It termed this a period of "feast" in bond markets.
|
|
Obama termed the young heir "adorable" in his remarks Saturday.
|
|
By contrast, Michiko is often termed "flawless" in her dedication.
|
|
It should be more accurately termed "the New Zealand model".
|
|
Stewart termed these two groups "level" traders and "movement" traders.
|
|
MLS originally catered to families, lamentably termed the soccer moms.
|
|
"But it is termed 'conducting espionage' when done by China."
|
|
Durant termed himself as ready to go after the practice.
|
|
I moved into what is now termed the aging process.
|
|
It's not the first time Schumer has been termed as such.
|
|
India termed that "unfortunate" and vowed to uphold its national interests.
|
|
This now termed by Israeli security people as "suicide by IDF".
|
|
Some researchers have termed trees as crypto-wetlands or vertical wetlands.
|
|
And we've termed "The Greasy Strangler" maybe the weirdest movie ever.
|
|
" A dealer on Long Island termed the microwave a "miracle worker.
|
|
Another possible problem is what Mutton termed "pro-cyclicality and herding".
|
|
Gates, in an earlier tweet, had termed it an "amazing undertaking".
|
|
For this reason I have always termed him an 'anti-wrestler'.
|
|
She rejected the request and termed Epstein a Level 3 sex offender.
|
|
China has strongly criticized such missions, formally termed Freedom of Navigation Operations.
|
|
" Senior Media Reporter Oliver Darcy termed Bee's comment "a really disgusting remark.
|
|
Ryan termed Obama's actions "efforts to appease the oppressive regime" in Cuba.
|
|
The result, which he eventually termed the "Akins Accelerator," seemed promising enough.
|
|
While dismissively termed the "ethanol mandate," the standard is about much more.
|
|
The college basketball season runs from Halloween, basically, through — it's mis-termed.
|
|
It has been termed 'really good management and leadership under great pressure!
|
|
One type of spear phishing is termed Business Email Compromise or BEC.
|
|
He termed her actions "extremely careless," which essentially amounts to gross negligence.
|
|
That's where companies like CVS Caremark, termed "pharmacy-benefit managers," come in.
|
|
Doctors removed what were termed loose bodies from his left knee Feb.
|
|
" He termed the barrier instead "a system to make infiltration more difficult.
|
|
"First up, we build what's termed a dev 1.0 driver," he said.
|
|
My son came to me with what he termed a moral dilemma.
|
|
" He termed this failure to name the enemy "a dereliction of duty.
|
|
Wildcat miners, termed "garimpeiros" in Portuguese, flooded into the area in their thousands.
|
|
The opposition has termed it the "slave law," and they have a point.
|
|
This comes despite what the business termed a "negative impact" from currency fluctuations.
|
|
The country would become what some have termed Asia's quiet economic success story.
|
|
He blamed the current situation on what he termed an inadequate U.S. response.
|
|
Ransomware + connected cars is termed as jackware and has started to gain attention.
|
|
The first is a hissing noise which, of course, has been termed #HissGate.
|
|
" Citi, in a research note, termed the restructuring plan as setting "optimistic targets.
|
|
" The UK and Canadian officials reportedly termed the body an "international grand committee.
|
|
In the Middle Ages monasteries were what would now be termed social enterprises.
|
|
How do you create and define what you have termed the "Oscar Effect"?
|
|
At the forefront of recent A.I. technology is an approach termed machine learning.
|
|
The combined cycle is now normally termed El Nino/Southern Oscillation, or ENSO.
|
|
Or that you've decided to make what might be termed a novel nomination.
|
|
Kapoor had termed it a "temporary setback" and said remedial steps were underway.
|
|
I termed it as choking, but it wasn't like I was throttling her.
|
|
The new discipline, termed "de-extinction," is as controversial as it is young.
|
|
The PNC last met in 2009 in what was termed an emergency session.
|
|
Chief Executive Gary Kelly, in an interview to CNBC, termed the glitch "unusual".
|
|
She termed the increase in participation "heartening" at a news conference last month.
|
|
Fed officials have termed the slowdown in inflation both a concern and transitory.
|
|
Although CNN termed Rubio's announcement "a remarkable reversal," that is putting it mildly.
|
|
"This was on an ironically termed 'Truth in Lending' statement," Mr. Amerling said.
|
|
An additional offense termed "aggravated abortion murder" could carry the death penalty, too.
|
|
Stringer termed decarbonization a "financial necessity" in a statement sent by a spokeswoman.
|
|
The Republican termed the Trans Pacific Partnership (TPP) "a potential disaster for our country".
|
|
Some have termed it "Alawistan" – after Syria's Alawite minority, to which al-Assad belongs.
|
|
He once termed himself "the king of debt" when discussing his private business empire.
|
|
An autopsy noted trauma to the body and the death was termed a homicide.
|
|
Corus has termed Catalyst's claims misleading and said it is paying a fair price.
|
|
Well, we started off sending audio with copper wires that we termed as analog.
|
|
South Korean President Park Geun-hye termed Sunday's launch an unforgivable act of provocation.
|
|
Although the play was initially termed a pass, it was later ruled a fumble.
|
|
Image:IntelThe new series, termed G-series, is intended as a bridge between the two.
|
|
"Put up or shut up" is how it's termed (which is actually very British).
|
|
He was put on the disabled list Sunday with what was termed triceps tightness.
|
|
These challenges are now being tackled with blood tests, a technique termed "liquid biopsy".
|
|
Democrats quickly pushed back on what they termed "inaccurate Republican leaks" on the deal.
|
|
There's been remarkably little outcry over what the LME termed an "error in reporting".
|
|
" Meyer termed firing Zach Smith, which happened July 23, as a "very tough call.
|
|
Psychedelics were originally termed "psychotomimetics," for their supposed ability to mimic states of psychosis.
|
|
The company termed Hinrichs' departure as a retirement, although he is 53 years old.
|
|
" This process occurs in tandem with what political scientists have termed the "invisible primary.
|
|
French police have been investigating what is officially termed in France a "worrying disappearance".
|
|
And he vocally touted what he termed the "Jimmy Kimmel test" for health care policy.
|
|
However, this is moving away from what we normally consider to be termed a cape.
|
|
Lee termed the sell-off a "midlife crisis" for the market and not a recession.
|
|
Some analysts termed it the first positive news for the company in over a year.
|
|
Medication "non-adherence" is so widespread it has been termed an epidemic by some doctors.
|
|
The US Geological Survey reported a 5.3-magnitude earthquake but later termed it an explosion.
|
|
The killer's manifesto, too, is steeped in 8chan-like irony, a style sometimes termed "shitposting".
|
|
Termed "Black Monday" in Asia, August 24, 2015 showed the increasing interconnectedness of global markets.
|
|
The Buddhist elders, who had termed conversion a "wicked and depraved act", have fallen silent.
|
|
Google has termed it an AR experiment, as you can literally only draw white lines.
|
|
Whether termed "grit", "task-motivation" or "conscientiousness", more psychologists are emphasising the role of persistence.
|
|
After the game, Horvat received treatment for what the team later termed a charley horse.
|
|
History counsels rather less sanguineness toward state-funded art, a category more appropriately termed propaganda.
|
|
Meanwhile, Ariana is being termed a "concept design" that doesn't have a rough delivery date.
|
|
" In a September 3 statement, the European Union termed the arrest "a dangerous political escalation.
|
|
Hanan Ashrawi, a senior official of the Palestine Liberation Organisation (PLO), termed the plan illegal.
