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"astutely" Definitions
  1. in a way that shows somebody is clever and quick to understand a situation, etc.

212 Sentences With "astutely"

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

"Cherchez la femme," one passing tourist commented to another, astutely.
Son may have astutely read America's new form of capitalism.
If the police do not act astutely, armed showdowns could develop.
As Chait astutely notes: [The] Democratic Party is racially and economically heterogeneous.
Like the great Franz West, Smith can be willfully and astutely unserious.
This is perhaps nowhere more astutely observed than in Holmes' own story.
In other words, "He's massive," as someone in the video astutely notes.
Last May, writer Will Wilkinson astutely predicted how Trump would become president.
Instead of resolving the mystery of Matt, Ms. Lee astutely complicates it.
In the first few minutes he astutely discusses the piece, playing excerpts.
Dee astutely captures how claustrophobia and the comforts of home can coexist.
It is not a perfectly-timed tackle, or an astutely-triggered counterattack.
As Russell astutely observes, Medora wanted someone to bear witness to her story.
"When you fail as athlete, you have to recycle yourself," he says astutely.
Automakers are astutely aware of the changes taking place in the transportation sector.
Over the last three or four decades, it's been an astutely neoliberal economy.
The tale was astutely told, though it couldn't avoid a murmur of condescension.
If these volumes say now, their astutely worn painted surfaces say then, and forever.
And as Ana Suda astutely points out, it is about kids not learning it.
As Matt Stromberg astutely pointed out, corporeality formed a major undercurrent in the show.
That would be fine, because as you astutely point out, kids are very boring.
She's also astutely aware of the way menopause is discussed — something she's hoping to shift.
To ensure favorable media coverage, Woodhull astutely started her own newspaper to promote her candidacy.
One user even astutely compared it to when Joey and Rachel hooked up on friends.
Cynthia was ahead of her time, astutely predicting 2018's national mood in the 90s.
The exhibition labels also note, very astutely, why many of these early photographs are now missing.
Given the positive results, many astutely ask why these approaches have not been implemented more widely.
Mr. Whishaw's astutely measured metamorphosis here suggests both deep, contemporary personal neurosis and atavistic self-sacrifice.
Not musically — the astutely titled Ctrl, a shiny, crunchy, whirring R&B concoction, abounds with ear candy.
Astutely the exhibition also includes several placards on which are given accounts from people interviewed by Richards.
I reckon, as my friend so astutely pointed out, the color has a $60,000 minimum entry point.
As my father astutely noted, the 14th Amendment was never intended to create this instant citizenship racket.
And as Quah astutely notes, the program is modeled after other, similar offerings from Shopify and Stripe.
On home computers' internet connections, and on astutely managed institutional networks, port 445 is usually kept firmly shut.
Worse still, all rods have their breaking points, but cheaper, less astutely designed ones have exceptionally weak ones.
"Bill had never actually met a person to whom he did not enjoy ranting," one character observes, astutely.
However, our senior lifestyle editor Cait Munro astutely said she wished the brand had released more innovative flavors.
Though he refused to go along with "coalitional presidentialism," Bolsonaro astutely catered to evangelical interests in his cabinet picks.
He's mindful and astutely observant of the need for tiny rituals in order to stay centered through the chaos.
While passing through the Lawrence household, a suspicious Commander Lawrence (Bradley Whitford) astutely questions why there's another Martha visiting.
It means anticipating puck movement so astutely, surveying the play so precisely, that he always squares up the shooter.
This strategy eventually led to the "Intel Inside" campaign, which astutely focused on the company more than the architecture.
Mr. Brooks's antidote lies in modesty, a virtue he elevates by astutely reframing it as both courageous and tough.
With that reality in mind, Democrats should relentlessly promote the astutely spirited analysis of Fox News' chief judicial correspondent.
Anarchy and mayhem is astutely observed and cinematically powerful, but the explicit subject matter is not for the faint-hearted.
James and his mates often play no less astutely but as if consumed, aware that no end suffices save victory.
Astana is astutely aware of the ongoing debate in the United States regarding the JCPOA's future under the Trump Administration.
