Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

115 Sentences With "calling cards"

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

There were other calling cards: upturned noses, small feet and exaggerated musculature.
Yet the blues could easily be one of Chicago's cultural calling cards.
Racism, Islamophobia, and xenophobia — and not economic anxiety — are their calling cards.
It's a calling card and very few people get calling cards like that.
Then we got bigger, and we got the fucking AT&T calling cards.
But its chief calling cards are spectacular underwater sequences filmed by Matias Boucard.
As we walked, we passed halal butchers and stores selling international calling cards.
The passionate crowds are one of the best calling cards for Tenby's race.
The stamps' release will be followed by prepaid calling cards bearing the actor's face.
They can function as professional calling cards — sample displays — for tattooists promoting their skills.
Both artists retain their stylistic calling cards, while offering something new, bright, and energetic.
" One of Javelina's calling cards, queso, "arrives lukewarm, which prevents trips to the emergency room.
One woman mentions in a memoir that her grandmother carried calling cards into the 1940s.
More extreme precipitation is one of the calling cards of a warmer world, experts say.
Possibly not as scary: The killer strikes at snowfall and leaves snowmen as calling cards.
Long, perfectly styled hair has always been one of the singer-turned-actress's beauty calling cards.
The surface simplicity of the whole idea is one of its great calling cards: Free college.
Long, bombshell hair is one of the most reliable visible calling cards of Victoria's Secret models.
Watch enough films by the same director, and you'll see these little visual calling cards sprinkled throughout.
"Frasier" settings aside, The Travel Channel points to mountains, rivers and oceans as Seattle's greatest calling cards.
They've done a lousy job so far in making this case, but they have two calling cards.
Spices remain one of Zanzibar's calling cards, though things have changed quite a bit over the centuries.
"Our business model is attacking" both the industries of calling cards and international phone calling, Larsson said.
Clients receive texts now, and the calling cards, replete with private (though outdated) celebrity information, may be shredded.
There was a separate AT&T phone center where you could use the phones with expensive calling cards.
"These are the latest calling cards of hate," Mark Pitcavage, Senior Fellow in ADL's Center on Extremism said.
The title role in "Schicchi," the trilogy's comic third part, is one of the Italian baritone's calling cards.
They're both sweet and frothy, they're both Instagram bait, and they're both calling cards of the proud basic bitch.
These stories, the ones that act as calling cards and life rafts, often gain inconsistencies through their repeated retellings.
And if you have or know a Black auntie, you know that being judgmental is one of their calling cards.
He says that the Amazon calling cards, seen here, had been used for cleanup when the driver finished doing his business.
I always had to make something out of those moments, and I guess those became calling cards for [ Epicly] as well.
Manila-based Jara Rogacion tweeted a set of downloadable flyers and calling cards for street harassers, which have quickly gone viral.
Two Cult of the Dead Cow contemporaries in Texas who were caught misusing calling cards as minors got off with warnings.
The green and red color combination is one of Poison Ivy's calling cards — perhaps now it'll be one of Zendaya's, too.
Remember, one of the American Apparel's calling cards is its "Made in USA" promise, yet Gildan produces most of its product overseas.
First, it either resells or recycles them and then takes that money to buy prepaid calling cards for soldiers currently serving overseas.
Over the course of eight seasons, GoT's original calling cards — narrative complexity, hot people arguing — gradually became overshadowed by its showstopping spectacle.
But without fail, they leave their calling cards: Pronged footprints and gashes in the ground where they&aposve dug with natural abandon.
"These are the latest calling cards of hate," said Mark Pitcavage, senior fellow in the ADL's Center on Extremism, according to CNN.
These people are very clear about their aim of finding work in the industry—the videos they make are calling cards, audition reels.
We used to buy calling cards all the time to talk to people back home but [when there was] internet, we had WhatsApp.
Personally, I prefer to admire these beautiful calling cards when I find them, grateful for a little more blue magic on any walk.
On Friday, Politico reported that two Republican House Intelligence Committee staffers went to London earlier in the summer to leave calling cards for Steele.
On criminal justice, one of Ms. Harris's calling cards, she did not unveil her own proposals until months after she began meeting with activists.
Analysts at the security firm CrowdStrike would find other apparent Russian calling cards, elements that resembled a piece of Russian ransomware known as XData.
