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"turnabout" Definitions
  1. turnabout (in something) a sudden and complete change in somebody/something

263 Sentences With "turnabout"

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

The GDCA turnabout on Bushnell isn't a fix for everything.
Immigration advocates and elected officials were pleased with the turnabout.
The turnabout could have profound implications for Trump's political fortunes.
Pundits say Friday's turnabout is all about elections in India.
In a turnabout, it was the women who were incarcerated.
But he could not abide a public turnabout, a retreat.
This year promises an odd turnabout for this lifelong Mets fan.
Clinton represents a stark turnabout from eight years ago, when Mrs.
The turmoil is a turnabout from just a few years ago.
House moderates' turnabout on preexisting conditions, however, calls that into question.
Skeptics of the military system were relieved by Mr. Trump's turnabout.
It is a remarkable turnabout for the company's founder, Sun Hongbin.
A similar turnabout has happened more quietly on the monetary policy front.
But his sudden turnabout stunned politicians and interest groups in the state.
Mr. Trump's comments signal a turnabout from Amazon's experience under President Obama.
That simple reality explains the head-snapping turnabout in Washington's deficit debate.
The turnabout shows how military officials are actually interpreting the presidential order.
The Russia reversal and the NATO turnabout were inherently linked, of course.
The move marks a sudden and dramatic turnabout for the U.S. tech conglomerate.
Bottom line on the lawsuit -- 2 Chainz told us turnabout is fair play.
On one level, I can't help but feel like turnabout is fair play.
But he is concerned for his clients about another turnabout in the courts.
That turnabout mirrored the president's shift after the 2018 shooting in Parkland, Fla.
All of this is a turnabout for Amazon from a few years ago.
Violating it with attacks on Iran's historical sites would represent a huge turnabout.
That was a turnabout, since he initially denied that he had behaved unprofessionally.
Millman said Tropicana's turnabout was not necessarily because the classic packaging was particularly good.
Backstrom's goal stunned the crowd, which was poised to celebrate a remarkable turnabout victory.
Is Trump's spectacular turnabout a function of fresh developments or a spasm of ego?
It was a textbook example of old-school political maneuvering, and a remarkable turnabout.
Even for those in the know, it was hard to see Wednesday's turnabout coming.
Utah's turnabout is the latest worrisome example of politicians rejecting the will of voters.
This is a dramatic turnabout from the "earnings recession" that stocks have been mired in.
Despite their recent turnabout, CSX shares are still down 22 percent in the past year.
Now, in a once-unthinkable turnabout, some are being converted to export liquefied natural gas.
The quick turnabout, from confidence to concern, reflects the broader weakness in the global economy.
The turnabout came after Mr. Guzmán escaped for the second time from a Mexican prison.
Sarah Benson, the artistic director of Soho Rep, said she was relieved by the turnabout.
The moment reflected a turnabout for the Police Department, which had initially resisted the order.
This turnabout could end the al Houthis' de facto control over much of populated Yemen.
" • "The quick turnabout, from confidence to concern, reflects the broader weakness in the global economy.
The market's primary measure of fear has cratered, representing a dramatic turnabout in investors' emotional state.
But thinking about Trump shouldn't obscure the sheer consequences of the turnabout as a policy matter.
It is a sharp turnabout from the scenario most expected would unfold under a Clinton presidency.
It suggests some circular turnabout, that things were good, then they weren&apost, then they recovered.
So is making fun of Mitt Romney anything more than a case of turnabout being fair play?
But as the field winnowed and the race got nastier, Cruz learned that turnabout is fair play.
"Possibly we've got a bit of Trump fatigue," he said, referring to Trump's turnabout on trade threats.
But the more relevant issue if what this turnabout pattern tells us about market prospects from here.
His plea was a turnabout from what the court had earlier described as a more defiant stance.
Mr. Trump's turnabout on Syria will likely widen the debate from in-the-weeds health care discussions.
Still, the turnabout drew praise from some lawmakers who had been concerned with Mr. Trump's previous stance.
All credit to the writers of "Better Call Saul," who somehow make this turnabout seem perfectly authentic.
"It's a 180-degree turnabout from the way we were thinking about those emissions," Dr. Connerney said.
I fear that Trump is relishing that role too much, and that his enjoyment explains the turnabout.
The sharp turnabout appears to be driven by traders' rising perceptions that Hillary Clinton will win the election.
Certainly, it was an unexpected turnabout by Alex M. Azar II, the secretary of health and human services.
Mr. Trump suggested that turnabout was fair play, mocking Democrats for crying foul for his remarks about Mrs.