To navigate tensions and avoid worsening them, allies and adversaries alike must astutely judge American intentions and anticipate American actions.
And as Dave Wasserman so astutely noted, don't think of this map as causing the Democrats to gain however many seats.
Astutely putting his face through the face hole, the excited pug thought he was about to taste some sweet whipped cream.
" As fans astutely alerted the Twitterverse, "Call It What You Want" is a follow-up to Swift's 2008 single "Love Story.
If the plotting occasionally falters, Ellis writes astutely about these women's full, complicated and not always sympathetic emotional lives (213:27529).
If the plotting occasionally falters, Ellis writes astutely about these women's full, complicated and not always sympathetic emotional lives (2:00).
If the plotting occasionally falters, Ellis writes astutely about these women's full, complicated and not always sympathetic emotional lives (21979:81183).
If the plotting occasionally falters, Ellis writes astutely about these women's full, complicated and not always sympathetic emotional lives (226:46).
The concept is pretty astutely designed to tug at the heartstrings, even if it does so in a brazenly manipulative way.
In "Notes From the Field," which has been astutely directed by Leonard Foglia, Ms. Smith assumes the identities of 19 individuals.
"America is undergoing a renegotiation of the terms of who is powerful," a woman from the University of Chicago astutely observed.
Instead of holding a camera in front of his face or gesticulating wildly, his fingers are clasped together as he listens astutely.
But as Nate Silver astutely notes in FiveThirtyEight, there are far fewer excuses for losing a diverse state with an older population.
But how astutely Trump plays the few cards he has in this unfolding crisis may come to define his own overseas legacy.
She's fucking with Sidney, for sure, as Sidney so astutely points out, as well as the rest of her patients, Sam included.
Critic's Pick Daniel Glenn's astutely goofy portrait of legislative gridlock in the Plymouth Colony casts women as some seriously conflicted founding fathers.
The Met's curators (and conservators) took nearly two years and several trips to Atlanta to finalize their selection, and they chose astutely.
"In between the chaos of a crowded airport during the holidays, be sure to take some time for yourself," Guilfoyle astutely noted.
Vox's Julia Belluz astutely observes that many of our favorite breakfast foods often have as much sugar as cookies and candy bars.
Astutely aware of his own mortality, he knew life was fragile, which was why he lived harder and faster and edgier than anybody.
It's a facet of the industry's imminent future that both Spencer and Blank are astutely aware of, but consider themselves in good places.
A Swedish duo has acquired a large fan following in India after tickling people with their astutely observed, funny videos on Indian oddities.
When the Guptas arrived in South Africa, they astutely acquired citizenship as naturalized "blacks" to benefit from the country's black economic empowerment laws.
The company also began focusing on slick, astutely marketed consumer products just as public enthusiasm for gadgets started ramping up in the 2000s.
A commenter astutely pointed out the placement of a screw discovered during a recent teardown that could be the source of these issues.
Pramila Jayapal astutely noted that "the President himself is the smoking gun" and that Trump is "the first and best witness" against himself.
The Niman Ranch hot dog was so thick that — as Melissa astutely observed — it threw off the ratio for meat, condiment and bun.
As former Israeli peace negotiator Daniel Levy has astutely observed, profound demographic and political changes have occurred in both Israel and Palestinian society.
But as you astutely mentioned to me earlier, Jon: Beyoncé shrewdly positions herself as a good pop buffer between the country's bad and ugly.
Maggie Haberman of the NYT astutely notes on Twitter that POTUS could simply declassify this intel to clear the air surrounding this incidental collection.
When asked about the swipe at Noah, Garnett astutely noted that he possessed a biting skillset, and shouted out Mike Tyson in the process.
Few artists have summed up their personality as astutely as they did on the first second of the first track of their first album.
Once the president secures comprehensive input on candidates, he must carefully review those ideas and astutely nominate the best individual who satisfies the criteria.
Bryant astutely took second base on the throw home and Rizzo then smacked a high fastball into right field for another run-scoring single.
Yet suspense rarely makes an appearance in this realistically acted, astutely written play, which is directed with a very even hand by Knud Adams.
