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"vestige" Definitions
  1. a small part of something that still exists after the rest of it has stopped existing synonym trace
  2. usually used in negative sentences, to say that not even a small amount of something exists

429 Sentences With "vestige"

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

Sports should be the last vestige where even people disagree.
Donald Trump is a misogynistic vestige of our ugly past.
The only vestige of the old world are the vices.
Time to make Electoral College a vestige of the past.
That's the only vestige of our Constitutional republic that's left.
Here's one with the last vestige of my dwindling youth.
It continues to be the last vestige for smartphone innovation.
Another vestige of minority power is going by the boards.
"To remove every last vestige of Iranian influence," he responded.
Sibilia called the disparity a vestige of America's segregationist past.
"This was the last vestige of coordination in Mississippi," he said.
Jews revere the site as vestige of their two ancient temples.
The reluctance to brawl is now a vestige of the past.
Barack Obama has called the electoral college a "vestige" from the past.
The segregation that was a vestige of slavery caused many to leave.
That I'd be stripped of every vestige of myself, mentally and physically.
The Dow is widely followed because it is a vestige of history.
He said this would remove a "lingering vestige of the cold war".
The question of drinking order is a vestige of the Hindu caste
The collection, called Vestige, is both stand-alone sculpture and functional tableware.
Egypt wanted stability and Sisi provided it, or at least its vestige.
Yes, the bullpen cart, that charming vestige of the 1970s, is back.
Handkerchiefs can pretty safely be categorized as a vestige of another time.
He is being ritually humiliated by a vestige of his past self.
No one should be surprised Cameron has relinquished his last vestige of power.
I feel like my generation's become an irrelevant vestige of a branded past.
Because it's the last raging vestige of anger over something they're wrong about.
"It is the lobotomy of his last vestige of independence," Ms. Seward said.
Reben Luncheonette is the last vestige of Los Sures (South Streets) in Williamsburg.
The fact that people still follow the Dow is a vestige of history.
Eminem has become part of the tradition, an anachronistic vestige of a simpler time.
Indeed, there is still some vestige of liberalism here, but it is deeply buried.
Clinton Democrats, the final vestige of 90s-era moderation, were the last ones standing.
Critics say that mining that area is a pointless vestige of the Cold War.
Meanwhile, the Super Bowl remains this idyllic vestige of who we thought we were.
For Jaynes, hearing the voice of God was a vestige of our past neuroanatomy.
A rep confirmed it's a vestige from the old feature and shouldn't be there.
"Time to make Electoral College a vestige of the past," he said on Twitter.
It's spring, even if the last vestige of winter chill keeps rearing its head.
Even the site of the January car bombing is a vestige of the divisions.
Aaron Bradbury's Vestige, which premiered at Tribeca Film Festival this year, is a perfect example.
In law school, we would have called this strategy the last vestige of a scoundrel.
The era of acute ideological confrontation of two countries is a vestige of the past.
It's safe to say the past four days have obliterated any vestige of their inhibition.
But usually there's some vestige of the earlier writing that persists underneath the most recent one.
It's really the only vestige left that we have for Republicans and Democrats to come together.
Some Filipinos, he said, still saw the president as all-powerful, a vestige of authoritarian times.
Its selection of pastries is a vestige of the earliest iteration of Chinese cuisine in America.
Many Puerto Ricans resent Washington oversight, and see the board as an unwelcome vestige of colonialism.
Our schools should be a beacon of hope and opportunity, not a vestige of failed policies.
Only a one-block vestige of Malbone Street (named for a 19th-century developer) still exists.
And Russia could soon move to crush the last vestige of the Syrian anti-government insurgency.
The last vestige of the Islamic State's caliphate that straddled Syria and Iraq is under attack.
But for all his success, Rivera was a vestige of when Jerry Richardson owned the team.
"Wandergesellen," or journeymen, a vestige of the Middle Ages in modern Europe, are hitchhiking across Europe.
Using extreme, often deadly force, they've managed to stamp out crime — and any last vestige of freedom.
Google's policy team has been organized regionally, a vestige of the company gradual's expansion into new countries.
Bill Stepien Stepien is the key vestige inside the Trump White House linked to New Jersey Gov.
Ricky Schroder and wife Andrea are selling off the last vestige of their marriage ... a Malibu mansion.
Turkey and Turkish Cypriots want the guarantor system, or some vestige of it, to remain in place.
Some vestige of this belief may account for the power granted to Iowa by our primary process.
Some are a vestige of a more genteel time, and a few have slid into history's shadow.
It could yet precipitate the end of the last vestige of the empire: the United Kingdom itself.
It was a vestige of a time they said they would sooner have left in the past.
The old crack laws were a vestige of the racist war on drugs started in the 1970s.
Its inclusion here is a deliberate move and not just a vestige of the wired times of yore.
Allstate now carries a $30 billion market value, making it the most valuable vestige of the Sears realm.
It is a vestige from a pre-globalization world in which foreign governments were the greatest threats imaginable.
Today, a lonely vestige from 271, the House on Sathorn, is dwarfed on three sides by glassy skyscrapers.
Gore, they would have realized what a quaint vestige of bygone days those rules of engagement have become.
"The Swiss watch industry is a vestige of another time and its biggest enemy is itself," Adams says.
And now the dreamers, unwitting, sickened with nostalgia, have torn down that last, threadbare vestige of Great Britain.
They are a distant vestige of the days when service personnel were social inferiors in need of handouts.
The last vestige of that program was a referral system that was supposed to expire at midnight Sunday.
It is the last vestige of what once was an industrial waterfront, teeming with longshoremen and factory workers.
There are several trailheads nearby, so hike into the rolling desert landscape, a vestige of what frontier remains.
But an American-backed military offensive stalled this month against the Islamic State's last vestige in eastern Syria.
AMMAN, Jordan — An American-backed military offensive has stalled against the Islamic State's last vestige in eastern Syria.
Today's paltry pensions are the last vestige of the one-sided labor rules in the league before 1993.
To somehow pinpoint his wife as the reason he is suffering is a stubborn vestige of plain old sexism.
My brown hair was like the final vestige of who I thought I was — it was a safety blanket.
The hyphen in its name is a vestige of a time when "New York" had a hyphen in it.
It is not some vestige of the late 863s: The law was passed by the Texas Legislature in 2003.
The president's allies are engaged in a full-court press to demolish any vestige of credibility on Cohen's part.
Why do Palestinians see it as "an abdication of any vestige of American impartiality in determining the region's future"?
This is Barack Obama's legacy, and why the Muslim travel ban will be remembered as a vestige of bigotry.
The bulk of South Africa's land is owned by its minority white population, a vestige of its colonial past.
One banker recounts listening to the speech from the shower, the last vestige of optimism washing down the drain.
But given the North's nuclear buildup, a mined DMZ seems to be a Cold War vestige of diminished value.
Its presence, a vestige of the previous ruling junta, is seen as opposition to the transition to a full democracy.
"(T)he statutory scheme is a vestige of the nation's and of Virginia's history of codified racialization," the judge wrote.
The black power desk was a real unit, the vestige of an establishment clinging to the last remnants of empire.
So, Samsung has a feature you can engage that shrinks the whole screen image to a shrunken vestige of itself.
The site, Islam's holiest outside Saudi Arabia, is also revered by many Jews as a vestige of their biblical temples.
From the windows of Ginkgo Bioworks' Boston offices you can peer down into a grimy vestige of the city's past.
The wall is revered as a vestige of Judaism's two ancient temples and access to it is segregated by gender.