|
|
Manager Bud Black termed the early exit precautionary and said Saturday that Arenado felt fine.
|
|
Coach Earl Watson termed it as a "management decision," and implied it wasn't his call.
|
|
While it would appear the FA sacked Allardyce, it has been termed a mutual decision.
|
|
This is termed USB Restricted Mode and it affects all devices that support iOS 11.3.
|
|
The Myanmar Army responded with its customary ferocity toward what it termed a "terrorist" group.
|
|
The race for a vaccine for the novel coronavirus, officially termed COVID-19, is on.
|
|
Individuals would face fines of up to $6,000 for posting what is termed fake news.
|
|
You've got a lot of workers in many, many fields that are termed required workers.
|
|
This was their retreat, their "shock absorber," as they termed it, from the outside world.
|
|
If someone opposed interracial marriages, that person would be termed a racist, Mr. Mooppan said.
|
|
" Soon afterwards, the statement said, 120 Palestinians gathered nearby in what it termed a "riot.
|
|
The problem is that Peña Nieto is termed out (one six year term, no reelection).
|
|
He termed it "a slight concussion" even though specialists say there is no such thing.
|
|
The point at which this by-product starts to accumulate is termed the "lactate threshold".
|
|
Espinal's legislation both fines the companies and offers financial "relief," as it's termed, for the employees.
|
|
And earlier CBS had reported that the suspect was wearing what they termed as fake grenades.
|
|
Instead, they accepted Johnson's preference for what the President termed "graduated pressure" against the North Vietnamese.
|
|
THERE exists a genre of information which might be termed "little-known facts that everyone knows".
|
|
SocGen termed it a "black swan" — a metaphor for surprise events that severely affect the world.
|
|
Every polling outfit has its own quirks, biases and prejudices, which are together termed "house effects".
|
|
Her former opponent Bernie Sanders termed "open borders" a "right-wing proposal" designed to depress wages.
|
|
His cause of death was gangrene; his disease was what he termed die Porzellankrankheit—porcelain sickness.
|
|
Lakefield Partners has increased its exposure to telecom stocks — termed dividend darlings by Hogan — to 17.6.
|
|
Deutsche Bank strategists termed the report "as a bit of an escalation without being too dramatic".
|
|
But that's the only grounds on which the "zero tolerance" policy could be termed a success.
|
|
Bitmain is a miner first and foremost, but also sells what might be termed crypto-shovels.
|
|
They were written to include what Throbbing Gristle termed the 'walls of noise' as break points.
|
|
It is now illegal to contact those termed "outsiders" on social media like Twitter and Facebook.
|
|
Foligno was placed on injured reserve Saturday with what the club termed an "upper-body" injury.
|
|
Prosecutors have claimed the agreement between Blanton and Shkreli, termed a consulting agreement, was a sham.
|
|
The Kremlin termed the conversation as "frank and constructive," according to RT. View the discussion thread.
|
|
The president has been guided by a view of race that may be termed strategic inadvertency.
|
|
A pioneering eight areas will go further still, becoming what he termed Accountable Care Systems (ACSs).
|
|
He termed the latest core inflation number as "well within the range" and "pretty well behaved".
|
|
House Republican chairmen are termed out after serving in the role for three sessions of Congress.
|
|
"I kicked up a fuss about it, and was termed mercenary as a result," Rigg recalled.
|
|
Sunday's vote was set to be what U.S. elections have often been termed: a change election.
|
|
"Creleisure," Oiticica termed the principle of his sensual installation "Eden" at London's Whitechapel Gallery, in 1969.
|
|
But a different type of noise introduced by humans (termed "anthropogenic noise") is causing problems today.
|
|
Coconut oil is a plant oil, but it falls into a special class, termed 'tropical oils.
|
|
The FAA said Monday it planned to require the upgrade it termed "design changes" by April.
|
|
"Moonbeam" Edmund G. Brown, Jr., is termed out, a new governor will be elected in November.
|
|
Since 1990, what might be broadly termed soccer's modern era, there have been eight World Cups.
|
|
In psychology, the spread of emotion from one person to another is aptly termed social contagion.
|
|
A.D.H.D. is termed a disorder, and in severe forms it can certainly disrupt a person's life.
|
|
That set of evening clothes termed a tuxedo is probably the most bombproof uniform in existence.
|
|
Toronto's coach, Nick Nurse, termed these Leonard's "hockey assists," meaning smart passes that lead to assists.
|
|
The rosy scenario that Mr. Brooks paints — his unfortunately termed "giving experiment" — is nearly impossible today.
|
|
The Boston Globe first reported the agreement, which ESPN later termed a deal worth $1.05 million.
|
|
This brazen evisceration of the separation of powers was termed "mutinous" by a former major general.
|
|
It is not that those who are now derisively termed RINOs have left the Republican Party.
|
|
But by and large, combining investment banks would be what one executive termed "a firing squad".
|
|
But by and large, combining investment banks would be what one executive termed "a firing squad".
|
|
Perhaps even more important, however, is the emergence of what might be termed a "Trump Doctrine".
|
|
Do they see any advantages of having what some writers have termed, "a Commander-in-Tweet"?
|
|
Inordinately complicated, Tesla endured what Musk infamously termed "production hell" to get it on the road.
|
|
Abbasi denied the charges and termed the decision illegal, saying he will appeal against the ban.
|
|
The United States and Europe have had other differences, which in their time were termed crises.
|
|
My results can be termed anecdotal, since my research was conducted primarily in my own mouth.
|
|
The attack was termed a "hate crime" in Times stories, to the consternation of several readers.
|
|
The Sputnik report termed the exercises "an unprecedented navy-to-navy contact" between Russia and the Philippines.
|
|
Deutsche Bank strategists termed the Treasury report "as a bit of an escalation without being too dramatic."
|
|
President Trump termed my case as an injustice, one that he was in a position to correct.
|
|
Fairfax Media's chief executive Greg Hywood termed the High Court's decision as "disappointing", in a separate statement.
|
|
" Beyond that, though, the key to Mr. Keiser's success was going after what he termed "retail golfers.
|
|
Appaloosa had termed Allergan's decision as "meaningless series of gestures" and called for a more immediate change.
|
|
The prisoner injured himself in what the medical examiner initially termed a "freakish accident," according to Graham.
|
|
Why it matters: The large-scale sweep, termed "family op," is part of Trump's broad immigration plan.
|
|
Should, what The New York Times has termed a "wanted" alert, be issued to phones at all?
|
|
Though officials have termed Friday's incident an accident, critics contend it follows a trend of police abuse.
|
|
Termed colony collapse disorder, the die-off counts among its causes a parasite aptly named Varroa destructor.
|
|
The foreign ministry last month called for an end to what it termed the "China responsibility theory".
|
|
Previously Italian authorities had allowed loans to be up to 180 days overdue before being termed NPLs.
|
|
The foreign policy establishment, memorably termed "the Blob" by Obama aide Ben Rhodes, is on the march.
|
|
Maduro termed charges by the Organization of American States that Cuba was behind unrest in Chile "stupid".
|
|
Pacific Crest Securities analyst Brad Erickson termed Tesla's communication regarding the misconception between the two cars confusing.
|
|
" Or, as the designer along with the brand's creative director, Babak Radboy, have termed it: "Extremely Normal.
|
|
Instead, they use the topic and stories of incidents to benefit themselves, a phenomenon termed secondary exploitation.
|
|
Some termed themselves "Bogleheads" and spread online his messages of thrift, and investments in low-fee funds.
|
|
Fontana's Cuts, as he termed his meticulously violated canvases, could seem like a big deal in 1966.
