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289 Sentences With "took root"

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

It would be years before this notion truly took root.
Large charities took root in Bangladesh because of government weakness.
A destructive bacterium took root in one of his eyes.
It was here where my fascination with politics took root.
Before the recession took root, Brazil was moving towards these ends.
Christianity took root here, perhaps as early as the first century.
It survived the passage across the plains, took root and grew.
The urban myth of AIDS Mary took root at this time.
The fire was gone from the speeches; a conciliatory tone took root.
It has been to America's benefit that Silicon Valley took root here.
Amid this plastic wasteland, a new bacterium species, Ideonella sakaiensis, took root.
This epidemic took root not in a slum, but a modern city.
It took root at Amazon in 1999 when Jeff Wilke joined the firm.
In hindsight the question of belonging took root far before my family's uprooting.
As giant corporations took root, so too did calls to check their power.
After World War II, ranch houses took root and spread like ground cover.
The chrysanthemums symbolize Chicago, where the President's professional and political career took root.
Once plants took root on land, they grew into forests, shrub lands and swamps.
Partly as a result of Coughlin's efforts, fascism took root in the United States.
The notion took root in what America's constitutional framers crafted as the First Amendment.
That mentality took root across all levels of Manhattan's apartment market, Mr. Miller said.
The DVD market started to crumble in 2005, about the time Legendary took root.
Spence says the idea took root in the aftermath of the global financial crisis.
The Cold War ended peacefully, and functioning constitutional democracies took root in Eastern Europe.
Both arguments took root in the two-decade period after the Second World War.
It wasn't a new model, but America is a place where it really took root.
Jasmine, plumeria, banana trees, begonias, heliconias, hibiscus and ginger took root, overhung with Spanish moss.
Actually, a decline in arrests took root during the final year of the Obama administration.
Their encounter is Retro Report's main focus, notably the story line that swiftly took root.
It's the same tree that took root there over a millennium ago, and without qualifiers.
Her activism took root in 20093, when her doctor felt a lump in her breast.
The #NeverAgain and #BoycottNRA movements took root with breathtaking speed following the Parkland school shooting.
For Samuel Hookham and his younger brother, Overwatch was an obsession that took root last spring.
They came from distant lands, unfamiliar and strangely armored, and took root in our grocery stores.
An end to the slump took root when the Jazz beat Cleveland earlier in the week.
Passing innovations like Air Coryell, the West Coast offense, and the run-and-shoot took root.
Paul's vision won out, Christianity took root, and now there's probably a church in your neighborhood.
Crime in Robbinsville is down, too, mirroring what happened in Brooklyn after Pacific Park Brooklyn took root.
In later years, a wave of funding opportunities and globally recognized accelerator programs took root across Canada.
Posh chocolate shops are springing up in the hip neighbourhoods where coffee culture long ago took root.
That influence took root in what is now Turkey and produced the great carved friezes at Pergamon.
Bitcoin cash machines appeared in Tbilisi as cryptocurrency operations took root, injecting life in often abandoned buildings.
When actual VR took root in our minds as an all-encompassing simulacrum is a little fuzzier.
Other reporters began traveling here more often to help cover the country, while bigger plans took root.
As the gesture became the subject of national conversation, it also took root on the local level.
It shows that the authoritarianism, corruption and crony capitalism of Putin's Russia took root during that decade.
According to Cutts, the idea for the challenges took root while he was watching TV in May 2009.
Although she got better, the virus took root in her fetus' bone cells, nerve cells and skin cells.
But as the decades passed, nostalgia for the USSR took root in some of these former Soviet satellites.
Backed by America, Japan is moving away from the pacifism that took root after the second world war.
How exactly this urban myth took root inside the company was a mystery she could not immediately explain.
Mass-produced costumes started to emerge in the early 20th century, when modern-day Halloween really took root.
As the Willkie (originally Willcke) family took root in Indiana, they earned a reputation for eccentricity and vanguardism.
That influence took root in what is now modern Turkey and produced the great carved friezes at Pergamon.
Forms of constitutional monarchies took root, at least for some time, in emerging economies like Malaysia and Thailand.
For decades, migrants from smaller cities headed for large urban centers where the country's economic boom first took root.
As the new standard of female beauty took root across the western world, so did the panic over cellulite.
However, once an unfortunately placed gazebo took root, she was out of luck on the mother-daughter get-together.
Gossage bought one cabin in this enclave in 22017, just as his Hall of Fame pitching career took root.
His interest in design also took root in childhood, fostered by the family's carpenter — "my best friend," he says.
Could fact checkers work speedily enough to post rebuttals online within minutes of his misrepresentations, before they took root?
This created what Christopher Lasch memorably called a "culture of narcissism," which took root in American life during the 1970s.
If this is the age for when the problems really took root, is Jack's death the catalyst for exacerbating it?
When large numbers of Salvadorans were deported from the US in the 1990s, the gangs took root in El Salvador.
In time, Ms. Snell's journalism career took root when she worked at a Los Angeles-based political and cultural journal.
Some of the most important political protests of the 1960s, including the free speech movement, took root on Berkeley's campus.
Roger Cohen LONDON — Europe, the soil on which Fascism took root, is watching the rise of Donald Trump with dismay.
