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20 Sentences With "brainchildren"

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

The defense team is aiming to spin the crimes as Gates' brainchildren. 4.
His economic populist ideas are the brainchildren of White House adviser Steve Bannon.
For a refresher on Mr. Birbiglia's brainchildren, check out "The Old Ones," his five-episode podcast companion piece.
It's unclear whether such orders were Xiao's brainchildren but it's looking increasingly likely that they will cost him his job.
The image and its title were the brainchildren of the planetary scientist Carl Sagan, who was a member of the Voyager Imaging team.
Because to move the needle on growth, Snapchat needs the AR brainchildren of more than just slimy marketers slapping brands atop the virtual world.
"Wonder Woman" and "The Justice League"—the brainchildren of DC Comics' fledgling entertainment division—dazzled audiences and reportedly drew standing ovations at SDCC panel discussions.
Both gadgets are the brainchildren of Intel, a chipmaker commissioned by the International Cricket Council (ICC), the sport's governing body, to find new ways to keep fans entertained.
The "Senior Managers Regime" and "Certification Regime" will come into force on March 7th, largely the brainchildren of Andrew Tyrie, a Tory MP and chair of the PCBS.
Speedfactory and Storefactory are both the brainchildren of a division within Adidas that is focused on new technologies called the Future team—a kind of Google X for sneakerheads.
Those first clones, the brainchildren of Lao Chen, were the actual children of several of her graduate students, conceived by the technique used to create the first cloned sheep.
Intellectual property has never been so sexy than at the European Inventor Award, where innovators and the patent examiners who protect their brainchildren are rock stars for the day.
HBO Max will also have series starring the likes of Lupita Nyong'o and Ansel Elgort, along with the brainchildren of Mindy Kaling, Insecure star Issa Rae, and even Ellen DeGeneres.
When writers and producers are bringing their on-screen brainchildren to life, should they reflect the truth of our racially divided country, or should they paint the just picture we want to see, given they want to see it, too?
Brands like Zella, BP., and Halogen are the brainchildren of a national department store that has regularly screened the most appealing trends of the season since 1901 and, inevitably, decided to apply those learnings to their own trendy — and slightly more affordable — collections.
Glenroe, as a story, had origins in two previous shows, The Riordans and Bracken. The three productions were the brainchildren of Wesley Burrowes.
Dennett has remarked in several places (such as "Self-portrait", in Brainchildren) that his overall philosophical project has remained largely the same since his time at Oxford. He is primarily concerned with providing a philosophy of mind that is grounded in empirical research. In his original dissertation, Content and Consciousness, he broke up the problem of explaining the mind into the need for a theory of content and for a theory of consciousness. His approach to this project has also stayed true to this distinction.
Lychnos and the society were both the brainchildren of Johan Nordström, since 1933 the first holder of a then-new professorship in the History of Ideas and Learning at Uppsala University.Frängsmyr (1990-91), p. 452 Nordström was an ardent popularizer and had the ambition to establish a periodical such as the American journal Isis, published by George Sarton since 1912, and a society corresponding to Sarton's History of Science Society, founded in 1924 to support the continued publication of the journal. Sarton visited Sweden in 1934 and was greeted as a celebrity and a long interview with him was published in the Stockholm morning paper Svenska Dagbladet.
Yet the concerts continued, and grew more and more ambitious. Prokofiev’s Alexander Nevsky received an early UK performance from KSO at the 1963 St Pancras Festival; several now-standard works including Bernstein’s Symphonic Dances from West Side Story, Mahler’s Das Klagende Lied and Puccini’s Messa di Gloria were introduced to UK audiences by KSO. As the orchestra for Opera Viva, another of Head’s brainchildren, KSO (in all but name—the sponsoring Fulham council insisted they dropped the "Kensington") performed in well-received exhumations of early Wagner, Verdi and Donizetti operas with distinguished singers including Pauline Tinsley and the young John Tomlinson. Yet the boldest venture was perhaps KSO’s 1961 UK premiere of the vast, original 1901 version of Schoenberg’s Gurre-Lieder.
TWINS NATALIA is an electro-pop ensemble comprising creative minds from various artistic fields working together to create some beautiful, catchy yet melancholic and substantial electro-pop combining an early 80s musical approach (analogue drum machine sounds, way of sequencing, etc.) with the latest recording technology. TWINS NATALIA is one of the many brainchildren of Steve Lippert, Anna Logue Records' permanent and wonderful graphic designer. The basic musical ideas are composed by Marc Schaffer on original analogue equipment (Boss DR-55, Crumar Performer, Korg MS-20/Poly-61, Roland TR-606/TR-808/CSQ-100/SH-2, etc.) supplying the basic rhythmic and melodic structure. Additional composition, arrangement and performance by Dave Hewson in his recording studio in East Sussex, and with lyrics are added by Sharon Abbott, performed by both Sharon and Julie Ruler, the latter three well known as POEME ELECTRONIQUE.

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