Today, generations accustomed to authoritarian power and generations accustomed to freedom coexist, and occasionally clash.
|
|
"The last few years, everyone's so accustomed to the losses that I'm just not accustomed to," James said.
|
|
The result is a campaign whose supporters have grown accustomed to being written off, and accustomed to defying expectations.
|
|
"South Koreans are accustomed to the rhetoric, but they're much more accustomed to rhetoric coming from North Korea," said Lee.
|
|
"It's like something from a movie where you become accustomed to something that you shouldn't be accustomed to," he said.
|
|
This meant the Broncs were accustomed to tense contests decided in the closing minutes while the Cats were accustomed to walkovers.
|
|
" Section 8 voucher holders get quickly accustomed to hearing "no.
|
|
Fortunately, plants are already accustomed to responding to changing environments.
|
|
Expect problems and more inconsistencies than you're probably accustomed to.
|
|
By this time, I had grown accustomed to the callers.
|
|
There was a pace that they had become accustomed to.
|
|
He is accustomed to unflagging support, idol worship and winning.
|
|
We are accustomed to protecting privacy with fences and hedges.
|
|
Bacon and Croak, accustomed to chatting with Wheatcroft, hung back.
|
|
Bill McDermott: CEOs are very accustomed to these political challenges.
|
|
John Calipari isn't accustomed to losing consecutive games at Kentucky.
|
|
"She would be very accustomed to hard work," he says.
|
|
Living in New York, one grows accustomed to building safeguards.
|
|
Icelandic fans are not accustomed to being in this position.
|
|
As an actress, Meghan Markle grew accustomed to the spotlight.
|
|
Gun researchers are accustomed to cynical resistance from the NRA.
|
|
That creates a void that runners are not accustomed to.
|
|
But it's the kind of racist you've grown accustomed to.
|
|
And it's a slightly different dab than we're accustomed to.
|
|
Romans are not accustomed to being ashamed of their city.
|
|
She became accustomed to patients coming in at all hours.
|
|
The closeted Maugham is accustomed to buying off indiscreet playmates.
|
|
I haven't noticed them, growing accustomed to them over time.
|
|
But they concede they've become all too accustomed to it.
|
|
We have become accustomed to the putridity of our president.
|
|
The House is not accustomed to this brand of rancour.
|
|
Gal Krubiner is accustomed to having hundreds of direct reports.
|
|
Retail workers, it seems, have grown accustomed to such interactions.
|
|
It was a question I was becoming accustomed to hearing.
|
|
The truth is, the drivers here aren't accustomed to journalists.
|
|
The driver, Dale Earnhardt Jr., has become accustomed to fanfare.
|
|
If you're accustomed to drawing on paper, keep doing that.
|
|
Mr. Sanders, once accustomed to being ignored, understood my plight.
|
|
We are accustomed to such behavior in the majoritarian House.
|
|
It was faster than what I'd become accustomed to hearing.
|
|
Certainly, Pantera is accustomed to managing meaningful sums of money.
|
|
Brenda: That's what I was accustomed to with my mom.
|
|
We are accustomed to being regarded as strange and countercultural.
|
|
The Saturday Profile BEIJING — Ma Baoli was accustomed to secrets.
|
|
But it felt different from what I was accustomed to.
|
|
But Crimea was not accustomed to fielding eight professional teams.
|
|
Kids accustomed to the school environment won't be as focused.
|
|
People along the border were accustomed to violence and fear.
|
|
In subsequent years, streaming subscribers became accustomed to binging shows.
|
|
"But I grew accustomed to the house," Mr. Solomon said.
|
|
We've grown accustomed to the largely white, largely male default.
|
|
But many in Mississippi have grown accustomed to nature's wrath.
|
|
Voters, accustomed to being able to trust politicians, were disgusted.
|
|
They lived digital lives, so were accustomed to — happy to!
|
|
I've become accustomed to the seasonal pace on Martha's Vineyard.
|
|
However, America is just getting accustomed to the Trump method.
|
|
In a neighborhood accustomed to failure, you generate some success.
|
|
They were accustomed to their mother not being entirely there.
|
|
The Land of Enchantment is accustomed to coming in last.
|
|
BEIJING — Zhao Lin had become accustomed to the single life.
|
|
For better or worse, she is accustomed to public harassment.
|
|
Yet, this is the world they have become accustomed to.
|
|
"Customers have gotten really accustomed to free returns," Walaszek said.
|
|
"People have grown accustomed to traveling with electronics," Grella said.
|
|
Growing up in Mexico, they had become accustomed to earthquakes.
|
|
This dog is accustomed to a certain level of luxury.
|
|
On TV, people are accustomed to having a commercial interruption.
|
|
Jason Furman has become accustomed to proclamations of Obamacare's collapse.
|
|
The somnolent pace has amazed even those accustomed to Albany's inertia.
|
|
The problem seemed simple: use the word "accustomed" in a sentence.
|
|
"At birthday parties, people are accustomed to eating what?" she asked.
|
|
Others, however, were more accustomed to collecting oil barrels than bodies.
|
|
We've become accustomed to staying connected whenever and wherever we are.
|
|
Since the 1960s art-lovers have become accustomed to accelerating change.
|
|
Becoming accustomed to royal life is invasive in its own way.
|
|
"Customers have become accustomed to advertising-free subscription services," Stephenson noted.
|
|
She's works to help American refugees become accustomed to Canadian life.
|
|
But he is accustomed to preaching for 20 or 30 minutes.
|
|
Those are a little different, but I've become accustomed to them.
|
|
China's exporters, for example, are already accustomed to such pinprick protectionism.
|
|
We are accustomed to arguing the import of responsible representation elsewhere.
|
|
Supporters of rooftop solar are well-accustomed to ups and downs.
|
|
Advertisers have grown accustomed to them over 303 years of practice.
|
|
The corporate czar is accustomed to making deals, not building alliances.
|
|
Every other homo sensorium has grown accustomed to hiding — not them.
|
|
Fans of HBO's Game of Thrones have grown accustomed to death.
|
|
It's no secret that our society is accustomed to objectifying women.
|
|
I'm accustomed to tight-knit communities where everyone knows one another.
|
|
Over the Holidays we're all accustomed to getting a little emotional.
|
|
By now, most of us are accustomed to the branding terminology.
|
|
Above all, consumers like their surplus, and become accustomed to it.
|
|
But I have to get better accustomed to the virtual world.
|
|
Pennsylvanians are accustomed to politicians and officials leaving office in disgrace.
|
|
In fact, it's the type of thing he's grown accustomed to.
|
|
EVEN FOR A country accustomed to bushfires, the scenes look apocalyptic.
|
|
But the French play by different rules than he's accustomed to.
|
|
He is an electrifying presence and accustomed to occupying center stage.
|
|
Power politics favors regimes accustomed to operating outside the liberal order.
|
|
"I'm not accustomed to that kind of bureaucratic freedom," Ruusunen said.
|
|
Smith and King slowly grew accustomed to their itinerant life style.
|
|
NAIROBI, Kenya — They were accustomed to running barefoot on baking ground.
|
|
She was so accustomed to her own blood, but never his.
|
|
They're very accustomed to being so oppressed and so beaten down.
|
|
But Djokovic is accustomed to playing mental tricks in Ashe Stadium.
|
|
Still, I answer him the way I've grown accustomed to answering.
|
|
It's a tall order, even for someone accustomed to tough assignments.
|
|
Despite the initial misgivings, Copurrnicus has grown accustomed to the harness.
|
|
At 69, Mr. Edwards is accustomed to this sort of clientele.
|
|
They have become accustomed, for instance, to rolling public relations emergencies.
|
|
A Jewish girl of 14, Wachenheimer was accustomed to being ostracized.
|
|
Wozniacki's results have not been the sort she is accustomed to.
|
|
And lines are not something to which this neighborhood is accustomed.
|
|
We are accustomed to walking on concrete in mass produced shoes.
|
|
The health care industry is accustomed to drug prices rising steeply.
|
|
The state is accustomed to hurricanes, but this one is different.
|
|
She had been accustomed to airtight lesson plans and scripted lectures.
|
|
Grisham is still growing accustomed to working directly with the President.
|
|
Doomsday preppers are accustomed to preparing for disasters of all kinds.
|
|
As journalists in China, we are accustomed to dealing with harassment.
|
|
Voting stations accustomed to long lines were virtually empty on Sunday.
|
|
They are accustomed to freedom, personal rights and access to information.
|
|
This abandonment did not apparently pain the sisters, accustomed to nannies.
|
|
Like Micah and Jana, they're accustomed to the small-living lifestyle.
|
|
We have, instead, become accustomed to companies treating employees as disposable.
|
|
Many had grown accustomed to the idea of an early death.
|
|
Some are New York City firefighters accustomed to springing into action.
|
|
The body doesn't get accustomed to changes in temperatures this rapidly.
|
|
They quickly became accustomed to making decisions without consulting their husbands.
|
|
This continued the downward trend that markets have become accustomed to.
|
|
We should not become accustomed to the killing of our colleagues.
|
|
Having grown accustomed to power, some members now fear losing it.
|
|
The public has become accustomed to stories about the Iranian threat.
|
|
Bloomberg is accustomed to spending significant sums on philanthropy and politics.
|
|
Hurlburt became accustomed to shrugging off negative attention and crude sexism.
|
|
So they are accustomed to a high pressure environment almost immediately.
|
|
Americans are not accustomed to dubbing (outside of 1s Bruce Lee films).
|
|
We were both accustomed to visits where the doctor asked the questions.
|
|
We've sort of become accustomed to it, but it is very shocking.
|
|
Thomas stood still, hoping his eyes would grow accustomed to the dark.
|
|
Enterprise lacks a lot of the pathos we're accustomed to in American
|
|
Consumers have become accustomed to the ease of quickly tossing things away.
|
|
Once you get accustomed to it, this structure creates a pleasing rhythm.
|
|
Mobility is a way of life to which they are easily accustomed.
|
|
Most financial services websites aren't accustomed to talking like a real human.
|
|
Even for Yemen, a country accustomed to violence, the carnage was shocking.
|
|
JORGE PAULO LEMANN (pictured), a Brazilian investor, is ill-accustomed to failure.
|
|
After 23 years of incarceration, I'm accustomed to being on high alert.
|
|
Today's lawmakers are far less accustomed to forming such cross-partisan alliances.
|
|
Silicon Valley, long accustomed to an inflow of Chinese money, sees opportunity.
|
|
I think Rachel's accustomed to having to manipulate someone she actually respects.
|
|
This was the new normal we were forced to become accustomed to.
