you haven't taken it seriously, well, you walk down 47th Street and you see a lot of empty booths," he told Insider.
"In order to remove his diplomatic asylum, he only had to do this once, and the Ecuadorian government could have taken it away; it never did," she told BuzzFeed News.
Earlier in the year, some genius realised that it's quite possible to seamlessly replace Donald Trump's eyes with little tiny mouths — and now, someone has taken it a step further.
All we can say is that the company has graciously taken it upon itself to conduct what we are certain (ahem) is a wholly unbiased survey on male-pattern baldness.
You can apply the filters to videos you've already taken (it has support for videos up to 1080p in this case), but you can't edit existing photos, which is disappointing.
"We've had way too many programs that have tested index insurance on a few hundred farmers and never taken it to the larger scale with the larger vision," Choularton said.
Brazil's net public debt stands at 38.9 percent of gross domestic product, and Meirelles has warned if no measures are taken it could approach 2002 levels of around 60 percent.
So a third-party accessory maker has taken it upon itself to design the iPhone charger that Apple would have made had it decided to prioritize design above all else.
"We have been clear that any evidence of sub-standard practices that fall short of our requirements would be investigated by the LME and action would be taken," it added.
Responding to that complaint, WADA issued new guidelines in April, establishing permitted amounts of meldonium in antidoping tests, which would indicate whether an athlete had taken it before the ban.
Both officials emphasize that if any military action is taken it would be carried out by US allies in the region, such as the Saudis, and not by US forces.
To rev up investment banking fees and reclaim market share, Bank of America is chasing smaller deals — and that's taken it to far-flung American locations it had previously ignored.
He signed it, but doubts have been raised about whether he'd taken it as far as he wanted, and there's speculation that other hands later got in on the act.
I got in touch with Ian Wallace, a psychologist who helps private clients understand their dreams and who is well aware of Dream Leaf through clients who have taken it.
The NFL's draconian policing of celebrations this year is such a hilariously NFL thing to do, and this Kenny Powers thing has taken it to it's absurd, logical end point.
The big picture: The New Yorker's Adam Entous reported that the "extraordinary step" of booting Obama from intelligence briefings had been suggested to Trump, but that he hadn't taken it.
News Analysis School superintendents, sports commissioners, college presidents, governors and business owners have taken it upon themselves to shut down much of American life without clear guidance from the president.
The rial's plunge, which in the unofficial market has taken it to around 000,1003 against the dollar from 2100,2000 at the end of 210, according to currency tracking website bonbast.
Until that day comes, Kent Bakke, local entrepreneur, longtime electric car driver and SEVA member, has taken it upon himself to finance the cost of X-Ray's first two prototypes.
Evgeni Malkin has eight points and Crosby six for the Penguins, who have taken it to the Blue Jackets and the struggling goaltender Sergei Bobrovsky in going up, 3-1.
Aside from this New York production, directed by Ari Edelson at New World Stages, five theaters have taken it up or are scheduled to present it in the coming months.
Ms. Gurung, who is a nurse, has taken it upon herself to be the de facto preserver of Seke, a language she says many young Nepalese are losing touch with.
While the offer was accepted by EM and Montreux, four other leading creditors including Elliott Management's NML Capital Ltd and Aurelius Capital Management LP have not taken it to date.
In "Untitled (Legs and mirror #1)" (2016), the artist's toes are perfectly placed to hide her sex, but Rasmussen could not have seen the image until she'd already taken it.
Officials in New Zealand, however, have taken it one step further and decided that teens under the age of 18 not be allowed to watch the show without a parent.
While we've been busy figuring out how to get discounted Chipotle burritos this Halloween, Bachelorette couple JoJo Fletcher and Jordan Rodgers have taken it upon themselves to improve the food chain.
His solution builds on the work of another Google researcher, Marc Levoy, and his experimental SeeInTheDark app, but Kainz has taken it a few steps further — check out the details here.
"We have now taken it from a niche vehicle to a mass produced car - an important step in terms of market penetration," said Osram's head of specialty lighting, Hans-Joachim Schwabe.
As Obama continues to remain neutral, Twitter users have taken it upon themselves to troll Biden's "I asked him not to endorse me" claim, comparing it to other classic, untrue excuses.
Kufrin seems to have taken it all in stride, but if you're talking about your breakup for thousands of people, you probably wouldn't want to get into the nitty gritty anyway.
There are still some kinks to work out, having taken it for a spin around the busy Manhattan block that hosts TC East, I can attest that it's actually pretty cool.
"It's quite devastating for our growers — they're really upset about it obviously, because this is their livelihood, and someone has taken it upon themselves to do something really nasty," Rowling says.
