" He added: "He is emblematic of a systematic problem.
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Quinhagak's experience is emblematic of the Arctic region, he said.
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Fuel thievery is emblematic of a new pattern of crime.
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Even the term "sex worker," is emblematic of that shift.
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There was no emblematic gathering place for parties at night.
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The bust is emblematic of modern tensions about ancients artifacts.
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And it's emblematic of a larger debate about corporate investment.
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My thought bubble: The situation is emblematic of our future.
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"It is a very emblematic piece," said auctioneer Gregoire Veyres.
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The emblematic cathedral now contains a Chapel of the Allies.
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Britney, to me, is emblematic of how women are 'tamed.
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It was very emblematic, I wanted to write about that.
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Zlatan stands outside this but is also emblematic of it.
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Both firms were emblematic of the excitement over clean energy.
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We are in many ways emblematic of that common ground.
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Emblematic of that is both Democrats and Republicans hate Congress.
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Her candidacy is emblematic of the way the ruling Bharatiya
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The Dutch "no" vote is emblematic of the continent's malaise.
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Scotland's transformation is emblematic of change in many Western countries.
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These nicknames alone are emblematic of The 5th Wave's banality.
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It's a bit emblematic of the way Korean entrepreneurs work.
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GOP leaders said it was emblematic of the nanny state.
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Clinton are emblematic of changing times for women in politics.
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Mr. Warner is emblematic of the shifting politics for technology.
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The play button is extremely emblematic of easy and simple.
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London, and Wembley, is emblematic of that corporatization of football.
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The color emblematic of home now represents the enemy, too.
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Germany's dysfunctional coalition government is emblematic of the EU's disarray.
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The lack of goggles is emblematic of synchronized swimming's rigor.
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"She's emblematic; an iconic figure in Paris," Mr. Rousteing said.
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One key to that goal is restoring the emblematic sign.
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This is emblematic of America's "broken system of accountability," he said.
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SF Motors is arguably the most emblematic example of that phenomenon.
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The company's woes are emblematic of the problems facing manufacturers worldwide.
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Now they are emblematic of a 21st-century urge to belong.
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Q. How are their lives emblematic of Shanghai and its history?
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"Is this emblematic of not being inquisitive or collaborative?" he says.
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Investments like Talon are emblematic of the industry as a whole.
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No species is more emblematic of America than the bald eagle.
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Yes. Is it emblematic of our national psyche or underlying nature?
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Which is emblematic of a lot of I Feel Pretty, actually.
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She was presented a silver loving cup, emblematic of the honor.
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The failed effort in Saigon was, according to official accounts, emblematic.
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"Kirill is the emblematic figure of Russia's theatrical landscape," she said.
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McBath's victory was emblematic of the Resistance triumphs in the midterms.
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Conversations across this emblematic region amount to a buffet of disillusionment.
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But I want to speak to what that is emblematic of.
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The whole discussion felt emblematic of the political year we're entering.
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In many ways, Pebble was emblematic of this era of wearables.
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Mr. Meisel sees the dispute as emblematic of larger national trends.
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Their rise is emblematic of a rebalancing of global technological influence.
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But the administration he is building is emblematic of his ignorance.
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I think that's sort of emblematic of how we view politics.
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These compact dimensions are emblematic of Jansson's own attentiveness and precision.
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"Literally and figuratively, it's emblematic of the Village," Mr. Berman said.
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They're our signature drink, very emblematic, very important for Puerto Rico.
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His efforts are emblematic of a wider, and belated, push by Democrats.
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Many see the appointment of a tycoon as emblematic of crony capitalism.
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In many ways, the Gear Sport is emblematic of Samsung as whole.
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That Kahlo is such an emblematic figure makes this blunder quite frustrating.
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Many saw it as emblematic of a climate of impunity in Romania.
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The result is emblematic of what's been a difficult year for NASL.
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Clinton's comments are emblematic of this more subtle version of Russian overhype.
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While not Europe's largest migrant camp, it may be its most emblematic.
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More than any other animal, it is emblematic of the American frontier.
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For many fans, the disaster seemed emblematic of a broader national malaise.
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Arya's rampage is emblematic of what makes Game of Thrones so satisfying.
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The case of Lula, Brazil's president from 2003 to 2010, is emblematic.
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They were considered emblematic of an Islamic identity in the Persian lands.
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The deal seemed emblematic of a "realist" turn in European foreign policy.
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For Allen, her case is emblematic of the military's sexual assault problem.
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For this reason, Kimmet says that the palace is emblematic of Tibet.
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Pour Ostad's history is emblematic of many prominent journalists of his generation.
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Even so, it seems to me emblematic of the challenge you face.
