Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

179 Sentences With "canaries"

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

They are PR canaries in the coal mine to start with, or canaries in the PR coal mine.
The work is "Two Stage Transfer Drawing" by Taraneh Fazeli and Sick Time With Canaries — not "Sick Time With Canaries" by Ms. Faneli.
Here are some canaries in the coal mine to watch.
Hasty lateral movement can trip defensive systems such as "canaries".
"These are the canaries in the coal mine," Roberts said.
However, there are a couple canaries in the coal mine.
For coal mines, canaries raised the alarm on toxic leaks.
In the political coal mine, people of color are your canaries.
"Birds are literally the canaries in the coal mine," Parr said.
At least, that's the plan behind canaries on child pornography forums.
"Blah Blah nobody reads these anyways," one of the canaries reads.
Bluebirds, cardinals, canaries, crows, finches, woodpecker, and owls are among them.
"They are the canaries in the coal mine," Dr. Benjamin said.
"The canaries in the coal mine are still gasping for air," she said.
Illinois and Dallas, in particular, are canaries in a $1 trillion coal mine.
"Another month, another chalk line on the wall," one of the canaries read.
My colleagues and I may have served only as canaries in the mine.
They stopped, looked inside and saw nothing but broken glass and dead canaries.
Cloudflare's expanded canaries were included in the company's latest transparency report, out this week.
Let's call them the web's two canaries in a coal mine: music and women.
"This is one of the canaries in the mine," she said of the area.
Otherwise, we as health care workers will be the canaries in the coal mine.
In this scenario, the laureates are like the proverbial canaries in a coal mine.
The canaries in the coal mine of democracy — minorities, journalists, activists — are already falling.
Adult male canaries learn a new song every year in order to attract mates.
There's a sizable cage here with zebra finches and canaries, and people can go in.
Cats, dogs, horses, peacocks, ducks, geese, chickens, canaries; Martha Stewart is Mom to them all.
Butterflies are canaries in a coal mine when it comes to climatic and ecological changes.
It's important work, because tapeworms are the nightmare versions of canaries in the coal mine.
Town halls, Rotary Club visits, and constituent encounters were like canaries in the coal mine.
For tech companies, cryptographically signed messages—or warrant canaries—flag secret demands for user data.
Typically, cryptographic canaries have been used to alert website users of government demands for data.
They killed canaries, they dumped goldfish on the floor, they indiscriminately bit turtles and policemen.
Where companies have abandoned their canaries or caved to legal pressure, Cloudflare is bucking the trend.
Astrotourism is already a component of the Canaries' booming tourism industry, drawing about 200,000 visitors annually.
Although the First Amendment protects government-compelled speech, the legality of warrant canaries remains legally questionable.
Like individual harbingers, these ZIP codes are canaries in the coal mine for ill-fated offerings.
Movement signatures also might serve as coal-mine canaries for disease or injury risk, he says.
The crystals in this case were serving as canaries, warning of potential harm to those exquisite instruments.
The coal company's bankruptcy and market trends for electric cars are the canaries in the oil fields.
New Orleans and other US cities wading through chronic floods are the canaries in the coal mine.
Others have gone to sell in more chilled out chemsex scenes abroad in Spain and the Canaries.
We are the canaries in the coal mine, and Bloomberg's toxic policies must be contained and dismantled.
Some things don't go together: brussels sprouts and bubblegum; cats and canaries; Megyn Kelly and NBC News.
There are several canaries in the coal mine — take the case of famous actress Fan Bingbing, for instance.
Harris calls Murray "one of the canaries in the coal mine" — his treatment a sign of liberal intolerance.
It has since shifted airline seats from Turkey, Tunisia and Egypt to the Canaries, Balearics and mainland Spain.
As usual, artists are the canaries in the coal mines — giving voice to those who cannot represent themselves.
Other crew members included Héctor the mute goat (for dairy), and Helen and Elvin, the Australian mine canaries.
Afghans seem to stage fights with nearly every kind of animal: dogs, roosters, camels, canaries, finches, quails, pigeons.