Turnabout is fair play, the proverb goes, but in the case of "Despacito" the forethought just wasn't there.
It was a spectacular turnabout for a leader seen as the standard-bearer of the liberal European order.
More generally, the VIX turnabout is "a bit surprising but indicative of the complacency I think persists," Strugger added.
And because turnabout is fair play, The Guardian reports that Pitt kind of, sort of crashed Cooper's impromptu performance.
But last month, in an embarrassing turnabout, it discontinued its new, premium Galaxy Note 7 after several caught fire.
And in an odd turnabout, China's own needs have made it somewhat dependent on ore from the United States.
Labor advocates and business groups alike were surprised by the turnabout, but it did not reflect any ideological shift.
Our new energy trade surplus is a dramatic turnabout from the way things were less than a decade ago.
The decisions that emanated from that friction ended up setting the stage for a striking personal and aesthetic turnabout.
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has protested this turnabout, stating that borrowers deserve to be protected from illegal actions.
Mr. Araud said the turnabout had so shocked him and his British counterpart that they at first suspected a trick.
Now, in a coy fashion turnabout, "he is bringing a touch of old Paris to Los Angeles," Ms. Sabas said.
Conservatives in particular have abused the term for the past decade and a half, but that doesn't justify unfair turnabout.
Turnabout Publications also published art, reviews, photographs, and fiction in its magazines, and released books dedicated to stories of transvestism.
Tonegawa's venture into brain science wasn't a complete turnabout, though, because he brought some of his investigative techniques with him.
Mr. Cruz, obscured for much of last year by a shifting cast of attention-getting rivals, is relishing the turnabout.
The charges against them represented a turnabout because the Texas grand jury had initially investigated Planned Parenthood for possible wrongdoing.
Yet once that level was hit, gold staged a major turnabout, rising as high as $1,371.8 at 9:15 EDT.
The turnabout reflects their growing confidence that the public supports their fact-finding mission on President Trump's dealings with Ukraine.
It's quite a rough turnabout for Boeing (BA), which reported record annual sales when it released results three months ago.
The campaign says it had to do with specific weaknesses in the agreement, but her turnabout still mystifies many voters.
Among China watchers, the turnabout also has contributed to questions about the fate of China's current crop of economic planners.
That was a turnabout for their party — the Bush administration had regularly and successfully charged terrorism suspects in federal court.
In a turnabout, Rad grabbed the top job back from Payne and now he appears to be getting more help.
It was a swift and stunning turnabout for the festival, which is to take place in New York from Oct.
But just before leaving office in January, Mr. Christie signed the 2017 version of the bill without explaining his turnabout.
In a tidy turnabout, architects of houses on those sites have to submit their designs for West 8's review.
It represents an astonishing turnabout since Robert Mueller's public testimony two months ago seemed to drain energy from impeachment efforts.
Democrats contend that since Majority Leader Mitch McConnell stole the nomination of Merrick Garland in 2016, turnabout is fair play. SEN.
But he said that despite the trust's last-minute turnabout, applicable law did not allow the enforcement of an unexecuted agreement.
To complete the turnabout, there are now rumours that Binyamin Netanyahu, Israel's prime minister, will soon visit Mr Sisi in Egypt.
Some argue that turnabout is fair play, but a better argument is that a fair electoral process is fundamental to democracy.
Because — the thing is — Chet has done a turnabout (nope, we're not surprised either) and now he wants the show back.
In a turnabout this month, Mr. Trump declared his relationship with Mr. Rosenstein good, to the relief of some federal prosecutors.
The measures — which will remain in place until the end of the year — constitute a startling turnabout for President Mauricio Macri.
It is a head-spinning turnabout that reflects, at least for now, the fizzling of Ms. Le Pen's fortunes in France.
Mr. Chavin's decision to become a prosecution witness two years ago represented a remarkable turnabout in his friendship with Mr. Durst.
"Lock him up!" the crowd chanted, a turnabout from the "lock her up" his supporters would chant about Hillary Clinton in 2016.
Nicki Hilton as Paris Hilton Turnabout is fairplay and Hilton donned her sister's 21st birthday look from years ago as her costume.
This may be the essence of turnabout as fair play, given that Teva has been cashing in on expiring patents for decades.
He now claims to be a champion of human rights—an absurd turnabout for an ally of Hosni Mubarak, the long-serving dictator.
After months of hostile rhetoric on China, including the threat of calling the Asian power a currency manipulator, Trump has done a turnabout.
