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"derive from" Definitions
  1. (formal) to get something from something
  2. (specialist) to obtain a substance from something

371 Sentences With "derive from"

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

It may derive from the restless politics of Maddow's parents.
Particular forms of intelligence derive from large groups working together.
Lots of dyes used in sodas and colas derive from insects.
Where does this dramatic obsession with death and sickness derive from?
And what general principles can you derive from studying tangled hair?
A woman's value doesn't derive from her status as a mother.
And what did you derive from your time with Tom Ford?
PATIENCE. Both derive from the same Latin root pati (to suffer).
The agency considered its interrogation program to derive from that authority.
His surname did not derive from the Russian word for reprobate.
Mr. Tuymans's fascination with moral complexities may derive from his upbringing.
Negative rating action could derive from deterioration in Zhangzhou Municipality's credit profile.
So what can we derive from the Yank's managerial debut with Swansea?
Negative rating action could derive from deterioration in Zhangzhou municipality's credit profile.
We do think their powers derive from the Children of the Forest.
These qualities derive from the excellent acidity in many of these wines.
One is that they derive from the relationships we have with them.
The other is that they derive from the mere fact of kinship.
CREATING DRAMA The drama in "Pacific Overtures" doesn't actually derive from diplomacy.
The material's unique molecular properties derive from constituent proteins that repel each other.
Pussy (n) may derive from the Old Norse puss meaning pocket, or pouch.
So what can we derive from this photo, this photo of Donald Trump?
The truest stories derive from a single, overriding skill: the ability to listen.
Some claim the differences derive from the varying demographics of the two states.
Some of the problems derive from esophageal conditions such as acid reflux disease.
In most cases — though not all — these ethics derive from a faith tradition.
That trust must derive from the ability of people to ensure their privacy.
The strength Cat and Marlena derive from their connection offers an alternative escape.
His artistic skills likely derive from his mother, Brazilian actress and singer Rosana Tapajos.
Physicists research buckyballs because they have unique properties that derive from their icosahedral symmetry.
All, in Brussels's view, derive from the legal obligations implied by Britain's EU membership.
These saraka cakes, historians say, derive from the Islamic concept of sadaqa, or charity.
Well, Christmas, Hanukkah, Kwanzaa and a few other holidays all derive from solstice celebrations.
Negative rating action could derive from negative rating action taken on the China sovereign.
Dugri may derive from driving directions in Arabic, but it has become much more.
" Both (along with "Baa, Baa, Black Sheep") derive from the French children's song "Ah!
How much satisfaction would Moffitt derive from beating his old team for the title?
It operates globally, but more than half of transaction it processes derive from Europe.
Many of the most tantalizing parts of its repertoire derive from vegetables and fruits.
It operates globally, but more than half of the transactions it processes derive from Europe.
The horror in this particular flick appears to derive from something quite commonplace: white suburbia.
The name Mumbai is believed to derive from Mumba devi, patron deity of the kolis.
Profanity is most likely to derive from things that tend to be taboo across societies.
Finally, and most importantly, the report cannot exclude concrete recommendations that derive from its analysis.
The court has undermined the protections all derive from the right to act in concert.
Many memorable moments in "Dear Los Angeles" derive from seeing familiar persons against unfamiliar backdrops.
No one person had the right to deprive them of whatever they derive from Mass.
Still, any political benefit Mr. Gantz might derive from the submarine scandal may be fleeting.
He's beefcake mixed with an elegance that may only derive from his resemblance to Patrick Swayze.
You could even make the case that Lil Peep's screech-strum dynamics derive from the Pixies.
Much of that stress seemed to derive from her almost bodily awareness of the world's problems.
If anything, our beliefs about matters of fact derive from those worldviews more than vice versa.
The valley's soft green hills, spreading views and famously fertile soil all derive from this history.
The more data they can collect, the more information they can derive from patterns and behaviors.
But doing so would run up against powerful stakeholders whose incomes derive from the status quo.
Narrator: While seemingly crazy, Stevens says most superstitions derive from three universal principles across all cultures.
It's not clear what advantages other countries might derive from signing a safe third country agreement.
Racism and sexism in America derive from inequalities that disproportionately favor white people and men, respectively.
While some elements of Root derive from the girls' memories, others required a bit more research.
The meaning we derive from clothes changes depending on who's wearing them and how and where.
The word "bomb" is used because of the explosive power these storms derive from rapid pressure drops.
AST Changes in the notes' rating would derive from changes in the same direction in BAM's IDR.
I like to create colorful worlds and landscapes, and see what stories people can derive from them.
He added that "it's unclear exactly what benefit" all three countries would derive from a policy change.
They also, occasionally and charmingly, allow us glimpses of the giddy pleasure they derive from their performances.
They aren't independent of him, and any profits they derive from the lease will benefit him, too.
Paradoxically, the core strength of the West does not ultimately derive from military hardware or economic numbers.
The frames of the stop-motion animation derive from bold, brushy compositions Ms. Madani paints and repaints.
It comes from the Chumash word for "moon"; it does not derive from the word for "nest."
There's something we can derive from this structure of the web itself, which is different, but very useful.
The same is true of her quest to understand the power her sister might derive from selling sex.
Negative rating action on YWSCOC could derive from a deterioration in Fitch's internal assessment of the municipality's creditworthiness.
But the end is really about looking at the turnaround and the lessons we can derive from that.
Dorveille's appeal doesn't derive from historicity: what appeals is the escape from the very conditions that obliterated it.
Jefferson and James Madison argued that the strength of the nation would always derive from its agrarian soil.
In fact, most of the due process rights we hold dearest derive from lawyers who represented unpopular defendants.
They derive from basic social contract principles of a kind that both Democrats and Republicans claim to embrace.
Many antibiotics used today derive from chemicals produced by microbes to defend themselves or to attack other microorganisms.
Negative rating action on SFund could derive from a deterioration of in Fitch's internal assessment of the municipality's creditworthiness.
I am constantly blown away at how much joy people derive from these characters, and I'm just so grateful.
That capability will derive from Sikorsky's Matrix Technology system, which it's currently testing in Black Hawks and commercial helicopters.
