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"ticked off" Definitions
  1. annoyed or angry
"ticked off" Synonyms
checked marked ticked crossed checked off marked off crossed out indicated signed lined stroked denoted dotted selected chosen chose annoyed irritated angered vexed vext provoked infuriated riled galled exasperated irked incensed maddened enraged nettled aggravated piqued peeved displeased ruffled rebuked scolded admonished berated reprimanded upbraided reproved castigated reproached censured chid chided criticised(UK) criticized(US) lambasted chastised carpeted lectured blasted rated cheesed off peed off teed off set off split hit the trail set out beat it hit the road lit out hauled off got out of my sight pushed off got torqued off skedaddled avaunted made oneself scarce popped off shoved off started on harassed nagged pestered told off itemised(UK) itemized(US) listed list inventoried recorded detailed enumerated documented specified particularised(UK) particularized(US) catalogued(UK) cited numbered numerated counted identified instanced mentioned calculated totalled totaled told computed reckoned aggregated quantified tallied accounted estimated summed amounted assessed toted added up mildly annoyed miffed mildly irritated slightly annoyed offended discontented disgruntled disgusted narked sore hacked off hot under the collar angry cross furious in a temper irate mad aggrieved fed up put out down in the mouth dejected depressed sad unhappy blue down downcast downhearted gloomy melancholy miserable crestfallen despondent disconsolate forlorn glum woebegone discouraged disheartened More
"ticked off" Antonyms

555 Sentences With "ticked off"

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

We had a box, one track actually ticked off, it was probably the first track to be ticked off.
"The litmus test for a contract is that neither side is ticked off before the ink can dry, and neither side should be ticked off," Gettleman said.
"I was ticked off," the former secretary of State wrote.
It is quite simple: which side is more ticked off?
"A little ticked off at myself, for sure," Woods said.
Folks on the right are ticked off about this news.
He ticked off others that closed: Detroit, Delaware, Janesville, Shreveport.
The markers in the kitchen wall ticked off his growth.
He then ticked off household names in American politics: McCain. Romney.
Some of the items on this list have been ticked off.
I mean, these guys are going to be really ticked [off].
The Surface Pro (2017) already ticked off all of these checkboxes.
Mike was ticked off at Christie over last week's "Beachgate" scandal.
Kaczynski has now ticked off the boxes in establishing Hungarian-style
"Now I was ticked off," the former secretary of State wrote.
As cards are dealt with, they can be ticked off and archived.
His tone was optimistic as he ticked off policy goals and promises.
Anger Soon we were deeply into the world of ticked off Beyonce.
Instead, they've become rapidly ticked-off plot points in an accelerated season.
You know, I&aposm getting really ticked off because you&aposre right.
He's clearly ticked off about it, but also hopeful for his pal.
The two justices ticked off favorite foods of current and former colleagues.
It's why people are ticked off and tired of politics as usual.
Ms. Sanders ticked off notable names who she said had not apologized.
Most important, England had ticked off another box, had done its job.
""If I'm acting a bit ticked off today, it's because I am.
So, both sides are united in the fact that they&aposre ticked off.
TOM DUPREE, FORMER JUSTICE DEPARTMENT OFFICIAL: Oh, I&aposm ticked off, too, Neil.
During his time at Juventus, he was ticked off for being significantly overweight.
I quit When the Biebs is ticked off, the Biebs doesn't play around.
"Canadians are going to be pretty ticked off, to be honest," she said.
Trump is still ticked off that Sessions recused himself from the Russia investigation.
All the boxes are ticked off, from Bluetooth connectivity to capable GPS navigation.
It's like people are ticked off about ... Steve Bannon is mad about it.
Poole ticked off a number of use cases where she thinks something like Hey!
And Islamabad's ticked off since the U.S. didn't give it a heads-up. 4883.
With all of those things ticked off, it's time for layout to step in.
They accused America of "war hysteria" and ticked off the president for being "reckless".
Gerges ticked off three points to remember in the complicated quest for peace. 1.
To do so is illegal, and has ticked off people in the wine business.
Straddling his bike, he ticked off a bleak political ticket on his fingers: Mrs.
As I ticked off various treatments, it became increasingly clear that nothing was working.
You're trapped in a series of trials, each designed by women you've ticked off.
" He ticked off projects that he hopes will begin to restore public support: "G.
Optus' pricing to watch the English Premier League (EPL) has really ticked off Australian fans.
Delta's been ... Look, the company went bankrupt before and ticked off a lot of people.
They&aposre ticked off because we disinvited them from attending one of our naval drills.
The expectant princess ticked off the last official event on her calendar in early August.
Another successful trip for Tara and my first illegal drug run ticked off my list.
"We've called these people so many times, some are getting ticked off," Cuccinelli told Mashable.
Mouse trapDisney banned the Los Angeles Times because it was ticked off about a story.
He also ticked off the economic recovery and homeownership rates as places Obama has failed.
But Trump is apparently ticked off that he didn't get an easy win in Venezuela.
" She ticked off from the checklist of societal change: "The internet, demographic shifts, climate change.
She ticked off Tony Oursler, Mickalene Thomas, Lee Bul and Do Ho Suh among others.
"Finally, Sammy gets ticked off," Mr. Scognamillo said, setting up the oft-told punch line.
"I made a list, and over the years a lot got ticked off," he said.
As he ticked off soaring premiums in different states, the president leaned over to her.
I get ticked off whenever Bernie Sanders speaks, so it's probably the same on their side.
Residents, who say they've missed getting important pieces of mail in the past, were ticked off.
He ticked off a litany of claims of how employment has suffered under the Obama administration.
The IAEA report, obtained by The Associated Press, ticked off that commitment and others as met.
The judge was also ticked off by Phaedra's vindictiveness ... intentionally misspelling his name on the docs.
That ticked off Aaron who suggests he's basically the Godfather of modern-day child pop stars.
Trump ticked off each network late-night host one by one, starting with NBC's Jimmy Fallon.
And, of course, after twenty or thirty other items had been ticked off, the golden egg.
On Tuesday, Matey denied involvement in a list of other Christie scandals ticked off by Sen.
The real standout for Helen Jon, though, is how well the suit ticked off my concerns.
I am ticked off like you cannot believe … because I'm mad about the politics of this.
The new philanthropists of the Trump era are young, liberal, and ticked off — at their parents.
He pointed to different components in the computer and ticked off which states they came from.
Now, they've got another work stoppage underway because they're ticked off about a new education bill.
Colbert ticked off a list of things that he says Trump condemned more forcefully than Nazis.
Avoid all the hassle of the sales and get everything on your list ticked off now.
He ticked off a list of places affected by terrorism, taking aim at Europe's immigration policies.
Instead, the former secretary of state ticked off a list of inflammatory remarks Trump has made.
Bradley's shot just in front of Boston's bench dropped as the final second ticked off the clock.
Anyway, former Department of Justice official Tom Dupree, I don&apost know if he&aposs ticked off.
It's hard not to feel ticked off when you're starving and they're coming from their lunch break.
One of his coworkers makes a sexist comment to another coworker's girlfriend and she gets ticked off.
But being on Facebook, I'm like, 'Hey, they're ticked off at the same stuff as we are.
I'm ticked off at Amazon for not protecting the live PPV IP of Google's YouTube from piracy.
That's another 650 miles ticked off of its bid to circumnavigate the globe using only solar energy.
Cook and SVP of Software Engineering Craig Federighi never ticked off all the Siri updates at once.
The Brits are ticked off about all the leaks to the media coming out of this investigation.
Several people who have worked with Duke ticked off multiple reasons they believe she will replace Sanger.
Clinton's remarks, she ticked off a list of foreign countries where Trump-branded products had been made.
The passion differential favored all those voters who were ticked off over ObamaCare and excessive federal spending.
Fishbein ticked off Cuomo's resume of offenses to the left, but ultimately landed on something more elemental.
One by one, she ticked off her required prerequisites, hunted down transcripts and secured letters of recommendation.
But the ball ticked off Ramirez's glove and rolled into short left allowing Wolters to reach third.
So Chinese audiences were pretty ticked off that the new remake seemed to exclude Chinese actors entirely.
But if you're ticked off about something and want to rant, please don't flame those good people.
Arsenal's deciding to appoint Arteta means one job being ticked off Massimiliano Allegri's list for the summer.
Warren ticked off a litany of potential executive actions she'd take to try to curb global warming.
Is he grateful — or ticked off that she didn't take the job and shield him from investigators?
The camerapersons filming en route watched in amazement as Honnold ticked off pitch after pitch, charging ever upward.
If you started now and ticked off 25 billion seconds, you wouldn't be done until the year 22050.
Too few and people get ticked off when they can't get one; too many and you're wasting money.
Well, if somebody was funny, he obviously got ticked off that he wasn't the one in the limelight.
Nathan Deal torpedoed a 'religious liberty' bill yesterday with a promised veto, and state lawmakers are ticked off.
You can bet these are also the ones that will be most ticked off by a U.S. withdrawal.
A British woman was "euphoric" to have ticked off an item from her "bucket list" – murder, prosecutors said.
Mars is the planet of war, and when Pluto is ticked off, power struggles tend to pop up.
COMEY: But he&aposs one of many other people involved and all the things you just ticked off.
It sure seems that's the way Thomas is reading it, and that's why he's ticked off at George.
Last month, he ticked off another Jordanian first by skiing from the north to the south of Greenland.
This is outright retaliation against a journalist who has ticked off an increasingly nationalistic and authoritarian prime minister.
It's easy to get ticked off by people when you miss a 19793-foot putt and they cheer.
He then ticked off a list of other famous names: Ellen DeGeneres, Jeff Bridges, Al Gore, Robert Zemeckis.
Mr. de Blasio ticked off a list of the ways that Staten Islanders had benefited from his policies.
Vatanen's shot then ticked off the stick of Hischier and fluttered past Anderson at the 43:58 mark.
Senate Democrats are still ticked off that the GOP blocked a vote on former President Obama's nominee, Merrick Garland.
Mike Matheson tried to retrieve the puck but it ticked off the skate of Trocheck and into the net.
"I understand why you're ticked off at your government," Mr. Vander Plaats said of evangelicals who supported Mr. Trump.
You keep your emotions in check, but in some ways you're ticked off and sad at the same time.
This, of course, ticked off Mallory ... who wondered if the whole deal was someone playin' a trick on her.