If ISIS is evicted from Raqqa it will lose the last vestige of any "governance" of its so-called caliphate.
Yolanda Hadid removed the last vestige of her marriage to David Foster with a legal name change ... TMZ has learned.
It finally feels like a modern applications and not like the last vestige of Google's old and forgotten design principles.
"NATO is indeed a vestige [of the past] and we agree with that," said Dmitry Peskov, President Vladimir Putin's spokesman.
The home, a vestige of the violent drug wars that plagued Miami, Florida, in the 1980s, was razed on Tuesday.
A state-funded stadium opened in 1992 that cost an estimated $214 million was already a useless vestige of yesteryear.
Charles Grassley of Iowa called the committee's approach "too conservative," a vestige of its old "bureaucratic" resistance to dynamic scoring.
Tanzania still has anti-sodomy laws on the books, a vestige of British colonialism, though homosexuality itself is not criminalized.
Who knows: Maybe "what happens in Vegas stays in Vegas" will soon be a cute vestige of a simpler time.
So Samsung has a feature you can engage that shrinks the whole screen image to a shrunken vestige of itself.
Here goes another vestige of my '90s childhood, now corrupted and confused like the rest of this country and this planet.
Hundreds of Israeli rightists entered Al Aqsa mosque compound, an icon of Palestinian nationalism and a vestige of ancient Jewish temples.
Stripping people of the right to vote is a "vestige" of a more unequal era, Messrs Hamilton-Smith and Vogel argued.
The employees of the Boston Globe were slaughtered in this room, and with them, the last vestige of the first amendment.
But just off the Senate floor and across the Capitol, one vestige of his presidential campaign remains: his Secret Service detail.
The lack of state wage floors is, in itself, a vestige of slavery in that it implicitly condones poverty-level wages.
We must embrace what Japan is creating with Society 5.0, or we will simply become a vestige of the technological past.
In each arm, she holds a vestige that symbolizes the various traditional industries in the country, from pottery to palm oil.
When the group is evicted from Raqqa it will lose the last vestige of any "governance" of its so-called caliphate.
The Electoral College system is an anachronistic vestige of a deal with the states that allowed slavery before the Civil War.
Christianizing Native children was considered akin to Americanizing them, the goal being to root out every last vestige of Native identity.
A federal judge ruled that the district&aposs racially lopsided student populations amounted to an illegal vestige of the segregation era.
Some bishops have said they consider abuse a problem that has been solved, a vestige from an earlier, less aware, era.
The property, which has been used as a dry dock for repairing barges, is the last vestige of Hoboken's industrial waterfront.
But those close to the labor movement suggested it may come from a vestige of a shrinking and transforming labor movement.
Parenthood was the next most traditional vestige after marriage, and a journey my wife and I never thought we'd embark on.
Research at Duke University lends further support to the value of this "useless vestige of evolution," as it was long considered.
While their owners squabbled over medallion status, they generally sat, crated, in the cargo hold—the last vestige of airline equality.
This enchanting artifact, officially called the Voyager Interstellar Record, may be the last vestige of our civilization after we are gone forever.
The move would eliminate the last vestige of democracy in Venezuela and pave the road for the consolidation of a totalitarian regime.
Ms. Piper realizes the rare and inspired paradox of an artfully controlled portrait of someone losing every last vestige of self-control.
Back then, the block was pretty bare, save for Magnolia Bakery and Bookmarc, the last vestige of Marc Jacobs's six-shop empire.
Until somehow Facebook learned of his death and his page was converted to a memorial account, and this last vestige died too.
As a lone surviving vestige of Apple's early aughts glory days, you did us well with your a la carte music offerings.
While the efficacy of Article 370 has been destroyed, it is still on the books as a Proustian vestige of the past.
Her voice was tremulous and young, and her slurring reminded him of his own stutter, that undead vestige of his early years.
While the efficacy of Article 370 has been destroyed, it is still on the books as a Proustian vestige of the past.
Despite the name change, Groove always felt like a vestige of the Zune era at Microsoft and something that consumers were unaware of.
And, in interest of full disclosure, at work I use an external keyboard, but that's just a vestige of my typical MacBook setup.
It&aposs a key step in bringing the tribes into the country&aposs mainstream life and abolishing a vestige of British colonial rule.
Yet our farmer-based values are still in our culture and in the workplace, a cultural vestige that reduces our happiness and productivity.
This is the most frightening vestige of President Trump's TV career: in his world, reality doesn't dictate the script; the script dictates reality.
The era of acute ideological confrontation of the two countries is a thing of the remote past, is a vestige of the past.
The book, released in 1988, a mere seven years after the nation's independence, positioned Antigua's tourism industry as a vestige of colonial rule.
But now that explosive and complicated vestige of the Old South is back, in a new — and, to some Americans, newly disturbing — context.
Traditionally, a challenge for means-tested aid is that it must determine who is most deserving—a vestige of the old Elizabethan system.
But by that time, most busing plans had been dismantled and were considered by some to be a vestige of a different era.
All the more reason this Hoop Dance, scratched, jumpy and schematic, feels like a small miracle, a charm-filled vestige of another time.
The era of acute ideological confrontation of the two countries is a thing of the remote past — it's a vestige of the past.
It was a vestige of my past, and especially my single life, a time when an "I," rather than a "we," took priority.
Bothwell Ranch is one of the last remaining orange groves in the San Fernando Valley, a vestige of the long-evaporated citrus industry.
In the United States, inadvertently naturalistic cemeteries are a major reason that a vestige survives of the prairies that once covered the Midwest.
There was no grand strategy, Republicans said, just a burgeoning anger that Warren was destroying whatever vestige of comity remains in the Senate.
In their wake, local people are purging every last vestige of Islamic State's presence: demolishing militants' homes and even digging up their graves.
For being interracial siblings, Parker and Zema are both a lightning rod for the country's racism and a last vestige of its music.
All porters were called "George," after the company owner George Pullman, a vestige of when enslaved people were addressed by their owner's name.
Silverman took to Instagram on Monday to humorously "milk" her "last vestige of sympathy" by posting a picture of the bruises that she sustained.
The habitual opacity that accompanies bans is a vestige of an earlier, forum-driven internet when mods were demigods and admins wielded absolute power.
What I found was a perfect sampling of the America I know and love, a lingering vestige of the "old New York" everyone misses.
Some admit that the muscle memory to handwrite their names—that last vestige of cursive—is atrophying, leaving them with an inconsistent John Hancock.
And in the ultimate cop-out, the robbers are redeemed and turned into Robin Hoods, stripping the film of the last vestige of honesty.
That program is the last vestige of the Fed's quantitative easing programs, which were asset purchases used to keep long-end interest rates low.
He and an attractively no-nonsense colleague, Irena (Agata Kulesza), record villagers whose plaintive, haunting music is a vestige of the rapidly receding past.
"He described his protest against rectal examinations as fighting to keep the last vestige of his humanity," Felber, the historian, said in an email.
"It is terribly disheartening to learn that it is, in fact, a vestige of a horrific part of our nation's past," the letter reads.
There isn't a garden in it — only the vestige of one, vines creeping up the side of a boarded-up cottage in Xenia, Ill.
For them, tribalism is not only a way to feel some vestige of pride in their own lonely selves, it's also an explanatory tool.
Now the tab and blank screen appear to be a vestige of the feature that still remains in both the app and on desktop.
When an Uber arrives he opens the door for me before getting in from the other side – perhaps a vestige of his high-society upbringing.