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White supremacy and misogyny are intertwined, and are emblematic of Nazi movements.
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I think it's emblematic of how ideas travel from work to work.
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Gui Minhai's third and most recent "confession" in February 2018 is emblematic.
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In fact, the entire McLaren design ethos seems eerily emblematic of Apple.
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|
But it is (or, really, was) also emblematic of Nike's golf problem.
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They are all emblematic of Tibetan Buddhism, but these are not Tibetans.
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The filibuster is emblematic of our country's rising political antagonism and dysfunction.
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The new "Will & Grace" is emblematic of a more divisive media age.
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Her hopes and subsequent disillusionment are emblematic of the workers' greater struggle.
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His death became emblematic of longstanding tensions between police and minority communities.
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Is there anyone more emblematic of early-aughts fashion than Paris Hilton?
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That scene from long ago is emblematic of the coming midterm elections.
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The track, she explains, is emblematic of After Hours' party-ready atmosphere.
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It was just so emblematic of what was happening to Hayes Valley.
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Hanging in the air, leading nowhere, it's emblematic of Fonseca's relentless ambiguity.
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The Bronx case is emblematic of a larger problem across New York.
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Santiago's story is emblematic of a global evolution in the transport sector.
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Jeff Zucker, the president of CNN Worldwide, is emblematic of the problem.
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For many Russians and Europeans, the line became emblematic of American arrogance.
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Many of the emblematic kiosks are being rescued from the scrap heap.
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It was the most emblematic Trumpian moment — I'm bigger than the eclipse.
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Sanders' travel is emblematic of his odd place in the political firmament.
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"The pensions reform is emblematic, and it's very important," Mr. Galland added.
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|
What instrument do you think is most emblematic of New York City?
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"We see this project as emblematic of our mission," said Roig-Morris.
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Today, Memphis is emblematic of the poverty issues that persist in America.
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These points are emblematic of the shift to an increasingly mobile society.
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John Oliver roasted the company as emblematic of the irresponsible crypto frenzy.
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The results are emblematic of Christie's poor numbers in the last year.
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McConnell's thrust is emblematic of what he sees as his crowning achievement.
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The play was emblematic of how March has gone for the Cavaliers.
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The clowns, he says, are emblematic of Rondinone's merging of joy and sorrow.
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But the president is emblematic of a much bigger problem facing the sport.
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The 2016 murder of environmental activist Berta Caceres has become an emblematic case.
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It's emblematic of why criminal justice reformers can look forward to his run.
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Mr Kalanick's wisecrack seems to have been emblematic of a deeply macho culture.
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This duality is emblematic of the intertwined territories Wong navigates in her work.
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And as O'Brien put it, this is emblematic of a society-wide problem.
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In this way, the Game Boy is emblematic of Nintendo as a whole.
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It's emblematic of how generally fuzzy iOS has become with basic interface concepts.
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Japan, where cash is still king, is perhaps most emblematic of that struggle.
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Many critics dismissed her campaign as emblematic of why Reagan's policies were misguided.
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It is one of Buenos Aires' most emblematic pizzerias, despite the "Yankee" name.
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As such, net neutrality is emblematic of the problems facing 21st century America.
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Consider what it means for an artist to be emblematic of a decade.
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Clara Barton is emblematic of the contributions pioneering women have made throughout history.
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The delay is emblematic of wider problems that are hobbling Puerto Rico's recovery.
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This practice is emblematic of gross inequities in treating patients with eating disorders.
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I think that's really emblematic of the fact that he's honoring Carl's word.
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After all, coffee shops have become emblematic of those wandering through their 19613s.
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Its emblematic figures, Lenin in particular, were cast as cynical manipulators, totalitarian fanatics.
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His collage paintings are scratchy reinterpretations of pop culture and its emblematic iconography.
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|
The baja hoodie has become emblematic of this breed of American hippie dropout.
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Many have criticized her coming across as entitled, apparently so emblematic of millennials.
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For some, the name Bieber is emblematic of a perceived scourge on taste.
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Cuomo's large lead is emblematic of two important trends in the Democratic Party.
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One of the moves, however, was emblematic of this gloomy and injured season.
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For experts, such an event was emblematic of AMLO's response to the crisis.
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Are drug abuse, pornography and gambling emblematic of a free market run amok?
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Santa Ana's case is emblematic of what's happening in much of the country.
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But to understand its trajectory, he may be the most important and emblematic.
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This view is emblematic of American financial governance since the Second World War.
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"The intentional exclusion of these employees is emblematic of deeper issues," he wrote.
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|
The two bills, pushing in different directions, are emblematic of 2015 in general.
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His sports jersey and Timberlands were emblematic of 2000-era hip-hop style.
