The daylight between Clinton and Sanders on nuclear echoes echoes a split in the environmental community.
|
|
" Bernstein hears echoes of Watergate "I keep getting asked, are there echoes of Watergate in this?
|
|
Still, there are echoes of her father's actions here, as well as echoes of Tyrion's father, Tywin.
|
|
And Pa would focus on finding our echoes, instead of all the other echoes he was chasing.
|
|
There are lots of things in there — visual echoes.
|
|
" Dash echoes this: "[Tumblr] used a very blunt instrument.
|
|
" Another source echoes the sentiment, saying, "Scott seems fine.
|
|
" The new strapline has echoes of "The future's bright.
|
|
Take President Richard Nixon -- the predecessor Trump constantly echoes.
|
|
The lawsuit echoes a similar case alleging aluminum price manipulation.
|
|
" Echoes the entertainment source: "Like any couple they have disagreements.
|
|
And it echoes the story of the economy writ large.
|
|
With this, he echoes similar statements all across the industry.
|
|
"It just kind of echoes around in there," says Flake.
|
|
And as for people buying Echoes instead of Sonos speakers?
|
|
But his troubles in Washington have echoes in his past.
|
|
A Mushroom Kingdom entrance echoes the classic Disneyland castle design.
|
|
Today Finkelstein and Birnbaum's work in Hungary has echoes everywhere.
|
|
Hannity then echoes much of that messaging on his program.
|
|
MILK is filled with ghostly echoes of that bygone era.
|
|
The president's charge echoes other Republicans' recent attacks on Democrats.
|
|
These are echoes of an earlier period of tense relations.
|
|
That echoes documents which people have unearthed in the past.
|
|
The battle over Charlottesville's Confederate statues echoes similar ones elsewhere.
|
|
Episode 2, naturally, had echoes of Asylum all over it.
|
|
" Echoes the Stefani source: "Before dating Blake, Gwen seemed lost.
|
|
It's relaxed and sexy, with echoes of something unfulfilled, too.
|
|
The Los Angeles administrative change echoes the California state precedent.
|
|
It echoes calls by the Greek government two years ago.
|
|
The season eight premiere also verbally echoes Arya's childhood games.
|
|
" Another source echoes that, saying Cattrall was "a demanding diva.
|
|
He echoes Saudi activists who say that anything is possible.
|
|
Leo Zhang, Senior Analyst at Cleantech Group, echoes Shoer's sentiment.
|
|
This is ambient that hisses and crackles, clanks and echoes.
|
|
" This echoes a tweet he sent overnight as well. "Wrong!
|
|
It's a message the candidate himself echoes at his events.
|
|
The accusation echoes similar criticism from Kabul aimed at Islamabad.
|
|
On the markets, history echoes but rarely repeats the past.
|
|
The troubles faced by Docoss have echoes of Freedom 251.
|
|
This scene has strong echoes of a scene in 'It'.
|
|
He often echoes themes that circulate on the extreme right.
|
|
The difficulty of pushing through recent transactions echoes the past.
|
|
Are there any echoes of real life in this scenario?
|
|
The masterwork has echoes of Mendelssohn's predecessors Mozart and Schubert.
|
|
And she echoes Mr. Siegel's broader point about thoughtful targeting.
|
|
Gestural echoes multiply over the course of the three pieces.
|
|
There were so many echoes of my own family's journey.
|
|
"High Life" also rings with echoes of the "Alien" saga.
|
|
This tradition is long gone, but Manu recognized certain echoes.
|
|
He then shouted "dump Trump!" to echoes from the audience.
|
|
The move echoes a larger industry trend, Ms. May said.
|
|
That echoes what one gynecologist told Women's Health as well.
|
|
You can definitely hear echoes of this in my album.
|
|
There is too much talk about archives, inventories, echoes, ghosts.
|
|
What will remain are all the echoes of the past.
|
|
The move echoes one at the state level, where Gov.
|
|
Do you see echoes of other fairy tales you've read?
|
|
The noise of desperate, rasping inhalation echoes throughout the evening.
|
|
There were echoes of Trump's warning on CNN Wednesday morning.
|
|
The reader will find plenty that echoes in modern India.
|
|
A small gazebo echoes the architecture of the main house.
|
|
"The Malfoys and Voldemort were echoes of Nazis," he said.
|
|
They contained echoes of the harsh rhetoric of the past.
|
|
Echoes of the period before the Civil War are everywhere.
|
|
The echoes deployed by Grande and Scott were intentional homage.
|
|
It also echoes the style that has become her signature.
|
|
It also echoes the style that has become her signature.
|
|
This echoes the process a lot of authors go through.
|
|
At WIRED, we're very attuned to what we call echoes.
|
|
This sentiment echoes previous statements he has made at conferences.
|
|
Same universe, but merely distant echoes of what transpired there.
|
|
Trump's own mistrust of international organizations echoes these earlier complaints.
|
|
His description of the "real" echoes that of his mentor.
|
|
There are echoes of that situation in today's Turkey crisis.
|
|
Are there any other Nixonian echoes to the Comey firing?
|
|
But there were echoes of other Trumpian characteristics as well.
|
|
A separate report out this week from Chainalysis echoes those findings.
|
|
That rhetoric echoes attacks from national Republicans, including President Donald Trump.
|
|
This echoes Facebook's own defense against the rising backlash it faces.
|
|
It echoes concerns of Harley- Davidson maybe for entirely different reasons.
|
|
Despite its echoes of Donald Trump, the image is nothing new.
|
|
Obama's criticism echoes similar condemnations issued by members of his cabinet.
|
|
The dichotomy echoes both readymades and the work of Donald Judd.
|
|
Knock on it with your hand and nothing echoes or reverberates.
|
|
Mystal's point echoes one long popular among liberal First Amendment thinkers.
|
|
Still, you can hear echoes of McCarthy in what came after.
|
|
Do I need to say this echoes the process of writing?
|
|
The speedy rollout echoes Burger King's trajectory with the Impossible Whopper.
|
|
They emit clicks and interpret the echoes to find their prey.
|
|
Maybe Eero's mesh network could be built-in to future Echoes.
|
|
Valerian has echoes of Willis' Korben Dallas in his snarky attitude.
|
|
Yet there are echoes of the Brexit campaign in their arguments.
|
|
That echoes an earlier report from Bloomberg which noted the same.
|
|
Guess what – Amazon sold a whole bunch of Echoes this holiday.
|
|
The song echoes the situation—you're right back where you started.
|
|
If taken as reliable omen, these echoes would be pretty worrisome.
|
|
That sounds like potential foreshadowing, with echoes of Potter once again.
|
|
The echoes of the Raj are not lost on the locals.
|
|
The authorities in Guangdong are acutely conscious of the historical echoes.
|
|
The horse echoes the ease they share and cements their bond.
|
|
Ari Wald, head of technical analysis at Oppenheimer, echoes Bapis' caution.
|
|
The new track"Pete Davidson" totally echoes her SNL bae's sentiment.
|
|
The call for global action echoes requests from other EU states.
|
|
The language of the Leave campaigners even echoes Trump's campaign slogan.
|
|
Interestingly enough, we can see echoes of this with the NBA.
|
|
It echoes how the company launched Siri in the first place.
|
|
The phone rings, and the morse code echoes through the house.
|
|
SC's legal response echoes a statement it issued back in December.
|
|
That shift in sentiment echoes expectations for other major central banks.
|
|
The new poll echoes similar ones produced by CNN and Gallup.
|
|
The ephemerality of Tsypin's time-bound performances echoes his studio's destruction.
|
|
"What happens in one world echoes in others," Jake is told.
|
|
The new submission from TEOS definitely echoes that concept car aesthetic.
|
|
Trump listens to them and, again, echoes back what he hears.
|
|
The park's Echoes Room, for instance, is approximately 367 feet deep.
|
|
You can hear echoes of Affleck's career in A Ghost Story.
|
|
There are some echoes of this strategy in the emerging world.
|
|
This push echoes the drive to block-grant welfare in 1996.
|
|
South Africa's third World Cup title had echoes of its first.
|
|
Their continued and growing support for Trump echoes this male consensus.
|
|
Only faint echoes of divisive subjects intrude on the holiday weekend.
|
|
He echoes the concerns of many senior intelligence and defense officials.
|
|
The cautionary tone echoes what some market watchers have been saying.
|
|
Her choice of Italian has echoes of Beckett's choice of French.
|
|
The surge echoes fast growth seen in China's own metropolitan hubs.
|
|
The line of inquiry echoes the Starfleet Academy's Kobayashi Maru test.
|
|
This line of thought echoes the way the twentieth-century Austrian
|
|
One can hear in her argument echoes of an earlier era.
|
|
There aren't as many Google Home options as there are Echoes.
|
|
It's the echoes, now unmistakable, of times when the skies darkened.
|
|
This echoes the sentiments Lochte already expressed with Caiden was born.
|
|
Things that have at least echoes of the old Cold War.
|
|
Do you see echoes of contemporary feminist rifts in this event?
|
|
The approach to geographic adjustment echoes the controversy over age adjustment.
|
|
In a way, he directs youth culture, rather than echoes it.
|
|
Today it's used by the community known as Echoes from Venus.
|
|
There are echoes of those sentiments in the current political climate.
|
|
There are echoes of the oblivious appeasement policies of the 1930s.
|
|
The echoes between the two produce a strange and chilling effect.
|
|
Here he echoes C. S. Lewis, who considered Hell a choice.
|
|
"The best mess you can imagine!" echoes Carlotta, both nodding vigorously.
|
|
Mr. Mead, the head of Hempitecture, echoes the concerns of others.
|
|
Reading it, you felt echoes of Flannery O'Connor and Graham Greene.