Sports historian Allen Guttmann has argued convincingly that modern sports derive from ancient rituals to secure the necessities of
It could also derive from inadequate processing, like cooking at too low a temperature because of a faulty thermometer.
Prize money — directly related to the amount of income UEFA can derive from sponsorship and television rights — keeps growing.
It may derive from nostalgia for Wodehouse's manicured milieu of mirth and privilege — "Downton Abbey" with a laugh track.
It's interesting that the new feminist directions sometimes derive from the stereotypical roles that society has imposed on women.
He's a biologist at Oberlin who studies what kind of information animals derive from the many sounds around them.
A limitation is that the majority of health care costs derive from labor, which this approach would not affect.
"We slightly miss the point if we don't understand how much pleasure their supporters derive from this," he said.
These form Aaron Taylor Kuffner's gamelatron installation, a series of automated bronze instruments that derive from the traditional Indonesian gamelan.
One of his technical supports may derive from an interest in the picture as a text, most likely a poem.
Embryonic stem cells, which have the potential to treat myriad medical conditions, are controversial because they derive from early embryos.
Now, the guilt accompanying any pleasure we derive from watching a man control a woman is a little too overwhelming.
The housing crisis in New York does not just derive from businesses moving in and making it a "nicer" area.
You can't derive from them that financial concerns don't drive some amount of Trump's support independent of white racial resentment.
Straps that dig, rising back-bands, chafing, and back bulge are all, on the whole, issues that derive from fit.
Those arguments often derive from different financial views, like if one partner is a spender and one is a saver.
Each artist takes a creative new approach to the human form that derive from a wide variety of historic motifs.
If the fun most people derive from Ready Player One comes from recognizing the references, then I'm excluded by default.
The longtime journalist argued that it would mean "no serious journalism" about the 2020 campaign would derive from the organization.
Glück's analyses seem to derive from this grief; she is wary, and sometimes darkly funny about, poetry's temptation toward grandiosity.
One challenge is to decide what should be designated an axiom and what physicists should try to derive from the axioms.
Chevron and Occidental also have put forward different estimates on the value of the operational synergies they can derive from Anadarko.
Since Native Americans' genes do, indeed, indicate they all derive from a single population, this discrepancy in timing is a paradox.
All of these derive from Britain's current membership in the EU and it highly probable that they would come under attack.
In Sunni-ruled Saudi Arabia and in Shiite-ruled Iran, death sentences often derive from a stern interpretation of Islamic law.
In his view, malevolence and ignorance both derive from a deficient facility with words; evil, where it emerges, manifests in language.
About 86 percent of the company's earnings will derive from cable programming, 90 percent of which will come from Fox News.
Under UNCLOS, which came into force in 1982 and which China ratified in 1996, maritime rights derive from land, not history.
Many of the negative comments derive from sizing issues with the smallest size being too big for small dogs like chihuahuas.
This is one of a number of projects by Japanese authors that derive from that series, many of which are pastiches.
"I'm sure of what we're seeing here, the dimensions that we're able to derive from this image (are) conclusive," Kraft said.
The intensity of the bright pinks in "Loom" (2018) seems to derive from a solid green line on the middle left.
Our principal sources of economic news derive from changes in the GDP, national employment, the unemployment rate, and the stock market.
It also could derive from the swell of missed extra points, creating score lines that warrant going for 23 later on.
Thorpe's more skeptical estimates in many cases derive from the attempt at implementing single-payer in Sanders's home state of Vermont.
The laughs derive from fish-out-of-water gags, as the Coneheads' customs and culture shock smack head-first against American normalcy.
The woman radical itself (女) is throught to derive from an image of a woman bending over with her hands clasped together.
The word "person", for instance, comes from the Latin for "mask"; the word "tragedy" may derive from the Greek for "goat-song".
Though the company has other businesses (Friendly's, ice cream, fruit punch, et al.), over 60% of its sales derive from conventional milk.
While the Float Lab's design particulars derive from practical concerns, the project as a whole draws inspiration from architectural and artistic predecessors.
Either way, you have been introduced to Bilquis, the ancient goddess of love, whose powers derive from prayers of a sexual nature.
Both derive from the changes introduced to the market since it was bought in 2012 by Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing (HKEx).
The titles derive from songs that remind Erizku of his past relationships and break-ups, turning the exhibition checklist into a playlist.
When errors occur, they usually derive from mistakes in the raw DNA data, said Mike Cariaso, also a co-founder of Promethease.
He failed to answer when asked to provide one example of a benefit that his country could derive from an expanded tournament.
It also changes the composition of the local population, threatening the "compositional amenities" that natives derive from their neighborhoods, schools, and workplaces.
The whole time-consuming business only adds to the joy I derive from it, and sets me up for the year ahead.
Both initiatives derive from complementary technological and scientific achievements that advance medicine, but lack emphasis on the everyday struggles of cancer patients.
The cyanotoxins derive from algae bloom in Detroit Lake and can induce allergic reactions, respirartory malfunctions, or damage to the liver or kidneys.
On a typical high-carb diet, we're fueled primarily by glucose (or blood sugar), much of which we derive from carbohydrate-rich foods.
The practice may derive from Mexico and Mesoamerica, but similar traditions can also be found in the cultures of Italy and the Philippines.
Its edge instead seemed to derive from how its socialbot reflected the personality of the team's 1003-year-old student leader, Hao Fang.
Google Apple CEO Tim Cook has made the argument before that part of the value customers derive from his company's products is privacy.
That is because the share of profits that fund managers receive through carried interest does not derive from money they have personally invested.
The potential for intolerance lies in the logic of religions like Christianity and Islam that say their teaching derive from a divine revelation.
The recent small-stock outperformance may derive from fears over the impact of a trade war with China on big, trade-oriented companies.
There is much joy to derive from food, and this kid has it in her mind that a lot of food is dangerous.
"The basic proposition you can derive from this paper is, we have no earthly conception how bad it's going to be," Lalwani says.
Many of the preexisting AI GAN artworks also derive from Romantic landscape paintings or portraiture, which contributes to the spookiness of the style.
