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173 Sentences With "turn of phrase"

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

But you're right — that's a wonderful turn of phrase.
Sometimes I even impress myself with the turn of phrase.
Dolores interrupts the speech here, correcting the turn of phrase.
I mean, this isn't a turn of phrase that normies use.
Besides her lovely turn of phrase, she is a gifted and empathetic observer.
The proof is — if you'll pardon the turn of phrase — in the pudding.
This simplistic turn of phrase, born of a misguided notion, gets used regularly.
His language might be spare, but his turn of phrase is strikingly elegant.
There can be just a turn of phrase, the way somebody says something.
His penchant for the dramatic turn of phrase is to be admired i think.
Many people will agree with the rabbi in finding Mr Corbyn's turn of phrase unacceptable.
It wasn't long before #MeToo wasn't just a turn of phrase — it was a movement.
Perhaps even in an overused turn-of-phrase, Obama's words are, dare we say, presidential.
He also nicely blends his own turn of phrase ("our kid") with grime's London-centric parlance.
He joked, using a rather bizarre turn of phrase, that sometimes he wished he and Mrs.
"Separate but equal" is an appalling turn of phrase given that it's derived from Plessy v.
Unless someone is referring to a "sheet of ice," which is merely a turn of phrase.
Trump has maintained that the turn of phrase was not a vulgar nod to male genitalia.
Squirt used the same turn of phrase to advertise their grapefruit-flavored soda the same year.
That small turn of phrase carries serious implications for President Donald Trump and his inner circle.
This may be because the term "marriage market" in China is more than a turn of phrase.
Weirdly, however, her usual snappy turn of phrase and ear for words seems to have gone awry.
To borrow a turn of phrase from orangutanparade, I guess it's time to get pregnant in Japan.
And his turn of phrase is as arresting as Runciman's own—one family friend is "unceremonious, crapulous".
It is a truth universally acknowledged that the Australian turn of phrase is a gorgeous linguistic riddle.
We can savor every turn of phrase, both musical and lyrical, as it twists down into character.
That was her work, wasn't it, the search for the tidy turn of phrase, the most apt anapest.
DIPLOMATS the world over know that a well-chosen turn of phrase can make or break a negotiation.
Norris' glorious turn of phrase, and down to earth sincerity had the panel, and the internet, in stitches.
Any old computer can host a website, and now one enthusiast has taken that turn of phrase literally.
He speaks with an eloquence that is offset by a ribald wit and an unpriestly turn of phrase.
Hatch's office was quick to defend and explain the turn of phrase, which has a few different meanings.
At 26, he too has a knack for a descriptive turn of phrase and an artful sense of pessimism.
Admit nothing, deny everything, launch counterattacks, to borrow Roger Stone's turn of phrase, has proven to be effective politics.
To borrow a turn of phrase from Jay Z: Elon Musk isn't just a businessman; he's a business, man.
Any inartful turn of phrase or perceived slight during a legitimate arrest could land an officer in years of litigation.
You might smile at an interesting word or a nice turn of phrase but who lingers over the perfect comma?!
He mocked his foes as "rented revolutionaries," a dig at their foreign backing, and laughed at his turn of phrase.
To borrow a turn of phrase from Mark Twain, I want to have voted, but I don't want to vote.
It seems more like a hurried attempt to employ a turn of phrase, only one that went a bit south.
"'Attention to detail' is such an ubiquitous turn of phrase, it doesn't do justice to what he actually does," he said.
"They messed them up a bit," Mr. Jones said of the Chapman brothers' drawings, using a more vivid turn of phrase.
There is something rotten at the core of this man that no length of script or turn of phrase can ameliorate.
Literally years in which one of them will utter some word or turn of phrase the other has never heard before.
Hallberg inhabits each of his characters completely, and there is some gorgeous image or turn of phrase on almost every page.
Considered blasphemous by some Christians, the odd turn of phrase is a way of saying, "I can't believe what I'm seeing." 
And then, before even giving his seatmate a chance to respond, he launches into an explanation of his witty turn-of-phrase.
You do a lot of reporting and you, every once in a while, get to write a really fun turn of phrase.
"I hear Churchill had a nice turn of phrase, but Trump's immigration speech is the most magnificent speech ever given," she tweeted.
But one of Trump's most prominent supporters, the media-savvy billionaire Peter Thiel, took Zito's turn of phrase and inverted its meaning.