|
|
This glacial pace is something to which residents have become well accustomed.
|
|
Hopefully, they get accustomed to it as we play games like this.
|
|
Tokyo (CNN)Yuriko Koike is a woman accustomed to breaking glass ceilings.
|
|
But then again she's so what I'm accustomed to, 'cause she people.
|
|
Gradually he grows accustomed to the distinct rhythm of a traveller's day.
|
|
I am accustomed to speaking about faith, collaboration, justice, love and peace.
|
|
As Italy's top barnstorming comedian, Beppe Grillo was accustomed to overzealous fans.
|
|
You're bound to make mistakes if you're not accustomed to this style.
|
|
They grow accustomed to hiding their feelings, expressing negative emotions through violence.
|
|
By now, you've become accustomed to the tainted synchronicity of targeted marketing.
|
|
Millennials, accustomed to apps and online services such as Uber Technologies Inc.
|
|
Judge is accustomed to patients coming into her office in a panic.
|
|
If you've been following the price of Bitcoin, you're accustomed to volatility.
|
|
This is likely to be unacceptable to gamers accustomed to 1080p resolution.
|
|
But then again she's so what I'm accustomed to, 'cause she people.
|
|
The effect on an ear accustomed to standard tuning can be invigorating.
|
|
For 210 years, Mr. Donahue had become accustomed to working largely alone.
|
|
The villagers, accustomed to living in a dictatorship, did little to protest.
|
|
"Many Italians are more accustomed to political chaos — remember Berlusconi?" says Binkley.
|
|
Wrapping your head around that when you're accustomed to VHS is hard.
|
|
Needless to say this was not the Butterball I was accustomed to.
|
|
Anyone accustomed to making pie can ace it on the first try.
|
|
Argentine consumers are accustomed to frequent strikes and no disruption was reported.
|
|
The updated Leesa Mattress looks much like the Leesa you're accustomed to.
|
|
But then we're native Northeasterners and we're more accustomed to solid rock.
|
|
Salman is treading through tricky territory, boldly overruling the clerics accustomed to
|
|
A generation accustomed to PVOD will, in time, pull out the rug.
|
|
The Boston Police Department is accustomed to large-scale demonstrations, he said.
|
|
Then again, as fish go, these were already fairly accustomed to electronics.
|
|
I know a lot of young artists are growing accustomed to it.
|
|
Joining the elements—despite its weirdness—is something Peezy is accustomed to.
|
|
He is accustomed to being the least-popular man in the room.
|
|
LONDON (Reuters) - Bond markets have become accustomed to getting their own way.
|
|
He said he had grown accustomed to living with chaos and uncertainty.
|
|
We are habitual pleasers, accustomed — even addicted — to patients' admiration and gratitude.
|
|
"We're not playing the fast game that we're accustomed to," he said.
|
|
Many people have become accustomed to managed care plans through their employment.
|
|
The exhibition has been a revelation for Russians accustomed to ritualized anniversaries.
|
|
Western clinicians were accustomed to treating individuals suffering from deep psychological trauma.
|
|
We have grown accustomed to endangering our bodies running down a dream.
|
|
The world never feels fallen, because we grow accustomed to the fall.
|
|
Karen Gibson, the founder, said she was getting somewhat accustomed to fame.
|
|
Mississippi is hardly accustomed to bruising Senate races between Democrats and Republicans.
|
|
And it sounds like the establishment is getting accustomed to the unimaginable.
|
|
They were accustomed to autonomy, and they were chafing at losing it.
|
|
Natives and newcomers alike grow accustomed to our annual apocalypse of flame.
|
|
They are, as a community, accustomed to living in proximity to secrets.
|
|
By then, Love had grown accustomed to operating in James's mammoth shadow.
|
|
But once accustomed to the layout, the controls were easy to use.
|
|
Above all, consumers like their surplus, and they became accustomed to it.
|
|
We have become accustomed to governors denouncing overreach by the federal government.
|
|
After 20 years of night surfing, Igel is accustomed to dicey situations.
|
|
Home Smart owners will be accustomed to these haphazard rollouts by now.
|
|
Related: Britain is more accustomed to surveillance than any other Western country.
|
|
When you're accustomed to privilege, the aphorism goes, equality feels like oppression.
|
|
Players grow accustomed to being in the same spot game after game.
|
|
The Mexican public has grown accustomed to false starts and dead ends.
|
|
The Ayyubs, accustomed to a middle-class existence, found their lives transformed.
|
|
Another step was revamping a sales force accustomed to selling to telcoms.
|
|
Before long, locals became accustomed to giving tourists directions to her apartment.
|
|
He is accustomed, he added, to being mistaken for another bearded fellow.
|
|
Or, at least, harder than you're accustomed to when pop icons die.
|
|
Investors have become all too accustomed, and maybe immune, to creative entrepreneurial phraseology.
|
|
And like most editors, I am accustomed to telling people what to do.
|
|
Hollywood is racist, but it ain't that racist that you've grown accustomed to.
|
|
But any tech support agent is accustomed to finding porn on a computer.
|
|
AFTER FIVE decades of military rule, the Burmese have grown accustomed to propaganda.
|
|
The medical opinion is that the prosecutrix may be accustomed to sexual intercourse.
|
|
Livestock herders like Adam Farrah are accustomed to lean times and cyclical drought.
|
|
Local officials are accessible for building networks, and citizens are accustomed to volunteering.
|
|
And, for people accustomed to injecting themselves, there are ways around the lights.
|
|
We have become accustomed—perhaps even conditioned—to upgrading everything, all the time.
|
|
As a Planet Fitness member, you grow accustomed to the strange and unusual.
|
|
I'm not totally accustomed to working beside so many different types of people.
|
|
That's more than I'm accustomed to from other premium Windows or Mac laptops.
|
|
We've become quite accustomed to (and obsessed with) taking style cues from Japan.
|
|
ARIZONA's voters aren't accustomed to being courted so late in a presidential election.
|
|
Accustomed to making the weather, think-tanks were victims of an intellectual storm.
|
|
South Korea and Japan are accustomed to the North's frequent threats to attack.
|
|
It's the kind of colorful final election rally South Africans are accustomed to.
|
|
After all, she's perfectly accustomed to playing characters from the '50s and '60s.
|
|
This age group, Yuen says, is already accustomed to the Snapchat's and Musical.
|
|
But such animals are highly trained and generally accustomed to the underground environment.
|
|
Even if users think it's important, they're very accustomed to giving it up.
|
|
Eventually, we grow accustomed to these chewy, protein-dense, vaguely meat-like foodstuffs.
|
|
Nothing gets a population accustomed to decentralized, nongovernmental commercial activity like commercial activity.
|
|
The wonders of modern science have accustomed us to medical explanations and diagnoses.
|
|
It shows a flight attendant who is accustomed to unfettered authority over passengers.
|
|
The imminent blackouts stirred little protest from a population accustomed to making do.
|
|
The case captivated a Lebanese public accustomed to seeing political violence go unpunished.
|
|
If any destination has become accustomed to outrageous accommodation prices, it's San Francisco.
|
|
She realizes they may all be too accustomed to eating whatever they want.
|
|
For newcomers to a war zone, they've quickly become accustomed to their surroundings.
|
|
Young Cypriots, accustomed to life on a divided island, are drifting further apart.
|
|
He warned members not to grow accustomed to attacks on hospitals and ambulances.
|
|
This country has long been accustomed to painful shortages, even of basic foods.
|
|
Russians, accustomed to the international prestige that superpower status affords, have responded predictably.
|
|
The big picture: Shoppers have become accustomed to almost free, lightning fast delivery.
|
|
"We grew accustomed to not hearing any facts or evidence," the embassy said.
|
|
Once disabling arthritis develops, the activities one is accustomed to can become problematic.
|
|
Obaid-Chinoy is accustomed to this kind of mixed reaction to her work.
|
|
Mr. Jégo patted his arm comfortingly, accustomed to the demands of his clientele.
|
|
One is a man of the people, accustomed to fist pumps and handshakes.
|
|
It's clear that he's accustomed to that, people taking him at his word.
|
|
After 16 months, Americans have grown accustomed to Trump in the White House.
|
|
Veterans are accustomed to a clear power structure and receiving and giving orders.
|
|
Above, Lori Rifkin, a lawyer, said she was "well accustomed" to such comments.
|
|
"The resistance movement has grown accustomed to the zombie walker (bill)," Wikler said.
|
|
I grieved for my old life, and the life I was accustomed to.
|
|
"That's something that people have grown accustomed to," Porter said of his style.
|
|
"We've grown accustomed to this life with all its cruelty and extreme hardship."
|
|
For TV networks, the television audience is already accustomed to engaging on Facebook.
|
|
Southerners, not accustomed to such things, confused the tremblors for the Second Coming.
|
|
I saw flecks of pale silver where I'd grown accustomed to showy gold.
|
|
That is in part because they are accustomed to instant gratification, he said.
|
|
Gamers accustomed to zombies, dragons, spaceships and building civilizations were apprehensive at first.
|
|
And for those not accustomed to telecommuting, remaining productive may be a concern.
|
|
The former mayor is accustomed to spending significant sums on philanthropy and politics.
|
|
Staff members are often leery of the changes in their accustomed cooking routines.
|
|
We Americans do not grasp how insidiously Trump has accustomed us to malignancy.
|
|
"Conservative minorities are accustomed to being attacked for telling the truth," she said.
|
|
His voice was a razor's edge: modulated, decisive, accustomed to getting things done.
|
|
As the youngest, Ms. Diez, 28, is accustomed to going with the flow.
|
|
Most have had little formal schooling and are not accustomed to civilian life.
|
|
They are not accustomed to being embarrassed the way they were Tuesday night.
|
|
I had gotten too accustomed to Baghdad&aposs regular bomb and mortar noises.
|
|
Astronomers are accustomed to satellites occasionally passing into view — one at a time.
|
|
First-class and frequent flyer passengers, for instance, are accustomed to preferential boarding.
|
|
Over the coming days, we became accustomed to a war-zone-like atmosphere.
|
|
Or perhaps you've become accustomed to calling the superintendent when things go awry.
|
|
Linden trains in northern Michigan and so is well accustomed to harsh weather.
|
|
This is a club that has grown too accustomed to "weird" things happening.
|
|
By now, however, we've grown accustomed to speaking with strangers on the web.
|
|
I think people are more accustomed to this kind of business as usual.
|
|
Traders are by now accustomed to baby steps towards monetary easing in China.
|
|
I've honestly grown fairly accustomed to using the left stick for basically everything.
|
|
As a Conservative Republican, I am not accustomed to siding with American Unions.