Bonnie, who is studying optometry at Marshall B. Ketchum University, astutely noted another factor that may have aided Karlie's growth — literally opening her eyes.
Floridians are astutely aware of the dangers they pose and, in fact, have embraced the animals, making them a central part of the state's identity.
On top of that, as BuzzFeed's Hayes Brown astutely pointed out, Haley will be the lone woman among 14 men on the UN Security Council.
Compiling data from Apple's iTunes App Charts and app analytics firm App Annie, Feng astutely concludes that the great app gold rush may be over.
Indeed, as Quona Capital's Rengaswamy astutely noted, competition is not new for IndiaMART — the company has survived and thrived more than two decades of it.
Battlefield 1 astutely focuses on the human cost of war, and the reduces time spent looking through a scope, further differentiating it from the competition.
He gave the back line an extra playmaking option, carried the ball well, kicked astutely and took some of the pressure off flyhalf Bernard Foley.
As Eugene Steuerle astutely observed in his book "Dead Men Ruling," the path to fiscal insecurity has been heavily influenced by former elected public representatives.
As an inveterate adolescent Walkman user, I found its use as an ersatz Proustian madeleine for Elliot's, Darlene's and Angela's childhoods to be astutely observed.
While she owns a multimillion-dollar house in the wealthy Gangnam area of Seoul, she astutely opened it to reporters to demonstrate a frugal lifestyle.
That 30,000-foot view allowed for some occasional prescience — for example he astutely gauged where gay rights were headed even before Obama and Hillary Clinton did.
As fewer films explore sex and the nature of desire on screen, Campion astutely demonstrates how eroticism can explore the limits of the self and society.
Go: Daniel Glenn's play "King Philip's Head," an astutely goofy portrait of legislative gridlock in the Plymouth Colony, casts women as some seriously conflicted founding fathers.
Senate Democrats astutely note that these messages were sent around the same time the Trump administration was reportedly developing an executive order to lower drug prices.
Although Barclay's work astutely points to the hierarchies that separate "knowing art" and "knowing about everything else" it does so firmly in the terms of the former.
And, as is astutely pointed out by Klum's fellow judge Howie Mandel, the dancing partners are basically pint-sized versions of the Project Runway host and singer.
On Thursday's show, Meyers astutely points out how nothing Trump does can surprise anybody anymore, including but not limited to him denying he was with Russian hookers.
In some progressive circles, being a "neoliberal" is, as others have astutely observed, "the left's favorite insult," a handy catchall for everything that's wrong with the world.
As John Gruber astutely points out, the statement has the stink of trying to shift blame or attention off of the FCC's own response and readiness issues.
John [Cho] and I were talking about this in another interview and John astutely said that he thought maybe Aaron had perhaps intentionally left that open-ended.
The scale models and maps astutely make the connection between historical accounts of protest and activism, between what was meant to be and what was actually constructed.
In some ways it's even reminiscent of what Microsoft was trying to do with Windows 8 on the Surface tablet, as my colleague Tom Warren astutely pointed out.
But as Vox's Dylan Matthews astutely points out, the facts of the case may not matter as much as what Paul Ryan and Mitch McConnell do with them.
It was never Love's fault that the Timberwolves' front office was unable to draft astutely, assemble a solid supporting cast, or handle his contract negotiations with any competence.
Anyway, Twitter user Jon Keegan stumbled upon an oddly prophetic Trivial Pursuit card from that ancient time that quite astutely summed up the year 2017 and our president.
Staged like a commercial for lingerie, fancy chocolates, a phone sex line, or all three, the video astutely skewers the idea that tampons are considered a luxury good.
And there you have, more or less, the entire plot of "King Philip's Head," which runs only through Saturday under the astutely restrained direction of Caitlin Ryan O'Connell.
Trump, astutely recognizing Macomb's independent streak, visited five times to Hillary Clinton's one, and connected emotionally with a suburban voting bloc that felt alienated by both national parties.
And Maher astutely probes how laws meant to protect women from harassment can also be used to control and punish blasphemers, minorities and critics of the military government.
