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"appellation" Definitions
  1. a name or title

166 Sentences With "appellation"

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

The appellation is the rare wine region defined by elevation.
That appellation often appeared below her name on the 19493-r.p.m.
I heard intermittent names of sons with the appellation "Junior" attached.
Appellation-of-origin rules mean tequila can only be made in Mexico.
The product reflects me, but most of all it reflects the appellation.
The hashtag #chexit, short for "China exit," is the new appellation du jour.
The Classico appellation generally indicates a superior wine to those simply labeled Soave.
People think that they avoid the appellation because they do not openly hate.
These wines, which carry the appellation Vinho Regional de Lisboa, can be quite good.
For good reason, the artists singled out in the essay didn't identify with Wollheim's appellation.
Sinatra didn't walk in and quiz you on which appellation the French created for vermouth!
While there is great diversity in the land, the appellation system has not kept up.
The official appellation, Viños de Madrid, encompasses three provinces with widely differing climate and geology.
So far in Rioja, only one major producer, Artadi, has chosen to leave the appellation.
"Haute couture," like "Champagne," is a legally controlled French appellation, zealously protected by the Chambre.
In "For unto us a Child is born," the appellation "wonderful" positively bloomed and grew.
The appellation is restricted to slopes near five villages, Grumello, Inferno, Maroggia, Sassella and Valgella.
Here's an excellent start, from the northern appellation of Naoussa, made of the xinomavro grape.
Here are six excellent Chianti Classico producers (though one, Montevertine, does not use the appellation).
Olympians may be the ultimate "ambassadors" of their country, but this is only a symbolic appellation.
Greatness, or Goodness, say what I shall call thee, to give me an higher appellation still.
The winemakers are still experimenting with which grape will produce the best wine for their appellation.
Another one is using an appellation system that will essentially mirror the ones we have for wine.
The name Melungeon derives from mélange, an appellation bestowed by early French settlers on the Clinch river.
A modern author, Lu Xun may not deserve the appellation "sage," usually reserved for Confucius and the like.
In case you aren't familiar with the Harlow appellation, to start, the Canadian model has six Vogue covers.
They needed to band together under a single name and denominación de origen (similar to a French appellation).
Named after the village of Irouleguy, they are the only Basque wines to have the AOC appellation in France.
Unlike in Tuscany, however, the Languedoc appellation rules have not evolved to become more helpful to consumers or producers.
Their product has not yet reached the zenith of niche dining — a fancy appellation to single out its best experts.
But the word "billionaire" is an especially egregious appellation, considering Trump's refusal to supply the public with his tax records.
He said that the mayor was being "nasty," a coded appellation he seems to favor when his target is female.
Try a cabernet franc from a Loire Valley appellation like Chinon or Saumur-Champigny, or maybe even a Chianti Classico.
I argue that farmers, regulators and consumers may benefit from adopting the wine industry's organizational model, known as the appellation system.
Appellation Wine and Spirits After 11 years, Scott Pactor has lost his lease and will close the store by early August.
Pavel Shvets, the founder of Uppa Winery and the driving force behind the idea of developing a Sevastopol appellation, is another.
Despite regional efforts to restructure the appellation system, it's hard to feel confident it will have immediate meaning for most consumers.
He is based here in the city of Napa, but few of his wines are entitled to the Napa Valley appellation.
An appellation is a legally protected designation that is applied to a product to indicate the geographic region where it was created.
Does it have the musty, planet-destroying aroma of a greenhouse gas appellation—generated, perhaps, by the burning of coal or oil?
Under this self-explanatory appellation, Brian Shimkovitz has done his part to help African music achieve the worldwide recognition it now enjoys.
Even before I could drink, he taught me never to buy wine that didn't have the words "Appellation Contrôlée" on the label.
The appellation names were subordinate in status to either the individual producers or the proprietary names they chose to label their bottles.
How is it that America insists on knowledge of the unknowable — what lurks in the heart — in order to assign the appellation?
Make sure to check the producer, the appellation, the vintage and, yes, the color, to be sure it is what you ordered.
The jumble of regions means that racy wines from the coast and richer, fruitier wines from inland may wear the same appellation.