|
|
But for equity investors accustomed to double-digit returns, it'll likely be disappointing.
|
|
Mr. Pérez is accustomed to such phone calls — and to people returning his.
|
|
There, he found the "organized chaos" in which he is accustomed to working.
|
|
That's largely because he, like other veteran diplomats, is accustomed to documenting everything.
|
|
Almost without exception, I was greeted with a joy I wasn't accustomed to.
|
|
Amazon was long accustomed to highly deferential treatment from localities across the country.
|
|
But the Upper West Side was different from what she was accustomed to.
|
|
For someone who was accustomed to being independent, the sudden inertia was maddening.
|
|
But Felix himself is not the Felix we have grown accustomed to anymore.
|
|
Air travel was much more glamorous and luxurious than we are accustomed to.
|
|
Verlander then had to quickly become accustomed to new players and a new town.
|
|
" Pennsylvanians are accustomed to politics that sometimes resemble an episode from "House of Cards.
|
|
"That's the Paul George we are accustomed to," Pacers center Myles Turner told reporters.
|
|
SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Investors are accustomed to the bold promises of Tesla Inc's (TSLA.
|
|
It takes a few moments to get accustomed to reading the time this way.
|
|
Accustomed to more lavish environs, leaders like Saudi King Salman sent top advisers instead.
|
|
The lifestyle he had grown accustomed to was shattered in just one fateful moment.
|
|
Investors, boards and executive teams are accustomed to this model and can plan accordingly.
|
|
Brooks said he has gotten accustomed to helping satisfy his wife's ever-shifting appetite.
|
|
A gentle mist rolls in, delighting mainland visitors more accustomed to toxic coal haze.
|
|
By contrast, as Iraq's Shias grew accustomed to power, their own apocalyptic impulse waned.
|
|
Public display Trump is accustomed to making high-profile hires out in the open.
|
|
It's 1 AM. His partner Mathilde, accustomed to such a scene, awakens him gently.
|
|
"It was great to see Nola pitch like we've grown accustomed to," Mackanin said.
|
|
Yet, Malik says he'll never get accustomed to the public tracking their every move.
|
|
The coming year is likely to be bumpier than investors have become accustomed to.
|
|
I do agree, and I think we're just not accustomed to talking about vaginas.
|
|
As I grew accustomed to it, however, I found it more helpful than hindering.
|
|
We are accustomed to hearing that European tech is perpetually in Silicon Valley's shadow.
|
|
She's a young woman, still growing accustomed to her powers, but she's also formidable.
|
|
We're accustomed to hearing positives first and only then a brief footnote on negatives.
|
|
Nike's customers may be more accustomed to politically tinged marketing than those of Gillette.
|
|
Suffice it to say, the VMA red carpet is accustomed to jaw-dropping moments.
|
|
When you're accustomed to unjust privilege, equality feels like oppression, as the saying goes.
|
|
SCHEDULING CONFLICT Jay Triano is still getting accustomed to his new role in Phoenix.
|
|
Camping stars Jennifer Garner in a role we're not accustomed to seeing her in.
|
|
But selling business software isn't glamorous, and Microsoft isn't a company accustomed to losing.
|
|
McClure has grown accustomed to drug overdoses -- his crew responds daily to such calls.
|
|
We've grown accustomed to taking our entire digital life with us wherever we go.
|
|
And one tradition she may have to become accustomed to is extending her bedtime.
|
|
Cute images of the kind we've become accustomed to began showing up around 22009.
|
|
So Dr. Pruetz and her colleagues let the apes grow accustomed to their company.
|
|
Once they become more accustomed to the ride, add mileage and take longer trips!
|
|
This unorthodox politician has stumped a media accustomed to a traditional style of politicking.
|
|
The surge has been surprising Border Patrol agents more accustomed to Spanish-speaking migrants.
|
|
People — a younger generation, particularly — are accustomed now not to be interrupted by ads.
|
|
Women are fully accustomed to men confidently, carelessly approaching them out of the blue.
|
|
Muna was not accustomed to being alone in the presence of an unknown man.
|
|
Yes, I think that they are getting accustomed to what the presidency can do.
|
|
But now people are getting accustomed to seeing me and they go, 'Oh wow.
|
|
Turkey and the EU are accustomed to kicking the question into the long grass.
|
|
Trump behavior they are more accustomed to seeing in their clinics than in the
|
|
Politicians of a certain era have become accustomed to using the African-American community.
|
|
Our campaign is accustomed to these right-wing attacks and they're going to continue.
|
|
"We become accustomed to things that the president does, in directing DOJ," Yates said.
|
|
Vapers have grown accustomed to bad news lately, as well as to patiently waiting.
|
|
Ms. Deyn, after all, has been long accustomed to performing, on camera and off.
|
|
We may have to learn to do without some things we've become accustomed to.
|
|
It's going to work them in," said one, turning to add: "We've become accustomed.
|
|
I should have grown accustomed to fateful twists and turns between life and death.
|
|
Americans are accustomed to the idea of paying for cheap goods made in China.
|
|
After weeks of practice, I became accustomed to the Hugo 28000's arcane controls.
|
|
For his part, von Spakovsky is accustomed to being in the line of fire.
|
|
Be aware that a conversion could mean facing fees you aren't accustomed to paying.
|
|
We Americans have not been accustomed, lately, to discussing our collective future without rancor.
|
|
And the next generation of wealth is growing up more accustomed to digital solutions.
|
|
Such events did not leave much of an impression—we became accustomed to them.
|
|
So we are already accustomed to the pressure, this favoritism you all talk about.
|
|
And in practice, learning to live with something surely means growing accustomed to it.
|
|
After four decades in Washington, Hatch was accustomed to the cruel rituals of Washington.
|
|
But Panama, long accustomed to following its own path, was far behind in compliance.
|
|
Even though it's something she's not accustomed to, it's something she wants to change.
|
|
We've grown accustomed to getting the full narrative of the cream of the crop.
|
|
The lack of access has unsurprisingly frustrated journalists accustomed to covering the White House.
|
|
Japanese companies accustomed to their ways are often reluctant to succumb to investor pressure.
|
|
Accustomed to advertising's creative freedom, Buckley chafed against the constraints of the studio system.
|
|
If you're a Game of Thrones fan, you've likely become accustomed to two certainties.
|
|
The U.S. will need "quantum natives who are accustomed to thinking differently," says Gil.
|
|
"Most people are accustomed to access in terms of the built environment," Sheppard noted.
|
|
Denizens of Los Angeles have grown accustomed to the theater's specific brand of ingenuity.
|
|
Over the course of the Trump administration, Americans have grown accustomed to political chaos.
|
|
My team was accustomed to winning, as our typically opponents were not difficult competition.
|
|
Since Donald Trump became president, we've almost become accustomed to his incessant, berserk gobbledygook.
|
|
For renters accustomed to Manhattan prices, Brooklyn can still seem like a relative bargain.
|
|
But the brazen attacks have shocked even those accustomed to daily incidents of violence.
|
|
Have you grown accustomed to Bartlett Sher's revival of this Lerner and Loewe musical?
|
|
But this year and next, we may not see the bounty we're accustomed to.
|
|
SA: Your husband is a beloved only child accustomed to this level of involvement.
|
|
Gallup concluded that South Koreans have grown accustomed to North Korea's threats of provocation.
|
|
And Niantic could get far more people accustomed to AR — a win for Google.
|
|
There was much work to be done, but Mill was accustomed to hard work.
|
|
A veteran of the commodity world, Mr. Pagh is accustomed to prices that fluctuate.
|
|
TOKYO — Leaders in Asia have grown accustomed by now to President Trump's breathtaking unpredictability.
|
|
I loved being on the move and I got very accustomed to working autonomously.
|
|
Giddings, an outspoken abolitionist, was accustomed to such treatment from the pro-slavery side.
|
|
Firefighters accustomed to tough situations were overcome with emotion after responding to the fire.
|
|
Video customers are accustomed to playing a favorite game for months at a time.
|
|
Accustomed as we are to knowing these things, we forget that neither is obvious.
|
|
A legendary actress with her own theater, she is accustomed to having her way.
|
|
The funding situation is simply "what we're accustomed to" in Greene County, she said.
|
|
"I am more accustomed to the American culture than the Turkish culture," she says.
|
|
My kids became accustomed to my maiden name being part of my "Official" name.
|
|
Residents said they were accustomed to hurricanes and floods, but not of this magnitude.
|
|
"People have grown accustomed to a certain baseline level of outrage," Fisher told me.
|
|
We've been more accustomed to basically zero percent on bills for the longest time.
|
|
They have become so accustomed to playing their lives that it is perfectly normal.
|
|
"A lot of artists are accustomed to 30 inches, 40 inches," Mr. Smith said.
|
|
That unique situation — wild animals who are accustomed to humans — makes for good viewing.
|
|
O'Brien is accustomed to working through issues, but Mendelssohn has been virtually trouble free.
|
|
We're accustomed to thinking of our cells as sharing an identical set of genes.
|
|
People in his part of the world are accustomed to having their lives upended.
|
|
But the British public has already grown accustomed to the use of surveillance cameras.
|
|
I've become so accustomed to that possibility that I've found some comfort in it.
|
|
Graham was accustomed to helping athletes work through torn knee ligaments and broken ankles.
|
|
Entrepreneurs accustomed to achieving double-digit returns would scarcely notice a modest wealth tax.
|
|
Americans are accustomed to regarding the I.R.S. as the source of their tax miseries.
|
|
The team's supporters, accustomed to blowouts, grew restless, noisily criticizing the coaches' play calls.
|
|
They are accustomed to making complex decisions involving tradeoffs, especially when a crisis arises.
|
|
Still, with users accustomed to Netflix's ad-free viewing, there has been some backlash.
|
|
Ms Harris, accustomed to succeeding at whatever she did, seemed flummoxed by the struggle.
|
|
In the meantime, the feds might lose a tool they've grown accustomed to using.
|
|
Many of the couples touched by the executive order are accustomed to living apart.
|
|
For an actor long accustomed to coming up short, it was an unnerving request.
|
|
Sunday's championship game will not have its accustomed prime-time slot on ESPN, either.
|
|
Raised under Israeli military occupation, I grew up accustomed to a feeling of powerlessness.
|
|
That's a tough pill to swallow for people accustomed to doing things for themselves.
|
|
I was an outspoken student, accustomed to raising my hand and proudly answering questions.
|
|
College students have become accustomed to saving money and finding what they need online.
|
|
For print editors accustomed to black-and-white on a weekday, this was nirvana.