Moser also astutely points to the fact that the book's very particular reading of Freud's theories of sexuality seems unlikely to have come from anti-gay Rieff either.
Bogaerts' first-inning RBI single produced two runs as Hanley Ramirez astutely scored from first on the play when Bogaerts got caught in a pickle between first and second.
But Machado astutely spotted a slider coming out of Guerra's hand on the first pitch to the next batter, Bellinger, and when the pitch bounced, Machado bolted for second.
At a function in New York recently, even CEO of 21st Century Fox James Murdoch astutely addressed "the proliferation of football" and how omnipresent this sport now seems to be.
But as Johnson astutely points out, these books are mostly about the choices we make in the "Blink" (Malcolm Gladwell) of an eye as we muddle through our daily lives.
As you know, folks are spending a lot of time indoors nowadays, and as we on the R29 Shopping Team have astutely noticed, sex toy sales are up — way up.
When Paul then astutely notes that his fondness for either apples or oranges varies depending on the day, that's a funny, pointed metaphor for the fickleness of the American electorate.
So he, Patrick and the brilliant scientist Sandy Cheeks (Lilli Cooper, in an astutely underplayed performance), a squirrel (don't ask), must come up with a plan to save their world.
Tallman astutely points out that by placing them on the paper, Bloom has turned an index into an icon, reminding the receiver of the history of past unwrapping and exchanging.
But in Blk & Blue at ABXY Gallery, Roberts more astutely explores the universality of anonymity, rendering characters who could stand in for anyone — a cousin, a sibling, a parent, yourself.
Robert Baratheon Foreshadowed Arya & Gendry's Marriage As reddit user darrylthedudeWayne astutely points out, King Robert discussed the Baratheons and the Starks joining their houses all the way back in Season 1.
Of course, Trump's speech promising "fire and fury" could very well mean the end of this world, as Stephen Colbert astutely pointed out on Late Night with Stephen Colbert last night.
As The Washington Post's Robert Costa astutely points out, Pawlenty himself was a pioneer in the push to make the Republican Party more populist and working class in his 2012 run.
But the extreme bouts of volatility in March have led to massive paydays for astutely-positioned trading desks that serve the clients racing to keep their gamma hedges up to date.
Though in the past this has occasionally led to chaos and a sense he was forcing the issue, this time around a balance of exploration and clear expression was astutely controlled.
The Yankees' manager, Joe Girardi, has lauded Torres for astutely sizing up pitches and hitting the ball to all fields, a trait the scouts saw in him years ago in Venezuela.
"People want to see you, but they don't want to hear what you have to say," says Sage, pointing astutely to the way young women are often objectified in our culture.
As my fellow Zoo enthusiast Brian Grubb of Uproxx has astutely observed, this basically makes her Batman, which is excellent news for those of us who like both superheroes and total nonsense.
The New York Times astutely pointed out that this trend appears to belong to the Youths Of America, but we'd argue that it's actually athletes who make this a trend worth consuming.
"So if a political campaign were using dark advertising your people helping support their use of Facebook would be advising them on how to use dark advertising," astutely observed one committee member.
It was, indeed, a "funeral to which they all came," (credit Susan Sheehan for astutely changing "everyone" to "they all"), because of Vann's stature as a military strategist and a civilian warrior.
He has spoken candidly and ad nauseam to the press about his background growing up in gang-oriented Long Beach, California, astutely breaking down that world with the keen eyes of a sociologist.
As one Redditor astutely pointed out, Webber is essentially the Michael Bay of Broadway, widely condemned as a hack by discerning musical-goers, even as he's put butts in overpriced seats for decades.
As Ronan Farrow astutely points out, those claims have been largely glossed over by reporters and news outlets that remain vulnerable to PR machines determined to wash away the sins of powerful men.
"Pain" is perfectly cast, beautifully acted, fluidly directed and astutely designed by a team that includes Mark Wendland (the metamorphic set), Paloma Young (costumes), Ben Stanton (lighting) and Elisheba Ittoop (music and sound).