Spain The King of Spain is straight-up ticked off at leaders in Catalonia over the region's independence referendum.
So 2,015 players (some of whom might be ticked off about it) will start the season wearing approved helmets.
That's because the New England quarterback hightailed it for the locker room immediately after the final seconds ticked off.
For Gilli, Yael's regular social worker, these visits were one more item to be ticked off a busy schedule.
But a 1-1 fastball to Martinez ticked off Sanchez's glove and rolled to the backstop, advancing both runners.
But the opening never came, they lost the ball, and a couple more minutes have ticked off the clock.
Jay Sekulow, Trump's personal lawyer, ticked off the denials from the President, the vice president and the Justice Department.
They're ticked off at government in general, including the way President Enrique Peña Nieto has handled the drug war. 5.
The Kings took a brief lead when Dustin Brown's shot ticked off the skate of Kovalchuk and fluttered past Lehner.
I got ticked off at the black b—–d because he has gutted our resources and spends money on Muslims.
She ticked off her latest problems to a nurse: weakness, occasional chest pains, trouble sleeping, feeling cold all the time.
He had an opportunity for a shot early, but he hesitated while one second after another ticked off the clock.
Israel The US is ticked off at Israel over its plan to build new housing tracts in the West Bank.
"We're not done perfecting our union," observed Obama, as he ticked off needed policy advances that included criminal justice reform.
A deaf cat gets kind of ticked off because he can't figure out who woke him up from a nap.
And ticked-off users are taking to Twitter to let Mozilla know how they really feel about the whole thing.
Princess Sofia ticked off the last official event on her calendar today before she's due to give birth in September.
As the relative-income model predicted, those who'd learned that they were earning less than their peers were ticked off.
In an interview, Mr. Nadler ticked off a dozen or so other policy areas awaiting attention by his committee alone.
The old tray was not exchanged for a new one, I noted, until every item had been ticked off twice.
"Why get everyone ticked off at you if you're not going to get the benefit of deploying encryption?" he asks.
In earnest, almost plaintive email missives to supporters, he ticked off the miles, described the scenery and asked for donations.
Tavares, stationed behind the Rangers' net, passed to Leddy, whose shot ticked off the right post and into the net.
Once you've ticked off all those boxes, keep on playing until a Space Anomaly appears in whichever system you're exploring.
Then Mu ticked off a six-part strategy to slash Chinese consumption and tap alternate supplies with little financial pain.
Ivanka and Jared are an unlikely couple to represent the ticked-off populism that has emerged as Trump's Presidential theme.
As her English went from halting to chatty, she ticked off everything she hungered to do: An overnight school trip.
He made a name for himself with his intense reports from the war -- which frequently ticked off the White House.
Wade in serious jeopardy, and separating immigrant parents from their children, there's plenty for someone to be ticked off about.
The official — who Gorman declined to name — ticked off numbers that illustrated just how crucial black women had been to Obama.
"The people of New Jersey are ticked off and it's my home state that I have immense love for," Piscopo said.
In his speed-mumble, he ticked off threats that his department had faced: Ebola, Legionnaires', Zika, Lyme, flu, Candida auris . Opioids.
I'm going on tour with Sia — that's kind of a dream for me, which I ticked off already, so that's cool.
The Ducks scored 32 seconds later, when Cam Fowler's shot ticked off Thomas Hickey and caromed off Islanders goalie Jaroslav Halak.
"I'm as upset and ticked off as I possibly can be about it," Georgia Southern head coach Tyson Summers told reporters.
He ticked off the criteria for "emergency funding" — a situation that is unexpected, catastrophic and has the capacity for permanent damage.
Only 210:2110.7 ticked off the clock before the Seahawks responded, tying the score with a 22010-yard scamper by Wilson.
In reaching this conclusion, the court ticked off various comments made by Trump and others, both before and after the election.
We were terrified that this would somehow be ticked off as an advice book, and that is not what we're doing.
However, replays showed Boychuk's shot ticked off the stick of Barzal as Barzal cut toward Murray in front of the net.
In his interview Thursday, Trump ticked off several actions that he said rebut any argument that he is under Putin's thumb.
In his 60 Minutes interview, Scott Pelley ticked off a number of issues and asked Schultz for his opinions on them.
But it's probably ticked off that the ICC started a war crimes investigation into its war with Georgia that killed hundreds. . 5.
The whole thing ticked off Democrats -- both on the committee and on the 2020 campaign trail -- who accused Barr of misleading Congress.
They were ticked off here in the Bay Area, as evidenced by this rant from longtime local sports radio host Greg Papa.
The lawmaker said he heard from ticked-off people of all ages who did not like the time changing and its effects.
It's that influx of wealth and negative attention that has many of the more level-headed members of the community ticked off.
He ticked off a list of businesses big banks can depend on besides traditional lending, including trading, prime services, underwriting and dealmaking.
But the puck ticked off the post and the skate of Hutton before trickling into the net at the 5:19 mark.
Elephant trophies The Trump administration will soon allow the importation of African elephant trophies, and some folks are ticked off about it.
Jack asked for his last name not to be used because some people are pretty ticked off at him regarding the theory.
He was a genius, for sure, but in his first gig, the drummer got ticked off and threw a cymbal at him.
"Rod Rosenstein's real problem right now is more with Congress than the president," said Meadows, who ticked off a list of grievances.
"I have never seen a time period where more people are upset, concerned, scared, ticked off, about so many things," he said.
If the B-movie director Andy Sidaris were alive today, he'd be pretty ticked off about "6 Underground," now streaming on Netflix.
Mr. Halvorson lost to Mr. Shuster in a primary, but 1,069 ticked-off voters wrote his name in on the Democratic side.
The app has ticked off its most loyal users with its latest redesign which merges your friends' snap messages with their Stories.
The Cronins ticked off all the steps typically taken in building a small business, from registering with the state to opening bank accounts.
De Rothschild, 41, ticked off both North and South poles in his twenties, traversing Antarctica and crossing the Arctic from Russia to Canada.
" Trump, you'll remember, got ticked off because Francis said that anybody who obsesses about building walls to keep people out "is not Christian.
Senators ticked off ideas on education, health care, criminal justice and infrastructure that had no chance of passage in a Republican-run Congress.
Expletives against Obama First of all, Duterte has been ticked off by America's increasingly open criticism of his signature "war on drugs" policy.
Well, way back when scientists decided that Pluto wasn't really a planet, I got ticked off and I guess it stuck with me.
Musk methodically ticked off the details of his radical plan on Tuesday at a special presentation, carefully outlining each component, checkpoint and hurdle.
"We're just as angry and frustrated and ticked off about it as anyone else watching this," Davis said in a press conference Tuesday.
Sanford Bishop, another Georgia Blue Dog, ticked off a long list of deductions eliminated under the GOP plan he said Democrats can't support.
Sipping an evening beer at the city's yacht club, Nick Revell ticked off a series of businesses that had closed their doors recently.
Hair care products maker Shea Moisture is the latest company to put out an ad that straight up ticked off its customer base.
So Hannity looks ticked off that Laura Ingraham is trying to get some time with Trump following his phone interview with the president.
In his State of the City address last month, Mr. Buttigieg received wave after wave of applause as he ticked off these achievements.
He ticked off those he knew, reading each aloud, adding which allegations he thought were likely true, and which he believed were unsubstantiated.
Patty Lee, welcoming visitors with soup, cornbread and sweet tea, ticked off all the towns nearby that were struggling: Kountze, Silsbee, Sour Lake.
In Tuesday's report, he ticked off efforts by courts across the country to give the public better access to the reasoning behind judgments.
As he contorted his body to better follow the ball, it ticked off the edge of his glove as he dove for it.
He ticked off a series of positive indicators, including 16 quarters of growth, with almost all countries benefiting, and 6.4 million new jobs.
In 1988, in a famous sermon called "The Curse of Liberalism," Criswell, the reformed segregationist, ticked off a list of denominations in decline.
He basically started shooting fire out of his hands like a ticked-off sorcerer leading up to the weekend in Toronto and beyond.
Trump ticked off a series of statistics about crimes committed by some illegal immigrants and vowed that would be stopped under his presidency.
Trump's the soon-to-be nominee, very few of his presidential rivals have pledged their support, and boy is he ticked off about it.
Campaign 2016 We don't know who looked more presidential during last night's "Commander in Chief" forum, but we do know who it ticked off.
He received credit for a fluke goal just 41 seconds after faceoff, when his shot ticked off the skate of Islanders defenseman Adam Pelech.
She ticked off several of the tweaks that the administration has already made this year and hinted that more changes were in the works.
As the seconds ticked off the clock in the blowout, Brazilians fans yelled out "Ole!" to usher the Argentines out of Carioca Arena 1.
As the seconds ticked off the clock in the blowout, Brazilian fans yelled out "Olé!" to usher the Argentines out of Carioca Arena 1.
Clinton ticked off the particulars of what has become a signature venture of her bid: the registration of three million Americans before Election Day.
After Trump blabbered vaguely about demanding some kind of great deal with Cuba before restoring full diplomatic relations, Rubio ticked off the exact terms.
Old-school drug warrior Jeff Sessions ticked off 2018 with aplomb Thursday when he revoked Obama-era memos protecting state experimentation with legal weed.
I've seen Will [Butler] do it and Sarah too, it just ticks off boxes that can't get ticked off working in a collaborative environment.
When Lisa Murkowski voted against the Kavanaugh nomination, Trump did not say he thought a quarter of her constituents would be really ticked off.
Ms. Hayes, who, as her online bio makes clear, is always a little ticked off, underscores her peevishness with a street-wear-inflected style.
Tyler Law, a spokesman for the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, ticked off districts — in Arkansas, Washington, New Jersey — where it's a major campaign theme.
The Predators went ahead again when Forsberg picked up a puck that ticked off the skate of Kyle Turris and backhanded a shot home.
"I love the poorly educated," Trump exclaimed from the stage in Las Vegas as he ticked off the highlights of his entrance poll numbers.
After the final second ticked off, tight end Martellus Bennett exchanged handshakes and hugs and then ran around the field, a personal victory lap.
The 3-point play put the Knicks up by 6 points, and a minute later Williams held the ball as the final seconds ticked off.
Essential ticked off a whole bunch of product design checkboxes, but it ultimately failed at the thing the company is least experienced in: sound quality.
Can't be too careful A 10-year-old girl gets a 2-minute pat down from the TSA, and boy is her dad ticked off.
