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959 Sentences With "to the fore"

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

The Moon enters Capricorn, bringing intimacy issues to the fore.
The election of Reagan really brought conservatism to the fore.
Issues concerning sex and intimacy will come to the fore.
As such, more independent voices have come to the fore.
The Moon enters Gemini tonight, bringing relationships to the fore.
Issues with your siblings could also come to the fore.
Issues of depth and intimacy may come to the fore.
Onstage, female theatermakers are bringing women's stories to the fore.
Issues around sex and intimacy will come to the fore.
Each new decade has brought past sins to the fore.
But it could quickly come roaring back to the fore.
More allegations from Bloomberg's past have come to the fore.
The earlier, more radical work came back to the fore.
Conversations about money and self-worth will come to the fore.
Fish's notched and shaped drawings brought those imperfections to the fore.
Debts, taxes, and other complicated financial issues come to the fore.
Scorpio season is here, bringing issues around money to the fore.
Your sex life is a theme that's coming to the fore.
Cuban relations often come to the fore during U.S. election campaigns.
New concepts like depression, anger and resignation come to the fore.
As traditional media erodes, new media is coming to the fore.
That suggests that an Asian benchmark will rise to the fore.
The Moon enters Taurus, too, bringing relationship issues to the fore.
Issues concerning sex, death, and taxes will come to the fore.
But Donald Trump's campaign and election have them to the fore.
When the threat recedes, our internal conflicts come to the fore.
Only now has the politics of class returned to the fore.
Issues around sex, trust, and intimacy also come to the fore.
Expect sex, intimacy, and trust issues to come to the fore.
Issues around sex, trust, and shared resources come to the fore.
That conflict came to the fore during the 2017 holiday season.
Her unresolved grief was coming to the fore in the clinic.
Race and racism have come to the fore in some elections.
Traveling, again, is another theme that will come to the fore.
Mr. Trump's election has again brought the issue to the fore.
The bourbon barrel-effect slides to the fore in the aftertaste.
But ethical questions have now "come to the fore," she said.
Mr Farron's evangelical beliefs came to the fore during the election campaign.
Murphy has come to the fore on the issue of gun control.
Relationship issues will come to the fore now that it's Scorpio season.
"It should have been brought to the fore …long ago," Trump said.
Wade, the courts and the rights of women come to the fore?
Issues concerning home and family are going to come to the fore.
The alt-right came to the fore during the U.S. presidential election.
Marville's shots are devoid of people, bringing the fixtures to the fore.
The national security implications of virtual currencies have come to the fore.
This has brought an unlikely defender of globalization to the fore — China.
The Moon is in Gemini today, bringing relationship issues to the fore.
Wade in 1973 — brought these antithetical beliefs about abortion to the fore.
Instead, what's inside the pulse — resonance, fluid, potential — comes to the fore.
This election brings to the fore a choice for all of us.
The ease of genetic testing has brought this question to the fore.
And this mass murder is bringing these political questions to the fore?
Issues concerning your home and family will come to the fore today.
Divisions that were previously papered over are now coming to the fore.
Complicated financial issues like taxes, debts, or inheritances will come to the fore.
The Moon is in Capricorn today, bringing issues concerning money to the fore.
The Moon enters fiery Aries today, bringing issues concerning relationships to the fore.
All that background pain has pushed itself to the fore of my psyche.
In aggregate, they tell stories that bring the subjects' humanity to the fore.
The Moon enters Taurus early today, bringing issues concerning intimacy to the fore.
The alt-right movement came to the fore during the U.S. presidential election.
The lead changed hands three more times before Jones came to the fore.
But this year has seen a number of worries come to the fore.
The shocking defeat brought the Islamic militant group's military prowess to the fore.
She is that three-year-old—until another identity comes to the fore.
Of course, reality comes to the fore when they discover they're losing money.
Healthier drinks will come to the fore, according to Kantar executive Graham Staplehurst.
Because it brought to the fore discussions about the purpose of public education?
Mass murder in a gay nightclub has brought the debate to the fore.
It's stronger that way, because different voices bring different arguments to the fore.
Still, strategic voting has since come to the fore in the G.O.P. race.
A recent report from the Stimson Center brings that question to the fore.
This full moon will bring issues concerning sex and intimacy to the fore.
This evening, a power struggle in a relationship will come to the fore.
Issues concerning cash and your sense of self-worth come to the fore.
" The anxiety around productivity comes to the fore most clearly in "The Problem.
The Moon will in Aquarius all day, bringing intimacy issues to the fore.
"In hindsight, that should have come to the fore" in the post-Sept.
It also brings Nick's fashionista cousin Astrid (Gemma Chan) more to the fore.
While each country will have priorities, three issues have come to the fore.
There's a full schedule of congressional testimony today, with Russia to the fore.
At times, it seems dormant; at times, it comes heatedly to the fore.
As Mr. Slonim grappled with this, his health issue came to the fore.
He writes: Corporations bring to the fore questions of size, power and accountability.
The actor's life also comes to the fore in two other distinctive films.
Then the fundamentals come back to the fore: How far does inflation go?
The suspension of Judge Pawel Juszczyszyn brought the issue back to the fore.
This all comes to the fore at a sensitive time in a sensitive place.
The Moon enters Earth sign Capricorn tonight, bringing issues concerning money to the fore.
"The party's extreme right wing views ... are coming increasingly to the fore," Peter said.
This brings to the fore a tension at the centre of Ms Warren's capitalism.
It's an issue that has come to the fore in recent days because Sen.
Sometimes, the worst parts of me were brought to the fore by this love.
As they hold fast, the family talks and generational differences come to the fore.
Yet in Mr Shulkin's case, the flap has pushed another scandal to the fore.
To the fore was stopping North Korea's nuclear weapons and missile program, he said.
These challenges are to the fore as Germany struggles to form a new government.
They will come to the fore only because Republicans nominated him to the presidency.
Popular influences come to the fore: vaudeville tunes, circus marches, cabaret, Iberian dances, ragtime.
Truth will not come to the fore without hard work and, potentially, a fight.
But in the final stretch, those divisions have come have come to the fore.
Then the ape repeats evolution and prosperity, then humanity comes to the fore again.
The Moon enters Libra tonight, bringing issues around sex and intimacy to the fore.
"  "This story is different because it brings all the other issues to the fore.
Relationship issues will also come to the fore due to the Moon entering Cancer.
Hundreds of creative applications of 3D visualization and augmentation are coming to the fore.
But one partial solution has surged to the fore: sending money directly to Americans.
Like any election, the campaign process brings many tensions in town to the fore.
This week's harrowing episode, "The Last Ceremony," moves Gilbert's question back to the fore.
Harshly divisive cultural issues came to the fore, driving even deeper wedges between Americans.
These are issues that certainly came to the fore in the last few years.
Mr. Goines steps to the fore here with a three-night run at Dizzy's.
Intimate issues come to the fore, and yes: Do watch out for manipulative behavior.
FOIX, France — When one French rider starts to fade, another comes to the fore.
FOIX, France — When one French rider starts to fade, another comes to the fore.
Mr. Schnatter notwithstanding, there's a considerable upside in bringing the founder to the fore.
But the two have combined to bring fears of anti-Semitism to the fore.
The recent Harvey Weinstein scandal has brought a lot of those issues to the fore.
Issues around trust and intimacy will come to the fore over the next few weeks.
CONTINETTI: Once the pictures of the families came to the fore, that is the issue.
In the days following Mr Bolsonaro's victory his economic plans have been to the fore.
Of course, other insecurities came to the fore over the years — is my nose massive?
The old ways of life – before malls displaced them – are coming back to the fore.
Emotionally, issues like security and your relationship to your belongings will come to the fore.
That possibility, though, brings to the fore a shadow over the future of Chinese science.
Cracks could also emerge within Erdogan's AKP, bringing the economic troubles more to the fore.
I imagine having their own children has also brought issues to the fore for them.
Some new way of presenting art will come to the fore soon enough, I imagine.
And still the echo of history rages to the fore, its howl demanding stronger countermeasures.
The Moon and Mercury both enter Taurus today, bringing issues concerning intimacy to the fore.
But where Google's new "opinionated" approach really comes to the fore is in the software.
I do not want other refugees to think that we push ourselves to the fore.
When speculative and, especially, Ponzi financing come to the fore, financial systems are more vulnerable.
Soon, Argentina's underlying macroeconomic challenges came to the fore, accelerating the run on the peso.
Today the Moon is in, Cancer, your opposite sign, bringing relationship issues to the fore.
You're in an intense mood today, Aries: Issues around intimacy are coming to the fore.
But now the issue is coming to the fore — and not because of the president.
With visuals completely out of the picture, the artists' personalities come brightly to the fore.
Instead, coming to the fore is a rich shadow play of harmonies and earth tones.
Last week, her frustration with Waterford and with her own powerlessness came to the fore.
The war drove Robert and Jimmy Quinlan apart, with more fissures coming to the fore.
Which message and bonding persona of a candidate can call that value to the fore?
Within months of Williamsburg's designation as a city, the discussion again came to the fore.
It was never America's military might that brought it to the fore of World leadership.
Carroll's suit could bring those allegations back to the fore, at least to some degree.
That's exactly the sort of backdrop where non-financial issues naturally come to the fore.
The suspension of Judge Pawel Juszczyszyn last week brought the issue back to the fore.
Mentioning Russia prominently during the speech would have brought that contentious issue to the fore.
But soon enough, the main issue of this election — religion — will return to the fore.
We have seen what I would refer to as homonationalism being pushed to the fore.
Your ruling planet, Venus, enters Taurus today, bringing sex and intimacy issues to the fore.
But the backlash against tech that came to the fore in 2017 isn't going away.
" Presumably Sanders' reggae outfit never covered " but that's my cynicism riding to the fore again.
At Thursday's presidential debate, those frictions came to the fore – and Joe Biden bore the brunt.
Since his arrest, other more hardline leaders with more militant followings have come to the fore.
Wellness, as well as your day job, is a topic that will come to the fore.
The Moon is in Leo today, bringing issues around money and self-worth to the fore.
But the past few weeks, issues around sexual harassment and assault have come to the fore.
The Moon enters Pisces this evening, bringing issues concerning cash and self-worth to the fore.
Issues concerning sex and intimacy will come to the fore, as will some complicated financial situations.
Unexpected home or family issues will come to the fore, and you can expect surprising news.
The Moon is in Capricorn, so expect issues concerning your relationships to come to the fore.
The Sun enters Gemini this evening, bringing complicated issues concerning cash and sex to the fore.
To the man who taught us how to cause #goodtrouble & brings values to the fore everyday.
These fading political risks have quickly made way for stronger fundamentals to return to the fore.
And the Democratic National Committee email leak brought the primary-season divisions back to the fore.
Issues around sex, trust, and sharing will come to the fore over the next few weeks.
But as more and more questions came really to the fore -- how did this get started?
The white supremacists who converged on Charlottesville understand their role in bringing Trump to the fore.
Why it matters: Each generation of digital media brings new voices and firms to the fore.
But the release of Springsteen's autobiography  Born to Run dragged far darker topics to the fore.
Issues around sex, intimacy, and trust will come to the fore, as will complex financial issues.
Complicated issues of money will also come to the fore—things like death, taxes, and inheritances.
But the release of Springsteen's autobiography Born to Run dragged far darker topics to the fore.
The Moon will enter your opposite sign Cancer later today, bringing relationship issues to the fore.
Financial issues may also come to the fore, especially tricky things like debts, taxes, or inheritances.
I had to start where I could bring ideas of legacy and posterity to the fore.
Curators and museums should follow HeK's lead in bringing more of their work to the fore.
S. trade tensions - and their potential impact on demand for industrial metals - returned to the fore.
Love, whether sacred or profane, comes to the fore in some of the season's prominent releases.
But what most distinguished the debate was the way in which gender came to the fore.
Mr. Netanyahu has desperately tried to change the subject, repeatedly bringing security threats to the fore.
The 2016 presidential election drew to the fore a systemic problem in our society: media bias.
Almost immediately, the underlying tension I had felt about intimate relationships really came to the fore.
Crude prices languishing near 2017 lows are also keeping the over-supply issue to the fore.
The Nobel Prize given to Duflo, Banerjee, and Kremer has brought these disagreements to the fore.
She has been unwell in recent years and has been pushing her son to the fore.
Issues concerning your sex life are coming to the fore, as are some complicated financial issues.
Issues around trust and intimacy will come to the fore, as will some feelings of grief.
We know that this isn't true, and this study's findings bring that reality to the fore.
It will be the first since 1994, and Birdsall intends to bring Beard's queerness to the fore.
Critical changes around finances—especially shared resources, debts, taxes, or inheritances—will also come to the fore.
The issue of keeping or eliminating private insurance came to the fore in January when California Sen.
And now a new generation of inexperience charismatic leftists are moving to the fore of the party.
These questions came to the fore in several films which played at this year's London Film Festival.
Another throwaway element of the original that's brought to the fore here is the time and place.
This comes to the fore in the book's final scene, the nighttime drive to find Chuck's killer.
For one thing, riskier and more economically attuned stocks have roared to the fore in recent months.
Yet, even with that success, issues of culture and values have come to the fore longer term.
On Tuesday, before Portal could even materialize in stores, privacy issues once again came to the fore.