When we last left the Unsullied, they were holed up at Casterly Rock, having just taken it from a Lannister skeleton army, while the bulk of them were off sacking Highgarden.
A Russian Standard Ltd spokesman said in the email that it was aware of the "technical step", adding that the bondholders could have taken it at any point since October 2017.
But what if, a week after that phone was taken, it shut down its own Lightning port's ability to send or receive data or even recognize it's connected to a computer?
"I'm still in charge of it, and U.S. Cellular has taken it national, now in Chicago and North Carolina and now my little idea has expanded and keeps expanding," Day says.
When facing tides of deliberate misinformation, scientists, engineers and researchers have taken it upon themselves to organize and raise awareness about their professions and the vital importance of the scientific enterprise.
"I've taken it over and it's become a passion of mine, to fundraise and hopefully better the lives of those of us suffering, as well as find a cure," she says.
The 27 EU leaders agreed their joint stance during talks in Brussels and their chairman, Donald Tusk, has now taken it to the British Prime Minister Theresa May for her approval.
But parish officials thought a member or maintenance worker might have taken it for cleaning until they saw the video on Wednesday and reported the theft to the police, she said.
However, the damage had already been done to what is still considered a fringe sport in Denmark—most of the article's readers would have certainly taken it in at face value.
Warren should not have taken the test; having taken it, she should not have publicized it; having publicized it, she should quietly fire anyone who urged this gambit and move on.
But frustration over this has gotten to the point that DC Mayor Muriel Bowser has taken it upon herself to troll Congress on the issue as much as possible this week.
But since he announced his bid for President, people have taken it upon themselves to express their views on him via his star and posting the photos to Twitter and Instagram.
Under Trump, DHS has taken it a step further: The agency's new leader, Secretary John Kelly, told lawmakers in February that the government contemplated whether to demand foreigners' social-media passwords.
"If somebody really had an issue at the time, they would have taken it to a teacher or administrator," said Mr. Petty, whose younger sister, Alaina, was killed in the shooting.
I'm anxious to see whether the other Democratic candidates in 2020 are mostly going to focus on people who already have debt or on those who haven't taken it on yet.
Monday's rally in the Stoxx has taken it above its 200-day moving average and right up to its trend line from May, as well as its 50-day moving average.
That was not so — an American commander in Afghanistan had simply taken it upon himself to use a particularly large bomb on a cave complex in the remote province of Nangarhar.
And while our poll's question is worded to focus on the general election, some respondents may have taken it as a question of who they'd consider voting for in the primary.
Facebook, Twitter, Reddit and Google's YouTube rushed to remove the content, but users were still able to find versions of the video hours after the companies had supposedly taken it down.
It pulled out of a tailspin that had taken it to its lowest level in six months against other top currencies including the euro and the yen, though it remained wobbly.
We&aposve had as many as 2500 at one time in the past, but we&aposve cancelled some and taken it easy on new card sign-ups the last 250 months.
Umbrico suggests that even if a photographer acknowledges that thousands of the same image exist, there is value in having taken it and owning a physical trace of that specific moment.
But the internet has taken it to a whole new level by making it so easy to make a meme — all you need is Microsoft Paint — and stream or upload videos.
Since June 2015, when Trump announced his candidacy, this writer has taken it upon himself each day to tell his Facebook followers that Donald Trump is a bad kind of dude.
And if your boo has not yet taken it upon themselves to embrace this part of being a responsible grownup, they're not yet ready for the other parts of a real relationship.
Numerous health agencies and obstetricians have stood behind this drug, and approximately 35 million women have taken it, but a new study suggests its effects may not be so significant, after all.
That could be a problem, as about two-thirds of patients in a new survey said that if they had known their drug was off-label, they would not have taken it.
In case you missed the memo that photos don't necessarily reflect reality, another Instagrammer has taken it upon herself to show us how different the same person can look in two pictures.
And now, pay-as-you-go models have taken it one step further and disintermediated even former "subscription assets:" instead of leasing a car, you can pay Uber or Zipcar per ride.
Jaramillo's ex-wife came to the police station to report that a gun of hers was missing and that he had taken it, Devine Police Lieutenant Christopher Andrews said, CBS Austin reports.
The companies under fire from federal authorities have taken it one step further by packaging the flavored e-liquid to actually look like it belongs on a shelf in the grocery store.
That safe-haven trend receded on Wednesday, with the euro bouncing almost one percent versus the dollar and recouping all its Tuesday losses, which had taken it down to 10-month lows .
The total has alarmed conservatives; President Donald Trump has taken it as validation of his decision to declare a national emergency and appropriate more funding to build "a wall" along the border.