I tried to push it out, but once it took root it refused to be yanked up and tossed away.
The principles and beliefs that took root at newspapers more than a decade ago did not remain in the newsrooms.
Conflict has plagued parts of Congo for decades, slowing development in the country's east, where the latest outbreak took root.
Investors and leading Fed analysts have spent the last month adjusting their outlooks as a familiar set of risks took root.
Indeed, it dates back to the inception of the nation, though it really took root in the 20th century and later.
The fear took root in 2016—which, while decidedly not-great in general, was very much a great year for books.
Eating disorders first took root in the Japan in the 1980s—around the time women became more emancipated in the workplace.
As much perception as it is reality, the belief took root in the early Obama years and has grown steadily since.
It took root in the Japanese court, and in temples and shrines, in forms which have scarcely changed over 1,000 years.
Pawtucket's arts initiative took root like one of the giant oak trees that still tower over the city's Oak Hill neighborhood.
While the fighting took root in the south, the security around the Lafarge plant in the north slowly began to deteriorate.
The Obama Presidential Center is expected to open in 2021 on Chicago's South Side, where Mr. Obama's political career took root.
It is perhaps for this reason that the cult of the college dropout as the inventor in a garage took root.
It took root in 2014, with President Xi Jinping's declaration that Beijing would shift its "noncapital" functions to the surrounding regions.
The Korean photographer Chanho Park's fixation took root when he was 11 and his mother, who suffered from pancreatic cancer, was hospitalized.
They are being methodically slaughtered, sexually enslaved, and driven from the very lands where their religions took root almost 2,000 years ago.
Stock markets closed out their worst week since the 2202 financial crisis on Friday as fears of a coronavirus pandemic took root.
If These Courts Could Talk For three N.B.A. players, their rise to stardom took root in the childhood courts that shaped them.
Or do I just learn to live with the fear of perhaps suddenly being exiled from the place I took root in?
In the past century, flamenco also took root in Japan, where performers including Shōji Kojima and Yoko Omori have earned worldwide acclaim.
Once the new coronavirus took root, South Korean health officials aggressively ​tracked down ​and isolated patients​, testing over 10,000 people a day.
The fact that riders are not being widely used means that accountability rests mainly with the studios, where the homogeneity took root.
Coming from Spain, Fever quickly took root in Europe's biggest cities and has become the millennials' favorite method of organizing a night out.
Many of the militants who were put to death were part of a Qaeda insurgency that took root in Saudi Arabia in 2003.
When Miller and his friends reconvened days later to play football, they were still discussing the outfit, and an unlikely fusion took root.
In the places where Protestantism made its clearest mark in early modern Europe it took root in the bourgeoisie, among people of influence.
The relationship didn't last, but the idea that was seeded on that late summer night in 2015 took root and eventually became Safe.
The supposed link between pedestrian texting and fatal crashes took root at a time when both pedestrian deaths and smartphone adoption were rising.
In "Everybody's Doin' It" he makes a bracing case that New York was the hothouse in which American popular-music culture took root.
Meanwhile, American diplomats emphasized the importance of comprehensive political and economic engagement between urban capital regions and rural communities where terrorists took root.
The whole green-economy frame almost took root, but once the Dems went on the defensive in 2010, it faded to the background.
Various brands of evangelicalism took root in the lonely frontier, and a gun was present in these settlers' everyday lives for hunting and defense.
The erroneous connection between the pizza place and an alleged child trafficking and child abuse ring took root with bad actors on the internet.
"HNA took root in Hainan, understands Hainan, implemented a new development concept in Hainan, and built a modern economic system in Hainan," Shen said.
The fervor that began in the US jumped the Atlantic and took root in Europe, where kickboxing is still more popular than MMA today.
Weaving beyond the Bauhaus looks at the intersecting connections and relationships that took root at the Bauhaus's weaving workshop and continue to unfurl today.
In Iraq, where the group that became the Islamic State took root, security officials are bracing for future waves of suicide attacks against civilians.
"I wanted to show how all of these things took root in a place that I was completely unfamiliar with," Ms. Green, 31, said.
Huge corporations like Boeing, Amazon, Microsoft and Starbucks took root here, of all places, in this drizzly Northwest corner of the continental United States.
John's battery dies immediately thereafter, but otherwise it's been a remarkably smooth night for a civilian operation that took root only 12 hours earlier.
"My depression took root in the beginning of my middle school years and will be with me for the rest of my life," Saoirse wrote.
Wells Fargo's problems took root more than a decade ago, when the bank started pushing employees to sell as many products as possible to customers.
Sequoia wood resists rot; scratch away the muck and charcoal from a stump which took root three millennia ago and the wood beneath is intact.
"My depression took root in the beginning of my middle school years and will be with me for the rest of my life," she wrote.
What is surprising, though, is how quickly the trope of a haunted Indian burial ground took root and spread throughout the rest of American culture.
Plus, he practically took root in the half-acre garden back behind the house where he lived with his wife and their children and grandchildren.
The subculture, based largely online but branching into annual conventions, took root in 1970s comics like Fritz the Cat and fanzines like FurNography and Yarf!.