Issues of racism and power came to the fore which challenged the power dynamics within the collective.
Underwater melodic tones and percussive samples are brought fantastically to the fore when you listen on headphones.
The HDZ then jettisoned its leader, who had allowed the party's Ustasha-admiring elements to the fore.
Concerns about renewed sectarian tensions and political divisions surrounding a possible border have returned to the fore.
The infighting came to the fore in recent weeks with major opposition leaders publicly criticizing each other.
But even the plan behind forcing this issue to the fore took no small bit of imagination.
You're in an intense mood today, with deep issues concerning trust and intimacy coming to the fore.
It's also left the stage clear for other leaders to come to the fore on the issue.
Issues about your home and family will come to the fore, and you're going to feel sensitive.
Global collaboration came to the fore in Bonn showing that Paris is becoming a real-world reality.
In A.S.M.R. videos, people engage in regular tasks while drawing those second-order pleasures to the fore.
Throughout the show, Apóstol brings the past to the fore, demonstrating Tucumán arde's relevance in the present.
Those qualities were certainly to the fore in the award of the prize for physiology or medicine.
More broadly, the concern over the outbreak is again bringing resentment of the mainland to the fore.
The Brexit saga has pushed nationalism and regionalism to the fore in British politics, ahead of economics.
We have seen the contradictions between tech giants and European governments come to the fore over time.
In short, with climate policy coming to the fore, Western societies are coming apart at the seams.
Masks will fall, and the glitz may disappear as the economy's inherent weaknesses come to the fore.
A pair of shootings in Texas and Ohio last month thrust the gun debate to the fore.
In Carry On, all the questions that fanfiction has been asking for decades come to the fore.
The story has brought to the fore questions of how race and class factor into college admissions.
In spite of my fears, it was my father who came to the fore as my ally.
Whether you're coupled or not, issues concerning you and another person's shared resources come to the fore.
"As they moved forward, it was really about the presidential system coming to the fore," Stein says.
Now the series is openly winking at its audience while pushing its more "idiosyncratic" contestants to the fore.
Given slowing growth and rising penetration, we see saturation fears coming back to the fore on Alphabet shares.
The result has been chaos: a rudderless party where personal disagreements have started to come to the fore.
"Supply-side issues returned to the fore, with crude oil prices rising strongly," ANZ bank said on Tuesday.
But Parnas is confident the fruits of their work will come to the fore in the presidential campaign.
Jesse: I think the sense of mystery or illusion has come to the fore as I've gotten older.
But Pizzella, currently deputy Labor secretary, has his own controversial past that will likely come to the fore.
Get the tools you use most often to the fore by choosing File, then Options, then Customize Ribbon.
Now, some surprising figures have come to the fore to voice mass frustration on the issues at hand.
Expect conversations about money to come to the fore as communication planet Mercury enters Taurus on May 13.
It makes sense that Melanie will behave differently depending on 'who' is to the fore in her mind.
The Moon is in Air sign Gemini, little scorpion, bringing issues around intimacy and trust to the fore.
The threat of losing their livelihoods brings racism to the fore and takes "Sweat" to its violent climax.
ON THE rich world's long march away from heavy industry, Britain once again finds itself to the fore.
I am not suggesting that community comes to the fore only during a Fourth Turning—far from it.
As each of these stories, and others, develop, Trump's divisive behavior and positions will return to the fore.
And yet no other politician has managed to come to the fore while in prison as he has.
The changes in the east have social, cultural and political consequences which are now coming to the fore.
Since her initial offering, Chung has produced celebrated collections that bring the dreaminess of storytelling to the fore.
In many other parts of the country, too, education has moved to the fore in this election season.
After decades of neglect from academics, they are coming to the fore in museum shows and private collections.
Environmental issues will also come to the fore following Trump's decision to withdraw from the Paris climate accord.
The Moon is illuminating the partnership sector of your chart today, Libra, bringing relationship issues to the fore.
The female subject returns to the fore in "Esther" (2012), another example of Wulff's major/minor iconographical hierarchy.
The Moon is in Waters sign Pisces today, bringing issues around self-worth and money to the fore.
In 2010, Benedict wrote a letter to Ireland's Catholics when the abuse scandal came to the fore there.
The Moon enters warm Fire sign Leo this evening, bringing issues around trust and intimacy to the fore.
This could shift priorities within the legislature and change the type of issues that rise to the fore.
Venus Williams has also returned to the fore after struggling for several years to manage an autoimmune disorder.
It is not only the "beef, Bible and bullet" message that has brought Mr. Bolsonaro to the fore.
News reports that Russia is already interfering in the upcoming election have returned the issue to the fore.
Her attempt, she insists, is just to bring the most interesting voices to the fore, rich or poor.
The outbreak has simply brought these xenophobic sentiments to the fore, strengthening them with confirmation bias and fear.
AS IF IN RESPONSE, a number of floral designers are bringing grass, eternally a backdrop, to the fore.
Formal investigations rarely lend the moral clarity needed to bring not one but multiple sources to the fore.
Issues around sex and intimacy will also come to the fore, now that the Moon is in Virgo.
Geopolitical risks have risen to the fore quite strongly, said Bart Wakabayashi, Tokyo branch manager at State Street Bank.
"Queer Eye" is a makeover show, but one which brings contemporary issues to the fore in almost every episode.
Over the next few weeks, conversations concerning your home, your family, or your roommates will come to the fore.
She's extremely professional and enjoying the fact that that side of her life is coming to the fore again.
Extremist positions have also come to the fore in a more insidious manner, which is proving harder to combat.
What guts it must have taken to push these issues to the fore instead of keeping them locked away.
I wanted to change that and to bring untested ideas to the fore that could disrupt the media space.
And some of technology's biggest names took a breath, allowing lesser-known tech players to come to the fore.
The Moon moves into emotional water sign Scorpio this evening, bringing issues around sex and intimacy to the fore.
The argument over sharp rises in the price of medicines came to the fore again in America's presidential campaign.
Beckham came to the fore a century later when the court ruled the opposite way in Bush v. Gore.
Another problem that's come to the fore is the fact that lorises aren't just being bought as pets anymore.
The DSA could organize boycotts of exploitive landlords, to help bring the issue of housing costs to the fore.
So the divisiveness is going to come to the fore immediately, and we'll see how he responds to that.
Full moons bring things to light, and as we discussed, some secrets are sure to come to the fore!
These ideas about parenting or not parenting, and sex, come to the fore when somebody faces an unplanned pregnancy.
If this question has now lost its urgency, the debate over globalization has brought new questions to the fore.
He's brought issues to the fore this campaign that others haven't, and he has the courage of his convictions.
When used critically, they can chip away at harmful stereotypes, pushing more accurate perceptions and understandings to the fore.
It is through the extensive research that the tight layers of critical discourse amongst friends come to the fore.
With smaller ensembles, his commanding pianism — equal parts Thelonious Monk, Chucho Valdés and Bill Evans — bursts to the fore.
Deep, intense feelings come to the fore, and you'll learn just how intimate you and your partners can get!
The impassioned debate over the immigration order brought to the fore issues at the heart of the Trump presidency.
But when that statute was struck down by Spain's constitutional court in 2010, the tensions came to the fore.
But there are naturally uncertainties about his ability to recover quickly and return to the fore at his age.
But his regime responded with force, moderate Syrian activists were targeted and eventually the extremists rose to the fore.
Geopolitical tensions returned to the fore after North Korea launched a ballistic missile that flew over Japan on Tuesday.
"(The BJP has) faced a tough opposition campaign, (and) their vulnerabilities have also come to the fore," Jha says.
I'd argue that you can see some of that tech and general approach coming to the fore here as well.
Trump, leaning heavily on Breitbart's readership, with the addition of his own bombast, has brought these fears to the fore.
Issues around sex and intimacy will come to the fore; you'll be sharing deep feelings and secrets with your partners.
Issues around sex and intimacy will come to the fore today, as the Moon is in sensual Earth sign Taurus.
Relationship issues will come to the fore today, as the Moon in Leo illuminates the partnership sector of your chart.
In stark fashion, the race brought to the fore complex narratives concerning race, gender, ambition, sexuality, political strategy, and protest.
"I think we'd be just fine and the benefits of lower oil for the consumer would come to the fore."
Last year's Obamacare repeal fight really brought this issue to the fore, and people might be reassessing their prior beliefs.
Issues around sex and intimacy will come to the fore, as will complicated financial situations like taxes, debts, and inheritances.
But in his new book, Catch and Kill, New Yorker reporter Ronan Farrow brings those allegations back to the fore.
But, a backlash from the investment community over the merits of monetary policy has once again come to the fore.
Certain strains of evangelical thought that many members of the mainstream media have long dismissed have come to the fore.
The Moon is in materially minded Earth sign Taurus today, bringing issues around finances and self-worth to the fore.
Polling data shows high levels of hostility to immigrants going back decades, and mass immigration brought it to the fore.
Pisces season will be a very emotionally sensitive time with sex and intimacy issues coming to the fore for Leos.
It came to the fore when the economy tanked, as corporations looked for new ways to inspire customers to shop.
Brent and U.S. crude oil futures prices dropped as worries about oversupply in the oil market returned to the fore.
This is especially true today, during the lunar eclipse in sensitive Pisces, which will bring domestic issues to the fore.
Over the past two months, however, jitters about French presidential elections in April and May have come to the fore.
But Booker, who would be the first U.S. president descended from slaves, has frequently brought the subject to the fore.
"The trade tariff pain is clearly starting to come to the fore in companies connected to autos," one trader wrote.
The Moon in Sagittarius is highlighting relationship issues, so expect intimacy-related problems to come to the fore this evening.
PRIVACY TO THE FORE Throughout the presentation, Apple executives stressed privacy protections for consumers as they shop and consume content.
Hence the near-disbelief that gripped the House of Commons, in 1939, when he came once more to the fore.
Nonetheless, Republicans should move this issue to the fore if they are to maintain the support of their traditional allies.
I think an interesting question is whether a "Better Trump" could come to the fore in 2020 should he lose.
Anything involving banks brings to the fore the conflicts in his Administration between the Wall Streeters and the anti-globalists.
The week's hearings could represent a turning point for the internet giants as discussions of regulation come to the fore.
In Silicon Valley alone, a number of haunting sexual assault accusations have come to the fore in the past years.
Impermanent art, like graffiti and performance, came to the fore in the Lower East Side in the 2000s and 80s.
The Moon enters Cancer and illuminates a very private sector of your chart, bringing issues concerning intimacy to the fore.
Like the very best groundbreaking pop albums, underground sounds are brought to the fore on Maths + English without being butchered.
That moment where everything falls away and those echoey keys come through to the fore amidst alien-sounding vocal sighs.
But on Tuesday, Reade's allegation came to the fore again when Grim reported on its general outline in the Intercept.
The suicides brought to the fore a longstanding problem for New York City police and officers all over the country.
As this eternally boyish comic has moved into his 50s, this aspect of his appeal has come to the fore.
All of this brings to the fore concerns about the global economy's ability to withstand a shock from the coronavirus.
The conventional values like dominance, aggression, wealth, athleticism, sexual conquest — and, particularly, emotional suppression — came roaring back to the fore.
In Unnikrishnan's imaginings, this ever-present threat of displacement comes to the fore only during his characters' most naked moments.
" But, as the drums stutter to a stop, an audio sample from a protest comes to the fore: "Hands up!
The heyday of disco, in the nineteen-seventies, was defined by conflicts that have recently come to the fore again.
It is not surprising that people with a pro-competitive, pro-business, anti-big government philosophy came to the fore.
But at points the testimony of the scholars grew heated as the stakes of the debate came to the fore.
He did not seek office when Law and Justice retook Parliament in 2015, pushing more acceptable candidates to the fore.
It's good for the museum to bring these issues to the fore in a range of ways, even uncomfortable ones.
But in 2020, some disability issues are coming to the fore, even if they aren't being explicitly approached as such.
People are being brought out to the fore, so far that I know virtually none of it related to the campaign.
Following the war, Rhee's strongman instincts came to the fore, as he declared martial law and made himself president-for-life.
One ability that has come to the fore in recent years is Holloway's ability and willingness to fight from both stances.
They repeatedly bring to the fore questions about how their personal identities — in terms of gender, age, race, profession, sexuality, etc.
These theories become more and more complicated and important as the more magical aspects of the show come to the fore.
It ended up being a more cohesive way of bringing that secret hipster hiding inside the pop star to the fore.
At home in all the major powers, growing populism, nativism, and jingoism come to the fore, militating against saving the world.
But her nomination would bring the filibuster reform battle, which has left many GOP senators still bitter, back to the fore.
The system is broken but the good news is that the advent of smartphones is bringing usable data to the fore.
This disparity was brought to the fore in 2014, when Salinas police shot and killed four Hispanic men in separate encounters.
Jim Cramer feels like we're in a market waiting to unravel, but the bearish news just isn't coming to the fore.
Fake news came to the fore during the 2016 US election and the Brexit referendum in the UK earlier that year.
Weidner says that the election has brought many deep-seated biases to the fore for young people, including racism and Islamaphobia.
These rose to the fore after former U.S. intelligence contractor Edward Snowden leaked details about the U.S. government's Internet spying programmes.