|
|
When a postgame questioner termed the team's rapid and precipitous collapse "unfathomable," Manager Mickey Callaway quickly agreed.
|
|
Only a political agreement, he said, could resolve what he termed a financial and an unemployment crisis.
|
|
For the next three decades, lethal violence, termed "The Troubles" plagued Northern Ireland, taking about 3,500 lives.
|
|
" One of the most important aspects of the Saunders aesthetic is something that might be termed "bonelessness.
|
|
This phenomenon is what Nick Epley, Juliana Schroeder, and I have collectively termed the lesser minds problem.
|
|
Together they formed the latest installments in what might be termed Beyoncé 3.0, the reimagining of Mrs.
|
|
More than 1,400 customers defaulted after entering into what the FCA termed "unsustainable" short-term repayment plans.
|
|
Many Cubans were sick of the "Special Period", as the government termed the drastic economic belt-tightening.
|
|
Gopichand was delighted with Sindhu's aggression and termed the manner of her championship win as "very special".
|
|
" His staff members backed up that claim with what his adviser Kellyanne Conway memorably termed "alternative facts.
|
|
The impulse to repudiate or correct also fuels what might be termed the call-and-response memoir.
|
|
Pilots reported that 150 fires were set, and the Air Ministry termed it ''a heavy and successful attack.
|
|
The trouble with Bendtner was that he was given what might be termed too much exposure at Arsenal.
|
|
The increases in hospitalizations nationwide tracked what health officials have termed an epidemic of painkiller and heroin abuse.
|
|
Senator Bernie Sanders, the former Democratic presidential candidate, celebrated what he termed the "collapse" of the Republican effort.
|
|
The decision comes more than two years after the carriers announced their plans, termed a joint business agreement.
|
|
These artists were exponents of what would later be termed, in the West, an art of institutional critique.
|
|
He termed it a 'flextension,' which allows Britain to leave before that date if Parliament passes legislation sooner.
|
|
Thanks to anime the katana has become the weapon of choice for what is colloquially termed the 'neckbeard'.
|
|
" This changed after Microsoft was hit by what Gates, in a 1995 memo, termed the "internet tidal wave.
|
|
If there is an antidote to the slob trend termed "athleisure," surely a Thom Browne suit is it.
|
|
Yet on January 153th a police team killed Mehsud in what they termed an "encounter" with four terrorists.
|
|
The trading volume is termed the "churn rate" and is higher than the actual amount of gas consumed.
|
|
Biden said the region instead seems to be moving toward a one-state solution, which he termed dangerous.
|
|
However, even holders of those bonds face an uncertain future after a company official termed the contract "negotiable".
|
|
The custody judge termed Allen's behavior with Dylan "grossly inappropriate" and awarded Farrow sole immediate custody of her.
|
|
The brothers termed it "the Truman Show delusion," after the 1998 Jim Carrey movie with a similar plot.
|
|
Haroon's lawyer termed the investigation a sting operation carried out by an investigating officer motivated by career advancement.
|
|
Ford released a new teaser video and a silhouette of what was termed "Mach 1" back in January.
|
|
A long-running effort termed "Data 42" aims to mine Novartis research data for paths to new drugs.
|
|
Reporters and Democratic operatives were quick to jump on Trump&aposs mistake, which some termed a Freudian slip.
|
|
The second group, termed "the Disinherited" in the UVA-IASC survey, comprises religiously conservative whites without college degrees.
|
|
Alongside Sessions, Miller formulated what he termed "nation-state populism," and he helped other members of Congress campaign.
|
|
San Francisco's housing crisis, termed a "code red" by California Governor Gavin Newsom, impacts people across the board.
|
|
The windmill—as fans have termed Wilder's all out flurries when he is chasing the finish—never materialized.
|
|
Thousands of black people were forced into what authors have termed 'slavery by another name' until the 1930s.
|
|
Andy Warhol was a pioneer beyond the studio and in the marketplace through what he termed Business Art.
|
|
After she termed the executive order an American issue, criticism erupted even among her own members of Parliament.
|
|
Schiff later termed the reading a "parody" of the call, something he said should have been obvious. Rep.
|
|
Considering that the great majority of immigrants are people of color, these are best termed non-discrimination policies.
|
|
By and large, everyone's brain showed some signs of what the scientists termed "degeneration" of the white matter.
|
|
That's "hate-selling," as the folks at the travel news and research company Skift have memorably termed it.
|
|
Woodside said the HOA is conditional on the execution of a fully termed LNG sales and purchase agreement.
|
|
Susan Collins, Johnny Isakson and Shelley Moore Capito, introduced what they termed a "comprehensive Obamacare replacement plan" in January.
|
|
" He said the city is looking at alternative sites and hopes to resolve what he termed an "unfortunate misunderstanding.
|
|
This extra wear and tear due to the inflammation from a heightened stress response has been termed allostatic load.
|
|
This extra wear and tear due to the inflammation from a heightened stress response has been termed allostatic load.
|
|
Thornton has missed two games, Couture six, and both are termed by coach Peter DeBoer as day-to-day.
|
|
Meanwhile over 1,000 businesses owned by accused Gülenists, (now termed the Fethullahist Terror Organization or FETÖ) have been confiscated.
|
|
There is little use for going with one's gut — or, termed another way, the observation of an experienced hand.
|
|
In a 2011 review, Dan Roden, a experimental therapeutics researcher at Vanderbilt University, termed this the genotype–phenotype dilemma.
|
|
To understand why the AP's supposed exposé is "a mess," as Vox termed it, start with its fundamental premise.
|
|
Under current requirements banks are requested to hold a certain percentage of their balance sheets or short-termed debt.
|
|
The recruitment business (termed "Talent Solutions") accounted for $2 billion of the company's $3 billion in revenues in 2015.
|
|
The works, ordered not chronologically but by what Tate has termed "a series of juxtapositions," feel haphazard and chaotic.
|
|
The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) reported a 5.3 magnitude earthquake in North Korea, but later termed it an explosion.
|
|
In its fifth decade, the North Sea basin is now termed "ultra mature" by Wood Mackenzie, an energy consultancy.
|
|
I'm calling for what University of Chicago professors Luigi Zingales and Guy Rolnik termed a Social Data Portability Act.
|
|
He termed the Fed's new posture one of "wait and see," not necessarily a hard stop on rate increases.
|
|
Mark Warner, D-Virginia, at the hearing termed "very significant," and I guess we're supposed to do the same.
|
|
Among those nine essential amino acids, three are termed "branch-chain" amino acids because of their specific chemical structure.
|
|
He helped them maintain faith in themselves as political actors in a troubled—what he termed a sinful—world.
|
|
He outlined a vision for American foreign policy oriented in opposition to what he termed an 'axis of evil.
|
|
"The movement was dominated by men who were actively hostile to feminism, which they termed 'white feminism,' " Sullivan says.
|
|
In it, he railed against "race-mixing" and also what he termed an "invasion" of Texas by Hispanic immigrants.
|
|
The comment drew derision from Pakistan's foreign minister who termed the statement "irresponsible" and an "invitation for nuclear encounter".
|
|
" Cornyn acknowledged a short-term solution was a possibility, but termed it "not the first, second or third choice.
|
|
The report also said the Syrian army would continue to fight against what it termed terrorist groups across Syria.
|
|
The NHL suspended Washington Capitals center Evgeny Kuznetsov for three games without pay for what it termed inappropriate conduct.
|
|
"This is a conspiracy against you," Trump said of what he termed a "corrupt, criminal" club "colluding" against him.