Artistic Modernism of all kinds took root in this soil, anxious about the disappearance of the past as well as, paradoxically enough, its unyielding grip.
The outbreak took root in the northern Lombardy region, and people traveling from Italy led to new cases in Nigeria, Mexico, Northern Ireland and Brazil.
In the nineteen-eighties, in the United States, a new illness took root as doctors became increasingly aware of the prevalence of childhood sexual abuse.
Putin's current assertiveness, Conradi shows, harks back to the tumultuous '90s, when the authoritarianism, corruption and crony capitalism we associate with contemporary Russia took root.
Those took root, and today they're growing in an area of about 500 square meters, where three varieties coexist—two from Sardinia and one from Tuscany.
The recession took root just as Rousseff started to roll back the costly stimulus policies, hiking taxes and interest rates and slashing investments in oil production.
The Pizzagate outcry took root during the fever-pitched news cycle of 2016, exploding online after the WikiLeaks release of Clinton campaign manager John Podesta's emails.
New Zealand filmmakers Belinda Schmid and David Welch are interested in why anger took root in Conrad's body and how that anger has shaped his work.
Problem was, Nimeiry was a politician first like all strongmen, the arty ones included, and as Islamism took root in northern Africa he turned due right.
The TV news crawl—a staple of cable news today—took root that day, a recognition that there was just too much news to talk about.
I remember long days spent at the I.N.S. building in Newark, periodic reminders that even as our life in America took root, our situation was precarious.
Dr. Margie removed that shame at the exact right time in my life, before it took root and hampered me, and for that, I'll be forever grateful.
And investors took $824 million back from technology-sector fund managers, the sixth straight week of such withdrawals, as risk-off sentiment took root, Lipper data showed.
The transformation in the Highlands is a product of a policy that took root in Washington State in the late 22013s, after youth violence had risen precipitously.
This puts the city on the same page as a number of other cities, New York State and many colleges, where the divestment movement first took root.
China, where the epicenter of the coronavirus took root, appeared to make progress in stemming the number of infections by imposing strict lockdowns, according to its government.
When what is now the European Union first took root in the 1950s, it included just six nations, and in three of them many people spoke French.
Remarkably, his strong showing included Jefferson Parish, which is the largest locality in suburban New Orleans and was where modern Republicanism first took root in the state.
" It took root on The New York Times's list and remained there for three years, becoming, as Entertainment Weekly put it, "The Book That Would Not Die.
Big break: The Manscapers took root in 2014 after friends complimented the outdoor décor at a party Mr. DeSantis and Ms. Brasier held at their Williamsburg apartment.
Biotechnology took root when Jonas Salk, who developed the first safe and effective polio vaccine, decided to establish his institute here to explore the basic principles of life.
Several of the cases involving those who were executed center on Awamiya, the Shia city in the country's Eastern Province, where Arab Spring protests took root in 20163.
After the fall of the Gang of Four, the Communist Party and much of the Chinese public chose to move on, as market-oriented policy changes took root.
In Iraq, the Islamic State took root within an insurgency against the country's Shiite-led government, and Shiite militias fighting it have been accused of brutality as well.
What does the fact many breaks styles took root in Britain rather than America say about the UK's relationship with hip-hop specifically, and black American music generally?
The results from the surveys show that improvements in household and business conditions that took root under President Obama continued through the first year of the Trump administration.
Her interest in traditional cooking took root when she was a teenager, eschewing trips to McDonald's in favor of learning Algonquin recipes, passed on orally from her grandmothers.
But anyone watching Mr. McConnell twist himself into knots in trying to block witnesses and documents has to wonder whether this notion ever took root in his mind.
Mr. Molony said his fascination took root when he was 12 and was gripped by "A Night to Remember," Walter Lord's 1955 book recounting the Titanic's final night.
In her dedication Jenkins, who wrote the words, credits Ruth Krauss and her "A Very Special House" as being the seed from which her own text took root.
Dr. Rock and Mr. Cosentino's romance took root in the spring of 2004, at a "Date Bait" speed-dating event at the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual & Transgender Community Center.
His piece captures what it was like in the 1940s through early 1960s, when writing software was a wide-open field, before a male-dominated culture took root.
But the larger move was westward, beginning in the late 1960s, when first the semiconductor business and later the personal computer industry took root in sunny Northern California.
Although she'd seen MMD before, Hylian ASMR found it a little intimidating and didn't start learning to use it in earnest until the idea for her channel took root.
Patratu, and the coal fields that supply it, provide a glimpse of the interdependence between coal, power and the state that took root with the birth of modern India.
But other promotions continued: the 247s saw gimmicks that encouraged women to show up to the ballpark in hot pants; breast cancer awareness events took root in the 232s.
The Lost Cause also took root because many Americans were being urged to reconcile with the South so the nation could move forward, says Simpson, the Civil War historian.
Its message took root, and on a pre-dawn run germinated into a concept in his mind: that athletes and their commitment to running clean ought to be showcased.
Along the way the shape of the novel took root, and he started to take notes during his butterfly hunts and write them up back in his motel rooms.
When the civil rights movement took root in the mid-20th century, it brought change to the racist laws and the "Whites Only" signs disappeared -- but only in principle.