When it comes to the effects of climate change, migratory birds are seen as canaries in a coal mine.
The first portable air sensors were the canaries that miners used to monitor for poison gases in coal mines.
A neural net trained to recognize only canaries isn't of any use in recognizing, say, birdsong or human speech.
In it, shoppers would flip through to find battery-powered cars, Mickey Mouse toys, fruitcakes and even live canaries.
With every passing day, it's become clear that event organizers were just the proverbial canaries in the coal mine.
They are well named; both the males and females are as yellow as canaries, and they sing as beautifully.
From dogs to cats to canaries to lizards, we humans form unbreakable bonds with our furry, feathered, and scaled friends.
As such, you might think our money was on Crystal Palace ("the Eagles") to beat Norwich ("the Canaries") this weekend.
Talking to Di Cunningham, organiser of the Proud Canaries, it's clear that existing groups feel more needs to be done.
Another hot spot is Barbarestan, housed in an old butcher shop with meat hooks still visible and caged singing canaries.
Clutching a copy of "Moby-Dick," she gives brief lectures on starfish and on the variations in the songs of canaries.
I have 26 red factor canaries in one giant cage, and they are pretty much all the music anyone ever needs.
But, the admin has apparently been late posting at least one of these canaries, much to the annoyance of other members.
The Democratic victories in last year's Virginia and New Jersey governor's races could well be the canaries in the coal mine.
Plenty of women's national teams have large followings, such as Australia's Matildas, England's Lionesses, Brazil's Canaries or Les Bleues of France.
But, in truth, these are universal stories that affect all people, with Jews merely serving as canaries-in-the-coal-mine.
Establishments like these are the canaries of gentrification, opening in neighborhoods where rent is cheap and foretelling the increases to come.
The networking and content delivery network is one of a handful of major companies that have used warrant canaries over the years.
Two days after the subway attack, 2,500 of them raided a dozen cult properties with riot gear, gas masks and caged canaries.
It could be apt to think of your teeth as the canaries in the coal mine of your overall health, Cram said.
The fishing villages in the mangrove-rich estuaries of Cambodia's Koh Kong province might be the canaries in the global sand mine.
They are canaries in the coal mine, and you can see from looking at birds what's happening to the environment in general.
But prosecutors often try to get lawyers to "sing" against their clients — to become "canaries" — in order to save their own feathers.
But if you view banks as the economy's canary in the coalmine, as I do, then you've got some pretty darn healthy canaries.
"These are the canaries in the coal mine for the MLP players," said a client note from Brean Capital LLC following the ruling.
The small tropical birds we call canaries, native to these islands and others, are named after the islands — not the other way around.
" She concluded, "Afghan women were the canaries in the mine shaft, bearing witness to the inhumanity of a regime against its own citizens.
Like the caged canaries brought into mines to warn of unsafe levels of pollutants, coal stockpiles signal the state of the coal industry.
These innocent victims are the "canaries in the coal mine for understanding public terror," as feminist writer Soraya Chemaly put it for Rolling Stone.
The networking and content delivery network giant said in a blog post this week that it's expanding the transparency reports to include more canaries.
"The power producers and utilities are the canaries in the coal mine," said Aron Cramer, C.E.O. of Business for Social Responsibility, a consulting firm.
Played with almost indecent relish by John Lithgow, Strutt has the smile of a cat who swallows a bushel of canaries at every meal.
Where others saw positive trends — say, a full-throated dawn chorus praising the nation's diversity — Mr. Rorty saw dead canaries in a coal mine.
Then you can spy the zebra finches with their honking song like a miniature traffic jam, and yellow canaries lightly whistling, flitting around the space.
" Carolyn Lazard, a founding member of the Canaries, says that, "we try not to do projects that compromise the health of anyone in the collective.
In the cloud, honeytokens are often authentication credentials that look like the keys to the kingdom, but actually act as canaries in the coal mine.