Yes, and this is partly because of companies being disingenuous about the continued benefit they derive from retaining the data of the dead.
Members of groups, Vanderbilt's Kam explained, often prefer "the self-esteem they derive from where their in-group stands," regardless of material self-interest.
Our basic urges derive from the lower-level areas of the brain, such as the limbic system, which is involved in emotions and motivation.
Larry shippers, as doomed as their mission appears, do have a sort of power, which they derive from the sheer mass of their project.
More recently – and projected for the future – are reductions in weight that derive from advanced design and manufacturing processes, and lighter, but stronger, materials.
Employees should think about it in terms of the functionality they bring to the company and the satisfaction they derive from their own careers.
Fortunately, garlic, miso paste and nutritional yeast are also packed with umami, but derive from plants — making this edit of the classic totally vegan.
His latest research suggests that the benefits portsiders derive from the element of unfamiliarity become greater when their opponents have less time to calculate.
Such divergent levels of fear could partly derive from the usual level of lethal violence, far higher in the United States than in Europe.
Part of his anger may derive from the notion that you deliberately misled him, in order to try to entrap him with the child.
These maps — and their lingering effects — derive from a time when the American government, he writes, believed that "inharmonious racial groups" should be separated.
Levy declined to specify how much EDF will invest in the electric mobility drive or how much revenue it hopes to derive from it.
Made of brilliantly colored, loosely knitted yarn, the works' impressively varied compositions derive from his DNA, specifically those sequences that determine someone's individual traits.
Those familiar with Amazon&aposs logistics network say those higher rates derive from the fact that those regions are high population and high density.
Ms. Kara's baby-blue and burgundy canvases with masklike figures are shown alongside her sculptures, which derive from marks and figures in the paintings.
And though they take their work very seriously, the enjoyment and gratification they derive from it blurs the common demarcation between work and play.
The answer is that our sense of direction—or "wayfinding" abilities—derive from a complex web of interactions between our brains, senses, genes, and environment.
These probabilistic engines still follow Carnot's efficiency formula in terms of how much work they can derive from energy passing between hot and cold bodies.
"There is bipartisan acknowledgement that the strategic advantages we derive from our national security space systems are eroding," Rogers and Cooper said in a statement.
Power, prestige, and plausibility can derive from various sources, and in our society one of those is marriage  —  at least it was 30 years ago.
Negative rating action on CQNA could derive from a deterioration of Chongqing Municipality's credit profile, which could lower Fitch's internal assessment of the municipality's creditworthiness.
That argument ignores the value that retailers derive from accepting debit cards and the importance of interchange in making the electronic payments system function effectively.
The idiomatic expression seems to derive from the idea that when selling a home, everything that's not affixed to the plumbing can be carted off.
What possible benefit could any society derive from releasing a member of the Manson family or a man who killed his grandmother with a hammer?
Razi was diagnosed with idiopathic epilepsy, a form that's thought to derive from genetics, in 2013 and placed on anti-seizure medication, the park said.
Analysts had been skeptical about the benefits AGL would derive from a takeover of Vocus, which is in the midst of turning around its business.
"All men's miseries derive from not being able to sit in a quiet room alone," the French philosopher Blaise Pascal wrote in the 17th century.
It reminds us that as wonderful as work is (and the accomplishments which derive from it are), it is not sustainable unless balanced by rest.
In this case, those plays derive from multiple platforms (mostly YouTube and Myspace) and may even represent repeat plays on behalf of a particular user.
The United States enjoys enormous advantages that derive from owning and operating hundreds of military bases spanning the alliance network — many in Germany and Japan.
Combined with real voting roadblocks that have been put into place in recent years, Trump could undercut the advantage Democrats derive from high rates of voting.
But it's our job, as parents, to teach our kids that a life well lived doesn't derive from having lots of money or from being famous.
These workers range from home health care aides whose jobs derive from Medicare and Medicaid to janitors in the federal buildings, such as the US Capitol.
It seems possible that at least part of respondents' negative associations about Twitter could derive from the often negative content for which it is best known.
Apple's iPhone 7 customers derive from three places: existing Apple users that upgrade, regular phone users that switch to a smartphone, and from competitors like Samsung.
For instance, the idea that women have certain innate characteristics (being loving and nurturing, say) and natural roles that derive from them (wife, mother) is sexist.
However, it's important to remember the data and information that a company can derive from manually, semi-autonomously and fully autonomously driven miles are very different.
How much value do online publishers derive from behaviorally targeted advertising that uses privacy-hostile tracking technologies to determine which advert to show a website user?
Officials in some states are also trying to determine if they can tax some of the global income that corporations derive from intangible properties, including patents.
Their painterly intensity and formal composition derive from Henri Cartier-­Bresson's definition of photography as "the decisive moment," the juncture of maximal effect and maximal information.
Psychologists who have investigated what role superstitions play, have found that they derive from the assumption that a connection exists between co-occurring, non-related events.
The only lesson the nation should derive from that story is that it's a bad idea to give an extremely long inaugural speech in inclement weather.
Negative rating action on XICI could derive from deterioration in the credit profile of Xi'an Municipality, which could lower Fitch's internal assessment of the municipality's creditworthiness.
"Investors are interested in the real returns they derive from their investments," said Steve Hanke, a professor of applied economics at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore.
As frustratingly slow as Tillerson's internal deliberations have been, he deserves praise for acknowledging management reforms must derive from a strategic vision of the department's purpose.
Risks to financial stability also derive from sharply rising Slovenian real estate prices and concerns over banks' profitability against a backdrop of low interest rates, it added.
But there's a certain subconscious resonance I felt while watching the New England Patriots literally battling their way back that I can never derive from video games.
The 10% figure does in fact derive from an extreme warming scenario, one in which the climate warms by about 8°C, or 14.4°F, by 2100.
Until this process of negotiations is over, the United Kingdom remains a member of the European Union, with all the rights and obligations that derive from this.
Often they are real; for instance, regal and royal derive from the same source, which was imported into English twice, from both Grandpa Latin and Aunt French.