|
|
The Marine Corps said that the circumstances of the crash, which it had termed a mishap, were under investigation.
|
|
Santander said investigators were probing what caused what he termed an "irregular situation," which took place early Wednesday morning.
|
|
The model perfected in Iraq against ISIS, often termed "by, with and through our partners," is becoming successful elsewhere.
|
|
The affirmative action program, termed the "reservation" system, transformed life for many in the lower caste groups in India.
|
|
Speaking to Marines on Tuesday, Trump proposed creating what he termed a "Space Force" to counter adversaries in space.
|
|
He is currently on what he has termed a "gap year," during which he is traveling around the world.
|
|
Esper termed the offensive "successful," but said that Trump was informed that a further military response could be warranted.
|
|
The former American League MVP was also out Saturday with what manager John Farrell termed a minor knee ailment.
|
|
Earthworks, as they were termed, were an overshoot, functioning as art mainly by way of documentation or dedicated tourism.
|
|
Paul railed against members of both parties, including Republicans for what he termed hypocrisy over concern about deficit spending.
|
|
This region of the genome—termed the MHC region—carries hundreds of genes typically associated with the immune system.
|
|
The minority view — what might be termed "politically incorrect" — would favor more care with language to avoid offending people.
|
|
Our era has become commonly termed the "Anthropocene," an unprecedented epoch in which humans have altered the planet forever.
|
|
At the party's pre-election conference in Dortmund last Sunday Mr Schulz termed this "asymmetric demobilisation" an attack on democracy.
|
|
Termed "designer fashion now," new-wave Thakoon collections will roll out approximately every two weeks, instead of every few months.
|
|
As for the pattern of five-color mosaics in birds' eyes, termed "multihyperuniform," it is, so far, unique in nature.
|
|
But as mentioned above, the Bush administration engaged in surveillance without even FISA approvals -- what has been termed warrantless wiretapping.
|
|
C Frans Nielsen left Friday's game against the New York Islanders with what the team termed an upper-body injury.
|
|
"Our execution led to weak productivity, as the way we termed it, and so we are taking action," Roman said.
|
|
Termed a "weed hangover," the condition supposedly comes with fatigue, lack of appetite, irritability, and an overall sense of grogginess.
|
|
Ricky's manager was urging us to write what he termed a "Spanglish" anthem that everyone in the world could understand.
|
|
When the ground was finally finished, some players loved it: Michael Boxall, a New Zealand defender, termed it "top-notch".
|
|
While cleared of wrongdoing, Burke was nevertheless tied to what was termed an "evil miracle," and he went into hiding.
|
|
In the first minute of his response to the killing spree, Donald Trump termed it "an act of pure evil".
|
|
The French military and colonial government, too, rapidly descended into what longtime French President François Mitterrand termed the cercle infernale.
|
|
"This could be termed as some sort of a relief rally," said Arun Kejriwal, founder of advisory firm Kejriwal Research.
|
|
Barak has said he returned to politics ahead of the parliamentary election to end what he termed Netanyahu's "corrupt leadership".
|
|
"Formation" may have been wildly popular with the BeyHive, but critics blasted Beyonce for what they termed an antipolice message.
|
|
One potential challenge is the trade tension between China and the United States, which Poloz termed a two-sided risk.
|
|
Browsing the Road Warrior Voices blog, Gulliver came across a post on what is termed the "world's first duffel suitcase".
|
|
Xi also warned about the need for young people to be morally upstanding and avoid what he termed "mistaken thoughts".
|
|
Indeed, such a pairing, often termed "cognitive collaboration" or "cognitive augmentation," is emerging in several areas, most notably freestyle chess.
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The official incidence of thyroid cancer—in particular, a subtype termed papillary thyroid cancer—began to soar across the nation.
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Following a loss head coach Jamie Dixon termed devastating, the Panthers entered their final home game against No. 15 Duke.
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This was one of the things about Henry that fascinated scientists: His amnesia often appeared, as they termed it, pure.
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Some termed themselves "Bogleheads" in his honor and spread online his messages of thrift and investments in low-fee funds.
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Looking at "Painting" helps me think about the art world's shifting estimation of the "international Catalan," as Miró termed himself.
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He argued that when people make moral decisions, they are influenced by emotion, or what might also be termed intuition.
|
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I was so hurt when those few trans people termed me a lucky bastard, but that's exactly what I am.
|
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He was kept overnight, and doctors determined that he had what the team termed a complex migraine condition, causing lethargy.
|
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One-off emergency short-termed budget responses for the NIH is not what the nation requires or expects from Congress.
|
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In a statement, Flamengo termed the test result "weak positive or inconclusive" and said it was performing a second test.
|
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Schools, museums, Disney parks, and even Broadway shows are shut down amidst the novel coronavirus outbreak, officially termed COVID-19.
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A hyper focus on what is now being termed the "opioid crisis," to the exclusion of other commonly misused drugs.
|
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He and his "witchy" wife, as he lovingly termed her, tuned in to Bali, and received a portent of sorts.
|
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We're all waiting, aren't we, for the men caught up in the movement termed #MeToo to face some actual consequence.
|
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Mr. Shear moved to Spencertown in 1984 in what the two men termed "an experiment," which became a lasting marriage.
|
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Jim Burson, a former college coach, was observing various games, performing what he termed "quality control" as a Nike consultant.
|
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The Taliban also rejected the result announced on Tuesday and termed Ghani's re-election to be against the peace process.
|
|
While the WHO termed the outbreak "an emergency in China," it refrained from declaring it an epidemic of international concern.
|
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Some maternity care costs, termed "prenatal services," are routinely covered by insurers, even if the woman is an adult dependent.
|
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S. President Harry Truman termed it a "police action," an undeclared military action under the auspices of the United Nations.
|
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" Western allies have called on Mr. Sisi to reject the proposed regulation of foreign aid, which Senator McCain termed "draconian.
|
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Advocates have termed these targeted policy proposals "science-based commitments and policies," an unglamorous name for an otherwise exciting development.
|
|
It's a contemporary of "collateral damage," another term emblematic of what had not yet been termed the military-industrial complex.
|
|
He then came within two points of a career high on Sunday despite playing at what he termed 2003 percent.
|
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The remaining "open" tonnage, as it's termed on the LME, has now fallen to 203,350 tonnes, the lowest since December 2008.
|
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At least five deaths have already been attributed to what the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) has termed a "landmark" disaster.
|
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Poland has termed the new US troop presence "Fort Trump," though it's not clear whether that will be its official name.
|
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But Aiban said Saudi Arabia would not accept what he termed as foreign interference in its domestic affairs and judicial system.
|
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Puljujarvi has played just two of the last six games while dealing with what coach Todd McLellan termed a minor injury.
|
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Now catching the far leg with what is sometimes termed the 'twister hook' is a large part of many grapplers' games.
|
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Members of the party have termed the plans "junk insurance" because companies can refuse to cover people with pre-existing conditions.
|
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That translates into looking for bonds that are termed "senior," which allow holders first dibs on assets if things go south.
|
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Members of the party have termed the plans "junk insurance" because companies can refuse to cover people with pre-existing conditions.
|
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Because the US plan was termed an "executive agreement," the White House says Obama did not require Senate approval for ratification.
|
|
GOP favorites to head the Fed have focused on what are termed "hard-money" economists, such as Stanford Economist John Taylor.
|
|
He was replaced to start the sixth inning despite making just 62 pitches because of what the team termed shoulder tightness.
|
|
Stepping into their lefts with their full bodyweight, Driscoll and Wilde's straight leads would be termed 'pure punches' by Jack Dempsey.