Since 1979, Bouzeron has been the only appellation where aligoté wines may use the name of the place rather than the grape.
The Taurasi appellation requires that wines be aged a minimum of three years before release, with at least one year in barrels.
Under U.S. law, wine appellations typically speak only to the place of origin, but in theory an appellation system can do much more.
He was a member of the Facebook group "Terminate the Republican Party," an appellation that took on a chilling significance after Wednesday morning.
The appellation did not even become official until 1982, more than a century after the region's flagship winemaker, Vega Sicilia, got its start.
She produces exquisite pinot noirs and chardonnays under the Hope Well label in the Eola-Amity Hills appellation here, just southeast of McMinnville.
But when the appellation system in Burgundy was set up in 203, aligoté was considered unable to express the characteristics of a place.
The appellation, Montepulciano d'Abruzzo, reveals exactly what this wine is: montepulciano grapes from the Abruzzo region of central Italy, on the Adriatic coast.
Kenny Likitprakong, also in Sonoma, makes a well-delineated cabernet under the Ghostwriter label from Bates Ranch in the southern part of the appellation.
"C" was already her nickname among friends, she says, and Musk simply pointed out that she need look no further for a new appellation.
Any appellation that omits the name of Jesus Christ amounts to "inadvertently removing Him as the central focus of our lives," insists Mr Nelson.
The appellation Rust Belt rings true to a large degree for these states as old companies disappear and are not replaced with new ones.
Except in this case we were talking about the larger entity of Bordeaux rather than the specific terroir of one appellation within that region.
For wine, the Old World is considered a place of intricate rules, intended to preserve traditional styles and combat fraudulent use of appellation names.
Mostly, these are wines in which the name of the grape or the appellation have become so pervasive as to essentially become brand names.
Despite the frustrating vagaries of the appellation, which make choosing wines difficult for consumers, the true Sonoma Coast shows great promise for pinot noir.
In May on Nantucket, a dinner of old Bordeaux finished up with Château Climens 2005 from Barsac, a region within the greater Sauternes appellation.
Schiaparelli, for instance, labeled itself as "demi-couture" until this season; it was only permitted to use the haute couture appellation earlier this month.
Montevertine, for one, left the Chianti Classico appellation in 2100 because it wanted to make wines that were 100 percent sangiovese, or nearly so.
Love of foreigners, of the strange, of the unusual is an apt appellation for the eccentric editor of "The Quibbler," a magazine of poor reputation.
But the appellation doesn't fall far from the tree: Just like his dad, he makes a clear effort to define his opponents as bad people.
Our No. 1 wine, the 2014 Ama Estate from Peay Vineyards, came from the northwestern-most part of the appellation, near the town of Annapolis.
Whatever their former appellation — Reagan Democrats, the silent majority, the Southern strategy — Joe Sixpack and Archie Bunker are now solidly in the billionaire businessman's corner.
As it happened, we ended up with nine wines from Taurasi, nine from Vulture and two from the wider Basilicata appellation, a vaguer, catchall zone.
If appellation were adopted, different regions could have their own products, which, again, makes it harder to take over the industry and produce a single one.
In fact, there is a legal designation called the Appellation d'Origine Contrôlée (or AOC for short) that protects cheeses made in certain regions.
Roederer Estate, a branch of the Louis Roederer Champagne house, grows all of its grapes in the Anderson Valley of Mendocino County, and carries that appellation.
Trump's only real mistake in calling Warren "Pocahontas" was that he should have used the more apt "Fauxcahontas" appellation that is commonly found on the internet.
Fromagerie Goncourt carries the four Normandy cheeses with A.O.C. status (Appellation d'Origine Contrôlée, a legal guarantee of quality): Livarot, Pont-l'Évêque, Neufchâtel and Camembert de Normandie.
As Soave Classicos, they all come from the original source of the Soave appellation, a series of volcanic hillsides in the Veneto region of northeastern Italy.
Producers like Mas de Daumas Gassac and Domaine de la Grange des Pères have become well known and respected while working outside the controlled appellation system.
Currently, the Le Puy estate falls within the Côtes de Bordeaux appellation, but the name of this particular region has been shuffled frequently over the years.