One of Switzerland's oldest department store groups, Bongenie Grieder took root amid the burgeoning wealth and industrialism of 19th century Europe that spawned the grand stores of the era.
But it was not until 2010, when she bought herself a Golden Square timepiece by the Geneva-based watchmaker Roger Dubuis, that her fascination with mechanical watches took root.
The Mexican people's repudiation of this government took root then — and it's now expressed in a desire for a government that will break sharply with the corrupt status quo.
She says she could not stand for election in a party run by Jeremy Corbyn, a "morally reprehensible" leader she has accused of standing by while such sentiment took root.
Another piece of al Qaeda took root in Syria and, after the Syrian civil war broke out, became Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, the jihadist movement that controls much of Idlib.
The idea for the performances took root back in 2012, back when Beach House were touring in support of their album "Bloom" and found themselves feeling the monotony of routine.
Warm Guns took root in the same setting of Eastern Kentucky, a place that has become a source of inspiration as well as a stage for much of her work.
While Amazon was preparing to open its New York store, a mounting outcry took root against cashless businesses, which critics say discriminate against those without credit cards or bank accounts.
Though we should be skeptical of reports coming out of China, where the virus first took root, there are signs that the outbreak is also winding down in that country.
This distorted understanding of Islam took root in many pockets of American society, helping lay the groundwork for the climate of fear and hatred of Muslims that we are seeing today.
While pagan religions were generally pro-cat, when Christianity took root in Europe cats came to be associated—alongside other fun things, like premarital sex—with the devil, and specifically, witches.
And then the Arab Spring took root at Turkey's doorstep and emboldened Ankara to throw its support behind anti-Assad rebels in Syria to oust the Assad regime on its own.
That's when a more globalized and financialized economy took root, and when well-paid jobs in the manufacturing sector started to lose ground to far worse jobs in retail and service.
A notable share of that violence comes from gangs that took root in El Salvador after the United States deported thousands of "criminal aliens" to the country in the early 1990s.
As the building boom in and around campus took root, investment continued in athletics, which, thanks to football's rejuvenation, had seen revenues double to $218 million over an eight-year period.
While sporadic efforts on many campuses took root decades ago, a true campaign was set off by the Canadian commission that looked into residential schools and their abuses against indigenous children.
Stuck in their hierarchies and traditions, those chefs had fallen out of touch with the spirit of the times, opening a small crack in the pavement where Chez Panisse took root.
On the other hand, when opera finally took root, with the founding of L.A. Opera, in 1986, it was relatively free of the entrenched conservatism that has hemmed in older houses.
This instability has the potential to weaken the unspoken cooperation that took root between Israel and the Sunni regimes in an effort to combat common terror threats throughout the Middle East.
It also sees the full flowering of the touching queer romance that took root in the comic's first volume, leading to a highly satisfying conclusion for this idiosyncratic middle-grade book.
"My depression took root in the beginning of my middle school years and will be with me for the rest of my life," she wrote in the private Massachusetts prep school's paper.
For Stein, Soleri's emphasis on limits in an age of limitless expansion is part of the reason why his architectural ideas never really took root in the US. They seemed un-American.
But they are equals in showing how shame took root and continues to flourish in a country founded by Puritans, in works that echo with the primal wails of ancient Greek tragedy.
When I joined the company in 1996, the passion and work ethic that he instilled in me took root, and I proudly work alongside him and other members of my family today.
Unable to influence politics through voting, and with no recourse in federal court, African-Americans were forced to stand by helplessly as the horrors of Jim Crow took root across the South.
While the Western Pennsylvania Hockey League took root in Pittsburgh as the first professional American hockey league in 1896, it wasn't until Michigan's involvement in 1904 that the league became truly national.
Nearly 20 years since Mr. Bradshaw's high school graduation and 400,000 opioid overdose deaths later, his story seemed to shed light on how the crisis took root and spread over a generation.
The view that took root, entrenched by the Reagan administration's 1982 merger guidelines, held that economic concentration was generally not a problem unless it led to consumers paying higher prices at stores.
"My depression took root in the beginning of my middle school years and will be with me for the rest of my life," she wrote in a 2016 piece for her school newspaper.
" That response, Elliott later explains, was a play on the Steinbeck quote: "Socialism never took root in America because the poor see themselves not as an exploited proletariat but as temporarily embarrassed millionaires.
Instead, Morrill-funded education crowded out many private institutions that were successfully training large numbers of people, and both college enrollment and the economy grew faster before the Act took root than after.
The conspiracy theory took root after Twitter made a change to its algorithm that effectively prevented hundreds of thousands of Twitter accounts from being auto-suggested when people used the site's search function.
While the impact of COVID-19 on retail across the country will certainly further negatively affect Groupon moving forward, the company was in dire trouble weeks before the crisis fully took root stateside.
" That response, Elliott later explains, was a play on the Steinbeck quote: "Socialism never took root in America because the poor see themselves not as an exploited proletariat but as temporarily embarrassed millionaires.
The drugs story is also more convoluted than it seems at first sight: painkiller abuse took root when mining was still booming, and West Virginians took a lot of Valium before the opioids arrived.