|
|
But he has not performed in the manner his team is accustomed to seeing.
|
|
We're accustomed to relying on one another for information as much as anything else.
|
|
It's a pretty simple regulation that the insurance industry has already become accustomed to.
|
|
Even with the changes, they had become accustomed to being restrained for too long.
|
|
Like ESPN, the Mets are accustomed to the revolving door in the baseball industry.
|
|
Higher velocity is certainly coming, and not just where you're accustomed to seeing it.
|
|
Gone are the navy blue uniforms we have become accustomed to over the years.
|
|
Staff are accustomed to generous working conditions, and their trade unions forcefully defend their perks.
|
|
But this season lacked the sort of bold political discourse we've recently grown accustomed to.
|
|
Employees will be accustomed to Facebook being a place for gossip, cat videos, and friends.
|
|
Anyone who uses Safari is very much accustomed to the wrath of the rainbow wheel.
|
|
Over time, customers have become accustomed to a certain level of complimentary service and amenities.
|
|
Being primarily an iPhone user, the Razer Phone 2 was heavier than I'm accustomed to.
|
|
For those who've grown accustomed to design-forward sites and apps, Match hits that mark.
|
|
This is a classic phishing scam, one you should become accustomed to recognizing on sight.
|
|
In a general campaign, Trump will not be surrounded by supplicants like he's accustomed to.
|
|
At the time, modem users were accustomed to getting busy signals from overloaded online services.
|
|
Extremophile organisms, accustomed to arid conditions, were unable to cope with the influx of water.
|
|
The typical supplier is secretive, battle-hardened, controlled by its founder and accustomed to volatility.
|
|
Some employees said they didn't report incidents because they'd grown accustomed to bad audience behavior.
|
|
So, I guess you could say I've become accustomed to writing about very intimate matters.
|
|
"It didn't have the magic that I was accustomed to," he has said of them.
|
|
The author seems to think we are accustomed to non-corrupt entities and government officials.
|
|
She taught students with challenges and was accustomed to district employees knocking on her door.
|
|
That's not necessarily a call to action that all Facebook users are accustomed to making.
|
|
As one of the stars of "Queer Eye," Karamo Brown is accustomed to giving advice.
|
|
Many Salvadoreans, accustomed to accounts of malfeasance by their leaders, are more despairing than outraged.
|
|
Folding phones are considerably thicker than the svelte "slablets" to which consumers have become accustomed.
|
|
We learn to grow accustomed to the absences, because it seems we have no choice.
|
|
Ezra Klein is accustomed to long, wide-ranging conversations with newsmakers and political power players.
|
|
Former Bachelorette DeAnna Pappas Stagliano is still getting accustomed to being a mom of two.
|
|
The move has unleashed a wave of optimism among a people accustomed to bleak survivalism.
|
|
Barr was prepared for disappointment; he was accustomed to the Catholic Church letting him down.
|
|
The next-day-delivery shopping to which many Britons have grown accustomed could become harder.
|
|
I eventually became accustomed to the control scheme, but it never felt comfortable or natural.
|
|
Certain characteristics of the racing also resembled what fans are accustomed to seeing at superspeedways.
|
|
Like any businessman, he is accustomed to asking for a lot and settling for less.
|
|
It's mechanical and includes enough travel for new users to become accustomed to it easily.
|
|
Would her lady parts ever get accustomed to the shifty, kinky nature of Grey's list?
|
|
We are so accustomed to gun violence that we have become inured to it -- numb.
|
|
The blackouts in March represented a dramatic decline for Venezuelans already accustomed to poor conditions.
|
|
As President Donald Trump's most trusted and only advisers, they had become accustomed to this.
|
|
"Kevin needs that money to keep up the lifestyle that he has become accustomed to."
|
|
They pine for the simple pleasures of E13, their old seats and accustomed vantage points.
|
|
Mr Card reckoned that Miami had become accustomed to handling large inflows of unskilled migrants.
|
|
Melissa: With previous partners, having drunk sex was something I had just been accustomed to.
|
|
It also appears that markets are getting somewhat more accustomed to the president's Fed criticism.
|
|
Becoming accustomed to contemporary user behavior forces you to reexamine the internet's less savory corners.
|
|
Somehow, audiences have come to grow accustomed to real people having extraordinary, not comfortable days.
|
|
Members of the Little Red Wagon Club are accustomed to picking up other people's trash.
|
|
It's a new business model for Roku, which is accustomed to making money from hardware.
|
|
He is a man of means, in his seventies, and accustomed to getting his way.
|
|
Most, however, say they've grown accustomed to the sight of "aunties" donning the face-kinis.
|
|
So maybe it'll cut down on thank yous as nominees become more accustomed to it.
|
|
The homes resembled the Midwestern abodes back in the US that Ford was accustomed to.
|
|
And the parties will grow accustomed to his visits and weary of his talking points.
|
|
In the first half, he missed throws that we aren't accustomed to seeing Brady miss.
|
|
But most importantly, people have spent eight years growing accustomed to scrolling the Instagram feed.
|
|
"I think there are certain times people are accustomed to eating things," Ms. Tung said.
|
|
But there's a concern that their prolonged intervention has made investors accustomed to their support.
|
|
For viewers accustomed to the rigid rules of TV formula, those early seasons felt visionary.
|
|
After three seasons on the series, he's grown accustomed to keeping the plot to himself.
|
|
Apparently, nitrate prints are much more beautiful than the versions we are accustomed to seeing.
|
|
" "New Hampshire people aren't accustomed to walking away or stepping down from their civic duty.
|
|
Americans have grown accustomed to Chinese competition—that is, the competition reported by the media.
|
|
The organizers were accustomed to string bands, and Wills insisted on performing with a drummer.
|
|
Those footnotes, he said, have become obsolete as courts have grown accustomed to transgender litigants.
|
|
His comments were far from the dog whistle the black community has grown accustomed to.
|
|
Even parts of the United States accustomed to cold weather are preparing for the worst.
|
|
Many were New York residents accustomed to sneaking into New Jersey for a better deal.
|
|
People here are accustomed to the threats from ongoing border strife between India and Pakistan.
|
|
I've grown accustomed to her face You don't know Shubnum Khan, but you've seen her.
|
|
Diners accustomed to East and West Coast oysters often find Gulf oysters unwieldy and bland.
|
|
He's given up a few more hits than we're accustomed to seeing, but it's early.
|
|
I would have guessed you'd be so accustomed to putting out new material by now.
|
|
Louvre workers, like all self-respecting (and salaried) French citizens, are accustomed to striking occasionally.
|
|
He embraced flaws and oddities, confusing critics who had grown accustomed to slick studio work.
|
|
TBS produces all its games and is not accustomed to picking up a local simulcast.
|
|
Inside, it was hard to move—or breathe, if you were accustomed to smokeless bars.
|
|
She's accustomed to having her fiction critiqued, but this feels much scarier, and more personal.
|
|
Consumers, businesses and politicians have also gotten accustomed to — or spoiled by — low interest rates.
|
|
Even junior editorial assistants grew accustomed to catered lunches and use of a car service.
|
|
I overwhelmingly use headphones or earbuds with my iPhone, and I'm accustomed to that setup.
|
|
For audiences accustomed to Tchaikovsky's lyricism and Mozart's familiar harmonies, this music borders on incomprehensibility.
|
|
"My body became accustomed to half a milligram, and the drug stopped working," she said.
|
|
Not accustomed to Europe's common use of military time, he had gotten the hours wrong.
|
|
This is just how it goes when you're accustomed to a certain level of success.
|
|
Fall and Koumadje are accustomed to stares in airports and snide remarks from opposing fans.
|
|
It's definitely not an idea that US policymakers or the public will be accustomed to.
|
|
They have grown accustomed to the politics of rationalization and the moral compromises it demands.
|
|
Alabamians are not accustomed to being bathed in national admiration in matters unrelated to football.
|
|
We were more accustomed to being away from each other than in each other's presence.
|
|
Absent the documentary material he's accustomed to, he overcompensates with copious analyses of Leonardo's works.
|
|
Once there, the group upset the expectations of European audiences accustomed to mainstream American jazz.
|
|
The performances, even if not the period-instrument versions we're now accustomed to, are remarkable.
|
|
That will require persuading communities accustomed to single-family homes to accept condos and townhomes.
|
|
And then third is what we've all become accustomed to talking about now, social distancing.
|
|
It's just something I've become accustomed to and it really doesn't matter in the end.
|
|
The group — more accustomed to swing, ballet and the electric slide — resist this new style.
|
|
As a freelance writer, I'm well accustomed to negotiating the challenges of working from home.
|
|
A company accustomed to vertiginous growth for its entire life does not easily shift gears.
|
|
By her sophomore year at Connecticut, Sue Bird was accustomed to guiding recruits around campus.
|
|
These women were high achievers, accustomed to knocking down barriers, not running up against them.
|
|
As an American journalist in Beijing, our colleague was accustomed to a watchful Chinese government.
|
|
As a black Southern woman, I have grown accustomed to navigating a many-voiced universe.
|
|
But that trip left some voters, accustomed to large amounts of retail politicking, wanting more.
|
|
We did a night lesson so I could get accustomed to driving in the dark.
|
|
Well, haven't we become sadly accustomed to administration officials who can't get their stories straight?
|
|
He seems accustomed to employing his physical charisma in the service of his business interests.
|
|
"We're very accustomed to the naysayers and the critics," she said, according to pool reports.
|
|
THE STAFFEREric Holcomb, Indiana Republican Aides to politicians are accustomed to working in the shadows.
|
|
We will continue to treat her in the manner to which she has become accustomed.
|
|
A quick-talking anti-discrimination lawyer, she has grown more accustomed to insult than praise.
|
|
It is a situation Ryan has grown accustomed to, and it might be valuable experience.
|
|
They were accustomed to occasional moments like this when one revealed himself to the others.
|
|
For forty years, in large social groups, I'd accustomed myself to feeling like the problem.
|
|
Above all, people are now more accustomed to assume convenience from these products and services.
|
|
Markets accustomed to selling tropical fruits and dried seafood to Chinese customers are hurting, too.
|
|
As investors grew more accustomed to shutdowns, they seemed to become more blasé about them.
|
|
Osborne was accustomed to toy manufacturers begging her to carry their products in her store.
|
|
But the orchestra had grown accustomed to the larger-than-life presence of Ms. Borda.
|
|
That may not be enough to support the lavish lifestyle they&aposre accustomed to, however.
|
|
The brand's revival and electric revamp might confuse consumers accustomed with the Hummer of old.
|
|
As I grew accustomed to the territory, I felt myself becoming less and less welcome.