Trump resorts to the slogan "fake news" and the Stalinist appellation "enemy of the people" when he doesn't like the stories that are written about him.
Arnot-Roberts, a wonderful producer in Santa Rosa in Sonoma, has been buying cabernet grapes from Fellom Ranch in the northern part of the appellation since 2007.
Tom Fogarty Jr. said his father began planting his original vineyard, in the cooler northern part of the appellation, with pinot noir and chardonnay in the 22012s.
But because China wants us to accept the appellation of 'Chinese country' and because so many Singaporeans are of Chinese descent, their actions have a special resonance.
The appellation was expanded greatly in the 1960s to include flat, fertile areas that were good for high yields but not so great for producing good wine.
For years, Mr. Lurton led a persistent effort to construct a new appellation for the northern Graves, hoping it would bring prestige and distinction to the area.
Two of the bottles carried the appellation Bourgogne Aligoté, a reminder that the Burgundians themselves have deemed aligoté unworthy of carrying a more specific designation of place.
The fault line divides the appellation into a cooler western portion, with newer pinot noir producers like Rhys Vineyards, and a warmer eastern section, closer to Silicon Valley.
Jarrar's fashion credentials need very little decoration; her previously held positions mean she's earned the haute couture appellation and suggest a bright future for Lanvin under her direction.
Our No. 1 bottle, the 2015 Domaine de la Grange des Pères, one of the producers working outside the appellation system, was lively, complex, textured and deliciously inviting.
Together, they offered some of the best articulations of Crozes-Hermitage, an appellation that has not always gotten much respect, but maybe has not always earned it, either.
" He signed his letters to her Law Giver, which, as Guha observes, was "a self-regarding appellation that reveals his desire to have Sarala conform to his ways.
Gaglioppo This grape from the Cirò appellation in Calabria, the toe of Italy's boot, can make gorgeously rustic reds, with aromas of roses and smoke and grippy tannins.
The three were Zuccardi Mendoza Paraje Altamira Concreto Malbec 2017 ($28); Catena Alta Mendoza Malbec Historic Rows 2015 ($35) and Altos Las Hormigas Mendoza Appellation Gualtallary Malbec 2016 ($38).
And the reason that usually was given was that your first or middle names were your so-called Christian appellation, whereas your last name was a government-given name.
The tasting bar offers a rotating roster of wines, each month featuring a specific region (in February that was the Rattlesnake Hills, a sub-appellation visible from the grounds).
To be clear, we are far from the realm of simple label trafficking: These are not small-time crooks looking to maximize profits by reselling fakes under some prestigious appellation.
Ultimately, the lander will be targeting the side of a 130 meter-wide pit known as Deir el-Medina, an appellation that once again pays homage to ancient Egyptian culture.
Appellation Wine & Spirits, which after 10 years on 10th Avenue in west Chelsea will soon be moving to London Terrace, sells only wines from organically, biodynamically or sustainably farmed grapes.
But more often, Mr. Riera has selected producers who, whether because of an independent streak or because their wines don't conform to a perceived norm, work outside the appellation system.
Because the Italian appellation regulations don't include rosé in this region, there is no vintage date on the label; the lot number on the back label indicates it is 2018.
If Mr. Simon, as The Times reported in 1988, sometimes bristled at the appellation "pianist's pianist," with its implied, if rarefied, marginalization, he was ultimately sanguine about his professional course.
Rhone Valley, France, $22 Although this wine comes from the humble Cotes-du-Rhone appellation, it has the pedigree and quality of a Rhone cru or a chateauneuf-du-pape.
But gross as it sounds, we can't think of a better way to describe the gooey texture of jelly, and the orb itself seems all but worthy of its supernatural appellation.
The occasion for the remark was the beginning of the "summer of hell," an appellation coined by Andrew Cuomo, the governor of New York, to prepare commuters for rough times ahead.
Each of these wines is the entry-level bottle from one of a small group of producers who have energized this appellation with their devotion to meticulous farming and conscientious winemaking.
While I'm generally supportive of people's efforts at self-appellation, it is the duty of everyone who objects to white-supremacist ideology to resist this group's efforts at mainstreaming its positions.