Seoul sensation Park Hae Jin has the honour of becoming the first Korean actor to get his face printed on Chinese stamps and calling cards.
All of those are Baltimore rapper and singer Lor Choc's calling cards, and what helps her music speak to listeners in a variety of situations.
By covering costs for the artists she worked with, Davis says she was able to create more music videos and use them as calling cards.
Glitz, glamour, and a shock of platinum blonde hair are sure to be the calling cards of The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story.
Eyeball Cards: The Art of British CB Radio Culture compiles hundreds of calling cards from the renegade 1970s and '80s Citizens Band (CB) radio scene.
When I was growing up, calling cards were always on our grocery list, until the proliferation of instant messaging and VoIP technologies made them obsolete.
Cell Phones for Soldiers is another group that sells donated phones and uses the proceeds toward prepaid international calling cards for members of the military.
The pageantry of failed floor votes has become one of Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell's calling cards in the Senate over the past few years.
The March for Our Lives movement, which has made intersectionality one of its calling cards, has helped draw attention to the violence that is often forgotten.
The company's first product was international telephone calling cards, but in 2004 it launched the first low-cost international service, selling SIM cards using mobile carrier partners.
He brought in other outsiders to key positions and relaunched the iconic 500, which became one of the new Fiat&aposs calling cards as it expanded abroad.
Whether you fall under the spell of the hotel's vintage factory fantasia will depend on what price you put on style, service and seclusion — the hotel's calling cards.
One of DNA's big calling cards is a proprietary, algae-derived complex, which is thought to hinder the natural production of skin cell proteins associated with aging skin.
For years, Khan had made a point of carrying around pocket Constitutions just like it and passing them out to visitors at his Virginia home like calling cards.
After finding a bag filled with poop and Amazon calling cards, a quick check of CCTV cameras indicated that a delivery driver for the e-commerce giant was responsible.
Larsson said the $3.3 billion market for overseas calls — used mainly by immigrants and business travelers — is dominated by calling cards and international call centers to dial back home.
I'd had my doubts when I'd heard that a rock garden was one of Chandigarh's — and India's — biggest calling cards, but then I stepped inside this one and was floored.
"I'm a fan of classics because they tell the story," said Lise Lindstrom, the American soprano who stars in the production and has made "Salome" one of her calling cards.
And if the contrast with the likes of Mr. Sanders, 75, were not obvious enough, the governor held up one of his accomplishments against one of Mr. Sanders's calling cards.
That gift for understated lyricism has made "Cendrillon," a lesser-known work from 1899 that shows its composer's knack for comedy, one of Ms. DiDonato's calling cards over the past decade.
While it's unlikely that discussion at J-14 will get as political as it does, say, on The View, Bure's day job, the actress' perspective is one of her calling cards.
Yesterday in Styles In the early 2000s, heterosexuals who favored European jeans, wine bars and fancy face creams — the calling cards of some women and gay men — sparked a marketing frenzy.
"I'm all about it," Bachman says, understanding that high-quality recordings of his performances are good calling cards to have out there, his music spreading further when Pier-Hocking posts it online.
Alongside were active in-person meet ups where participants would exchange their calling cards, often printed with something like "You have eyeballed Joe Soap," accompanied by an illustration of a soap bar.
Two of the solo pieces, "Hey Little Girl" and "Mardi Gras in New Orleans," are Professor Longhair tunes; a third, "Big Chief," was one of his calling cards, written by Earl King.
The three giant letters are made up of posters and calling cards for loan sharks, a comment on the abuses of the policy and the growing chasm between rich and poor Malays.
The delicious fruit did go by a host of other, more Europeanized calling cards over the centuries, having been known as the aguacate to the Spanish and "midshipman's butter" to English sailors.
His compressed voice flits and flutters over a looped verse, jolting between its natural form and the pitched-up, delicately nasal tone that's become one of his calling cards over the years.
And while neither Olympics organizers nor security firms are ready to point the finger at the Kremlin, the hackers seem to have at least left behind some calling cards that look rather Russian.
Art Review For design-minded travelers, the principal calling cards of Mexico City, Lima or São Paulo — Latin America's megacities, each of them larger than New York — have been their delirious modernist structures.
Here's the circular trap of the supergroup: If the players are respected entities, their calling cards already completed, how do they put something new on the line without sacrificing the reason they're there?