That has brought GM crops to the fore, especially maize, a staple crop grown and consumed in most sub-Saharan countries.
Big money is still a fact of life in congressional races and it will undoubtedly return to the fore in 2020.
Your day job, your habits, and your approach to wellness are all themes that are going to come to the fore.
Palestine isn't on Google's map, and it never has been, but the issue has come to the fore again this week.
"Political uncertainty in the Middle East has returned to the fore," the IEA said in its closely-watched report published Friday.
Trade tensions, which had recently yielded some of the spotlight to nuclear negotiations, could also make a return to the fore.
Warren's bill has brought these issues to the fore more so than any moment since Larry Fink's annual letter to shareholders.
Yet there's a great organ riff, a killer guitar break and some sharp funky brass sounds now brought to the fore.
The next calendar year should also see two competing political ideologies come to the fore, according to The Economist's Daniel Franklin.
But this minor alteration pushes some important questions to the fore: What does the park reveal about the people who visit?
Geopolitical tensions came to the fore again overnight after North Korea's foreign minister said U.S. President Donald Trump had declared war.
It's a conversation that, as Americans know too well, tends to bring a country's dumbest, most regressive opinions to the fore.
The restrictions have come to the fore as the Trump administration scrambles for ways to prop up ailing companies, including airlines.
Climate activists are looking for a new, post-Keystone focus, and "keep it in the ground" has risen to the fore.
Mateen's attack was a terrible and year-defining incident that has driven the issue of mass gun violence to the fore.
Republicans have, on occasion, pressed similarly to bring issues to the fore — think of Rand Paul's opposition to federal surveillance policy.
It helps brings old emotions to the fore, momentarily sweeping away disorientation caused by the resident's irreversible, progressive loss of faculties.
Victorian technology caused a major cultural shift and brought the middle class to the fore through media, manufacturing, capitalist marketing, entertainment.
The roots of populist discontent that propelled Ms. Le Pen to the fore have not magically disappeared with Mr. Macron's victory.
Yet he has suddenly been pushed to the fore of this crisis, helming a national response group and visiting Wuhan itself.
He is 22004-1-2 in singles, the format where his superior ability and single-minded focus come to the fore.
After Castro brought the issue of decriminalizing border crossing to the fore last summer, Warren was quick to adopt his ideas.
Its $11.5 billion share sale earlier this week brought those concerns to the fore, though investors like its attractive dividend yield.
This year, the growing size of market came to the fore when the largest secondaries deal ever was reported in May.
Anyway, Tchelitchew and the rest of them were swept aside when the Abstract Expressionists came to the fore in the 1940s.
But in these artist-focused rooms, Cahun's photographs are allowed to breathe and her fascinating life is brought to the fore.
And it is this specific intersection of gender and climate that Mayor Hidalgo's leadership of the C40 has brought to the fore.
She's a grey goof, dumb and storyless, except when her shared history with Banks comes to the fore, which it often does.
However, the real test will come in the second round, when economic tactics are likely to come to the fore, it noted.
Issues concerning trust and intimacy come to the fore as the Moon in Aries illuminates a very private sector of your chart.
The primary campaign, and the election next spring, could turn out to be ugly as identity politics are thrust to the fore.
But the issue Trump brought to the fore -- players kneeling during the National Anthem -- was not one of the team's chief concerns.
If the healthcare bill fails, these criticisms will likely come to the fore when the party and the press conduct their postmortems.
And Mr. Payton, who has lately been honing his skills as a studio auteur, brings a few fresh ideas to the fore.
Two characteristics come to the fore in relation to the global migration crisis: the first is confusion and the second is ambivalence.
A full moon in Taurus arrives early tomorrow morning, bringing an issue concerning your home, family, or living situation to the fore.
The Sun enters Aquarius this evening, activating the home and family sector of your chart and bringing these themes to the fore.
Xi has increasingly come to the fore in recent weeks, however, as China has appeared to successfully brought the outbreak under control.
Issues of citizenship and solidarity — that is to say, asking what it means to be an American — have returned to the fore.
While geopolitical issues have sprung to the fore, subtler shifts in the backdrop of the stock market might be producing outsize reactions.
That's because he sees, in Trump, a politician who is bringing his own strategy for attacking left-wing culture to the fore.
By bringing it to the fore, they built a wave of political support totally out of proportion to their actual organizational strength.
But in the world of underground electronic music, in which Berlin predominantly traffics, it's undeniable that women have come to the fore.
The vibe will heat up in your intimate relationships; action planet Mars will bring issues concerning sex and closeness to the fore.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads For 23 years, Urbanworld Film Festival has brought a diverse slate of cinema to the fore.
A general disconnect from society comes to the fore in two films screening together, Ben Rivers's Ghost Strata and Denis Côté's Wilcox.
Today, the lesson of Iraq hangs over everything, and Twitter has brought both anti-war and non-American voices to the fore.
At the tables in the back, on the other hand, the restaurant's "Bonfire of the Vanities" alter ego comes to the fore.
Cramer also noticed health care stocks starting to come back to the fore and shared his cardinal rule for spotting market rotations.
It will embolden people to come to the fore ... so we can find the business people who are tampering within the ANC.
The online music hub ReverbNation has established a track record of success in bringing new talent to the fore in popular music.
Charlotte has experience from the DNC in 2012, but our guess is that this cycle will bring more malign actors to the fore.
The future of Deutsche Bank's investment banking operations has returned to the fore after the collapse of merger talks with smaller rival Commerzbank.
In 2012, the brutal gang rape of a young woman in the nation's capital, brought the issue of sexual violence to the fore.
Ribot's version is sparse and understated, its acoustic slides leaving plenty of space for Waits' voice to bring the lyrics to the fore.
This should have been brought to the fore it should have been brought up long ago and that's what you have hearings for.
The Georgia primary is a microcosm of that existential crisis, bringing delicate but explosive questions about race and party politics to the fore.
I think that is coming to the fore for both of them – even more now they are starting to have their own families.
The Deutsche Bank story, which rippled across markets Thursday, has been moving to the fore as a risk because of fear of contagion.
But GDC's decision to highlight Bushnell — undoubtedly an important figure in the history of games — may bring that uncomfortable conversation to the fore.
Tonight's full moon in Scorpio is very emotional for you, Leo, as issues concerning your home and family life come to the fore.
Synthetic biology will certainly get caught up in the post-eugenic discussions of such matters that CRISPR has brought to the fore today.
Indeed, perhaps Coates's most intriguing new character, Zenzi, throws Wakanda into crisis by bringing the citizenry's conflicted feelings toward T'Challa to the fore.
While ISIS is surely the first-order problem in terrorism, other threats are likely to come to the fore during a Trump presidency.
Also, embedded in the statement is that fact that governance issues will be forced to the fore as financial markets (in China) internationalize.
If we talk about normality instead, a whole new field of insights comes to the fore, including that of compliance with a norm.
The issue came to the fore last week when news broke that former President Bill Clinton had boarded Attorney General Loretta Lynch's plane.
Much of this came to the fore when a U.S. Court of Appeals allowed one of the cases, American Electric Power Co. v.
The attack overshadowed the last day of campaigning for Sunday's presidential election first round, bringing raw issues surrounding Islamist militancy to the fore.
A seasoned leader with expertise in a multitude of Finance and Business functions, Dipanjan brings over 15 years of experience to the fore.
The Sun enters Virgo August 22, lighting up the intimacy sector of your chart and bringing to the fore sex and trust issues.
Your mind shifts to material matters when communicator Mercury enters Earth sign Virgo on July 30, bringing conversations about cash to the fore.
The debate came to the fore again last week when Google removed AdNauseam, an anti-tracking browser extension, from the Chrome Web Store.
Tensions outside the ring had come to the fore inside it, and the result was one of the fiercest fights of the decade.
The Moon is in Aries today, illuminating the financial sector of your chart and bringing issues around worth and security to the fore.
Your focus is on your home, family and private life; however, some intense topics will come to the fore, especially concerning your relationships.
Today's full moon in Libra will bring some issues you may have been avoiding to the fore—you can't ignore things any longer!
"The one that has always concerned me is the financial issues, which obviously have come much to the fore this week," he said.
The question that came to the fore: Is the United States' policy toward Russia what the president says, or what the government does?
It's a needle-thread between the climate activists who've forced this issue to the fore and the non-voters, undecideds, and swing voters.
Those connections came to the fore again last week, when the mood became toxic between Lighthizer and Freeland, as the U.S.-imposed Sept.
Yet the effort to develop 5G standards has brought many new players to the fore, including Huawei, a relative newcomer to the field.
Yet certain aspects of Biden's political persona fit uncomfortably with a changing Democratic Party, and those problems came to the fore last week.
In the Trump era and the Trump orbit, these ambassadors of a darker side of the American dream have come to the fore.
And as hyper-concentrated social justice movements took a back seat, protest songs focused on more general social commentary rose to the fore.
It was late March, and all were in favor of Novak Djokovic shaking free of his tennis crisis and returning to the fore.
The Yankees' power is coming to the fore as they extend their lead with solo home runs by Gleyber Torres and Giancarlo Stanton.
But President Xi Jinping has also created new ways to put himself and his message of patriotic obedience to the fore this year.
But in Britain, where questions of identity, sovereignty and perceived threats to the nation have come to the fore, it is particularly acute.
India and the United States have built close political and security ties, but in recent years trade frictions have come to the fore.
In subsequent elections as social issues came to the fore, seniors have tended to split their votes more evenly or side with Republicans.
A three-day event provocatively titled "Who Owns Black Art?" outside of the official Art Basel fair brings this point to the fore.
Gordon also saw some encouraging signs coming to the fore in Peloton's chart despite the stock's nearly 13% decline so far this month.
But she is masterly when she lets more scraped-down prose push a series of elemental questions to the fore: Do intentions matter?
Still, with no consensus behind any one path, and a vanishing window for further negotiation, more radical solutions are rising to the fore.
Yet it's a widespread assumption that even Justice Antonin Scalia brought to the fore last December during oral arguments for the Fisher case.
"There are no motives in this piece which have to be brought to the fore," Schoenberg wrote when he revised the work in 1949.
He is a perfect fit for Khuddoos, bringing the character's loneliness and trauma to the fore with a pathos few other actors can manage.
Expect issues around sex and intimacy to come to the fore, and to hammer out complicated financial issues, especially those that concern shared resources.
Brod says that encryption "is finally coming to the fore," he said following a U.S. election marked by hacks and leaks of confidential emails.
How can a country so famous for its liberal politics, which allows prostitution, soft drugs, and gay marriage, also propel Wilders to the fore?
The modern version of professional and social ruination, however, came to the fore for Gilbert as she watched #MeToo allegations roll out in 213.
Didi has struggled over the last 18 months, so safety concerns bubbled to the fore following the murder of two female passengers last year.
The issue of unaccompanied minors came to the fore as their numbers started to increase in 63, spiking in 2014 and garnering international attention.
A choking of global oil supply has come to the fore of investors' minds, pushing prices up for both Brent and West Texas Intermediate.
Austria's longstanding nativist streak came to the fore in the summer of 2015, when the European refugee crisis became the continent's dominant political issue.
And the fact that the neighborhood is near the downtown Arts District across the river has brought the issue of displacement to the fore.
Besides the United States, migration has again risen to the fore of national political debates in a number of North African and European countries.
The Moon enters Sagittarius this morning, urging you to take it easy, and intimacy issues come to the fore as the Sun enters Leo.
Pussy Riot rose to the fore as a collective, but as of now, Tolokno appears to be the most active—and most visible—member.
Besides the United States, migration has again risen to the fore of national political debates in a number of North African and European countries.
Meanwhile Western governments, with America and Britain to the fore as large donors of aid to Ethiopia, have been notably silent about the turmoil.
Hierarchies of all kinds, not just class, come to the fore in mysterious ways the film isn't quite prepared to be frank about either.
Power issues in your relationships will come to the fore at 8:03 PM when the Moon opposes the lord of the underworld, Pluto.
And as Ms. Anderson says these lines, and others like them, a sense of Blanche as a desperately plotting strategist comes to the fore.
Iqra at first represents Somalia and something shared, drawing them together, but when Iqra's conservative cultural views come to the fore, Muna is repulsed.
"  While the polls reflect name recognition now, Bringman predicts a diverse group of candidates will come to the fore, and will have "diverse support.
" Another person talked about how their "anxiety levels have been off the hook and lots of repressed stuff is coming back to the fore.
But at a time when terrorist attacks have pushed questions of national identity and civic education to the fore, it quickly became politically charged.
The topic came to the fore after a reshuffling of House Appropriations subcommittee chairmen this week that was prompted by the departure of Rep.
Mass shootings have repeatedly thrust the gun debate to the fore over the last decade, though they make up a sliver of gun deaths.
In recent years, directors like Erik Matti (already an established director of mainstream fare), Raya Martin and Jerrold Tarog have come to the fore.
What's more, populism's rise has brought anti-Semitism to the fore, catching a Labour Party still struggling with its language on Israel largely unprepared.
Indeed the insistence that Britain pay up is a sign of the strains that will come to the fore after the transition period ends.
You're in a sensitive mood today thanks to the Moon entering Water sign Pisces—issues concerning trust and intimacy will come to the fore.
You're reflecting on your career and your reputation today, thanks to the Moon in Capricorn, and relationship issues are also coming to the fore.