In medicine and law, it appears that the appellation "crisis" comes to apply only when longstanding challenges faced by the poor in obtaining essential services begin to affect the middle class.
The court of appellation ordered Morawiecki to broadcast a statement before the evening news on two major TV stations admitting he was factually wrong in claims about his administration's road infrastructure program.
But France, home of the appellation d'origine contrôlée (AOC) system, which designates the origin of wine, butter and cheese down to the village level, wants to push the origin labeling even further.
Auguste Clape, a pillar of the northern Rhône Valley wine region whose sturdy yet remarkably soulful wines awakened interest in the little-known Cornas appellation, died on July 21989 in Valence, France.
Madeleine Kamman, 87, an influential chef, restaurateur and teacher of traditional French cuisine; Auguste Clape, 93, a winegrower who awakened interest in the Cornas appellation in the northern Rhône Valley wine region.
We have unfortunately moved away from the simple definition of racism, to the point where the only people to whom the appellation can be safely applied are the vocal, violent racial archetypes.
It was the Sancerre Comte Lafond from Baron de Ladoucette, a big Loire producer better known for its Pouilly-Fumé, a neighboring appellation of Sancerre, also made with the sauvignon blanc grape.
Empire Rye — an appellation that requires, among other things, that distillers use New York State grain and age their whiskey for at least two years — represents a novel turn in American distilling.
This fatalistic indifference is something that drives the optimistic American liberal quite mad; he is prone, in his more exasperated moments, to refer to Negroes as political children, an appellation not entirely just.
One of the more interesting, Lamoresca, is not actually from within the confines of the appellation but from just north of it, in the hills near the town of San Michele di Ganzaria.
But Rioja Gran Reserva is defined not by terroir — as long as the grapes come from the confines of the Rioja appellation in northern Spain — but by how long the wine has aged.
The last few weeks we've been drinking Bandol, which comes from a small appellation in the hills above the Mediterranean port of the same name, and is perhaps better known for its rosés.
Justin Calvino, one of the appellation effort's organizers, told VICE that farmers are moving toward responsible water and environmental use, and perhaps more importantly, that the black market is already showing signs of evaporation.
On the other are Mr. Kushner's "Democrats," an appellation used to describe even Republicans who want to soften Mr. Trump's rough edges and broaden his narrow popular appeal after months of historically low poll numbers.
A case in point is the Sonoma Coast of California, a region so unwieldy and with so many perspectives on what it is and what it can be that the appellation is all but useless.
" A dictionary called "Slang and Its Analogues Past and Present"codified the sobriquet in 1811 as "the most offensive appellation that can be given to an English woman, even more provoking than that of a whore.
The oldest of the plantations in the Caribbean region, La Victoria was founded in 1892 by a multinational group of families, but the bulk of the investment came from a British couple, explaining the queenly appellation.
Regardless of the particulars, Cornell described Gris as a "warm fraternal spirit," a rare appellation for an artist who favored the company of women to the point of making their male companions wait outside his studio.
Consequently, the grapes are much less expensive than Napa fruit, and their appellation, Wild Horse Valley, has none of the built-in selling power that comes with being able to put Napa Valley on the label.
The country's largest newspaper, Israel Hayom, which backs both Mr Trump and the Israeli prime minister, Binyamin Netanyahu, dubbed Bahrain the "island of hope", an odd appellation for a kingdom that crushed a popular uprising in 2011.
The competition took place at the Chateau du Galoupet, one of France's biggest wine estates, and the teams had to identify the country of origin, grape variety, vintage, producer, and appellation for each of the 12 wines.
Tellingly, Italy is the most assiduous state in claiming EU "geographical indications" (GI), be they the stringent Protected Designation of Origin (eg, Chianti Classico), the looser Protected Geographical Indication (eg, Cantucci Toscani) or the weakest appellation, TSG.
But the nonvintage brut is made in such quantity, the company says, that it must supplement its New Mexican grapes with grapes from three other states: California, Oregon and Washington, hence the nebulous "American Sparkling Wine" appellation.
The Classicos come from the heart of the historic Valpolicella region, which is generally considered to have better potential than simple Valpolicella, which usually comes from areas into which the appellation expanded in the mid-20th century.