|
|
The 2246-247 war has found other curious, possibly inadvertent, echoes.
|
|
The echoes of my acting work in today's world are eerie.
|
|
My scream echoes in the darkness, never to be heard again.
|
|
And so you're still hearing echoes of it today in Bristol.
|
|
The research has echoes of studies from the 1960s involving flatworms.
|
|
These patterns have echoes in our own imperial — er, presidential politics.
|
|
ECHOES: The Saga Anthology of Ghost Stories, edited by Ellen Datlow.
|
|
Go deeper: How the U.S. oil boom echoes through the economy
|
|
Echoes of the Yellow Vest violence that rocked France are resurfacing.
|
|
But if you listened closely, you could hear echoes of Bannon.
|
|
We find echoes of that same longing in Emine's girlhood reminiscences.
|
|
Even in Nevada, tone-deaf misogyny still echoes in the chamber.
|
|
"The silence echoes in my ears still today," Dr. Rabinovici said.
|
|
Still, the number 27 echoes back in the book and movies.
|
|
Not quite, experts say, but the echoes are real — and disturbing.
|
|
But the echoes are unmistakable and have become impossible to ignore.
|
|
His work on impeachment echoes his successful bid to persuade Sen.
|
|
Confirmed: We are Frigid echoes, stony elegiac gaze of future specters.
|
|
McConnell's response this week echoes the approach he took last fall.
|
|
We're hearing echoes so loud they've become the sound of today.
|
|
Fashion often echoes the mood of the times, subconsciously or otherwise.
|
|
The fireplace's herringbone pattern echoes that of the pickled hardwood floors.
|
|
" The chorus echoes T.S. Eliot's "Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock.
|
|
And its profane subtitle, which echoes the name of your website.
|
|
Do you see any echoes of history in today's current events?
|
|
The case has echoes of Paula Jones's suit against President Clinton.
|
|
But his history has all the echoes of a terrible past.
|
|
When you stop listening, "ella" is what echoes in your head.
|
|
Even white evangelical support for Trump held echoes of the 1990s.
|
|
By holiday season 2017, Echo devices, which can do a host of tasks from playing music to setting alarms to ordering products on Amazon, had become so popular, shoppers were using their Echoes to buy more Echoes.
|
|
More people should know Heligoland's story for the echoes it has today.
|
|
The model echoes HBO's business plan, said Tru Optik CEO Andre Swanston.
|
|
It seems to repeat itself, but these are echoes rather than repetitions.
|
|
Does it really matter why you're collecting echoes for the Nth time?
|
|
This scam echoes a similar scheme that popped up over the summer.
|
|
This echoes what sources told PEOPLE and other outlets through the years.
|
|
That echoes a problematic history of naming and shaming individuals considered contrarian.
|
|
Many contemporary viewers have pointed out that the film echoes the present.
|
|
These games are faint echoes of the hunting behaviors of their ancestors.
|
|
The question immediately echoes: Why isn&apost Ivanka doing something about it?
|
|
The new name echoes that of the first auctions, held since 1970.
|
|
These basic tastes are the echoes of prehistoric signals that saw humanity
|
|
I speak out loud, and my voice echoes around the empty space.
|
|
There are indelible melodies and eco-anthems and echoes of the Memories.
|
|
The striking improvement in Wuhu's property market has echoes around the country.
|
|
Part of Lee's allegation echoes those of the 48 patients from USC.
|
|
Snap's IPO has echoes of that of Alibaba, a Chinese internet giant.
|
|
The violence on Friday echoes the beginning of South Sudan's civil war.
|
|
Needs to keep it down in the bedroom, the Eyrie really echoes.
|
|
And it has echoes of Apple's own default security settings on MacOS.
|
|
And by echoes I don't simply mean parallels — those are obvious enough.
|
|
Yet some hear echoes of Weber's ideas in Pentecostalism's growing social influence.
|
|
It not only echoes the populists themselves but plays into their hands.
|
|
Mystic Detectives surveys the influences and echoes of Surrealism in contemporary art.
|
|
Others point out echoes of "Animal Farm" (1945) in modern political rhetoric.
|
|
The new Echoes aren't groundbreaking, but they don't have to be, yet.
|
|
The echoes of this experiment will be heard far beyond Bavaria's Alps.
|
|
Wheeler's lobbying client echoes a similar industry-first vision for the EPA.
|
|
The new Fox News lawsuit clearly echoes the UK phone-hacking scandal.
|
|
Yet even Marvel increasingly embraces the way the superhero echoes have curdled.
|
|
She also echoes Boyd's sentiment about the family vibe of the gym.
|
|
Subtle echoes on vocals and drums finally made it into the mix.
|
|
A long, sad howl echoes over a green field, for dramatic impact.
|
|
Isn't that the reason every tech conference echoes with the word "iteration"?
|
|
The game's alien planet is full of life that echoes that inspiration.
|
|
There were echoes of that first Air in last year's MacBook debut.
|
|
Find the show that echoes your mental headspace and indulge in it.
|
|
Orli Matlow, a New York-based stand-up comedian, echoes this sentiment.
|
|
Some saw the potential for echoes of 2016 in the French race.
|
|
The headset's design echoes that and the experience once you jump in.
|
|
The incident had powerful echoes for today's conflicts in the United States.
|
|
In her Ditasa-Ulod are echoes of the beautiful naga, Filipino mermaids.
|
|
Puns are accidental echoes, random likenesses thrown out by our lexical cosmos.
|
|
The uncertainty about Trump's future intentions echoes some of his 2017 moves.
|
|
We're hoping to see echoes of this over the next few years.
|
|
The color of one pitchers' glaze echoes the color of the waterfalls.
|
|
It has a bit of everything, with eerie echoes of modern issues.
|
|
For New Yorkers, the destruction of daily life bore echoes of Sept.
|
|
This line echoes almost verbatim most 2015 outlooks written one year ago.
|
|
It's an easy mode survival game that echoes Minecraft's own survival mode.
|
|
Let echoes of the past remind Your modern ears of simpler times.
|
|
Echoes of Laura in Tennessee Williams's "The Glass Menagerie" can be heard.
|
|
Former Wall Street executive and Ellevest founder Sallie Krawcheck echoes this sentiment.
|
|
It's a slow build that echoes these early days of Parker's career.
|
|
The decision echoes that of the centre-right Center Party on Tuesday.
|
|
"What's your name?" she asks, as Jaqen's voice echoes in our ears.
|
|
The CRISPR phenomenon can have echoes of "Frankenscience" in the popular imagination.
|
|
Further down, though, the streets are echoes of the city's founding panic.
|
|
The echoes of rushing crowds, a flickering light, a train zooming by.
|
|
The notion echoes the historical precedent of things like the agriculture example.
|
|
Mayer echoes Ochota's sentiments when he comes by to introduce his wine.
|
|
Yet other Gore-era echoes have resounded through this heady campaign season.
|
|
Wordplay MONDAY PUZZLE — Peter A. Collins is back and he's hearing echoes.
|
|
I found some echoes of my Indian childhood in the Russian tales.
|
|
The trope of the secluded creator has echoes of imprisonment and stasis.
|
|
This work echoes Minimalism but softens Minimalism's hard edges with impressionistic brushwork.
|
|
You can hear echoes of this idea in the comments from Gens.
|
|
Meek Mill sees echoes of his experiences in Mr. Kraft's current predicament.
|
|
I feel like there are echoes of that show in this one.
|
|
That said, the document still echoes national security priorities from past administrations.
|
|
The cover art's beautification echoes what Chernow has done on the page.
|
|
I call this sciencuality, a neologism that echoes the sensuality of discovery.
|
|
That decision was practical, and it too has echoes for our time.
|
|
The pledge echoes testimony from Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin to Congress today.
|
|
But there are still plenty of echoes with America's mad, ugly Thunderdome.
|
|
It's not difficult to hear the real-world echoes of this message.
|
|
The debate echoes the tussling over the term "organic" in the 1990s.
|
|
The past is "filled with echoes", she wrote in "The Handmaid's Tale".
|
|
Fleshier than Botticelli's idealized beauty, the Cyclops's pose perfectly echoes its inspiration.
|
|
And the controversy certainly echoes discussions that took place in Schiele's time.
|
|
Mr. Dunt echoes the London mayor, Sadiq Khan, in calling on Mrs.
|
|
LeStrange echoes this sentiment, harping specifically on the importance of natural light.
|
|
There are many Easter eggs but the most prominent echoes are structural.
|
|
It echoes our core values of inclusivity within our online business community.
|
|
They exist as haunting echoes of one man's pervasive joy and agony.
|
|
The message was coordinated with the White House's and echoes Mr. Trump's.
|
|
The discovery of the buried colossus may also have strong literary echoes.
|
|
Saleh echoes this sentiment for what he wants for his own podcast.
|
|
In fact, it echoes many of the things I've heard from nutritionists.
|
|
In a way, this echoes the first of two earlier Great Awakenings.
|
|
That aside, the search echoes of one that recently ended in tragedy.
|
|
The legislation echoes the harder line on Tehran taken by President Trump.
|
|
You've talked about threats to constitutional democracy and echoes of Josef Stalin.
|
|
Trump echoes and even stokes his constituents' fears about globalization and immigration.
|
|
Some saw echoes of Time's cover when Adolf Hitler won the honor.
|
|
Maybe, but they remain only faint echoes of Cold War era risks.
|
|
In other words, I saw echoes of my own figure in hers.
|
|
Hip as NoMad is becoming, it resonates with echoes of its past.
|
|
The echoes of the shooting were just another part of my childhood.
|
|
But those echoes don't lend this finale much additional depth or stakes.
|
|
She chose her pen name because of its echoes with Morante's own.
|
|
These visual echoes achieve their most pointed expression in several doubled images.