Trump's turnabout on Moore initially took the form of increasingly sharp attacks on Jones, but slowly shifted from anti-Jones to pro-Moore.
I don't think the F.B.I. would fib, of course, but it's hard not to be a bit suspicious of the last-minute turnabout.
If Trump's ideological turnabout has been remarkable, equally remarkable has been the change of heart many congressional Republicans have experienced about Trump. Sen.
The sudden turnabout by the school came after a day of intense backlash over the university's announcement that Ms. Manning had been included.
The announcement was another turnabout for Mr. Trump after a week of changing course on an array of domestic and foreign policy matters.
The turnabout — in which he is hoisted by his own petard — is squirmy but not as resonant as it would like to be.
The most striking thing about the turnabout is that Paul Ryan has reportedly opposed the move to hobble the ethics watchdog from the beginning.
The 2019 pact was a dramatic turnabout for OPEC and its allies, after the producer group had agreed to boost supplies in mid-2018.
In its upper Manhattan WorkLife Center, just a few steps from the Columbus Circle turnabout, Steelcase is showcasing five distinct and striking workspace concepts.
In a turnabout no one expected, New York's most prominent stages are rich with drama, most of it new and most of it American.
It is a striking turnabout for a system that has long been the great equalizer, a space where hourly workers jostled alongside financial executives.
It is a striking turnabout for a system that has long been the great equalizer, a space where hourly workers jostled alongside financial executives.
The turnabout came after a day of intense discussions between leaders of Israel and Jordan, the custodian of the shrine, and with American mediation.
In a quick turnabout, he decided to announce the pick on Twitter on Friday after all, delaying only the formal photo-op announcement until Saturday.
And it represented a stark turnabout for Mr. Trump, who billed himself during the campaign as an ally of gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender people.
Since turnabout is fair play, it's tempting to subject the left to the same tendentious excoriation to which it subjected the right six years ago.
The turnabout for the first generation of post-Mao Chinese capitalists, once seen as exemplars of the country's ingenuity and economic prowess, has been swift.
The new Austin campus marks a turnabout from Chief Executive Tim Cook's earlier comments that Texas would be an unlikely choice for a new campus.
Now the Trump administration is in power and, under the approach that turnabout is fair play, Democrats have fought to keep the salary freezes in place.
The key turnabout in the region, after all, has come from the fact that Trump decided to make a large, unilateral concession to the North Koreans.
A decision to oppose a clean debt-ceiling bill because of other legislative measures under consideration in Congress would be a significant turnabout for the party.
But Disney's accounting decision is yet another example — perhaps the most stunning one — of the turnabout we've seen in digital media over the past few years.
At the line's terminus, a U-shaped turnabout atop the North Hollywood subway station, I found a place to get a coffee and a decent sandwich.
In the kind of potential turnabout rarely if ever seen at this late stage of a presidential race, Donald J. Trump exulted in his good fortune.
An improving picture for farmersThis turnabout for farmers is being driven by two things: increasing global demand for soybeans and declining global soybean inventories and production.
"These are questions that Joe Biden has never adequately answered," Mr. Johnson told reporters in the Capitol, a day after Mr. Biden's remarkable Super Tuesday turnabout.
But in a turnabout, Mr. Corsi said prosecutors had now accused him of lying to them about other communications he had with Mr. Stone regarding WikiLeaks.
This remarkable turnabout in the United States has cut carbon dioxide emissions, created hundreds of thousands of jobs and prevented thousands of deaths from air pollution.
Fannie's policy turnabout follows the sale of thousands of rundown homes to Vision and its competitors at bargain prices in the aftermath of the foreclosure crisis.
This is a dramatic turnabout from the 1997 corporate statement issued by the same group, which defined maximizing shareholder value as the sole purpose of corporations.
Responding to the turnabout, tZero began focusing on the technology needed to develop a platform to trade the so-called coins or tokens created in offerings.
It also marks a turnabout in Obama's own thinking — amid grumbling by many European diplomats that the president hasn't given the continent the attention it needs.
So, in addition to President Trump's welcome turnabout in support of NATO, the administration should also prioritize building nonmilitary capabilities with our European allies and other partners.
The 5 percent rally that Wal-Mart is enjoying in 2016 represents a substantial turnabout from 63, when Wal-Mart was actually the Dow's worst-performing stock.
It is a stunning turnabout for a land of 1.8 million people that not long ago was among the most pro-American Muslim societies in the world.
Decades later, Mr. Barry still recalls how a round of firings in the Interior Department at the dawn of the Reagan administration signaled a turnabout in policy.