" The bottom line: Chris Johnson, a former top CIA China analyst now at CSIS, says the message will be: "We have heard your feedback, taken it into account, and we're making changes.
Image: WikimediaPrey animals are capable of defending themselves in an amazing of ways, but when it comes to mounting a sophisticated biological counter-attack, sea urchins have taken it to another level.
I have, however, seen several of his films, so I have taken it upon myself to rank them based on Pitt's viability as a husband, from DUMP HIM to MARRIAGE MATERIAL. 24.
Industrial and commodities-focused stocks also led the pack in Europe though the pan-regional STOXX 600 faded after a two-day rally that had taken it to a six-week high.
To me it seems like they've taken it to the logical extreme, which is we may brief, we may not, but it doesn't matter what we say because nothing we say matters.
That safe-haven trend receded on Wednesday, with the euro bouncing nearly one percent versus the dollar and recouping all its Tuesday losses, which had taken it down to 10-month lows.
This has taken it in recent weeks to a 523-year high versus the euro, a 252-249/22016 year peak against the dollar and its strongest level ever against the basket.
Since Congress is clearly unable to curb the rampant power abuses of the Underwood administration, we here at Refinery29 have taken it upon ourselves to serve as the whistleblowers of this administration.
Some have taken it upon themselves to mount a mass down-voting campaign that temporarily prevented the game hitting the number one spot on the rankings at analogue gaming's online epicenter, BoardGameGeek.
A series of movies in the last several years have played with the trope — and just this year, The Witch, 10 Cloverfield Lane, and Don't Breathe have taken it to new places.
"Some assets would have been less favourable to hold in the model, for instance corporate bonds and mortgage bonds, and FSA has taken it to heart," Swedbank analyst Ingrid Wallin-Johansson said.
If she had taken it for granted that Evan would lead a long and happy life, like her grandfather, could she not have made similar mistakes in blindly taking everything for granted?
That safe-haven trend receded on Wednesday, with the euro bouncing nearly one percent versus the dollar and recouping all its Tuesday losses, which had taken it down to 10-month lows .
Fortunately, others have taken it up: Within the pages of the liberal scholars that Geoffrey Kabaservice unfairly attacks, we can find an honest attempt to grapple with this difficult and painful history.
"If either of these cases is taken, it will almost immediately become the highest profile case on the court's docket," said Steven Shapiro, the legal director of the American Civil Liberties Union.
We've taken so many steps forward towards accepting people, to understanding the plight of people, to clearing up the mess that borders create, and what Trump's done is taken it all backwards.
So now—left with no other option—I have taken it upon myself to lay out, comprehensively and definitively, for the first and last time, the true purpose of the dusty stick.
"He receives a salary, and as part of his salary, which is very generous, he has taken it upon himself to donate to causes he sees fit in Guyana," Mr. Gallucci said.
He had a gift for uniting followers behind his vision; within a year, he had built an ensemble, taken it to a festival in Scotland and won critical praise for his work.
And resisting congressional subpoenas is the first reaction of many presidents, even if this one has taken it a step further by declaring that he will refuse any and all of them.
The governors of New York and California, operating with only loose guidance on social distancing from the federal government, have taken it upon themselves to announce stringent restrictions on remaining in place.
So I have taken it upon myself to respond to some of the, ahem, concerns put forth as part of a real survey of the 350 biggest publicly listed companies in Britain.
In one video posted online, a woman who had help up a sign paying tribute to Blue Girl was soon in a struggle with female police officers who had taken it down.
"To reimpose the border is like putting up the Berlin Wall again, after you've taken it down," said Mr. Fleming, whose farm equipment company is based just two miles from the border.
However, if you're just looking for something to help you chill out, we've taken it upon ourselves to test over 20 of the trendiest anti-anxiety and stress-reducing products out there.
With minimal support from fellow Republicans, President Trump and his administration have taken it upon themselves to champion free and fair-trade policies that benefit tens of thousands of U.S. steel workers.
Rob Dunkel, the founder of a small 12-person software company in Chicago, has taken it upon himself to help consumers get the seller details they most need before making buying decisions.
And while politicians are notorious for ducking the truth and skirting apologies, Trump's campaign has taken it to another level – where photographic evidence and violence is not enough to change his tune.
Having recently released his new afrobeats infused track "Y," Geko has now taken it stateside and remixed Fabulous' 2003 hit "Can't Let You Go," adding flavour and his own take on the track.
If you're as protective of your gadgets as I am, you've probably got a screen protector ready to apply to your new phone as soon as you've taken it out of the box.
He'd done that from the age of five, helped out on the stall from nine and taken it over at 21, with no training save what he'd picked up at the dinner table.