Silas ticked off the names that made a difference in the 26-23 run to end the quarter — Howard, Jeremy Lamb and Walker among them.
You'll find it easy to get ticked off this season, especially when it comes to your public life, so be sure to take some space.
As the final seconds ticked off the clock in the opening period, James moved to the left and drained a fallaway jumper from 20 feet.
Partizan scored in each half, the minutes ticked off the clock, and the observer seemed slightly dumbfounded, and a bit delighted, that no incidents occurred.
The Detroit defenseman passed into the crease, where the puck ticked off the stick of Hirose and fluttered past Domingue at the 3:32 mark.
Tieless, with legs crossed, he ticked off his company's latest accomplishments — robust digital growth, updated advertising capabilities — with the swagger of a knowing publishing chieftain.
Post was one of the many performances who jumped on stage in Time's Square as the countdown ticked off the last moments of the decade.
"Yes, I have confidence in my goalies, of course I do," said a curt Weight, who added he was "(ticked) off" about the Islanders' current predicament.
Using notes scrawled down on a crumpled piece of paper, the actor ticked off four points of fact that have been the subject of some confusion.
Known as Rule 40b, it effectively kept Paul off the ballot at the 2012 convention -- and ticked off a lot of tea partyers and conservative activists.
The IMF, having predicted disaster, has been ticked off by its own watchdog for being so obsessed with European integration that it failed to be neutral.
One after another, members ticked off why a plan to charge fees for driving cars and trucks into Manhattan's most congested neighborhoods was a bad idea.
Reality Check: Sanders on wealth inequality in the United States By Tami Luhby, CNNMoney Sanders ticked off a list of points showing how unequal America is.
They're surprising sticklers about proper grammar use, with 74 percent of them getting ticked off if they see errors on social media, according to the poll.
China has made claims on almost the entire sea and the islands located there and has ticked off Washington with its military buildup in the area.
"When I mention a Pro-Climate Candidate like @ReneeHoagenson and only 2202 of my 2628,28500 followers 'like' comment & retweet, I get pretty ticked off," Astin tweeted.
Later, Representative John Garamendi of California ticked off "serious quality issues" on other Boeing flagship aircraft such as the 787 Dreamliner and KC-46 aerial tanker.
Clinton ticked off some highlights of her tenure as secretary of state, saying Mr. Trump "can talk to me about stamina" when he accomplishes as much.
He ticked off the names of film directors, musicians, actors, painters and models like Federico Fellini, Daniel Barenboim, Jack Nicholson, David Hockney, Yoko Ono, Jerry Hall.
In 2011, Oracle CEO Larry Ellison got ticked off because his neighbor's redwood trees blocked the view from his house on Billionaire's Row in Pacific Heights.
Trump ticked off at Uber 3 front page stories from Trump's America Flynn on Iran sanctions Ivanka and Jared save LGBT rights Trump's first weekend plans
And Iowans are ticked off by the Democratic National Committee's debate criteria, which they think have stolen their job of sorting viable candidates from wayward dreamers.
John Holland-Kaye, the airport's chief executive officer, met me one morning in an empty conference room near the airport and instantly ticked off some figures.
"This news came out about Paul Manafort, and I'm really ticked off about this," said an agitated Booker, who then gave an informed speech on inequality.
He's in charge of setting up a visit by the commissioner general from Tokyo, and the ticked-off press corps is threatening not to cover it.
She ticked off one detailed policy plan after another - a hallmark of her campaign - that she said would reform the basic structure of the U.S. economy.
"Even if you're ticked off at Boeing, you have to get over it, because you have to do business with them," said airline consultant Mike Boyd.
It was particularly brutal when she ticked off the various votes he's made over the years on guns and other issues which are decidedly not progressive.
Lisa Vanderpump has totally disconnected herself from the rest of the 'Real Housewives of Beverly Hills' cast and her costars are ticked off ... TMZ has learned.
But there was no defense Tavares' backhanded shot, which ticked off the stick of Hickey, who was stationed in front of the net, and under Elliott's legs.
More than 300,000 "Game of Thrones" fans are so ticked off about the way this final season has played out, they've signed a petition demanding a remake.
"Oh, and about half the writers and producers, all your researchers, the digital department, half the control room," said another, as they ticked off other missing staffers.
An already ticked off federal judge on Tuesday slapped Michael Flynn, President Donald Trump's former national security advisor, with restrictions on his travel as he awaits sentencing.
House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy Reality Check: McCarthy on fairer taxes By Tami Luhby, CNNMoney McCarthy ticked off the ways the Republican agenda would help the nation.
The stock ticked off a number of factors that Chanos looks for in a potential short such as growth by acquisition, fraudulent accounting and crowded shareholder base.
Mulvaney ticked off what he claimed were White House wins in the budget deal -- from reinstating a school choice program in Washington to funding for border security.
He has even ticked off the exact number of days he had left until his 10-year term expired in 2023 -- a term he expected to complete.
Travis Dermott's shot ticked off the stick of Tavares and fluttered into the crease, where the puck bounced off the stick of Kapanen and into the net.
But he also ticked off a list of lessons that the autonomous vehicle industry can learn from the NTSB's experience with accidents in other modes of transportation.
But as he ticked off his thank-yous last Saturday — to the crowd, to the city, to the university hosting him — a sudden calm seemed to arrive.
Her video subsequently went viral, mostly because people were ticked off at the audacity of anyone who would clog up a whole subway aisle during rush hour.
Moonves ticked off a number of possible explanations: Suspensions to star players; the rise of fantasy-football-focused shows, like the NFL's RedZone channel; and Donald Trump.
"The timing is good in terms of relocating prior to I.P.O." He ticked off Washington and Florida as places where people could have also saved on taxes.
As the final seconds ticked off, they leapt over the boards, flung their sticks and gloves in the air and mobbed the goalie who saved their season.
Disparaging her from the stage — and no doubt pleasing Senate Republicans who have been urging him to get tougher with her — the president ticked off his grievances.
He ticked off Plutarch and Herodotus and Cicero, writers named by his character in the play, crediting them with thoughtfully exploring the role of fact in art.
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer of New York ticked off a long list of problems with the bill, mostly related to Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands.
At a rally in Minnesota last week, Mr. Trump ticked off the names of his favorite Fox News stars like an announcer at an all-star game.
Ironically two of the failures -- not repealing Obamacare and not building "the wall" -- have ticked off both parties -- the GOP for failing and the Democrats for trying!
Its chief economist, Lacy Hunt, ticked off a list of current trouble spots: slowing auto sales, skimpy inflation-adjusted wage growth, low savings rates and sluggish construction.
Mr. Golubovsky ticked off cities across Russia where protesters had turned out: an estimated 43,24 in Novosibirsk, as well as in Omsk and other large Siberian cities.
While he ticked off the typical party positions, including his support for building Trump's wall, Marshall portrayed himself the heir to a "pragmatic" brand of Kansas Republican.
While some experts decried the paper as unnewsworthy (everyone's known about Crispr off-target mutations forever!) the majority of threads ticked off the experiment's flaws: Tiny sample size!
The US ambassador to the United Nations ticked off these names this week, as she launched a blistering attack on Syrian President Bashar al-Assad and his allies.
The puck ticked off Pavelski's stick and sailed past Hertl before it sailed past a trio of Islanders — defensemen Travis Hamonic and Nick Leddy as well as Halak.
As a reporter ticked off some details about him — 37 years old, a mayor, a veteran of the war in Afghanistan, married to a man — Mr. Greene interrupted.
The company ticked off officials in Nevada by basically pulling the same stunt: running self-driving road tests outside Las Vegas without registering its vehicles with state regulators.
I head to work and try to spend the majority of my time on the subway meditating; it keeps me from getting ticked off at the MTA system.
Concerns: The lawmakers ticked off a slew of concerns with Trump's decision to withdraw from the treaty that bans ground-launched nuclear and conventional missiles with intermediate ranges.
The president ticked off a list of his administration's accomplishments, including new Census data showing across-the-board declines in the poverty rate and rising incomes in 2015.
THE TOPLINE: The House Armed Services Committee's marathon markup of the annual defense policy bill is going strong, with several hot button issues already ticked off the checklist.
Joel Weinstock, whose research partly inspired the movement, ticked off more reasons purchasing unregulated parasites is a bad idea: You don't know that you're getting the species promised.
She said the former secretary of state "embodies so many of the values that we try hard to teach our young people," and ticked off highlights from Mrs.
Norman Ornstein, a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, ticked off Pompeo, DeVos, Nielsen, Steve Mnuchin ("Certainly the slimiest Treasury secretary ever") and Housing Secretary Ben Carson.
YARDLEY, Pa. — Sitting at her pumpkin-decorated dining room table, Kristen Donnelly ticked off her top political concerns: pay equity for women, gun control and anti-immigrant sentiment.
Instead, Shin-Soo Choo's fly ball ticked off Gardner's glove for a double, which put the go-ahead runs in scoring position and marked the end for Tanaka.
The Seattle area has already ticked off No. 10, limiting large public gatherings, and part of No. 11, the closing of schools and public buildings, Ms. Durkan noted.
Instead, she ticked off a number of policy issues that are important to African-Americans, and that she has plans to address, such as housing and maternal mortality.
In a briefing for journalists, European Union officials ticked off a list of issues that they said remained unresolved before the talks are supposed to start Monday afternoon.
Charlie McAvoy's shot was deflected by Varlamov and bounced to DeBrusk, whose putback ticked off the skate of Mayfield and trickled past Varlamov at the 8:33 mark.
Young, a Republican, argued that arming teachers would help keep students safe, then ticked off examples of what he says happens when governments take firearms away from citizens.
" She then ticked off what she called "a sampler" that ranged from "end lobbying as we know it" to "block the revolving door between Wall Street and Washington.
The Capitals chased Gibson with 9:38 left in the second, when a bouncing puck in the crease ticked off the leg of Backstrom and into the net.
She and Eric Wilson, a case manager, ticked off nicknames they have been given: Daddy-O, Animal, Tasty, Tow Truck, Charlie Tuna, Mr. Nature, Dirty Harry and Juice.
Mr. Coates, who is black, ticked off a list of government-sponsored discriminatory policies — including those in Mr. McConnell's birthplace of Alabama — such as redlining and poll taxes.