|
|
Kate Rosenblatt, MA, LPC, LMHC, the clinical director at Balance, echoes this sentiment.
|
|
There are echoes of Woo's neo-noir cops-and-robbers classics all over.
|
|
Many of us will hear echoes of our own experience in her words.
|
|
In-store Echoes were clearly just the beginning of Whole Foods' Amazon integration.
|
|
Lots of echoes of the Obama/Bin Laden situation room photo here pic.twitter.
|
|
"To measure these light echoes to half a millisecond is incredible," said Kara.
|
|
I've gotten over it, but then the echoes of that are always there.
|
|
I cannot help but hear in these words terrible echoes from the past.
|
|
Even basic call quality issues, like delays and echoes, prove difficult to fix.
|
|
Becker's statement echoes what Simmons' longtime rep, Tom Estey, has said about him.
|
|
For May, however, the unhappy turn of events ironically echoes the piece's themes.
|
|
It echoes what members of the administration have previously said on the topic.
|
|
AWS' French customers include Canal+, Decathlon, Les Echoes, Schneider Electric and Societe Generale.
|
|
The indictment information echoes the date detailed in another earlier BuzzFeed News report.
|
|
Interestingly, Spotify's complaint echoes recent comments made by Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-MA).
|
|
The thunk of her falling quarters echoes in the nearly empty visiting room.
|
|
That has echoes of Amazon's reported plans to offer a branded bank account.
|
|
Many of its characters also appear to be echoes of Besson's past work.
|
|
And why is he seeding his text with echoes of Shira's own stories?
|
|
First came the confetti, lasers, and fireworks, now come the echoes and spotlights.
|
|
Dr Wright's argument echoes that made by another astronomer, Jill Tarter, in 2010.
|
|
Listen closely to Tony Woods and you can hear echoes of Dave Chappelle.
|
|
It's grim, with obvious echoes of Marx (who was writing about automation too).
|
|
The theme echoes real-world fear of terrorism in Europe and North America.
|
|
This echoes a similar story from British tabloid The Sun over the weekend.
|
|
And that's where the misleadingly simple echoes of a certain classic premise end.
|
|
Sure, there are echoes of Stella McCartney lingerie, and 1980s Jean Paul Gaultier.
|
|
" Echoes a second source, "This whole process has been very hard on him.
|
|
This title has obvious echoes in the hell language used in the show.
|
|
And you're going against a cult that maybe echoes what you don't believe.
|
|
Fans of Sunset no doubt felt echoes of that earlier game in Spidey.
|
|
There are some very strong echoes of very dark periods in American history.
|
|
But the power of the series also derives from its disturbing contemporary echoes.
|
|
I've been back, but it's hard to go in because of the echoes.
|
|
" Echoes Tyler about his wife, "Hayley is going to be the best mom.
|
|
Hagit Katzenelson, who works as a product manager for Walmart, echoes Chin's sentiments.
|
|
An exhibition that explores the influences and echoes of surrealism in contemporary art.
|
|
"The Star-Spangled Banner" echoes the past and gives voice to our present.
|
|
And the media commentary on his anti-media commentary echoes on and on.
|
|
But echoes of Thiel's guidance are in Agarwal's advice to other aspiring entrepreneurs.
|
|
Many immigrants like him, he says, hear ominous echoes in President Trump's words.
|
|
That rhetoric of the "rule of the taxpayer" echoes into the present day.
|
|
And since just 2015, it has reportedly sold more than 0003 million Echoes.
|
|
Dance, echoes, delays, bass, rhythms, angelic voices and hopefully not too much feedback.
|
|
Her statement echoes what she and Viall told People after the Bachelor finale.
|
|
The echoes of our present politics kept me fully invested in the narrative.
|
|
Such a model echoes Airbnb's desire for everyone to 'build a history' online.
|
|
In the Critics v Fans match up, the outcome echoes Batman v Superman.
|
|
And that "2019-2020" prediction just echoes the latest reports in the media.
|
|
The parallels are not precise, but we hear the echoes, see the shadows.
|
|
Trump's tweeted threat to Iran has echoes of his treatment of North Korea.
|
|
Further prompting optimism is the echoes of sympathy for the market in Washington.
|
|
To Zabel, it echoes other difficult, unjust fights for to protect civil rights.
|
|
So I started to follow their tracks and try to hear their echoes.
|
|
It echoes the rise of the dark wizard Voldemort in Rowling's Potter stories.
|
|
Its blue and white color scheme echoes the transferware in a case above.
|
|
Here in Asia, the political climate still echoes with the war's final shots.
|
|
Trump's Tuesday morning tweet echoes the language he frequently uses to describe immigrants.
|
|
But the battle is coming, and there are echoes of that history already.
|
|
This echoes the frequent over-emphasis (or even sole emphasis) on shareholder value.
|
|
Conflicts of the past find contemporary echoes in new movies about politics, too.
|
|
In their new adaptation, Mr. Taccone and Mr. Cohen have sharpened the echoes.
|
|
When I make a mistake, it echoes through the canyons of the world.
|
|
When I make a mistake, it echoes through the canyons of the world.
|
|
In this inaction, there are eerie echoes of the errors made in 2014.
|
|
That echoes a report from the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office released in May.
|
|
"McEnroe: In the Realm of Perfection" rings with echoes of the big screen.
|
|
This issue echoes problems that arose during Scotland's own independence referendum in 2014.
|
|
The tribute echoes the one paid to Hogwarts headmaster Dumbledore after his death.
|
|
Obama's critique echoes concerns voiced by both liberal and conservative health policy analysts.
|
|
Dragon Quest XI: Echoes Of An Elusive Age is weighed down by history.
|
|
His mustache bristles during a full-bodied chuckle that echoes throughout the brewery.
|
|
" This echoes similar stories arguing ending mass incarceration "is not a federal issue.
|
|
And now I have echoes of WeWork, renting out space to other startups.
|
|
"So that lately has felt kind of strange, maybe with some echoes."N.
|
|
An unpublished study by social psychologists shows that the impact echoes years later.
|
|
For "Echoes and Expulsions," the scrim has been pulled aside, revealing rough country.
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After all, a band like Soundgarden transcended its early echoes of Led Zep.
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What, if anything, about this echoes what is going on in your life?
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Early audiences saw echoes of revolutionary currents that had swept 19th-century Europe.
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And a cry for help during an attack often draws nothing but echoes.
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This echoes the pattern in other towns and cities that the SDF captured.
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Given her interest in echoes of past injustice, her archival structure makes sense.
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And then there is Japan's jersey, which echoes the traditional Sashiko stitching technique.
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Her experience echoes allegations made by Jenny McCarthy against the actor in 1998.
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" That symmetry is just one of the echoes tucked into "Relatives in Descent.
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The Times piece also disclosed a previously unreported account that echoes Ramirez' story.
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The language in the trade deals echoes those provisions but contains some differences.
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What echoes of the past do you see when you look around today?
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It is a conflict from the 26s with echoes in the present day.
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They inhabit a grand house, sparsely furnished but crammed with echoes and creaks.
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If her work has echoes of other writers, her tone is her own.
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Lune Rouge's first show, "Through the Echoes," retells the history of the Earth.
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The war in Afghanistan in some ways echoes the American experience in Vietnam.
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The "second coming?" in this puzzle is an ECHO, because it well, echoes.
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The Dingell remark carried echoes of the president's attacks on the late Sen.
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Like any radar, they fire radio waves at targets and gather faint echoes.
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The donors' conundrum echoes Republicans funders' agony in 2016 over President Donald Trump.
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Echoes of the matriarchal cultures that dominated prehistory lurk in our collective unconscious.
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Throughout the gallery echoes "Opus No. 1," a popular choice for hold music.
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"At this point in time I would advise caution," echoes Manhattan Analog's Coates.
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But the show's producers never wanted to make much of any geopolitical echoes.
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The editorial echoes comments made by Chinese Commerce Ministry spokesman Gao Feng Thursday.
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The full-throated loathing of Washington echoes from all crannies of the country.
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The hype echoes Beahm's return to Twitch after taking time off in 2017.
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A 133 study led by University of Chicago's Marianne Bertrand echoes that conclusion.
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He's engaging in behavior that has scary historical echoes and real-world effects.
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But in some ways, our present reality echoes that of enslaved black people.
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"It's full of people everyone knows which are reverberating like echoes," Germann said.
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Merkel's ban echoes France's ban on burqinis — full-body swimsuits — earlier this year.
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The sound of wind echoes throughout, building into a terrible, swelling, orchestral score.
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Low-pitched prehistoric echoes rang through the Hall, overlapped by high-pitched children.
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"The presence of echoes would certainly be a strong indication that black holes are not the classical perfect-absorber we think they are," added Cardoso, who was not involved in Afshordi's study, but has published many papers about gravitational wave echoes.
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However, much of the feedback to Hornsey's response echoes a single sentiment: try harder.
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"Son of Saul" approaches its stupefying subject in a way that echoes Kierkegaard's imperative.
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They emit high-frequency sounds and listen for echoes to determine where objects are.
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"We see echoes of what happened here in Canada, in the US," he said.
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Even so, the Afrofuturist echoes in the work gathered here are poignant and powerful.
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Something of Kahlo echoes in the same wine-red lipstick I wear to work.
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The change bore echoes of a 1973 decision to remove homosexuality from the DSM.
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Zampirolo dubs it "Something that is sloppy and unstable and unreliable," which Austin echoes.
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A survey of companies by the Institute for Supply Management (ISM) echoes such worries.
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What we see in those goosed ratings echoes what we see in economics research.
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" Gianni's friend Hal Rubenstein, echoes that, telling PEOPLE: "This falling on her was brutal.