Instead of being what Sherry Turkle, an M.I.T. sociologist and psychologist, has astutely termed "alone together," we have an opportunity to be creative with the digital tools that previous generations couldn't have imagined.
Ultimately, though, the controversy did a lot to raise questions of who and what art is for — perhaps more astutely than ArtPrize's other populist model, which tends to center around competition and overstimulation.
It's not beyond imagining that Mr. Obama could break with a practice whose ills he observed so astutely, and which contributed to the downfall of the Democrat he hoped would cement his legacy.
" Mr. Trump has "astutely but cynically played the polarization card," something Mr. Baker judges to be the "most irresponsible and destructive course of action taken by any major political figure in American history.
What Steve realized, very astutely, was that this was a confrontation between the status quo in Washington and everyone else in America who felt like they were getting screwed by a broken system.
But there was one issue: she was unsure how to start the project, which two Home Depot employees in Gaylord, Michigan astutely noticed when she was at the store looking for supplies last week.
As Mashable App Reporter Karissa Bell astutely pointed out, one of the solutions Facebook seems to be trying to solve with its new bot platform is the issue of app fatigue and app engagement.
Interestingly, these cold warriors seem out of step with the traditional Republican mantra of free trade and open borders that President Ronald Reagan astutely pursued with a Communist-led China in the 1980s. Sen.
That beat is Cam'ron's "Down and Out,"​ a beautiful soul number courtesy of Syleena Johnson that Cam astutely observes is ripe for "that 1970s heroin flow" and which Cam summarily dismantles with surgical precision.
As my colleague Frank Bruni has astutely observed, Trump is as transparent as they come: You don't need a Ph.D. in psychology to know that the president is an insecure narcissist with daddy issues.
"Kapilow astutely surveys the radical changes in popular taste in the 1960s and '70s that dislodged the Broadway musical from its once-central place in American culture," Todd S. Purdum writes in his review.
Another View The "big, fat, ugly bubble" in the stock market that President-elect Donald J. Trump so astutely identified during his campaign now becomes one of the greatest potential liabilities of his presidency.
But as Josh Meyer astutely pointed out in a Politico, confidential Department of Homeland Security (DHS) documents show that the agency has been concerned about Antifa's propensity for political violence for some time now.
As Jo Boaler, rock star professor of math education at Stanford University, astutely observes in the second chapter of her new book, 'We need to give students more experiences of mathematical ambiguity and risk-taking.
As Morgan Stanley astutely cautioned at the time of the Time Warner deal: The lack of focus has affected AT&T's performance and its management's ability to live up to expectations – both internally and externally.
The five-member group that most people know as the Temptations is embodied with piquantly detailed individuality by charismatic, supple-voiced actors who astutely convey the imbalanced equations of ego and accommodation in their characters.
Having emerged from that fire relatively unscathed, Roman now astutely advises his dad that the Azerbaijani money may end up being more trouble than its worth, if it is even truly an option at all.
The days of the type of long-range visionary research that Bell Labs produced, both in-house and through events like 9 Evenings, are gone, but as Demirijan's film astutely points out, its beneficiaries are us.
Jen Pan astutely notes that the cost of having a flat, or bossless, work environment is that the work of management (and attendant surveillance) spreads throughout the workforce; when no one is the boss, everyone is.
Specialist providers say they can run pensions and life policies at a lower cost by using economies of scale, investing more astutely and using actuarial expertise to match assets more closely to liabilities, thereby reducing risk.
Much of "Frankenstein" participates in the debate over abolition, as several critics have astutely observed, and the revolution on which the novel most plainly turns is not the one in France but the one in Haiti.
It's a heartbreaking image, and one that underscores the urgent need for systemic medical attention at a time when, as the exhibition astutely points out, healthcare and traditional models of caregiving were rigged against queer communities.
And yet, as the Atlantic's Olga Khazan astutely observed after the most recent Democratic debate, presidential candidates aren't laying the blame of America's health care problems on hospitals, fixating instead on pharmaceutical companies and health insurers.
Specialist providers say they can run pensions and life policies at a lower cost by using economies of scale, investing more astutely and using actuarial expertise to match assets more closely to liabilities - and thereby reduce risk.