Patrick Leahy of Vermont whether he thinks the President has the right to authorize torture if it violates law, Gorsuch ticked off a list of precedents that ban torture.
In an interview, Mahmoud Ali Youssouf, the foreign minister of Djibouti, ticked off countries that he said suffered as a result of misguided Western policies — Iraq, Afghanistan, Syria, Lebanon.
The puck ticked off Wood's skate and into the net a moment before he crashed into the net and jarred it off its moorings at the 7:25 mark.
So, I'm sweeping up the side quests I have left—the optional extras that I've activated over the past 80-plus hours but haven't totally ticked off just yet.
"Not only am I [ticked] off about this ticket and paying with pennies to clog up the system, but I also want to protest the whole racket," he said.
That's why executives were so ticked off when the Warriors—fresh off acquiring Kevin Durant last July, thus assuring Andrew Bogut would flee—landed Zaza at the league minimum.
She ticked off other factors, including former FBI Director James Comey's handling of the investigation into her private email server and the spread of "fake news" on social media.
Alex Adams, 19, agreed, discarding "this fake Russian story that there was collusion" and said he was "ticked off" by attempts to discredit Trump's powered-by-the-people win.
Actor Sean Astin said Monday that he is "pretty ticked off" with his Twitter followers for not interacting with a previous tweet about Missouri House candidate Renee Hoagenson (D).
He's won many tournaments around the world, big events, and now with his major win at this year's British Open he's ticked off something very important in his career.
Though the Cleveland Indians are one win away from punching their ticket to the World Series, manager Terry Francona had reason to be ticked off during Monday night's game.
During their meeting, he said, Robert Lighthizer, the United States trade representative, ticked off the long history of trade imbalances, and warned they could not be allowed to continue.
O.K., now that I've ticked off about 80 percent of our audience, I'm going to wager a small bet with you that Bernie Sanders wins Iowa and New Hampshire.
Ms. Pease ticked off names she said had never received justice: 14-year-old Henny Scott, who was found dead two weeks after she went missing in December 2018.
Speaking at a workshop in Erbil organized by the United States Institute of Peace and an Iraqi organization, Sanad for Peacebuilding, he ticked off the reasons: poverty, injustice, marginalization.
A few of the empire's most famous undesirables spent part of their exile here: Fyodor Dostoyevsky after he ticked offNicholas I, and Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn after he ticked off Stalin.
The Islanders tied the game 2:19 later, when Kuhnhackl was credited with the goal after his slap shot ticked off the stick of Severson and floated past Blackwood.
And when Steven Souza Jr.'s chopper over the mound ticked off Sabathia's glove, Torreyes was there, scooping the ball up and firing on the run to get Souza.
Nicki Minaj's husband finally got his ducks in a row on the West Coast -- getting himself registered as a sex offender, and looking kinda ticked off in the process.
As the final seconds ticked off the clock, Sooners fans chanted, "The streak is over," referring to the loss eliminating the Jayhawks from the race for the Big 12 title.
The Rangers started the night with just 2:29 ticked off the clock when Pavel Buchnevich took a sharp-angle shot from the sideboards and fooled Stars goalie Anton Khudobin.
And Pence ticked off his accomplishments as governor of Indiana, saying he had produced a $2 billion surplus, spurred job growth and cut taxes while investing in infrastructure and healthcare.
Ticked off and covered in paint, he allegedly grabbed a real handgun and fired at the cars that had ambushed him—accidentally striking and killing a three-year-old inside.
It's another headache for Chaka, who made it clear Wednesday night on 'Watch What Happens Live' she's still ticked off Kanye West sampled her on his song, "Through The Wire."
He ticked off the city's other so-called saunas, which he occasionally patronizes: Mermaid Spa, in Coney Island; the East Village Russian baths; the Wall Street banya , on Fulton Street.
"When Trump starts calling journalists the enemy of the people and fake news, these kids get ticked off," said University of Maryland journalism school dean Lucy Dalglish (The Associated Press).
Mr. Caraballo ticked off two other Spanish-language bookstores, Librería Lectorum and Librería Macondo, which he said connected literature to culture in a way that he hoped to keep alive.
At bottom, the contretemps is personal: The former USFL team owner was ticked off that most of the Eagles didn&apost plan on showing up, with fewer than 10 expected.
Two Education Department officials at the front of a brightly lit classroom ticked off the alphabet soup of acronyms that represents the city's various resources for parents, principals and teachers.
As he walked over to the roasting line, he ticked off problems with Mr. Trump's tariffs, which he said hurt his and his customers' ability to sell their produce oversees.
Not long ago Erin Wexstten, the 20063-year-old founder of Oxalis Apothecary, a plant-based skin care brand, ticked off all the ways she uses lavender in her life.
Kakko's shot bounced off Vasilevskiy's pads, but the puck trickled away, ticked off the skate of Rangers defenseman Braydon Coburn and trickled into the net at the 9:37 mark.
And the only way to get out of that, you have to fight and get a little ticked off and show up tomorrow with a little chip on your shoulder.
McConnell on Tuesday ticked off a number of states where he believes the races are currently "dead even": Arizona, Nevada, Tennessee, Montana, North Dakota, Missouri, Indiana, West Virginia and Florida.
At the Pentagon, General Dunford ticked off some of the campaign's accomplishments, including reclaiming 0003 percent of the territory the Islamic State has seized in Syria and Iraq since 2014.
All about the money Mark Wahlberg reportedly got paid way more than Michelle Williams for "All the Money in the World" reshoots, and the Twitterverse is ticked off about it.
When the final seconds ticked off the clock, Cleveland fans, who had endured a 212-22 season and waited nearly two years to see their Browns win, erupted in celebration.
Judge Gorsuch ticked off past cases in which he ruled for the little guy, calling himself "a fair judge" and noting that members of both parties have said as much.
"How do you think I feel right now, I'm pretty ticked off, I'm not happy, I'm not a morning person," he angrily told the nurse, laughing now at the memory.
"It's normal that will come up, we are prepared for that," Trump said after Brzezinski ticked off a list of jabs and names that the Republican presidential frontrunner has been called.
In an elegantly compact rhetorical flourish Kaine ticked off a litany of Trump's demeaning, sexist, and racist transgressions against undocumented Latino immigrants, women, blacks, and President Obama via his birther lie.
Tammy Bush Mayo, a wife of another deputy, said she was ticked off that two of her husband's colleagues were turned away Saturday at the Taco Bell in Phenix City, Alabama.
He ticked off the names of wealthy friends who he said had accepted his invitation to donate huge sums to veterans causes, who he credited with "unbelievable" Trumpian riches and success.
In the short term, we'll probably see some fear-mongering as to how much Google is pushing into the home, and ticked off Nest owners will undoubtedly face some growing pains.
Henry Winkler was fired up about Miss America right before he went to cast his ballot in the California primaries ... and ended up having even more reason to get ticked off.
Burr ticked off the areas of possible collusion the committee had already probed, and also issued a blanket threat to future witnesses that they should testify voluntarily or face a subpoena.
"The people of New Jersey are ticked off and it's my home state that I have immense love for," he added, while not elaborating on the full extent of his plans.
Gates was ticked off because he had tried to download a Microsoft app, Movie Maker, from the Microsoft website but discovered "This site is so slow it is unusable," Gates said.
In his speech, Trump ticked off a list of ISIS's diminished capabilities with its loss of territory, including not being able to extract natural resources, taxing citizens or stealing ancient artifacts.
He ticked off a list of his highest-profile accomplishments during his eight years in office, including healthcare reform, the Iran nuclear deal, and the opening of diplomatic relations with Cuba.
Unfriendly skies You know the passengers on an Alaska Airlines flight were ticked off after one of them forced the plane to be diverted after trying to light a cigarette -- twice.
A 12-year-old Australian boy really ticked off his parents by using the family credit card to buy flights to Bali, Indonesia, after he had an argument with his mum.
She ticked off a list of how multiple court dates can affect those involved: lost wages, lost jobs, losing a place in drug-treatment programs because of missed sessions, child care issues.
For each ticket, he quickly ticked off some claims of defects regarding address, type of vehicle, fines and the like — all the while lightening the jargon-laced tedium with jokes and stories.
Another of his counsellors had taught him "the five D's," which he ticked off on his fingers to remind himself: "Distract yourself, drink some water, take deep breaths," Bolu began, then stopped.
"I am very committed to making sure that Facebook is a platform for all ideas," he said after Mr. Cruz ticked off several examples of potential liberal bias on the social network.
When Diana famously confronted Camilla at a party at the home of mutual friend Lady Annabel Goldsmith, Camilla "coolly" ticked off Diana for "'unacceptable behavior in a private house,&apos" reports Bower.
Jose Flores, 19, a Honduran migrant who set out for the United States three months ago, ticked off the perils posed by violent gangs and dismal job prospects in his home country.
He credited strong travel demand on economic growth and increases in personal income and household net worth, and he ticked off a long list of steps airlines are taking to contain costs.
The Carolina Panthers quarterback, clearly ticked off when Washington linebacker Trent Murphy took a cheap shot at his helmet, tossed the ball in Murphy's direction, which earned Newton a flag for taunting.
Bass ticked off a list of concerns about the Chinese economy, including industrial production at financial crisis lows and the lowest nominal fourth-quarter year-over-year GDP print in 40 years.
" On the call, Cook ticked off a long list of countries — Brazil, Russia, Japan, Canada — that are facing "slowing economic growth," while pledging to invest throughout the economic downturn and avoid "retrenching.
Along with the usual itinerary list, there's often a number of other rather nuanced requirements that need to be ticked off before making a booking, not least when it comes to accommodation.
He delivered a lengthy digression on the State of the Union address, noting that Democrats sat on their hands as he ticked off one measure of success for the country after another.
In remarks at a press briefing Wednesday, Mr. Young ticked off some of the factors that had led to the crisis, including human errors, excessive optimism and the complexity of the spacecraft.
"Cereal, pasta, tomato sauce, eggplant sauce, olive oil, salt, jams," Mairi Giannakaki, a senior official with a Chios food company, ticked off as we slalomed around conveyor belts bearing the various items.
Gracie ticked off a list of other changes she'd like to see, including raising the minimum age for firearms purchases to 21 and setting limits on the amount of ammunition in magazines.
He ticked off a few other measures, including an always contentious debt limit increase, a usually bipartisan Pentagon policy bill and an important piece of legislation for the Food and Drug Administration.