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Kyle Godfrey-Ryan's story echoes Bravo's account: inappropriate touching and occasional outbursts of rage.
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Of course, for fans outside of Japan, Echoes is essentially a brand new game.
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In this sense, Camnitzer echoes the critical pedagogies of Paulo Freire and Simón Rodríguez.
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California chain Smitten even developed an ice cream flavor that echoes your fave bottle.
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The latest polling echoes the market, showing just a small margin between the two.
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The new party's name, Alternative for Sweden, echoes the German party Alternative für Deutschland.
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The selection of a pop concert has echoes of the Bataclan massacre in Paris.
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She also echoes Lavin's assertion that the "burst of consciousness" drives toddler's brutal honesty.
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I was focusing on combat instead of worrying about blood echoes, stats, and upgrades.
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The finding that poor children are more likely to be medicated echoes previous research.
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The Beijing party line echoes the positive tone voiced by the country's business executives.
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With echoes of Maoist China, a national "learn from Davao" movement is under way.
|
|
Speaking with Edwards, he echoes the same sentiments about why circuit bending took off.
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The elderly population echoes the huge flows of teenagers in the 1950s and '60s.
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|
Ray's plight echoes throughout the game, from enemies to environments to puzzles to cutscenes.
|
|
Sessions' Senate website echoes many of the sentiments Trump has expressed during his campaign.
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|
But that is just one way in which the case echoes into the present.
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Many in the chamber would have been distracted by booming echoes, the model suggests.
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" Another source echoes the first, adding, "Both of them were married at the time.
|
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Mic traced the origins of (((Echoes))) to at least as far back as 2014.
|
|
Len Lichtenfeld, interim chief medical officer of the American Cancer Society, echoes Schilsky's concerns.
|
|
But this latest incident echoes another one from the same city in April 2015.
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She says she doesn't represent the Russian government and the Kremlin echoes that characterization.
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|
The propaganda that blared from its emergency system loudspeakers sounded like warbly, cavernous echoes.
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|
Something like a Trump presidency is bound to stir up echoes of the past.
|
|
Her succinct and simple two-part answer basically echoes everyone's thoughts on the matter.
|
|
" Tracy echoes that: "It's really important for people to see Trayvon as a person.
|
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The playlist includes radar echoes, plasma waves, and even dust smacking into a comet.
|
|
Trump's recent alliance with the Christian right only makes the historical echoes more audible.
|
|
There are echoes of that obfuscation in Trump's tweets and Giuliani's shrug this morning.
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So when I hear that, I hear the echoes going back thousands of years.
|
|
One of the craziest echoes a pivotal aspect of his relationship with Mr. Robot.
|
|
Past these murky sexual questions, The Sinner echoes DOS' tendency to burn its members.
|
|
Democrats were quick to point out that the manifesto echoes Trump's rhetoric about immigrants.
|
|
It also echoes Obama's criticisms of the Justice Against Sponsors of Terrorism Act (JASTA).
|
|
This piece echoes the Creative Director's continuing vision of freedom, equality and self-expression.
|
|
Mandela's statement echoes the South African government, which tweeted at the president on Thursday.
|
|
In the meantime, the echoes of Paxton's 2014 move will continue to be felt.
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|
The things that move me as an actor are those echoes that come up.
|
|
In race tournaments around the country today there are echoes of BMX's glory days.
|
|
Julia often echoes what she hears from Elmo and the other Sesame Street characters.
|
|
Burr's reaction echoes those of other Republicans who have described Brennan's actions as inappropriate.
|
|
The "echoes" don't show up on a Twitter search or on a Google search.
|
|
This echoes the late '90s strategy of the Clinton White House against Ken Starr.
|
|
Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie echoes over the speakers: Women are told to make themselves smaller.
|
|
The machine body, the torture and the rebreather are all deliberate echoes of Vader.
|
|
It was around this time that he began illustrating cartoons for Black Echoes magazine.
|
|
Douthat's column echoes a familiar conservative lament: the displacement of aristocratic legitimacy by modernity.
|
|
She suggested they are echoes of America's national origins quotas for immigrants decades ago.
|
|
This high level of performance echoes throughout every key role in Big Little Lies.
|
|
It had unpleasant echoes of many cases involving powerful men and less-powerful women.
|
|
" That echoes statements from Jackson's estate which dismissed Robson and Safechuck as "admitted liars.
|
|
That echoes an initiative that President George W. Bush once embraced but Democrats blocked.
|
|
"There are echoes to it that should concern the White House," Mr. Feaver said.
|
|
There were some echoes of a revolution in female identity on a few catwalks.
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|
There may be echoes of this argument in future legal cases, says Ms Burch.
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|
" This criticism echoes a discussion about the authenticity of the philosopher in Plato's "Phaedrus.
|
|
The party's cry of "take back our country and our Volk!" echoes through Berlin.
|
|
That view echoes what Shelton, a 2016 campaign adviser, said in her 2011 interview.
|
|
Echoes of "The Godfather" abound this season, so keep your eye out for oranges.
|
|
Europe&aposs defiance of Trump over Huawei echoes a pattern seen after Iranian Gen.
|
|
That pattern echoes what happened in Australia, where winter runs from June through August.
|
|
In the history of communications technology, it was a development with echoes of Gutenberg.
|
|
"The Armory Concert" is a solitary statement, but it reverberates with echoes of collaboration.
|
|
This solution echoes a disturbing legacy of forced displacement that has reinforced racial inequality.
|
|
Stacey Gilbert, head of derivatives strategy at Susquehanna, echoes Maley's sentiments on the stock.
|
|
The rich ochre of the clay echoes the drawings in the room next door.
|
|
Those who saw echoes of "Black Panther" in Tubman's gesture were not far-off.
|
|
That echoes the "unfussy" way of cooking and developing recipes practiced by Alison Roman.
|
|
The 11-page document echoes those of the El Paso and other recent shooters.
|
|
They're partisan dispatches from a certain moment in time, one that echoes our own.
|
|
There were echoes of that assumption even when the intent was to praise her.
|
|
The situation in Europe echoes that of the United States but is more varied.
|
|
The Declaration of Independence echoes the idea that sovereignty must serve a higher purpose.
|
|
That part of the House inquiry echoes that of the states' investigation of Google.
|
|
There is ample cause for concern, and I hear disturbing echoes of the past.
|
|
Trump's Wednesday statement echoes his earlier comments that China should handle the situation itself.
|
|
That&aposs because most entrepreneurs will "see echoes" of their early decisions later on.
|
|
" Her mother echoes this: "I think that was the best thing she could do.
|
|
Cigarette smoke and the faint echoes of fans' chants wafted in from the stands.
|
|
His foreign policy echoes the era of isolationism that began almost a century ago.
|
|
He needs the changeup, because echoes of his own past are his toughest competition.
|
|
Her current show of paintings, "Daydream Believer," at 33 Orchard, echoes this musical past.
|
|
That feeling also informs his photos from Cafe'tal, where echoes of the past linger.
|
|
Mr. Buffett's statement Tuesday echoes other recent comments he has made on the subject.
|
|
Allahu Akbar, they shout as the gun's booming report echoes across the empty sand.
|
|
The film had direct echoes in French director Jacques Tati's 1967 comedic masterpiece Playtime.
|
|
The fact that there are still echoes of this today is certainly a problem.
|
|
A survey released on September 12th by the Association of Flight Attendants echoes these findings.
|
|
For the French voter, the case has echoes of similar past scandals over "phantom" jobs.
|
|
The conceptual renderings show a new Penn Station that echoes the original building from 1910.
|
|
The Jeff Bezos show is now selling Amazon Echoes in the Whole Foods produce section.
|
|
This echoes what Judge William G Young in Massachusetts wrote in his ruling last week.
|
|
That echoes the frustrations of Conservative activists who reject May's Brexit plan but feel ignored.
|
|
"This is a drill," a voice echoes over a loudspeaker across this small coastal town.
|
|
Chinese designer Taoray Wang has been showing at NYFW since 2014, and echoes the sentiment.
|
|
See You Yesterday, adapted from Bristol's 2017 short film, deliberately echoes Back to the Future.
|
|
The attack on Buttigieg's experience echoes a theme Biden has been stressing in recent days.
|
|
The sound of shambolic shuffling echoes around the Liberty Stadium, Vicarage Road and Goodison Park.
|
|
Meta's situation echoes that of Osterhout Design Group (ODG), another floundering augmented reality headset company.
|
|
But when he riffs on topics such as Civil Service reform, the Trump shot echoes.
|
|
The expo's official theme, "Live green, live better", echoes his calls for a better environment.
|
|
But one other idea echoes throughout "Kiksuya," and it could have significant ramifications moving forward.
|
|
It's hard not to see echoes of his pitch in Rubin's earlier work on Android.
|
|
Dragon Quest XI: Echoes of an Elusive Age was a hit in Japan last year.
|
|
" It's a sentiment that Jeffrey echoes, saying he is "inspired by her all the time.
|
|
" Keough echoes her sentiment, "I don't think I even knew what a reality show was.
|
|
Don't do it, pleaded a British professor, Kehinde Andrews, citing the ugly echoes of colonialism.
|
|
There are echoes of the de-Baathification policies that alienated Sunnis during the American occupation.
|
|
I wondered if there were echoes between the two dimensions that did the same thing.
|
|
This echoes comments from Neal Baer, chairman of NBC Entertainment, about the future of distribution.
|
|
The echoes of these unions have shut out other voices, like that of small business.
|
|
Catherine Cusset's writing, translated from the French by Teresa Lavender Fagan, echoes that vivid style.
|
|
In this way, Bojack Horseman ends on a note that echoes throughout the entire show.
|
|
This enabled them to simulate a bat's "view" of the resulting cloud of reflected echoes.