Negative rating action on CQNA could derive from a deterioration of the credit profile of Chongqing Municipality, which could lower Fitch's internal assessment of the municipality's creditworthiness.
Their rigid class distinctions, false religious piety, sexual aggression, oppression of children, spouses, and siblings—all reveal themselves to derive from the most primitive and idiotic impulses.
Negative rating action on BIG could derive from a deterioration of the credit profile of Baoji Municipality, which could lower Fitch's internal assessment of the municipality's creditworthiness.
That meaning of leak is young—since the '50s only—and appears to derive from simple analogy to the ordinary meaning, of stuff escaping through a hole.
"At the end of the day, processors look at the total package of metal and what value they can derive from that," GFMS analyst Johann Wiebe said.
Or more indirectly, "marketers could derive from raised stress levels, poor sleep, and a combination of other behavior that a romance is in trouble," experts have speculated.
Even if producer interests predominate over consumer interests, what producers should care about is not how much they export but how much income they derive from exporting.
Little about this remake is new, including the delight that Senate Republicans derive from making Mayor Bill de Blasio squirm, especially on the matter of mayoral control.
Indeed, the DeVoses' education activism, which favors alternatives to traditional public schools, appears to derive from the same free-market views that inform their suspicion of government.
The alleged savings derive from the erroneous assumption that if Free File users filed their taxes without Free File they would file paper rather than electronic returns.
I assumed that if it ever went, so too would my femininity, or the strength I derive from traditionally 'feminine' things like makeup, dresses, or domestic badassery.
The notion that pig's blood was used as an anti-Muslim weapon appears to derive from a 1939 Gary Cooper movie and a single letter written in 1960.
So while the white spots and the grey objects both derive from real things inside the eye, phenomena called visual snow and phosphenes are caused by the brain.
Islamic law is more flexible than is commonly believed: sharia may be God's "divine blueprint", but "the rules we derive from it", or fiqh, are subject to reinterpretation.
She's serving executive realness, reinforced by the personal meanings and symbolism we assign to our jewelry and the power we derive from the talismans we make and wear.
Trochut says his creative motivations also derive from both the distinct geometric elements and perceptual distortions of M.C. Escher and the harmonious geometrical patterns of Tomas Tomas' tattoos.
The field of behavioral finance has demonstrated that the pain we derive from market losses impacts us twice as much as the pleasure we feel from market gains.
The majority of the 13 Hong Kong terms derive from Cantonese loanwords, such as "dai pai dong" (a food stall); and "yumcha" (to drink afternoon tea; eat dimsum).
The lost revenue has been offset in part by a reduction in the amount of assistance the poorest Oklahomans can derive from the state's earned-income tax credit.
The Goncharova designs derive from both Diaghilev's 1914 opera-ballet staging, which featured extensive choreography by Michel Fokine, and from Fokine's 1937 one-act ballet adaptation of it.
TechCrunch spoke to each organization (and reviewed the reports) and found the contrasting stats derive from different methodologies — namely defining what constitutes a startup and an African startup.
But therapists involved in such programs speculate that their benefits actually derive from shutting down for a time some of our brain's higher and sometimes cacophonous cognitive functions.
But the role it plays in your life is to keep you from identifying and pursuing forms of validation that derive from your intellectual, professional and creative achievements.
Those who support the bureau's measures decry the high interest rates these lenders charge for these risky loans and tout the "savings" borrowers will derive from the regulations.
Their diet is heavy on carbs: 72 percent of their daily calories derive from unprocessed starches, 14 percent from saturated and unsaturated fats and 14 percent from protein.
"Giraffe, girafe, giraffa (English, French, Italian) — all derive from the Arabic zerafa, a phonetic variant of zarafa, which means 'charming' or 'lovely one,'" Allin explains in the book.
Scope, half of whose sales derive from German clients, rates financial services groups, corporates, structured finance products and alternative investments, while Feri specializes in funds and real estate ratings.
And if you buy at a premium, Schmansky said, it could wipe out the value you assumed you'd derive from picking a lower-cost ETF over a mutual fund.
Starting with the available land and labor, the structure of production is determined by the available technology and the capital that we derive from the available land and labor.
Post-1945 institutions such as NATO and the European Union are built upon a common set of political ideals, many of which derive from the legacy of the Holocaust.
And in today's very partisan environment (particularly in a polarized state like California), the benefits one would derive from voting for one slightly more moderate officeholder are vanishingly small.
These differences among professional and scholarly translators happen most often with languages that derive from a wide variety of geographic locations and language sources, such as Yiddish and Spanish.
But with the Olympics ending soon, perhaps we should channel some of the enthusiasm for the Games and focus a bit on those everyday benefits we derive from trade.
Their patterns derive from bandannas — one belonged to Ms. Mays's great-grandmother, another to Georgia O'Keeffe — whose decorative forms are reproduced via pinpricks in the obscurity of the darkroom.
Such misjudgments would most likely derive from the mutual and obligatory search by each endangered party for "escalation dominance," that is, from an inevitable competition in strategic risk-taking.
As a society, we're willing to bear some of the negative health consequences because of the enjoyment we derive from cake, cookies, chips, and all sorts of tasty treats.
Clearly, a balance needs to be struck between the interests of businesses and the needs of an overweight public with mass health problems that derive from poor eating habits.
But if there's any information we can derive from the nonsense, it's that it seems like President Obama is predicting the Panthers will take the Vince Lombardi trophy home.
Their relationship is emblematic of a movie whose greatest pleasures often seem to derive from what fails to happen, the showdowns and declarations that hang tantalizingly in the wind.
That's partly because the long-run link between money and happiness is complex, but also because salary is only one determinant of the satisfaction people derive from their jobs.
The researchers did not investigate the name of the capuchino seedeaters, but Dr. Campagna said it did not derive from the popular Italian drink of coffee and foamed milk.
But Buttigieg is also effectively arguing that queer people's rights should derive from the very institutions we've only recently gained (tenuous) access to, like marriage and the job market.
About 40 percent of Lindt's U.S. woes derive from the Russell Stover business it bought in 2014, with 60 percent attributable to a sluggish chocolate market, he told Reuters.