" In their dueling footnotes, as Ginsburg ticked off complaints about Thomas' opinion, she contended that "the cost of, and trauma potentially induced by, a post-procedure requirement may well constitute an undue burden.
A woman at a mall in Louisville, Kentucky, was ticked off at two fellow shoppers when she thought one of them jumped in front of her in the checkout line at J.C. Penney.
Former Times Editor Joe Abramson says she ticked off that the paper then had to ask one (Inaudible) who is this woman, why (Inaudible) failure to missing Donald Trump&aposs victory in 2016.
" Trump, pivoting from his attacks on Clinton for having the audacity to acknowledge she's a woman (playing the "woman card"), then ticked off examples of Clinton's so-called judgment issues: "Emails, bad judgment.
With Greiss pulled for the extra attacker, the Islanders tied the score when Lee's shot just to the left of the net ticked off the stick of Alexander Steen and into the net.
In Brussels last month, Pompeo parroted the "America First" view with a tone deaf and arrogant speech in which he ticked off a confusing and often contradictory laundry list of problems with multilateralism.
Asked Thursday if Congress should step in to ensure that states don't undermine LGBT rights, Pelosi ticked off several victories the Democrats and other LGBT advocates have won in Washington in recent years.
He thanked his family, introduced his wife, lauded his ticket-mate, ticked off policy ideas, made a few jokes and expressed optimism about the country and his party's chances to win in November.
But you the concerned citizen have a right to be ticked off as hell, especially since Hunter is a self-advertised fiscal conservative who spends a lot of time whining about deficit spending.
You may be royally ticked off that your client changed his mind about an upcoming project or that your coworker fell down on his responsibilities and forced you to pick up the slack.
She ticked off a list of grievances against the U.S. Soccer Federation, the sport's governing body, saying the costs it imposes to play in soccer clubs have "alienated" Latino, black and rural communities.
The puck finally bounced to Ryan Pulock, who fired a shot from the left faceoff circle that ticked off the stick of Brassard and into the net just 85 seconds after the opening faceoff.
He ticked off areas in which he could beat Mrs Clinton: on border security and fears of crime caused by immigrants, on foreign trade and jobs and on Islamic terrorism ("She's very, very weak").
OK, there weren't a lot of them -- something that ticked off more than a few House Republicans -- but we know the broad outlines: lots of tax cuts, fewer tax brackets, doubling the standard deduction.
South Korea says it's doing this so an environmental assessment can be done, but let's not forget that China was ticked off at both the US and South Korea over this defense system. 5.
I'm at the point where I've ticked off everything within an hour of my apartment, and a lot of the shops on my hit list are an hour and a half or more away.
The Knights were the ones who were really ticked off at the number of crab claws that the 21-year-old had piled on his plate, so they took matters into their own hands.
"When your own party basically says, 'Yeah, yeah, yeah — step aside, we've got better people,' of course you're going to be ticked off," adding that he wasn't ever explicitly asked to leave the race.
Defenseman Christopher Taney fired a puck that caromed off the right post and ticked off the pads of Greiss before Miller swooped past Dal Colle and tucked a shot home for the unassisted goal.
The Lightning tied the game on what amounted to an own goal by the Devils when Joseph's pass into the crease ticked off the stake and stick of Taylor Hall and trickled past Schneider.
During the meeting on July 18, Pierson said he ticked off a series of problems at the plant and repeated his position that it should be shut down for a limited window of time.
TICKED OFF Swatch gained its dominant position in movements when it was forged by the 1983 merger of the two main watchmakers to survive an influx of cheap battery-powered quartz watches from Asia.
As he spoke to a packed room of black voters and leaders at Paschal's soul food restaurant in Atlanta on the eve of the debate, Castro ticked off the ways he's led the field.
He said Mr. Bannon's role had been "greatly exaggerated," even as the CNN host Jake Tapper ticked off a long list of policies he said Mr. Bannon had played a key role in formulating.
She ticked off some of the country's largest sex scandals, like the Boston Globe's 2002 expose on the Catholic Church's history of sex abuse and the 2012 conviction of Sandusky for abusing 10 boys.
Law enforcement sources tell us cops were in the gated community Tuesday for an unrelated matter when several neighbors flagged them down and ticked off a laundry list of complaints against Rob and Chyna.
Aberg passed into the crease, where Ondrej Kase was descending upon Georgiev, but the puck ticked off New York center Mika Zibanejad and trickled into the net with 5:51 remaining in the second period.
Asked about the column during a White House event, Trump called it a "gutless editorial," bashed the New York Times as "failing," and ticked off economic achievements that he said were proof of his leadership.
At the start of the meeting he ticked off problems that struck him when he became CEO: GE had high ambition but lacked focus, and it had lost sight of its customers' demands for quality.
BY HIS own admission Governor Bruce Rauner has not ticked off many of the 2000 points on the "turnaround agenda" that four years ago the voters of Illinois, in their wisdom, elected him to pursue.
In short, Kalanick isolated himself with Huffington as buffer — and other directors were ticked off by things like this NY Times puff piece on Huffington (which they viewed as being primarily about personal brand promotion).
The actor told us he was ticked off about a $1,000 charge for long-term parking at Columbus airport, but says it was the valet who got lippy first ... threatening to "put hands" on Faizon.
Speaking on a cell phone between his civics classes, Conn ticked off the reasons for the protest: Overcrowded classes, deplorable building conditions, safety hazards, equipment shortages: "The conditions are terrible in the schools," Conn said.
Johnson ticked off other steps the agency is taking to mitigate travel disruptions, including deploying canine teams, setting up a centralized incident command center and giving local airport officials the authority to make resourcing decisions.
Corker ticked off a laundry list of concerns that have piled up for senators, including Trump's summit with Putin in which Moscow says agreements were reached that Congress says it has not been told about.
He ticked off the names of the former rivals who have now endorsed him, and while he said hardly anything about his specific policy goals, he spent considerable time highlighting the diversity of his support.
McConnell ticked off the items on what he called the "Democratic wish list," citing tax deductions to solar and wind energy companies, workplace provisions sought by organized labor and new emissions standards for the airlines.
The president ticked off those items on Friday when he hailed America's economic strength at the World Economic Forum's annual meeting in Davos, Switzerland, where global leaders have been sharing encouraging economic news all week.
Ms. Hill then ticked off a list of what needed to change: • A process of reporting harassment where it is clear to every employee where to turn and how they will hear about the outcome.
She ticked off pros and cons for each – Sanders' career-long commitment to progressive ideals versus Warren's compelling backstory, Sanders' ability to excite young voters versus Warren's history-making potential as the first female president.
After taking back possession, Drew Brees did what he does best, leading the Saints on a 65-yard drive that resulted in a game-winning field goal as the final seconds ticked off the clock.
Things ticked off with some lawyer named Ken Starr giving a lecture to the Senate about why impeachment is bad and how you need a crime under the US Criminal Code for impeachment to count.
With the Kansas City Chiefs beating the Los Angeles Chargers, a late touchdown by the Dolphins suddenly swung the bye week to Kansas City as the final seconds of both games ticked off the clock.
In a tone of mild astonishment, she ticked off their studio's virtues: good light, central air, a real kitchen with full-size appliances — and countertops, no less — and a dishwasher and a washer and dryer.
Reminding the viewers that he was once a U.S. Attorney, Christie ticked off a list of virtual "indictments" of Clinton's record as Secretary of State including the policy failures in Libya, Syria, Russia, China, and Cuba.
SHANGHAI (Reuters) - Five times world champion Lewis Hamilton returned to the top of the Formula One standings on Sunday with a comfortable victory in China that ticked off two more milestones in an already stellar career.
If you were annoyed by either of those things, you probably weren't nearly as ticked off as the PDF Association, which published a long explanation of just why the Mueller report PDF file was so bad.
The Sharks tied the score with 211:22011 left in the second, when Joe Thornton's pass into the crease ticked off the skate of Tomas Hertl and under the left leg of Islanders goalie Jaroslav Halak.
Bannon had ticked off the conservative billionaire Mercer family, benefactors to both Trump and Breitbart, with his comments in the new book "Fire and Fury" by journalist Michael Wolff — comments highly critical of the White House.
While things could change, the board's recent decision to reverse its plans to spin off Yahoo's stake in China's Alibaba Group, but not explicitly say the company is for sale, really ticked off Starboard's Jeff Smith.
If you're only backing startups in a few places on the coast and not in the middle of the country, we shouldn't be surprised there are a lot of people that are kind of ticked off.
While things could change, the board's recent decision to reverse its plans to spin off Yahoo's stake in China's Alibaba Group, but not explicitly say the company is for sale really ticked off Starboard's Jeff Smith.
He ticked off a dozen or more countries — in the order with a combined goods and services trade deficit — starting with China and including Mexico, Germany and Canada that run a surplus with the United Sates.
Dozens of Republican offices have blasted out press releases about "Schumer's shutdown," while GOP leaders ticked off a list of newspaper headlines on Saturday that said Senate Democrats blocked a stopgap funding bill on Friday night.
The rally in Harrisburg, Pa., was familiar territory for Trump, who basked in the roars of the crowd as he ticked off various campaign pledges he said would get done while lobbying attacks at the media.
After a breakthrough on the contentious issue of family reunions for migrants on Tuesday - although it was overshadowed by a subsequent row over the details - the parties ticked off other, less tricky, issues including climate policy.
To all the people ticked off at Kevin Hart on behalf of Lil Nas X for seemingly interrupting his story about coming out -- LNX says feel anyway ya want, just don't count him among the outraged.
But Bird was ruing the moment he could not deliver, when he was shielded slightly by Machado, the base runner at first, and watched helplessly as the ball ticked off his glove and into right field.
McConnell ticked off comments from several rank-and-file Senate Democrats on Tuesday advocating for Pelosi to transmit the articles to the Senate, urging Schumer to "listen to his own members" and start the impeachment trial.
Burberry aspires to be all things to all people, and Mr. Tisci ticked off the strength he felt the label "deserves to have": not only fashion, but accessories, evening wear, streetwear, underwear, expensive clothes, affordable clothes.
Between Palpatine's self-resurrection and the discovery of Force healing, Anakin's ghost has got to be pretty ticked off that he was Vader-ing around when he could have raised Luke and Leia with Padme instead.
As he waited for Ms. Klobuchar to address a small crowd on a rainy Friday afternoon, Stan Lloyd, 68, ticked off the qualities that have kept Ms. Klobuchar on his list of potential candidates to support.