|
|
The report from the CEOs echoes the sentiments of a national group of business economists.
|
|
In tandem, the wine-investment world has developed an infrastructure that echoes other financial markets.
|
|
Byron Dorgan, who served as a North Dakota senator for 18 years, echoes this sentiment.
|
|
The film echoes the real world in ways DeMonaco couldn't have predicted at the time.
|
|
Researchers have found a tough, but clever way to turn Amazon Echoes into surveillance devices.
|
|
The sounds of their kissing echoes through the Scottish castle currently hosting this steamy hookup.
|
|
Echoes could already play music; now Sonos is adding nice sounding speakers to the mix.
|
|
It's a song that echoes best through a person who no longer exists, it seems.
|
|
The settlement echoes a similar deal between Uber and its drivers in California and Massachusetts.
|
|
Echoes of the past The 1923 election put Labour in government -- but not in power.
|
|
Stone echoes the sentiment, pointing to the strong earnings predictions for other sectors as well.
|
|
Gravitational waves are echoes from the collision of two black holes billions of years ago.
|
|
Clinton's closing days of her New Hampshire campaign carried eerie echoes of her 2008 campaign.
|
|
The painting's interior framing of this cloistered, intensified core echoes another of Hodgkins' pictorial inclinations.
|
|
Additionally, the Nikkei also echoes the foldable phone's potentially high price tag of $1,500-2,000.
|
|
The overall theme echoes one of President Trump's favorite new catchphrases ... guilty until proven innocent.
|
|
It's a tactic that echoes Richard Nixon, who targeted licenses held by the Washington Post.
|
|
Similar echoes of Trump can be seen in other states around the country as well.
|
|
But in some ways, his statement also echoes what Iliza Shlesinger told Deadline last month.
|
|
This closely echoes the Nixon administration's rhetoric in the early days of the Watergate scandal.
|
|
Superman's behavior and outlook in the Injustice series echoes this sentiment towards crime and punishment.
|
|
His advocacy of national populism echoes -- and very deliberately expatiates -- far-right movements across Europe.
|
|
Trump's message echoes the dismal economic drumbeat on conservative talk radio, television and web sites.
|
|
So far, so fast and so remarkable are the echoes in many South Korean chambers.
|
|
As the Paris Peace Forum gets underway, echoes of the past are sure to reverberate.
|
|
But the unease over how the candidates' families interact echoes that of the candidates themselves.
|
|
Yet perhaps most striking about the letter is the degree to which it echoes Mrs.
|
|
Never mind the echoes of Stephen King that any remote, broken-down rest stop recalls.
|
|
The association's reaction echoes a statement provided by a Hilton spokesperson about the travel ban.
|
|
Indeed, sometimes his ideas are little more than echoes of what he sees on Fox.
|
|
Neo-nazis have been putting parentheses, or "echoes," around the name of a Jewish writer.
|
|
Scientists can then analyze the intensity of the echoes to learn more about the surface.
|
|
It echoes a similar move by competitor Starling Bank, which passported to Ireland in June.
|
|
And the blockchain "name game" is just getting started — and it echoes dot-com mania.
|
|
Suspiria echoes these films as well, with their mix of modern aesthetic and fairytale surrealism.
|
|
It's a practical statement that echoes the advice from thousands of scientists around the world.
|
|
Christie would add executive experience to the ticket and he echoes Trump's criticisms of Washington.
|
|
The policy echoes a pledge made by the opposition Labour Party before the 2015 election.
|
|
Jordan Shapiro, a research psychologist and author of "The New Childhood," echoes the AAP's recommendations.
|
|
There were also echoes of Colonna's style at Louis Vuitton and Saint Laurent's spring shows.
|
|
Her comments carried echoes of Trump's "America first" message in his inaugural speech on Friday.
|
|
When echoes bounce back, the animal perceives them with fatty pads in its lower jaw.
|
|
I silently chant "I-18" or "G-57" until the combination echoes in my mind.
|
|
A Reddit reply thread that simply echoes "Fuck you Robinhood" has attracted hundreds of participants.
|
|
There are some echoes here with Parlá — both respect decay, and want to counter it.
|
|
His model of political posturing echoes what I saw while studying Tanzania's wild Gombe chimpanzees.
|
|
In chapters labeled "now," he listens for echoes of these ideas in 17843st-century America.
|
|
The $500 billion that's been allocated for corporations also prompts some echoes of the past.
|
|
It's the versions of yourself that you create, the echoes of yourself that you inspire.
|
|
But the new movie echoes its predecessor in shape and to some degree in mood.
|
|
" Echoes Lopez, "It really is so much fun to watch and be a part of.
|
|
This, of course, echoes what Rubio has been saying to crowds on the campaign trail.
|
|
One hears the influence of Philip Roth in these pages; elsewhere, echoes of Harold Brodkey.
|
|
The narrative centers on a handmaid named Offred, whose name echoes her male master, Fred.
|
|
That echoes a similar message from its bigger competitor Alibaba and its Luxury Pavilion platform.
|
|
Fans of Fifty Shades might see echoes of that book in this basic plot summary.
|
|
Every August, the Mountain Echoes festival opens up Bhutan's literary scene for a brief moment.
|
|
And still others said the current situation contained strong echoes of the period after Sept.
|
|
Mr. Kipchoge's performance has echoes of breaking the 4-minute-mile barrier in the 1950s.
|
|
But Gordis's biases are nothing compared with the louder silence that echoes through this book.
|
|
The New Waves operation had echoes of the Egyptian state's approach to controlling online debate.
|
|
Tuesday's bill echoes those concerns but stops far short of creating a government-owned network.
|
|
The dynamic echoes that of Michael Cohen, another zealous Trump ally who turned on him.
|
|
He prefers the term "unprocessed water," which echoes the idea of processed versus unprocessed food.
|
|
The four-woman band Warpaint sees and echoes the allure of those more innocent times.
|
|
The suspect wrote an anti-immigrant manifesto that echoes Trump's language and views about immigrants.
|
|
It's a succession of major painterly melodies set among ink-drawn pre-echoes and reverbs.
|
|
"Social Creature" is a wicked original with echoes of the greats (Patricia Highsmith, Gillian Flynn).
|
|
It's got echoes of older quirky graduation experiments, like this Second Life commencement from 2009.
|
|
This poem — bearing words like "testify" and "judge" — echoes our current moment and offers relief.
|
|
Howling or wheezing into the microphones, she uses electronics to assemble a soundscape of echoes.
|
|
One of her recent strategic moves even echoes those of former Microsoft boss Steve Ballmer.
|
|
There are undeniable echoes of the Brexit-Trump 2016 electoral insurrection in this first round.
|
|
"I could feel the echoes of history and decided to leave the country," Dajczgewand says.
|
|
Franz Kafka, G. K. Chesterton, Graham Greene — laughter almost always echoes through their empty temples.
|
|
What's revealed in this report echoes the findings of a CNN investigation published in October.
|
|
Close this foul chapter that stains Australia and echoes the darkest moments in its history.
|
|
But as Mr. Gaines delivered a speech that echoes Joyce's beautiful peroration, I remained detached.
|
|
" In Tokyo Mr Takaoka echoes her feelings: "There's something special about things that are inconvenient.
|
|
This discussion echoes a complaint raised in 2014 by Justice Antonin Scalia in Whitman v.
|
|
I like the way in which this photograph in particular echoes these different mythological beings.
|
|
Moscow's retaliation, announced by the Foreign Ministry on Friday, had echoes of the Cold War.
|
|
Gillibrand's bill echoes aspects of other proposals, some of which will face resistance from Republicans.
|
|
I see the echoes of the boomer belief in independence and meritocracy in the millennials.
|
|
He prefers the term "unprocessed water," which echoes the idea of processed versus unprocessed food.
|
|
All of these moments sounded like echoes of the major news stories after Hurricane Katrina.
|
|
He lets out a primal yell that echoes back off of the buildings around us.
|
|
The only echoes of grandeur are the enormous windows and the ceiling high up overhead.
|
|
SITElines' conceptual framework of home echoes the porous definitions of a guest, stranger, or family.
|
|
" The statement has echoes of the galvanizing Black Lives Matter slogan "white silence is violence.
|
|
Echoes of a Collective Memory runs at LA's Vincent Price Art Museum through March 22.
|
|
Her voice — funny, chatty, personal but not too personal — has echoes throughout women's media today.
|
|
Guillory's new cross-complaint seems to confirm Altman's account from yesterday (which itself echoes Vogt's suit).
|
|
In the febrile mood of an apprehensive city after Grenfell, the echoes are hard to ignore.
|
|
This description strongly echoes what advocates of nudges say about when their approach should be deployed.
|
|
In fact, with its echoes of Samuel Huntington's clash of civilisations, it was a dramatic departure.
|
|
While music festivals have changed radically, Gordon said their recent evolution has echoes back to Woodstock.
|
|
This echoes the conclusion of Stan Alcorn's influential 2014 essay on why audio rarely goes viral.
|
|
Scientists are interested in measuring the time between the initial flash and the lower-energy echoes.
|
|
There's no grand journey, and Lina doesn't achieve some heroic moment that echoes down through eternity.
|
|
" And Dr. Tsai echoes, "Long-term usage will cause wear and tear to your natural lashes.
|
|
A Polaroid photomontage, the violence of collision echoes throughout the composite image and its constituent parts.
|
|
The effort echoes a call for more dramatic action from Justice Democrats and other liberal groups.
|
|
Such resentment echoes around Europe and is playing out in domestic politics from Austria to Britain.
|
|
His legislative agenda often echoes his inflammatory anti-immigrant rhetoric online and in speeches and interviews.
|
|
It echoes the film's alien aesthetic, with ambient tones that make the scenes even more strange.