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In another emblematic case, journalist Chen Jieren was disappeared for actually alleging corruption.
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The politics of extremes This is emblematic of our new politics of extremes.
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There are few brands as emblematic of the classic overcoat than London Fog.
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In this sense, the show's most emblematic piece is by the artist Shimabuku.
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The city's name, once emblematic of the strife, no longer provokes angry reactions.
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The two photographs described above are emblematic of Stockbridge's approach toward documentary photography.
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|
To me it's emblematic of everything wrong with the Democrats' approach to government.
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|
But it is entirely emblematic of America's post-Reagan treatment of business regulation.
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|
The whole spectacle is emblematic of Trump's unusual relationship to the news media.
|
|
To Cramer, that action is emblematic of what investors are just beginning to grasp.
|
|
NNAF's lawsuit is emblematic of more than just serving justice to merciless trolls online.
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The artist's most famous and controversial photo, "Man in Polyester Suit" (1980) is emblematic.
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The racially ambiguous model has become emblematic of this street-cast, cool kid trend.
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No piece of software is more emblematic of this philosophy than 1003-2-Switch.
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|
Among the loudest agitators were pupils at emblematic schools, which hurt the schools themselves.
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|
Instead, it's emblematic of the company's failures rather than heralding its phoenix-like revival.
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|
Though emblematic of our time, energy drinks aren't an invention of the new millennium.
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|
That is how the Carrier's problem becomes emblematic for the economy as a whole.
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|
" The New York Post's headline was emblematic of the next day's coverage: "'Excuse me!
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These are issues confronting us as well -- they're emblematic of the struggle for survival.
|
|
If rubber boots symbolise Nokia's history, Stockholm's telephone tower (pictured) is emblematic for Ericsson.
|
|
The carnitas suspension is emblematic of the company's across-the-board commitment to animals.
|
|
Her story is also emblematic of the push and pull in our divided nation.
|
|
"I accept the extradition," said Duarte, who has become emblematic of corruption in Mexico.
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|
They stay at his famed gold-encrusted resorts and are emblematic of his success.
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|
It is also emblematic of it: a truly a funky and battered old ballpark.
|
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While impressive, this is very much emblematic of the drained talent pool at 205lbs.
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Immensely wealthy and powerful, yet despised as a Jew, he was an emblematic figure.
|
|
However, scientists think decades' worth of brilliant sunlight have bleached away their emblematic colors.
|
|
This is emblematic of the obstacles inherent in the field of high-profile projects.
|
|
Their response was emblematic of the decline of decorum and civility in our nation.
|
|
Emblematic of the recent turbulence, last week the S&P 22018 slid 22019 percent.
|
|
Emblematic of this problem is the VA hospital still under construction in Aurora, Colo.
|
|
These problems are emblematic of the broader failures of the Japan government's nuclear policy.
|
|
And Queipo de Llano is an "emblematic figure" for two other brotherhoods in Seville.
|
|
And East Orosi is emblematic of many towns throughout the Central and Salinas Valleys.
|
|
I feel like it's emblematic of the concurrent paths we happen to be on.
|
|
That is emblematic of the widely varying practices used to account for disaster deaths.
|
|
This response is emblematic of how other houses of worship are handling the crisis.
|
|
The case of Audin was emblematic, but this touches the whole history of colonization.
|
|
Headley's near-miss foul ball was emblematic of the last month for the Yankees.
|
|
That there are two title characters is emblematic of the opportunity and the problem.
|
|
And, sadly, the actions of both men are emblematic of a much larger problem.
|
|
That round of sanctions targeted emblematic goods such as French wine and Italian cheese.
|
|
Tester's race is emblematic of a broader phenomenon affecting Senate contests around the country.
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|
FOR JOHNSON'S DETRACTORS, however, the space would have been emblematic of all they disliked.
|
|
Indeed, Walker's poor position is emblematic of the GOP in the Upper Midwest overall.
|
|
Mr. Wheeler's cynical ploy to upend the mercury regulations is emblematic of his agenda.
|
|
But the iPhone has also become emblematic of China's long reliance on foreign technology.
|
|
Afghanistan has become emblematic of everything wrong with our Asian and Middle Eastern policies.
|
|
The scene was emblematic of the first day of protests at the Republican convention.
|
|
Her vulnerability and openness is emblematic of the series' ability to evoke your deepest emotions.
|
|
My life is emblematic of how this nation has been cleaved into two distinct worlds.
|
|
The emblematic clock had remained at three minutes to midnight for the past two years.
|
|
The bet on e-bikes is emblematic of the types of investments he's looking for.
|
|
The work is emblematic of New York's vibrant underground gay artistic culture of that time.
|
|
Perry among them, cite both as positives — emblematic of the state's penchant for personal freedom.