Kanye started his Sunday Service in a field in Calabasas ... but has since taken it across the country -- making stops in Utah, Chicago and at Howard University -- even spotlighting at Coachella this year.
But some have taken it upon themselves to innovate beyond the norm in an attempt to connect with their viewers in a meaningful and resonant way — and that can take rather odd forms.
No matter the path that is taken, it is extremely unlikely the US will wake up one morning with its abortion laws entirely reversed, which is what Roe did in the opposite direction.
"Of course, it isn't 100% effective and some people who have taken it correctly have acquired HIV infections, but that doesn't mean it isn't a very effective option to protect yourself," Johnston says.
If you're not familiar with the case, comedian Tiffany Haddish has taken it upon herself to spill more tea about the time she got to party with Queen Bey in a GQ interview.
That has taken it much closer to fair value by benchmarks such as purchasing-power parity (PPP), the exchange rate at which a basket of goods is worth the same in different countries.
Black Friday is here, and we've taken it upon ourselves to find the best deals on all things home-related, since we have to admit, we're feeling a little spendy just about now.
BEIRUT (Reuters) - The Lebanese group Hezbollah has located an Israeli drone that crashed in Lebanese territory and has taken it to a secure location for inspection, a source in Hezbollah said on Tuesday.
"  "It's a casual look, but the brogues make it a little bit more formal, just to show the other person that he's dating that he has thought about things, taken it slightly seriously.
Brent crude futures traded up a shade at $54.33 per barrel, having lost some of the ground overnight made earlier in the week that had taken it a 1 1/2-year high.
There are some businesses that have taken it upon themselves to lead by example; big tech companies are using their robust paid-leave programs to attract workers and build their "socially conscious" image.
The woman advised police that she happened upon the orphaned animal the previous evening and had taken it into her own care — something wild animal welfare agency, the RSPCA, strongly advises people against.
If Nunes has a complaint about that, he should have taken it up with the agency it remains his job to oversee—a point made by Nunes's counterpart on the Intelligence Committee, Rep.
But Trump has taken it to new heights by first alleging that Obama "wiretapped" Trump Tower and now blaming Obama for civilian attacks in Syria—which occurred four years after a Russia-U.
Somewhere along the line, the reasonable balance that was originally intended shifted away from business into the hands of activist plaintiffs' lawyers, and they have taken it all the way to the bank.
When examining the SMH on an absolute basis, one can see its 14 percent decline since March has taken it down to its 200-day moving average, and down near its February lows.
Samuel Maskell, a former senior engineer on the Android notifications team at Twitter, has taken it upon himself to create a tiny little Android "app" that restores a quick link to Twitter Highlights.
Hopper would say Torn threatened him with a knife but Torn contended it was Hopper who pulled the knife and that he had taken it away from Hopper and turned it on him.
Like many, I've had a father or two, and (like many) they've been disappointments, men who force you to take leave of them at some point if they haven't taken it upon themselves.
Sure, had Weinstein taken it upon himself to follow the Pence rule, it is true he probably would not have had opportunities to harm his alleged victims during meetings and audition-type scenarios.
But after his fingerprints were found on the envelope, he testified that a stranger had given it to him at his gas station and that he had taken it to the church headquarters.
" Someone pitched a diabetes joke: maybe Florida, the "Good Times" matriarch, could say, about a dog that bit her, "I would have lost my big toe, had the sugar not already taken it.
In fact, it seems some players have already taken it upon themselves to punish the 'Stros ... because as of last week -- they had been hit by pitches SEVEN different times already this spring.
I'll admit I've taken it for granted that my daughter will be healthy, that she will get her vaccines, and that if she has a cold or bout of diarrhea, she will recover.
No longer willing to wait for the adults to take charge, young people have taken it upon themselves to end the violence; a sign of a new emergent and politically self-aware generation.
It will represent yet another uncomfortable moment for a party that has often had to pick between its traditional conservative principles and standing with the barnstorming force -- Trump -- that has taken it over.
But now the Trump administration has taken it to a new level: The slight risk of letting the wrong refugee in is more important than the benefits of letting in the right ones.
But because I love you, dear Noisey reader, I have taken it upon myself to present you with several of Emin's music videos, and will now proceed to make ruthless mockery of them.
And yet, because of the creaking, clunking nature of British law, it is still impossible (or illegal, at least) for me to write down the name of the individual who has taken it out.
In the meanwhile, if you find yourself with a camera app that unexpectedly quits after a photo is taken, it might be a good idea to manually close other applications open on the device.
Right now, this program is only offered in the US at Boca Raton's Florida Atlantic University, but Stanford University and its medical center have recently taken it under wing and should implement it soon.