When you lend to a business, it is obligated to pay you back with interest, but with a stock investment, your returns derive from the success of the company.
"We believe the breakout overrules the bearish takeaways we can derive from the low level of the VIX and weak seasonal influences in February, for now at least," Stockton said.
Instead, what holds together Monarchs — which fills all the Bemis's galleries — are common themes among the artists' work, some of which derive from traits that Puleo identifies in the butterfly.
She did, of course, make a fair number of speeches to big banks -- though by no means did the bulk of her income as a speaker derive from those speeches.
"The increasing infant mortality rate is likely to derive from the progressively deteriorating nutrition status, the collapse in living standards, and a breakdown of the health system," the authors wrote.
I think a lot of the pleasure I get out of it does derive from that sort of longevity—that I'm only acting as a part in this thing's story.
Analysts who studied photographs of the North's leader, Kim Jong-un, inspecting the new rocket motors concluded that they derive from designs that once powered the Soviet Union's missile fleet.
Their work suggests that the deep satisfaction most people derive from altruistic behavior is not due to a benevolent cultural overlay, but from the evolved architecture of the human brain.
In economics, the law of diminishing marginal utility states that as consumption of a good or service increases, the marginal utility (or satisfaction) consumers derive from each additional unit declines.
While all these dances richly abound in specific dramas and suggestions, the bigger emotions they prompt derive from the felicities with which moves meet music: poignant, puckish, exuberant, by turns.
That is so whether China's complaints and accusations derive from genuine paranoia on the part of an insecure dictatorship, or from clever posturing to keep the West on the defensive.
But by the time Smith made her recordings, attitudes toward the songs, which derive from a tradition of blackface minstrelsy that began in the 19th century, had started to shift.
The collective excitement that sporting animals, such as racing greyhounds or thoroughbred horses, seem to derive from participating in races may also be more akin to play than to serious competition.
" The links Jamison draws between sobriety and creativity derive from what she calls her "unsexy" dissertation at Yale, which was titled "The Recovered: Addiction and Sincerity in 20th Century American Literature.
The psychological toll (not to mention the IQ-dropping effect!) of multi-tasking seems to derive from the effort of making our brain pay attention to two disparate topics at once.
The actual order of events goes like this: It doesn't take a genius to derive from this that the real source of Trump's misery is his disastrous decision to fire Comey.
While the prospects of major banking law reform in the Congress appear dim, the banking regulatory agencies themselves have an opportunity to reduce the administrative burdens that derive from Dodd-Frank.
"This will ensure the amount of tax paid in the UK reflects the value these businesses derive from their interactions with" users in Britain, the Treasury said in its 2020 budget.
He seems driven by resentment about European trade surpluses and low defense budgets, issues that blind him to all the other benefits Americans derive from our alliance with Europe and Canada.
Such missteps derive from the fact that, in London, decisions over Brexit are motivated not primarily by expert advice, strategic considerations, game theory or negotiating tactics but by domestic politics. Mrs.
The food here is focused on simplicity and seasonality, the kind of pleasure one might derive from a thick piece of dense and springy sourdough bread served with fresh cultured butter.
Laura/Laurel/Lauren all derive from the Latin "laurus," meaning the laurel tree, whose leaves were awarded in victory — for, say, getting a fake newspaper judge to side with you (congrats).
New scans like the one presented here can tell us what features were lost to evolution, which ones derive from a common ancestor, and which ones evolved independently among different groups.
In essence, front-of-package labels would obfuscate the great benefits we derive from GMOs and represent a setback in terms of technological innovation, environmental protection and the fight against hunger.
Quinoa makes an unexpected appearance, scattered over fried rice for a touch of chewiness; zucchini, pulped for juice, brings lushness to green curry, whose color and potency also derive from kale.
"Lo and behold, we altered in some fundamental ways the nutrient intake of these animals and hence the nutrient composition of the products that we derive from those animals," Dr. Benbrook said.
The tones derive from the same Analog Circuit Behavior technology that powers Roland's AIRA line, which includes surprisingly accurate renditions of the TR-808, TB-303, and the System-100 modular synthesizer.
"I was inspired by the marked improvement patients with Parkinson's disease derive from unproven but costly interventions," said Dr. Alberto J. Espay, lead author of the study and associate professor of neurology.
Rather, the debate focuses on whether open internet rules should derive from the 80-year-old Communications Act or some other theory of Congressional authority because the current law predates the internet.
Is it good business to jeopardize some of the $1.6 trillion in benefits that we derive from ecosystem services from healthy land, air, and water, to which ESA directly and indirectly contributes?
One of the biggest economic benefits of ending child marriage would derive from a reduction in population growth, according to the study co-authored by the International Center for Research on Women.
Specifically: a primer on how to craft a powerful Washington image, and the advantages for someone in the executive office (or nearby) that derive from a close working relationship with a designer.
Although Google's parent company bills itself as a diversified firm with about 1.73,000 employees, almost 90 percent of the company's revenues derive from advertisements, like the ones that show up in search.
Plagium in turn is believed to derive from the Latin plaga, which can signify either a snare or the stripe on skin called up by a whip, the presumed punishment of plagiarii.
How would you balance the benefits you derive from your energy use with the true economic and environmental costs, if you had that information and could choose exactly where your energy comes from?
The argument updates Gottfried Leibniz and Ernst Mach's idea that space-time might not be a God-given backdrop to the world, but instead might derive from the material contents of the universe.
Mature body cells (eggs and sperm included) derive from progenitors, known as stem cells, that have the power to divide, proliferate and eventually to turn into particular cellular components of a particular tissue.
But it doesn't answer the question of how long it can go on this way, or just how much further lift stocks can derive from a patient Fed and undemanding corporate-debt costs.
What most readers would not derive from the article's substance is Azerbaijan's large-scale offensive against Nagorno-Karabakh in April, 2016 — a calculated act of aggression accompanied by gross violations of international law.
Even though [it] can lead to headaches, it can also contain crucial information that impacts how much you pay for card use as well as the overall benefit you derive from your card.