As far as shaking up the world of cycling and putting British riders to the fore, the sponsorship has undoubtedly been a spectacular success.
While midwifery is making a comeback in the US, midwife-led deliveries are standard practice in UK hospitals, pushing natural birth to the fore.
As Zune died other consumer-focused device efforts came to the fore (Kin, Windows Phone 7, Xbox One) and the music service lived on.
Austria's longstanding nativist streak came to the fore in the summer of 893, when the European refugee crisis became the continent's dominant political issue.
And in 2016, both states will also vote in competitive Senate races, in which the candidates are already pushing gun laws to the fore.
The Dabbers has come to the fore lately because of some of our work being used in several Chuck Palahniuk projects by Mindpollen studios.
The topic of Germany's spending, or lack of it, has come to the fore this summer as its economy has slipped near recessionary territory.
Plots for more novels or children's stories, bits of poems and, sometimes, when I'm lucky, just beautiful, intact sentences will come to the fore.
"Moving into these environments, the political identities that move to the fore are not Republican or Democrat, or conservative or liberal," Mr. Lassiter said.
The issue Ms. Khan's article really brought to the fore is this: Do we trust Amazon, or any large company, to create our future?
This attitude returns to the fore this week, with James Comey scheduled to testify on Thursday about Trump's attempts to stifle an F.B.I. investigation.
But one thing is certain: The Mackey marketing playbook — bringing labor to the fore in order to assure customers that they are A-O.
The furor led others on Twitter to bring to the fore more criticisms of Bloomberg, like that he has supported Republicans in the past.
His speed and talents have since come to the fore and he is now a leading light in the Grand Prix Drivers' Association (GPDA).
In recent years, Paul Kagame has risen to the fore of the international arena as one of the strongest allies of Israel and Jewry.
But gently asking, "What's a smart girl like you doing at a party like that?" tends to bring that smart girl to the fore.
As feminist issues come to the fore in deeply patriarchal South Korea, there's a growing discontent among young men that they're being left behind.
The timeless parts of sensory experience come to the fore, as when Sophie gives Marianne cherrystones heated by the fire for her menstrual cramps.
Defense Secretary James Mattis was slated to join the briefing, too, as defense spending comes to the fore during a debate over the budget.
It was another question, one that Trump's candidacy has brought back to the fore: whether, and how strongly, to disavow the Ku Klux Klan.
That Americans in general — and news organizations in particular — are increasingly using social media has also helped push frank racial discussions to the fore.
Capita's troubles came to the fore during a slowdown in business decision-making after Britain's vote to leave the European Union in June 2016.
Eminem fundamentally remade hip-hop's relationship to drugs, bringing abuse and addiction to the fore, but also venerating a kind of drug-addled mischief.
As regulatory problems are worked out, the second big question is coming to the fore: who will make money with e-vehicles and how much?
As for Google Sheets, again the formatting options are kept to the fore, with formulas, charts, and data filtering options a bit harder to find.
Now that issue seems to be coming to the fore anyway, piling more pressure on Lam and creating new headaches for her bosses in Beijing.
The party that came to the fore amid Germany's migrant crisis and has tapped into discontent over government policies ranging from immigration to the economy.
This news and the president's tweet brings a question that experts have been debating for months to the fore: is Trump's North Korea policy working?
Colin Kaepernick brought the issue to the fore in 2016, when he began kneeling for the anthem as a quarterback with the San Francisco 49ers.
Here are the top five races of the night: The race between the Staceys brought to the fore issues of race, gender, economics, and electability.
World equity markets slipped as a surprise deterioration in German and South Korean economic data brought back to the fore concerns about a global downturn.
With all men destined to die — valar morghulis — women have come to the fore of the conflict, not as wives or daughters, but as rulers.
"It is somewhat provocative to bring the anthem to the fore in a new way at a moment of tension in this country," he said.
Efforts by the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) to build inter-caste alliances among Hindus have brought religious differences more to the fore, she believes.
As Republican consultant Stuart Stevens noted, crime isn't an issue in Senate races, which are usually the battleground where new issues come to the fore.
China's gloomy factory readings have brought global growth worries to the fore again, which is likely to benefit safe-haven currencies such as the Japanese .
Recent news about the FBI's investigation of emails from Hillary Clinton's top aide and Donald Trump's dubious tax maneuvers bring these questions to the fore.
I think we'll see many more things like that start to come to the fore around how we can use technology to hold people accountable.
"We are denying anything of our members being involved ... there is no evidence which has come to the fore," CWU President Clyde Mervin told Reuters.
Whilst this is not insurmountable by any means, it brings to the fore the need to effect a change in mind-set inside the boardroom.
Cross-Atlantic M&A may be coming back to the fore, he said, especially as big European mergers are more difficult due to competition rules.
The Christian destruction of Greek and Roman monuments came to the fore recently with the 211 publication of journalist Catherine Nixey's book The Darkening Age.
In several closely fought races around the country, candidates' actions and comments regarding gay people have come to the fore and come to define them.
At the same time, cellphones and social media bring up-to-the-minute relationship issues to the fore, possibly laying bare continuing arguments and fights.
For the environmentalists, the pressures of negotiation have brought to the fore old strains between the party's "realist" wing and its more left-wing elements.
This point is where software storage vendors can thrive to the extent they're able to bring new cloud-based data management solutions to the fore.
ZURICH, Feb 17 (Reuters) - Investor expectations for the Swiss economy slipped in February as uncertainty over global economies and falling prices came to the fore.
Venus enters your sign, Capricorn, on December 25, and meets with Saturn, bringing issues around love, money, and beauty (all Venusian themes) to the fore.
It's even more to their credit — and a boon to the future — that they've kept that career's difficulty, and toughness, and nowness to the fore.
In addition to highlighting the challenges the B&H warehouse workers are still facing, last night's protest brought a few larger questions to the fore.
But with the rise of the new left in the 1960s in America and in Europe, a new set of issues comes to the fore.
All of the gender and racial ickiness of the 1933 film — defused or simply erased in the Broadway retelling — is here brought to the fore.
A 20-year-old American on the rise, she will finally face Williams, the 37-year-old American icon intent on returning to the fore.
Just when Republicans were settling in to work on a tax overhaul, President Trump brought immigration policy back to the fore, scrambling the party's agenda.
Kelly crystallizes an uncomfortable tension that's risen to the fore since the Weinstein story hit: What happens when #MeToo meets "I'm not a feminist, but"?
" Now he's been thrust to the fore with his award-winning performance as a racist police officer, Jason Dixon, in "Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri.
The euro area is under pressure once again as the coronavirus outbreak shakes up countries in the bloc and brings historic differences to the fore.
When that's the case, it may be that moral failings and missteps kind of come to the fore more quickly because they will stand out.
An issue that first came to the fore 52 years ago after passage of the 1965 Immigration and Nationality Act has yet to be resolved.
Democrats maintain that even a failed vote will help them bring the issue of pre-existing conditions to the fore ahead of next month's elections.
So the key to desensitizing the aryl hydrocarbon receptor was probably already present inside killifish DNA, and natural selection simply brought it to the fore.
In any case, tax cuts and infrastructure spending plans are likely to be whittled down in Congress, especially if deficit hawks return to the fore.
It remains unclear why this conversation, which draws Trump more directly to the center of the impeachment probe, is just now coming to the fore.
But the film, despite various nods, didn't push its way to the fore this season, making Ms. Negga a long shot — one that came through.
But his work burst with generous humanity and possessed a sure grasp on the power of intimacy — something these productions skillfully bring to the fore.
Intense, brooding, and emotional Scorpio is a difficult sign for Venus to be in, as issues concerning jealousy, possessiveness, and revenge come to the fore.
Trump simply came at the right time to benefit from this, which came to the fore for reasons that have nothing to do with him.
Westworld brought this question to the fore in its premiere season, when host Dolores (Evan Rachel Wood) is brutally sexually assaulted in the very first episode.
Why it matters: These ideas and their champions are coming to the fore at a moment when there are real opportunities to begin to realize them.
This has come to the fore not only because of government policies but because of the falling costs of wind and dramatically falling costs of solar.
Those artists rose to fame in the 2010s, but club music has been around since the 1970s, when disco came to the fore in New York.
Since then, the #MeToo movement has propelled women's stories to the fore, forcing a collective reckoning around systemic gender imbalances across industries and society more broadly.
Their strength in the face of shocks came to the fore after the 2015 attacks, with slogans showing a united front and rejecting fear, he said.
Those concerns came to the fore on Monday, however, as European shares fell 1.5 percent and Asian stock markets logged their biggest falls in four months.
As we head into the 2020 election, the party faces a moment of truth, one that these women have been instrumental in bringing to the fore.
Issues concerning intimacy come to the fore today, Aquarius, and with the moon in Virgo connecting with Venus retrograde, an interesting shift will arrive this afternoon.
The Sun and Mercury in Cancer confront the lord of the underworld, Pluto, on July 7, which will bring manipulations and shady behavior to the fore.
The Moon is in Fire sign Aries today, illuminating the financial sector of your chart and bringing issues concerning money and self-worth to the fore.
"But in this Hongmao Medical Tonic case, the role of the public security authorities in local protectionism has again come to the fore," Professor Wang said.
Baddiel & Skinner's refrain of "It's coming home" still reverberated around stadia across the country and a group of gifted young players were coming to the fore.
Uncharted 43 pushes similar moments to the fore, however, making them primary vectors for the storytelling and often the elements that carry the most emotional weight.
"That step really has just brought to the fore the other constraints which are still being addressed," said Stuart Shepherd, an economist at Sapere Research Group.
Warrior planet Mars enters Sagittarius today, illuminating a powerful and intense sector of your chart and bringing issues involving intimacy and shared finances to the fore.
Now, Simone's life is once again coming to the fore thanks to the upcoming biopic Nina, with Zoë Saldana drawing controversy for portraying the legendary musician.
More innovative competitors like Shire, CSL Behring, Roche, Bayer, and Novo Nordisk are coming to the fore and putting Bioverativ's massive potential future sales at risk.
China's gloomy factory readings have brought global growth worries to the fore again, which is likely to benefit safe-haven currencies such as the Japanese yen.
Chancellor Angela Merkel's decision in 21996 to take in more than one million migrants brought the challenges of integration to the fore and upended German politics.
While privacy and data security are among the most compelling policy challenges in today's world, we wonder what additional capacity the FCC brings to the fore.
Almotasim sees this election as a chance to bring to the fore issues related to women, such as compensation for those who have suffered from conflict.
Nowadays, it seems, all of Turkey's old conflicts — most prominently the divide between religious and secular Turks — and many new ones, are coming to the fore.
This is where Elnathan John's talent comes to the fore, as Dantala must decide what being a Muslim really means to him and to his companions.
At a time when homophony was coming to the fore—melody over accompaniment—Duarte's contrapuntal interplay of lines would have had a somewhat old-fashioned sound.
Rather than express Indigenous art as its own sequestered genre, the point of this initiative is to bring an underrepresented demographic of artists to the fore.
The Moon is in intense water sign Scorpio today, lighting up a very intimate sector of your chart and bringing issues concerning intimacy to the fore.
Today, agitations for universal health care, basic income, and childcare, and Sarah Jaffe's call to nationalize Amazon bring these important questions about monopoly to the fore.
But what's well-masked in his productions for others is, in his own music, brought to the fore — a fluency with texture, a willingness to unsettle.
The pandemic is "bringing to the fore the underlying challenges that we have in our health and social support system in the United States," Kates said.
Together, these articles tell the rich interwoven stories of a community of women who ushered video, audio, electronic, internet, and software-based art to the fore.
On the evidence, it's the war and the acts of resistance that nearly got Cahun and Moore killed that bring his best writing to the fore.
Later in the track, with Mr. Harris throwing piano gusts behind him and Mr. Gilmore letting the ground disintegrate below, Mr. Akinmusire comes to the fore.
As the country prepares for the legal and constitutional implications of Brexit, unresolved issues around identity and civil liberties like DeSouza's are coming to the fore.
The increasing popularity of trail biking has brought to the fore some of the inherent conflicts in the uses of public land — natural regions or playgrounds.
The issue was brought to the fore in recent months by a comparatively small contract for fetal tissue the Food and Drug Administration announced in June.
Her figures are to the fore: mainly barefoot women in simple, timeless dresses whose staring Iberian eyes contribute to an aura of both power and penitence.
When Brexit begins to loom over the clandestine affairs of an "increasingly isolated island state", espionage by and against other European powers comes to the fore.
The basics of life—clothing and food, as well as accommodation—are much to the fore in "The Revenant," which is set in the eighteen-twenties.
I think the idea that you could just present well and suddenly leap to the fore, that dismisses just what a special candidate this guy was.
Her focus, of course, was not on the macroeconomic and bailout-related issues that would later come to the fore but the question of consumer protection.
Occupy Wall Street had come and gone, and while the ninety-nine and the one per cent didn't disappear, black and white came to the fore.
In turn that is making a lot of men feel insecure or unclear about their role in society, which is bringing more aggression to the fore.
However, an eventful Sunday morning brings family secrets to the fore, challenging the way she sees her pastor father, Daniel, and her relationship to her faith.