For Komisaruk, a "safer working hypothesis" is that if a process exists, it's probably not a mistake or a vestige, there's a function for it.
Why it matters: The West for decades has seen the North Korean side of the DMZ, a "vestige of the Cold War," as enemy territory.
If you keep a phone around long enough, it becomes a vestige of an old version of yourself, or even many former versions of yourself.
Guantanamo Bay is the last remaining vestige of a philosophy of counterterrorism that justified any activity -- war, torture, detention -- in the name of protecting America.
Taxation is a vestige of this, the cruel, barbaric history of government, the dark truth of which has been obscured by the mists of time.
Until recent years, many Jews in America believed that the worst of anti-Semitism was over there, in Europe, a vestige of the old country.
Teletext, today, remains a quaint vestige of a 1980s retro-future fantasy, known in America only to scoffing technologists and a small, geeky fan base.
Christian Bale's ditched any vestige of Dick Cheney from his life, and by that we mean roughly 100 lbs ... in just a matter of months.
In "Bitter Money," which runs more than two and a half hours, the duration seems less purposeful than the vestige of a film in progress.
While gentrification has transformed much of New York City, the vans represent a vestige of the city's past and the enduring energy of its immigrants.
Those obligations were a vestige of its $6.6 billion acquisition by KKR & Co., Bain Capital and real estate investment trust Vornado Realty Trust in 2005.
Groups of friends dared to bare themselves, thanks to the protection of other women and abundant paint used to provide a last vestige of modesty.
The Congressional Review Act, a vestige of the Gingrich years, gives Congress a brief window to undo certain new federal regulations it does not like.
The clearance proceeded calmly, and the Jungle was gone by the end of the day, the containers remaining as a last vestige of the camp.
Perhaps as a vestige of their former lives as market editors, Fiffer and Sperling aim to unearth, promote and collaborate with local talent through Botanica.
Those obligations were a vestige of its $6.6 billion acquisition by , Bain Capital Partners and real estate investment trust Vornado Realty Trust in a 2005.
Jorion's last series, Vestige d'Empire (Vestiges of Empire), focused on the architectural heritage of French colonialism in countries such as Vietnam, Senegal, China, and Madagascar.
It is perhaps the last vestige of Ronald Reagan's legacy, and that makes it so important to what's left of the establishment Republican Party in Washington.
The celebrity interview is a vestige from late night's past, but I usually find myself skipping through Colbert and Noah's interviews, and I can't be alone.
In a few short weeks, the last vestige of direct U.S. government involvement in the governance of the Internet's technical operations will come to an end.
I don't think that it helps to call this sort of language "populist"—that's a word that Trumpism has emptied of any vestige of its meaning.
The Hastings Steam & Sauna is an important vestige for the bustling city center that used to be, while simultaneously representing the present state of the neighborhood.
But the oversight board, which may have seemed a reasonable requirement in Washington, has been seen on the island as an intolerable vestige of colonial rule.
The only vestige of that era is the Staten Island Ferry, nine hulking boats that make regularly scheduled point-to-point crossings of New York Harbor.
Original features include wood floors, pocket doors, molding and transom windows in the upstairs bedrooms, a vestige of life before air-conditioning, which this house has.
However, since that time violence has been increasing, a particularly troubling sign since the last vestige of the UN mission is scheduled to depart mid-October.
As Miller notes, Passover is often "the last vestige for people holding on to their Judaism," and so the Haggadah needs to be accessible to everyone.
Dia:Beacon was enticed by a vestige of the city's industrial past: a 300,22-square-foot former Nabisco box factory near the banks of the Hudson River.
She begins the book hostage to an adult vestige of that old mythmaking system: "If she loves me, why won't she stop?" she thinks about Katie.
Now came the pause just before the gray-gloved pallbearers present the coffin to the white-robed priest — when death sheds its last vestige of abstraction.
Dmitri S. Peskov, a spokesman for President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia, said on Monday that "NATO is indeed a vestige," according to Radio Free Europe.
Anthony Cardinale, a defense lawyer who has represented mobsters — including, decades ago, Mr. Salemme — described the trial here as a "last vestige" of such federal prosecutions.
Congressional Memo WASHINGTON — Senate Republicans are preparing to abolish the final vestige of power that the minority has to block Supreme Court nominations through a filibuster.
He speculated that this might have been a vestige of the colonial era, when access to education was mostly limited to children from relatively privileged families.
With yet another vestige of the Trump campaign now out of the White House, perhaps the administration will begin to do a better job of governing.
The horror of Getty Sr. is that he is never less than human, but that he's hoarded everything, including every last vestige of love, for himself.
It was not immediately clear if the suspension included the Palestinian Authority's security coordination with Israel, a crucial vestige of the relationship between the two sides.
A vestige of 20th century political campaigning—the yard sign—is going the way of the fax machine, and Edward Kimmel knows who to blame: the Internet.
Twelve years later, Electronic Frontier Foundation technologist Noah Swartz has reimagined the game as a text adventure, usually thought of as a vestige of 1980s interactive fiction.
This can be seen from the new administration's plans to eliminate the National Endowment for the Arts — a last vestige of truly public support of the arts.
These resilient microbes are a vestige of Earth's ancient past, but they could also be a sign of things to come under the influence of climate change.
Darwin theorized that the appendix was a "vestige of evolution," a fold of flesh that used to be part of a large cecum and was now functionless.
But birds are these really visible indicators of when you have a functioning ecosystem—when you have a place that has some vestige of wildness to it.
At the airport, we saw a twin-engine plane moldering by the runway, ditched there years ago by drug traffickers, one vestige of the region's troubled past.
SoS Pompeo's announcement closing the U.S. consulate in Jerusalem and transferring its responsibilities to the embassy ends the last vestige of American support for the city's division.
The dampeners were artifacts of a decayed security system; Blue Barge was now a secret so open it retained the slightest vestige of mystery only to civilians.
"This change will ensure that Vietnam has access to the equipment it needs to defend itself and removes a lingering vestige of the Cold War," he said.
Many young protesters see the extradition bill as hurting the territory's judicial independence — in their view, the last vestige of insulation they now have from Beijing's influence.
The power to adjourn Parliament, he said, is a historical vestige, one of many that remain in Britain's constitutional system, which relies heavily on precedent and custom.
In a league of 32 color-coded molds, the smoke-filled tailgate parties represent a vestige of original expression, described as something from a post-apocalyptic world.
Here in Texas he has the strong vestige of people who worked on his 2016 campaign and who have maintained an active presence in the 2018 campaigns.
That removal is the last major vestige of Microsoft&aposs ambitious plans to create the "Complete All-in-One Games and Entertainment System" with the Xbox platform.
And that, to them, was a vestige of an ugly history, a time when Virginia and other states used to prohibit people from marrying across racial lines.
Some city officials see the horse-drawn carts as a vestige of a poorer country, incompatible with the modern highways in a capital that is booming economically.
While attending the Shad Planking, the state's most iconic political event and itself a vestige of the Byrd era, he gladly accepted a Confederate flag lapel sticker.
It is, perhaps, some last vestige of companies willing to include those sorts of features up front, as the industry marches toward the inevitability of all-screen fronts.
Museums, here, are not just historical collections but a form of propaganda, and discovering an important vestige—or its fraudulence—can have serious cultural, political, even diplomatic implications.
Netanyahu's right-wing government is wary of being seen to yield to Palestinian pressure over the site, which Jews revere as the vestige of their two ancient temples.
At the same time, Biden represents a vestige of the Obama administration, which Trump has fixated upon as he compares his own presidency to that of his predecessor.