Open to K-12 students in US public, private, and home schools, it is an essay contest in which students will be asked to name the robotic space traveler and explain the reasons behind their chosen appellation.
That would be our subject over the last month, Rioja Gran Reserva, in which the rules of the appellation require that wines be aged at least five years by the producers before they can hit the market.
Known by the appellation Obamacare, the ACA was the Obama Administration's response to growing concern that inflated health care costs inhibited access to quality medical services and contributed to the rise in disease prevalence among lower socioeconomic groups.
Not too long ago, rhum agricole from Martinique or Guadeloupe — a rum distilled from the juice of fresh-cut sugar cane, following strict rules enforced by an "appellation d'origine contrôlée" in France — might have satisfied those nebulous ideals.
"Witch rock" is a phrase that's both utterly meaningless ,and utterly meaningful—its utility and importance comes down to who is wielding it, and in the case of New Zealand trio Hex, the "witch" appellation is quite apt indeed.
There has been mounting tension in the Loire, where AOC (appellation d'orgine contrôlée) producers feel that loosened EU regulations allowing IGP (indication géographique protégée) to grow sauvignon and pinot noir grapes has cheapened the AOC brand, especially in Sancerre.
In the future, I suggest looking for a new appellation approved in 226, the Rocks District of Milton-Freewater, which, though paradoxically across the border in eastern Oregon, is the site of some of Washington's most interesting new vineyards.
He quite enjoyed being likened to Samuel Johnson, the great 21961th-century critic, essayist, lexicographer and man about London, who, like Professor Bloom ("a Yiddisher Dr. Johnson" was one appellation), was rotund, erudite and often caustic in his opinions.
Not surprisingly, producers that are actually in the coastal portion of the region have initiated efforts to subdivide their corner of the appellation into more manageable slices, guided by soil and climate characteristics rather than business and political concerns.
"One of the main characteristics of the Côtes de Provence appellation is light and pale (and dry) styles of the rosés produced in this region," says Paul Chevalier who heads US marketing and sales for Whispering Angel, a leading rosé label.
Originally called "Girl With Balloon," the work has been given the appellation "Love Is in the Bin," which is fitting when you remember that just moments after being sold it was half-destroyed by a shredder hidden in the frame.
But it's not exactly a stretch either, considering that AOC producers have been quite vocal about their opposition to the IGP appellation, with hundreds of producers gathering to protest the new regulation, a tradition as quintessentially French as drinking wine.
It was only many decades later that the times caught up to Melville, that he became known as the first great American novelist, an appellation that, for better or worse, has presided over our discussions of American literature ever since.
It also testifies to both the region's longstanding inability to produce much in the way of compelling wine and the appellation system's failure to find logic in either its rules for Languedoc or a meaningful way of subdividing the land.
Of the snacks, the steak tartare stands out, not only for its unabashedly Western appellation but also because its medallions of ginger-and-lime-dressed chopped raw beef, dusted with peppercorns and nestled on homemade rice crackers, are unequivocally delicious.
"They can taste slightly disconcerting at first, because you don't associate them with an appellation, or known reference, but they maintain the characteristics of the type of grape, and above all they are silky," says the founder of the winery Borja Saracho.
The vast majority of the bottles in the United States come from the Muscadet Sèvre et Maine appellation, but one bottle, the Haut Bourg, came from the rarely seen Muscadet Côtes de Grandlieu area south of Nante and closer to the Atlantic.
"The Mighty Franks" (the title comes from Aunt Harriet's unironic appellation for her family) is set in the scrubby Laurel Canyon neighborhood of Los Angeles, traditional outpost of musicians and artists, rather than in the security-patrolled enclaves of Brentwood or Bel-Air.
Though a lot of dolcetto comes from Alba, and much of it from excellent producers, Dogliani is generally considered the best territory for dolcetto (along with a third appellation, Dolcetto di Diano d'Alba, which I don't often see in the United States).
These are, after all, very expensive clothes for the very few, and for a brand to qualify for the haute couture appellation it must meet a series of stringent requirements established in the days of yore, presumably to maintain the purity of the line.
TOKYO (Reuters) - As Tokyo braces for the arrival of Typhoon Hagibis, Scotland fans are no longer laughing at its revised appellation of "Haggis" as they hope it moves on quickly enough for their crucial World Cup pool game against Japan to go ahead on Sunday.