The measures marked a significant turnabout in the president's IMF-backed efforts to balance the crisis-prone country's budget, although market participants seemed unconvinced by his proposals.
Glee featured the song in an episode centered around a Sadie Hawkins dance, playing off the dance's turnabout theme, which requires the girls to ask the boys.
In a turnabout no one on Broadway expected, this season is rich with drama — ambitious, challenging, risky work, most of it new and most of it American.
The turnabout upset the mayor of Hoboken, Ravinder S. Bhalla, who led busloads of the city's residents to a special meeting New Jersey Transit held in January.
I do want you to talk about George Schultz's grandson, because I think that was your finest story, getting that turnabout was epic in so many ways.
The abrupt turnabout was the latest example of the ethical thicket the president-elect and his family face as he prepares to take the oath of office.
Monmouth's poll produced another unfavorable finding for Trump: 54% of Florida voters believe the GOP nominee's recent turnabout on President Barack Obama's origins was made for political reasons.
The missile attack — and the tensions with Russia — are a sharp turnabout for Trump, who expressed a desire to forge a better relationship with Putin during the campaign.
Corporate insiders have been buying more company stock recently, Dyson added, and that's a sign business leaders agree with his view that a turnabout is on the way.
The charge was immediately denied by a senior Trump administration official, but the turnabout signaled that any diplomatic engagement between the two countries would be complicated and fraught.
Trump has denied any wrongdoing, but the proceedings represented an extraordinary turnabout for Cohen, the first member of Trump's inner circle to receive a prison sentence this year.
For a certain generation, at a certain place and time — Britain, post-70s feminism, under the rule of Margaret Thatcher (nicknamed the "Iron Lady") — this turnabout seemed possible.
This is a turnabout from the preceding two years — 2014 to 2016 — when the fatality rate rose by 8 percent, which was the worst increase since the 1970s.
And the suddenness of the turnabout left the Falcons with gnawing questions about what went wrong and what role their decision-making had played in the dispiriting outcome.
Despite Mayor Fulop's turnabout, he said his project deserves a tax break to get the complex off the ground, for the good of the city and Journal Square.
He later explained his career turnabout to Mr. Lurie by saying that he had followed the Brooklyn Dodgers when the team moved to Los Angeles after the 1957 season.
Still, he sought to apply positive spin to the trade war on his final day here, a turnabout after ratcheting up tensions in the lead-up to the summit.
It is such a dramatic turnabout that, even in the things-change-fast N.B.A., some around the league have struggled to process the swiftness and depth of it all.
None of the early suitors are from Japan — a remarkable turnabout for a country that controlled the majority of the market for many kinds of microchips a generation ago.
For more on the meetings, you can read about Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's candid comments caught on video as well as an analysis of President Trump's turnabout on NATO.
President Donald Trump's turnabout on the violence in Charlottesville, Virginia has rocked his administration, leading to rising speculation that some top officials may be looking for a way out.
The subsequent centuries of turn and turnabout between Germany and France strengthened people's regional identity; their links to whichever capital city claimed them at the time never grew that strong.
The turnabout has been especially striking given that he has styled himself as a national leader while seeking to put New York at the vanguard of a new liberal movement.
The emphatic victories by Mr. Trump were a sharp turnabout from his difficult weekend and suggested that his stumbles in recent days had not done substantial damage to his campaign.
At lunch time on Halloween Ms. Volk strode toward Mr. Siatta again, this time in an Illinois Appellate Court courtroom with a Chicago skyline view, to complete their relationship's turnabout.
It was an unusual turnabout, almost exactly seven years after the Syrian uprising began as peaceful demonstrations that later transformed into an armed rebellion after security forces fired on protesters.
And here in Nebraska, a state that last killed a prisoner in 1997, the lethal injection represented a stark political turnabout from when legislators outlawed capital punishment three years ago.
Now, the turnabout is proving embarrassing for Mr. Netanyahu so close to the election — and some of his fellow right-wing politicians fear it may could cost their camp votes.
Bouteflika's resignation on Tuesday was a huge turnabout for the sickly 82-year-old leader, who had initially planned on running for a fifth term in elections slated for April.
The Russian bombing is a remarkable turnabout from November 2015, when a Turkish F-16 fighter jet shot down a Russian Su-24 attack plane that had violated Turkey's airspace.
The effort is also a turnabout of sorts for House Republican efforts in 2016 to highlight Hillary Clinton's use of personal emails for her official work as secretary of state.
The effort is also a turnabout of sorts for House Republican efforts in 2016 to highlight Hillary Clinton's use of personal emails for her official work as secretary of state.