"This change will ensure that Vietnam has access to the equipment it needs to defend itself and removes a lingering vestige of the Cold War," the president said.
I think keeping this compromise alive is important, especially as their rival Apple continues their practice of circling every square and removing every vestige of meaningful user choice.
It's the last vestige of the rural fishing village that was Shenzhen 30 years ago, before it became megalopolis of 20 million people packed into high-rise towers.
This suits Padilla, known for his swashbuckling charisma and his black eye patch, a vestige of a gruesome goring he suffered, and remarkably returned from, seven years ago.
When the appendix could be removed with little harm to its own owner, it seemed to prove Darwin right, and his idea that it was a vestige stuck.
" The abortion ban, she said, was more offensive: "It felt like a vestige of a culture that was not in tune with how people were living their lives.
Recently, the scientists realized that even when they interfered with their trained snails' brain cells in a way that should have removed the memory completely, some vestige remained.
Like many museums in small countries, it strives to fit every last vestige under one roof, making for a sense of disheveled urgency as you navigate the rooms.
There is one vestige of populism Trump should cling to even at Davos: the idea that the richest and most powerful people in the world aren't always right.
The Electoral College, which is written into the Constitution, is more than just a vestige of the founding era; it is a living symbol of America's original sin.
I think there is in the Senate in particular a vestige of the kind of older tradition that it's the world's greatest deliberative body, but it's been awhile.
A vestige of the planned economy, the hukou system assigns each Chinese citizen a jurisdiction of residence that determines their access to education and other social welfare services.
Two generations after "Howl," America is fighting to hold onto a vestige of its conservation ethos, a country whose national park system was the envy of the world.
This includes the surface lots that are peppered throughout cities, a vestige of a time decades ago when car ownership had surged and mass transit use had declined.
But today, Germany is experiencing a resurgence of the right — driven, at least in part, by its effort to overcome past misdeeds by suppressing any vestige of nationalism.
The city's new mayor, Ravinder S. Bhalla, said on Tuesday that residents had resoundingly approved the replacement of the last vestige of the industrial waterfront with a park.
Today the most prominent vestige of Barr's folk-art advocacy is Rousseau's work, such a familiar part of the Modern's identity that it barely registers as "self-taught."
It's a vestige of the 1970s, when Biden was fighting mandates or court orders for busing, although it's not clear if he had a hand in this particular provision.
The bases are a vestige of American occupation and are highly concentrated in the prefecture compared to other parts of Japan; military aircraft crashes still occur in civilian areas.
" Pence declared U.S. support again for Guaido, with whom he spoke by phone earlier this month, and the National Assembly, which he leads, as the "last vestige of democracy.
" Pence declared U.S. support again for Guaido, with whom he spoke by phone earlier this month, and the National Assembly, which he leads, as the "last vestige of democracy.
Currently, about 630,000 soldiers are serving active duty, a vestige of the Korean War and a continuing reminder of the country's vigilance against the hostile nation to the north.
His decision on Iran shredded any last vestige of doubt for Trump's critics and most of his allies that he is setting America's international standing back years -- maybe decades.
Once the foundation of the Sharon Valley Lime Kiln, constructed circa 1880 to convert limestone into calcined lime, it is the town's most intact vestige of an earlier era.
Like the few other pinpricks of light scattered throughout the movie, the trattoria is a vestige of a resilient communal spirit that has survived despite conspicuous neglect and abuse.
The building now boasts a new roof, but still has rotten clapboards, pigeons roosting in the broken eaves and those boarded up windows, a vestige of the early years.
"This change will ensure that Vietnam has access to the equipment it needs to defend itself and removes a lingering vestige of the Cold War," he said in Hanoi.
It's difficult to comprehend but very likely about to play out: A Republican-controlled government is preparing to take a wrecking ball to the last vestige of fiscal sanity.
An old banner is plastered on the shuttered building, a vestige from a different plan to turn it into a family life center, gym and school of performing arts.
Her hold, and the idea of a single person or magazine as the ultimate arbiter of style, may be as much a vestige of the former world as print itself.
And now, with political polarization at an extreme, the Senate is on the verge of killing off the Supreme Court filibuster, the one remaining vestige of bipartisanship on presidential appointments.
So in the textbooks then, it was still listed as a classic example of a vestige of evolution, and a I think a lot of textbooks are still that way.
Florida voted overwhelmingly to rid the state of a vestige of its Jim Crow days—a law that forbade former felons from voting—and thus to reënfranchise 1.4 million citizens.
The group, a vestige of pre-financial-crisis banking, had $1 billion to make loans to small and midsize companies and was outgunned amid the rise of private-lending firms.
Wheels The mundane vehicle license plate, along with the windshield wiper a virtually unchanged vestige from the dawn of the automobile, is in the midst of a 21st-century makeover.
"While the world burns, the Senate will sit in total inaction because of an antiquated vestige of a bygone era," Mr. Inslee said in an interview, referring to the filibuster.
Fight Against Last Vestige of ISIS in Syria Stalls, to Dismay of U.S.: The American-backed offensive has encountered unanticipated problems, and the terrorist group remains potent around the world.
The Cold War is a thing of past, the era of acute ideological confrontation of the two countries is a thing of remote past, is a vestige of the past.
The fossil fuels that remain behind after deep decarbonization, the ones that still need their emissions captured and buried, will be a small vestige of the current fossil fuel regime.
Obama campaigned passionately against George W. Bush's foreign debacle and fiscal recklessness, but there's no vestige of that in the body language between Bush and Michelle Obama whenever they meet.
Over the years, much has been made of the first lady's supposed animosity toward both Clintons (mostly fiction, with a soupçon of truth), a vestige of the bitter 2008 campaign.
Would the VA yield to the usual critics, who decry such statements as "Christian triumphalism" or whatever other invective they hurl at every vestige of Christianity in the public square?
The bulk of South Africa's land is owned by its minority white population, a vestige of its colonial past, thus they are likely to be most affected by the changes.
All of those efforts have now been scaled back or reversed, leaving G+ as a vestige of an over-ambitious Google that miscalculated just how far user goodwill would take it.
Terry McAuliffe, who has been fighting to restore voting fight to felons who have completed their prison sentence in his state, has called felon disenfranchisement a vestige from Jim Crow laws.
"The Strand bookstore is the last vestige of the former Book Row," she said, referring to the corridor of booksellers that once lined Fourth Avenue from Fourteenth Street to Astor Place.
Today, Syria remains one of Russia's few reliable allies outside of the former Soviet republics, a vestige of Moscow's former superpower status and a final military toehold in the Middle East.
A vestige of New York's early days as the country's leading port, this roughly 10-block hub on the East River contains a unique collection of early-19th-century brick buildings.
These days, managers are your friends, offices come with acceptable coffee and the occasional free beer, and suits are the last vestige of a time when work looked like, well, work.
The flamingos that once prowled the property were long gone (or hiding in shame) and the monkey cages, while clean, seemed to epitomize the place — an icky vestige of another era.
In the '70s, as the Hawaiian renaissance began taking hold, the band adopted a uniform: checkered palaka shirts, a vestige of the plantation era and a symbol of working-class pride.
"J'espère qu'il y aura un vestige commémoratif pour honorer son dévouement à l'élévation de l'humanité par l'illumination, et son amour pour le pays qui lui a sauvé la vie", il écrit.
Even as a girl, I knew that I was uncommonly lucky, which is what encouraged me, when I was eleven, to write off pussy-grabbing as a pathetic, confusing cultural vestige.