He mentions cycling, but his exercise still seems to derive from sentence construction, prying out lazy words, rummaging through dictionaries and wringing suspense from unlikely moments, as when he extends his Orange Trapper.
"The European Commission's forecasts for the Italian deficit are in sharp contrast to those of the Italian government and derive from an inaccurate and incomplete analysis (of the budget)," said Economy Minister Giovanni Tria.
The only benefit they would derive from the settlement was what Judge Coleman called "lackluster non-monetary relief" – and Neiman Marcus had already promised remedies like credit monitoring outside of the proposed class deal.
"The European Commission's forecasts for the Italian deficit are in sharp contrast to those of the Italian government and derive from an inaccurate and incomplete analysis (of the budget)," Tria said in a statement.
In her case, it seems quite plausible that the benefit she derives from having a female president as a role model is greater than the benefit she'll derive from more materially redistributive social policies.
Since many already zero-rate lots of services, they would have to bring their offerings into line with the law, the process of which would probably remove any competitive benefit they derive from them.
In choosing not to allow her bitterness about his failings as a father to consume her, a daughter is choosing not to deprive herself of whatever pleasure she can still derive from their relationship.
"The Bank of Israel is prepared to prevent anomalous appreciation of the shekel by purchasing foreign exchange whenever necessary, and particularly if it will derive from relatively short-term financial factors," the minutes said.
Many of them derive from his own Tweets, which often use brash, creative language — whether it's a sharp insult hurled at an opponent, a bizarre typo, or his out-of-the-box political messaging.
But I don't necessarily think we should measure the Qing solely using terminology or models that we assume to be universal, but that in fact derive from and best describe European or American history.
Her previous books include two charming, engaging novels for children, "Eliza Rose" (a girl at the Tudor court) and "My Name Is Victoria" (as you'd expect) and many that derive from her television shows.
Raising fuel prices is sensitive, because many Nigerians see the subsidy as the only benefit they derive from living in Africa's top oil producer which is gripped by graft and poverty despite its energy wealth.
Facebook describes all sorts of benefits that we might derive from such a system, including environmental ones (reducing car trips) and retail ones (stores can package fewer items for display, saving on costs for materials).
Many widespread ideas about race derive from 19th-century distinctions between negroes, caucasians and orientals, which have been discredited by science (Amo Afer is interesting because he was born before those racial categories had hardened).
Both designs derive from the third part, the so-called black part, of Schlemmer's work, as did most of Kyle Luu's glamorous costumes, distinguished from the original designs mainly by more sparkle and less boldness.
Mr. Trump seems also to be suffering from amnesia, as if all recent history began with Mr. Obama and conveniently avoiding the fact that many of the policies he denounced derive from George W. Bush.
Raising fuel prices is sensitive because many Nigerians see the state subsidy as the only benefit they derive from living in a major oil producing country which is nevertheless gripped by endemic corruption and poverty.
In these conversations about automation there's always the worry about people losing their incomes, but there's also a worry about the felt loss of meaning — the meaning we derive from the work that we do.
"The diet that you eat and your lifestyle can have dramatic impacts on the gut microbes that you recruit and the benefits or the negatives that you derive from them," said Ishaq in a call.
The sentences Moran likes derive from the loose, Senecan style perfected in the 17th century by the likes of John Donne, rather than ones from the stiff, hierarchical period of Samuel Johnson a century later.
The Argentine film "Kekszakallu" seems designed as a test of how little the director, Gastón Solnicki, can derive from the Hungarian composer Bela Bartok's only opera, "Bluebeard's Castle," while still citing it as his inspiration.
The sentences Moran likes derive from the loose, Senecan style perfected in the 17th century by the likes of John Donne, rather than ones from the stiff, hierarchical period of Samuel Johnson a century later.
To claim to cherish artistic and intellectual achievement while condemning artists and writers to poverty is to empower fraud, and to deprecate those values — beauty and justice, empathy and altruism — that we derive from literature.
But since Trump says he wants to increase defense spending regardless of how his bid for burden sharing plays out, it's even unclear what economic benefit the United States will derive from pressuring its allies.
Actually, I would be happy to supply you with a morning latte, as errands give me a sense of purpose and a feeling of accomplishment I rarely derive from other activities in my daily life.
The future plants in the AR installation all derive from real plants in and around the Olympic Sculpture Park—ones that are tolerant to droughts and warming oceans, and are expected to adapt with increasing temperatures.
In this exhibition I wanted to show her creative process beyond printmaking — that a print could derive from a painting or a drawing or a sculpture, or might inspire a work by her in another medium.
The artworks' numerous references to bees and honey, for example, derive from the artist's collaborative research into the international honey trade with science labs at Brown University, Rhode Island School of Design, and Shangxi Agricultural University.
A red crossbillPhoto: Ryan F. MandelbaumRed crossbills, also called common crossbills, live throughout the northern hemisphere, and their peculiar crossed bills derive from an evolutionary arms race with the evergreen tree cones whose seeds they eat.
The New York samples all derive from one Haitian strain, and those from San Francisco are all so closely related that they probably all resulted from one person introducing one New York strain, Dr. Worobey said.
He would transform Swindon, a modest market town — the name is said to derive from the Old English for "pig farm" — into an industrial center, as well as a key transit junction between London and Bristol.
These wretched facts, revealed in Megan Marshall's new biography, "Elizabeth Bishop: A Miracle for Breakfast" (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt), derive from a trove of letters, unknown to previous biographers, that Bishop wrote to her psychiatrist, in 1947.
"Congratulations!!!" wrote @CarolinaHerrera on her post.) Her carefully cultivated privacy may just as likely derive from the ideological gap that separates her (and, reportedly, her fiancé) from her future brother- and sister-in-law, the Washington Kushners.
The effect of all this was to create a rudimentary sense of shared identity within a diverse population; a sense of Qin-ness or — to use a modern English word that may derive from Qin — Chinese-ness.
The artwork in Wars, a group exhibition at David Nolan, obviously doesn't derive from firsthand knowledge of machine guns, mustard gas, and aerial bombardments, but it does share the essence of Dix's imagery: war's absurdity, chaos, and waste.