She became an artist against great odds, as did any woman in late-21782th-century Paris, and aided by the patronage of Marie Antoinette, went on to thrive in a nine-lives, astutely managed sort of way.
As Adam Pilarski, the former chief economist of McDonnell-Douglas (now part of Boeing) astutely notes, if the global planemaking giant wants to "act like a little whiny American company", it will lose out as a result.
Astutely geared to the selfie age, it might well have been subtitled "Americans Are Strange to Look At," which, in the 21950 images here, we sure are: funny-strange, beautiful-strange, crazy-strange, dangerous-strange, inscrutable-strange.
In an article published in The American Interest, Walter Russell Mead astutely wrote that "the basis of any Trump Revolution would have to be energy," which may spell the end of American dependence on Middle Eastern oil.
Her program consisted mostly of an astutely chosen mixture of standards and contemporary songs, in which she abstained from wailing pyrotechnics to dig deeply into the lyrics and give one of the year's most satisfying cabaret shows.
However, as critic Ken Tucker astutely points out, the show "hedges its bets": Mara plays only a minor character and the episode concludes with the doctor who performed the procedure going to confession and asking for forgiveness.
"When it comes to modern digital relationships, the rhythm of the exchange tells us as much as its literal content, and it doesn't take any specialized skill to read between the lines," Slate's Amanda Hess astutely explained.
To the Editor: Re "Our Brother, Our Executioner," by Omer Aziz (Sunday Review, March 17): That the massacre "began with ideas, and ended with violence" astutely sums up the killing of innocent Muslims in Christchurch, New Zealand.
But Ms. Bailey's real skill — the reason she lasted so long — was being able to balance such high-minded homages to the magazine's history with content that seemed, more and more, like an astutely art-directed catalog.
But the standouts here are 21913 radiant abstractions from her last 2100 years that parlay these inclinations into a distinctive yet flexible style of saturated monochromes interrupted by small episodes of two or three astutely contrasted colors.
As John Oliver so astutely argued in Sunday's episode of Last Week Tonight, it was because the hearing had nothing to do with whether Ford's allegation is credible or with the committee's desire to find out the truth.
Yet, somehow, with his instinct and practical business experience, he managed to grasp the strategic realities undergirding the China and North Korea problems far more astutely than did his opponent Hillary Clinton or his senior adviser Henry Kissinger.
Thanks to Donald Trump, whom he cultivated astutely and assiduously, he got his way on the Iran deal, brought the American Embassy to Jerusalem and pursued openings with the Arab world without making irreversible concessions to the Palestinians.
This gasp-inducing moment was exactly when I decided that Mr. Letts's latest play, directed with astutely varied pacing and room for rage by Dexter Bullard, was going to be a lot more interesting than I had thought.
On November 11, 2015, Sandler scooped up four tickets for the Lakers home finale against the Jazz at Staples Center on April 20163, astutely assuming it could (and would) be Kobe Bryant's last home game in purple and gold.
The irony in that, as my colleague Dan Primack astutely pointed out to me, is that the primary takeaway from the "30 for 30" documentary about the XFL — which Ebersol, himself, directed — is that the XFL launched too soon.
There was this actual dreamboat of a pro-shop boy whom I'll call "Sunglasses" because that's what I very astutely called him in my head before I knew his name and also because I rarely saw his naked eyes.
ELLYN ROTH, NEW YORK To the Editor: David Brooks astutely lays out many reasons behind the recent weakening of the social bonds that hold us together as a society and the related loss of faith in our governing institutions.
The last thing anyone needs right now in today's troubled world is, as one Twitter user astutely put it, negative vibes: Please go on Stephen Colbert's official FB page and leave some positive comments that'll make people wanna check BTS out.
Given recent advances in natural language processing, the syntax for engaging with bots will be less brittle than the command line of recent decades, even if we are "50 Nobel Prizes away" from HAL 9000 as Benedict Evans astutely observes.
Donald Trump astutely used our dissonance to gain the Republican nomination, demeaning many of the qualities we claim to value in our elected leadership and also hope to see in our children: decency, honesty, tolerance, respect for others, regard for women.