Can "The Crown" really handle the story of their dead mother -- a story already regularly manipulated for political kicks by courtiers and culture warriors -- with any vestige of its usual class?
Al-Aqsa, one of Islam's holiest sites and a symbol for Palestinians seeking their own state, is built on a compound revered by Jews as the vestige of their two ancient temples.
But step into the Austin home he shares with his wife, actress Finery founder Brooklyn Decker, 30, and son Hank, 1, and you won't see a single vestige of his epic career.
The United States holds title to about 56 million acres of tribal lands, a vestige of the treaties made between 1778 and 1871 to end wars between indigenous Indians and European settlers.
Rather than encouraging visitors to experience Versailles as a "commercial, historically objectifying" vestige of the past, Mr. Eliasson said he would like his work to provoke a more active kind of visit.
Customers waited to place their order with one of the young men working behind the gate, a vestige of a time when running a restaurant in the neighborhood was a riskier proposition.
Environmental experts say Haryana's plan has the potential to wipe out the last vestige of the green cover that is essential for millions of Delhi residents who are vulnerable to air pollution.
As the area gentrifies, Ms. Campo said, it has saddened her to watch the mission — "the last vestige" of hope for some people — appear to roll back a bit of its compassion.
With the board of directors and sales practices already grudgingly refreshed, the chief executive, Timothy J. Sloan, a 30-year Wells Fargo veteran, sticks out as a vestige of the old regime.
One imagines them joining Tom Cruise in the 2003 movie "The Last Samurai," galloping at full tilt, swords drawn, representing the last vestige of their chivalrous time crashing against the mechanized future.
"I hope there will be a commemorative vestige to honor his dedication to elevating humanity through enlightenment with appreciation for his love of the country that saved his life," Mr. Baldwin wrote.
It could represent a "vestige" of the days when racial discrimination by businesses was routine, researchers said, or it might be that proprietary algorithms used by individual insurers "inadvertently" penalized minority areas.
While President Trump quipped at the Thanksgiving turkey pardon last week that he's been "very active" in rescinding Obama-era policies, a vestige of the previous administration remains at the White House.
The fact that 26 Anglican bishops or "lords spiritual" sit in the upper chamber of the British parliament is singled out as an outdated vestige which has substantial as well as symbolic importance.
Your ANS helps to prepare you for what you think is going to happen, an evolutionary vestige left over from when we'd have to run screaming from a lion in order to survive.
Radwani House is a charming vestige of the courtyard homes that once covered most of Doha, but began to vanish after the city gained electricity and piped water in the 1950s and 60s.
It represented a vestige of quality, goodness, and integrity that American manufacturing is supposed to be known for — and it lived on at this one company, in a world dominated by industrial chintziness.
This vestige of race-based immigration quotas means that H6900-B holders from populous countries that produce many skilled workers have much longer wait times than those from countries that export less talent.
The ballot measure has drawn wide support, including from the state's Democratic and Republican Parties — a sign that Louisiana may finally be ready to eliminate a remaining vestige of the Jim Crow era.
Jews revere the site as the vestige of their two ancient temples, and sometimes visit under the protection of Israeli police who also guard the compound entrances - a presence resented by many Palestinians.
Credit...Ian C. Bates for The New York Times SAN FRANCISCO — Audium, a 49-seat theater that is enclosed by 176 speakers, is a vestige of oddball experimentation in a rapidly gentrifying city.
Here is the north-east coast of Baffin Island, in the high Arctic, where, looking towards the Barnes Ice Cap, you can glimpse the "rapidly vanishing last vestige of the Laurentide ice sheet".
They give the tax benefit that donors crave, for which they collect management and investment fees that can add up to millions of dollars annually, but they hint at a vestige of control.
"Tent City" is a vestige of Sheriff Joe Arpaio's 23-year rule over Maricopa County, which ended in 2016 after he lost an election to Paul Penzone, a Democrat and former Phoenix police sergeant.
Four days earlier, another noose — an ugly vestige of America's brutal past in which black people were targeted and lynched — was discovered hanging from a tree on the grounds of the Smithsonian's Hirshhorn Museum.
Al Aqsa compound, also revered by Jews as a vestige of their two ancient temples, was among areas Israel captured in a 1967 war with Jordan, which retains a stewardship role at the mosque.
In a quest to cling to her last vestige of stability during this tenuous time — her home — she opens up her spare room to Airbnb renters as a way of not breaking the bank.
Pence, meanwhile, delivered a video message to the Venezuelan people declaring Maduro "a dictator with no legitimate claim to power," and "recognizing the National Assembly as the last vestige of democracy" in the country.
Clinton is also willing to impose federal penalties, including denying tax-exempt status, in order to, as Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito wrote, "stamp out every vestige of dissent" to a far-left agenda.
Hurricane Maria's damage to Puerto Rico and delays in getting needed supplies to the island were a reminder that shipping within the U.S. is controlled by the Jones Act, a vestige of 1920s protectionism.
The Islamic State, also known as ISIS, has lost 213 percent of the land it once held in Iraq and Syria, and the fight to evict it from the last vestige started this week.
The Fed has long been done with its quantitative easing program, but one vestige of the program has been that it replaces the Treasurys and mortgages on its balance sheet as they roll down.
To the Israelis they had become, the diaspora fear of a Jew being attacked on the street just because she was a Jew seemed but a vestige of a horrible past, now long gone.
The academy worked in ways that were "a vestige of an era that we would like to be over, that of an elitist and closed system," the signees wrote in the newspaper Le Monde.
Wasese had reported that when they returned to camp the "older ones" took the clothing away and burned it—perhaps to prevent illness or perhaps merely to destroy a vestige of the outside world.
Even though it ended quantitative easing long ago, one vestige of the program continues, as the Fed replaces the mortgage and Treasury securities it holds on its $4.5 trillion balance sheet, as they expire.
I came from the people who colonized this island territory — the Spanish who used the island as a garrison and later as a sugar factory — and a small vestige of the natives they found.
Although it closed shortly into Satya Nadella's tenure as CEO, the Nokia deal was the last vestige of the Steve Ballmer era and Nadella started unwinding the move not long after the deal wrapped up.
That could quickly change, given the religious passions that swirl around the Old City, where Al Aqsa Mosque, Islam's third-holiest shrine, abuts the Western Wall prayer plaza, a vestige of two ancient Jewish temples.
One freezing night this week, dozens tried at once; it was all over within minutes, the only vestige half a dozen French police vehicles filled with bored-looking officers at the roundabout near the tunnel.
Flannery suppresses her "distaste and indignation" at her husband's behavior, and is subsequently described as "Willa's mother," as though parenting has drained her of even the very last vestige of her writerly self — her name.
But Palestinians, who hope to see the eastern part of Jerusalem become the capital of a Palestinian state, see the move as an abdication of any vestige of American impartiality in determining the region's future.
Palestinians, who hope to see the eastern part of Jerusalem as the capital of a Palestinian state, see the embassy move as an abdication of any vestige of American impartiality in determining the region's future.
Nestled between Avenues C and D in the East Village of Manhattan, his motorcycle garage, Sixth Street Specials, is among the last in the borough, a vestige of a neighborhood that scarcely resembles its past.
As the city succumbs to sleek glass monuments to hedge-fund hegemony, 28 remains a boho vestige and a precarious homage to the creative churn that made Greenwich Village famous from Los Angeles to Laos.
Call it a vestige from Marxism or maybe Christianity, but there was a sense that the current fallen order was fragile and that a more just mode of living was out there to be imagined.