But as the weekend went on, Mr. Trump's longstanding frustrations with an inquiry that he has branded a "witch hunt" once again came to the fore.
The introduction of General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) legislation in Europe earlier this year and coverage of high-profile breaches have brought the issue to the fore.
A little over 10 months after the Harvey Weinstein revelations brought #MeToo to the fore, we're finally seeing films set to tackle workplace sexual harassment take shape.
"All of the things that we've been worried about, the market's been worried about all year, are now starting to come to the fore," he said Tuesday.
The Moon in Gemini brings issues concerning intimacy to the fore, plus, sweet, sexy Venus enters Libra, finding you more shy about love (and money!) than usual.
Tension also arrives as power struggles and manipulation in your relationships come to the fore, due to Venus squaring off with the lord of the underworld, Pluto.
The #MeToo debate, which has pushed sexual assault to the fore, leads Ms Jongenelis to conclude that there is a shift in norms about what is acceptable.
The legal spat has brought to the fore concerns long raised by small traders and a right-wing group close to Prime Minister Narendra Modi's ruling party.
The so-called "frog case" has brought to the fore the plight of the dusky gopher frog, an embattled three-inch amphibian facing population decline for years.
If other issues come to the fore in 2020, then racial issues could have less impact on voters' decisions than they did in 2016, says Mr Sides.
Economic anxiety also tends to bring traits like anger at elites and racial animosity to the fore, which synergized conveniently with Donald Trump's nakedly anti-immigrant platform.
On the serene but largely listless A Moon Shaped Pool, where strings and acoustic fingerpicking are pushed to the fore, that does not redound to Yorke's benefit.
In my much-discussed CNN clash with Trump spokesman Jeffrey Lord on Tuesday night, the issue of race -- and Trump's manipulation of it -- came to the fore.
Eventually, a team of anthropologists and scientists, including the American virologist Carleton Gajdusek, realized that the illness might be related to the Fore practice of funerary cannibalism.
LA-based producer Matrixxman took production duties on this one, offering a bare-bones beat with a booming bass that brings Van Dick's flow to the fore.
Question marks over whether consensual workplace relationships are ever OK have come to the fore this week after the high-profile firing of McDonald's CEO Steve Easterbrook.
It's become common this season to note that the female characters on "Game of Thrones" are stepping to the fore, but that was especially evident on Sunday.
In recent months, migration has again risen to the fore of national political debates in a number of North African and European countries and the United States.
Letter From America In recent years, the idea of privilege — for whites, for men, for straights, and for others — has moved to the fore of American discourse.
But the false alarm from the system in Hawaii brought crucial questions to the fore: When every minute counts, would the window of warning have been enough?
Why it matters: It brings the net neutrality issue back to the fore during a midterm election year, and Democrats hope that will resonate with younger voters.
Howard's uniquely grating comedy instincts blundered to the fore when he responded to being discovered applying stickum to the game ball with his trademark wind-up laugh.
The Moon is in Aries today, bringing issues concerning your home and family to the fore, and you'll be eager to solve any issues that come up.
English clubs then came to the fore, winning four titles in a row between 1968 and 1971 thanks to Leeds United, Arsenal, Newcastle United and Leeds again.
It further allayed concerns about the economy's health, which had been brought to the fore by a temporary inversion of the U.S. Treasury yield curve last month.
Although Pakistan's economic growth has soared to nearly 21.5 percent, the fastest pace in 22014 years, the structural problems with the economy are coming to the fore.
After returning to the fore by winning Wimbledon in July, he returned to dominance by winning the United States Open for the third time on Sunday night.
Sweden's far right-wing party blames the government's liberal immigration policy for the rising crime, and will thrust the issue to the fore in the fall campaign.
"They all have flaws because the process of running for president forces those flaws to the fore," said Zepecki, who worked for Obama's 2012 re-election campaign.
"We started as a voice in the wilderness on some of these issues, but conversations have come more to the fore," SumOfUs campaign manager Sondhya Gupta said.
You're in the mood to connect with your home and family as the Moon enters Libra this afternoon, and relationship issues come to the fore this evening.
Many of these old, half-forgotten details came to the fore at the Tuesday hearing after the case was upended by an appellate court on Feb. 7.
In the intervening years, Sanders has more often brought racial justice to the fore of his campaign; he speaks often of wanting to build a multiracial coalition.
And tribal instincts tend to come to the fore in times of scarcity or insecurity, when our capacity for lofty ideals and long-term planning is weakest.
It was a sensible effort to explore how Ms. Barrett would handle the "complex moral and legal question" that she herself had sensibly brought to the fore.
It came to the fore in the media with the tragic death of Grace Millane, the 21-year-old British backpacker who was traveling in New Zealand.
SMALLER CHINA-TYPE DEAL India and the United States have built close political and security ties, but in recent years trade frictions have come to the fore.
Chronologically speaking, we should now be enjoying "Breakfast on the Planet of the Apes," with the low-calorie fruit-and-berries option very much to the fore.
Stocks in Asia closed lower on Friday as U.S.-North Korea geopolitical tensions came to the fore once again, keeping the demand for safe haven assets intact.
Concerns about a global economic slowdown had come to the fore after the Federal Reserve announced that its monetary tightening policy cycle would end earlier than expected.
That is what the story of Mildred and Richard Loving brings to the fore; the right to marry equally and to have equal protection under the law.
After weeks of leaks by officials, Erdogan has finally coming to the fore, revealing his calculus all along is to goad Saudi officials into a full accounting.
While public procurement often focuses on environmental issues, the pilot project is an opportunity to bring human trafficking in government supply chains to the fore, he added.
Perhaps it was the presence of reporters in the room, the painting's steep valuation, or the questions about authenticity that the raids had brought to the fore.
It's only when the trap drums kick in and the vocals change from singing to quasi-ironic rapping that the song's true intentions come to the fore.
If these works are haunted by the specter of an untold past, "United States of Attica" brings history to the fore with a bolt of righteous anger.
For months now, election followers have been waiting for climate change to come to the fore, but its urgency has been relatively ignored on the debate stage.
I mean, you think back to the early days of cinema, and you had a couple of women directors, but I think they're really coming to the fore.
Religious divisions came to the fore in Ukraine after the 2014 annexation of Crimea by Russia and conflict between Ukrainian and Moscow-backed separatist forces in the east.
Transgender rights have risen to the fore in recent years and as LGBTQ people prepare to mark the 50th anniversary since the Stonewall uprising of June 28, 1969.
Last year, a deadly shooting spree at a Parkland, Florida, high school brought long-running arguments about gun control in the United States to the fore once again.
Just as the ETF revolutionized the way consumers can index a plethora of investing strategies, so too will a whole new class of innovation come to the fore.
The Northeast's less-ideological Republicans didn't care about the past heterodoxies of John McCain or Mitt Romney and helped power more electable, more mainstream choices to the fore.
Philip might have been having a grand time, but there was an emptiness to it that slowly came to the fore, while Elizabeth might have been an automaton.
In recent years a new meaning has come to the fore: "a form of identity, located in and asserted by individuals rather than imposed on them from outside".
The violent fringes of this rivalry came to the fore on that day in 1997, in an incident that would soon be known as the Battle of Beverwijk.
Issues around sudden increases in health-care costs have come to the fore, most recently related to pharmaceutical company Mylan coming under fire for its EpiPen price increases.
For more than five years, the US has been issuing unsubstantiated warnings about Huawei's relationship with the Chinese government, and 2018 has brought that antagonism to the fore.
The premature, multifaceted tragedy of Miller's death by apparent overdose last week thrust a myriad of vital conversations to the fore, including candid reflection on addiction and depression.
The social sciences, in particular, would be put to the fore in the development of new tech and people would think more about the consequences of new innovations.
And across the media spectrum, as other players come to the fore, presumably with fat wallets and opportunities, either on the buying or the buyee side of things.
Similar in scope to the Civil Rights Movement in the 1960s, Black Lives Matter has helped bring the conversation surrounding police violence and racial injustice to the fore.
The hearing was widely viewed by Democrats as another opportunity to bring the swirl of suspicion of connections between Russia and Trump's advisers to the fore once again.
Differences between queer people came to the fore within the microcosm of the center, as debates over the inclusion of open bisexuals and S&M groups made headlines.
As sustainability has shot to the fore following the Vale dam disaster in Brazil in January, the need to get all sections of society on side has increased.
In retrospect, we can see a familiar pattern: A huge story comes to the fore, only to quickly be supplanted by Trump's latest antics on the campaign trail.
As the scandal unfolds, Trump's murky financial ties to Russia are coming to the fore, showing the need for laws requiring presidential candidates to disclose their financial history.
But Britain's vote in June to leave the EU has brought economic uncertainties to the fore; one survey of business activity recorded its sharpest drop in 20 years.
In 1975, however, J.G.A. Pocock published a tome called The Machiavellian Moment: Florentine Political Thought and the Atlantic Republican Tradition, bringing the civic republican tradition to the fore.
Amid splits in the opposition, civic groups have come to the fore, with strikes and road blockades in cities tapping into anger over Morales' near 14-year rule.
In short, irrespective of the calendar for the clearance of arrears, the economy needs immediate reforms to address the vulnerabilities that have come to the fore since May.
Also on September 5, Mars enters Earth sign Virgo, which will bring complex issues, like debts and taxes, to the fore—things you might rather not worry about!
The message, said Ihsan al-Shammari, politics professor at Baghdad University, was aimed at stirring sectarian fears to try to bring the Baath party back to the fore.
Meanwhile, interest rates have moved to the fore, with the bench mark U.S. 10-year Treasury yield reaching 3 percent for the first time in four years Monday.
The grind of a long fortnight came to the fore as both players threw away serve, but Halep nudged 4-3 in front when Wozniacki's forehand deserted her.
When customs officials on Monday again began processing the cases of people they termed "undocumented arrivals," the migrants looked among themselves for who should step to the fore.
"He expressed optimism at that time that leaders would rise to the fore in the future who would put the good of the country above themselves," Flake said.
The issue of sexual assault has most recently been brought to the fore by the powerful letter a survivor wrote to the man who attacked her, Brock Turner.
And yet, these images are also clandestinely beautiful: filmed in black-and-white, their harshness becomes softened and the precise detailing of their designs comes to the fore.
The agency's director, James Comey, has called for an "adult conversation" about encryption in 2017 — and he's in a position to bring the issue to the fore again.
He added that he hoped his film production company, Significant Productions, would help bring more "new voices" to the fore by providing a platform to young, aspiring filmmakers.
Millie and Ethel become friends, bonding over motherhood, as suspicions about the Rosenberg family come to the fore and Millie engages in some illicit behavior of her own.
Whenever Ms. Falco is bringing these themes to the fore, especially in her scenes with rival politicians played by Mr. Fitzgerald and John Pankow, "The True" is riveting.
NEW YORK (Reuters Breakingviews) - The rapid economic slowdown caused by the spread of Covid-19 has brought to the fore the prospect of companies getting help from taxpayers.
Long before the #MeToo movement brought sexual violence and harassment to the fore, women in the military and their advocates had highlighted such misconduct in the armed forces.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads Over the past few years, issues of race, gender, representation, and power dynamics have come to the fore in the art world.
More than one person I met credited them with bringing contemporary art to the fore, not just in Plovdiv, but in Bulgaria and Eastern Europe as a whole.
Transgender rights have risen to the fore in recent years and as LGBTQ people prepare to mark the 50th anniversary since the Stonewall uprising of June 23, 1969.
Such a fractured outcome could push to the fore more centrist politicians who might help bridge the gap between the feuding separatist and unionist parties at the extremes.
While COLA 2018 does not have an explicit theme, labor and immigration histories come to the fore as a lens through which to view the present and future.
This eclipse will activate the sector of your chart that rules your home, family, roots, and early childhood, so expect sensitive, personal issues to come to the fore.
In the second, the strings mostly took over the arpeggios, holding them to a statelier tempo, and the elements inspired by the chants came more to the fore.
Ms. Miller started working on the book in early 2017, and since then it has shifted and expanded as conversations about sexual violence moved increasingly to the fore.
The biggest and most energized protests India has witnessed in a generation are sweeping the country and one young woman has been thrust to the fore: Aishe Ghosh.
Irish unity will surely come to the fore as a topic and one poll in September showed a slight majority for Irish unification among people in Northern Ireland.
And if Mr. Bloomberg moves into contention, his serious vulnerabilities, including his support of the stop-and-frisk policy in New York City, could come to the fore.
Her case brought the debate about the ties between politics and business in South Korea to the fore, as several top business leaders were implicated in the scandal.
Asian shares closed mixed on Monday, paring gains seen earlier as trade returned to the fore after another set of tariffs on U.S. goods were announced by China.
Fissures within the ruling APC, a coalition party, have come to the fore in the last few months in the run-up to the February 2019 presidential election.
Amid these changes, Fukuyama writes, identity politics has come to the fore, and it has become our common culture, no longer the province of a party or side.
But the recent crashes, and a fuller understanding of the role Boeing has played in regulating itself, have brought concerns that had simmered for years to the fore.
The universal — or at least, seemingly universal — appeal of the New Deal was lost as the particular interests of African Americans and other minorities came to the fore.
Why it matters: The agreement ends weeks of acrimonious negotiations over Wen's severance package, which came to the fore in a New York Times report over the weekend.