"The problem is not just with Adel Mahdi," said Mohamed Fadhil, 35, a painter who had taken it upon himself to pick up trash strewn on a side street by the protesters gathering daily.
"We have taken it and secured it," Mr. Trump said of Syria's oil during remarks at the White House on Sunday, after announcing the killing of the Islamic State leader, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi.
The market currently is amid a downturn that has taken it sharply lower from recent record highs, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average off nearly 5 percent in just the last week or so.
When that white working-class security started to go away in the 1980s particularly, it was easy to just be enraged and not know what had done it or who had taken it away.
The Daily Caller did not immediately respond to a request for comment, though Fox News Digital Editor-in-Chief Noah Kotch did: “The item was inappropriate and we’ve taken it down.
Turns out she had an unregistered, unlicensed gun in her pocket -- she had taken it from her then-boyfriend who was drunk at the time -- and Beth's dad called Dog to bail her out.
That tilt has changed over time, as Pluto's almost oval orbit has also taken it closer and further from the sun, giving it temperature extremes that could explain the scars left on its surface.
Read More Don't buy into the safety stock surge: Traders "Based upon the previous moves of this similar nature that they've taken, it has not effectively increased new investment or economic activity," Lien said.
Facebook, Twitter and Google rushed to remove the content from their platforms, but users were still able to find versions of the video hours after the tech giants said they had taken it down.
"Assad's role in the future is uncertain, clearly, and with the acts that he has taken it would seem that there would be no role for him to govern the Syrian people," Tillerson said.
Several local and state governments have taken it into their own hands to curtail or ban facial recognition technology, including California, Oregon and New Hampshire, where law enforcement has been barred from using it.
The space is considered so sacred by San Franciscans that a local doula has taken it upon herself to rebuild it every time it gets destroyed by vandals, an act she regards as religious.
Case in point: One Australian brewery has just taken it upon themselves to embrace the inky abyss of the human abdomen by brewing a beer that actually utilizes the brewer's own belly button lint.
Given the backdrop of Election Day in November, Acosta said that LGBTQ voters understand what's at stake in every election and have taken it upon themselves to exercise their power at the ballot box.
Yes, I could have easily taken it off, but I chose to review it the way it was sold to me — with a comically large piece of lettuce that barely fit into the box. 
Pundits have long taken it as an article of faith that Buttigieg (who, like Klobuchar, seems to be surging) has no discernible black support in South Carolina and elsewhere, based on endorsements and polls.
We are tired of our elders running into dead ends when it comes to change, so we have taken it upon ourselves to be the force behind a movement, an urgent one at that.
Caterpillar shares have taken it on the chin in recent months amid international trade tensions, and its quarterly earnings report scheduled for Monday morning will shed light on how the industrial name is faring.
Now he's taken it to the next level by opening up the Belgrade Urban Distillery in the Beogradski Market, a hip spot filled with street food stands, vintage clothes retailers and a record shop.
Technology has taken it on the chin in recent months as a tech names, many with high multiples, have fallen in part due to privacy concerns, international trade tensions and weaker-than-expected earnings.
Trump, erupting in nocturnal tweets — emissions quite similar to those captured on Nixon's White House tapes, except that they are instantaneously blasted out to tens of millions of Twitter fans — has taken it further.
This is a common scam technique, but Macpatchers seems to have taken it a step farther and asked him to read a script that appeared on the screen, claiming he was pleased with the service.
They've actually taken it pretty seriously; they have put all sorts of procedures in place to make sure the individual giving the advice isn't being compensated very differently even if the firm is getting commissions.
Because there are no Olympic volunteers standing outside my Airbnb, I went next door to the IOC hotel and asked them where the media shuttle stops, as I had taken it home the previous day.
The people of Malmö seem to have taken it to their hearts, and almost immediately miniature things started to show up on the scene—club posters, cheeses, all kinds of plastic animals and much more.
It is not exactly surprising that Kardashian has taken it upon herself to defend West — Kardashian has defended her husband many, many times before and will likely do it many more times in the future.
WASHINGTON — As the White House fends off accusations of collusion with Russia, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson has taken it upon himself to guide the Trump administration's thinking on dealing with Russian President Vladimir Putin.
Ever since Babe published a questionable article with an anonymous woman accusing Aziz Ansari of sexual misconduct, many have taken it as an excuse to discredit every other story published on assault in recent months.
The US is observing the sub via reconnaissance imagery and the officials said the submarine's patrol had taken it farther that it has ever gone, sailing some 100 kilometers out to sea in international waters.