While Baghuz is the last vestige of the Islamic State's caliphate in the region where it was born, the caliphate was always a global project, with 16 of its 35 "provinces" outside Iraq and Syria.
But if, as he has threatened, he's going to get rid of every last vestige of the ACA, he would be "protecting people's right" to do something monumentally stupid: live life free of medical insurance coverage.
"Unless the Goths and Vandals are arrested in their work, the destruction of the incomparable forest will probably go on till the last vestige of it is destroyed", the New York Herald railed in December 1855.
In 1981, many of the world's leading cosmologists gathered at the Pontifical Academy of Sciences, a vestige of the coupled lineages of science and theology located in an elegant villa in the gardens of the Vatican.
" At PJ Media, Paula Bolyard asserted that the mayor "denigrates Christians and Christianity at every turn, brands supporters of traditional marriage as akin to racists, and seeks to erase every vestige of Christianity from public life.
It's all too easy to beat on "Iron Man" as a vestige of a more regressive era, when we made movies that coddled the egos of affluent, straight white men (well, even more so than today).
The marital naming law, supported by many conservatives who believe that women belong predominantly in the home supporting their husbands and families, is seen by some as another vestige of discrimination against women in Japanese society.
The fight to save its elderly tenants from eviction, and to preserve the last vestige of Manilatown, would evolve into a nearly decade-long battle that came to a head on one violent night in 1977.
The Seaport district is one of those parts of New York so overrun with tourists that it ceases to maintain even the faintest vestige of the umbilical cord that once connected it to the city's spirit.
But while leading gun control advocates largely welcome Mr. Bullock, Ms. Gillibrand and Mr. Ryan as converts, they remain wary of Mr. Sanders, a vestige of hurt feelings remaining from his 2016 campaign against Mrs. Clinton.
The U.S. is on the 'left' of the Atlantic, only because world maps arbitrarily represent north as up, which is a shameful vestige of Eurocentric cartography that thought it only proper to place Europe 'on top.
Toys R Us entered bankruptcy in September with $4.9 billion in debt, a vestige from its $6.6 billion acquisition by Kohlberg Kravis Roberts, Bain Capital Partners and real estate investment trust Vornado Realty Trust in 2005.
This was the case even before this year's Daytona 500, where Monster Energy — the new series sponsor — brought back the practice of "grid girls," an embarrassing vestige that should have been left back in the 20th century.
This vehicle, this mighty locomotive, is a memento of Britain's industrial heritage, a vestige of a time when your great-grandad worked the railways, stoked engines and got two lungfuls of good, healthy coal for his troubles.
"The opportunity to grow in Brooklyn in a spectacular space like this, that's huge for us," Mr. Mast said, looking up at a vestige of the space's shipbuilding past, an overhead crane capable of hoisting 10 tons.
But Myanmar's other groups regard them instead as a vestige of the colonial era, when the country was incorporated into British India and the British brought non-Buddhists from elsewhere in the colony to work in Burma.
Making matters worse, Gambia, Burundi and South Africa have announced their intention to leave the court, which some African leaders see as a vestige of colonialism because it has so far tried cases only from their continent.
The retailer filed for bankruptcy this past September with $4.9 billion in debt, a vestige from its $6.6 billion acquisition by Kohlberg Kravis Roberts, Bain Capital Partners and real estate investment trust Vornado Realty Trust in 2005.
We all knew in our hearts that if we just waited long enough, the Internet of Things would come around to self-playing pianos; that surely the cloud would incorporate that last vestige of ol' timey technology.
Today, a rising generation is barraged with the message that the greatest stumbling block to their success is an amorphous, all-purpose villain of "institutional racism" and that, while any vestige of that remains, they cannot progress.
"You see, here, it's a trace, a vestige!" said Stéphane Lamache, a government-funded researcher, pointing to a thick bit of wall sticking out toward the road at Quinéville, on the eastern coast of the Normandy peninsula.
In this kind of through-the-looking-glass nightmare, Robert Mueller's investigation — his very existence — seems like the last vestige of the reality we used to cling to: that justice can still prevail, even against all odds.
In reality, the protest was about much more than a statue— it's a symbol of white supremacy, a vestige of America's racist past and represented the deep fear and animosity that is running through the country right now.
KERBALA, Iraq (Reuters) - After followers of a populist Iraqi Shi'ite cleric who had once supported anti-government protests attacked sit-ins this week, some activists are looking to one last vestige of the establishment for support: their ayatollah.
He preached patience and prudence, twin concepts that never really meshed with Carmelo Anthony's stated desire to vie for championships — or at least a shot at the playoffs — while he still clung to some vestige of his prime.
For decades, American leaders have steered carefully between the Scylla and Charybdis of ancestral enemies -- Saudi Arabia and Iran -- in hopes of maintaining some vestige of peace, or at least the absence of outright war, in the region.
India's new coffee culture is a vestige of the growing urban middle class, as young people—fuelled by curiosity and good incomes—have begun interested in trying new flavors and artisan products, from fast food to gourmet cheese.
In addition to military compounds, 22 communities with 11,000 people live in the so-called Sovereign Base Areas (SBAs), a British-controlled vestige of colonial rule that remains nearly 60 years after the rest of Cyprus gained independence.
They are "Wandergesellen," or journeymen — a vestige of the Middle Ages in modern Europe — young men, and these days women, too, who have finished their required training in any number of trades and are traveling to gather experience.
Remote, calculating, ascetic and cerebral, a self-styled revolutionary inspired by what he once called "Marxist-Leninism-Mao-Tse-tung thought," he affected a scholarly manner, bespectacled and haughty, a vestige of his early years as a schoolteacher.
Michalchyshyn and the UCC argue that the hammer and sickle symbol is a vestige of the former Soviet government responsible for the Holodomor—a man-made famine in Soviet Ukraine during the Stalin regime that killed millions of civilians.
He has been in prison since emerging from Baghouz, a tiny village in eastern Syria where the SDF is poised to wipe out the last vestige of Islamic State rule - which once spanned a third of Iraq and Syria.
The Obama administration has moved to shut down the Department of Homeland Security's Muslim national registry program, a vestige of post-20033/11 policy that's been sitting on the books since 2002 but unused in the past five years.
The Obama administration has moved to shut down the Department of Homeland Security's Muslim national registry program, a vestige of post-9/11 policy that's been sitting on the books since 2002 but unused in the past five years.
What matters is that you, all of you, on both sides of the political aisle, have let Putin destroy any vestige of comity left in this town and you have no idea that that was his plan all along.
In a Nordic country priding itself on its modernity, the Nobel banquet is vestige of old-world luxury that every year brings together royalty and the powerful in politics and business with some of the world's top scientific minds.
The Obama administration has moved to shut down the Department of Homeland Security's Muslim national registry program, a vestige of post-9/11 policy that's been sitting on the books since 2002 but unused in the past five years.
When the Supreme Court handed down its ruling in Brown, which laid the foundation for the destruction of legal segregation not just in schools but in every other aspect of American life, it considered segregation a vestige of slavery.
In person, though, Mr. Cavill comes across less like a Hollywood action hero than an English gentleman in the prewar sense, a vestige of an era when leading men were described as "dashing" or "debonair," and civility meant something.
And children, with what vestige is left of childhood, will be led by the hand of all their well- meaning soccer moms and dads who will say to their kids, look honey, this is where the wild things were.
Embossed (in this case) with a pattern of panels and rosettes, the material is a vestige of a fading low-end décor tradition, and it chimes with the curatorial conceit of "vernacular abstraction" with which Fujita has been identified.