|
|
But this kind of behaviour is better termed debauchery -- extreme indulgence in bodily pleasures and especially sexual pleasures -- rather than hedonism.
|
|
The move has already been decried by over two dozen governors, making up what has been termed the U.S. Climate Alliance.
|
|
That is because of what he termed "inappropriate" public criticism of his ban by Defense Secretary Ashton B. Carter and Gen.
|
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The specific requirements of line processing—the "disassembly line," Berkowitz termed it—means there isn't much room for workers to maneuver.
|
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SS Jhonny Peralta (left thumb) took grounders on Sunday as well as what were termed "controlled swings" by manager Mike Matheny.
|
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" Infertile from an adolescent bout of mumps, he was often impotent except with prostitutes, whom, for their detachment, he termed "goddesses.
|
|
In addition, Sandoval has what could be termed professional commitment issues: the habit of bailing out of one job for another.
|
|
Indeed, it would no doubt be termed "socialist" by the framers of conservative messaging, who regard any redistributionist project as such.
|
|
When she "had her accident," which is how they termed it at the hospital, Peggy was the one to find her.
|
|
We received teary phone calls, resulting in what we've termed the "$700 swoop-in": round-trip emergency flights, hotel and meals.
|
|
"Climate change people," as 2012 presidential debate moderator Candy Crowley famously termed them, don't expect much from high-level US elections.
|
|
"That's why we're being termed a shithole," Andrew Mataso, 55, a business executive, said on a busy street in Nairobi, Kenya.
|
|
But it's also an example of what might be termed "positive" vampirism, drawing sustenance from the vital juices of another movie.
|
|
LGBTQ candidates have made significant strides in recent years following what many observers have termed the "rainbow wave" in U.S. politics.
|
|
Israel's Supreme Court has upheld the demolition policy, which Israeli officials have termed both punitive and a deterrence to potential attackers.
|
|
The next day, prosecutors said, Linda Mangano received her first paycheck for what they termed a "sham" job with Mr. Singh.
|
|
"So these chemicals, which are more correctly termed 'synthetic cannabinoids,' they're designed to stimulate cannabinoid receptors in the brain," Baumann explained.
|
|
This phenomenon, termed an "intensity gap," would make sense if reproductive rights weren't constantly being chipped away at the state level.
|
|
Republicans are now stuck with what he termed the "Pottery Barn theory" of health care: You break it, you buy it.
|
|
In the most recent Quinnipiac University national survey, for instance, 22020% of college-educated white voters termed the economy excellent or good.
|
|
Instead, they appeared to inhibit this impulse and wait for an even bigger reward in the future, an ability termed delayed gratification.
|
|
On Wednesday, Canadian negotiators unveiled what they termed "creative ideas" to address U.S. demands for a sunset clause and higher auto content.
|
|
Dan Kriek, Agri SA president, said his organisation would challenge the recommendation, which it termed "reckless and populist", through its legal team.
|
|
Throughout 2018 foreign politicians and business leaders visiting Beijing were struck by an unexpected phenomenon which might be termed "Liberals for Trump".
|
|
Dan Kriek, Agri SA president, said his organization would challenge the recommendation, which it termed "reckless and populist", through its legal team.
|
|
Mason County Sheriff George Johnson commented that he believed the sightings were due to an unusually large heron he termed a "shitepoke".
|
|
These virtues of government, as Oakeshott would have termed them, can also be described as the virtues of pragmatism, or indeed statecraft.
|
|
The other [reason I used the word] is that it's identifying these radical feminists exactly as they don't want to be termed.
|
|
Britain used to subscribe to a model of industrial relations which Otto Kahn-Freund, an Oxford legal theorist, termed "collective laissez-faire".
|
|
The luxury minimalism that defines the inspired workspace is an extension of a broader aesthetic movement that Kyle Chayka has termed Airspace.
|
|
EU tax law protects companies against paying tax in a country where they do not have what is termed a "permanent establishment".
|
|
Former Argentine government official caught hiding millions Fernández de Kirchner, a leftist, termed out and left the presidency in December last year.
|
|
Those to whom information was leaked, termed "bystanders," were broken down by the FBI into peers, family members, authority figures and strangers.
|
|
Eventually, over five years, she began to probe what she termed the "deep story" that animates the populist movement on the right.
|
|
Yet he warned against any moves towards tighter integration, especially by the EU's founding members (which he colourfully termed the "Carolingian EU").
|
|
Of what used to be termed gutter journalism, or, indeed, of what goes on down at gutter level, we see no trace.
|
|
Yohji Yamamoto made gorgeous drop-crotch athletic pantaloons, and Givenchy offered what can only be termed a sheer inmate-jersey shrug ($1,505).
|
|
Lasseter, a co-founder of Pixar, had been on a six-month leave of absence following what's been termed "missteps" in behavior.
|
|
City social media termed the situation a "#poppynightmare," and streets leading to Walker Canyon had to be temporarily closed to non-residents.
|
|
Notre Dame is what the historian Pierre Nora termed "a lieu de mémoire," a site or emblem of shared history and identity.
|
|
That's a whole new buying impetus coming in from what LME broker Marex Spectron termed in Friday's morning report the "onshore casino".
|
|
Evidence suggests that the threat that the wealthy pose to what Rawls termed the "fair value of political liberty" has become extraordinary.
|
|
"It's what I have termed negative partisanship," Alan Abramowitz, a political science professor at Emory University in Atlanta, wrote in an email.
|
|
Pakistan civilian and military chiefs rejected what they termed "incomprehensible" U.S. comments and summoned U.S. Ambassador David Hale to explain Trump's tweet.
|
|
The exhibition then was a major showing of, what the French art critic Nicolas Bourriaud termed in the 90s as relational aesthetics.
|
|
GlobalData Retail Managing Director Neil Saunders termed the company's quarterly performance as "impressive," given the maturity of TJX's Marmaxx and Marshalls concepts.
|
|
Trout, the two-time American League MVP, left the game after the second inning with what the team termed right calf tightness.
|
|
Benny Leonard was one of the next professional boxers to popularize the shift and his was what is termed a 'drop shift'.
|
|
Clark and her team also curated a list of what they termed the 10 most adventurous tour packages to book in 2020.
|
|
Also missing was the defensive coordinator, Kacy Rodgers, who is battling an unspecified health issue that Bowles termed "serious" earlier last week.
|
|
Once again, he termed that "spying," even though Mr. Wray, his own F.B.I. director, has rejected that term to describe investigatory activity.
|
|
Millions would die, and millions more would be faced with displacement and starvation as we enter what scientists have termed nuclear winter.
|
|
Anti-Chinese violence, in other words, was a form of political action or, more specifically, what could be termed 'violent racial politics.
|
|
Anton Bogdanov, Christiansen's lawyer, said he planned to appeal Wednesday's verdict, which he termed illegal and feared would set a dangerous precedent.
|
|
He claimed he was voted into office with significant support from what he termed the "kalar," a common pejorative for the Rohingya.
|
|
Except Andy Meehan, the star of that Saturday afternoon's generously termed "rally," was not necessarily looking to stick it to The Man.
|
|
What Thomas Barnett termed the "non-integrated gap" in his 2004 book, "The Pentagon's New Map," remains a concern after ISIS. Gen.
|
|
She says she was grateful for the opportunity to see what she termed Puerto Rico's "urban art" as well as international artists.
|
|
Her status makes her one of the few women in the N.B.A. with a prominent job in what is termed basketball operations.