Related: Massive Nature-Inspired Sculptures Explore Growth and Decay A Massive Bonsai Tree Brings "A New Stage of Beauty" to the Top of a Mountain A Pixel-Based Plant Performance Took Root in Barcelona
High in the Pindos Mountains, a Bosnian pine took root, and 1,075 years later a trio of scientists from Sweden, Germany, and the U.S. have pegged it as the oldest known tree in Europe.
Though they'd begin to flirt with this sound in 2010 with the release of Warm Slime, it took root fully on 2013's Floating Coffin, a fan-favorite that's a solid, standalone entry point.
When the experiment ends, he will isolate anything that took root, or try regrowing the fungal bits he put into the peeps in a regular medium to demonstrate that the candy didn't kill it.
When the idea of a contract took root, Buchwald says his parents and Hibshman's parents were totally on board, and helped them create a site and put together materials for a mission and execution.
The officially sanctioned segregation that took root during the Wilson era deepened under President Warren Harding, whose Southern-born commissioner of public buildings and grounds segregated even the tennis courts near the Washington Monument.
CWA political director and Working Families Party co-chair Bob Master believes Verizon workers, who were caught in a tense contract fight when Occupy took root in 2011, benefited from the spirit surrounding the demonstrations.
Its main tourist attraction is his summer palace, which houses a collection of crown jewels, furniture, paintings and documents from the long-gone monarchy, one of the few that took root in the New World.
Dick Bradsell, a career bartender who was considered the father of the cocktail revival that took root in London in the 1990s and continues to flourish today, died on Saturday at his home in London.
The shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Florida and students speaking out after it gave birth to multiple conspiracy theories online, Vox's Matt Yglesias noted, many of which took root on the right.
The eventful session came as some Wall Street watchers prepared to celebrate the 10-year anniversary of the start of the S&P 500's bull market run that took root during the financial crisis.
Calls to abolish ICE first took root on the far left of the Democratic Party, but have quickly been embraced by insurgent candidates like Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, the upstart Democratic congressional candidate from New York.
The practice of spending more on variable pay than on permanent raises took root in the 2000s, when growing competition from abroad increased pressure on companies to keep a lid on prices and production costs.
Reasonable people denounced it as competitive heresy, but the superpower compulsion that America is or must be No. 1 in everything — even when cold, hard facts would indicate otherwise — took root in its sporting culture.
That belief would jibe with action in the bond market, where traders have pushed the 10-year note to around 2.45 percent, a level it last was in early 2018 before an inflation scare took root.
All my life, I've mouthed off about how I should stop acting, and I don't know why it was different this time, but the impulse to quit took root in my, and that became a compulsion.
Margaret Renkl NASHVILLE — I thought I had escaped the beautiful, benighted South for good when I left Alabama for graduate school in Philadelphia in 1984, though now I can't imagine how that delusion ever took root.
It took root centuries ago in Scotland, where there is a nine-hole, par-3 course in North Berwick that is primarily for children (and that spawned Catriona Matthew, winner of the 2009 Women's British Open).
Ms. Bryant, of Gorham, Maine, a reporter for The Bangor Daily News, wrote that the event took root after another senior, Sophia Palangas, started a Facebook event to get together with friends for a final farewell.
The saga was launched by the flight of a young Hebrew teacher named Lehmann Gluckstein from eastern Europe in the early 1800s, and took root in London where his son Samuel created a small cigar factory.
As the crackdown on opioids gained traction, a sweeping change in chronic pain management took root — the tapering of millions of patients who have been relying, in many case for years, on high doses of opioids.
In the 1990s, efforts to deport immigrants who had been convicted of crimes played a major role in exporting MS-2000 — which started as a Los Angeles prison gang — to El Salvador, where it took root.
As the video above by Alex Kuzoian for Business Insider shows, Hinduism, Buddhism, Christianity, Judaism, and Islam often took root in a small geographical area and then spread like wildfire to surrounding regions — and sometimes continents.
Few names are as revered in the world of techno as Tresor, the legendary Berlin nightclub that took root in an abandoned bank vault located in the former DMZ right after the fall of the Berlin Wall.
"My depression took root in the beginning of my middle school years and will be with me for the rest of my life," she wrote in a column in the Deerfield Academy's student publication in February 2016.
In "Burning Want," Mr. Murray wrote of the trauma that took root: From just on puberty, I lived in funeral:mother dead of miscarriage, father trying to be dead,we'd boil sweat-brown cloth; cows repossessed the garden.
The theory linking Mr. Rich to the email leak took root in conservative circles and was cited by prominent conservatives like Newt Gingrich and right-wing commentators like Rush Limbaugh, Sean Hannity and Alex Jones of Infowars.
The project took root before Trump's company took on management, but the website for Tiger Woods Ventures, referred to as TGR, an umbrella organization over all of Woods' business and charitable work, does not dodge the association.
Those were the places where a Sunni insurgency took root after the American-led invasion of Iraq in 3003, and later gave rise to an affiliate of Al Qaeda and the leadership ranks of the Islamic State.
As I left my car, I found myself thinking again of the long now: a man who sends messages with a potential life span of 50,000 years, living among trees that first took root a millennium ago.
Richard's not someone who is quick to be quiet, because he's just like already having conversations about patriarchy and, you know, and, by the time it got so bad is when I think his greatest ideas took root.