Though the old icon was a remaining vestige of skeuomorphic design (digital designs that resemble physical objects to make them more relatable and familiar), there was something very calming about seeing it on your homescreen and then tapping on it.
Puerto Rico is a battered vestige of what it was just a few hours ago, with vegetation stripped from trees, hundreds of houses smashed to tinder sticks, and streets filled with the flotsam and jetsam left behind by catastrophic floods.
Whatever it is, now we are free to tear apart every last institution until every last vestige of that kind of pain is gone, hurtling toward some new future where you can only hope the kindness in our hearts wins out. ●
U.S. President Barack Obama visited Vietnam in May and announced the removal of a lethal arms embargo, the last major vestige of the war between them a half century ago, allowing for closer defense links and some joint military exercises.
Obama made the comments just before ending a three-day trip to Vietnam, whose high point was an announcement that Washington's ban on sales of lethal weapons to the country - a vestige of the Vietnam War - would be completely lifted.
Halting activity at the park, where 20053 South Korean companies employed about 55,000 North Koreans, cuts the last significant vestige of North-South cooperation - a rare opportunity for Koreans divided by the 1950-53 war to interact on a daily basis.
Though the old icon was a remaining vestige of skeuomorphic design (digital designs that resemble physical objects to make them more relatable and familiar), there was something very calming about seeing it on your homescreen and then tapping on it.
He emphasized his relationship with McCain was a vestige from a bygone era of bipartisanship, and he recalled when the two of them sat next to each other on the Senate floor, which they were reprimanded for in the 1990s.
Halting activity at the park, where 103 South Korean companies employed about 55,000 North Koreans, cuts the last significant vestige of North-South cooperation - a rare opportunity for Koreans divided by the 1950-53 war to interact on a daily basis.
Back in 2011, the federal government's statutory debt ceiling, an obsolete vestige of World War I-era public finance, was successfully transformed by House Republicans from a cheap partisan talking point into a sharp-edged spear used to extract policy concessions.
Because of Hocking Hills's unique topography of cliffs, gorges and rivers, its climate is a vestige of an era when glaciers had just begun to recede, and trees such as the Eastern hemlock, the Canada yew and the mountain laurel dominated.
HAVANA (Reuters) - Communist-run Cuba will officially recognize private property, something it has long rejected as a vestige of capitalism, under a new constitution that also creates the position of prime minister alongside the president, state media reported on Saturday.
The B&B Cocktail Lounge opened on South Avenue in Syracuse in 1989, and by the time it closed almost three decades later, it was a lonely vestige of what had been a thriving strip of African-American bars and clubs.
Giardia, a parasite that causes gut troubles in people, and Trichomonas vaginalis, a parasite that drives the sexually transmitted infection trichomoniasis, have just a vestige of the original organelle, a sac that does not perform the traditional energy-producing role.
Critics said that by removing the ban, a vestige of the Vietnam War, Washington had put concerns about Beijing's assertiveness in the South China Sea first and given up a critical lever to press Hanoi for improvements in human rights.
The 15% slice of Renault held by Le Maire's ministry is a vestige of the nationalisation of the company following the liberation of France, which began with the D-Day invasion, 75 years to the day before the Fiat-Renault merger collapsed.
About 15,000 people have arrived at the camp in the last week alone as the U.S.-backed Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) lay siege to the last vestige of Islamic State's territorial rule at the besieged village of Baghouz near the Iraqi border.
Thousands of people - many of them the wives of IS fighters and their children - have been streaming out of besieged enclave at Baghouz for weeks, forcing the SDF to delay the assault to wipe out the last vestige of the jihadists' territorial rule.
For a long time, the large ensemble has seemed a clunky vestige of American music's past — outmoded since bebop supplanted swing in the 1950s — but a bumper crop of enterprising, conservatory-trained composers sees it differently: as a vessel of grandiose possibility.
"This week we are going to vote on life and death, war and peace issues with minimal debate, no amendments, and now, as I understand it, not even a motion to recommit, the last vestige of having an alternative view expressed," Rep.
"SNAP is practically the last vestige of the safety net for the poor in this country," said Marion Nestle, author of several books about the politics of food (including, most recently, Unsavory Truth: How Food Companies Skew the Science of What We Eat).
BAGHOUZ, Syria (Reuters) - U.S.-backed Syrian forces launched an assault against the final Islamic State enclave in eastern Syria on Sunday, aiming to wipe out the last vestige of its self-declared "caliphate" that once spanned a third of Iraq and Syria.
Ironically, though, it's also the last remaining vestige of the immigration system under which a lot of white Americans' ancestors came to the US — a system in which immigration restrictions were based on the individuals trying to come, not what skills they'd bring with them.
QUAYSIDE, an area of flood-prone land stretching for 12 acres (4.8 hectares) on Toronto's eastern waterfront, is home to a vast, pothole-filled parking lot, low-slung buildings and huge soyabean silos—a crumbling vestige of the area's bygone days as an industrial port.
NBC is now known as home of The Voice and Blacklist and masochist heaven This Is Us. But between the drama and reality and shows about Chicago is The Good Place, the last sparkling vestige of the network's comedy heights — and it is delightful.
He moved the desks (the two had faced each other), so he now looks onto a fireplace with a striking gold-framed 19th-century painting of a woman, a vestige of the brand founder Valentino Garavani's occupancy of the office before he sold the company.
In his zeal to create what he calls a Fourth Republic, free of any vestige of Communist rule and vest the state with ever greater power, the party's leader, Jaroslaw Kaczynski, has also set the nation on a collision course with the European Union.
Neither Ms. Brown nor Ms. Winkler skate, but several years ago they became fascinated by a group of day rollers they happened upon in Central Park, assuming they were the last vestige of the roller disco trend of the late '70s and early '80s.
But Ms. Peacock and her business partner husband, Shane Peacock — yes, it's their legal surname, a vestige of Mr. Peacock's British grandfather — are the rebel punks of India's high-fashion scene, eschewing traditions like block printing for marabou feathers and peddling catsuits rather than kurtas.
It is a typical Creole eatery in Guadeloupe, with plastic streamers, bamboo tables and chairs, and plastic place mats emblazoned with the ever-present madras plaid motif, a design vestige of the indentured Indians who worked the plantations after slavery was abolished in 263.
EL PASO, Texas (Reuters) - The jeans Estela Ortiz wears to work on casual Fridays are a last vestige of the job she held for 24 years at Levi Strauss, one of El Paso's top employers before the North American Free Trade Agreement clobbered the town's textile industry.
Lastly, Flickr announced earlier in the month that it will finally be removing the last major vestige of the company's former Yahoo stewardship — it's doing away with the mandatory Yahoo login requirement, and will be transitioning existing accounts away from Yahoo over the next few weeks.
Soon after, he shepherded a piece of legislation that would repeal New York's nearly-century-old cabaret law, which forbid dancing in bars without a cabaret license—a vestige from the anti-speakeasy era, often used by mayor Rudy Giuliani to harass bars that received noise complaints.
And both nations also agreed to push forward, bringing in other nations like the U.S. and China, to sign an agreement to formally end the Korean War—a cold war vestige that certainly needs to discarded in the trash heap of history once and for all.
When remembered through the rose-colored glasses of nostalgia, the 70s represent the last vestige of New York history in which the city might have been considered egalitarian—when it didn't matter whether or not you were wealthy, as long as you carried yourself like a star.
" Just over one year ago, Mr. Obama took the stage at a theater in Havana, with Mr. Castro in attendance, to reject that thinking and declare that he intended to "bury the last vestige of the Cold War" and "leave behind the ideological battles of the past.