|
|
In 2007, for instance, he began what was termed an "Alevi opening," a yearlong effort to discuss the improvement of Alevi rights.
|
|
NARL earns a higher profit on oil refined in excess of 90,000 bpd, termed "merchant barrels," BP says in its arbitration filing.
|
|
The Japanese standout departed last Wednesday's start against Kansas City after four innings due to what the team termed a blister issue.
|
|
Clinton first called the decision a matter of convenience and then termed it a mistake, even if doing so wasn't expressly forbidden.
|
|
The legislation, termed the Opioid Crisis Accountability Act, also limits the quantity of opioids that wholesalers can distribute in a single community.
|
|
" Lear alleged the facility had been built with the assistance of aliens themselves, which Lear described as tall specimens he termed "Greys.
|
|
Alexei Zabotkin said inflation should be "stabilising below our target" before the bank switches to what he termed as a "soft" policy.
|
|
Both players skipped the opening match of the season on August 11th following what a club spokesperson euphemistically termed "further security incidents".
|
|
Looney was injured in Game 2 with what the team termed a non-displaced first costal cartilage fracture on his right side.
|
|
Dozens of protesters did gather on Sunday afternoon to protest the Election Commission's handling of the vote and what they termed cheating.
|
|
" Missouri told the clinic in May that it wanted to interview several physicians over concerns about what the state termed "deficient practices.
|
|
Looney was injured in Game 230 with what the team termed a non-displaced first costal cartilage fracture on his right side.
|
|
We may have termed our age the "Anthropocene," but human history has long been a product of man's negotiation with his environment.
|
|
Meanwhile, Monsanto termed Bayer's $64 billion bid inadequate, amid speculation the U.S. seed giant will hold out for a $130 per share offer.
|
|
Although officials from the relief agency termed the bombing a "war crime," the Pentagon determined that no military personnel would face criminal charges.
|
|
In this way, Long Shot doesn't just feel like a "gender-flipped" Pretty Woman, as some have termed it, but something else entirely.
|
|
The posts were made immediately before and after state-led violence displaced 700,000 Rohingya Muslims in 2017 — what the UN termed a genocide.
|
|
It brought together 300 works that were grouped around three themes: abstraction, Neo-Concretism and what the artist termed the "abandonment" of art.
|
|
However, the board is proposing a textbook with a photo of what one news report termed an "Aztec Dancer Look" on the cover.
|
|
Sixteen percent failed to disclose what she termed a "big freebie" (a gift from a brand with a value of thousands of dollars).
|
|
The "Shale Revolution," as the turn to fracking and horizontal drilling in recent years has been termed, was something of a historical fluke.
|
|
His ire appears to be at what he termed the slow pace of progress in the trade talks and Chinese attempts to "renegotiate".
|
|
In February, it termed stents as "essential" devices, noting cases of heart disease were rising and the stent pricing was "restrictive and exorbitant".
|
|
One of Trump's key campaign promises in the 2016 election victory was to end the war on what he termed "beautiful, clean" coal.
|
|
Mrs May's deal used to be termed a "hard" Brexit, as it would take Britain out of the single market and customs union.
|
|
Magomedsharipov performed what is termed a "windshield wiper," raising his right foot behind him and swiveling it across to cup Moraes's right hip.
|
|
He also confirmed that Kevin Hart is part of what he termed "the Jumanji Breakfast Club," a casting that's been rumored for weeks.
|
|
"A stab the back to every conservative in this country," is how the radio host Mark Levin termed the President's endorsement of Strange.
|
|
The old "bull guard" as it is termed in Lethwei: forearms high and chin down, top of the head projected toward the opponent.
|
|
Money in the form of new revenue sources, creative financing techniques, private equity participation, infrastructure banks, supportive public grants, and favorably-termed loans.
|
|
ANZ Banking Group said in a research note last month that what it termed the "effective" stockpile is closer to 100 million tonnes.
|
|
Lee once termed him "the staff in my right hand," and by the end of the war made Longstreet his second-in-command.
|
|
In doing so he faces what one commentator has termed "the mother of all battles" with organizations that have stymied change for decades.
|
|
Several days later, India said it had carried out "surgical strikes" on militant bases across the border, a claim Pakistan termed "an illusion".
|
|
This small reactor was termed "walk-away safe" because when the liquid sodium coolant got too hot, it expanded and shut itself down.
|
|
But Dar, an advocate of a strong rupee, was furious and ordered an inquiry into what he termed a "mind-boggling" rupee tumble.
|
|
Students of what Hamilton termed the "science of politics," they believed a set of checks and balances would lead to a natural equilibrium.
|
|
In the congressional hearing, Haqqani termed the Obama administration's decision to engage in nuclear, helicopter, and missile deals with Pakistan as conflict-provoking.
|
|
Importantly, research on what is termed "enacted extraversion" indicates that introverts tend to overestimate the negative emotions they will experience when acting extraverted.
|
|
Mr. Obama's "politics-free security approaches," as Mr. Hokayem termed them, have left some hoping for a stronger hand from Washington come January.
|
|
Though Islanders coach Doug Weight termed the injury "lower body," Tavares was clutching the back of his left leg in the hamstring area.
|
|
The sources termed the bid a "Hail Mary" from CEO David Farr as he "struggles" at Emerson to move more firmly into automation.
|
|
Psy-Group also conducted "off-line" operations, as the company sometimes termed clandestine on-the-ground activities, according to a former company employee.
|
|
In the world of Kanye, such tweets may later be termed by the artist as "art speech" or framed as something else entirely.
|
|
Like other aspects of his quicksilver character, his politics were ambiguous: leftist in general but what might be termed pop-aristocratic in effect.
|
|
What would later be termed the "scientific revolution" was marked by a desire to categorize, label, and rank everything from plants to minerals.
|
|
Sander favored large format cameras that could replicate what he termed the "delicacy of the delineation" in early daguerreotypes, over newer, compact technologies.
|
|
It has charged Cuba with responsibility for health problems affecting some two dozen diplomats or their family members, which it has termed attacks.
|
|
The owners and players mistrusted each other so much that many of the "negotiations"—perhaps better termed "grandstanding"—were conducted through the media.
|
|
During that conflict, termed Operation Protective Edge, the Iron Dome knocked 28500 rockets out of the sky — achieving a 6900 percent success rate.
|
|
After that game, which Ryan termed "as painful of a loss as I can remember," he admitted to committing several game-management errors.
|
|
Throughout the 75-minute work, Ms. Evans stages what she has termed "mini events"; they create the work's choreographic structure, which changes nightly.
|
|
The researchers termed another strategy exploratory: Ants still moved slowly, but they took winding paths moving away from and back to a trail.
|
|
So when I hit age 29.73, after which point egg quantity and quality diminish and pregnancy is termed "geriatric" — I didn't think twice.
|
|
Audubon and other groups are weighing in as well with detailed comments on what is termed the "scoping" of the environmental impact study.
|
|
Kafka had a reflexive instinct for what Philip Larkin termed the "importance of elsewhere": Remoteness and otherness were for him conditions of desirability.
|
|
" There's a welcome, restrained elegance to these gauzy interludes starring the man the online fandom has already semi-affectionately termed "Old Man Rick.
|
|
The UK is currently facing what Prime Minister Boris Johnson termed the "highly likely" prospect of the coronavirus crisis deepening in upcoming weeks.
|
|
The war locally termed the "Resistance War Against America" also informs the regretful art of the Vietnamese collective known as the Propeller Group.
|
|
When drone operators aim for specific individuals in what Barack Obama termed "targeted killing," the intended target is rarely killed the first time.