|
|
The movie's tone echoes that of Futurama, which was also a love letter to retro-futurism.
|
|
I maintained the vibe, however, and created a look that echoes the inspiration without copying it.
|
|
When such folk hear echoes of 2007-08, it would be foolish not to pay heed.
|
|
After early victories, the campaign turned into quicksand (with haunting echoes in Vietnam, Afghanistan and Iraq).
|
|
Even if that echoes other emerging-market currencies, it risks adding fuel to the trade war.
|
|
" That moment echoes a near-identical comment by Silvio from DWP season 1 episode "Chapter VIII.
|
|
The sound of "Start me up" now echoes around the loading bay; the lorry has departed.
|
|
But echoes of her writing are heard in the endless political obfuscation about causes and solutions.
|
|
The federal indictment echoes the lawsuit and states that Jensen practiced his Program on school property.
|
|
It is impossible not to see echoes of these ancient tales in works over the centuries.
|
|
This certainly echoes the doomed nature of their relationship, and definitely hints at a bittersweet destiny.
|
|
Her writing also has echoes of Patrick Leigh Fermor's epic tramp across the pre-war Balkans.
|
|
The encounter with Dr. Freeman, calling back to the episode "Echoes," played out the same way.
|
|
My temples throbbed with heat, cold sweat pearled on my limbs, and sounds became distorted echoes.
|
|
As a roar echoes across a gargantuan hall, a pile of scrap slides into the mixture.
|
|
" Echoes Landsburg, who plays Doris Schwartz: "I spent four years of my life with these people.
|
|
"The result echoes my vision of capturing a nebulous inner dialogue we all have," she says.
|
|
Rhimes echoes that sentiment, saying that Crossroads is usually young film students' introduction to her work.
|
|
Furthermore, the release also echoes claims that the ballroom was too small by several thousand people.
|
|
The PP echoes Vox, a new hard-right group, in promising to protect bullfighting and hunting.
|
|
Gunfire echoes from the building, as pistols are fired on 25-metre and 50-metre ranges.
|
|
" This echoes his earlier comment on the necessity of creating a more "profound theology of womanhood.
|
|
And as Google prioritizes making its own hardware under Osterloh, its emerging design philosophy echoes Apple's.
|
|
But it also echoes her fundamental ambitions: to celebrate glamour and beauty, even in unglamorous times.
|
|
As the shrieks stop, one final thud echoes across placid shot, implying Richard killed the woman.
|
|
Why it matters: This view echoes President Trump's campaign rhetoric that white Americans are under attack.
|
|
Transport Secretary Chris Grayling echoes management's position that the unions are striking for no good reason.
|
|
But it is the sound of the old Arabic world that always echoes for El Amir.
|
|
The content of the speech that Qatar says never happened echoes Qatar's foreign policy track record.
|
|
But when the credits roll, a strange hollowness echoes through the past four or five hours.
|
|
Cuban's advice echoes that of legendary investor Warren Buffett and entrepreneur and inspirational coach Tony Robbins.
|
|
" Gerald Gitau, a 29-year-old electrician, echoes these sentiments: "The President already has my vote.
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The arguments against the NYHA are echoes of the normal arguments marshaled against single-payer healthcare.
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I think it echoes a lot the last speech by Governor (Stephen) Poloz a month ago.
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Sharon Monteith, an account manager at a telecom company and a Bethel resident, echoes Jonson's thoughts.
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" Bédard echoes those thoughts, saying "There was a lot of confidence in what we can achieve.
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The name of the service echoes ESPN+, the sports service that the company debuted in April.
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In many of the stories Satia tells, there are echoes of today's debates on gun ownership.
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The debate echoes the last time Congress rewrote the Higher Education Act, in the mid-2000s.
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Even better, despite its echoes of The Fifth Element, it is not part of a franchise.
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That echoes complaints often levelled by foreign business about informal barriers to market access in China.
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" George Osborne, the British Treasury chief, said it had "echoes of literature used in the 1930s.
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Enriched with echoes and with memories, the room would surely also be affected by this afternoon.
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His approach to business echoes that of Russell Simmons, the entrepreneur who founded Def Jam Records.
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" Swaney echoes that, saying, "There were more questions after the second trial than after the first.
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Inside are echoes of an earlier age that for now is the norm in Puerto Rico.
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That echoes concerns across the Atlantic about child-rearing becoming a new battleground for class warfare.
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When the President issued his order, I was not the only person hearing echoes of dispensationalism.
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Far more troubling is how closely the language used by the murderer echoes Trump administration messaging.
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Donald Trump, in his own way, echoes this advice under the umbrella of the Republican Party.
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In Britain, the question found its echoes in an equally acrid discussion of leadership and power.
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The underground rebellion of handmaids in Gilead echoes how women fought back in the early 1900s.
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" John Delury, of Yonsei University, in Seoul, said, "It's impossible not to hear echoes of Deng.
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Some aspects of Friday's shooting had echoes of the massacre at Columbine High School in 1999.
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This language closely echoes a suit filed by 14 anonymous female Lyft passengers earlier this month.
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The Echo Flex is great for certain situations and rooms where other Echoes don't make sense.
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A Baselworld veteran of 235 years, Mr. Thompson echoes the observation about this year's lighter traffic.
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When Cruz accuses Trump of not being a real conservative, he echoes Taft's attacks on Eisenhower.
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This strategy has echoes in the early days of the health care reform fight of 2009.
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Their pervasiveness echoes and helps perpetuate the message in American culture that you exist to work.
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His story echoes a familiar tale of the progression from easily accessible prescription painkillers to heroin.
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Fair enough; we got the hint that she's supposed to have echoes of the Mad King.
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Another Final Fantasy XV fan, SwggrBck, echoes these sentiments, also following the game since its reveal.
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Watching Trudeau's victory speech, you might have heard echoes of Obama's rhetoric of hope and change.
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The neat isomorphism of Joron's couplets betrays a turbulent force field of transformations and recursive echoes.
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The introduction of the iMac Pro echoes a similar move from Apple on the iPad front.
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He echoes how important the connection between the stomach and the brain are in these disorders.
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Yet in the greenless grime-gray, oases do occur, splendid contradictions, hearty echoes of healthier days.
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In that world in flux, Mr. Manafort's political strategy had echoes of Mr. Trump's populist campaign.
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It echoes what happened when photography took over painting's role as a faithful recorder of reality.
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And it's a way to link the past to the present, which echoes the exhibition's title.
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This measured perfectionism echoes Wilmarth's desire to capture the essences that make life a curious thing.
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The nuance of the media echoes the nuance of the subject matter: indigeneity in North America.
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Could you ever have imagined that those ideas around looping and echoes might take that trajectory?
|
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"Hell" also has echoes of the German word "Heil!" and its haunting associations with Nazi salutes.
|
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This work, which echoes the Fauvist coloring of "Promenade" and "Rosa Smoke," occupies a darker space.
|
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The repetition echoes multiple daily mealtimes and represents the cumulative act of eating around the world.
|
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"We grew up eating everything," echoes Colbey, who was also born in Kerala and raised Christian.
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Now it has a hotel that echoes those glamorous days with a definite 21st century twist.
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Mr. Maduro's approach echoes the Cuban model, where a single party rules and elections aren't competitive.
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"I find it concerning, because this does have echoes of the 2008 Great Recession," said Rep.
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"I find it concerning, because this does have echoes of the 22020 Great Recession," said Rep.
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The second room, which also echoes earlier efforts, accommodates up to six people at a time.
|
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This echoes calls in the beauty world for wider ranges of foundation to reflect skin tones.
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The sentiment behind the invitation echoes the Queen's statement after Harry and Meghan announced their departure.
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Another challenge for Angela Merkel, doubts on the Kavanaugh hearing and echoes of Cold War tactics.
|
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It was wrenching to watch the futile Iraq war unfold, with its tragic echoes of Vietnam.
|
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Mr. Trump's allegation that the news media gave unfair coverage during the campaign echoes accusations Mrs.
|
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And the manner in which some died — trapped between barred windows and roaring flames — echoes this.
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The raised arm of Ms. Smith's singer echoes the tradition's stern gesture for marking a beat.
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The construction of the new facilities echoes the rapid completion of Beijing's Xiaotangshan hospital in 2003.
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"All of this has deeply disturbing echoes of the dark days of the 1930s," he said.
|
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That's disgusting, and eerily echoes the craven play by Bliss in 2003 to smear Dennehy's name.
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"To the extent that sentiment echoes the views of authoritarian leaders, it empowers them," Simon said.
|
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Baked in the walls through generations of osmosis are the echoes of bygone trials and tribulations.
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Echoes of the Clintons The historical precedents for Kavanaugh's big move were political rather than legal.
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Neuropsychologist Sanam Hafeez, MD, echoes what Specter states: If you want attention, you wear red lipstick.
|
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His reference to dollars "stupidly" spent in the Middle East echoes concerns from lawmakers like Sen.
|
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Conley sees the historical echoes, but agrees with the leaders who warned of unpredictable times ahead.
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The letter echoes a blog post CEO Doug McMillon made on August 15 calling for reform.
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For those familiar with Petersen's "Café Lehmitz," you will see echoes of that here, as well.
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Go deeper: The slowing U.S. shale boom How the U.S. oil boom echoes through the economy
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And one aspect of the contest echoes back down the decades to the events of 1963.
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And one aspect of the contest echoes back down the decades to the events of 1963.
|
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Based on my experiences with other trainers, it's clear that Rumble's training style echoes Rachel's sentiments.
|
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With her short, blonde faux-hawk, leather pants, and sneakers, Sabina's street style echoes Stewart's own.
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An occasional rooster and the echoes of construction over the island are the only other sounds.
|
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The upset had echoes of Buster Douglas's shocking upset of Mike Tyson nearly 30 years ago.