What's interesting is how the backstories come to the fore and how the process of learning intertwines, in some fashion, with the finished or continuing body of work.
That was in part due to concerns about oversupply coming to the fore again as U.S. production rose in tandem with increased output from Saudi Arabia and Russia.
Instead, she pushes her whites in front of the grays and blacks, and coaxes her colored bands to the fore of the expanse opened up by the whites.
Short of that, second-generation Americans are all equally deserving of scrutiny — they're all, to some extent, impostor Americans, whose enemy loyalties will eventually come to the fore.
You're in an intense mood today, Cancer, as the Moon enters Aquarius and lights up a very sensitive sector of your chart, bringing intimacy issues to the fore.
Now, it's up to us to grab it while it's being pushed to the fore post-Brexit, and dismantle its race-based reasoning behind the country's economic decline.
Now, let loose on an original entry in the series, with fresh levels and remixed classics, they're bringing what most appealed to them about those games to the fore.
Kate's complicated relationship with her mother moves to the fore of "A Manny-Splendored Thing," and the show sparkles as it gives their dynamic its most significant showcase yet.
Wellness and self-care issues come to the fore, and problems at work or issues with your schedule reach a breaking point where something has just got to change.
The end goal of chat looks like bringing utility and convenience to the fore rather than cloning a competing product into the fabric of every app under the sun.
Fears that he could make too many concessions to secessionists came to the fore in recent weeks after Catalan parties blocked the budget bill and demanded talks over independence.
But Cramer noticed not much Trump-related news came to the fore this week, and the Federal Reserve remained tame and predictable when it raised interest rates on Wednesday.
The symposia aim to expand some of the themes that artists have brought to the fore in the exhibition or that activists have been working on in their practice.
This point comes to the fore when she, Teddy (James Marsden), and their small band of supporters storm into a host maintenance lab in the thick of the rebellion.
This debate came to the fore after the Civil War, which removed the principal barrier to expansion (the controversy over whether slavery would be expanded to newly acquired territories).
While Spain today is home to numerous upstart political groups, the country has largely resisted the right-wing populism which has come to the fore in other European nations.
Trans-Tasman rivalry will be to the fore with New Zealand and Australia meeting in the finals of both the men's and women's hockey and the men's heavyweight boxing.
The issue has come to the fore amid the recent influx of migrants to Germany, which has sparked a backlash among some Germans including a rise in online vitriol.
The anti-vaccination conspiracy theory that vaccinating children can cause autism came to the fore in the early 2000s after a discredited doctor published a fraudulent and false study.
It was having an opponent who actually knew what to do in front of her which allowed Justino's vastly improved footwork and tighter striking to come to the fore.
Some of the orchestra's strengths — its voluptuous and flexible string sound, the first-rate horn section led by Todd Leighton — only truly came to the fore in the Mahler.
As it becomes clear that the separation will be costly, a second question about Brexit will come to the fore: might there still be a way to avoid it?
The Moon enters Libra early this morning, lighting up the intimacy sector of your chart and bringing issues concerning sex and emotional depth in your partnerships to the fore.
His protectionist policies, which go against decades of Republican orthodoxy, have brought the issue of trade and its potential costs to workers to the fore of the presidential race.
She is up against herself right now and these traits -- that have come more and more to the fore to define her for too many people for political comfort.
With online shopping holidays like Amazon's Prime Day coming to the fore, the fourth quarter as a whole is growing less important for retailers year over year, Siegel said.
CAPITALISM Concerns about the ability of governments to rein in capitalism were brought to the fore during the 2008 global economic crisis and continue to reverberate around the West.
In the off years, more specific issues come to the fore such as pricing, access and affordability and these are not issues that have positive attributes for the industry.
" Criticism of Dr. Grant as anti-feminist had come to the fore in 1988, with the publication of her book, "Being a Woman: Fulfilling Your Femininity and Finding Love.
For now, Republican strategists say GOP candidates will likely seek to weather the political storm — while hoping other issues will come back to the fore closer to the midterms.
The 2016 Race A jarring regulatory action this week against five large banks was bound to bring Wall Street to the fore in the Democratic presidential debate on Thursday.
The Marianne Faithfull cover "Deep Water," with Earl and Arthur singing with Nick over the credits—how did that come to the fore and wind up in the film?
Why it matters: Online platforms have become vectors for threats of violence against schools — an issue brought to the fore by the shooting in Parkland, Florida earlier this year.
Even an 18-year-old ballet dancer has been learning his or her craft for thousands of hours, and that is what Mr. Forsythe brings to the fore here.
A new generation of harpsichordists is coming to the fore, one that has given an almost hipsterish profile to an instrument that is popularly stereotyped as archaic and twee.
The issue came to the fore again in 2015 after state officials in Michigan acknowledged that the water supply in the city of Flint had been contaminated by lead.
As racial and ideological diversity have declined, the most extreme versions of conservatism, authoritarianism, and the authoritarian personality have come to the fore, elevated in both media and politics.
Polls predict a fractured result, but our correspondent writes that such an outcome could push to the fore centrist politicians capable of bridging the gap between separatists and unionists.
More personal than might have been appreciated in 1978, "Anna" brings Akerman's career-long concerns to the fore — homelessness, solitude, the child-parent relationship, the nature of sexual identity.
But Bencic, a Swiss extrovert who turned 22016 on Sunday and is returning to the fore after injury, has long been considered one of the game's most sparkling talents.
The issue of militant groups on social media came to the fore in 2013 when the Islamic State grabbed global attention by posting videos of beheadings and bombings online.
The malice in such playfulness soon comes to the fore when Sir Toby and company play a diabolical prank of Malvolio, which leads to his incarceration as a madman.
Wade, but Federalist Society types are now divided on many of the issues coming to the fore: criminal justice reform, executive power and the constitutionality of the administrative state.
Mr. Liberman's defection from the right-wing religious axis and his refusal to join a government with ultra-Orthodox parties has thrust Israel's secular-religious divide to the fore.
Mr. Nimmo's work came to the fore after the 2016 American presidential election, when intelligence agencies concluded that Russia had used Facebook and other internet platforms to influence voters.
The issue came to the fore last year during debate over a Virginia bill that would have broadened the circumstances under which someone could get a third-trimester abortion.
Whenever a stand needed to be taken and the attention of the public needed to be endured, the peacocks huffed and squawked to the fore en masse, idiotically iridescent.
Recommended by investigators after an Air France A330 jet crashed in 2009, the idea came to the fore after the disappearance of Malaysia Airlines flight 370 in March 2014.
While privacy and data security are among the most compelling policy challenges in today's world, there are doubts as to what additional capacity the FCC brings to the fore.
"While the coronavirus has captured the market's attention over the last week Fed policy will return to the fore [Wednesday] and it will be an awkward transition," Colas said.
It is inevitable, because of the inherent American spirit, that leaders will move to the fore who want to take us back onto the path of optimism and goodwill.
The fight to not succumb to these feelings is almost becoming unbearable and at some point I will not be able to stop them from coming to the fore.
Not every family is fortunate enough to have a friend ready to step to the fore at the moment their son, daughter, wife, husband, brother or sister needs it.
The case brought the issue of tainted art in private collections to the fore, raising the specter that thousands of plundered artworks might be lurking in attics and cellars.
If the Trump era passes, the Democratic coalition's internal strains might come to the fore, but until that happens, a sense of being under siege will keep it together.
Riding the momentum of a 20003-seat pickup in the midterm elections, Democrats are bringing to the fore audacious policy ideas that have been mostly simmering on the sidelines.
Along with weakening the opposition, the factionalism has also brought to the fore an enduring malaise in Zimbabwean polity: its fear of single, independent women in the public sphere.
In an era when issues of data protection have come to the fore in Washington and other global capitals, the Cathay breach does not stand out for its scale.
A young man born in London and trained in Oxford was expected to travel anywhere from India to the Arctic and recreate the processes that brought England to the fore.
Extinction Rebellion, which goes by the abbreviation XR, describes itself as an "international movement" that uses "non-violent civil disobedience" to bring issues such as climate change to the fore.
The seriousness of the threat from the Taliban's use of captured or abandoned equipment first came to the fore when the insurgents briefly seized control of Kunduz in the fall.
But Royce Gracie brought an idea to the fore—the clinch was going to happen and if it did, you better know how to deal with him on the ground.
The latter risk came to the fore earlier this month after an anti-Semitic far-right militant attacked a synagogue and a kebab restaurant in the eastern city of Halle.
And as many influential Christian figures––such as Pope Francis and environmental activist Katherine Hayhoe––have publicly voiced their backing of the issue, these conversations are coming to the fore.
Brexit — the UK's decision to leave the European Union after a referendum in the summer of 2016 — brought to the fore huge levels of acrimony between average citizens and elites.
Exploring your past and your roots is a great way to work with this energy, and you will likely notice that themes concerning home or family come to the fore.
The alt-right movement, which came to the fore during the presidential campaign, is a loose grouping that rejects mainstream politics and includes neo-Nazis, white supremacists and anti-Semites.
With the foreign policy team to the fore -- officials like National Security Advisor H.R. McMaster and Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, there was a sense that professionals were in control.
And in that case, the civil liberties concerns Republicans suddenly care about — and that groups like the ACLU have cared about for a long time — would come to the fore.
As social media came to the fore, other sites and platforms, like BeatStars and MyFlashStore (now known as Airbit), emerged to help consolidate and capitalize on the rapidly growing market.
Cyclical stocks were back to the fore as French election worries were soothed by centrist Emmanuel Macron cementing his position as frontrunner in the first televised presidential debate on Monday.
Game of Thrones Over 10 weeks in the sixth season of "Game of Thrones," it has become a cliché to note that the powerful women have come to the fore.
This is not a new theme, of course — it waxes and wanes with circumstance — but after a multi-decade rise in inequality, it has come roaring back to the fore.
Prison is not sexy, cool, or heartwarming, which means that, despite its attempts to bring real issues to the fore, OITNB's depiction of that world will always remain a fiction.
Expect your dreams to be very active during this time, and don't be surprised if feelings you've been ignoring come to the fore—you can't ignore your emotions any longer!
Whereas many of his past works have been all about focusing on each new improbable element as it stomps to the fore, here, Mr. Norman's complexity has a lighter footprint.
That nettlesome question has come back to the fore as law enforcement authorities take aim at Goldman Sachs for its involvement in a vast scandal at a Malaysian investment fund.
The race, which may not be decided until next week at the earliest, was an outlier for both its uncertainty and the raw emotions that it brought to the fore.
Both issues have come to the fore at an inopportune time — as Mr. de Blasio seeks to shore up his support among Hispanic voters for his re-election in November.
The debate brought this issue to the fore because the presidential debate is a ritual linked to one of the political processes we hold most dear: the right to vote.
MARA ROSENBLOOM QUARTET, "Songs From the Ground" (Fresh Sound, 2013) The bandleader edges closer to the fore here, offering a handful of pert, tuneful originals with more space to improvise.
Though the camera's focus naturally rests upon him most of the time, it frequently drifts to incorporate his family and friends, letting their expressions and interests come to the fore.
Since the president has a relatively free hand in pursuing national security issues and foreign affairs, it is on this stage that Clinton's initiatives will come immediately to the fore.
It came to the fore last Wednesday night, on NBC's "Commander-in-Chief Forum," during which each candidate was questioned for just under thirty minutes before an audience of veterans.
Disagreements over global trade negotiations came to the fore at the APEC forum, which failed to agree on its usual joint statement after U.S. opposition to wording on fighting protectionism.
Mincome was a prototype of an idea that came to the fore in the sixties, and that is now popular again among economists and policy folks: a basic income guarantee.
Myth 2: Reducing the federal prison population would result in a crime wave The recent focus on federal prison reform has brought the usual collection of naysayers to the fore.
Maybe Trump would realize that his plans for stealing Iraqi and Libyan oil are beyond the pale once in office, and his more dovish instincts would come to the fore.
Overrated, because after that first commercial break, the host pops up much less frequently than you might think, a format that allows presenters and winners to come to the fore.
Carlos built instruments, and on The Shining's soundtrack, a controller she called the Circon (with a circuit built by Bob Moog) comes to the fore allowing for irreducibly ghostly tones.
The civil rights movement asserted that people of color deserved a place at the table, literally and by law; feminism brought women to the fore in the workplace and in politics.
However, security and tackling the threat posed by Islamist militants has returned to the fore after the arrest of two men in Marseille on Tuesday suspected of plotting an imminent attack.
But I think we're seeing a shift in this dichotomy now, and I think this is a great opportunity for religious voices that are inclusive to really come to the fore.
But this documentary is less about any one race or candidate (though Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez understandably draws attention) than it is the movement that's swept all these women to the fore.
Overseas stocks are starting to look attractive relative to U.S. equities, provided risks tied to the U.S. dollar's strength don't come to the fore, BlackRock's Kate Moore told CNBC on Wednesday.
"As we advance our agenda of deepening and strengthening trading arrangements, divergences of approach on climate change, media freedoms, and the death penalty may come to the fore," the ambassador wrote.
Debate over what content is allowed on the site recently came to the fore after President Donald Trump tweeted threats at North Korea, which the country interpreted as justification for war.
The U.K. is meant to leave the EU on October 31 and with no deal agreed by Parliament, the prospect of a potential "no-deal" departure has returned to the fore.