|
|
As for his oddly-proposed cyber-defense agreement with Putin, America's most bitter cyber-enemy, it can only be termed an incomprehensible corollary.
|
|
" Feminism endures when it embraces consciousness both within and without, becoming a cooperative struggle for justice across categories, what Kimberlé Crenshaw termed "intersectionality.
|
|
While switching between "alters," as they&aposre termed, does occur, it can be so subtle that it might be imperceptible to a stranger.
|
|
Barr initiated the review in order to determine whether surveillance on the Trump campaign — which he termed "spying" in April — was adequately predicated.
|
|
So says NHL deputy commissioner Bill Daly, who termed it "doubtful" that the NHL board of governors would vote on the matter earlier.
|
|
A Republican National Committee spokesman emailed reporters on Monday afternoon to slam what he termed "a ridiculous smear" against Kavanaugh by the Times.
|
|
Manley said his members were increasingly concerned that Trudeau's team might be relying on Congress, which he termed "a very high risk strategy".
|
|
Last month, Hall of Famer Oscar De La Hoya also termed the Mayweather-McGregor contest a "farce" that should not be allowed to happen.
|
|
It is one of four conurbations - along with Beijing, Shanghai and Chongqing - termed a municipality, giving it the same high status as a province.
|
|
" Bogdan said the military plans to increase production lots significantly as part of what he termed the "largest ramp up in the program's history.
|
|
The current eruption (termed "mild" by the folks at the INGV's Etna Observatory) first started with loud explosions and incandescent blocks on January 20.
|
|
Kinzinger also shared concerns about what he termed "name-calling" and the effects those remarks can have on morale in Congress during the interview.
|
|
"BREXIT-plus-plus-plus" was how Donald Trump—who also called himself "Mr Brexit"—termed his pitch to voters during his successful presidential campaign.
|
|
Chief Executive Officer Tom Greco termed the quarter's performance "not acceptable," although he added that the necessary changes to improve performance were being implemented.
|
|
If drought is "the new normal", as Ms De Lille has termed it, then asking people to conserve water will only go so far.
|
|
As Johnny was coming of age in the South Side of the Chicago—then termed the Black Belt—he struggled to find his identity.
|
|
Unlike Bonds and Clemens, Sosa is not what Bill James termed an inner-circle Hall of Famer, one of the best of the best.
|
|
The vaccine is termed self-amplifying because, along with code for the protein, further code is injected that will amplify the amount of RNA.
|
|
" When months turn into years, the family and friends of missing people are left living in limbo, experiencing what is termed as "ambiguous loss.
|
|
As such, much of what is called Street Art today should, in my opinion, simply be termed neo-Muralism (or even Creative City Art).
|
|
" Texas Governor Greg Abbott put out a $20,000 reward for info leading to the arrest of those responsible for what he termed a "murder.
|
|
When Ted Cruz launched his attack on what he derisively termed "New York values," Trump hit back in an unexpectedly moving and thoughtful way.
|
|
Still, there are numerous companies and, what it's termed in the community as "placenta arts specialists," across the country that offer to encapsulate placentas.
|
|
The former Oklahoma attorney general made a name for himself by fighting what he termed the "activist agenda" of former President Barack Obama's EPA.
|
|
But it allowed them to use what the law termed "nationally recognized" assessments, "such as ACT or SAT exams," for the high school tests.
|
|
These companies would develop into what the tech guru Jeff Jarvis termed "radically public companies," which operate more like public utilities than like businesses.
|
|
Cases of severe lung illness from vaping, termed EVALI, have soared to over 2,000, with 39 deaths, the Centers for Disease Control announced Thursday.
|
|
Lebanon's Supreme Islamic Shi'ite Council called the execution of cleric Nimr al-Nimr a "grave mistake", and the Hezbollah group termed it an assassination.
|
|
The hits to the groin — termed "unnatural acts" by the league — are a point of emphasis after several situations involving Green during the postseason.
|
|
"All too often, we can't have an open and honest discussion about the realities," he said after what he termed a "disturbance" had finished.
|
|
" Fact Check: Only a very few American workers are subject to estate taxes, and those subject to the tax are usually not termed "workers.
|
|
Then Dallas Fed President Richard Fisher at the November meeting termed close relationships between Fed officials and market participants as "akin to insider trading".
|
|
It included a failed attempt by the police to create what was termed a "fruit machine," which was intended to identify subjects' sexual orientation.
|
|
In 1905, the physiologist Ernest Starling presented a new theory: chemical messengers, which he termed "hormones," are crucial actors in the body's self-regulation.
|
|
So, if Russia is just a "competitor," as he termed it, why does the Atlantic Alliance need to spend another trillion dollars on defense?
|
|
Specialists at the United States National Arboretum were brought in by the White House to assess the Magnolia grandiflora, as it is specifically termed.
|
|
Such fees, which average around $11 a month and can swallow most of the card's initial value, have been termed predatory by consumer watchdogs.
|
|
These hypercities are underdeveloped and overcrowded, contributing to what Mike Davis termed a "planet of slums" in his 2006 book of the same name.
|
|
It plans to securitize part of the backlog of unpaid bills to improve liquidity and recover money owed by what it termed strategic defaulters.
|
|
Clinton was secretary of state in President Obama's first term, gave the Russian intelligence services what one diplomat termed a road map of Mrs.
|
|
The episode intermittently crosscuts with the soft-focus vision of a distant tomorrow inhabited by Old Man Rick, as the fandom has termed him.
|
|
They said it was an egregious attempt to politicize the armed forces, while Democratic lawmakers termed it petty vindictiveness against a dead war hero.
|
|
"Many countries have something that can be reasonably termed a deep state," Michael Koplow, a Turkey expert at the Israel Policy Forum, tells me.
|
|
His more significant legacy is his part in establishing London as a hub for what he termed geopolitical work and others call reputation laundering.
|
|
Elisabeth Bik, a scientific integrity consultant with an active Twitter presence, detailed what she termed "serious problems" with the paper in a blog post.
|
|
He said Nissan had bolstered sales in recent years, pursuing what he termed unrealistic goals, by leaning on profit-sapping incentives and fleet sales.
|
|
The researchers found statistically significant increases in gun deaths beginning in 2009, with what they termed an epidemic among 20163- to 14-year-olds.
|
|
Late last year, the spike in air pollution levels forced authorities, who termed the crisis as a public health emergency, to shut schools twice.
|
|
Late last year, the spike in air pollution levels forced authorities, who termed the crisis as a public health emergency, to shut schools twice.
|
|
New governors will be elected in Colorado, Kansas, Michigan, Minnesota, New Mexico, South Dakota and Wyoming, all states where the incumbents are termed out.
|
|
Ore mined from Lynas' Mount Weld in Western Australia will be transported for early processing, termed cracking and leaching to the planned Kalgoorlie plant.
|
|
In an email to the university's staff after Tuesday's vote, he termed the no-confidence resolution "unfortunate" but said he respected the faculty's views.
|
|
In 1580, a wine book by Johannes Rasch first recorded this ancient grape variety as Blauer Wildbacher and the resulting wine was termed Schilcher.
|
|
Petersburg as the most at-risk city in the U.S., with potential losses of $175 billion from what it termed a 100-year storm.
|
|
Societe Generale analyst Michael Wittner termed the deal a "big surprise", and said the agreement would be added to the bullish side of the ledger.
|
|
But Mr. Golijov tempers the gloom, using a bright key to illuminate the dark text and achieve what he termed a "sad but luminous" sound.
|
|
A deadline set by the European Commission for Italy to revise its budget to deal with what are termed excessive deficits passed without Italy complying.
|
|
The Russian destroyer Admiral Tributs and the sea tanker Boris Butomato, arrived in Manila on Tuesday for what the Philippine Navy termed a goodwill visit.
|
|
The total DNA complement of the microbiota is termed the microbiome, and it's what we study to learn about the inner workings of the microbiota.