McDonald's locations in Bangkok have long-served burgers with sweet chili sauce, and (pardon the turn of phrase) that shit is dope.
The turn of phrase acknowledged class inequality, even as it suggested that good manners, hard work, and clean bedsheets could overcome it.
One writer might provide a vocal melody for a prechorus; another might supply one redolent turn of phrase for the second verse.
In the transactional dating apps space you can almost forgive him for that Freudian slip turn of phrase, which turns people into 'products'.
Rumsfeld loves its difficulty, its strategy; the way its tougher rules challenge players, in a Churchillian turn of phrase, to never give up.
A vulgar turn of phrase concerning Owen's not-entirely-noble intentions toward Jeff's sister is repeated too often and with too much relish.
But your critics show bad faith when they treat an angry tweet or a flippant turn of phrase as proof of moral incorrigibility.
Apologies for using that obvious turn of phrase to describe the precarious situation the chief operating officer of Facebook now finds herself in.
It's also home to plenty of family farms that will live or die on a turn of phrase within the next farm bill.
It is an elusive turn of phrase, but one closer to the classical philosophical notion of happiness as part of the individual's civic existence.
The colloquial turn of phrase, "the Other's take you," (often used to mean "fuck off") also indicate it used to happen a lot more.
Porter initially settled on calling himself a "jack-of-all-trades," but a little later, a more poetic turn of phrase occurred to him.
"APP has inspired us," says William, a death-row prisoner who, after ten years inside, has both a poetic and lawyerly turn of phrase.
"Your critics show bad faith when they treat an angry tweet or a flippant turn of phrase as proof of moral incorrigibility," I wrote.
A turn of phrase may appear pretty at first, then take on shades of nostalgia before registering as a creepy obsession haunting the ear.
" Bloom added, "I miss the humor, the turn of phrase, the way we interact, the way in which you can be vocal about things.
If we think Trump is the biggest threat to American democracy, we can find wrongdoing in a turn of phrase in a phone call.
A BRIDGE, Erica Wagner says in a lovely turn of phrase, "is a place that is no place at all, that is in itself between".
Today, although I might sometimes have trouble with a tricky turn of phrase in a novel, I consider myself absolutely fluent at texting in Japanese.
"3D Touch" is also a less awkward turn of phrase than "Force Touch," a title that critics pointed out sounds oddly violent out of context.
Asked about Mr. Kasich's use of the same line, Mr. Weaver said Friday that he had indeed told him about Mr. McCain's turn of phrase.
That delivery is so smooth it's masking the fact that each and every line is a punchline, or at least a clever turn of phrase.
It is a slow build, but rewarding—akin to the way one picks up an accent, or a friend's turn of phrase from repeated exposure.
I think he was willing to go out and be the "human hand grenade," to borrow a turn of phrase from the Fiona Hill testimony.
Twitter users quickly seized on Sessions's turn of phrase: Sessions says he also saw Trump speak at "the Jewish AIPAC event" The Jewish AIPAC event?
It went from the taxi industry is so evil, which I think he had a really great turn of phrase about them, to fight them.
I know that "taking" someone's virginity is a common turn of phrase, but in this situation, I think it indicates a double-standard based on gender.
So I want to point out something that, if not exactly a mistake, is an odd turn of phrase that shows how idiosyncratic Wolff's book is.
My favorite turn of phrase was CHICKEN CO-OPS; I got seriously challenged by PHOENIX A-Z and was duly impressed by AMERICAN GOT HI-C.
Lots of people became convinced that words have a kind of magic power, that anyone can be convinced of anything given the right turn of phrase.
He's a singer-songwriter of observant insight and penetrating empathy, brilliantly adept at compressing a complicated range of emotions into a terse, plain-spoken turn of phrase.
Kenny didn't even come up with the fabulous turn of phrase, his wife did during an argument years ago and has brought it back quite often lately.
Please "give me a break," to borrow a turn of phrase from the marketing campaign for a chocolate bar that is definitely not the best in the world!
But whenever it seems like he's leaning too heavily on the soapbox moralizing, he lightens the mood with a hilariously weird turn of phrase or oddball cultural reference.
He rose to power in Russia after promising to "whack in the outhouse" his terrorist enemies in Chechnya, a turn of phrase that proved wildly popular in Russia.
The second way, which would require legislation, is through a $1.7trn in federal funding for what Mr Biden calls, in a Sandersesque turn of phrase, a "Clean Energy Revolution".