A world that imagines animals as beings who walk, talk, and form complex interpersonal relationships inevitably brings this dichotomy to the fore, either by addressing it directly or ignoring it entirely.
Her jump to the fore as the central character in the adaptation of a incredibly popular YA novel presented Stewart with a massive public profile: an opportunity, but also a curse.
Norwegian Aksel Lund Svindal claimed gold in the men's downhill and Sweden's Andre Myhrer won the slalom as experience came to the fore in the pressure cooker atmosphere of the Games.
And instead of pure advertising, Nazerali at Carat suggested that branded content – ads that are more like editorial – will come to the fore, as long as marketers can get them right.
"We believe the worst thing that could happen at Airbus in the coming 12-24 months is for evidence of political considerations coming to the fore," Jefferies analyst Sandy Morris said.
While the London attack, the Maryland rape case and critiques of the media moved to the fore during certain stretches, an implicit defense of Mr. Trump was also a consistent theme.
Unfortunately, those lessons hardly get a chance to come to the fore, hidden behind tacky sets and a singularly one-toned film that never manages to create enough drama or entertainment.
Make it easier for bipartisan groups of legislators to bring their ideas to the fore even if the House leadership is too frightened to call the bills up on their own.
"Failure to reach any deal would almost certainly return the military option to the fore as the U.S. administration's preferred means of removing the North Korean threat," said the IISS note.
"The challenges of doing business in the Middle East is not just in terms of (cash) collections... but also that customer dialogue has very much come to the fore," Cochrane said.
"AN ENGLAND-SHAPED HOLE" English identity came to the fore during a 2014 parliamentary by-election in Rochester and Strood, neighboring towns to Chatham and Gillingham, which was won by UKIP.
Trade concerns returned to the fore after the Trump administration said tariffs on steel and aluminum imports from Canada, Mexico and the European Union would take effect Thursday midnight U.S. time.
With that statement, every woman and every parent of a daughter and sibling of a sister is forced to bring Trump's braggadocio about kissing and groping women back to the fore.
Obviously, the explosion of information on the internet has made it extremely difficult to catalog all of that information with humans, and that's why Google has really come to the fore.
Meera's prominent role in the most recent episode, in which she kills a White Walker with a dragonglass spear, has led a three-year-old theory to return to the fore.
The moon in Capricorn lights up the intimacy sector of your chart today, Gemini, and very powerful emotions are coming to the fore for you and your partners to consider deeply!
The current resurgence of nativism brings the jingoistic fixation on "blood and soil" to the fore, stoked by the likes of Donald Trump, Marine Le Pen, Nigel Farage, and Steve Bannon.
On their own, Brandon and Michon's work easily merit solo exhibitions, but it is through this thoughtful pairing that deep explorations of process, materials, medium, and time come to the fore.
Questions over content policing have returned to the fore in the tense days since the election, which has led to protests against Trump and his proposed policies in major U.S. cities.
The song's motto, "unity in diversity," conveys the artist's advocacy for a society that runs counter to the current far-right politics that have come to the fore the world over.
With the imminent arrival of Mr. Farrow's "Catch and Kill," a question coming again to the fore is whether or not that group includes top executives at NBC and NBC News.
Diminish the role of a bloated government bureaucracy, they contended, and grass-roots organizations, charities and private companies would step to the fore, reviving communities and delivering public services more efficiently.
The anti-immigration, anti-free-trade, anti-interventionist views that Trump brought to the fore of the G.O.P. were positions Sessions had been advocating, often alone, for much of his career.
This summer, a roiling mix of economic frustration and anger over police abuses toward black residents came to the fore when a South Bend police officer killed black resident Eric Logan.
Schulz said airlines such as those setting up low cost, long-haul operations would favor the A330neo, whose economics would come to the fore as oil prices rise back toward $80.
The ruling comes months after a closely fought election that saw progressives pitted against Islamic hardliners and worries over increased involvement by Islamic groups in politics were brought to the fore.
Amid the crisis, once-controlled diseases like diphtheria and measles have returned to the fore, putting Venezuela's 30 million people at risk and raising the threat of contagion beyond its borders.
"I entered the Conservative Party leadership contest to broaden the debate and bring the diverse views of millions on Brexit to the fore," he said in a statement posted on Twitter.
The games and matches often stand in for cultural struggles around race, class, gender, and national identity — but that struggle is the subtext, and the movie brings it to the fore.
Joan Burbick, who wrote Gun Show Nation, saw that marital problems very much came to the fore in her interviews with men at gun shows, and this was going back 266 years.
"With global growth losing some momentum and becoming more divergent, and U.S. rates rising steadily, worries about credit risk are returning to the fore - including in many mature economies," the IIF said.
Sanders's emergence during that campaign brought the left-wing sentiment base in the party to the fore, showing that there really was massive demand for bolder progressive ideas like Medicare-for-all.
Often times, in the scenes that we have where she's had too much to drink, you can see that facade, that presentation kind of crumble and something else comes to the fore.
But the problem was once again brought to the fore this spring, when a video of a 16-year-old girl being sexually assaulted by several men was published on social media.
Sometimes race comes to the fore — as in the episode "Indians on TV," which critiques the idea that "there can only be one" character of a given minority background on a show.
"Like all of history, our interpretation of Bill Cosby is a work in progress, something that will continue to evolve as new evidence and insights come to the fore," the statement added.
In August, as concerns about Google's effort to build a censored search engine for China came to the fore, I wondered whether it wouldn't cause a crisis of morale at the company.
When all is said and done, though, Trump does bring some refreshing new foreign policy ideas to the fore – and whatever Trump's merits as a candidate, these proposals deserve our serious consideration.
Fundamentally, even as the election of Donald Trump has brought the issue of Islamophobia to the fore, Watched is a rare portrayal of the devastating impacts of policing on young Muslim lives.
British Prime Minister Theresa May's Conservative Party began gathering for its annual conference on Saturday with bitter divisions over her Brexit plans rising to the fore, raising doubts about her own future.
JAKARTA (Reuters) - A polarizing election for Jakarta governor saw Islamic identity politics come to the fore and exposed fractures in Indonesian president Joko Widodo's fragile ruling coalition, an exit poll has revealed.
There are also renewed worries that the Greek crisis is about to rise up again and that Italy could see anti-euro politicians come to the fore in the next few years.
Oudea was thrust to the fore of a controversy over the use of secretive tax havens in April after an investigative news syndicate exposed the activities of Panama law firm Mossack Fonseca.
The idea of unlimited holiday came to the fore when California-headquartered Netflix said it would not fix a maximum numbers of days that employees could take off, nor track their holidays.
Given how imaginative and distinct each of these first phase finalists ended up, it will be interesting to see what the second and third runs of the competition bring to the fore.
French banks have been thrust to the fore of a controversy over the use of secretive tax havens since an investigative news syndicate exposed the activities of Panama law firm Mossack Fonseca.
The revelation on Tuesday that Anjem Choudary, Britain's most high-profile Islamist preacher, has been convicted for inviting his followers to support Islamic State has again brought the issue to the fore.
The perception that the military has a partisan preference comes to the fore in every close election when the absentee military ballots are assumed to favor the Republican candidate in the race.
"Like all of history, our interpretation of Bill Cosby is a work in progress, something that will continue to evolve as new evidence and insights come to the fore," Mr. Bunch said.
Various negative trends are coming to the fore: from democratisation to a focus on identity and culture; from a world of relative order to a world in chaos; from interdependence to decoupling.
The issue has returned to the fore after a grand jury in Cleveland decided on Monday not to bring charges against police officers in the shooting of 12-year-old Tamir Rice.
The "West Wing Democrats," including Gary Cohn, Jared Kushner, and the president's daughter Ivanka Trump appear to be moving to the fore and insisting on some competence in regard to the economy.
In addition to the focus on tax, the G7 meeting in France will also weigh on the emergence on new digital currencies after Facebook's Libra project thrust the matter to the fore.
At a time when sport in all its forms feels secondary to the very real issues facing the country, the decision to bring fox hunting back to the fore seems increasingly strange.
" When he left office completely discredited, a new generation of GOP leaders came to the fore inspired by the hard-edged libertarianism of the Tea Party and its critique of "crony capitalism.
But Petrosyan had been kickboxing for years, he had competed under full Muay Thai rules but it was as the K-1 Grand Prix champion that he really came to the fore.
Now the issue has come to the fore again, as Macedonia's government earnestly renews a push to join NATO and the European Union, hoping to alleviate the Balkan country's poverty and isolation.
As we explored Philadelphia, another hot-button migration topic came to the fore: the threat of art spaces being priced out of their long-term homes to other neighborhoods or even cities.
Op-Ed Contributor We are now six days into the Iran protests, and the questions that seized Washington during the 2009 pro-democracy movement have now once again come to the fore.
In this respect, these de-skinned boats bring to the fore a concern with the fine grain of migration and bodily experience, where hybridity and the crossing of permeable boundaries loom large.
This dynamic has manifested itself globally, although it is in the Middle East that the effects of this competition have most come to the fore, particularly with the threat of CAATSA sanctions.
Last week, that tension came to the fore again when the Mayo Clinic announced that Google would begin securely storing the hospital's patient data in a private corner of the company's cloud.
A series of political twists has suddenly jolted these issues to the fore, and the country's long-simmering secular-religious divide has become a central issue in the national election on Tuesday.
But the new reporting by the Times brings it to the fore again — and that could have big implications for the Supreme Court, the 2020 election, and the country as a whole.
The justices may have thought that confirmation process would be solidly in the past by the time this year's term opened, but the new reporting brings it right back to the fore.
The civil rights and black power movements are a moment where old ways of thinking about blackness begin to recede and new ways of understanding blackness begin to come to the fore.
But what made the New Republic and its peer policy magazines so great was how restlessly, relentlessly idiosyncratic they were — that's how they drove new ideologies and new ideas to the fore.
Fundamentally, even as the election of Donald Trump has brought the issue of Islamophobia to the fore, Watched is a rare portrayal of the devastating impacts of policing on young Muslim lives.
The Commission is also focusing on controlling the spread of hate speech on online platforms — an issue which has again bubbled to the fore in Europe in recent times, following the refugee crisis.
Major shifts in style regimes usually happen in the crucible of a market setback, and growth stocks simply represent too much of the market to retreat quietly while value moves to the fore.
London time — its highest level since March 2014 and going beyond the levels seen during a sell-off in May when concerns over Italy's commitment to the euro zone came to the fore.
Analysts project earnings growth at S&P 230 companies to decline 2.3 percent in the first quarter as the impact of tax cuts fade and worries about global growth come to the fore.
Sandler's at his best when he taps his roots as a schmuck who somehow dirty joked his way out of a meaninglessness—when his desperation brings frustration, rage, and urgency to the fore.
Analysts project earnings growth at S&P 224 companies to decline 2.3 percent in the first quarter as the impact of tax cuts fade and worries about global growth come to the fore.
A combined death toll of 36 people on the streets of Britain has pushed the issue of security to the fore of the election with both main parties accusing the other of weakness.
This land squeeze came to the fore over plans for Gansevoort Peninsula in Hudson River Park, the long and narrow system of repurposed piers along the Hudson River in Midtown and Downtown Manhattan.
NEW YORK (Reuters) - The hard-charging, fast-moving warrior sport of hurling made its Citi Field debut on Saturday, in a three-match tournament that brought rivalries and Irish pride to the fore.
Loach is the most enduringly political of filmmakers, and the United Kingdom has just been dragged through its second general election in three years, with issues of social justice much to the fore.
But when NASA scientist James Hansen brought climate change to the fore in 1988, Exxon was already starting to reverse its position on the validity of the science it helped to put forth.
These didn't come out of nowhere: Apple has been playing up its privacy game for at least a few years now, and in the Tim Cook era it's especially come to the fore.
We know that personality traits can be pretty deeply embedded by early childhood, but we also know that which traits and dispositions are brought to the fore, individually and collectively, depends on circumstances.
Although Switzerland today exchanges bank account data on its current clients with dozens of countries to crack down on cross-border tax cheats, fresh tax litigation has brought legacy matters to the fore.
Time and time again over his near-decade in public service, Mr. Williams has brought issues to the fore that affected millions of New Yorkers but had gone unaddressed by the city's leaders.
As the '60s faded and a new generation of dissidents came to the fore, ready for prison or exile in the battle for their human rights, Mr. Yevtushenko lost some of his glitter.
Other details come to the fore: the prosecutor also told people that he did not trust his own private security, and he made a point of acquiring his own weapons for self-protection.
As the battle over whether Hemings and Jefferson had been in a relationship has receded, the question of what type of relationship they could possibly have been in has come to the fore.
It has also brought to the fore the increasingly untenable contradiction between these two systems: one that holds academic freedom as a core value and another that emphasizes ideological control above all else.
And while the narrowness of the ban has already raised questions about its likely effectiveness, another perhaps more pressing problem has come to the fore: Politicians get a particular exception to the rule.
Apple's stand — it argues that to unlock the iPhone would violate its free speech rights — has brought questions over these competing forces to the fore, exposing gaps in some telecoms operators' own approaches.
"The bullish afterglow of yesterday's drop in U.S. oil stocks is fading as concerns over the U.S.-China trade spat return to the fore," said Stephen Brennock, analyst at brokerage PVM Oil Associates.