While the perpetually woke are dismissed, they're also the canaries in our coal mines, alerting us to dangers we might be too drowsy to see.
The leaks helped popularize the use of "warrant canaries" by tech firms eager to display resistance to government attempts to obtain access to user data.
In 1873, Ulysses S. Grant ushered in the beginning of his second term as US president by accidentally killing hundreds of canaries on Inauguration Day.
As it notes in a press release tied to the announcement, the Aria takes its name from flocks of canaries used to keep coal miners safe.
The children being hospitalized now are in a sense the country's canaries, the earliest victims of a danger to which the state can offer little response.
In a busy world in which legislation and the processes by which it is produced are often opaque, mavericks are the canaries in the coal mine.
Sex workers are the canaries in the digital coal mine, and SESTA, if it isn't fought and reversed, is a disaster for all kinds of online speech.
"What I can say about penguins in general is that they are important 'canaries in the coal mine' when it comes to ocean health," she told Gizmodo.
"The Canaries is pretty much booked out," said Joussen, who is now sole chief executive after co-CEO Peter Long stepped down at Tuesday's annual general meeting.
Not only that ... Thug's lawyers also want info that will help them rip apart would-be canaries, including criminal records, personnel files and any other relevant dirt.
Without diminishing anyone else's suffering and death, it's a sad fact that the Jews often are the canaries in the coal mine of social and political collapse.
People with disabilities were then and are now taken as cautions or warnings of bad things past or future, canaries in the coal mine of human existence.
In many ways they are the canaries in the coal mine alerting us to the health of the natural world upon which we are dependent for survival.
"I think the financials are certainly the canaries in the mine," for where the markets are headed said Bruce McCain, chief investment strategist at Key Private Bank.
Germany's passion for pets is well known, and billions of euros are spent in the country each year on cats, guinea pigs, canaries, parakeets and the like.
Warrant canaries are often used to blow the whistle around National Security Letters; demands for information the FBI can send to companies without obtaining a court order.
"We must not treat children as 'canaries in the coal mine' where they are exposed first and then tested to see if they have been poisoned," Lowry said.
"I think there's a lot of negative stories that are going around about corals, you know they're the canaries in the coal mine for climate change," says Edwards.
Lawyers have been described as the canaries in the coal mine in the face of a wave of automation now beginning to displace highly skilled white-collar workers.
We find those spaces via a cloud robot (so users don't have to suffer, even a few canaries per screen size-profile, with ad delays and battery draining).
A culture's institutions of higher education are canaries in the culture war coal mine: They struggle with ideological shifts before these changes are apparent in the broader community.
On the eve of the Nintendo Switch reveal, these same bad habits may serve as canaries in the coal mine or signals the company has learned from its errors.
"You can think of our National Parks as the 'canaries in the coalmine," Ani Kame'enui, Director of Legislation and Policy at the National Parks Conservation Association told VICE Impact.
We don't know if moderators are canaries for the social-media-consuming public at large or if their heavy dose of the worst of the web makes them outliers.
They find themselves competing for McBurney's favor as he sets about manipulating their vanities and insecurities, smiling like a tomcat who has stumbled into a cage full of canaries.
As canaries warned coalminers of invisible death in the industrial era, now birds of every shape and size can be life-or-death alerts in the age of global warming.
"But given that market risk measures functioned much more effectively as canaries in the coal mine during the 2008 crisis than did regulatory risk measures, we would caution against complacency."
"But given that market risk measures functioned much more effectively as canaries in the coal mine during the 2008 crisis than did regulatory risk measures, we would caution against complacency."
The 11th hour canaries in the coal mine The Oscars are just over three weeks away at this point, and DGA voting doesn't end until today (the show is Sunday).
Until then, we imagine McGahn's West Wing as a coal mine, with scandals as dead canaries piling up around his feet, confronting one of the legal profession's most vexing decisions.
Though many leaders persist in denying this reality, intense natural disasters and accelerated extinction rates are canaries in the coal mine for anthropogenic climate change, among many other worrisome trends.