Today, the average Android device is not only susceptible to malware and trackers, it's also heavily locked down and loaded with proprietary components—characteristics that are hardly the calling cards of the FOSS movement.
The second, "My Calling (Card) #235 Double Meta-Performance" (228–27), edits together footage from two meta-performances based on Piper's use of calling cards that alert recipients to the fact that she's black.
Chance's vocal calling cards — those "yups" and chirps — sound like affirmations now, signs that a kid from a city with a mind-numbing murder rate can still turn out okay, successful, even wildly happy.
We sat down at a long conference table, where I produced several of her "calling cards" from the late 1980s and early 1990s, brilliant performance props she created for use in real social situations.
The actors here spend a lot of time doing everyday activities — mime calling cards like showering, toothbrushing — that made me long for the abstraction of dance or the greater specificity of an actual toothbrush.
She is perhaps best known for a pair of calling cards she produced in the late 1980s to give to people who made racist remarks in front of her or tried to pick her up.
Look closer and the three giant letters are made up of posters and calling cards for loan sharks, a comment on the abuses of the policy and the growing chasm between rich and poor Malays.
Accounting for these "tips," transportation, food, calling cards, and the cash left to inmates, each visit can cost around 1,000 pesos—too much money for a family that can usually visit just once every two weeks.
The collectable locker keys found strewn about in previous titles are replaced with telephone cards—prepaid public phone calling cards that were hot collectibles in the era (and still have a devoted following of fans today).
The database, Hate on Display, was started in 2000 in an effort to track hate groups and help identify symbols that serve "as potential calling cards of extremists and anti-Semites," the league said on its website.
The group has made unexpected and extreme violence one of its calling cards, and it has publicly embraced and promoted the shock value of hitting "soft targets" like a concert audience full of young women and girls.
It's the show's second episode, and it carries all the calling cards of the mid-'90s drama: earnest handling of an "edgy" social issue (in this case, cross-dressing), power suits, and a jingly smooth jazz soundtrack.
That year also saw an incident in which a man and woman attacked a fast food joint and a Walmart, killing two cops, and leaving two calling cards featuring a swastika and a "Don't Tread on Me" insignia.
"The problem with going against Vladimir Putin for Donald Trump is, one of his calling cards is he is tough, he's really making American great again, he's strong," Miringoff, director of the Marist Institute for Public Opinion, told Hill.
Federal agents believed that much of the $8,700 Elshinawy received from ISIS through multiple means was used to purchase a laptop, calling cards, a private VPN networks, and a hotspot—all of which were apparently used to communicate with ISIS.
" As far as calling cards go, Wicca Phase is defined by evocative words ("passion", "silhouette", "cold"), occult imagery, and the name "Corinthiax", which he has previously described as "an evil, romantic entity that tortures me and makes me emotionally restless.
And some major Bush backers on Sunday even reported being contacted by the team representing Trump, who has made self-funding his campaign one of his premier calling cards and mercilessly taunted Bush as "low energy" for the past several months.
Songs about the bar, the highway, hard work, and home—those were Merle's calling cards, and those are the things that mattered most to the man who raised me, things he passed down to me through actions, if not words.
But part of her appeal is that she is who she's always been, with or without her beauty calling cards, and this cover doesn't mean we're about to see a whole new version of the star — just another, more personal side of her.
Calling cards came into widespread use in the mid-1800s, when the middle class was trying to acquire a bit of an upper class finish, and when it became feasible for everyone to print up and carry around personalized bits of paper.
Bannon's rhetorical calling cards include: Jackson Pollock-smatterings of military terms, aggressive calls to action, swerving questions that don't serve his purpose, advocating for far-right leaders in America, Italy, France, Switzerland and Hungary, appeals to emotions above facts, and interrupting people.
That voice, along with the patch Colvin wore after she lost an eye to a grenade in Sri Lanka, became her calling cards as she catapulted into war zones around the world, and wrote deeply felt, courageously reported articles for The Sunday Times in London.
" It's a good career move for the statuesque cop with the "hussy red" hair, who seems suited to the new criminal terrain of drug lords so cruel they leave severed heads as calling cards and biker gangs so brutal they "eat Hells Angels for breakfast.
There were really harmful aspects of it, and it had all the calling cards of a cult: the tight-knit community where everything's in-house, the psychological trappings, intended or otherwise, and the fact that people donated a lot of their personal assets to the group.