In Munyono, a middle class neighborhood, police and voters confronted each other when rumors that ballot papers had already been ticked off by the ruling party started spreading shortly after the voting material finally arrived at 2pm.
I keep telling people if you read a headline and (after reading it) you're ticked off and you're angry and you're frustrated, then double check that source because you need to know whether or not it's legitimate.
White ticked off some of the reforms that she considered central to promoting safer markets: creating comprehensive oversight of the swaps market, registering private fund advisers, changing credit-rating agencies and enhancing transparency for asset-backed securities.
Nominal GDP rose by 5.1 So, if we're growing debt so much during a 5 percent nominal GDP period and you ticked off some economic facts are reasonably reassuring, what's going to happen when we turn down?
Trump has reportedly been ticked off at Ross since about halfway through 2017, when the president tore him apart for botching his trade deals with China—negotiations the former Wall Street tycoon had taken the lead on.
The minutes showed almost all Fed members agreeing that another rate increase was "likely to be warranted fairly soon," but also ticked off a series of issues that had begun weighing on their view of the economy.
And people have ticked off, you know, when I went home to Texas and I had all my colleagues who went home, Republicans have promised for seven years, if you elect us, we will repeal this disaster.
The answers they received were as varied as one can imagine, though there were of course common "gripes," which the old Army hands could have easily ticked off without the aid of a cross-sectional scientific survey.
After deliberation by the referees and off-court review officials, it was determined that more than 213 seconds ticked off the clock between the time of contact off the inbound pass and when Ross released the shot.
Jack D. SpiroRichmond, Va. To the Editor: My cat may not have a feline counterpart of a dog's eye muscles, but she is fully capable of giving me a "stink eye" whenever she's ticked off about something.
And when Domingo German's ninth-inning pitch to Adam Moore ticked off the glove of Sanchez after a third strike, he chased it down and fired to first in time for the final out of the game.
The Yankees loaded the bases again in the ninth, with a bit of good fortune: an error by Longoria, a liner that ticked off the edge of shortstop Beckham's glove and Headley's third single against the shift.
BUENOS AIRES, June 303 (Reuters) - Since taking office in December, President Mauricio Macri has quickly ticked off a long-held wish-list of Argentina's manufacturers - lifting tough capital controls, easing import restrictions and freeing up access to dollars.
Last month Linklaters was ticked off by MPs for its work on deals involving Russian companies, after it refused to answer questions about the flotation of En+, a holding company for Oleg Deripaska, a businessman under American sanctions.
Goetze-Ackerman ticked off the items the women would no longer be able to wear on the green, including plunging necklines, joggers, leggings by themselves (they can be worn under shorts or skirts), and racerback tops without collars.
Pelech put the Islanders up 3-0 with 10:34 left in the period, when his shot from just inside the blue line ticked off the stick of Penguins center Teddy Blueger and sailed past a screened Murray.
Booker, who introduced the landmark First Step Act last year to implement a series of prison reforms, said he was "ticked off" about what he said was a light sentence for Manafort, but that he was not surprised.
She ticked off some more of what she expected: sudden sharp rises in rent, withheld deposits, increases in domestic violence for those stuck in close quarters and, for homeowners, complicated title problems that could jeopardize access to assistance.
He ticked off some of the administration's adjustments to make that happen, such as recalling IRS workers to process tax refunds, reversing plans to stop issuing flood insurance policies and bringing back rangers to clean up national parks.
He ticked off what he said were his achievements — some coming just in recent days — on a laundry list of issues like North Korea, trade and the economy, and attacked his predecessors for their failures on the same.
I quickly ticked off a list of some of the things she survived, or endured, over the course of nearly 90 years: For our parents, or grandparents, World War II, by itself, raged on for four long years.
During the rally, Sanders ticked off several instances of the closing of locomotive, chocolate and steel plants that were uprooted from Pennsylvania and moved to other countries such as Mexico and China so they could pay lower wages.
" Even as he ticked off everything else his office was doing, Mr. Becerra said he was not surprised that the world thought that every filing that came out of Sacramento had the word "Trump" after the word "vs.
The Islanders went up 3-0 with 4:05 left in the period, when Scott Mayfield's slap shot from just in front of the NHL Face-Off logo ticked off the skate of Lee and fluttered past Brossoit.
He then ticked off the list of House accomplishments: legislation repealing and replacing the 2010 Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, border security legislation, a veterans aid bill, education reform and a military readiness bills.
Menendez ticked off contradiction after contradiction: Pompeo said during the hearing that he supports a diplomatic approach to Iran's nuclear program, but in the past has said that regime change is "the only way" to deal with the problem.
There isn't nostalgia, misguided or not, for how Clinton handled NATO or NAFTA or gun control or the national debt, several of which Hillary Clinton ticked off in Montreal as things she was most proud of Bill for doing.
In a sneak peek at Sunday's season 12 premiere, Kendall Jenner gets seriously ticked off with her brother Rob Kardashian after she finds out he re-gifted the iPad she bought him for Christmas to his girlfriend Blac Chyna.
Slavin was credited with the first goal 2:50 into the game, when his slap shot snaked through a gaggle of players in front of Halak, ticked off the skate of Islanders defenseman Adam Pelech and trickled past Halak.
So as Uber and Waymo battle over what will doubtless be one of the most important technological developments of the next decade, it's worth taking a look at how the company ticked off the judge presiding over the fight.
He ticked off provisions that the White House argues would help truckers — such as lower taxes for individuals, a reduction in the top rate for pass-through businesses taxed through the individual system, and repeal of the estate tax.
Mr. Trump ticked off several accurate economic metrics: The unemployment rate is at its lowest level in nearly 17 years, the economy grew at over 203 percent in the last two quarters, and the stock market has been soaring.
Pelosi herself ticked off many of those crises when talking to reporters on Tuesday, saying that is what helps guide her and her leadership team, even in this time of great uncertainty: "We have experience with this," Pelosi said.
"Corey sat there with a half-smile on his face, not knowing quite how to respond," the authors wrote about Mr. Lewandowski's first job interview with Mr. Trump, as the candidate ticked off his fleet of planes and helicopters.
Lehtonen's milestone lifts Stars past Islanders NEW YORK — As the final seconds ticked off the clock Wednesday night, Dallas Stars goalie Kari Lehtonen smiled behind his mask and allowed himself to soak in the accomplishment of joining a select NHL fraternity.
But Republican officials noted record fundraising during the impeachment process, leading Trump's re-election effort to bring in $155 million in the last three months of 2019 alone, boosted by a support base that is both pumped up and ticked off.
In an interview on CNBC's "Squawk Box," Hayes ticked off a number of factors that make Britain an ideal place to do business: a highly educated workforce, flexible labor rules not available elsewhere in the EU and a competitive tax policy.
Trump inconspicuously announced the endorsement earlier on Friday at a rally in Omaha, Nebraska, as he ticked off the names of several prominent Republicans who have come around to his candidacy since he became the party's presumptive nominee earlier this week.
Earlier, at one point during the demonstration, Rinaudo ticked off a number of facts about the state of poverty and health care in Rwanda, his way of building up the size of the market problem that he intends for Zipline address.
LGBTQ groups are still ticked off; they say the new law stills allows for discrimination against transgender people because it forbids cities from granting them extra protections until 2020, by which time the Supreme Court likely would have weighed in.
The sudden appearance of Fries With That has really ticked off some of the suburb's residents, who fear the pop-up is a chance for the company to test whether they can open up a permanent store in the area.
Renfroe hit a high chop back to the mound that ticked off Lorenzen's glove to ruin a chance for an inning-ending double play and scoring the final run Earlier, the Padres had a tying run cut down at the plate.
Then on Friday night, they lost in extra innings to the Cubs, who tied the score in the ninth when a pitch from closer Kenley Jansen ticked off the glove of Ruiz, who was catching him for the first time.
Clinton, speaking Monday night at a gun violence roundtable in New York, ticked off a list of Sanders's past votes on guns, including opposition to background check bills, and said he is using a straw-man argument to explain his record.
Nevertheless, the president of Mexico's national farm council, which represents the country's largest private sector agriculture and livestock companies, ticked off potential targets for the Mexican government's possible retaliation, including U.S. grains like yellow corn, pork legs, apples, potatoes and whiskey.
President Donald Trump's ambassador to Russia, Jon Huntsman, last week ticked off a laundry list of bad acts for which he said Russia must be held accountable when Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin meet on July 16 in Helsinki.
In his own testimony, Tommaso Treu, an astronomer at the University of California, Los Angeles, and a member of the TMT project, ticked off some of the questions that "the power of 2" — two telescopes — could address: Are we alone?
The next day, an Islamic State operative came to question the first group of captives, but he seemed to already know facts about them and ticked off personal details, like where one man worked and what his political sympathies were.
Removing his earlier statements about the Charlottesville violence from his jacket pocket, Mr. Trump on Tuesday glibly ticked off a list of racist groups that he had been urged to explicitly denounce, and ultimately did two days after the clashes.
" But he also ticked off a list of conditions he would consider an "honorable resolution," including a deal that protects human rights and women's rights and allows the United States to continue to "protect the American homeland from international terrorists.
Mr. Lauder, the president of the World Jewish Congress who recently started a new $25 million effort to fight anti-Semitism that employs a pollster working for Mr. Bloomberg, listened as Mr. Trump ticked off a litany of administration actions.
Mr. Neal ticked off multiple phone calls with Robert Lighthizer, the United States trade representative, and Ms. Pelosi over the weekend — including a call with Ms. Pelosi in the middle of Sunday's New England Patriots game — about the trade deal.
She ticked off her major issues: climate change, lowering health care premiums and the cost of prescription drugs, immigration as the bedrock of American values, passing privacy laws to rein in technology companies, and the importance of protecting voting rights.
He ticked off Japan, Australia, South Korea, India and Japan, as well as a long list of regional players sensitive to Iran's desire to grow its regional influence, including Kuwait, Egypt, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates.
In fact, former colleagues say, the Ted Cruz of 2000 is entirely recognizable in the candidate now aspiring to the presidency himself, fusing hyper-intelligence, crackling ambition and a laundry list of impeccable insider credentials that he once ticked off more readily.
John Delaney, a critic of Medicare for All, ticked off a list of European countries -- "whose systems we admire" -- that guarantee universal health care using models that keep a role for private insurers, which Medicare for All, in almost every case, does not.