|
|
Marmots have become accustomed to the presence of humans in Austria's Hohe Tauern National Park.
|
|
The researchers first accustomed young rats to play and tickling, which the rats would invite.
|
|
But Mr. Hollein was accustomed to running his own show in his previous director positions.
|
|
"Najib has become accustomed to weathering international investigations," Eurasia said in a note to clients.
|
|
She wins over a crowd more accustomed to the Mixolydian jams of the Grateful Dead.
|
|
"People are not accustomed to thinking about social interaction through a strategic lens," Nordgren says.
|
|
It is an irritation the 35-year-old mother of four has become accustomed to.
|
|
It is an irritation the 35-year-old mother of four has become accustomed to.
|
|
The postwar world grew accustomed to the rapid growth made possible by the baby boom.
|
|
By now, audiences have grown accustomed to superhero movies that put women in the spotlight.
|
|
Like Trump, Bloomberg is a hardened New Yorker accustomed to wielding both power and influence.
|
|
The city was not accustomed to the company playing hardball, let alone commenting on politics.
|
|
How would such an encounter differ from the ones most of us are accustomed to?
|
|
"This is totally different from what the shelter system is accustomed to doing," he said.
|
|
"There's this saying that when you're accustomed to privilege, equality feels like oppression," she says.
|
|
People are so accustomed to it that people are desensitized to a lot of stuff.
|
|
The depiction is not at all how we've become accustomed to seeing ancient sculpture presented.
|
|
Consumers have become accustomed to calling out names for popular voice assistants, such as Amazon.
|
|
It took weeks after my initial shock to get accustomed to iOS 11's Control Center.
|
|
"We're so accustomed in our culture to seeing drawings of penises all the time," Altman said.
|
|
It was not the Trump the public had become accustomed to during the volatile presidential campaign.
|
|
Maybe he doesn't—he's a professional ballplayer, and sometimes you get accustomed to that catered life.
|
|
Those more accustomed to Mendeleev's version, fret not—our table takes its cues from the original.
|
|
He was accustomed to giving earnings reports every year at Exxon, but not much in between.
|
|
She worked really hard to confuse women who were accustomed to going to our old location.
|
|
Thanks to dip powder and gel formulas, there's a manicure standard that we've become accustomed to.
|
|
Adrien Mondot and Claire Bardainne have become accustomed to showing their work to large theater audiences.
|
|
Keepers have been getting Bao Bao accustomed to her traveling crate over the past few weeks.
|
|
Correa received a far less warm welcome than he had been accustomed to in the past.
|
|
Especially after the controversial bathroom bill in March, they have become somewhat accustomed to these antics.
|
|
JonBenet, a former Little Miss Colorado, was accustomed to the spotlight, even at her young age.
|
|
These new gestures will be a paradigm shift for for people accustomed to the home button.
|
|
Mistakes seem to count more when they're made by players who aren't accustomed to making many.
|
|
Rick wouldn't survive back in the wild with his deformities and is too accustomed to humans.
|
|
They are accustomed to navigating classrooms and workspaces in which most of their colleagues are white.
|
|
Importantly, the birds showed no signs of becoming accustomed to the eyes, even after five weeks.
|
|
Adding that feature helped society adopt the new technology and become accustomed to it pretty quickly.
|
|
Post 9/11, Muslims—especially Muslim men—flying to America have become accustomed to extreme vetting.
|
|
It was the smirk, many Mexicans observed, of a man accustomed to getting away with it.
|
|
The throat becomes accustomed to it after the first week or so, depending on the weather.
|
|
New Yorkers are also accustomed to high-profile visitors, like President Barack Obama, causing temporary chaos.
|
|
Vulnerable countries have long grown accustomed to Russia's habit of wielding energy as a geopolitical weapon.
|
|
Los Angeles Chargers defensive end Joey Bosa is accustomed to corralling opposing quarterbacks and ball carriers.
|
|
If you're accustomed to the "language" of contemporary AAA gaming, Chung confounds it at every turn.
|
|
Even so, their presence in a country accustomed to unarmed officers policing by consent is controversial.
|
|
Fire ants are native to the wetlands of Brazil, so they're accustomed to torrential rainy seasons.
|
|
Rebecca was accustomed to the smiles (the smiles concealed stares) and the half attempts at conversation.
|
|
Ever since, Yomeda has enjoyed learning about and growing accustomed to the wild nature of chipmunks.
|
|
Like many black families, we had grown accustomed to being mostly invisible on the small screen.
|
|
The rules we are accustomed to today in presidential primary debates are actually very recent inventions.
|
|
Perhaps it's because they're already accustomed to entities that operate this way: Silicon Valley tech companies.
|
|
Jeans aficionados may be accustomed to hearing some unusual tips on keeping their denim products fresh.
|
|
We have all been accustomed to using specialized apps and even devices for reading e-books.
|
|
But the downward trend, which observers have become accustomed to, seems to be about to change.
|
|
We are accustomed to party labels as very meaningful shorthand for principles, beliefs, and policy stances.
|
|
The situation has become convenient for Israelis and for too long, and people have become accustomed.
|
|
In stark contrast, Hillary Clinton is measured, pragmatic and much more accustomed to Russian-style diplomacy.
|
|
Andrew M. Cuomo may have accustomed her to leading events that others have sought to avoid.
|
|
This was a far cry from the affectedly quaint confectioner parlors I had grown accustomed to.
|
|
It's an understandably difficult thing to hear, given the rate of change we've grown accustomed to.
|
|
Players who are familiar with the series will be pretty accustomed to how Yakuza 6 plays.
|
|
The rope she was accustomed to using was being diluted with synthetic fibers in the market.
|
|
As a born-and-raised Manhattanite, 30-year-old Jessie Lipskin is accustomed to minimalist living.
|
|
I've grown accustomed to playing myself in fictional scenarios through immersive theater and alternate reality games.
|
|
These critters tend to be highly specialized, geographically restricted, and not at all accustomed to disturbance.
|
|
"It wasn't a typical outing that we're accustomed to from Bum," Giants manager Bruce Bochy said.
|
|
It's certainly a jarring change for Instagram's community, which has grown accustomed to the old feed.
|
|
The Patriots are also not accustomed to being on the road for these kinds of games.
|
|
Instead of using chords, they are more accustomed to one note being played at a time.
|
|
Not least, a decentralised bureaucracy is accustomed to pursuing breakneck local growth—and damn the consequences.
|
|
Maybe this was Scott's covert mission to get Khloé accustomed to the sheer exhaustion of motherhood.
|
|
We've become so accustomed to the pundit class just glibly talking about everything under the sun.
|
|
The longevity of this community can seem astounding to those accustomed to the modern gaming cycle.
|
|
If you pee every time you feel the slightest urge, your body becomes accustomed to that.
|
|
Americans were accustomed to a longstanding model: institutions and their leaders as the stalwart of democracy.
|
|
Let me be even more clear: the P-Series doesn't work the way you're accustomed to.
|
|
Barnard is accustomed to tests going wrong, but this hasn't dampened his hopes for his rockets.
|
|
A ribbon ankle wrap is a nod to the style the ninja turtle's are accustomed to.
|
|
It was a common occurrence for senior-level skaters, most of whom were accustomed to them.
|
|
The jobs that remain pay a fraction of what the oil workers had grown accustomed to.
|
|
But they present the risk of getting travelers to accustomed to discounted rates or free stays.
|
|
It's a bad and harmful policy, but one that foreign NGOs are accustomed to dealing with.
|
|
Western consumers are accustomed to using many different apps to access the internet, not just one.
|
|
But Republicans have become accustomed to questioning the official analyses of their signature pieces of legislation.
|
|
This is important because people living under dictatorships are not accustomed to open dialogue and debate.
|
|
He also told her that women students are accustomed to "paying for it" with their bodies.
|
|
"Maybe China's not accustomed to dealing with a strong president who will not relent," he said.
|
|
Cashin has previously mentioned Wall Street has become somewhat accustomed to Trump's "dramatic" approach to dealmaking.
|
|
With his knack for laying electric cables, he had grown accustomed to working almost every day.
|
|
She was also accustomed to men, especially on social media, dismissing her work out of hand.
|
|
They are accustomed to a sharing economy that subscribes to many of cohousing's principles and practices.
|
|
Pick up and hold your juvenile rodent frequently, so that it becomes accustomed to human touch.
|
|
We're accustomed to linear time, with one event leading to another: a revolution, then a coup.
|
|
" Durvasula agreed: "The population as a whole is getting more and more accustomed to getting praise.
|
|
The lay-low strategy is a departure in style for a president accustomed to rhetorical bombast.
|
|
Chinese soccer fans are accustomed to their team's letting them down when the pressure is on.
|
|
Instead of the usual spiel I've become accustomed to, Smith's language was a bit more positive.
|
|
Just when you grow accustomed to a blissful melodic phrase, she's moved onto something totally different.
|
|
Código knows that even little kids have become accustomed to listening to vallenato in their neighborhood.
|
|
Getting people accustomed to watching organic videos can make them more receptive to watching video ads.
|
|
A CEO president might be more accustomed to making decisions based on short-term cost savings.
|
|
Northern California is accustomed to wildfires and occasional wafts of smoke that drift with the winds.
|
|
Grapefruits can also be somewhat bitter, which may turn off people accustomed to honey-sweet tangerines.
|
|
This is a pattern that health care observers in Washington have become accustomed to in 2017.
|
|
The coverage came as a surprise to a company accustomed to going about its business quietly.
|
|
"The areas where you're accustomed to seeing goats wandering around, snow is not there," says Mow.
|
|
" — much as anyone plying my craft these days must grow accustomed to "Oh, yeah, fake news!
|
|
For decades, Mexico had been accustomed to having a constant stream of people leave the country.
|
|
Instead of writing in solitude, as he was accustomed to, he needed near constant physical assistance.
|
|
Even Real Madrid, a club more accustomed to leading than following, was impressed by City's model.
|
|
But now what you have is a system operating outside the spec [that you're accustomed to].
|
|
But younger Japanese are growing more accustomed to living and working with international neighbors and colleagues.
|
|
He is accustomed to angering the Manhattan power elite, not the leader of the free world.
|
|
But as she grew older, she became accustomed to the speed and convenience of the era.
|
|
It wasn't until I went off to college that I became accustomed to eating at restaurants.
|
|
The symptoms had built up over time, and I had simply grown accustomed to feeling bad.
|
|
Civilian life often lacks structure, camaraderie, and a sense of purpose to which veterans are accustomed.
|
|
GANGNEUNG, South Korea — Figure skaters, like Broadway actors, are accustomed to giving matinee and evening performances.