Some of this is because Boston's splashy summer free-agent signee, Al Horford, missed time early this season due to injury; without Horford's imposing presence around the rim, Bradley doesn't have as much carte blanche to hound opposing ball handlers, which negates one of his defensive calling cards.
He also took a percentage of the proceeds of an annual Italian feast in the neighborhood, and in the mid-1990s, was involved in a swindle related to selling calling cards with airtime minutes from telephone companies, a lucrative venture in the days before cellphones, the prosecutor's memo said.
But when Election Day looms far in the distance, it's important to maintain the pressure, to call out the lies, to counter the propaganda, the corruption, the violation of the country's moral ideals, and the steady erosion of democratic values that have become the calling cards of modern-day autocrats.
Speaking to a joint session of Congress, Mr. Trump hailed what he called the "extraordinary success" of his administration's first year, and largely steered clear of the nationalist rhetoric, political attacks and confrontational tone that have been his calling cards both as a candidate and as a commander in chief.
Spending the 1940s in Switzerland, she swiftly moved from lighter lyrical roles to heavier ones in operas by Wagner (Senta in "Der Fliegende Holländer"), Puccini (Tosca and Turandot) and Verdi (Leonora in "Il Trovatore" and "La Forza del Destino"), as well as the formidable Strauss antiheroines who became her calling cards.
While the movie adds in some fresh locales (Marrakesh and London provide backdrops, in addition to the series' native New York), "Men in Black: International" basically relies on the same combination of shape-shifting aliens, half-kidding action and creative weaponry that were the calling cards of the first three movies.
Two years after the band's last LP, Mare Cognitum's calling cards remain, twinkling out of the void—the cinematic feel, the understated vocal rasps, the lush melodies, the nimble riffs—and its creator revels in progressivism, flaunting a disregard for genre constraints even as Buczarski executes the traditional tremolo and chromatic scales with studied grace.
Most of the ship's elaborate calling cards like the RipCord, FlowRider and North Star had been rendered inoperable by the storm, and all the pools and hot tubs had been emptied by the ship's hours of side-to-side rocking and were never refilled, but that didn't stop people from getting out to do things and have fun.
The arrest of Mr. Matthews came after days of worrying about the community's remaining churches, and about the fabric of a proud, working-class stretch of Acadiana just north of Lafayette, where the global calling cards are not extreme mutations of heavy metal, but the joyous chug of zydeco or the high lonesome wail of Cajun fiddles.
While a heist movie is something of a departure from her crime/mystery/whatever-you-want-to-call-them novels, "Widows" nevertheless flashes several Flynn calling cards in the way it focuses on mostly realistic women solving unrealistic problems — committing crimes or uncovering others — which always involve, and are complicated by, the people in their lives.
Though this week's talk will be all about Mr. Trump's loss, it should really be about America's loss, and about confronting head on the racism, xenophobia and Islamophobia — not to mention callous indifference to poverty and suffering — that have become the calling cards of these politicians, and that are sadly embraced (or, at the very least, overlooked) by far too many Americans.
The China Drama Academy primarily contributed to Chan's success in three ways: It facilitated lifelong friendships with fellow entertainers, like Sammo Hung, who in the early days got him jobs, then went on to co-star in some of his most famous movies; it prepared him for stuntwork and trained him in martial arts, which were his calling cards in Hong Kong's down-and-dirty film industry; and it turned his body into an instrument that could withstand ungodly amounts of pain.
By the time I got to Little Town on the Prairie, in which Pa performs in a minstrel show and Laura raves about the hilarity of the "darkies," I was old enough that I had grasped without help that minstrel shows were racist, and had developed a strategy for reading such passages: I would say, "Oh my god, Laura," and then skim past to get to the good part about all the girls at Laura's school playing cliquish power games with their calling cards.
Whether it be her Mythic Being street performances of the early 1970s, in which she donned an afro wig and mustache and interacted with the public as her very masculine alter ego; her calling cards of the late '453s which literally called out racism and unwanted male attention; or her recent Probable Trust Registry, in which visitors sign contracts agreeing to certain statements, such as "I will always be too expensive to buy," Piper confronts issues of race, gender, and power that define our contemporary, contested world.

No results under this filter, show 115 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.