It has been a stunning turnabout for a man once lauded as America's Dad, who has been married to his wife, Camille, for 50 years and had five children with her.
" This is a shocking turnabout for Kuri, which was initially hailed by a prominent tech blog as possibly one day "[replacing] your little brother as the cutest member of your family.
Under President Obama, Republicans decried the alarming surge in federal deficit spending so it may seem like a fair turnabout for Democrats to rail about proposed spending increases under President Trump.
While Britain, like many countries, has experienced a sharp turnabout in its attitudes toward homosexuality — same-sex marriage has been legal since 21957 — the announcement did not meet with uniform enthusiasm.
Her sudden turnabout demonstrated the political potency of the events in Charleston, a racial event so powerful it provided a once-unthinkable opening to discuss the flag as a racist symbol.
It was a striking turnabout for elites accustomed to lives of extreme privilege and the freedom to jet off to Paris, London or New York at the drop of a hat.
Confident that the political order is largely intact, Democrats have been emboldened to oppose his agenda, and Republicans, who adamantly refused to help Mr. Obama, are learning what turnabout feels like.
Republicans, who for more than a century were held in a hammerlock by Democrats in charge of the state's legislature, defended the moves under the principle that turnabout is fair play.
"I have not heard of such a dramatic turnabout," said Victor Shih, an associate professor at the University of California, San Diego, who specializes in the politics of Chinese banking policies.
Still, Judge Donnelly's stay makes for a remarkable turnabout from how the situation looked throughout the day on Saturday, and hands the new president his first setback in the judicial system.
But in addition to a tactical win for the left, Obama's turnabout on Social Security is the result of a cycle of tactical ineptitude on the part of the American conservative movement.
It was a dramatic turnabout from initial Saudi insistence that Khashoggi had left the consulate unharmed, while still protecting Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman through the narrative of a fistfight gone wrong.
That was a tactical turnabout by the U.S., which in the past had argued that it didn't need to produce hard evidence of the threat it says Huawei poses to nations' security.
It's a sly turnabout for Mr Gekoski, a British-American academic and rare-book dealer known for chronicling the bookish life in broadcast, and in books such as "Outside of a Dog".
What's more, the bank's controlling stake would become a minority investment, with Deutsche Telekom and T-Mobile preserving their control — a turnabout that also is said to be giving SoftBank execs pause.
In a glam turnabout from the previous weekend — when Sofia found herself knee-deep in mud while competing in a Tough Viking obstacle course — the couple were the definition of sophisticated style.
After sweeping to victory in the 2006 midterms and then electing a popular two-term president in 2008, the collapse of Democratic influence in Washington represents an astonishing turnabout of political fortune.
That inquiry represented something of a turnabout in the difficult relationship between researchers and Aboriginal Australians, who have been reluctant to participate in studies because of a fraught history of scientific exploitation.
The town's former mayor, Andrei Kholzakov, who chairs an international association of trade union groups lobbying for asbestos, said that hopes of a turnabout in American policy had been disappointing so far.
It was a turnabout from the administration's earlier position, which deemed the planes safe to fly even as dozens of other nations banned them after they were involved in two fatal disasters.
NEW YORK/WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Donald Trump's turnabout on the violence in Charlottesville, Virginia has rocked his administration, leading to rising speculation that some top officials may be looking for a way out.
The current turnabout features the populist Cristina Fernández de Kirchner, who was president from 2007 to last year, and her husband, Néstor, who preceded her from 2003 to 2007 and died in 2010.
The declaration also came days after Trump -- in a turnabout from his campaign stance -- declared in an interview that his administration would not label China a currency manipulator, which could have triggered investigations.
The moves would scale back the involvement of Mr. Kalanick and strip him of an ally, a turnabout for a chief executive who had been hailed as an innovator and a role model.
"Unless that miraculous turnabout between the exit polls and the actual results happens - the Netanyahu magic has been broken," Anshel Pfeffer, author of a Netanyahu biography, wrote in the left-wing Haaretz daily.
" The new line of attack, echoed by lawmakers and White House officials, is a turnabout for Republicans toiling to defend the president, who for weeks had led the cry of "no quid pro quo.
"Mainly we're just trying to flush out what evidence they have, if any, for his complete turnabout on EPA's position on climate change," PEER senior counsel Paula Dinerstein told me in a phone call.
The operation was a turnabout for the Syrian fighters, who had originally taken up arms to fight their government and are now fighting Syrian Kurds who had sought a measure of autonomy in Syria.