Likewise, expensive educations from Ivy League schools represented not just a level of intellect or achievement, but an aura of excellence one can derive from investing in a trusted academic institution that came with a built-in reputation.
And while his base of support does derive from the kinds of voters who have increasingly found a home in the Republican Party in recent years, it's clear that Trump's base does not overlap completely with the GOP.
All the works derive from the simple, everyday act of observing your surroundings — from turning, raising and lowering your head, from seeing what's to your immediate left and right, what's above and below where you stand or sit.
Given the high percentage of traffic that many publishers derive from Facebook, the company may have more success in getting them to add a "Save to Facebook" button than Pocket, which offers a similar button of its own.
The alliance's Eastern expansion has all but assured Otto von Bismarck's long-ago claim that if another European War were to arise, it would probably derive from "some damned foolish thing in the Balkans" (or perhaps the Baltics).
But what I derive from getting things framed isn't perfection; it's completing a task that comes with rules, consideration for light and an opportunity to preserve — and not in my cluttered, humming mind, but with a tactile compromise.
Across his first few weeks in office, Mr. Trump has shown little sign of delivering anything for working Americans beyond whatever satisfaction they may derive from watching him bait the Washington establishment and attack the reality-based media.
Much of the uncomfortable nature of TLOU Part II seems to derive from having to guide Ellie through scenarios that see her shoot, stab, maim, and dismember the people who stand between her and the retribution she seeks.
She understands, in some powerful way, that coziness has very little to do with your cashmere and your candle and everything to do with the sense of community that we derive from the shared pursuit of staying safe.
We provide information and guidance for mental health professionals, health care organizations and systems, and public health entities for how best to address the wide range of mental health and public health concerns that derive from global warming.
"This study represents the most rigorous analysis to date of samples suspected to derive from anomalous or mythical 'hominid'-like creatures, strongly suggesting the biological basis of the Yeti legend as local brown and black bears," the paper reads.
All of these methods (improving access, providing information, changing choice architecture and the use of incentives) derive from work by scholars such as Cass Sunstein (who worked in the Obama Administration during the president's first term) and Richard Thaler.
Any such curtailment would draw Japan deeper still into North Korea's threat zone, while also undermining the credibility of the protection it is supposed to derive from America's nuclear umbrella and generally weakening its alliance with the United States.
Geofencing and other emerging digital technologies derive from microtargeting marketing initiatives that use consumer and other demographic data to identify the interests of specific voters or very small groups of like-minded individuals to influence their thoughts or actions.
" Although not alone in this practice, Tolkien was the first philologist to establish such a network of evolving dialects that derive from one another "by slowly accumulating changes and divergences in form across time from a common ancestor species.
In other words, the benefits of breast-feeding may derive from myriad factors, including the many microbiomes in the mother's body — in the breast milk and on the skin of the breast — and in the baby's mouth and gut.
Those with experience of playing professionally are genuinely well placed to make good refs, not only because of their athleticism and practical knowledge but also because of the authority they derive from having come from within the world of football.
We are told that his sculptures derive from language, words he has distorted and abstracted with a computer programme to form awkward figures and structures that are intended to make us aware of our bodies passing through the exhibition space.
Given that patients "own" their cells and tissue, I agree with Ms. Skloot that they should at a minimum be informed that others may profit from the research or products that derive from their tissue as part of the consent process.
Critics have strived to interpret his idiosyncratic oeuvre, but "Room to Dream", a story of his life, shows that many of his themes derive from childhood—ideas and images lurking in shadows that Mr Lynch has filled with imagination and dread.
Many tong practices are said to derive from a tradition that got its start in China early in the Qing Dynasty (1644 to 1911) as a sworn brotherhood/gang of outlaws committed to restoring the earlier Ming Dynasty (1368 to 1644).
But with four out of the five figures being bald (including, it would seem, the one beneath the bandages), it is not too much of a leap to suspect that these images derive from the experience of radiation and chemotherapy.
"We are dismayed that the US Department of Justice has decided to execute warrants against US persons that derive from criminal complaints filed by the North Korean regime," read a statement attributed to "Ambassador Lee Wolosky" on Free Joseon's website.
The Space Force mission should not derive from an executive order, subject to revocation or revision, nor should it originate from some inter-service agreement where the need to compromise results in the most experienced beltway insider gaining the most advantage.
That's the conclusion of recent studies that found the benefits may derive from myriad factors, including the many microbiomes in the mother's body — in the breast milk and on the skin of the breast — and in the baby's mouth and gut.
Although many policies can help address it, progressive income taxation is the fairest and most potent of them all, because it restrains all exorbitant incomes equally, whether they derive from exploiting monopoly power, new financial products, sheer luck or anything else.
A senior Warren aide made the case Sunday night that, by releasing the income information in this form, the campaign is providing more detail -- in the form of itemized figures -- than voters would be able to derive from tax return documents.
Instead, its pleasures derive from how it offers what Ezra Pound called "news that stays news" — a sensation of looking into a life and catching a glimpse of not only a particular character but also a particular emotional and social milieu.
These days, it's just an eternal game of foreplay, where record deals derive from countless "pints down the road", handshakes over brunch, and the same unknowns being circled on every A&Rs schedule until their boss demands that an offer is put in.
"Part of the appeal with a social networking app is that network effect, the more friends and family you get on the app itself, the more benefit you can derive from the app and that kind of increases that stickiness," Sydow said.
Singer's defense of abortion and his defense of euthanasia of infants derive from identical premises: that neither fetuses nor infants are beings capable of wanting to continue living, so they have no preferences in that regard that other people are obligated to honor.
The commercial is silly in its reduction of identity to a wardrobe choice, but it does reveal something about the sense of self we derive from our roots, which are both troubled and enriched by the new global technological reality of our time.
And Business Insider, especially the transportation and retail sections, does a lot to dispel that — our most interesting scoops and stories from these sections often derive from the fact that many of us are talking to blue collar and service workers every day.
The world is changing rapidly, as we all know, and so I feel most days that I have my one foot firmly planted still in a linear television business world because there's still a lot of revenue that we derive from that.