Now, it seems as if the top salons have taken it a step further with what some call "base coat nail art," which is basically minimalist nail art painted over a clear coat — that's it.
"It's always disappointing when you get the first one that you can't go out and do it again, but coming here, we would have taken it coming home 1-1," Islanders center Frans Nielsen said.
"Despite all the measures that have been taken, it seems impossible to re-establish the Libor as a credible, robust and resilient benchmark," Moser said in remarks prepared for a conference in Zurich on Friday.
Another attempt to offer gifts resulted in a tribesman shooting an arrow straight through Chau's waterproof Bible, the symbolism so on the nose that another person might have taken it for a sign from above.
An outsider to the art world by virtue of his class, and an outsider to conventional society by nature of his transvestism, he has taken it upon himself to educate, and occasionally provoke, the masses.
With Saturday's 4-2 loss to the Jets in Winnipeg, Montreal has a 12-26-3 record since the end of November, a nose dive that has effectively taken it out of the playoff picture.
For some reason that is unclear to even God himself, a few music publications have recently taken it upon themselves to reevaluate some albums from nu metal's "classic" era as they turn 20 years old.
"No one has ever taken it to Keith the way I took it to Keith," said Porter, who claims to be at peace with the judges' decision, even if he still doesn't agree with it.
So in honor of the upcoming haunted Magic 8 Ball film or whatever, we here at VICE have taken it upon ourselves to compile five ideas for future evil toy movies we'd love to see.
He had taken it upon himself to master the local lead laws, the history of lead poisoning in America, the science of lead, the safe practices for sanding a house, the avenues of litigation available.
They made clear the administration was moving cautiously, mindful that if such an unprecedented step was taken, it could deepen the country's economic and social crisis, in which millions suffer food shortages and soaring inflation.
My grandmother had taken it out of storage, as she did every year, and lovingly set it up on the floor, dropping some clementine peels around its base to show that it had been fed.
Based on that notion and the EPA's delay in setting a nationwide legal limit of PFAS in drinking water, several states, like California, have taken it upon themselves to set their own legal PFAS limits.
In 1964, the club's manager, Ron Greenwood, had wrapped the F.A. Cup trophy in cloth and taken it home on a London Tube train after the Hammers had beaten Preston North End in the final.
NAFTA has been such a win for U.S. farmers that "we've kind of taken it for granted and now we've seen what it looks like with a potential of losing those trade agreements," Guernsey admitted.
Where once she felt sustainability was forced on her, she has now taken it upon herself to implement eco-conscious guidelines across the business, from recycling cardboard boxes for shipment to selecting responsibly sourced fabrics.
This fall we've been riding 303s paired with tubular tires for cyclocross, through mud and sand and over the bumpiest tracks, and these wheels have taken it all and delivered week in and week out.
"I think it's been clear for a long time that the Appellate Body has taken it upon itself to do gap-filling and to do rulemaking in areas where the members haven't spoken," Vaughn said.
With some research, I learned there was a group of men who had not only been as horrified as I, but had taken it upon themselves to offer those bodies some dignity and bury them.
Though a 2014 decision to remove Black Pete from Amsterdam's Sinterklaas parade was overturned in a higher court, city parade organizers have taken it upon themselves to gradually remove Black Pete's racist characteristics from celebrations.
The UFC honcho posted a photo with Lesnar on Sunday -- and, while it's unclear when the pic was taken, it just so happens the WWE Elimination Chamber event went down in Vegas ... Dana's home turf.
In this film, he's taken it further, drawing on Japanese styles of theater, illustration, and storytelling for a tale about a pack of dogs and a little boy in search of a place to belong.
But it was just this really interesting moment when he said that and he saw that I was kind of taken it back, and he said you just, you have to go along with the right.
Season 1 may have won this anthology raves and award show acclaim, but Season 2 has taken it to an all-new level with a story about a boy who accuses a male classmate of rape.
In case you were wondering what a Jay Z apology response would be like, though, Funny or Die have taken it upon themselves to make a spoof film titled I Gave You Lemons on his behalf.
And more individual abortion providers like Thill, who learned how to provide abortions on papayas as medical students, have taken it upon themselves to develop similar workshops and trainings and open them up to the public.
While the chain's Aussie-tizers and Foster's Beer Cheese Fondue are enough to send any self-respecting Australian into a conniption, Outback Steakhouse has taken it one step further with its upcoming "Big Australia" promotional menu.
Well, in honor of Aladdick and that brain-bleedingly bizarre trailer, we here at VICE have taken it upon ourselves today to gather up ten different options that would've made for a better XXX Aladdin title.
Indeed, in the unlikely case that the broadest form of Apple's argument is taken, it could make all computer-based transactions subject to heightened scrutiny under the law, said Stuart Benjamin, a law professor at Duke.