Those are places where young men who joined gangs in Los Angeles, or formed their own to protect themselves and their community of war refugees, took root after they were deported from the United States back to El Salvador.
After raising rates four times in 2018, and anticipating further hikes in 2019, the Fed in January switched to a "patient" stance as concerns about the global economy took root, and markets voiced doubts about the U.S. economic recovery.
According to Microsoft, the Xbox Adaptive Controller project first took root in 2014 when one of its engineers spotted a custom gaming controller made by Warfighter Engaged, a non-profit that provides gaming devices for wounded and disabled veterans.
While most of Hollywood's A-list opts for mansions in the Hills, Depp has lived downtown for years, building his penthouse complex piece-by-pice since the building was modernized in 2007 — before the downtown revitalization really took root.
It is not, then, a crisis of American democracy at all, but a sickness in the Republican Party—one that took root with Newt Gingrich's "Republican Revolution" in the 1990s, and which has only metastasized within the GOP since.
Welles's own activism first took root on the stage, in collaboration with radical artists like Marc Blitzstein on The Cradle Will Rock and in his all-black adaptation of Macbeth in Harlem, as well as in his radio work.
Enclosed gardens, in particular, were used in a hospital context at least as far back as the Middle Ages.) Horticulture therapy as it's known today in the United States took root (so to speak) following the first World War.
The darker elements took root gradually, while the warriors meant to combat them — like the spirit of Laura Palmer, or the various non-malevolent forms of Agent Dale Cooper — slipped into the world in ways both clumsy and imprecise.
The design-first culture that took root under Cook struck again with the MacBook Pro, yielding new laptops so thin their keyboards were awful and featuring USB-C ports that required sleek Macs to be used with ugly dongles.
The first change took root for me about 18 months ago when the graduate program that I direct started teaching Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (pronounced as the single word ACT) to our doctoral students, who are future clinical psychologists.
It was an embarrassing stain on a progressive city that for decades had welcomed immigrants fleeing war, famine and poverty only to leave them trapped in an isolated collection of decrepit brick apartment blocks where crime and despair took root.
In Saudi Arabia, the Arab Spring took root in Awamiya and the rest of the eastern province of Qatif, home to millions of Shia Muslim Saudis who have long believed they hold second-class status in the Sunni-ruled kingdom.
He wasn't the first person we'd spoken to either at the ground-level of the legal gun business whose criticism of smart gun technology took root in a decidedly if-it-isn't-broke-don't-fix-it approach to firearm innovation.
Patterson examines how the political clientelism that took root in independent Jamaica has led to deadly "garrison-based politics," in which a poor neighborhood is bribed or coerced through the threat of violence into voting for a particular political party.
The conspiracy theory that Clinton had been fed answers took root following NBC News's "Commander-in-Chief Forum" on Wednesday night when a picture circulated the internet showing what looks like a glare casting a white shape into Clinton's ear.
When German immigrants poured into Pennsylvania in the late seventeenth century, the German language took root and spread westward; one Virginia county petitioned Congress to print federal laws in German as well as English, to aid farmers who spoke only German.
"My depression took root in the beginning of my middle school years and will be with me for the rest of my life," she wrote in a 2016 piece for the student newspaper at her private school, the elite Deerfield Academy.
Hailing from an East LA suburb that was infested with gangs long before punk took root, this coalition of troubled kids was mentored by an old veteran of a cholo gang and bonded over punk's confrontational image and antiestablishment stance.
Unlike with manufacturing, which took root in cities large and small, and in exurban industrial parks, opportunity in the information era has clustered in dense urban enclaves where high-tech businesses can tap into rich pools of skilled and creative people.
Yet what works in New York may not work in Jakarta, and while we now have to evaluate art at a global scale, we also have to study the particular circumstances in which "global" contemporary art took root in local cases.
After raising rates four times in 2018, and anticipating further hikes in 2019, the Fed in January switched to a new "patient" stance as concerns about the global economy took root, and global markets voiced doubts about the U.S. recovery.
The seeds of the climate justice petition before the Commission on Human Rights took root in December, when Yeb learned Greenpeace leaders were looking for somewhere to test whether international human rights law could be used against major carbon emitters.
In essence, Castro, too, was fraught with the same vicissitudes and maddening inconsistencies with respect to race that has plagued most major Western Hemisphere leaders of European descent ever since the slave trade waned and rigid de jure segregation took root.
That didn't work out particularly well: As the 1970s economy continued to grow, inflation took root thanks to low rates and remained stubbornly in place until the early 1980s, when then-Fed Chair Paul Volcker had to tighten policy sharply.
At UC Berkeley, students created vivid and colorful images of resistance in response to the increasing political tumults and traumas, from Nixon's ordered bombing of Cambodia to the Kent State shootings that occurred just days before the workshop took root.
These entities normalized ideas that had lurked for decades on the far right -- particularly the demonization and scapegoating of immigrants and targeted minority groups -- and moreover encouraged a kind of authoritarianism in their politics that took root and manifested itself in Donald Trump.
It's true that Trump has placed the idea of a border wall front and center ever since he first set foot on the campaign trail, but the idea of building barriers along the US-Mexico border took root long before he took office.