But efforts to vigorously contest death sentences now reveal dubious convictions more frequently, he said, bringing to the fore examples of bad forensic science and other prosecution evidence that wilts under close examination.
Abuse in one of these vocations came to the fore of public consciousness just last week, when a grand jury detailed decades of allegations of child sex abuse by Catholic priests in Pennsylvania.
Indeed, perhaps the best we can hope for is to point to the phenomenon in its absence: Aliveness is whatever is lacking when the monotony of the routine forces itself to the fore.
Ana Lucia Araujo, a history professor at Howard University who studies slavery, said the controversy over Ms. Meirelles's birthday has brought to the fore a topic many Brazilians are reluctant to acknowledge publicly.
WASHINGTON — The tentative deal reached late Monday by congressional negotiators to avert another government shutdown brought to the fore something President Trump has rarely seen in his time in office: reality-based programming.
Despite the longstanding nature of the US-Saudi alliance, the relationship still has problems — ones that have come to the fore in the wake of Nimr al-Nimr's execution over the new year.
As was mentioned last night, the internet companies are making consumer privacy tools much more accessible, looking at Facebook's change and Google's change, bringing the privacy tools to the fore from the rear.
The ascension of the internet as a social dimension has already brought to the fore such possibilities, even as the field of bionics stays somewhat behind the advances hoped for it by now.
Leadership can promise diehards that major issues will come to the fore later, and they're likely to move mountains to convince Trump not to interfere or threaten a veto of any potential compromise, either.
The issue of threats by drones to commercial air traffic came to the fore after London's second-busiest airport, Gatwick Airport, was severely disrupted in December when drones were sighted on three consecutive days.
This time around, the growing demand for action, especially by young people, and the daily reminders of the escalating damage to the planet, are forcing this issue to the fore where it rightly belongs.
The dynamic was indeed, as Deb said, like that of a Thanksgiving dinner, in which the sublimated tensions of the family unit, loosened by alcohol or the right instigating question, come to the fore.
Venus has been in Gemini, bringing good vibes to your relationships; this morning, things will begin to intensify as Venus enters psychic Water sign Cancer, bringing issues around sex and trust to the fore.
LONDON (Reuters) - British Prime Minister Theresa May's Conservative Party began gathering for its annual conference on Saturday with bitter divisions over her Brexit plans rising to the fore, raising doubts about her own future.
Genoa-based Carige has come to the fore as the last remaining large Italian lender in difficulty after the Rome government rescued Monte dei Paschi di Siena and liquidated two regional banks this year.
The religiosity that hung in the background of good kid creeps to the fore in the opening tracks, a bleak vision of the strife in the artist's hometown as prelude to the biblical apocalypse.
In the recent local elections, in which the opposition defeated the ruling Justice and Development (AK) party in most of the country's big cities, including Mersin, much of that frustration came to the fore.
Longer-term, however, the loss of the world's longest reigning monarch — widely praised and perceived as a moderator and arbiter in often acrimonious and violent political disputes — may bring political tensions to the fore.
But as producers on Monday began restoring some of the nearly 74% of output that was shut at U.S. Gulf of Mexico platforms ahead of Hurricane Barry, concerns about oversupply returned to the fore.
By excavating the horrors of the ongoing war and resulting humanitarian crisis in Syria, Azzam develops an aesthetics of exile that brings to the fore the silent memories and experiences of barely surviving groups.
I'd been back and forth with a Philips representative, asking for suggestions on what to cook that really put the machine's skills to the fore, and was flummoxed when they suggested frozen french fries.
When I asked for his takeaway on ketamine, he described it as the "most exciting treatment to come to the fore" during his career as a psychiatrist, and said depressed patients should have hope.
This media game is damn near impossible to win, and it takes a precise combination of ego, nostalgia, and money to bring an idea to the fore that has any kind of staying power.
This would promote uncertainty regarding reforms, as it would once again bring to the fore the risk of destabilizing scenarios such as elections and/or a change in the makeup of the Greek government.
A fringe party, British First shot to the fore last November when Trump sparked outrage in Britain and a sharp rebuke from Prime Minister Theresa May for retweeting British far-right anti-Islam videos.
But this seems unlikely to alter the symbolic project the AK party has already started, one which brings a particular interpretation of the Ottoman past to the fore, and which will not go uncontested.
On Sunday afternoon at the Morgan Library & Museum, the George London Foundation presented a recital by the mezzo-soprano Jennifer Johnson Cano and the tenor Dimitri Pittas that brought this issue to the fore.
After the A.K.P. won major victories in a constitutional referendum in 2010 and in elections in 2011 — and subdued the military — the party's liberal rhetoric waned and its social conservatism came to the fore.
Yet we think that there are broader geopolitical factors at play, as geopolitics has returned to the fore for a number of major producer states as well as the oil market generally in 2300.
The recent battle between North Carolina lawmakers and the Obama administration over bathroom access for transgender people suggests that equality issues that came to the fore in 1969 are yet to be fully resolved.
In his defense, Sessions said he had not researched certain legal questions or fully thought out matters related to the presidential authority brought so clearly to the fore in the Russia probe Trump abhors.
This is largely because its clunkiest element — a 1960s strand involving a piano teacher (Donna McKechnie) living in exile, narrating plot points to Gualtieri's unnecessarily abrasive grandson (Chase Crandell) — suddenly comes to the fore.
The strategic aspect of League of Legends comes to the fore with a series: teams can look at and react to which champions are getting picked, and how different players are performing on them.
The clash between the world's two biggest economies at the WTO — the US and China — is bringing to the fore massive questions that the international body has never before had to reckon with before.
In a time when our attention span for news seems as short as the blink of an eye, our national sickness around sexual harassment and assault has come to the fore again and again.
That contradiction came to the fore on Thursday night, when Mr. Trump rejected the recommendation by Mr. Pompeo and Mr. Bolton to strike Iran for the downing of an American drone earlier that day.
I want to talk about how mainstream it is or isn't, but it definitely has resonance now, at least in the media discussion, and the Facebook stuff has really brought it to the fore.
The issue of threats by drones to commercial air traffic came to the fore after London's second busiest airport, Gatwick Airport, was severely disrupted in December when drones were sighted on three consecutive days.
The Bagger put the question of why "Shape" has surged to the fore to a handful of Hollywood insiders and academy voters, and received answers as varied as the colors of a merman's scales.
Unless Buttigieg, whose fluent answers and freshness bought him to the fore, begins to draw sharper contrasts and offer discernible, digestible and symbolically meaningful ideas, he could wind up winning more admiration than votes.
Those salacious details were brought to the fore after an incident in which Mr. Alvarez's mistress reportedly fought with the mistress of another Duterte crony, Antonio Floirendo Jr., over seats at a cultural festival.
The suspects' faith has been an undercurrent in the case ever since, one that came to the fore in Monday's hearing -- even though neither prosecutors nor witnesses explicitly referred to the defendants' Muslim faith.
The issue first came to the fore in 2001, when scholars associated with a unionization campaign at Yale issued a report challenging what they considered the university's one-sided celebration of its abolitionist past.
Other signs point to China steadying its course after a stock market crash and surprise currency devaluation two years ago shook the financial world and brought the country's long-term problems to the fore.
Still, the deal died, earning everyone an F. THE MAC IS BACK Litigation alleging a material adverse change, or a MAC, to justify walking away from a deal, returned to the fore this year.
"At best (the impact of the championship) can mask over the criticism for a few weeks, but they will come back after summer when economic and social concerns come to the fore," Dabi said.
In attempting to capture the rich, tactile qualities of the ceramics in material form, the duo have pushed their fabric experimentation to the fore with knitwear in felted cashmere and two-tone dyed sheepskin.
When compared to South Africa, which has a population of 53.6M and an installed generating capacity of 44,000 MW of electricity, the scale of the challenge facing Nigeria begins to come to the fore.
Whatever specific reforms move to the fore, the Janus decision will test whether state legislatures and executives recognize that public sector unions make government work efficiently and effectively for citizens — as they indisputably do.
Interest in accusations of sexual harassment and misconduct came to the fore again on Monday when three women who had previously accused Trump of misconduct called on the U.S. Congress to investigate his behavior.
LASTING LEGACY Although Switzerland today exchanges bank account data on its current clients with dozens of countries to crack down on cross-border tax cheats, fresh tax litigation has brought legacy matters to the fore.
You're in a sensitive mood today, as the Moon enters Fire sign Leo this afternoon and lights up a very intense sector of your chart, bringing issues around intimacy and shared resources to the fore.
Now a dream collaboration has come to the fore, with Guns and Roses front man Axl Rose taking over the lead singer role after Johnson's shock retirement from touring due to a hearing loss risk.
Human rights, often an overlooked topic in relations with Beijing, have come back to the fore, along with calls for punitive sanctions that would further weaken China's economy in the middle of a trade war.
As pre-Enlightenment modes of value-signaling, tribalism and power-politics come to the fore on campus and social media, we must reaffirm our commitment to Western liberal values by actually putting them into practice.
"We are now having improvement in credit culture, we are having integrity come to the fore," he said, adding that the government has taken steps to improve the ease of doing business in the country.
He came to the fore during the Irish Republican Army's most violent years in the 1970s and 1980s but also helped turn Sinn Fein into a legitimate political force on both sides of the border.
At any given moment, it could have been an eight-year-old who was to the fore in her consciousness, or the 16-year-old, and they just wouldn't go out unless age-appropriately attired.
Saturn rules commitments and hard work, and its retrograde will find you rethinking these themes—especially in the realm of money and other material issues that came to the fore starting back in August, 2015.
So, you can see a very distinct Rare thread running through the catalogues of each composer, which certainly comes to the fore in the feeling of the Yooka-Laylee music, which you can stream below.
And this week, that outlook came to the fore, when they launched a revolt against Reddit at large, claiming that changes to its voting system were meant to stifle the visibility of pro-Trump links.
Crude prices have sagged almost a third since October, in part due to concerns about oversupply coming to the fore again as U.S. production rose in tandem with increased output from Saudi Arabia and Russia.
"The slaughter and the starvation and the water and all the things that are going on in Yemen that are atrocious, coupled with Khashoggi and his murder, bring all of this to the fore," Rep.
It also would have banned the government from demanding companies build security flaws into their systems, an issue that has risen to the fore following Apple's high-profile standoff with the FBI earlier this year.
" Between President Donald Trump's tax cut stimulus, a healthy labor market and the end of the Fed's historic quantitative easing policy, Cooperman said he wouldn't be surprised to see those issues "come to the fore.
As investigators in Kabul and Ghor tried to piece the episode together, the conversation about her life and death once again brought to the fore the issue of child marriage and women's rights in Afghanistan.
As a result, they are more liable to fragment over time, as political rivalries and divergent views come to the fore among the various opposition factions without a unifying figure to reconcile or diffuse them.
One of my theories coming out of 2016 was that Republicans by embracing Trump were at risk of losing a generation of voters, and it sure seems like that is coming to the fore now.
"We had been cautious on the growth profile in International, and believe the issues faced in India and Morocco bring to the fore certain risks that have been underestimated," Credit Suisse said in a note.
Almost two years after the Marawi siege brought the issue of Islamic extremism to the fore, parts of Mindanao remain under martial law, which is not due to expire until the end of this year.
But were Mr. Trump to leave the race now, on whatever pretext, he could state honestly that he bested a formidable Republican establishment and that he brought important issues like illegal immigration to the fore.
The new political identities have not sat well with either party, leading both sides to be split, perhaps irrevocably so, and giving Corbyn good reason to keep his party's fight from coming to the fore.
The issue came to the fore when the whistleblower — reportedly a CIA agent — detailed steps taken to prevent access to a transcript of a July 25 phone call with the president of Ukraine, Volodymyr Zelensky.
When the important questions of the day — human rights, the future of the American trade embargo, Cuba's future — were raised (if not settled), a frothier one came to the fore: Cuba was giving a party.
"These findings bring to the fore critical and troubling trends that would otherwise be hidden from view," said Sabeel Rahman, a professor at Brooklyn Law School who specializes in the intersection between money and democracy.
The duty of the financial adviser is one that's come to the fore this year with the Securities and Exchange Commission's passage of Regulation Best Interest, or "Reg BI," as it's known in the industry.
These tensions came to the fore in a recent debate within the New York City chapters of D.S.A. over whether or not to endorse Cynthia Nixon's campaign for the Democratic gubernatorial nomination in New York.
Despite constant talk that he was capable of stepping to the fore and upending the Big 3 hierarchy in men's tennis, his last trip as far as a quarterfinal in a major was in 2015.
Apologies are a means of recognizing a violation of rights, and so as apologies increase in the 18th century, the question of whose rights were violated and who the violators were comes to the fore.
" —Esmeralda Santiago "Lost Children Archive by Valeria Luiselli is informed, to powerful effect, by the author's ongoing commitment to meditating on the seemingly infinite predicaments America's immigration and refugee policy has brought to the fore.
This is her great book, the one that only she could have written, the one in which everything that was good in her came to the fore and everything that had been bad became good.
Animal rights are increasingly coming to the fore through trends like meatless meats, activism against the use of animals in tourist attractions, and fur sales bans that even have support from the Queen of England.

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