But it's worth noting, to the unfamiliar, that "Delete your account" was not a sudden turn of phrase by a coldblooded social media manager, let alone the candidate herself.
The speech itself, if you read it, is rather banal and unremarkable, but the turn of phrase came to be a powerful icon of the politics of the era.
By contrast, Mr. Steyer added, in an awkwardly clinical turn of phrase, that a recent poll showed that he had "24 percent of blacks in South Carolina" supporting him.
" He apparently could not resist concluding with a typically Russian turn of phrase: "It's hard to find a black cat in a dark room, especially if it's not there.
Officially called the GBU-43/B Massive Ordnance Air Blast, its acronym conveniently gave way to the nickname "Mother of All Bombs" — a callback to Hussein's turn of phrase.
The work usually begins with a concept that comes about by meditating on a found image, a turn of phrase or the way a word sounds, and so on.
Starting with Richard Nixon , every Republican candidate who took the White House employed some form of what had been named, in a deceptively genteel turn of phrase, the Southern Strategy.
" And with a turn of phrase, linked his real estate successes to the potential of a Trump presidency: "Not only can they change a skyline, they can change the world.
In his inaugural address, he described a raging "American carnage" that he vowed to halt — a turn of phrase that rankled local officials who have prided themselves on crime reduction.
The team of four is tasked with finding a girl named Clara who possesses "divine nonchalance" — yet another turn of phrase we aren't supposed to truly understand the meaning of.
The judge said he was reluctant to undertake a "special counsel's investigation" — he added he couldn't "resist" the turn of phrase — but agreed to bring her back over the government's objection.
I even heard people jokingly call the street masquerade "The Police Parade," a turn of phrase that was pretty fitting considering there were officers and law enforcement vehicles at every turn.
Part of that also comes from working with Pharrell, who produces the vast majority of the tracks and enjoys a kooky musical turn as well as an unexpected turn of phrase.
One gets the sense that Hill wanted to include every anecdote, observation and turn of phrase he ever conjured up or heard, and was loath to prune any from the finished product.
As that turn of phrase proves, the internet and the culture around it still had a ways to go for total permeation of American society, but it was certainly a turning point.
As the band's career has advanced, Turner has also grown into a stunning ability to express desire and emotion with a turn of phrase that never slides into either sentimentality or cynicism.
Putin's spokesman, Dmitry Peskov, said the report wasn't of any interest to the Kremlin and, in a pointed turn of phrase, expressed regret that the report "only poisoned" relations between Russia and Britain.
The Casual Inhumanity of How Detroit: Become Human Uses Black CulturePhoto: Sony Interactive EntertainmentTo quote a time-honored African-American turn of phrase, video game developer David Cage owes black people a check.
The poor turn-of-phrase takes a dark turn later in the episode, when a petty Melrose (Jackie Tohn) tries to play mind games with Cherry in front of all the GLOw women.
Playing a raffish aesthete punch-drunk both on language and, yes, drink, Mr. McKellen allows his Spooner the occasional sly smile when he has let rip with an especially spry turn of phrase.
" New York Times op-ed columnist Bret Stephens wrote, for instance, that Williamson's critics "show bad faith when they treat an angry tweet or a flippant turn of phrase as proof of moral incorrigibility.
Most notable, according to one press release, will be Perdue's bid to replace the traditional way of slaughtering chickens with "controlled atmosphere stunning"—a turn of phrase so bland it can only be deliberate.
The second star: Vili Saarijärvi—The Finnish prospect is part of a disappointing Team Finland entry at the World Juniors, which led to him introducing a new turn of phrase to the hockey lexicon.
Tessitore's turn of phrase might have gone unremarked upon had McLaughlin not already made kicks from 43, 39, and 47 yards earlier in the game, with the last coming as time expired in regulation.
That's the reason the whole "basket of deplorables" comment offended people instead of just sounding like a weird turn of phrase — she played to her own stereotype by showing disgust for 30 million Americans.
" One such ally worried about Mr. Trump's potential softening, author Ann Coulter, tweeted that "I hear Churchill had a nice turn of phrase, but Trump's immigration speech is the most magnificent speech ever given.
You won't find a striking turn of phrase anywhere in this biography of a playwright who, as a line-to-line stylist, can't match Tennessee Williams or Tony Kushner (both of whom revere him).