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These radar echoes were too "small and bright" to indicate rock or ice beneath the surface.
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Your goal, as the jingle echoes, is to make the bar where everybody knows your name.
|
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Some of the documents have echoes in today's arguments over what to do about climate change.
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But what&aposs striking to me is that you know I heard echoes in the 22007 campaign.
|
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His description of the bubbling intellectual cauldron of post-first-world-war society also has echoes now.
|
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This shot of the new planet totally echoes something out of Ridley Scott's more earthly hit, Gladiator.
|
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Laura Dowling, who served as chief White House floral designer under Obama for six years, echoes Bernard.
|
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The Bay Area-based company echoes a lot of what Superpedestrian says about scooters used for fleets.
|
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"John Tsang's tactic positioning himself as the popular choice has echoes of the 2012 race," he added.
|
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" Nguyen echoes this statement: "No matter what generation you're in, there's always gonna be something like it.
|
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The composition echoes a car windshield with the front seat passenger windows flattened into a panoramic format.
|
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A performance that echoes day and night across cable news, AM talk radio, and the conservative internet.
|
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It seems obvious that you will one day be able to link Echoes together to play music.
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Brody said he's excited to be part of a project that echoes relevant and important social issues.
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The song also echoes "Summertime," George Gershwin's jazz standard written for all-black opera Porgy and Bess.
|
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That echoes predictions of slower revenue growth in the wake of the inquiry by ANZ last week.
|
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Their warning echoes a similar message from Obama during the U.S. president's visit to Britain last month.
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One alternative is ultrasound, which works by sending sound waves and analyzing the echoes that come back.
|
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But Mehanna echoes the sentiment of Candela and others at Facebook when he talks about open sourcing.
|
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The bell rings and the trading pit echoes to shouts and bellows of offers and counter-offers.
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When you look at what's happening right now, do you see echoes of 20th century European fascism?
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The play with pastel dots and stripes echoes the hand-colored chalkware figures in the adjoining cases.
|
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Echoes of past Clinton criticisms Clinton has previously suggested that Sanders was promising his supporters too much.
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Atomico's Zennström echoes these sentiments, arguing that manufacturing has until now remained "relatively untouched" by digital technology.
|
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Some such echoes may be accidental, the conspiracists unconsciously defaulting to ancient tropes, but they are striking.
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THERE ARE more than a few echoes of the Nixon era in the presidency of Donald Trump.
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This largely echoes Trump administration officials, who often say that humanity's contributions to climate change remain unclear.
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Like his audio artist precursors, Martin foregoes spatial-temporal order in favor of visual or thematic echoes.
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Alex Biffin, one of the dancers for Thunder From Down Under in Las Vegas, echoes this sentiment.
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The campaigns have echoes of the Russian-inspired disinformation effort in the US during the 2016 election.
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Hypist just released this wonderful bondage-inspired pin that echoes Drake as much as it does Araki.
|
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This echoes Establishment Republicans' worst fears that Trump atop the party ticket would hurt down ticket races.
|
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Another way to evaluate sanctions is through the prism of rehabilitation, again with echoes of penal practice.
|
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The plastic wrapping on the underside of the fiberglass panel echoes the rusted surface of the base.
|
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He echoes the concerns of authorities who say vigilantes don't have standards or ethics to abide by.
|
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Warren's proposal echoes a number of points made by Stanford's Securing American Elections report earlier this month.
|
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Fran Strajnar, co-founder and CEO of digital currency data provider Brave New Coin, echoes this theme.
|
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It largely echoes the proposal Trump outlined as a candidate and did not include some key details.
|
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The move also carries echoes of new French President Emmanuel Macron's novice-heavy list of parliamentary candidates.
|
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While the film reminds Phillippe of his horror pedigree, it also echoes elements of his life now.
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Such caddish behaviour would hardly be rare: parliament, nearly three-quarters male, sometimes echoes like a farmyard.
|
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Sand Hill Road, the home of Silicon Valley's venture capitalists, echoes with talk of "decacorns" and "hyperscaling".
|
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For many, her fate now echoes that of Hong Kong's first post-handover leader, Tung Chee-hwa.
|
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RBC's note echoes earlier reports from several other companies including Cowen and Company, KGI and Drexel Hamilton.
|
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Or do they at least portray their subjects' lives in a manner that somehow echoes their art?
|
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Simeon's story echoes that of the other two-to-three dozen women also waiting at the clinic.
|
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In Q2 2018, Canalys estimates that Google shipped 5.4 million Homes, and Amazon shipped 4.1 million Echoes.
|
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" Pelosi, in the letter, echoes several of her colleagues by saying the order constitutes "a Muslim ban.
|
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It echoes Senator Elizabeth Warren's (D-MA) announcement last week, which is, generally speaking, a good thing.
|
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This refreshing dose of reality echoes, although perhaps coincidentally, the recent insight of two Stanford-educated engineers.
|
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It is also a policy that has echoes of some of the great catastrophes of economic history.
|
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They warned that Barr is undermining his credibility by using language that echoes Trump and his allies.
|
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The keynotes always open with a video, which conveys a theme or idea that the keynote echoes.
|
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It might not be a coincidence that the show's title echoes the name of noise-canceling headphones.
|
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To write about profound loss, you step inside a genre, elegy, that is full of haunting echoes.
|
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They were made of basalt, so inside them you heard hardly any echoes at all, he said.
|
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What follows in Thompson's essay echoes the accounts of other women who've accused Toback of sexual harassment.
|
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An animated Web series followed, with echoes of "Sex and the City" and the Gossip Girl books.
|
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And it echoes comments made by Speaker Nancy Pelosi (Calif.) and Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerry Nadler (N.Y.).
|
|
"Trump Veers to a Korea Plan that Echoes Failures of the Past," worried the New York Times.
|
|
It's hard not to see echoes of the difficult decision Sphero made roughly this time last year.
|
|
These are at once specters of past defeats and echoes of victories, almost, but not quite, attained.
|
|
As I walk towards the festival, I hear the loud and sorcerous echoes of the ritual's leader.
|
|
Mannix's embodiment of Hollywood gangsterdom had less explicit echoes throughout the first half-century of American film.
|
|
By which I mean they are enjoyably frustrating, comfortably confusing—echoes of the point-and-click past.
|
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SkyAlert's predicament echoes that of companies seeking funding to develop earthquake alert apps in the United States.
|
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It echoes the pattern in other territory the YPG and its allies have taken across northern Syria.
|
|
He echoes Simons, saying that chefs are slowly moving toward more plant-based dishes on their menus.
|
|
They say the situation echoes a wave of investment in the years before last decade's financial meltdown.
|
|
In "Beautiful Ghosts," Victoria echoes "Memory" and reflects on Grizabella's tragic life, as well as her own.
|
|
Human rights advocates say the bill holds clear echoes of the term frequently used by President Trump.
|
|
This sentiment echoes that of other health officials over the weekend, who expressed dismay at Vallance's proposal.
|
|
Their most recent album, "Mettavolution," centers on another rock standard: "Echoes," Pink Floyd's psychedelic epic from 1971.
|
|
These are all classic steps in the march toward mass murder, with clear echoes in later genocides.
|
|
Sometimes the film echoes today's headlines, as in the subplot of foreign collusion in an American election.
|
|
That timeline echoes Gates' previous comments about the steps other countries should take to contain the virus.
|
|
Today, echoes of Grant can be heard in the hate speech of white nationalists like Richard Spencer.
|
|
Their concern echoes a recent plea by the head of ING for the ECB to change course.
|
|
In the video, Johnson essentially praises Kardashian as her savior, using dramatic language with echoes of abolition.
|
|
The report largely echoes the findings of an investigation published by The New York Times in December.
|
|
But in this application, Dr. Citrin and his colleagues knew the echoes were bouncing off flat layers.
|
|
TikTok's appeal echoes that of Vine, the beloved video-sharing app shut down by Twitter in 2016.
|
|
Their concern echoes a recent plea by the head of ING for the ECB to change course.
|
|
" The echoes of the current unrest in Hong Kong may be coincidental, but they are inescapable. "No.
|
|
It's the premise of the AT&T and Time Warner deal, which itself echoes Comcast buying NBCUniversal.
|
|
Their demand echoes the voice of the Iranian people: ouster of the theocratic system in its entirety.
|
|
" She continued, "If Mr. Cameron's own brazenness echoes that seen in his story, remember the essential difference.
|
|
Her mother loved the woods, and Fern's affection for nature echoes a child's love for a parent.
|
|
I think a lot about what she says, which echoes many of my own thoughts and doubts.
|
|
The friendly introductions and echoes of "you can sit with us" filled the car the entire trip.
|
|
Writer Anjali Pinto echoes this theory in an April 2018 essay she wrote in the Washington Post.
|
|
Critics on Saturday were quick to point out that this language echoes a popular anti-Semitic trope.
|
|
Look around the city today and you'll find echoes of Appalachian traditions, and modern spins on them.
|
|
Having once raised sheep on the Mendocino coastline, Ms. Thomas found echoes of Northern California in Orient.
|
|
He is banking on a strategy that echoes back to the Clinton campaign run by Robby Mook.
|
|
But there are other eerie echoes of the moment, suggesting the fraught bridges between the two countries.
|
|
This behavior echoes that of Joseph McCarthy, as it involves falsely labeling loyal American citizens as disloyal.
|
|
Nothing much happens, but daily chatter contains echoes of the past: forced assimilation of Romanians, the Holocaust.
|
|
The VA's opioid crisis echoes the nationwide pattern of suspect partnerships between painkiller companies and medical professionals.
|
|
That echoes Saturday criticism in which Trump questioned what "our country [is] coming to" after the ruling.