I didn't struggle much with the clues today, after getting a good start with TWO BY FOUR, TUPELO, ROYALTIES, ZOLA and NOVA SCOTIA, which happens to be where a good number of my ancestors took root, so it came to mind easily.
It ranges from a strikingly rough back-to-basics painting from 1964 by Brazil's Mira Schendel to the elegant painted panels of Venezuela's Alejandro Otero, from 1955, whose patterns and high gloss fuse Op and Minimal art years before these movements took root.
But his most resonant moment came when he emphasized his emotional connection with an evangelical movement that was initially skeptical of him — skepticism that also took root at Liberty, where students in October protested the younger Mr. Falwell's support for Mr. Trump.
The companies—all of which were initially slow to acknowledge their role in the information war that took root as early as 25—have as of this month confirmed the existence of an extensive misinformation campaign launched via social media to influence American voters.
Tony Mendoza, a Los Angeles-area lawmaker, became the third member of the California legislature, all Democrats, to resign over allegations of sexual misconduct since the #MeToo movement took root last fall, toppling powerful men in politics, the media and other realms of American life.
Pro-Trump Pravda sites like Breitbart, which have fomented birther conspiracies for years, weren't upset that Trump disclaimed birtherism; they celebrated Trump's successful attempt to troll the media and his incipient effort to muddy the waters about where this racist conspiracy theory took root.
"Economic activity continued to expand in late January and February," even as concerns took root at the U.S. central bank about a possible slowdown, the Fed said in its regular "Beige Book" compendium of anecdotes compiled from industry and business contacts around the country.
While criticism of Section 230 had mounted for years, the coalition of corporate interests questioning the value of the protections took root in late 2017 when Disney and 21st Century Fox backed the bill allowing lawsuits against web platforms for knowingly facilitating sex trafficking.
For example, they might follow a case study in how fake news spreads: In this article and "Daily" episode, The Times traces how a fringe theory about Ukraine took root in the White House — and how it's formed the background of Mr. Trump's impeachment inquiry.
He has reconstructed whole-cloth a societal and security schematic that is swallowing up a large part of Ukraine, disintegrating its Ukrainian identity, indoctrinating children, undermining jobs and economic opportunity, and pulverizing democratic institutions that took root there since the fall of the Soviet Union.
Analysts say the group is already preparing for a new phase, morphing back into the kind of underground insurgency it started as, when it took root among disaffected Sunni populations that were willing to tolerate, if not wholeheartedly embrace, its ultraconservative brand of Islam.
Meanwhile, as women's progress hit a lull, the 1950s' nuclear family idyll — a mother at home caring for her husband and kids — took root; and in a parallel universe, Diana Prince came out to the world as Wonder Woman, and married the man of her dreams.
The rise of the Olympic swimming mom was made possible by the professionalization of the sport, which took root in the United States in the 1990s and has borne ample fruit during the career of Phelps, the most decorated Olympian in the history of the modern Games.
Other clients included a young couple who rented substitute grandparents for their child, and a bachelor who rented a wife and daughter in order to experience having the kind of nuclear family he'd seen on TV. The idea of rental relatives took root in the public imagination.
But here in the Puget Sound area of Washington State, which struggles with one of the nation's worst homelessness problems, an unusual arrangement took root: homeless camps with rights and rules, and given government protection from the raids, sweeps and indignity of life in the shadows.
It could also deepen the U.S. perception that took root under the Obama administration that the U.S. "interests lie more in Asia than in its traditional Atlantic sphere of influence," according to Sebastian Mallaby, a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations, writing in The Washington Post.
It's an initiative that took root at this year's Women's March in L.A., where the company gave women the opportunity to share raw and emotional testimonials about the kind of hardships (like domestic violence) and triumphs (becoming the first openly trans person running for California state legislature) they've faced.
I once thought the ideas behind sentencing reform took root merely in forgetfulness about our past blunders; complacency about our success in correcting them; and, more recently, a refusal to look honestly at the surge in murder and heroin use we see in cities from coast to coast.
"While attending Deerfield Academy, a private preparatory school in Massachusetts, Saoirse wrote about her own experience with mental illness for the student newspaper, writing that her depression "took root in the beginning of my middle school years and will be with me for the rest of my life.
Local competitors to telephone companies (so-called "Competitive Local Exchange Carriers") never took root and today, a few huge wireless and wireline phone companies dominate the industry, among the most concentrated and least popular in the U.S. Are we to assume that this was the outcome Neil Gorsuch wanted?
But by the 1990s, with the advent of the World Wide Web and the beginning of the tech industry's march to the apex of the world's economy, another Silicon Valley political narrative took root: techies as unapologetic libertarians, for whom the best government is a nearly nonexistent one.
Mr. Martinez, who lives in the Bronx with his wife and two young children, said the garden took root three years ago when he asked the carwash owner if he could plant a short row of tomato and jalapeño plants on a patch of grass next to the carwash.
Waziri's journey from Afghanistan to Denmark took root in 2008 after she suffered the first of several strokes, and her husband, a wealthy landowner from the Gereshk District of Helmand Province, married a much younger woman who did not want to take care of her, her family said.