" Katharine Hayhoe, a climate scientist at Texas Tech, had a longer turn of phrase, suggesting that we call them "what used to be entirely natural disasters ... now amplified or exacerbated by human-induced change.
The game was The Swapper, and I remember because game developer Jon Blow went on a Twitter rant about the turn of phrase soon after, which may or may not have been directed at me.
There are diehard supporters who believe it was nothing more than a turn of phrase, that she meant nothing by it and that Democrats and the "liberal media" are just making much out of nothing.
The president has taken to describing scrutiny by House Democrats as "presidential harassment," an awkward turn of phrase that his lawyer translated into constitutional terms by arguing that Congress' request infringes on Trump's constitutional rights.
But when Mr. Chappelle says some of the sexual assault victims speaking out are now experiencing "buyer's remorse," a particularly cruel turn of phrase, this is surely not the funniest thing he can think of.
" Writing for Commonweal, a Roman Catholic periodical examining the intersection of religion, politics and culture, Mr. Bacevich takes on a turn of phrase that has gained popularity in the news media: "The Age of Trump.
A charismatic bruiser with a baby-soft face and piledriver body, Bradley favors a dry turn of phrase — when asked how he's doing, he responds "South of OK, north of cancer" — and a placid demeanor.
As is often the case when an appealing turn of phrase pops up in a random place, the culture over time found a more distinguished lineage for it — in this case, a great American president.
" Hatch later clarified his remarks with "helpful additional context," sharing a tweet from Whitlock, who explained that this turn of phrase "was used quite often during the Civil War when Hatch was just a young senator.
About Raisin, our reviewer wrote: "His language might be spare, but his turn of phrase is strikingly elegant," adding that "the confidence and skill with which he pursues his vision is not just persuasive, it's powerful."
I investigated algorithms that could prompt sales agents, Cyrano de Bergerac-style, with the right turn of phrase at just the right moment, and others that were capable of designing parts for appliances, cars and airplanes.
He is even-handed throughout, passionate without being sentimental and has a great turn of phrase, summing up the territory that would later become the kingdom of Jordan, as a "vacant lot which Churchill decided to fill".
As definitive as that portrayal was, however, Wilder was truly capable of so much more: a deft turn of phrase, a sharp-witted eyebrow raise, a moment of gleeful whimsy, quickly countered by an earnest, warm smile.
This is especially true with music learned in childhood: Sometimes it's a little turn of phrase in a set of Lamentations by Mundy (circa 1529-1591), or an outrageous chord progression in a Stanford (1852-1924) motet.
Putting aside the fact that his taped-together turn-of-phrase makes absolutely no logical sense, it's also probably not the best time—after already being punished by the league—to go ahead and actually directly condone violence.
Meanwhile, many of the country's great places of worship, including Westminster Abbey in London, are hosting acts of "civic remembrance": a revealing turn of phrase indicative of rituals that walk the boundary between the secular and the spiritual.
An idiom might be a lovely turn of phrase, but the more common it is in a pool of speakers, the more it simply serves as a shorthand for something that might take more time to spell out.
The person who actually comes up with the fresh, clever, quotable turn of phrase, the one that captures a moment or a feeling in a way that you recognize as different and original — that person deserves a salute.
Apple's debut continues to resonate for many reasons—her wise beyond her years turn of phrase for one, the assured slink of her vocals for another—but also there's a striking clarity in her total lack of filter.
W magazine declared him one of their Modern Renaissance Royals (an extremely Yeezy turn of phrase, now that you think about it) and filmed an interview that packs an almost lewd amount of idiosyncrasy into less than three minutes.
NBC's piece, authored by Jonathan Allen, claimed that the hearing "lacked the pizazz necessary to capture public attention" — a turn of phrase that quickly became a meme and echoed the talking points Trump family members and administration officials used.
He just has a way of expressing himself—a turn of phrase, a sincerity, a real belief that what he is doing is important—that makes you want to listen, and when you do, his gusto feels rare and deeply inspiring.
"The system's going to have to digest that idea," Sanders told me about the need to phase in Medicare-for-all over a few years, in an uncharacteristic turn of phrase for a senator not known for advocating gradual change.
" Hatch later clarified his remarks with "helpful additional context," sharing a tweet from his communications director Matt Whitlock, who explained that this turn of phrase "was used quite often during the Civil War when Hatch was just a young Senator.