|
|
At the Pillow, the company dances to taped music, a drawback to which you grow accustomed.
|
|
And the public is increasingly accustomed to the comfort and free choice of a capitalist economy.
|
|
But what happens when five individuals accustomed to being solo performers have to share the spotlight?
|
|
At this point, I don't really feel anything about it because I'm accustomed to people's ignorance.
|
|
It can take two to three months for a woman to become accustomed to the device.
|
|
Residents of China's smog-choked metropolises long ago grew accustomed to dealing with stubborn air pollutants.
|
|
Officials warned Chicago residents, accustomed to chilling winters, to expect an unusually deep and dangerous freeze.
|
|
The once-powerful leader of the Sinaloa drug cartel was accustomed to being flanked by bodyguards.
|
|
Though, those accustomed to more traditional and understated design might view it as a bit kitschy.
|
|
Users in China are becoming more accustomed to so-called "super apps" like Tencent-owned WeChat.
|
|
These people are gifted, experienced, and trained imagination mavens accustomed to working within a time budget.
|
|
And Mr. Upton travels light, which can flummox subjects accustomed to how other shelter magazines operate.
|
|
Six years into the Syrian war, we've grown accustomed to the images of death and devastation.
|
|
We've already become so accustomed to his egomania that we sometimes forget how remarkable it is.
|
|
We are accustomed to speaking about photographs as though they were identical to their subject matter.
|
|
Then she gave me that annoyed look I'd become accustomed to during her middle school years.
|
|
President Donald Trump's aides have grown accustomed to ignoring their mercurial boss as they deem necessary.
|
|
Even sections we call "clear" will look scruffy and forlorn to people accustomed to manicured cemeteries.
|
|
Veteran Florida politicians accustomed to tight electoral margins could shrug off the state's whiplash-like results.
|
|
Everyone is so accustomed to this state of affairs that people have forgotten to question it.
|
|
They had become accustomed to providing this as part of a benefit package and, after Healthcare.
|
|
And that's because the adage is true: When you're accustomed to privilege, equality feels like oppression.
|
|
And a generation of workers accustomed to information sharing has grown numb to its negative consequences.
|
|
She's already accustomed to serving in office — last year, she was the junior class homecoming princess.
|
|
We are not accustomed to having someone so obviously disordered in a position of such power.
|
|
Not the venal corruption we are accustomed to thinking about, but what he calls systemic corruption.
|
|
For viewers accustomed to looking at paintings on canvas and panel, manuscripts are a different beast.
|
|
He adds: To put it simply, we're not accustomed to high inflation because we haven't seen it.
|
|
"Market participants got accustomed to such volatility over the past few years," Commerzbank analyst Carsten Fritsch said.
|
|
The ripple in the news will quickly vanish; we've become so accustomed to hearing about school violence.
|
|
Successful business people — especially at the levels where these men operated — aren't accustomed to having a boss.
|
|
He also suggested extensive training, so factory workers can become better accustomed to the industrial work ethic.
|
|
Hulk Hogan is accustomed to a good fight—and Gawker Media is ensuring that he gets one.
|
|
Researchers have been accustomed to working on their own or in relatively cozy circles of close colleagues.
|
|
The only problem is that users have gotten accustomed to this content being free since YouTube's inception.
|
|
"Accustomed to the undomesticated life, Balto frequently urinated and defecated at will throughout Theranos headquarters," Bilton writes.
|
|
Being something of an introvert, I grew accustomed to working by myself on a relatively small scale.
|
|
Luxury labels are accustomed to tempting fashionistas, and now they're stretching from haute couture to haute cuisine.
|
|
It would maintain the same pressure as what humans are accustomed to living in at sea level.
|
|
By now, everyone has become accustomed to the fact that Trump sleeps only few hours each night.
|
|
Munger said the rise of ETFs has driven fees lower overall, squeezing managers accustomed to generous compensation.
|
|
Its staff will fight on, unbowed and unafraid, with the courage to which you have become accustomed.
|
|
"It certainly was not what I was used to or accustomed to in Detroit," Franklin later said.
|
|
This reflects two realities to which policymakers in Britain and on the continent must now get accustomed.
|
|
"People who are accustomed to making quick sense of the world … tend to be flummoxed," he explained.
|
|
The forest is a particularly inhospitable place for those not accustomed to it — but I'm no wimp.
|
|
The Supreme Court is accustomed to setting limits on the rights guaranteed by the constitution, he says.
|
|
The president is accustomed to shaping the news cycle and the narrative through tweets and executive orders.
|
|
Those grown accustomed down the years of hearing airline bosses scoffing at environmental concerns will be skeptical.
|
|
Calderon said he long ago grew accustomed to hearing his name surface in trade rumors and reports.
|
|
Franny, is a vainglorious manipulator of other people accustomed to getting his way, often by playing God.
|
|
Mike Muscala, a reserve forward who sits near the Uno players, has grown accustomed to their histrionics.
|
|
For a generation, Los Angeles football fans have grown accustomed to watching other cities' teams on television.
|
|
This process is meant to offer convenience and discretion to millennial men accustomed to ordering everything online.
|
|
Now that's something we conservatives are accustomed to, but not so much for those on the left.
|
|
THOSE of us who fly regularly have grown thoroughly accustomed to the usual interactions with flight attendants.
|
|
By this point, I was accustomed to the concept of live music, and even comfortable with it.
|
|
I, a British man, fresh-faced and dewey-eyed in this country, am accustomed to shit festivals.
|
|
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads PHILADELPHIA — Afaq is accustomed to the reactions inspired by her turban.
|
|
So, I think it&aposs going to be more fascinating then we&aposre accustomed to in California.
|
|
However, the primary (and presumably default) section is still the classic news feed we're accustomed to seeing.
|
|
"What I'm gonna miss the most is the way of life you've become accustomed to," he said.
|
|
The Game of Thrones crew is already pretty accustomed to employing ruses to throw off their fans.
|
|
Rowley told us the police were friendly and helpful, and accustomed to WatchOS misdials like this one.
|
|
It becomes more accustomed to it over time and things that were killing you before because easier.
|
|
WE have become accustomed to hearing how prescient "Nineteen Eighty-Four" (1949) feels in today's political climate.
|
|
This was a little jarring for die-hard Riverdale fans, who are accustomed to Apa's American accent.
|
|
Regions of the U.S. that aren't accustomed to seeing snowy weather are bracing for record-setting accumulation.
|
|
Law enforcement agencies are accustomed to being able to use every available means to spy on suspects.
|
|
It's very minimalistic, which will suit those accustomed to what they're doing, but may dissuade VPN newbies.
|
|
Everyone is now accustomed to the constant stream of angst pouring from President Donald Trump's Twitter account.
|
|
It's going to look more like a wifi router than a wireless antenna we're accustomed to seeing.
|
|
"With our direct democracy, Swiss people are accustomed to having the last word," said ProTell's Dominik Riner.
|
|
Watching these things and we have gotten kind of accustomed to the theatrics as you put it.
|
|
In the digital age, we are already accustomed to shooting off messages without having to consider them.
|
|
But the big tech companies are private corporations accustomed to shaping global public policy in their favor.
|
|
That'll be the first way to really get accustomed to and introduced to our team up here.
|
|
But if consumers can't get the same products they've grown accustomed to legally, they'll find other workarounds.
|
|
Mr. Bloomberg, who often challenges subordinates with provocative questions, has grown accustomed to deference, the people said.
|
|
To a show-business veteran accustomed to orchestrated fawning, this must be coming as a nasty surprise.
|
|
Mexicans are accustomed to the issues of drugs, migration and trade protectionism surfacing during American election campaigns.
|
|
It's a shame that people are so accustomed to fake, that they want to see it everywhere.
|
|
Fans, accustomed to constant novelty, no longer have the patience for artists to take unhurried new shapes.
|
|
They have grown accustomed over the years to a revolving door like system with each new administration.
|
|
Japan is much more accustomed to economic stagnation, and even recessions, but the outlook there is brighter.
|
|
Iowa officials are accustomed to twisting themselves into rhetorical pretzels to justify the state's antiquated caucus system.
|
|
Students accustomed to second-by-second vigilance found it difficult to manage their time when left unsupervised.
|
|
I think it has changed, I think the haters, they get accustomed also to a 140 characters.
|
|
Goose Bay, a small town in eastern Canada, isn't accustomed to handling enormous jetliners like the A380.
|
|
But the measure is widely unpopular with Brazilians, who are accustomed to a relatively expansive welfare net.
|
|
Some Wall Street observers think that perhaps the markets have grown accustomed to Trump's erratic negotiating style.
|
|
But the predominance of a certain type has been noted by natives accustomed to a different style.
|
|
But for Ryan, giving younger children the chance to grow accustomed to functioning prosthetic arms is key.
|
|
During her time in the courtroom, Ms. Rifkin has become "well accustomed" to inappropriate remarks, she said.
|
|
There's an entire segment of potential homebuyers who have become accustomed to the historically low interest rates.
|
|
The ruling surprised human rights advocates, who have grown accustomed to the government's harsh treatment of dissidents.
|
|
I am not accustomed to dancing around an issue; I prefer to call it what it is.
|
|
We are coaxed out of our dependency on harmful narratives of black lives we've become accustomed to.
|
|
Markets have grown accustomed to that support, but they are growing concerned the firepower is mostly spent.
|
|
Our city, one to which Donald Trump is accustomed, comprises shop owners and customers of all backgrounds.
|
|
The broadcast windows will be familiar to American audiences accustomed to watching European league games — 9 a.m.
|
|
Falling back to standard time keeps the sunrise time a little closer to what we're accustomed to.
|
|
It is also rougher to set up and get accustomed to than products like smartphones and tablets.
|
|
During that time, she grew accustomed to the grandeur of Chinese hospitality and their curiosity about foreigners.
|
|
The industry is accustomed to having its hopes raised and dashed, making investors gun-shy about Canada.
|
|
Beau's ranch seems perpetually on the brink of failure, and he's not accustomed to dealing with that.
|
|
It was exciting kickboxing for a crowd more accustomed to MMA and got the buzz going early.
|
|
He was blunt and assertive and his success in business made him accustomed to getting his way.
|
|
We are accustomed to reading without reference to any physical object specific to the act of reading.
|
|
And Democratic leaders said they were not given the accustomed notification that the measure would be considered.
|
|
Success in sports is a new universe, and Clevelanders are still getting accustomed to its gravitational pull.
|
|
Sadly accustomed to toxic air, many of Delhi's people are donning masks of one sort or another.