Perhaps it is true, as Walvin asserts, that sugar tainted "all involved wherever it took root," but how it tainted places and people, and who did the tainting, and how conditions changed over the past 500 years are often left unexplained, as are any resulting lessons we might learn.
The spiritual religion eventually made its way to the New World via the African Disaspora, where it took root and flourished in places like Haiti (where it became "vodou") and Louisiana (where it became "voodoo") and remains a driving cultural force and deeply-held belief system for many people.
The exhibit does an excellent job of surveying the breadth of African American art during those years by including not just famous names such as Romare Bearden, Roy DeCarava, and Betye Saar, but also less recognized individuals whose work created the fertile ground in which the most celebrated artists took root.
In that time, the United States military has evolved from a small, irregular force of wartime volunteers to a sprawling permanent establishment, with the greatest change happening during and after World War II. As this occurred, the apolitical professional military ethic took root within the senior ranks of the military. Gen.
In late February, Amazon made news when it made a show of warning third-party sellers on its online marketplace that price gouging on products that have been in high demand ever since the coronavirus took root—surgical masks, hand sanitizer, and similar hygiene-centered goods—would not be tolerated.
But those who have tracked the group since it took root in Iraq in the early 2000s say that even after losing its land, the group is far stronger today than it was the last time it was considered defeated — in 2011, the year American troops pulled out of Iraq.
Democrats and Republicans had sorted into liberal and conservative parties, the former of which had been handed a once-in-a-generation opportunity to expand the social contracts of the New Deal and Great Society, the latter of which was committed to retrenching the liberal gains that took root in those eras.
Several documents establish that it was at Congregation Kahal Kadosh Beth Elohim in Charleston where the American version of Reform Judaism took root in 1824 through young mavericks who "wanted to modernize Judaism so it wouldn't die," said Dale Rosengarten, director of the Center for Southern Jewish Culture at the College of Charleston.
"There is a lot of value in targeting some of the exclusionary aspects of the final clubs, and making sure we are working toward the same goals collectively," said Rebecca Ramos, a rising senior and president of the Delta Gamma chapter, one of the Greek organizations that took root here in the early '90s.
Researchers have meticulously documented how Nazi war criminals fled to South America in the aftermath of World War II. But much less is known about a plot that took root before and during the war: The Nazis hoped to establish a German bridgehead in South America by conquering a swath of the Amazon River Basin.
And while the concentration of digital ad spending in the hands of a handful of tech giants began on desktop platforms, Pew says the data shows it "quickly took root in the rapidly growing mobile realm as well" — which the report also notes accounted for slightly more than half of all digital ad spending last year.
"It was when the Irish immigrants came that the holiday really sort of took root in America and they had their practice of going door to door, asking for fruits and nuts and things like that," she said, referring to how immigrants from Ireland and Scotland brought Halloween-like traditions to the US in the 1800s.
This is Monday night kirtan at Bhakti Yoga Shala, a Santa Monica yoga studio that since opening in 2009 has served as a primary hub for LA's kirtan scene, an often barefoot spiritual music community that took root in Los Angeles more than 20 years ago and continues to thrive in yoga studios, private homes, and desert festivals around SoCal.
Rather, our true regional fissures can be traced back to the contrasting ideals of the distinct European colonial cultures that first took root on the eastern and southern rims of what is now the United States, and then spread across much of the continent in mutually exclusive settlement bands, laying down the institutions, symbols and cultural norms later arrivals would encounter and, by and large, assimilate into.
There was probably a scary headline about a new study in a peer-reviewed journal about how some facet of my life makes me 10 to 15 percent more likely to die "early," whatever "early" means, which took root in my brain and increased my heart rate and my blood pressure, gave me a headache, affected my breathing, and even made my calves throb.
Markovics is a student of German history and like others in his movement, he is earnestly inspired by the thinkers of the New Right, which took root in France in 1970s and 1980s — and which keeps the core social values of the far right, while adding a sprinkling of traditionally leftist platforms, like market skepticism, and a language inspired by conservative German philosophers of the World War I-era.
So when I began to see signs of a different pattern emerging there in recent years — a stirring of economic life, in manufacturing, that communities like Twin Falls had never known — the idea gradually took root as I talked to people there and around the West, that a powerful counterexample to the national narrative of rural decline might be unfolding (as described in my front-page article on Tuesday).
Though numerous organizations around the world have been celebrating this milestone — a world-touring Bauhaus bus that hit the road in Germany, a new biography of founder Walter Gropius, Bauhaus Beginnings at the Getty Research Institute in Los Angeles — this exhibition seeks to tell the story of the famed German art school a different way: through the intersecting connections and relationships that took root at the Bauhaus's weaving workshop and continue to unfurl today.
Former engineer Susan Fowler wrote a letter exposing the culture of harassment CEO Travis Kalanick had fostered within Uber; video surfaced of Kalanick berating an Uber driver mid-ride; a secretive program specifically designed to deceive law enforcement called 'Greyball' was uncovered; a viral campaign to boycott Uber took root after Kalanick accepted a position on President Trump's short-lived Strategic and Policy Forum; Google subsidiary Waymo sued Uber for alleged theft of trade secrets.

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