It only remained to be seen what Mr. Gantz had gotten from Mr. Netanyahu in exchange for his stunning turnabout — and whether Mr. Netanyahu would ultimately live up to his end of any bargain.
The events of Thursday night marked a dramatic turnabout for Mr. Trump, who until this week had displayed virtually no interest in a deeper role for the United States in the long, bloody conflict.
Turkey's turnabout came after an air strike killed 33 Turkish soldiers in Syria, and appeared to be an effort to press for more EU aid in tackling the refugee crisis from Syria's civil war.
That is a major turnabout by Mr. Trump and his aides, who once vowed to challenge China's control of disputed reefs that it has turned into artificial islands, replete with military equipment and runways.
In the sort of political turnabout that may only be possible when society faces dire need, giving free money to Americans suddenly appears not only rational but critically necessary to many Democrats and key Republicans.
But the interview on Monday would have given prosecutors their first opportunity to ask Ms. Clifford detailed questions about the arrangement, which Mr. Trump initially denied but then acknowledged in a startling turnabout last month.
The turnabout by the administration came amid a backlash at its decision over the summer to exempt more oil refineries from a requirement to include ethanol, a biofuel often derived from corn, in their blends.
Holding the course on austerity has been a remarkable turnabout by Mr. Tsipras, who swept to power in 603 as a maverick political outsider promising to tear up the bailouts and repudiate the budget squeezing.
The political drama around the federal courthouse in Manhattan did not end with the sudden, unexplained turnabout of President Trump in firing Preet Bharara, the United States attorney for the Southern District of New York.
This appeared to an abrupt turnabout from OPEC's September meeting, when some of the world's leading oil producers were talking about pumping extra oil onto the market in order to help soothe intensifying supply shock fears.
This would be a turnabout of the tactic Washington openly considered in late 2017: launching a limited military strike to give the Kim Jong UnKim Jong UnPompeo expresses concern over North Korea missile tests State Dept.
Journalist Joan Biskupic sought to make sense of this shift in an NPR interview last month, stating that "his concern for the legitimacy of the Supreme Court, perhaps is own legacy" is driving his moderate turnabout.
Arthur: Clinton's convenient turnabout on trade was a total union cave — but no worse than what so many conservative Republicans did when they turned against trade promotion authority to spite President Obama, who admirably supported it.
This turnabout from the days when China soaked up much of the world's money flows has led investors to believe that China's currency — already weakened in recent months after two sets of devaluations — could fall further.
The story of her turnabout is incomplete, for Kym Wilson was not available to speak for herself: what follows is from information supplied by her family, high school and college teachers and police and court records.
Along with providing a reprieve for the people whose lives depend on this program, the turnabout is a reminder that the Trump administration can be — if not shamed — at least pressured into doing the right thing.
This appeared to be an abrupt turnabout from OPEC's September meeting, when some of the world's leading oil producers were talking about pumping extra oil onto the market in order to help soothe intensifying supply shock fears.
The retailer's decline has been so precipitous that Marks & Spencer was almost dropped from Britain's Financial Times Stock Exchange 1003 index, a stark turnabout for a company that was an original member of the list in 2100.
The Democratic race has seen a remarkable turnabout since the end of February, when many not only viewed Bernie Sanders as the Democratic frontrunner, but also thought he could essentially lock up the nomination on Super Tuesday.
The enthusiasm of Ms. Eilish's devotees denotes a striking turnabout, a new generation's rejection of the flirty babe aesthetic embodied by contemporary idols like Ariana Grande in favor of something more crazily improvised and less strenuously sexual.
Her statement at the International Court of Justice in The Hague capped a jarring turnabout, decades in the making, for Ms. Aung San Suu Kyi, from champion of human rights and democracy to apparent apologist for brutality.
TRADE TALK TURNABOUT Some analysts believe recent signs of improvement in both the Chinese and American economies may have hardened their negotiating positions on trade after months of progress when the business outlook had appeared much more shaky.
The new software could be seen as a turnabout of the company's previous stance against censorship that it has held for years, dating back to Google's decision to effectively pull its search business out of China in 2010.
The Yankees have provided some dramatic victories this season and endured some gut-wrenching defeats, particularly in the last two weeks, but Wednesday's turnabout may have been as unlikely an outcome as any they have experienced in 2016.
The so-called candidates' job market is a turnabout from the years following the Great Recession, when unemployment hovered near 153% and businesses insisted that job applicants boast nine or all 10 of the criteria on their checklists.