" And Brian Fallon, a CNN political commentator and former spokesman for Hillary Clinton's presidential campaign, tweeted, "I'm sure Republicans would have taken it in stride if Chelsea Clinton was deputized to perform head of state duties.
Verbal barbs designed to put off the opposition in the heat of battle, sledging has long been part of cricket, but the intense rivalry between England and Australia has often taken it to a different level.
"Specialize and pick your own niche," is a piece of advice most entrepreneurs will have heard at some point throughout their careers, however, 29-year-old Tugrul Cirakoglu seems to really have taken it to heart.
READ: These schools want to wipe away gender stereotypes from an early age Innovative methods With the gap widening, some school districts have taken it upon themselves to change this dynamic by introducing an innovative solution.
He had not taken it outside with him; packed with every ad tracker dreamed up in the last twenty years, more accurate an identifier than his fingerprints, it would have given him away at forty feet.
In Ottawa, women have taken it upon themselves to make sure that young girls all over Canada's capital region are getting their shot behind the microphone, in front of amps, and on top of drum thrones.
When I asked why the watch was in his car and not on his wrist, he'd shrugged and said that it'd been too flashy to wear out, so he'd never taken it out of the case.
Can you talk about why you think schools have taken it upon themselves to handle cases of sexual assault, and how that sense of policing fits into your larger point about what the university has become?
"He would have only taken it on if he were 100 percent confident that that independence could be preserved," said Matthew Schwartz, partner at the law firm Boies, Schiller & Flexner and a former prosecutor under Bharara.
Mr. Pagitt warned Mr. Williams that churches that have taken it, including EastLake Community Church near Seattle and GracePointe Church near Nashville, lost up to 70 percent of their members and large shares of their revenues.
Bloomberg LP will now make the program mandatory for all to take by April 3, due to the "highly positive feedback" it has received from the more than 1,200 participants that have taken it, Cooper said.
"Two-thirds of those guys would have had big money offers in Europe, bigger than they're getting here, but they haven't taken it because they want to play for Australia and that's what counts," he said.
The dollar fell on Thursday, failing to hold the previous day's gains on the back of upbeat U.S. data, as the euro resumed a rally that has taken it near its highest level in three years.
FROST: IN TERMS OF HIS TEAM, JAMIE, WERE YOU EVER OFFERED A JOB ON HIS TEAM AND GIVEN THAT YOU QUESTION THE ADVICE HE'S GETTING, DO YOU WISH YOU'D TAKEN IT IF YOU WERE OFFERED IT?
A human driver could have taken it in any number of directions, but it was interesting to see how the car responded (or in this case didn't) versus what I thought a human would have done.
We see these entrepreneurs as the ones who have found success with a product, have taken it to market, are seeing product market love, and that's the opportunity for us to engage as late-stage investors.
So in honor of the impending onslaught of Avatar movies with potentially godawful names, we here at VICE have taken it upon ourselves to come up with 50 better options out of the goodness of our hearts.
"The issue of branch closures needs to get higher up everybody's agenda," BSB chair Colette Bowe told the British parliament's Treasury Select Committee, adding that she has already taken it up with the banking industry's trade body.
So in honor of this heinous movie season, we here at VICE have taken it upon ourselves to put together a helpful list of all the excellent TV you should be beaming into your eyeholes this summer.
The A400M was developed for Spain, Belgium, Britain, France, Germany, Luxembourg and Turkey and has been beset by delays and cost overruns which have taken it well beyond the original budget of 20 billion euros ($23 billion).
Apparently, the CIA thinks that we all need a lesson in whether or not Marvel movies are real life, so they've taken it upon themselves to tweet about whether the futuristic technology in Black Panther actually exists.
But they made clear that the administration is moving cautiously, mindful that if such an unprecedented step is taken it could deepen the country's economic and social crisis, in which millions suffer food shortages and soaring inflation.
One thing the Note 28 has that I wish the iPhone X and Pixel 22 XL had is the ability to adjust the amount of blur, both while you're composing the shot and after you've taken it.
But an intrepid handful have taken it upon themselves to condone Trump's suggestion that ethnic minorities can't be counted on to judge impartially—or, failing that, to spin it into something that falls within normal political bounds.
It reeks of satire, but Trump has taken it as legit, and it seems like it actually is: The video was originally uploaded by a guy named trumpeffect who made an equally bizarre anti-Cruz video, too.
An exercise to identify alien immigrants from Muslim-majority Bangladesh has been going on in the northeastern state of Assam for years, but Prime Minister Narendra Modi's Hindu nationalist-led government has taken it up in earnest.