If you take into account canaries, rabbits, fish and other animals, the total number of pets in the country is a staggering 393 million — in 68 percent of American households.
But with a package holiday in a five-star hotel in Tunisia costing about the same as for a two-star hotel in the Canaries, TUI is looking for new destinations.
Canaries in the coal mine Even if gum disease itself doesn't cause a person to develop heart disease or diabetes, treating gum disease could improve the management of these other diseases.
At least in theory; although canaries can arguably end up generating confusion rather than furthering transparency on account of only being able to offer a partial signal, not an explicit confirmation.
"We have argued for a long time that Nordic banks, Swedbank and Nordea in particular, have been the canaries in the coal mine," said Adam Barrass, banking analyst at Berenberg bank.
History suggests that Australia's mining minnows are like the canaries in the coal mine for broader commodity markets, chirping enthusiastically when prices are rising but dying off faster when the market turns.
The grape rows are fronted with red rose bushes, planted as proverbial canaries that will be hit first by any impending blight, giving the growers time to protect the vines if possible.
The canaries in the coal mine This -- a report about cracks emerging among Senate Republicans -- is the most important story of the day, captured perfectly by CNN's Manu Raju and Clare Foran.
We talk a lot about NSA surveillance, National Security Letters, warrant canaries, facial recognition technology, a police van disguised as a Google Maps vehicle, the war against encryption, and government-mandated backdoors.
Spain confirmed the country's first case of coronavirus after a man was diagnosed on the island of La Gomera in the Canaries, according to a Reuters report citing the country's Health Ministry.
A White House staffer had a plan to bring in hundreds of canaries "to chirp for the inaugural ball guests," who at that point were desperate for any good cheer, Bendat says.
One day, cautious as always, he slips or trips on the familiar grounds of his beautiful house, while far away on her flood plain Poppet notes a slight volcanic tremor in the Canaries.
Though the Half Moon Hotel was demolished long ago, the lesson of Abe Reles lives on: Protect your witnesses with vigilance, for the streets of Brooklyn are tough and not all canaries can fly.
We were the canaries in the coalmine warning our fans and foes of things to come in the guise of the Court Jester, examples of conformity in extremis in order to warn against conformity.
That's because sperm counts are important for more than just fertility: sperm — as the authors of the study put it — are the tadpole-shaped "canaries in the coal mine" when it comes to health.
Like the famous canaries that were first brought into coal mines from the early 1900s to detect carbon monoxide, creative solutions have long been used to mitigate some of the risk inherent in mining.
And just like canaries in a coal mine, wild birds all across the world are telling us the same thing: Earth's ecosystems are withering and dying at an unprecedented rate, thanks to climate change.
For at least a century — since coal miners began using caged canaries to alert them to the presence of toxic gases — we have known that we can put these shared vulnerabilities to practical use.
McNamara said that "the crossover changes everything" and sets the stage for a potential spin-off starring her character and the Canaries, played by Katie Cassidy Rodgers (Laurel Lance) and Juliana Harkavy (Dinah Drake).
At one end, Mr. Höller suspended two bird cages filled with canaries, a bird valued for its bright singing and color but also as a harbinger of death when detecting toxic gases in mines.
This new crop of IPOs in 2019 will be canaries in the coal mine for the economic prospects of other technology companies, as well as the economy at large — which is increasingly dominated by tech.
The zines are simultaneously canaries in the coal mine of a protest movement that may be at the edge of state violence, and offer a glimpse of the protestors' very real conditions, fears, and aspirations.
Cramer says every time investors see a headline about the warning signs in the market, or canaries in the coal mine, or signals to watch for an epic decline — take it with a grain of salt.
Get closer, though, and you will discover that the ribbon is actually about 3,300 seamless feet of white concrete friezes with fossil-like patterns inspired by erosion on the volcanic island of Lanzarote, in the Canaries.
With an energized base on their side, and poking at it when they threaten to go wobbly, Democrats are looking at better-than-expected polling and hearing a chorus of canaries singing in GOP coal mines.