Not surprisingly, wine is a staple in Levi's Stadium — home of the San Francisco 275ers and the site of the Super Bowl — where fans in the 25 suites have access to vintages from more than 60 high-quality California wineries through a program called Appellation 49.
Not only a basic category error and entirely (oxy)moronic — as long as the works looked "street" or urban (with the requisite drippy paint) the appellation "street" could apparently be added — but the key element of Street Art, the street of its very name, became entirely irrelevant.
The al-Qurayshi appellation at the end of his name indicates that he is being portrayed as a descendant of the Quraysh tribe of the Prophet Muhammad, a lineage that the Islamic State considers to be a prerequisite for becoming a caliph, or ruler of a Muslim theocracy.
While there are many cheeses like Brie (Camembert, for example, which shares similar flavors but differs in its place of origin, size, and method of production), there are only two Bries recognized by France's agricultural regulatory agency, AOC (Appellation d'Origine Contrôlée): Brie de Meaux and Brie de Melun.
Instead of the controlled appellations like Faugères, for example, they fall back on theoretically less prestigious general geographical categories like Vin de Pays de l'Hérault, which gives consumers an idea of a wine's provenance while allowing producers the option of working outside the rules of the appellation system.
David Placek, the founder and president of Lexicon branding, whose company named the Swiffer, the Blackberry, Verizon Fios, the Subaru Outback and Embassy Suites, agreed that the scandal would be difficult to label, given that any appellation would have to be short, sharp and clear in its meaning.
It was the only logical choice, since this particular back emerged from the University of Southern California with a Heisman Trophy and a can't-miss appellation, and because he was clearly the best player in a draft class that would eventually be studded with five Hall of Famers.
While the FDA does regulate what can be called Parmesan or Romano in this country, the standards—which were put in place to guarantee a modicum of industry uniformity back in the 1950s—failed to enact any sort of appellation designation like Champagne has in France or beer has in Germany.
Because a name can have an unintended meaning, the university—itself named after the Virginia patriot and delegate to the Constitutional Convention of 1787 who refused to sign its document in part because it perpetuated slavery—has already tweaked the law school's new appellation to the Antonin Scalia Law School.
It's a bit like Tuscan producers in the 1970s who, frustrated by inflexible and counterproductive restrictions in places like Chianti, chose instead to call their wines, no matter how ambitious, vino da tavola, or table wine, a category outside the appellation system generally reserved for simple, innocuous and inexpensive bottles.
Justice" had been the required appellation until just months before her nomination, when the justices, perhaps sensing that change was inevitable or maybe just wishing to sound a little less stuffy, voted in conference in a superb accident of timing to drop the "Mr." and to refer to each other simply as "Justice?
The percentage of the region's grapes that went into nouveau was so high — as much as 60 percent of the basic Beaujolais appellation in 1988 — that when its popularity faded, growers were left with an oversupply, and the public was stuck with an image of Beaujolais as a place with insipid wine.
But the new player in the region is China, which has styled itself a "near-Arctic" country — a self-appellation U.S. officials find absurd: One senior State Department official called it "a made-up, fantasy definition" worthy of George Orwell; another rattled off the precise distance between Beijing and the Arctic Circle (22018,2750 miles).
The big picture: According to MoveHub, which collected data on 446 cities in 20 countries, two cities more or less tie for the appellation of the world's biggest hipster haven: the southeast U.K. city of Brighton and Hove and Portland, OR. Rounding out the top five were Salt Lake City, Seattle and the Portuguese capital of Lisbon.
More specifically, the lesbian who's not a lesbian — she picked up the appellation in high school, converting an insult into an identity — walks into a bar and instantly becomes the object of obsession to a clutch of characters, most of whom desire her, some of whom scorn her, all of whom cannot stop blabbering about her.
But many in the contemporary-music community will feel a tug of the heart when, during the new edition of the NY Phil Biennial (through June 11), the name " STUCKY " appears all alone, without the "Steven"—though it could have been just "Steve," the appellation by which this superb composer was known to a legion of grateful and admiring colleagues.

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