In nearly every one of the piece's many, many minutes there is a stimulating effect or turn of phrase, something indisputably correct, or sometimes intriguingly incorrect, like the weirdly, somehow wonderfully whimsical pips of winds and brasses that mourn Lazarus's death.
On two separate occasions during Tuesday's impeachment hearings, House Intelligence Committee ranking member Devin Nunes (R-CA) derisively referred to the impeachment inquiry as a "drug deal" — a turn of phrase meant to depict Democrats as being up to something illicit.
For the second time today, Devin Nunes obliviously refers to the impeachment inquiry as a "drug deal" -- the exact turn of phrase John Bolton used to describe Sondland and Mulvaney working to leverage Ukraine into doing political favors for Trump pic.twitter.
Vega's proclivity for plunging the depths of human feeling, coupled with her uncanny ability for a turn of phrase lit up her intimate concert, where she introduced almost every track with an anecdote about where in her life it had come from.
Like any great turn of phrase, it pithily gets at something quite deep-seated: our anxiety over the way the indignant and polarized national mood intersects with the hyper-competitive, fully monetized attention economy that defines American culture and politics in 2018.
It was written and produced by Max Martin, who said that the memorable melody came to him as he fell asleep (the Swedish musician is also responsible for the song's strange turn of phrase, thinking that "hit" was American slang for "telephone").
Dick has a really relentless turn of phrase that makes him stand out from his peers, and that mixed with Alberto's kind of dry warning about being up in your mom's closet trying on her clothes is just too much for words.
He also said that he wished he had never promised to provide examples, but did so using an unfortunate turn of phrase for a mayor who, especially early on during his administration, was accused of sleeping in and therefore running late to events.
People got poetic: And someone wrote a trap remix: Even Tom Brady used the turn of phrase to caption his Insta: Jesus also took the wheel: The meme has been hot for a little more than a week, which is an eternity in viral time.
To declare what cannot be said, boldness of imagination, a writer's ability to surprise with language, metaphor or an original turn of phrase and boldness of original ideas: an authentic willingness to enter the wound and live in that dangerous place of ambiguity and empathy.
He's a gifted wordsmith ("I do like to slip in precise turns of phrase," he said, slipping in a precise turn of phrase), excels at playing characters in his routines and has become physically adept enough to make full use of Radio City's massive stage.
"Drug deal," if you recall, was the memorable turn of phrase then-National Security Adviser John Bolton originally used to describe the efforts of US ambassador to the EU Gordon Sondland and Rudy Giuliani to leverage the Ukrainian government into doing political favors for Trump.
" In defending a false claim by the White House press secretary, Sean Spicer, that Mr. Trump had attracted the "largest audience ever to witness an inauguration," Ms. Conway used a turn of phrase that struck some observers as similar to the dystopian world of "1984.
But his turn of phrase, contrasting sharply with Merkel's injunction last week "never to forget that this is about people", sticks out in a country whose political discourse is still shaped by memories of Nazi war crimes, including mass deportations, in World War Two.
Lockwood has an eye for the precise details that capture a family's neuroses, and the exact turn of phrase that will leave readers snickering and then scrambling to explain to horrified friends why the idea of a priest in transparent boxers is so funny.
From her arrival on the national political scene in 2008 to her recent stumping for Republican presumptive Donald Trump the former Alaska governor has routinely fashioned odd and unusual rhetorical arrangements -- including a new memorable turn-of-phrase at a Trump rally in San Diego on Friday.
Don't fret if you don't solve the earth's mysteries in your talk; common knowledge can be made into an epiphany if emphasized in a memorable way, if expressed in a clever turn of phrase, or by applying it to an audience's specific situation or circumstance.2.
It's an interesting turn of phrase; perhaps he means to say that he doesn't have to try to be Chanel because Chanel's style is so expansive — she invented an entire wardrobe, from the little black dress to the chain-strapped purse to the two-tone shoe.
The physicality is still there, too, both in Abbott's descriptive turn of phrase (a mouth is colored "placenta red" with lipstick, a bookmark hangs like a "dark tongue"), and in the shape of Dr. Severin's work, which delves into the furrows and twists of the human brain.
During a joint news conference, Mr. Kurz spoke of the need for "an axis of the willing" in the fight against illegal migration, a turn of phrase, some commentators pointed out, that was once used by Benito Mussolini to describe the alliance between Italy and Germany.