President Trump has largely taken it easy on China during his two-day stop in Beijing, something Barack Obama was criticized for during his first trip to China as president, which took place under surprisingly similar circumstances.
My only concern would be that the magnetic top could slide off in transit but even energetic pushing couldn't dislodge it so, while care is must be taken, it should survive a ride in a back pocket.
Cruz is also aided by several cash-flush super PACs, who have taken it upon themselves  to carry out much of the traditional work of campaigns on his behalf, like knocking on doors and distributing campaign literature.
But one Wisconsin high school student may have taken it a little too far when he showed up to classes Thursday dressed as Darth Vader, causing a parent to freak out and prompting a school-wide evacuation.
Now it's eyeing the rest of the US.To rev up investment banking fees and reclaim market share, Bank of America is chasing smaller deals — and that's taken it to far-flung American locations it had previously ignored.
But Mr. Trump has taken it to a new level, and Democrats have been quick to note that there is little in his background to suggest any basis for empathy for those who live paycheck to paycheck.
Mr. Musk, the entrepreneur behind SpaceX and the electric-car maker Tesla, had taken it upon himself to warn the world that artificial intelligence was "potentially more dangerous than nukes" in television interviews and on social media.
On one level, it was clear whoever it was going to be was going to have to make a series of changes because the conversation had already and the election process had already taken it that way.
"Despite the low levels reported and in full cooperation and collaboration with the FDA, JJCI is initiating this voluntary recall of Lot #22318RB of Johnson's Baby Powder, from which the tested sample was taken," it went on.
"The case is being treated as a very serious one," Marcus Vinícius Braga, Rio de Janeiro's Civil Police Secretary, said on Thursday, adding that intelligence and cybercrime units had taken it on in addition to local police.
In U.S., the impeachment usually takes a long time, now it just begins and it's far from the key stage, so some believe that investors have not taken it seriously, more of them still wait and see.
Google hired Brown to boost its efforts to hire more women and other minorities, so few of whom work at the internet giant that the U.S. Department of Labor has taken it to court over the issue.
But most of the time, when pinged, the researchers use a boat to follow the floating tag's signal in the water, or a car on land — if some person has intercepted it and taken it home unknowingly.
Rihanna is every bit the rude girl she's always warned you she is, and now she's taken it to an extreme level by teasing her Navy with a strategic selfie she was fully aware would cause a frenzy.
Fortunately, the cellular company has taken it upon itself to remind everyone about that in a new fact sheet that curiously forgets to mention its 5G Evolution network at all — almost like it isn't a real 5G network!
In fact this is really just a teaser for what's possible—because Rannou has taken it as a chance to create a series of tutorials that teach you how to use Sonic Pi, a free live coding synth.
A deeper dig into Trump's past shows yet another prosecutor who seems to have taken it easy on the billionaire -- and received a needed political donation in what might be a coincidence, or might be pay-to-play.
Earlier this week, Zimmerman told Florida news outlet WOFL that he recently received the pistol back from the Department of Justice, which he said had taken it after he was acquitted of murder for Martin's death in 2013.
After months of denying there was any Russian meddling in the 2016 U.S. election, President Vladimir Putin said Thursday that "patriotic" hackers could have taken it upon themselves to intervene — though not at the behest of the Kremlin.
"Of course, at this juncture we can talk about estimates, but certainly it's in the ballpark, and that's why I have taken it upon myself to take that number … as the official toll in Puerto Rico," he added.
I still haven't taken it to the swimming pool yet, but I let it track all of my treadmill runs and brisk walks outside, and I love being able to learn more about my exercise as it's happening.
"Of course, at this juncture we can talk about estimates, but certainly it's in the ballpark, and that's why I have taken it upon myself to take that number … as the official toll in Puerto Rico," he added.
At least one candidate has taken it upon herself to try to drive up polling support: Gabbard has met the 130,000-donor threshold but needs at least three more qualifying polls to make it into the September debate.
It's normal for US administrations to pressure their allies to contribute more to European security — President Barack Obama did so — but Trump has taken it a step further by sending letters about about the issue to European capitals.
The late 2018 swoon in U.S. stocks was an early harbinger of recent softness in economic data, so equity prices have already taken it into account, said Jim Paulsen, chief investment strategist at the Leuthold Group in Minneapolis.
"If he thinks there is something interesting under the surface, he won't really stop until he has taken it apart," said Sullivan, who emphasized that she was speaking as a friend and not a representative of Notre Dame.
These are the security services, the oligarchs, state employees, the poor and, just as important, the people who have made their money in dubious ways at home in Russia and have taken it abroad to places like London.

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