One way to view the current situation is that Mr. Trump is an opportunist who has astutely ridden an economic expansion that had long been underway – and is now hoping it will carry him through a drawn-out trade battle.
To urge people not to save parking spots with cones or household objects during inclement weather, which they astutely labeled "Game of Cones," the department shared a post from its Facebook page featuring everyone's favorite back-from-the-dead character, Jon Snow.
Shell has said that the deal will make money when oil is around $60 a barrel, but some analysts say that, assuming it manages the BG acquisition astutely, Shell will come out ahead even if prices do not rebound as Shell expects.
Most importantly, as Wired astutely pointed out last week: one of the most important things you can do to protect yourself (and the rest of your address book) is to resist the urge to click on everything that shows up in your inbox.
By framing these objects — a window, a clothesline, a cherry tree — in changing seasons and times of day, she finds ways to see her life anew, to celebrate the commonplace, while astutely probing the pressures modernism has placed on the picture plane.
So when Jeff Bezos opened a discount online store 22 years ago, he astutely decided to sell books, a product for which consumers would know the actual discount he or she was receiving because the list price was there for all to see.
"No one I met in Russia had studied Western culture as deeply as they had and extracted so much that was so good in it, while staying true, as best they could, to the place where they were from," he astutely describes them.
In some of her later books, she gave in to a tendency toward didacticism, as if she were losing patience with humanity for not learning the hard lessons — about the need for balance and compassion — that her best work so astutely embodies.
They have rebuilt their minor-league development program, astutely assessed which prospects to hold onto and which to deal, and plucked diamonds in the rough, like center fielder Aaron Hicks and Gregorius, and perhaps first baseman Luke Voit, in exchange for superfluous parts.
Evans's conclusion astutely distinguishes between changes in language itself and changes in technologies of communication; we would all do well to follow his lead and understand better what emojis do well — and worry less that they threaten the basic function of language.
During a segment skewering the president's symbiotic relationship with Fox News (we believe Bee's exact phrasing was "long-distance circle jerk"), Full Frontal astutely noted that Trump has tweeted more about Fox News since taking office than he has about Tiffany ... ever.
He writes about them so vividly, comments so astutely on small details of light and space and color, that we find ourselves reading the book with an iPad or laptop on hand, Googling images of the works he has so eloquently and ardently described.
He astutely tallies the degradation that Trump's lawless, norm-busting presidency has already inflicted: stuffing the courts, assaulting the Justice Department, demonizing the free press and mainstreaming extremist ideas like mass deportations and the Muslim travel ban — now shamefully validated by a Supreme Court majority.
"So, in summary, there's a narrow pathway to a landing zone, which could give access to a tunnel, which would pass under a summit, but perhaps reach sunlit uplands rather than the last ditch before the cliff edge," astutely tweets the AFP's Dave Clark.
One of the many ironies of the European election is that the supposedly backward-looking Brexit Party has exploited social media much more astutely than the self-consciously with-it Change UK. Mr Farage's public events have been perfectly choreographed and his online campaign first-rate.
The gap between Senate GOP leaders and the base widens McConnell has been a piñata for conservative activists for years, which Cruz astutely realized when he called his leader a liar on the Senate floor during a debate over the reauthorization of the Export-Import Bank.
Originally composed as an instrumental piece by Leroy Anderson in 1948, "Sleigh Ride" acquired lyrics soon after, when Mitchell Parish heard, astutely, the way the melody mimics falling snow and the clippety-trot of horses; the song that resulted is a precise union of content and form.
By claiming that the American effort "cannot fail to command the respect" of all other nations, Madison "set an influential precedent," Feldman astutely comments, "for subsequent American unwillingness to shine harsh light on wars that produced mixed results," a precedent that resonates today in Iraq and Afghanistan.
CAITY WEAVER Probably not since Josef von Sternberg used costuming to transform Marlene Dietrich from a plump German starlet into a mesmerizing world-weary femme fatale in "Morocco" has a director deployed fashion in the service of atmosphere and character more astutely than Wong Kar-wai.