Because the provisions eliminated the benefits a credit card company could derive from a low-price business model — most obviously, a greater share of the market — all four major credit card networks charged higher fees than they would have absent the provisions.
Democrats and Republicans on the House Energy and Commerce Committee called on the Trump administration's trade negotiators to reconsider including the protections, which derive from Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, in trade agreements with countries like Canada, Japan and Mexico.
However, Economics Nobel Laureate Paul Krugman further asserts that there are essentially no benefits for workers in 2018, despite the fact that a number of corporations have announced bonuses for workers while saying that the bonuses derive from the new tax law.
Just last month, China's State Drug Administration revised the health warnings on human immunoglobulin products to note that although plasma treatments are screened for pathogens, they nonetheless derive from human blood and therefore may still pose a minor risk of infection to patients.
She also acknowledged the stark economic reality that advocates for players frequently cite: that "the extraordinary revenues that defendants derive from these sports" demonstrate that capping players' compensation at scholarships and related costs "is not commensurate with the value that they create."
Mark Hanna, of the Insurance Council of Texas, which strongly backed the legislation, told MONEY that claims made before or after Friday would be treated the same way, since the new law does not affect the claims process — only the lawsuits that derive from claims.
And, although it is important simply to understand how exercise impacts the mechanics of cells, these insights may also allow researchers "to develop targeted drugs to achieve some of the benefits that we derive from the exercise in people who cannot exercise," Nair said.
They found that today's citrus trees derive from at least 10 ancestral species that originated in the southeast foothills of the Himalayas, in a region that includes the eastern area of Assam, northern Myanmar, and western Yunnan, according to a study published today in Nature.
MUMBAI, India — Jews in the Indian state of Maharashtra were granted minority status this week, a decision that was celebrated by local Jewish leaders, though they said they were still trying to grasp the full range of benefits Jews might derive from the new status.
Those recommendations derive from a model drawing on years of play-by-play data, churning it through hundreds of thousands of simulations — sometimes more — to determine the decision that most boosts a team's likelihood of winning, a metric EdjSports calls GWC, for Game Winning Chance.
In the earlier interview, Jordan repeated multiple White House defenses of the call, including claiming without evidence that the whistleblower was partisan and falsely asserting that the whistleblower complaint process had recently been amended to remove a requirement that complaints derive from firsthand information.
Another big sticking point: Since it's impossible to know what a person would have looked like had they not had Botox, it's tough to gauge the size or significance of the benefit a patient may derive from preventative injections—or if there's any benefit at all.
This impulse could stem from the chemical hits our brains receive with each news hit, but it could also derive from a primitive behavioral instinct—surveillance gratification-seeking, or the urge that drove our cave-dwelling ancestors to poke their heads out and check for predators.
While calling the plaintiffs' experience "tragic," Justice Anthony Kennedy's majority opinion referred to the Bivens precedent as the remnant of an ancien régime, a time when the Supreme Court was willing to derive from statutes or the Constitution itself remedies that Congress had not explicitly authorized.
Meaning can come from many sources at work, but the two most satisfying and reliable derive from: (1) giving people a chance to learn and to grow personally, and (2) providing associations in which people genuinely like and respect their leaders and develop bonds with one's teammates.
It slumped again in July by an annualized 1.37 million tonnes, although the production figures supplied to the IAI by the China Nonferrous Metals Industry Association are prone to a degree of monthly volatility that can only derive from the statistics, not the reality of smelting aluminum.
The overall index score of 71 out of 242 shows that workers are by and large satisfied with their jobs, especially in terms of how much meaning they derive from work, how much their colleagues appreciate what they do and how much autonomy they have at work.
Simon Frith – sociologist, music critic and founding chair of the Mercury Prize – has argued that popular music helps us to negotiate the relationship between our inner and public lives – that: "Pop tastes do not just derive from our socially constructed identities; they also help to shape them".
And I am far from alone in my admiration: He also inspires countless creators to cover, expand upon, interpret and derive from his work, a trait that puts him not only squarely in the folk tradition, but also in the world of storytelling and oral history.
Though fentanyl is known as a prescription drug that is most commonly available as a patch that is placed on the skin, in recent years, a bootleg version of fentanyl believed to derive from China has flooded the illicit opioid market in both the US in Canada.
Media companies ability to attract premiums in a platform world will depend upon three things: The value of a media company will be predominantly tied up in its brand; the amount of incremental revenue or reach that content can derive from being associated with that company.
What possible benefit could we derive from hearing about someone like us who had met the worst possible fate — not dying from a freak accident or a sudden illness but dying the way girls were killed: intimately, sexually, compulsively, fueled by jealousy or entitlement or rage?
What possible benefit could we derive from hearing about someone like us who had met the worst possible fate — not dying from a freak accident or a sudden illness but dying the way girls were killed: intimately, sexually, compulsively, fueled by jealousy or entitlement or rage?
The political and social rights of genuine, state-based citizenship derive from the contribution members make to sustaining the public life of the community, be it through participation in the economy as workers and consumers, caring for children and the elderly or simply recognizing and abiding by its laws.
The recipe does not derive from the fieldwork of great Mexican cooking masters like Diana Kennedy or Patricia Quintana (who might rail against it), nor from personal experience cooking in central Mexico with the women and men who have been making such sauces since the region's pre-Hispanic era.
But our safety net is stretched almost to breaking point... The diversity within species, between species and of ecosystems, as well as many fundamental contributions we derive from nature, are declining fast, although we still have the means to ensure a sustainable future for people and the planet.
We are censoring all artistic works that derive from the creative mind and the soul of the artist, whose race and culture happen to be different from her subject, while the very impetus and purpose of art is to reveal, to be a bridge, to depict our common humanity.
Mayfield is building on that earlier experience to give users something he sees lacking in Slack, an integrated collaboration tool, and he's taking a page from those early days by providing a Wiki to give team members more context and structure than they could derive from a linear Slack conversation.
And his inability, or unwillingness, to crassify like that seems to derive from some deep inner trust in the logical, some sense that if a policy is honest and intelligent enough, it doesn't need to be justified by a name or face—it doesn't need to be sold to you.

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