The "Million Dollar Listing" star was leaving Craig's in WeHo Thursday night when he ticked off several reasons why the Amazon honcho's "magnificent" new Beverly Hills property deserves to be the most expensive sale in the history of Los Angeles ... and then some.
Speaking in New Zealand after a trip to Antarctica, Kerry took a swipe at Donald Trump as he ticked off some of the ways in which global warming is already affecting the planet: more fires, floods, damaging storms and rising sea levels.
Instead, he ticked off a litany of accomplishments from his first months in office, including anti-abortion rights policies, the confirmation of Neil Gorsuch to the Supreme Court and a directive that eases enforcement of a ban on political activity by religious institutions.
Fans at Oklahoma City games remain standing until the team scores a point, and the fans were on their feet until 2 minutes 30 seconds had ticked off the clock — seeing four misses — before Westbrook swooped to the rim for a layup.
She ticked off statistics, noting that nearly one in five Americans lives with a disability, and strayed from her prepared remarks — "I want you to hear this because this is not well known," she interjected at one point — to urge people to listen.
Conte, 53, spoke as 5-Star leader Luigi di Maio and League chief Matteo Salvini sat beside him, nodding their approval as the urbane law professor ticked off all the main elements of a policy agenda the party leaders had finalised days before.
Appearing this morning before a congressional panel, Mnuchin ticked off a list of other ideas, including "dramatically" expanding government loans to small businesses and providing aid to specific industries hit by a downturn in travel, such as airlines, cruise lines and hotels.
The ball ticked off the top of the webbing of the leaping Judge's glove, caroming into the first row of the bleachers and bouncing back onto the field for a two-run home run that gave the Braves a 29-22 victory.
Huddled in the stands during the waning moments of the Giants' regular season finale last month, as the last seconds ticked off in yet another disastrous Giants season — the team's sixth losing campaign in seven years — Giants fans sought succor in a memory.
However, we told them we could offer a great culture and ticked off the investments we'd made in building one, ranging from major ones, like our employee stock ownership plan, to fun perks, like the video games employees can play on breaks.
The president's visit is certain to trigger protests among residents, and talk about who might attend fundraisers for the president ticked off a mini-controversy earlier this month when actress Debra Messing said the list of those attending Trump's events should be published.
Big-serving American Querrey, champion in 219, calmly ticked off the next three games to move into the quarter-finals where he will meet top seed Marin Cilic, who fought back to beat Luxembourg's Gilles Muller 217-27 63-26 26-23.
Finally, after crawling up a rickety old ladder and into the loft, I found myself in "The Acid Lounge" (one task, ticked off!), which was essentially somebody's bedroom which they had adorned with old scarves from Camden market and allowed strangers to take drugs in.
Whiston ticked off the Tesla bus, the truck and a crossover vehicle known as the Model Y. Tesla is also building a much bigger Gigafactory than it had originally intended— and the company has said itself that it is going to need more Gigafactories.
Ocasio-Cortez, a 28-year-old who is a registered member of the Democratic Socialists of America, ticked off every box in the emerging litmus test of the American left: It certainly sounds like a left-wing platform — but it also might be pretty popular.
I've sat in a Model S, and more than enough midsize sedans with many of the extra car option checkboxes ticked off, and I can't think of any that even come close to the amount of comfort the top-of-the-line Air offers.
She ticked off the couple's $110 million investment in the community bank they founded in Oakland, California; Steyer's spending to end the cash bail system in California; and his financial support for Andrew Gillum's unsuccessful campaign in 2018 to become Florida's first black governor.
But when Contreras hit a harmless fly ball to right in the bottom of the fifth, the wind carried the ball about 40 feet from where Judge had camped under it — and it ticked off his glove to the turf as Contreras raced to third.
For instance, I had a sports car, and a few years ago I realized it's not cool for a guy over 65 with 20/40 vision to be getting ticked off when somebody's driving less than 100 miles an hour in front of it.
When Nova heads to the Zika event to answer questions from attendees, she learns that people are indeed pretty ticked off that she pressed the panic button with her article on something that's not necessarily an actual problem in the ninth ward yet — just potentially might be.
On Wednesday, Mr. Christie used the same insult against Mr. Rubio, and ticked off a long list of what he viewed as the senator's shortcomings, including the length of his town hall meetings (too short), his stump speech (unchanged in years) and his Senate achievements (nonexistent).
Lockheed Martin is one of that very small group, through its partnership with Boeing on the United Launch Alliance, and through its development of the Orion crew capsule, which ticked off an important checkbox in July when it was confirmed complete and ready for mission prep.
When I asked Brown what he would prioritize, he started with a tax bill and ticked off four components: Brown's earned income tax credit expansion alone would lift an estimated 6.6 million Americans out of poverty, according to Columbia University projections, as Vox's Dylan Matthews previously reported.
"We have a whole universe of suburban women and voters under 40 who are so ticked off at Trump they are coming out to vote in droves and energizing the base organically," said John Anzalone, a Democratic pollster for both Clinton and former President Barack Obama.
For the New York store, they wanted a townhouse, uptown, not on Madison but off Madison Avenue, a list that Mary-Kate, dressed in a Row blazer and shirt over threadbare vintage jeans, ticked off from her perch on a sofa on the store's third floor.
" 25 Photos View Slide Show ' He ticked off the major brands that had come to London to show (Tommy Hilfiger, Emporio Armani) and the rising young guard that is bubbling up here, and pronounced, bullishly: "This season's London Fashion Week, I think, is the best ever.
" Like a ticked-off anthropologist, she wrote of "the pervasive good-ol'-boyism of the Redneckus texenis, that remarkable tribe that has made the pickup truck with the gun rack across the back window and the beer cans flying out the window a synonym for Texans worldwide.
He and the others ticked off initiatives under Mr. Buttigieg: a small-business resource center on the West Side where minority residents are concentrated; the hiring of the city's first diversity officer; legal help for tenants facing evictions; and funding for home repairs in historically marginalized neighborhoods.
He and the others ticked off initiatives under Mr. Buttigieg: a small-business resource center on the West Side where minority residents are concentrated; the hiring of the city's first diversity officer; legal help for tenants facing evictions; and funding for home repairs in historically marginalized neighborhoods.
The lawmakers ticked off a long list of provisions that must be included in a final TTIP deal, including the elimination of all tariffs, especially on agricultural products, strong rules on intellectual property rights and enforceable commitments on digital trade, particularly on data server localization requirements.
"Today we come together to imagine," Ms. Warren said, using variations of "imagine" roughly 50 times as she ticked off plans for providing universal health care, wiping away student loan debt, tackling climate change, addressing gender and racial inequities and curbing the power of money in politics.
In the Reuters interview, he ticked off areas that he discussed privately with Putin, including security for Israel, Syria and Russia's annexation of Crimea and incursion into eastern Ukraine, and the Nord Stream 2 pipeline from Russia to Germany that will supply natural gas to Germany.
Gartman ticked off a number of obstacles to putting a floor under oil prices: The chief of Russian oil giant Rosneft continues to insist it will increase output; Iran is intent on restoring production following the lifting of sanctions this year and China's crude demand appears to be moderating.
But in court, the prosecutor ticked off each accusation, one by one: In 2011, years before Gomez worked at the Brian Center, a woman with severe Alzheimer's said he had touched her inappropriately while cleaning her up at another nursing home in town, prompting a law enforcement investigation.
The judge in that case ticked off a string of allegations against Chammout at his sentencing: He had been accused of shooting a juvenile in the leg, seeking to smuggle rocket launchers into the Middle East, attacking his wife with a crowbar and plotting to hire a hit man.
In the end, it was Hornqvist, who played his first six seasons in Nashville, and the Penguins who were able to score from close range, and as the final seconds ticked off, the Predators' fans could only watch in stunned amazement as the Penguins won yet another Cup.
As he watched election-night returns stream in at a hotel ballroom in Concord, N.H., a retired construction worker in bluejeans amid a sea of suits, Mr. Vigue ticked off a list of concerns about the military and Mr. Trump's disparaging comments about Senator John McCain of Arizona.
In a statement, Josephine Martin, a Purdue spokeswoman, ticked off steps the company had taken in the last 18 months to discontinue promoting opioid painkillers, by eliminating its sales forces, no longer marketing OxyContin to doctors, submitting to outside oversight and offering $200 million in emergency opioid relief.
SAN DIEGO — As the final seconds ticked off the clock in Sunday's game between the San Diego Chargers and the Oakland Raiders, the scoreboard and each team's fans affirmed what had become abundantly clear over the course of this season: The two longtime rivals were headed in different directions.
Following suit, Senator Ted Cruz of Texas then referred to his longtime spouse, Heidi, while Senator Marco Rubio of Florida ticked off the 17 years he'd been married to his wife, and both Ben Carson and Carly Fiorina made references to the individuals they've been wed to for decades.
Robert Menendez — the committee's top Democrat — ripped into the nominee: Menendez ticked off contradiction after contradiction: Pompeo said during the hearing that he supports a diplomatic approach to Iran's nuclear program, but in the past has said that regime change is "the only way" to deal with the problem.
Lady-likeness was required, even if a woman was a little buzzed and a lot of ticked off: Think of the sisters in PBS' Downton Abbey, ever the tight-lipped Brits, wining and dining in style, always keeping their drinks to themselves; or depictions of composed women drinking in fine art.
Despite being outshot 9-19763 to that point of the period, the Oilers scored first as Nugent-Hopkins picked off a pass and sped up ice before taking a long shot that ticked off of Pouliot in front and past Capitals goalie Braden Holtby 7:48 into the second period.
As loaded dishes of food made their way past my hungry eyes, I mentally ticked off what I couldn't eat: the brisket, made with tomato paste, a nightshade; the hummus, made with chickpeas, a legume; the bread of affliction itself, the matzoh, made with wheat, and thus that malevolent gluten.
But even when you've ticked off the lot—destroyed this ammo depot, recovered this film from a dead US pilot and wrecked his downed prototype aircraft, sent a powerful enemy cannon to its doom in a deep canyon—the game tells you to do it again, to get that 43% score.
He ticked off some of those accomplishments: Most of them reflected liberal priorities, like fighting greedy landlords and "recognizing the gay community in a way that was never done before," but a few were nonideological triumphs, like bringing a minor-league baseball team to Burlington and rebuilding the city's wastewater plant.