|
|
Booker is no different, but perhaps more than others, he echoes the religious-political ethos of Jackson.
|
|
Amazon Echoes and Fitbits were popular stocking stuffers this year, if Apple's App Store is any indication.
|
|
Many of the elements of Sanders's "housing for all" agenda have clear echoes in other candidates' proposals.
|
|
" Their world, as she puts it, "clamors and echoes with shrieks, bellows, and the sounds of violence.
|
|
And it's a sad commentary on the news media that so much reporting echoes these baseless attacks.
|
|
Many Australians hear echoes of Trump's statements in the outbursts of Peter Dutton, the home affairs minister.
|
|
As a plant that became a weed in its relocation, it echoes the exhibition's ideas about displacement.
|
|
His handling of silicone, for example, echoes its use in pacemaker tubing, deodorants, electronics, and so on.
|
|
That echoes again in "Closer" when Willis and Bob Nash (Will Chase) have a confrontation at Calhoun Day.
|
|
Th Genie also uses Amazon's Far-Field voice recognition technology, so it will play nicely with other Echoes.
|
|
But there is, in the NBA's creeping inevitability, something that echoes in a way that's familiar and unsettling.
|
|
There are even echoes of this philosophy in a speech he helped write in 1994 for Mr. Gore.
|
|
But his critique of the Republican president proved influential — and this week there were clear echoes of it.
|
|
Christia Spears Brown, a professor of psychology at Kentucky University, said that this new research echoes previous work.
|
|
The attack in June has taken on a wider significance in Italy, with its echoes of Mussolini's squadristi.
|
|
It echoes a centuries-long undercurrent in US immigration policy, beginning with the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882.
|
|
Each winter, crackling and splintering ice echoes across the Uncompahgre Gorge, roughly 10 miles northeast of Telluride, Colorado.
|
|
Okayplayer music editor Ivie Anie made a point that echoes Notre Dame professor Pamela Robertson Wojcik's assertion above.
|
|
Rosales's online archival projects form the basis of the IRL exhibition Echoes of a Collective Memory at VPAM.
|
|
I don't add that my voice doesn't carry in the great hall, only echoes back into my ears.
|
|
This echoes a longstanding Trump argument that plundering fossil fuels should be a goal of American foreign policy.
|
|
But it also has echoes of a real scientist, working mysteriously in the heart of the English countryside.
|
|
It not only echoes but reinforces the very hierarchies that allow rape culture to persist all around us.
|
|
Europeans hear echoes of a National Front slogan dating back to the 1980s: "Love France or leave it".
|
|
More recently, he took on his first role as a director on Fire Emblem Echoes: Shadows of Valentia.
|
|
This echoes the justifications of many at the Pentagon, including Mattis, who say they have seen concrete results.
|
|
The assemblage echoes the rendering that graces the cover of one of Saar's sketchbooks on display under glass.
|
|
Clean, minimalist spaces dominate many scenes, giving the show an intellectual, distant feel that echoes our heroine's demeanor.
|
|
We got through this once before, Ms Kingsolver's echoes seem to say; we'll get through it again, somehow.
|
|
But you can't yet link your Echoes together, and the quality of the sound is passable at best.
|
|
The campaign to leave the EU has echoes of populist movements across Europe and in the United States.
|
|
Google's creations are known for having a playful edge, so it's fitting that today's celebration echoes that sentiment.
|
|
The proposal echoes SpaceX's strategy for colonizing Mars, which Musk has said will start with establishing cargo routes.
|
|
Dr. Chantal Marie Gagnon, a life counselor and licensed psychotherapist, echoes Fisher's parallels of love to a drug.
|
|
But while the Sport echoes the look of other aggressive watches, the Style just looks kind of cheap.
|
|
It echoes the adolescent lament "anywhere but here," a siren call for photographers to take to the road.
|
|
The stylistic choice echoes the desperate denial that both Conor and his mom are choosing to live in.
|
|
Other Echoes Inhabit the Garden continues at Launch F18 (373 Broadway Suite F18, Tribeca, Manhattan) through June 22.
|
|
There are indeed too many echoes of 2016 in this latest row for his opponents to feel triumphant.
|
|
Their work echoes an argument made by Brad DeLong, also of Berkeley, and Larry Summers, of Harvard University.
|
|
Observers see echoes of Lebanon's civil war, which also drew in foreigners and dragged on for 15 years.
|
|
James McLaughlin, CEO and president of Intelligentsia Coffee, the first U.S. coffeeshop to offer Oatly, echoes that sentiment.
|
|
" Another insider has said Shookus' marriage "didn't end over infidelity," and this source echoes that: "The impression I
|
|
"Wayve has a very differentiated technical approach versus most other autonomous vehicle startups," echoes Fly Ventures' Gabriel Matuschka.
|
|
There are, of course, echoes of Volkswagens's emissions cheating here—though that affected 11 million cars in total.
|
|
This echoes President Donald Trump's warnings that the United States could use armed force against Mr Maduro's regime.
|
|
At the same time, there are echoes of Chicago's interrupters, modifying behavior to prevent the transmission of violence.
|
|
The memorable visit echoes Prince William's own to greet his then-newborn brother Prince Harry in September 1984.
|
|
And it echoes the response Women-for-Trump offered up in defense of their own candidate in 2016.
|
|
The Council echoes the growing concern of business experts over the president's persistent tough language regarding trade deficits.
|
|
The news echoes another recent report that Huawei had initially developed the software for use on IoT devices.
|
|
That disparity marks a stark inequality that echoes the growing income gap central to this year's presidential campaign.
|
|
It'll come out of their mouth, but until a white person echoes it, that's when people pay attention.
|
|
The song sounds deceptively simple with its catchy melody, but it's actually layered with echoes and atmospheric sounds.
|
|
An angelic male voice echoes behind Kendrick's, and in tandem they envelope the beautiful melody and upbeat percussion.
|
|
Fears about restrictive voting laws with echoes from the Jim Crow era have grown among people of color.
|
|
The lack of acknowledgement and condemnation of militant right-wing terrorism echoes another area of silence by Trump.
|
|
This scenario allows the leaders to bypass the echoes of condemnation that follow brazen assassinations and mass disappearances.
|
|
But shame on anyone in the media who echoes the sexist conspiracy theories that seek the same end.
|
|
In this sense, Silicon Valley's culture echoes the Wolf of Wall Street culture of the 1980s and '90s.
|
|
However, his call echoes the greater indecision and uncertainty in the investment community after years of monetary easing.
|
|
If money talks, the White House's 227 proposed federal budget echoes the president's hard-line stance on immigration.
|
|
Many of Tay's offensive tweets were mere echoes of what other users said on Twitter (see example below).
|
|
Even casual students of history will recognize this vocabulary echoes the hateful terms used by notorious anti-Semites.
|
|
Between its uncompromising, blistering rage and its condemnatory rhetorical stance, the play has many echoes of Biblical prophecy.
|
|
But while U.S. efforts to target North Korean missiles have echoes of Stuxnet, there are also distinct differences.
|
|
This echoes teamLab's stated mission to break down the barriers between the physical and digital with their artwork.
|
|
So Honorée Fanonne Jeffers echoes Ghansah when, researching the poet Phillis Wheatley, she falls in love with her.
|
|
The sense of symmetry and asymmetry in the composition echoes Mondrian as well as pays homage to him.
|
|
In Mr Duterte many see echoes of Mr Estrada, another populist outsider elected on an anti-corruption platform.
|
|
Echoes of an Era proved Khan was flexible—that she could fit comfortably in any lane she pleased.
|
|
Listen to the echoes, whistles, and howls from outer space for yourself to get in the scary spirit.
|
|
South Korea's steps to impose taxes on big tech companies echoes similar measures the European Union is considering.
|
|
But her call to fight "corruption, corruption, corruption" echoes views other, more mainstream, Democrats have previously expressed. Sen.
|
|
In his calls for equality, they hear echoes of their parents, some of whom immigrated for economic opportunities.
|
|
The story echoes Peter Pan, but with more distinctive and capable Lost Boys, with their own unique powers.
|
|
" Livio echoes the philosophy of Carl Sagan, who popularized the idea that humans are, "made of star stuff.
|
|
That violent period film (echoes of The Revenant, anyone?) remains a giant question mark looming over awards season.
|
|
By then, the songs' exploration of femininity and creative power held echoes of environmentalism, thinking about Mother Earth.
|
|
Echoes of Facebook notwithstanding, one thing is clear when it comes to commercial genetic testing companies, Gruber said.
|
|
Although no two quarterback situations are alike, the Jets' current predicament echoes the quandary Mangini faced in 2008.
|
|
New technology that echoes the computer from "Star Trek" could be a key to the company's future success.
|
|
You'll have to look hard for negative feedback, which generally echoes my findings of light wear and tear.
|
|
But there are echoes and recurrences linking this difficult moment to the American berserk of two generations back.
|
|
The report echoes findings from a probe by the Department of Homeland Security Inspector General's office in September.
|
|
He echoes other candidates who have either declined to support or outright opposed House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi.
|
|
Its goal is to give its customers remote access to devices like Amazon Echoes, smart appliances, and thermostats.
|
|
The situation has uncanny echoes of a collapse of a for-profit educational institution about two decades ago.
|
|
The boycott has echoes of previous protest movements in China which have followed perceived insults to the country.
|
|
Sanofi's unsolicited approach for Medivation has echoes of its bid for rare disease drug maker Genzyme in 2011.
|
|
They say the situation echoes a wave of investment in the years right before last decade's financial meltdown.
|
|
You talk to enough people and you express your skittishness, and it echoes and it just keeps compounding.
|
|
In "The End of Karma," Somini Sengupta delivers a portentous warning that echoes Ambedkar's, updated for the present.
|
|