Jim Cramer says every time investors see a headline about the warning signs in the market, or canaries in the coal mine, or signals to watch for an epic decline — take it with a grain of salt.
If you are part of an arts organization, consider offering workshops to your staff, members, or neighbors on collaboration, listening, imagining, and healing from Urban Bush Women, Ultra-red, the Canaries, or the Design Studio for Social Intervention.
Maybe my father, and the thousands of people who have bonded over their self-perceived status as targeted individuals, are a kind of indirect warning system experiencing a kind of collective dream—canaries in the digital coal mine.
Even using canaries, Reddit is treading a fine line Reddit founder Steve Huffman — posting under the username "spez" — stopped short of confirming that the company had received such an order, but his language certainly suggested that was the case.
"The immigration court judges often feel like we are the canaries in the coal mine trying to alert the Department of Justice and Congress that the backlog is creeping up and that we need more resources," Judge Marks said.
So-called warrant canaries—cryptographically signed messages published by tech companies—are designed to flag secret surveillance orders: if the company fails to post a new warrant canary, it may have received a secret government demand for user information.
It's that we trust it too much and slowly become imbecilesFlat-earthers are the canaries in the coalmine /18 "With AI in charge of our information, we're facing a brand new, existential problem that concerns all of us," he wrote.
The Canaries, a collective of women, femme-presenting, and gender non-conforming people with autoimmune conditions, gather to create art and to support one another as they navigate medication, doctors' offices, and a culture of overwork, particularly in the arts.
Hotel unit Riu was able to increase prices by 13 percent in the first quarter of the current financial year, mainly since the increased demand in the Canaries meant it did not have to offer discounts on last-minute bookings.
I started thinking about your case" — your case being Murray's case — "a little again, without ever having read you, and I began to suspect that you were one of the canaries in the coal mine that I never recognized as such.
In the living room, a giant kaleidoscopic Frank Stella print was propped up against a forest-green wall near a wire-mesh and cast-iron bird cage that for much of the 1970s was home to more than two dozen canaries and finches.
"There's a lack of checks and balances and controls that would make it easy for the company to make sure that things are going properly and there are canaries in the coal mines blowing the whistle if there is a problem," she said.
Gaslit for decades into believing that Michigan's economic woes were specific to that state's rapid industrial development and egregious dependence on consumer industries, suddenly Michiganders felt vindicated for what they knew they were: canaries in the coal mine of post-industrial decline.
Some protesters dressed as canaries in cages - a reference to the idea that the death of a canary in a coal mine is an early warning of dangerous gases - while others wore hard hats and hi-vis gear to look like site workers.
Those tie-ups include formal links with chefs such as Mr. Blumenthal and Wolfgang Puck and a property program on the Spanish island of Tenerife in the Canaries that offers catering in your new home by one of Spain's most decorated chefs.
MADRID, Jan 31 (Reuters) - Spain's National Centre for Microbiology has confirmed the country's first case of coronavirus after a man was diagnosed with the virus on the remote island of La Gomera in the Canaries, the Health Ministry said late on Friday.
Laymon has long been one of the canaries in the coal mine of (specifically) the American condition, with essays that have been unafraid to dig into his own life to lay bare the many contradictions that have made him the man he is today.
These so-called "warrant canaries" — named for the poor canary down the mine that dies when there's gas that humans can't detect — are a key transparency tool that predominantly privacy-focused companies use to keep their customers aware of the goings-on behind the scenes.
If the funding sounds insane — especially in today's climate where some of the most promising tech startups are getting marked down, and we hear many canaries telling us that there is more to come — from what I understand, there is a method to this madness.
"The people that we see being targeted by these texts today—dissidents, activists—these are kind of the people on the frontlines of what is to come for all of us tomorrow, these guys are sort of the canaries in the coal mine," Marczak said.
That's summer as in the (very) silly season, when people have nothing better to do than toss beach balls on sandy strands, play games with words (and musical instruments), trill like canaries and, when the urge strikes them, hop about like enchanted pogo sticks.