The Sharks tied the score a little under four minutes later when Radim Simek's shot from just in front of the blue line ticked off Gambrell, who had his back to the net as he fought for position with Islanders defenseman Ryan Pulock, and fluttered past Varlamov with 9:24 left.
" Siegfried ticked off a series of controversies sparked by Kelly's comments, which included calling some immigrants "too lazy" to register for protected status, making false claims about what a Democratic congresswoman had said at a ceremony, and asserting that the Civil War occurred because of "the lack of ability to compromise.
"That made me uncertain if maybe I shouldn't vote for someone else this time," said Ms. Asmann, After Mr. Bouffier ticked off a list of his accomplishments in the past five years — low unemployment, increase security and considerable investment in education — she decided that she would stick with the conservatives.
Gillum ticked off numbers from his 2018 campaign that he argued could be huge assets to the eventual nominee: 70,000 supporters who mobilized in various ways on his behalf, more than 1 million "good, live" cellphone numbers with supporters who had conversations with his campaign and more than 1 million email addresses.
Instead, he was thinking about the crucial play he could not make — on an 23th-inning single by Mark Canha that ticked off the edge of his outstretched glove and scored the winning run — and two little ones that loomed large in the Yankees' 22-211 loss to the Oakland Athletics at Yankee Stadium.
In a recent interview at his downtown office, he ticked off various leases his brokers had secured for Qualcomm, as well as the dozens of start-ups that have grown up around it — along with law firms, banks, furniture dealers and architects that all get an outsize portion of their business from the local giant.
Sabathia could only get one out in the fifth, allowing a single to Choo, a liner down the right-field line by Kiner-Falefa that scooted under Judge's glove for a triple, and a bouncer up the middle by Nomar Mazara that ticked off Sabathia's glove for an infield hit that scored Kiner-Falefa.
Still, in an interview Tuesday with CNN, the chairman of the National Republican Congressional Committee stressed the party's "incredible bench that I think is ready to step up if they need it," as he ticked off the names of Ryan and the rest of his House leadership team, including California's McCarthy and Louisiana's Scalise.
Gola White, who was beside her daughter when she was shot and killed in a playground this summer, four years after her son was gunned down in the same housing project, ticked off the public safety resources that she said were scant in Bronx neighborhoods like hers: security cameras, lights, locks, investigating police officers.
Mr. McGreevey ticked off all the steps needed to get Mr. Ortiz back to work: contact the office of the secretary of state for Puerto Rico to get a copy of Mr. Ortiz's original birth certificate; put together job applications; scroll employment opportunities; make sure he passed drug tests, and establish a mailing address.
The "Iron Man" actor turned out for a media preview staged by Audi to mark the opening of the annual Los Angeles Auto Show this week, and Downey ticked off a list of the various models he has owned in recent years, including one of the R2000 sports car featured in the first film starring that superhero.
Roborace is an effort to create a completely autonomous racing competition, one that will supposedly run alongside all-electric racing series Formula E. That's an extremely ambitious challenge, but the company recently ticked off an important milestone: the development version of the car did a full-speed lap of the Formula E track in Berlin, Germany.
The Penguins then struck first when Gudbranson's shot from the Stanley Cup Playoffs logo just in front of the blue line ticked off the stick of Islanders center Leo Komarov and sailed past Lehner, who was screened by teammate Nick Leddy as well as Pittsburgh right winger Patric Hornqvist with 9:24 left in the second period.
We were reminded of that just this week, when Trump — so ticked off at the Department of Justice's failure to protect him from justice — gave an interview to Fox News in which he said the fact that Sessions was first to put his hand up was "the only reason I gave him the job" of attorney general.
By the end, after Sanders rattled off the problems with the health care industry, the immigration laws, and Donald Trump, and ticked off the states to be won, starting with this one, people were standing and chanting "BERN-EE, BERN-EE" and one that ended "BERNIE ES PRESIDENTE" in this cafeteria filled with the bright morning.
Mr. Obama ticked off the elements of the pivot: the deployment of a rotational force of Marines to Australia, a missile-defense system to protect South Korea from the North's missiles, and a greater American voice in regional issues, like the disputes between China and its neighbors over reefs and shoals in the East China Sea and the South China Sea.
But government watchdogs ticked off a variety of actions — or inactions — taken during Mr. Cuomo's more than seven years in office that they believe have left Albany more prone to corruption, including lump-sum allocations and a decision in the early days of Mr. Cuomo's tenure to limit the amount of financial oversight of SUNY projects by the state comptroller's office.
"Puppy Prozac" is so last decade: Dr. Dodman, who has diagnosed Tourette's syndrome in racehorses and autism in bull terriers, ticked off an extensive if familiar-sounding list of remedies for mental disorders in animals: Buspar to treat anxiety, Ritalin for A.D.H.D., Xanax for phobias, an arsenal of S.S.R.I.s for depression, PTSD, and O.C.D. Can LSD microdosing be far behind?
" Pointing out she is not a smoker, Ms. Gould ticked off some of the properties of the Juul that the company believes have made it big: the way the "formation of the e-liquid mimics the way the nicotine is delivered in a cigarette"; the fact that Juul was the first to "design an e-cigarette that was not cylindrical.
He ticked off the headlines: The campaign opened its first Nevada field office in East Las Vegas, home to the highest concentration of Latinos in the state; The first dollars Sanders spent in California were used to open an office in East L.A.; And the first thing the campaign did in Iowa was communicate with voters in a bilingual format.
Speaker Paul RyanPaul Davis RyanEmbattled Juul seeks allies in Washington Ex-Parkland students criticize Kellyanne Conway Latina leaders: 'It's a women's world more than anything' MORE (R-Wis.) in an interview early Sunday said he empathized with Democrats over the recent revelations in former Democratic National Committee (DNC) interim chairwoman Donna Brazile's new book, saying he would be "ticked off" as well.
Over the phone, Zavell ticked off other ideas for policies and programs that would lower barriers to entry and help create a more just and equitable cannabis industry: waiving the license application fees, creating seed programs to fund cannabis businesses started by people of color, or routing the tax revenues from cannabis business into communities directly impacted by the drug war.
Zoe LofgrenZoe Ellen LofgrenWhat the impeachment vote looked like from inside the chamber Lawmakers request watchdog probe of Trump admin's ending of temporary protected status Trump set to confront his impeachment foes MORE (D-Calif.), holding up a pocket copy of the U.S. Constitution, ticked off lines from the legal text as she sought to argue that a fair trial would include witness testimony.
In one striking sequence that highlighted his ideological resolve, Mr. Sanders ticked off a list of policy issues and challenged Mr. Biden to explain to the American people how he would address them — a series of questions that could be seen as an opening gambit for a list of concessions he would seek from Mr. Biden if he were to drop out of the race.
"This World Cup feels like a distraction from everything," said Michael Gibbons, 44, author of "When Football Came Home: England, the English and Euro 96" who ticked off a list of tragedies last year, such as the deadly fire at the Grenfell Tower housing block in London, or the terror attacks in Manchester and London — not to mention the ugly aftermath of the Brexit vote.
In an interview here, he ticked off some of his earliest criticisms of the president — from the days when Mr. Trump peddled the false theory that President Barack Obama was born in Kenya, to the time Mr. Trump referred to Mexican immigrants as "rapists," to his call for a complete ban on travel to the United States by Muslims — before looking up and stopping himself.
One of the up-and-comers, Mr. Moore, ticked off a list of what he views as blemishes on Mr. Biden's record that should be barriers for black voters: Mr. Biden's past support for crime bills that some experts argue resulted in harsh sentences for black offenders; his treatment of Anita Hill during Clarence Thomas's Supreme Court confirmation hearing; and his eulogy for Strom Thurmond, the state's onetime Dixiecrat senator.
In my contact's experience, the more dangerous part of staff boredom and capriciousness is that if a client ticked off the shelter staff, for whatever reason, they could have their shelter reservation status changed in the computer overnight, when management wasn't around, and subsequently be forced to move out, find a new spot for themselves and their belongings, and start over again on wait lists and service placements.
The man, whose born name is Alexander Coe (of Nazareth, obviously), has ticked off most of the proverbial boxes a clubbing legend could check—an era-defining club residency, the world's first commercial mix CD, a pioneer of digital DJing—but it's his forthcoming album for long-running downtempo mix CD series Late Night Tales that displays at even nearly 50 years young, he still has some tricks up his sleeve.
Hillary ClintonHillary Diane Rodham ClintonTop Sanders adviser: Warren isn't competing for 'same pool of voters' Anti-Trump vets join Steyer group in pressing Democrats to impeach Trump Republicans plot comeback in New Jersey MORE was "ticked off" at NBC's Matt Lauer for asking too many questions about her email scandal to the point that she felt "almost physically sick" at a nationally televised presidential forum held last September in New York.
" Trump and Pence promise a winter of wholesale change About 300 miles south, at the Crown Coliseum in Fayetteville, North Carolina, Trump ticked off the same scripted agenda items but only came alive as he veered into a riff on flag-burning -- "We love our flag and we don't like it when we see people ripping up our flag and burning our flag ... And we'll see what we're going to do about that, OK?
Sure, these things are made for pets, but maybe you'll get lucky and manage to spot one discreetly tucked behind a car, ripe for the tinklin': People really seem to enjoy taking out their pent-up Trump rage by turning him into statue form and abusing the hell out of him: We've seen disturbing reconstructions of him stripped nude, dressed like a serial killer, and beaten to shit by ticked-off liberals and punk bands.
" Irv ticked off each "because" on the fingers of his left hand: "Because only an anti-Semite can be 'provoked to anti-Semitism'—a hideous phrase; because the mere suggestion of a willingness to talk to these freaks would just be throwing Manischewitz on an oil fire; because their hospitals are filled with rockets aimed at our hospitals, which are filled with them; because, at the end of the day, we love Kung Pao chicken and they love death; because—and this really should have been my first point—the simple and undeniable fact is . . .
He asked about her life, and she sighed impatiently and ticked off the father and the farm, the dead mother, the older brother, William, who was away to be a doctor, the significant fact of her return soon to boarding school, and she was aware that every word signified the extent of the gap between them, in this country, at this time, and the gap would, of course, feed into his fantasies about her, which she was sure were already hot, fetid and possessing, and now the four days until the train went back through the Midlands to her school seemed like all the time in the world to make this happen.

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