Strongmen on their own political turf, the two men ambled as tourists through the eighth-century rock carvings of Mamallapuram on India's south-eastern coast before banqueting at a romantic seaside temple, the last vestige of a once-thriving port that traded with China 1,300 years ago.
The rings may be the vestige of a comet torn asunder by Saturn's gravitational tides, or the product of a collision between a comet and an icy moon, or the result of something that disturbed the orbit of several moons, causing them to smash into each other.
Thousands of people - many of them the wives of Islamic State fighters and their children - have been streaming out of the besieged enclave at Baghouz for weeks, forcing the U.S.-backed Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) to delay an assault on the last vestige of the jihadists' territorial rule.
READ: The Netherlands has decided traditional black face is racist Critics — including the United Nations' Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination, which in 2015 said the character was a "vestige of slavery" — say the character is an obviously racist stereotype which has no place in modern Dutch society.
The latest vestige of 215s life that's about to get put on an ice float — wait, those are dying too — that's about to get put on some garbage and pushed into a rising ocean is the idea that the Detroit Red Wings are still a good hockey team.
" Any vestige of weed's subcultural appeal is in sharp contrast with the air of corporate dullness hanging over the venue's carpeted hallways and fluorescent-lit conference rooms, where hour-long panels range from "The ABCs of CBD" and "Sustainable Cannabis Cultivation" to "Creative Ways to Push Through Marketing Restrictions.
The album's hardly a more objective take on decadence than those of his contemporaries, as if such a thing were possible, but by dunking his head in a bubbling swamp of textured sound until any vestige of received songform evaporates, he dodges the convention of identifiable/relatable performative subjectivity.
She became a story editor for the anthology series "Armstrong Circle Theater," a vestige of the golden age, and for weekly series like "The Defenders," a father-and-son courtroom drama starring E. G. Marshall, and "The Trials of O'Brien," starring Peter Falk as a literary-minded detective.
My husband groaned in frustration and tried his best to make his son appreciate that the Queen's role in opening and ending Parliament is largely archaic and performative, a vestige of a pre-modern era when the monarch still had a substantive say in the making of law.
" Mr. Pence said he recognized the National Assembly, led by Mr. Guaidó, as "the last vestige of democracy in your country," and stated that, "we are with you, we stand with you, and we will stay with you until democracy is restored and you reclaim your birthright of libertad.
Despite the appointment by Haider al-Abadi, Iraq's prime minister, of Najim al-Jabouri, a local Sunni general, to lead the campaign, many Sunnis fear that in Mosul as in Aleppo global powers are implicity helping Iranian-backed regimes ravage the last vestige of Sunni power in the Fertile Crescent.
And yet this is not a great time for traditional ways to do things, and the All-Star Game feels like a vestige of a time before everyone could watch every game on their computer—four at a time if you're feeling particularly gluttonous and want to test your attention span.
Their declared intention is to create a fully federal and centralized Europe, and the next step is to make every E.U. country's finance minister submit his or her government's budget to an E.U. financial controller for approval, thus removing the main remaining vestige of national sovereignty from the member states.
No wonder it's in comment sections and on Twitter where this flaccid, gassy, swearing-not-swearing tends to take place: this is where the people who have had every last vestige of control over their own lives go to whinge in half-hearted tedium about the world that's killing us all.
As he explains in his lucid and thoughtful book THE MEANING OF BELIEF: Religion From an Atheist's Point of View (Harvard University, $24.95), he is more troubled by some of his fellow atheists — specifically, those who campaign against religion as an irrational vestige of primitive thought outmoded by modern science.
Just to give you an idea what a different time it was: A few months after Putin was appointed president in 2000, he signed a bill that restored the Soviet national anthem, a vestige of our Soviet past that had been legally abolished to signal a new era for Russian politics.
Were Lee and, for that matter, Birmingham-born Walker Percy unwilling to surrender the vestige of Alabama-ness that haunts their novels — the conviction that the Southern gentry's antique, upper-class posture of respectability actually mattered in the face of their crimes, first against Native Americans and then against enslaved blacks?
Indeed, depending on one's views on the city's eternal struggle between development and preservation, the new Tin Building represents either the keystone of a revitalized Pier 17 and South Street Seaport district or the loss of an important physical vestige of the city's thriving past as a maritime commercial center.
"This huge number of presidential appointees are a vestige of the spoils system, no way to run a railroad and certainly no way to run our government," says Max Stier, head of the Partnership for Public Service, which advocates for government employee effectiveness, and assists transition teams of both parties.
In a new report released on Tuesday, Global Zero's Dr. Bruce Blair, a former Air Force launch control officer who's a nuclear security expert at Princeton University, argues that the United States' nuclear stance is a "vestige of the Cold War" that creates instability with an unnecessarily hefty price tag.
But by the time Mr. McManus inherited the Hell's Kitchen district leadership in 21972 and became the family patriarch, the Democratic organization had become just a vestige of the feral Tammany tiger that had fended off New York's would-be reformers and good-government groups since the mid-21983th century.
This is why Kaepernick and other athletes kneel and why Black Lives Matter protesters of all races protest across America: to call for reform of a criminal justice system that is the last vestige of Jim Crow in that results are colored by race and class far more than any other factors.
A poll published in the Brazilian paper Folha de São Paulo showed that about two-thirds of Brazilians were skeptical of closer ties with the US. The US-Brazil relationship has historically been chilly — a vestige of US meddling during the Cold War (and because the US, to some extent, supported the military dictatorship).
To his fan club, Musk is so much more than a charismatic artist, a talented musician, or, hey, a flawed but successful tech entrepreneur—he's a messiah, a vestige of an age of retrograde masculinity, when a reasonably successful man could expect his ideas to remain unchecked and his words be read as gospel.
Use the word at your peril: To some Newfoundlanders it is offensive, a vestige of the derision toward locals expressed by some American G.I.s stationed there during World War II. For decades stoic Newfoundlanders have endured national ridicule, the butt of jokes that cast residents of one of the country's more remote corners as bumpkins and dimwits.
It's an aesthetic the group perfected in the late 1990s, when it stripped any final vestige of angst from punk, with results generally along the lines of "whiny whine mope/whiiiiny whiiine moooope/chug chug chug chug pow pow pow pow" (repeat 8 times) — pop-punk as structurally flawless as anything from the Brill Building or "Grease," a saccharine soundtrack for high-fives and restless preteen energy.
" Justice Thomas added that "[b]ecause the Court's decision vindicates Phillips' right to free exercise, it seems that religious liberty has lived to fight another day," but warned that "in future cases, the freedom of speech could be essential to preventing Obergefell from being used to 'stamp out every vestige of dissent' and 'vilify Americans who are unwilling to assent to the new orthodoxy.
The Rural Vote's Disproportionate Slice of Power• In Defense of The Electoral College (Richard Posner in Slate)• Electoral College Is 'Vestige' of Slavery (PBS)• Electoral College Keeps Things Fair (Gary Gregg in Politico)• Keep the Electoral College (USA Today editorial)• Flunking the Electoral College (New York Times editorial from 2008) After groups have finished their research, hold a quick straw poll to see where students stand.
In April, the New York Times editorial board begged the 81-year-old not to leave, not just because his replacement will be unlikely to occasionally side with the more liberal side of the court (as he famously did in the 2015 ruling legalizing same-sex marriage), but because he was in some ways the last vestige of an era when the country's highest court was not defined by narrow partisanship.

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