|
|
We have become accustomed to pursuing our individual self-interest at the expense of the common good.
|
|
A new Broadway production of "West Side Story" might look shockingly different from what we're accustomed to.
|
|
Plus, Mr. Rogers' coding requests were easy for an engineer accustomed to solving complex traffic-signal puzzles.
|
|
With the Covid-19 pandemic, there are so many new things we need to grow accustomed to.
|
|
And the celebrity magazines grew accustomed to the couple, gauzily covering their engagement, child's birth and marriage.
|
|
Virtual attendees may become accustomed to remote engagement via a variety of local robotic avatars and controls.
|
|
Trump has bludgeoned us into becoming accustomed to these kinds of comments but that, too, is worrying.
|
|
My mother and father were from the mountains, more accustomed to dirt than sand, freshwater than salt.
|
|
This is a team accustomed to the pressure of a scorching hot day with impossibly high stakes.
|
|
Over time, his body has become accustomed to the barefoot, bowlegged posture, but it doesn't come naturally.
|
|
Yorick's babel imp was accustomed to the rapid avalanche of overlapping greetings, but this time was different.
|
|
That prediction sounds odd if not laughable to modern ears accustomed to the legislature surrendering its authority.
|
|
Bullock, accustomed to playing no-nonsense characters on life-threatening missions, effectively conveys the sense of urgency.
|
|
There's a representation of us that everyone has become accustomed to and comfortable with, even black people.
|
|
But militia rule has accustomed many to the idea that power belongs to whomever has the guns.
|
|
Prosecutors said he had become accustomed to a lavish lifestyle and was preoccupied with clinging to it.
|
|
But by the time we went out, I'd become accustomed to confessing that I carjacked a man.
|
|
But experts insist they seem bigger only because humans are not accustomed to seeing them up close.
|
|
He's kept his wife in the style to which she's accustomed, and that does not come cheap.
|
|
But Fleury, a Quebec native, acknowledged that it was not a role to which he is accustomed.
|
|
Accustomed to his independence, Mr. Broadley clashed with his Ford counterparts and tired of the internal politics.
|
|
"Apparently these folks aren't accustomed to how the internet works," read a top comment under the post.
|
|
But for emerging markets, accustomed to cheap dollar debt, the surge may signal instability in the future.
|
|
Ming's diagnosis was that years of being a boss had accustomed the husband to praise and adulation.
|
|
They have become accustomed – and distressed by – frequent attrition and the feeling they have failed to win.
|
|
As the head of an eponymous family business, Trump was accustomed to making almost every major decision.
|
|
These are big changes for anyone who is accustomed to using plastic bags when they go shopping.
|
|
In hotels, I had grown accustomed to a fairly standard amenity: a small safe for important documents.
|
|
I learned how to do it for my Kickstarter book, and now I'm just accustomed to it.
|
|
And Nancy is accustomed to being laughed at by her grown-up boys — condescended to, affectionately minimized.
|
|
Like all of her colleagues, Ms. Zhang grew accustomed to wearing sweat-soaked clothes under her suit.
|
|
By now, these co-headlining ambassadors of early 93s R&B are accustomed to sharing the spotlight.
|
|
Company insiders were accustomed to complaints from rivals at book publishers or executives at big-box stores.
|
|
Imagine Volvo trying to roll back added Google functionality after its buyers have grown accustomed to it?
|
|
Many, even most, are accustomed to almost universal internet access through home broadband and mobile internet packages.
|
|
Unsurprisingly, the available analogies are all male; women are accustomed to translating their subjectivity onto men's bodies.
|
|
Listen, maybe after launch, we'll all become accustomed to referring to Peacock without an accompanying snicker. Maybe!
|
|
Accustomed to helping the city's rich and powerful spin their complicated personal lives, she offered her assistance.
|
|
Like many disabled adults, I've long since become accustomed to my physical limitations and all they entail.
|
|
I was accustomed to taking care of myself and I had let him take care of me.
|
|
Executives at Exxon describe Mr. Tillerson as a strong leader, accustomed to making decisions and giving orders.
|
|
Since the recession, shoppers have grown accustomed to hunt for bargains and to not pay full price.
|
|
Growing up in a digital age has made young professionals accustomed to being accessible around-the-clock.
|
|
And now that vapers are accustomed to flavored products, how will prohibition solve the nation's nicotine addiction?
|
|
SRS: Right, they go for shock and awe, and people who aren't accustomed to how it looks.
|
|
Automakers and dealers are accustomed to dangling hefty incentives that they sweeten during downturns and the holidays.
|
|
Not only were returning Holy Cross players accustomed to winning, so were many of the incoming freshmen.
|
|
As employees become more accustomed to the applications, he said they become much more enthusiastic about it.
|
|
"If you live in the southeast, you're accustomed to hot, humid conditions through the summer," he said.
|
|
The secretary of the Treasury and his wife, actress Louise Linton, are accustomed to a lavish lifestyle.
|
|
If you're accustomed to finding amusement in novelty, absurdity, and cultural detritus, the function of We Beefin?
|
|
I think that people aren't accustomed to thinking of surveillance as a threat to the First Amendment.
|
|
They're accustomed to engaging with adults and they know how to build and take advantage of networks.
|
|
Born in Turkey, Cennetoğlu is undoubtedly accustomed to hotly contested debates on immigration and its sociopolitical effects.
|
|
Aesthetically, it offers the standard white walls and flexible space we are accustomed to having at institutions.
|
|
For American brewers accustomed to lobbing grenades at orthodoxy, producing zwickel and keller beers is especially appealing.
|
|
Most park visitors are accustomed to the charming but often underwhelming static performances of their favorite animatronic characters.
|
|
We are all too accustomed to stories about young people's lack of connection to their communities and families.
|
|
But the pound is accustomed to large swings in its nominal exchange rate, the S&P report said.
|
|
If you're accustomed to tinkering with the temp on your grill, then this should be a no-brainer.
|
|
Here, he talks about waking up to a life so foreign to the one he's accustomed to living.
|
|
As the gymnasts note, the nature of their grueling practices makes them accustomed to being touched by adults.
|
|
If you live in the United States, you are by now accustomed to relinquishing your data to corporations.
|
|
My first two two-minute flights were VR-free, to get me accustomed to flying in the tunnel.
|
|
Because they are accustomed now to winning these victories on social policies and other issues by judicial fiat.
|
|
People are more accustomed to blurred categories, or products that don't fall strictly into one category, Meza noted.
|
|
"I can't imagine anyone who'd grow accustomed to that," he says, laughing about being considered a sex symbol.
|
|
Leaders of the National Council for Peace and Order, the junta's official name, have grown accustomed to office.
|
|
"And financial institutions have become accustomed to startups working with them through API's and other technologies and systems."
|
|
This created a sort of identity crisis, since the serfs were accustomed to being cogs with no individuality.
|
|
To her, the L train shutdown will be another obstacle—the kind that New Yorkers grow accustomed to.
|
|
We've all become so accustomed to getting whatever we want, whenever we want, at little to no cost.
|
|
Available on Mubi Kiyoshi Kurosawa makes movies with characters who act slightly … off from what we're accustomed to.
|
|
Our "count the rings" culture won't make it easy and Trout's become sadly accustomed to going it alone.
|
|
People are kind of accustomed to politicians making all sorts of gaffes, but this one beats them all.
|
|
Even if we resist it, we're accustomed to software telling us whether we can watch a digital movie.
|
|
We are all accustomed to a world where monetary policy can regulate things to at least some degree.
|
|
We are accustomed to fudging for a "good enough" solution that will clear the bar of public acceptability.
|
|
The startup ecosystem had become accustomed to the ethos of begging for forgiveness, rather than asking for permission.
|
|
Like several of their neighbors, they said they've become accustomed to living in darkness: At around 7 p.m.
|
|
Sjöholm laughed that after so many years in the entertainment industry, they're accustomed to taking on ambitious visions.
|
|
It seems more advantageous to simply reach people through channels they are familiar with and accustomed to using.
|
|
The video is filled with the kind of cringe-worthy stereotypes of India we've sadly become accustomed to.
|
|
Analysts have become accustomed to Zalando beating their expectations, with revenue having increased by a third in 2015.
|
|
The next goal is to get the parents accustomed to that routine, as well as the local culture.
|
|
A community that had grown accustomed to lots of cool stuff on a regular basis started seeing less.
|
|
At the same time, many YouTube twins are well accustomed to fans picking a favorite between the two.
|
|
Note 7 users are likely accustomed to a larger-screen phone, since the Note screen runs 5.7 inches.
|
|
The violence is so constant it's easy for those on the outside to become numb, accustomed to horror.
|
|
As he did so, the parallels with the maps of disease outbreaks he was accustomed to were unavoidable.
|
|
Sure, a Mac is a superior computer in some ways, especially if you've grown up accustomed to them.
|
|
Maybe we're just so accustomed to the Kardashian-Jenner's daytime Balmain cameos that this styling feels totally feasible.
|
|
We're so accustomed to the wonders of modern medicine we take for granted how wondrous it really is.
|
|
It's not a line of inquiry American presidents are accustomed to, and it showed in Obama's sweeping evasion.
|
|
The javelin community is becoming accustomed to champions from unusual backgrounds, if only because it has no choice.
|
|
Again though, working remotely requires a different skillset and work ethic than most office workers are accustomed to.
|
|
Building towards sustainable company growth -- not to mention industry change -- requires becoming accustomed to this mode of action.
|
|
They'd grown so accustomed to relying on the stuff that it was impossible to imagine life without it.
|
|
This means that non-Prime members will no longer get the discounts they have long been accustomed to.
|
|
Maybe the reading of Amy Sherald's portrait, Coleman told me, requires something we aren't accustomed to having: patience.
|
|
More than 130 lawmakers accustomed to taking their time walking to the House floor consequently missed the vote.
|
|
People who were already accustomed to Stories elsewhere still see the feature as intrusive, interruptive and somewhat desperate.
|
|
The small island nation is accustomed to earthquakes rolling through, but most come and go with little impact.
|
|
It's not uncommon for people to become accustomed to a certain standard of living or way of life.
|
|
Trump is accustomed to measuring businesses' performance and he should do the same for federal agency cybersecurity performance.
|
|
Germany poses a particular problem for U.S.-owned social networking sites accustomed to American standards of free speech.
|
|
Giant pandas, like Tian Tian and his sleepy new cub, Bei Bei, are naturally accustomed to blizzard conditions.
|
|
It's a radical breakthrough for those of us long accustomed to clay, concrete, and metaphorical sh*t bricks.