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The prince has stressed that much of the transformation can be achieved through improvements in government efficiency and restructuring (termed "qawam" in the vision document).
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After engineering what he later termed "an extremely unwise merger" with the Boston investment counseling firm Thorndike, Doran, Paine & Lewis, he was fired in 1974.
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What the company has previously termed a "test tunnel" in the southern suburb of Hawthorne, between downtown LA and Torrance, demonstrates the company's "Loop" system.
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Churchill occasionally had dark moods which he termed "Black Dog", fuelling an entire subsection of Churchill speculation about whether his melancholy was something more serious.
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It did make the disclosure about the audits, which it termed an "examination," in the filings it made ahead of its recent initial public offering.
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Briefing, which as Lessing termed it, was an "inner space fiction," was more about madness and alienation than about a critique of modern social structures.
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In "The Theory of the Leisure Class", published in 1899, Thorstein Veblen, a Norwegian-American economist, explored the nature of what he termed "conspicuous consumption".
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Mr Putin has mockingly termed Patriarch Bartholomew of Constantinople the "Turkish Patriarch" and suggested that his grant of independence to Ukraine was motivated by money.
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Manson was virulently racist, and believed that a race war was coming, which he termed "Helter Skelter" (from the Beatles song of the same name).
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Central bankers could be more confident in the stimulative effect of what Milton Friedman termed "helicopter money": distributions to the public of newly minted dosh.
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But at a special parliamentary committee hearing on Tuesday, both the right-leaning Conservatives and left-of-center New Democrats termed Ottawa's response as inadequate.
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The committee's report this week on the government's draft bill on investigatory powers—termed the "Snoopers' Charter" by critics—adopted a tone of blistering disdain.
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Better termed a "Consumer Tax", the BAT neither simplifies America's byzantine and outdated tax code nor does it reduce the tax burden on our citizens.
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Crude traders may be under-estimating the president's determination to end what he has termed a "terrible" deal and ratchet up the pressure on Iran.
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Sharman also said executive power has generally increased over the last several decades, apart from a handful of what he termed "retreats" of presidential authority.
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He hammered the FBI's recent recommendation against prosecuting Hillary Clinton for what it termed "extremely careless" handling of classified information over a private email server.
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Hours after Trump's spokeswoman Sarah Sanders termed Hill's Twitter comments "a fireable offense," Hill was back on the air at ESPN, hosting the 6 p.m.
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When we first meet the Jenningses, Philip is experiencing what can only really be termed a crisis of faith, while Elizabeth is the true believer.
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Eventually termed the Maslach Inventory, the scale assessed the risk of burnout by testing subjects along three basic dimensions: emotional exhaustion, depersonalization and personal accomplishment.
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According to your mood, it might be termed the Jackass Theory of History, the Howling Mediocrity Account, the Colossal Bungler Hypothesis or the Blockhead Conjecture.
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Trump on Monday termed the caravan bound for the United States a national emergency as he sought to boost his party's chances in the Nov.
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Much of this would be termed "thematic content" in today's movie industry, but in the pre-code era, no one cohesive system of classification existed.
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In Sumo: The Art of Six Second Fighting I name checked Kotoshogiku as the perfect example of what sumo pundit David Benjamin termed 'a bulldozer'.
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The look that Hungry had termed "distorted drag" is outside any number of binaries: gender, culture and human as opposed to machine, animal or alien.
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That's termed the "entourage effect," and Lord Jones, for one, has sought to compensate for it by using CBD rendered from the entire hemp plant.
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Most importantly, she's found a way to blend her soulful vocals, intimate songwriting and adolescent folk leanings into music she's often termed "psycho-acoustic soul".
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But on Thursday, other advocates praised the action in Albany, saying lawmakers and Governor Cuomo were ending what they termed a form of child abuse.
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Naturally, it was Miuccia Prada who articulated the new reality best when she evoked a need for simplicity and what she termed "essentiality" in design.
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Both Klobuchar and Comey graduated in the class of 1985, termed "the happy class" by professors for their love of social events and throwing parties.
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And while certainly tragic, wouldn't 10 deaths in a 19th-century mine more properly be termed an accident — one that's not particularly unexpected or urgent?
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"I cannot think of an actress less likely to be termed 'my little bird' than me," she told the producer, Thelma Holt, but Holt prevailed.
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Cunning users termed him Gaysper, and as the image went viral, he transformed from intended insult to a stance against hatred via mockery and humor.
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" A report on transphobia by the influential queer newspaper Pink News later termed these hats, with their focus on women's biological experience, "exclusionary pussy hats.
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This turn towards economic "neoliberalism," as leftists termed it, was not just a matter of economic policy, but rather a comprehensive ideological and philosophical project.
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Then there is Syndergaard, whom Warthen termed a "man giant" on Wednesday and who has announced he wants to throw harder than ever in 2017.
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San Francisco (CNN Business)The CEO of the world's biggest cannabis company is on what might be termed an "everyone calm down" tour this week.
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The New Brunswick Presbytery, responsible for ousting William, publicly apologized and, as a gesture of recompense for what it termed "ecclesiastical lynching," retired the mortgage.
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Finally, in her early 70s, she had a camera — a tool, she called it — to practice what years earlier she had termed "cinécriture" (cinematic writing).
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" The university was a casualty of Prime Minister Viktor Orbán's turn toward authoritarianism, his development of a quietly repressive system that I've termed "soft fascism.
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Martin was about to deliver an outline of what, with characteristic wit, he termed a "killer" climax, when once again the stage went dark and blank.
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MACCALLUM: Yes, she was talking about President Trump also earlier on MSNBC and calling him an authoritarian hyper-capitalist, is the way that she termed him.
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"A 4673 percent headline beat on self termed 'Core EPS', strangely includes one-time items, which when removed leave earnings in line with expectations," he said.
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To get around this definitional constraint, researchers have separated the behavioral criteria required for episodic memory from the conscious component and termed this "episodic-like" memory.
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NATO ally Turkey termed the U.S. recognition unacceptable and said it would take action against it, including at the United Nations, Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said.
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Pound's militant opposition to capitalism — which he termed usury — is the centerpiece of CasaPound's political vision, and its first proposal was to disconnect homeownership from banking.
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" Physical requirement such as pushups and pullups were "not the point," Mattis reportedly said, directing his comments to the nature of what he termed "intimate killing.
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Hun Sen has termed the threat by the EU a "psychological warfare" against his government, adding that the withdrawal of the EBA would not affect Cambodia.
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Probably the biggest was seeing winning pitcher Jordan Zimmermann (227-2) leave with two out in the sixth with what was termed a right groin strain.
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And bank distribution deals, termed bancassurance, are emerging as a popular means to sell insurance products in Asia, complementing the more commonly used agency channel route.
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The club termed Iguodala as questionable for Game 6 after it lost for the second consecutive game Thursday with Iguodala sidelined due to a leg contusion.
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The report, seen by Reuters, will be the basis for a Commission discussion on Wednesday of priority EU infrastructure plans termed Projects of Common Interest (PCI).
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In January of last year, development of the new submarines have passed what&aposs termed "Milestone B," clearing the way beyond early development toward ultimate production.
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