The poems in her first collection, "The Secrets of the Tribe" (1981), touched on her multiple roles as a daughter, wife and Jewish woman — "a member of the tribe" as she put it — and displayed her gift for the telling metaphor and wry turn of phrase.
Clearly proud of the text, he watched expectantly as we read every painfully meaningless string of buzzwords and contradictory turn of phrase, struggling to suppress countless winces, eye-rolls, outbursts of mocking laughter, and the urge to turn his press release against him and papercut some sense into him.
Or perhaps it would be more apt to say that I have been at a loss —a strange turn of phrase, as if loss were a place in the physical world, a kind of reverse oasis or Bermuda Triangle where the spirit fails and the compass needle spins.
But "hit her mark" isn't exactly a positive turn of phrase in this context: a moment where the United States is managing to raise plenty of negative perceptions around the world without the help of artists by simply maintaining its standing as the international capital of deadly mass shootings.
Its low-key sensibility mirrors that of the record, which sees Musgraves making many everyday observations about both her relationships and the world around her, though her turn of phrase—much like the pretty way the light hits in the video—elevates what she's saying, so it sounds like poetry.
The ensemble cast also includes a commie-hating New York police detective and a former British officer who, in a turn of phrase I wish I'd never read, hopes to "scoop up the contracts before the Nazis got around to scooping up the directors" of some Jewish-owned record companies.
Several labor leaders have launched acidic attacks on Ms. Nixon in recent weeks, including John Samuelsen, the international president of the Transport Workers Union, who called Ms. Nixon a "rich, Prosecco-sipping Manhattanite masquerading as a progressive," a turn of phrase that opened up Mr. Samuelsen to a fair share of mockery.
During the 2016 campaign, he whipped up anti-immigrant sentiments by insisting they are responsible for illegal drugs, rape and violent crime (In fact, immigrants are more law-abiding than individuals born in this country.) After he was elected, Trump characterized immigrants as invaders, a common turn of phrase among white nationalists.
" When his words are taken out of context by cable TV hosts and rival campaigns, he said, "it creates a pressure that threatens to make you less interesting because you have to repeat yourself even more than usual because trying even a slightly different turn of phrase could be something somebody can take advantage of.
Clinton has also equivocated and hedged when talking about the investigation into her email practices, calling it a "security inquiry" at one point and insisting that she "never received nor sent any material that was marked classified," an excessively lawyerly turn of phrase that distinguishes between material marked classified and classified material that may have not been marked correctly.
I am so not a prognosticator, but so what I will do to answer your question and avoid prognosticating, I will go back to a turn of phrase which hasn't been used in a while: You will be able to watch what you want to watch, when you want to watch it, where you want to watch it.
"Although it is possible that Boehner was making a muted classical reference, and intended to characterize Cruz as a bearer of light, this seems unlikely, as he in the same talk referred to the senator by another turn of phrase which is incompatible with this imagery," the website said in a statement, noting that "Lucifer" has several meanings, some benign and some inflammatory.
The producers Richard Gottehrer, a veteran of the girl-group era, and Rob Freeman, who had worked with Blondie (as did Mr. Gottehrer), recognized the classic chassis underneath the band's dented rust and polished each song until "Beauty and the Beat" became one of those albums where on every listen, a different turn of phrase or guitar lick sticks in your head.
If a writer fails to get a character, a scenario, a turn of phrase just right, the reader is jarred from the story; if a writer is writing about a character who looks nothing like himself, as I was, and gets that wrong, that writer is unmasked as someone who couldn't manage empathy, someone who couldn't understand the world beyond himself.
The traumatic nature of the event has meant I find it hard to remember parts of my life before then—before my uncle was no longer with us, before I was so hypersensitive to suicide as it's acknowledged in modern media and casual parlance ("I felt like killing myself," a particularly unhelpful yet surprisingly common turn of phrase), and before I faced my own ongoing battle with depression and anxiety.
Williamson's 'dark power' comment breaks internet and keeps her in race No one knows what to make of author Marianne WilliamsonMarianne WilliamsonWilliamson unveils plan to create Cabinet-level Department of Peace Marianne Williamson says she will remove Oval Office portrait of Andrew Jackson if elected Biden, Buttigieg bypassing Democratic delegate meeting: report MORE's candidacy, but it seems all but certain she'll stick around in the race after her turn of phrase about Trump's "dark psychic force" became the biggest internet moment of the night.

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