|
|
But they are deeply unpopular with a population that had grown accustomed to rising salaries under Mr. Putin.
|
|
Morris wasn't at all what Brussels audiences were accustomed to, and much of the reaction was viciously hostile.
|
|
McConnell and House Speaker Paul Ryan, a Wisconsin Republican, are accustomed to rabble rousers on their right flanks.
|
|
MUMBAI, India — Bela Bhatia, a human rights lawyer in the Indian state of Chhattisgarh, is accustomed to surveillance.
|
|
He also said Snapchat has to work on getting users accustomed to the changes, especially among Android users.
|
|
He again flashed his skepticism and unpredictability in dealing with agencies long accustomed to a level of deference.
|
|
They had gotten accustomed to seeing their names in the headlines for years before they got in trouble.
|
|
This would completely decimate the immediate accessibility to which radio and other music users have long been accustomed.
|
|
Takarazuka's performers aren't accustomed to playing women who blatantly "use sex to get what they want," he said.
|
|
She was just accustomed to living among people who look like her—it's the way she was raised.
|
|
What that approach to life yields is a smallness with which we are not accustomed in our presidents.
|
|
Those companies start out accustomed to using Chinese internet sites and apps to market and enhance their business.
|
|
The waitstaff was well accustomed to treating their longtime guest with deference and offered us a private nook.
|
|
So accustomed are we to yarns of demonic possession that the beatific equivalent comes as quite a shock.
|
|
He to questions about hiring human editors, winning points with those accustomed to slow, boilerplate responses from Google.
|
|
It's no less intuitive, but takes getting used to if you're accustomed to riding an old-school overboard.
|
|
And after the rigours of the past both were accustomed to the deferred gratification that heavy investment requires.
|
|
We first see him as a small boy already accustomed to keeping the counsel of his own thoughts.
|
|
An eight-term incumbent representing a heavily Republican district in northwestern Iowa, King is accustomed to landslide victories.
|
|
Changing habits is hard, and people might not want to give up the lifestyles they've grown accustomed to.
|
|
"She is accustomed to being in the headlines and recognizes the scrutiny that comes with it," she said.
|
|
America's role is to lead the world — it was what many Republican voters have grown accustomed to hearing.
|
|
Video also carries lucrative advertisements that are closer to the television commercials that brands are accustomed to making.
|
|
Why it matters: It's a battle of two tech giants accustomed to holding sway over their business partners.
|
|
"The Uzbek community is not accustomed to representing ourselves as Muslims in America," the immigrant leader told me.
|
|
The marijuana found in Tunisia is lower quality than the medical-grade product Americans have become accustomed to.
|
|
New Yorkers have grown accustomed to seeing heavily armed officers standing in subway stations and at city landmarks.
|
|
New York City, accustomed to living with the echo and shadow of terrorism, handled the shock with composure.
|
|
Many people advertising properties on Airbnb belong to a generation whose members are accustomed to living with peers.
|
|
Many millennials are accustomed to posting edited photos of themselves for friends to see at every life stage.
|
|
This may be a childish ploy, but it's appallingly successful among adults who have become accustomed to civility.
|
|
Just when we'd grown accustomed to the small hell that was Litchfield Penitentiary, things suddenly got much worse.
|
|
Sleeping in the stuffy confines of his home is something to which Mr. Tarip is still not accustomed.
|
|
Consumers have already grown accustomed to the convenience of seeing movies -- especially certain kind of movies -- at home.
|
|
"I think the more people see it, the more they will get accustomed to it," Mr. Crutchfield said.
|
|
The public became accustomed to images of generals and politicians prostrating themselves in front of their constitutional monarch.
|
|
Over time, most city dwellers grow so accustomed to this intense stimulation that they cease to notice it.
|
|
Accustomed to pulling people from rubble as airstrikes pummel towns, the rescuers are now trying on hazmat suits.
|
|
The so-called "God Pod" at the head of Exxon Mobil had accustomed him to rule by remoteness.
|
|
We grew up being accustomed to the news of shootings of children who seem eerily similar to us.
|
|
To some creators accustomed to the company's previously hands-off approach, however, such new standards could prove costly.
|
|
And as a society, we have grown accustomed to the luxuries of automated manufacturing and computer-aided design.
|
|
She said that after years in the military, she was accustomed to reporting problems only to her superiors.
|
|
Exacting professionals like Theresa are surely accustomed to more thoroughly thought-through work than what is presented here.
|
|
He plied the pigs with corn so that they would be accustomed to his presence in their pen.
|
|
Those who prefer their summer over ice have also grown accustomed to another question: regular or cold brew?
|
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The wearable consistency of Japanese sunscreens is the biggest shocker to those of us accustomed to Western versions.
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"Obviously, I think that's more what we're accustomed to seeing," Bucks Coach Mike Budenholzer said of the victory.
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"I'm a criminal defense lawyer who handles capital cases — trauma is something I'm pretty accustomed to," she said.
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"We are not too worried because we are accustomed to it," she said by phone from the hotel.
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And also as in sports, the teams that are accustomed to winning are the angriest when they lose.
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I quickly learned and got accustomed to hearing terms for violent sexual activity too graphic to detail here.
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It can all be quite daunting — even for New Yorkers accustomed to such bountiful options and pedestrian congestion.
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Bank said being accustomed to skiing's greater speeds could make snowboard races feel like "slow motion" for her.
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Consumers and business customers are becoming accustomed to rapid innovations in product capabilities, designs and even business models.
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But your ear grows accustomed to them quickly, and finds a way to make a home inside them.
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Accustomed to being an activist for others, Mr. Glasgow now finds himself without a champion of his own.
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The reason, several explained, is that they're accustomed to having that slim margin for error as their motivation.
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In a capital accustomed to overcooked spectacle and insufferable congressional testimony, James B. Comey delivered on the hype.
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Norlaila Kyrgios is accustomed to attending to Nick like this, picking up after him in every way imaginable.
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Crimes have a tendency to become not just stories but genres, once we get too accustomed to them.
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As a superpower and major aid donor, the United States is accustomed to giving advice, not taking it.
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He has six children and seven grandchildren, so he grew accustomed to looking for "kids eat free" signs.
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He is accustomed now to urgent late-night calls from fresh arrivals unfamiliar with, say, locks on doors.
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Once we have grown accustomed to the new surroundings, the woman leaves the bar behind for the outdoors.
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It has only been in modern society that we've become accustomed to such regular meals all-year round.
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The public to some extent has grown accustomed to the factual deviations or written them off as unimportant.
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Meantime, weather advisories Saturday stretched along the Appalachians through the Carolinas, into places more accustomed to wintry precipitation.
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The problem is that we can't begin to observe change at the rate these trees are accustomed to.
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Par for the course while covering a Trump rally Trump-beat reporters are accustomed to all of this.
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For those accustomed to the speed of Amazon Prime, don't expect the same two-day turn around here.
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Mr. Xi has a highly scripted style, and the Chinese are accustomed to meetings that are tightly choreographed.
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Facial recognition technology is drawing scrutiny in a country more accustomed to surveillance than any other Western democracy.
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The pistachio trees planted in orderly rows — and the growers who nurture them — are accustomed to harsh conditions.
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When Afewerki decided to go into battle, Eritreans, accustomed to war to preserve their homeland, enlisted to fight.
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Yuka Kusano, 37, said her children had grown accustomed to large classes while they were evacuated in Iwaki.
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On match days, she looks after a group not always accustomed to sympathy on match day: the media.
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We're accustomed to the trope that this year's presidential election featured the two most unpopular candidates in history.
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At work, I've grown accustomed to typing on a special ergonomic keyboard to protect against repetitive strain injuries.
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Journalists are accustomed to being attacked, and the Administration's insults have served only to motivate many of them.
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Drivers accustomed to the seamless technology of their smartphones are finding today's dashboard offerings clunky and non-intuitive.
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"Pull out cash to pay for everything so you don't get accustomed to just charging everything," said Brady.
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Everything is relative, and New Yorkers are not at all accustomed to playing the role of marginal contender.
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Residents of the remote region, about 563,300 miles east of Moscow, are certainly accustomed to record-cold weather.
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That role once seemed likely to go to Bill Clinton, a man thoroughly accustomed to the political stage.
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Americans are just growing accustomed to the impact of the massive millennial generation as consumers, workers and voters.
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Small towns are lovely for bringing up families, but the services they may be accustomed to are limited.
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We have a lot we need to work on to get back to the level we're accustomed to.
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As a cancer survivor, she had grown accustomed to taking on life's several challenges head on and successfully.
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Anyone who spends much time in India's Hindu temples is accustomed to being just steps from extreme wealth.
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"Germans have grown accustomed to the fact that the United States would always be their friends," Scharioth said.
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I've gotten more accustomed to it, but I wish I had that skill coming out of the gate.
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I'm accustomed to being a kind of mother figure, the wise older woman who provides empathy and advice.
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Young Cuban players face some pressure when they start out, but it's something they quickly become accustomed to.
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Our fifth-place finisher may raise some controversy, which is something North Carolina is growing accustomed to these days.
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There's well over a thousand molecules that make meat taste and have that smell that we're so accustomed to.
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As Newton bounced off the turf, he gave an annoyed look, a princeling not accustomed to such tough handling.
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It only gives you notifications you're accustomed to getting from your smart watch or the lockscreen of your phone.
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And how girls and women grow up in a culture just sort of accustomed to that kind of treatment.
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For your Aries friends and family, Gat recommends surprising them with something a little flashier than they're accustomed to.
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How will this memory polymer look and feel compared to the glass phone screens that we've become accustomed to.
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Suddenly an investment firm materializes on the scene and starts writing checks bigger than anyone is accustomed to seeing.
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For people (read: not six year olds) accustomed to the hellish landscape of the internet, these risks are expected.
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The docuseries will be the most camera time he's received in years; though, he's well-accustomed to the spotlight.
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Some proponents argue against all-mail voting, citing tradition, as many are accustomed to voting at their polling location.
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And there is no denying that Trump kept the level of his accustomed outrageous pronouncements to a surprising minimum.
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As an alternative, countries often offer private health insurance at premiums well below what you are accustomed to paying.
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He wasn't happy about the schools in Barawe as compared with what he had become accustomed to in Dadaab.
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Brokers, too, have grown accustomed to their ways and are usually hesitant to use technology to upgrade their processes.
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The fact that I'm so accustomed to spending Valentine's Day as a singleton means that I have zero expectations.
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Accustomed to steamrollering laws through, Mr Rajoy acknowledged that he will now have "to earn governability…day by day".
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Investors have become accustomed to endless reports of progress and want to see an actual deal signed before celebrating.
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