As our friends at Waypoint astutely noted in their review, Far Cry 5's writing tries to capitalize on the fact that it takes place in America for the first time in the series while Donald Trump is president, but it fails to say anything meaningful about that.
Paying for Treatment Nathan Heller, in his piece about how families are crowdfunding to cover medical costs, astutely observes that the exploitative storytelling culture underpinning GoFundMe "looks past all the interlocking motions of society in favor of the personal, the private, the atomized view" ("Tell Us What You Need," July 1st).
It is just as deeply reported, just as astutely interpreted, just as rigorously thought through as any other form of journalism, just in a very different form, one that can sound fantastical but one that has centuries of thought and theory backing it up, all the way back to ancient Greece.
" Beyond hampering the state's interest in maintaining secular policies, Monday's decision is a "terrible blow" to the Establishment Clause values that protect religion, according to Corbin, who astutely warned, "We are not at a point in time in our history where we should be ignoring the ramifications of a decision on minority religions.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads All films are, to some degree, expressions of an artist's politics, but few contemporary directors have more actively and astutely reckoned with the political in their work than Jia Zhangke, who continues to capture a rapidly developing China in all its growing pains and irreparable fractures.
It has been posited that a number of Trump voters supported him out of an anarchic desire to destroy a system that has not worked for them, or even just to see what would happen with the nuclear codes (or, as an Onion video headline in 2011 astutely put it, "Morbid Curiosity Leading Many Voters to Support Palin").
As Khalidi astutely points out, while SC 242 is generally regarded as the foundational basis for future Arab-Israeli peace talks, for the Palestinians it represented a one-two punch: Nowhere in the resolution are they referred to by name — they are merely "refugees" — while a return to the 1967 borders meant the outside world was now legitimating their 1948 expulsion.
Mishan writes astutely about the sensory aspects of food—capturing the crackle of flaky Egyptian crepes folded into each other "like a series of Chinese boxes," in a former Bay Ridge bodega; or the creamy, tumeric-stained monster curry bun that resembles "a crab stranded on its back," at a Malaysian restaurant in Elmhurst—but Hungry City is a food column that is only sort of about food.
More compelling is a late chapter, "Rock and Roll, Broadway and the Me Decade," in which Kapilow astutely surveys the radical changes in popular taste in the 1960s and '70s that dislodged the Broadway musical from its once-central place in American culture, yet simultaneously fostered the full flowering of Sondheim's unique genius as the leading third-generation example of outstanding songwriters who had begun their work in their teens and 20s.
First, because while Clinton had astutely mocked Obama's theory of post-partisanship in 2008, the Clintonian approach of simply being 25 percent more Republican-like—voting for the Iraq War and supporting anti–flag-burning amendments out of some bizarre idea that doing so would cancel out the salience of those issues for the movement identified with nationalism and jingoism—had already definitively failed at either establishing long-lasting Democratic majorities or cooling the hysterical opposition of the right.
Discussion amongst the members continued about the role, relevance and purpose of OSI, with one member astutely noting that there were a lot of "free software" wonks in the group, attempting to bastardize open source to advocate their own agenda: If, instead, OSI has decided that they are now a Free Software organization, and that Free Software is what "we" do, and that "our" focus is on "Free software" then, then let's change the name to the Free Software Initiative and open the gates for some other entity, who is all about Open Source, to take on that job, and do it proudly.
The members of the Senate Finance Committee initiating the investigation included Max BaucusMax Sieben BaucusOvernight Defense: McCain honored in Capitol ceremony | Mattis extends border deployment | Trump to embark on four-country trip after midterms Congress gives McCain the highest honor Judge boots Green Party from Montana ballot in boost to Tester MORE (D-Mont.) and Chuck GrassleyCharles (Chuck) Ernest GrassleyGOP senators call for Barr to release full results of Epstein investigation Trump health official: Controversial drug pricing move is 'top priority' Environmental advocates should take another look at biofuels MORE (R-Iowa), who astutely pointed out the disturbing epidemic and wanted to understand who was behind it.

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