But, we also know from the history of congressional wave elections that there do tend to be canaries in the coal mines -- a race or a set of races that reveal that something is happening out in the country that we need to pay attention to.
In the same way that coal miners once looked to canaries as sentinels of dangerous conditions, we can look at the current bird crisis as evidence that we need to strengthen, not erode, our efforts to protect the environment — not only for birds, but for our sake.
"We're not saying that the market is necessarily turning yet but we are seeing some signs and some canaries in the coal mine that tell us that the market is moving away from these high-flying momentum names into more robust and defensive names," Sanchez added.
In the self-directed clip, we find Abrahams in isolation against an arid desert climate—which he tells us via email is the volcanic Lanzarote island in the Canaries—singing the song in sign language, lamenting disintegrating social relations and an earth unnaturally divided by human imposition.
From the Alien and Sedition Acts under John Adams, to the mass political deportations during the first Red Scare, to Trump's recent "Muslim ban"—whenever the slightest hint of tyranny has been in the air—immigrants have always been the canaries in our nation's civil rights coal mine.
The People's Republic of China has been for some years now penetrating deeply into universities, think tanks, the entertainment industry, corporations, local government, and other sectors of advanced industrial democratic societies, with Australia and New Zealand — because of their proximity — being, I think, the canaries in the coal mine.
But the move raised suspicion, as warrant canaries are cryptographically signed messages that, when not updated per an expected schedule, are intended to warn users that a company or service is facing some sort of legal battle, but is also under a gag order and can't address it publicly.
Both Andrea and Donny have microscopic observational powers, and they zoom in on and magnify grotesque and rattling details: cake crumbs on the lips of a woman in the audience for Donny's final magic show, or the preponderance of canaries on the wallpaper of a home where Andrea takes up residence.
Canaries act as a workaround for U.S. gag orders which prevent companies publicly disclosing warrants for user requests by publishing an explicit statement that they have not received any warrants for user data to date — allowing for the reverse to be signaled if a canary is removed or not updated.
Time and again, even the most serious and respected people in the Trump administration — people who were looked to as good influences on the ignorant and impulsive president, or, in a worst-case scenario, as canaries in the coal mine — have ended up going out to defend Trump over something indefensible.
The other categories fall off from there — the SAG Awards predicted Best Supporting Actress eight times, and Best Actress seven — but if the Golden Globes are the beginning of the awards season conversation, with the ability to set the tone, then the various guild awards shows become the 11th hour canaries in the coal mine.
And, since Texas has the second earliest filing deadline in the country (December 11, one week after Illinois), it's possible that Hensarling and Smith are merely congressional canaries in the GOP coal mine, with further retirements likely as filing deadlines approach in other states throughout the course of the first seven months of 2018.
"This year we've been able to completely remix our holiday program from Turkey, Egypt, Tunisia, and taking 1.2 million bookings from there to Spain or other destinations… the Canaries [Islands] are up 27 percent, long-haul is up 40 percent, so there is a response that we're managing," Michael Healy, chief financial officer at Thomas Cook, told CNBC Thursday.
Kesler, and many people I spoke to in California, view themselves as the canaries in the coal mine for what they worry is the future of not just the state of California, but America — an America that will grow increasingly browner over coming decades, and perhaps, to the angst of many on the right, increasingly further left.
Attempting to reach the page where it was previously hosted results in the following notification: Warrant canaries became popular in the wake of the 2013 Snowden disclosures revealing the extent of government surveillance programs, as a tacit route to signify to users when a service might have been compromised by a government request for user data.
Taraneh Fazeli, in relation to a publication the Canaries are producing as part of her curatorial project "Sick Time, Sleepy Time, Crip Time: Against Capitalism's Temporal Bullying," facilitates a somatic and discursive workshop where people who are not members of the collective move through a series of paired exercises that consider the temporal shape of care and examine the different ways we communicate — gesturally, linguistically, affectively.

No results under this filter, show 179 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.