Single-family home building remains strong, real estate experts say, but a glut in office and apartment developments, largely a result of the boom-to-bust turnabout in energy, has raised fears of substantial cuts in construction jobs.
The turnabout reflects in part the rising power of the state's teachers' unions in Albany now that their allies in the Democratic Party have taken control of both chambers of the Legislature for the first time in years.
It was a remarkable turnabout for a Republican governor with a 93 percent approval rating from the National Rifle Association (NRA) gun rights advocacy group in an otherwise politically liberal state with some of America's most permissive gun laws.
"The two leaders noted that the operations conducted by Russia's Aerospace Forces have brought about a real turnabout in the fight against the terrorists in Syria, throwing their infrastructure into disarray and causing them substantial damage," the Kremlin said.
The so-called candidates' job market is a turnabout from the years following the Great Recession, when unemployment hovered near 153 percent and businesses insisted that job applicants boast nine or all 10 of the criteria on their checklists.
And the next day, he changed his mind, in a dramatic spectacle broadcast live on TV. The sudden turnabout led to cheers in a packed meeting room of the Miami school board — and fury and confusion in New York.
John Podhoretz in Commentary: With this deal, Trump has betrayed his core followers and a significant campaign promise — the most startling such turnabout since the first President Bush went back on his "read my lips, no new taxes" pledge.
Martin Shkreli said in court Monday that he would not testify in his own defense in his fraud trial, a turnabout from as recently as last week, when his lawyers told a judge that he had "insisted" on testifying.
Pai has a reputation as a conservative ideologue—his speech announcing the net neutrality rollback was sponsored by the right-wing activist group FreedomWorks—and it would be a startling turnabout if he bowed to public pressure and scrapped his plan.
Why it matters: It's quite a turnabout for a man who largely receded from party politics after his presidency, often without being missed by his party's leaders in Washington, where he was an outsider even as a White House resident.
Richard W. Painter, who served as the White House chief ethics lawyer during the George W. Bush administration, said Mr. Perraut's quick turnabout violated the spirit of President Obama's ethics pledge, intended to prevent former aides from lobbying the executive branch.
Cohn has a vested interest in this turnabout, but it's also hard to argue he's wrong, considering how long startups remain private, and how much more secondary activity now takes place before companies are acquired, go public or conk out.
I spent a part of my childhood trying to get friends and classmates to read a book titled "The Turnabout Girls," which is about social class; it takes "The Prince and the Pauper" and updates and transforms it for girls.
Left unchecked, local officials in many of those states engaged in a range of tactics last year that likely would have been barred in earlier years; whether the Justice Department's recent turnabout will spur more such actions remains to be seen.
The outrage over Mr. Comey's firing was a political turnabout for many Democrats, who had previously expressed anger and frustration at his handling of the investigation into Hillary Clinton's use of a private email server when she was secretary of state.
Which in part explains the lightning-fast turnabout by New York mayor Bill de Blasio on Wednesday, when a seemingly innocuous tweet about his favorite bagel order, shared in honor of National Bagel Day, was quickly taken down and amended.
This turnabout where George W. Bush gets free airtime to promote his immigration idea but then Obama doesn't get free airtime for his ideas because it's "overtly political," and then Trump gets free airtime for an overtly political message on immigration, is striking.
The turnabout in the Lehigh Valley, whose shuttered factories inspired Billy Joel's elegiac 1980s song "Allentown," was evident more broadly on Friday, when the Labor Department reported that manufacturers nationwide added workers last month at the fastest pace in more than four years.
The turnabout has raised concern that the company is being more optimistic than its trial results warrant as it makes a case for a desperately needed treatment that, if approved, could be the first to slow progression of the mind-wasting disease.
It is the latest chapter in her fraught relationship with the president, and a stark turnabout for Ms. Pelosi, who until days ago had been deeply resistant to impeaching Mr. Trump despite the deep disgust she has expressed for him and his conduct.
Putin informed Assad of the withdrawal by phone, and the two agreed Russia's military intervention "brought about a real turnabout in the fight against the terrorists in Syria, throwing their infrastructure into disarray and causing them substantial damage," according to a Kremlin statement.
Consideration of selling the attack aircraft to Nigeria is a sharp turnabout from two years ago, when the United States blocked the sale of American-made Cobra attack helicopters to Nigeria from Israel, amid concerns about Nigeria's protection of civilians when conducting military operations.
The Trump turnabout has set off a fervent search on both sides of the Atlantic for answers to hard questions about the global role of the United States, and what a frazzled Europe can and should do for itself, given a less reliable American partner.
It was a spectacular turnabout for a leader who has been seen as the standard-bearer of the liberal European order but who has come under intense pressure at home from the far right and from conservatives in her governing coalition over her migration policy.
The decision was an abrupt turnabout by Amazon after a much-publicized search for a second headquarters, which had ended with its announcement in November that it would open two new sites — one in Queens, with more than 25,000 jobs, and another in Virginia.
It is a remarkable turnabout for Japan, a country that controlled the majority of the market for many kinds of microchips a generation ago, and where companies have frequently banded together to rescue flailing domestic rivals rather than let them fold or be acquired by foreigners.
In a startling turnabout, GOP members say they're ready to push their prized health care bill through the House and claim a victory for President Trump, six weeks after nearly leaving the legislation for dead, and days after support from Republican moderates seemed to crumble anew.
The step, which is contingent on further cooperation by Sudan with Washington, would further demonstrate the striking turnabout in relations between the countries, a thaw that began under the Obama administration and a rare area in which the Trump administration has continued the approach of its predecessor.
Then came the inevitable downplaying from Vatican officials, the inevitable turnabout from Trump ("the Pope is a wonderful guy," he told CNN), the inevitable debates about whether the Vatican's own walls are un-Christian, whether Protestant voters in the South Carolina primary are still suspicious of popery, and more.
In a phone call Monday between Putin and Assad, "the two leaders noted that the operations conducted by Russia's Aerospace Forces have brought about a real turnabout in the fight against the terrorists in Syria, throwing their infrastructure into disarray and causing them substantial damage," the Kremlin said.
Clinton swept the five major primaries on Tuesday, she lost white men in all of them, and by double-digit margins in Missouri, North Carolina and Ohio, exit polls showed — a sharp turnabout from 2012, when she won double-digit victories among white male voters in all three states.
The chairman of the University System of Maryland's Board of Regents announced his resignation Thursday, a stunning turnabout barely 48 hours after the board recommended that the University of Maryland's head football coach D. J. Durkin be retained — a decision that the university's president overturned a day later.
This turnabout in the face of presidential criticism just made an uncomfortable situation even worse, but even so they were on the verge of a détente with the players before one of their own, the Houston Texans owner Robert McNair, scuttled that with his "inmates running the prison" remark.
For a president who prides himself on being the Great Disrupter, it was a startling turnabout, one that underscored how Europe's shifting landscape — with an ambitious president in France, a lame-duck leader in Germany and a breakaway populist in Britain — has scrambled the calculus for Mr. Trump.
But in an unlucky turnabout, Bernie the hunter becomes Bernie the prey as this chase merges in his mind with one from before the war, in which he was fed amphetamines while tracking a murderer who fouled the mountain retreat where Hitler was soon to celebrate his birthday.
The man who many on the left predicted would take down Mr. Trump, who had become a fixture on cable news networks, orbited in celebrity circles and even flirted with a presidential run himself, could now face years in federal prison, a turnabout the Trump camp noted with glee.
WASHINGTON (AP) — Stopping short of a complete turnabout, President Donald Trump is expected to announce a revised Cuba policy aimed at stopping the flow of U.S. cash to the country's military and security services while maintaining diplomatic relations and allowing U.S. airlines and cruise ships to continue service to the island.
On the same stretch of Causeway Street where their last appearance in the Cup finals cratered 49 years ago, the Blues — who had missed the playoffs only nine times since the team's inaugural 1967-68 season but had never savored their ecstatic conclusion — completed the most improbable in-season turnabout in N.H.L. history.
Still, that a three-year band of recent data shows a broad decline in racially disparate policing is a significant turnabout from years of unconstitutional tactics during the administration of former Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg, and hews with efforts by the police commissioner, James P. O'Neill, to build trust between officers and civilians.
Amnesty International U.S.A. said it was told the organization was "not the best tenant" for a building owned by a Chinese state-owned enterprise, in a turnabout that suggests the reach of the Communist Party during a time of intense economic dispute with the United States, and its ability to exert power in America.
And in a stinging turnabout, Bill Stepien, the campaign manager whom Mr. Christie dismissed in the so-called Bridgegate scandal, is expected to become Donald J. Trump's White House political director, while Mr. Christie was fired as transition chief and shut out of jobs in Mr. Trump's administration, despite having been one of his earliest big-name supporters.
In what will be their first conversation since Mr. Trump took office, he and President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia intended to talk by telephone on Saturday about areas of possible cooperation, particularly in fighting terrorism in the Middle East, a collaboration that would represent a significant turnabout from years of friction between the two countries.

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