|
|
Former officials said the death was emblematic of larger problems with detention at the border.
|
|
These microscopic alterations are emblematic of Cesarco's linguistic labyrinths, which invite multiple lines of inquiry.
|
|
Postmates, the delivery app, is often seen as emblematic of the struggling on-demand businesses.
|
|
And no trip carries more emblematic weight than the first one in a new presidency.
|
|
At a high level, Voice Control strikes me as emblematic of Apple's work in accessibility.
|
|
It is also emblematic of the way US power and money holds developing countries underwater.
|
|
So why were they supposed to be emblematic of what a great father he was?
|
|
But it is also emblematic of something else that Mr Trump — a teetotaller — has uncorked.
|
|
Uber and Lyft are emblematic of the biggest problem that faces the American economy today.
|
|
It is emblematic of this public upsurge of interest in defending the idea of science.
|
|
The echo symbol is emblematic of a new class of bigotry born and bred online.
|
|
The economics job market in the United States is emblematic of this market-oriented preference.
|
|
Liberal group EMILY's List said the incident is emblematic of Trump's long record of misogyny.
|
|
This is emblematic of what Republicans fear this development signals is to come under Trump.
|
|
It is emblematic of the Trump administration's overall hostility to immigrants, both legal and undocumented.
|
|
"Sweetgreen is very emblematic of the future of the fast-casual industry," Mr. Oches said.
|
|
The two players were emblematic of what was going on all over the golf course.
|
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Perhaps no subject is more emblematic of this partisan estrangement than American support for Israel.
|
|
Williams' appearance on the series is emblematic of the cycle Glover is trying to stop.
|
|
I think what's happening right now is emblematic of what's been happening for a while.
|
|
Wednesday's game against the Texas Rangers was emblematic of where Refsnyder stands as a player.
|
|
At the heart of the truth commission's report were detailed accounts of 34 emblematic cases.
|
|
Comey's interference, moreover, is emblematic of the rise of the surveillance security state in America.
|
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The humble bureau is emblematic of the way that lifestyle changes have transformed collecting culture.
|
|
In Iraq, the U.S. occupation—in its incompetence and brutality—became emblematic of American decline.
|
|
Bolsonaro hit back by saying the attempt was emblematic of the "hopelessness" of his opponents.
|
|
"We thought this gene family was maybe emblematic of a larger phenomenon," Dr. Haag said.
|
|
The protesters' brief time on stage seems emblematic of this moment in the election cycle.
|
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The standoff, our correspondent writes, is emblematic of the larger forces tearing at European unity.
|
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Pursuing his own path, far from everyone else, he became at once emblematic and singular.
|
|
Later, Reeve pointed to a defensive gaffe that was emblematic of the Warriors' slow start.
|
|
The election in the Netherlands was also emblematic of the disruption of traditional partisan divisions.
|
|
Many — led by social media pundits — interpreted the moment as emblematic of their difficult relationship.
|
|
It is emblematic of Mr. Trump's trust on a range of political and ideological issues.
|
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Breakingviews The Volcker Rule is emblematic of the challenge facing the latest Federal Reserve nominee.
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Mr. Acconci's work is emblematic of Italian Futurism, an artistic movement that emphasized geometric abstraction.
|
|
And last week in New York, protesters doused the emblematic Wall Street bull with blood.
|
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The trade fight, she added, is emblematic of Mr. Trump's overall approach to the economy.
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|
There was a particularly emblematic one, in basic black, that I tried on immediately ($950).
|
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Surreal though the sight may be, it is emblematic of broader British distaste for Trump.
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In 2012, the emblematic podcast This American Life did a special on politics in Afghanistan.
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|
It's an event that's emblematic of the broader pragmatic, eclectic open-mindedness of this period.
|
|
NEW YORK (Reuters Breakingviews) - Uber Technologies is emblematic of many Silicon Valley claims to fame.
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The show is emblematic of the transition period the auto industry itself is in now.
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Instead, should we treat them as emblematic of a mainstream sensibility that most moviegoers share?
|
|
The dynamic is emblematic of the show's strong female roles, a rarity in gangster dramas.
|
|
But the jihadists' eventual loss of this emblematic pair of cities should not be overstated.
|
|
The reason it's a story is that it's emblematic of a new kind of monopoly.
|
|
To Warren, the Trump administration's nepotism is emblematic of everything that is wrong with Washington.
|
|
The book is simply emblematic of a larger set of hierarchies that price people out.
|
|
Such differences are emblematic of how the South American trio treat enterprise and investment more generally.
|
|
His loss became emblematic of humanity's changing relationship with machines, computers and information — especially artificial intelligence.
|
|
Indeed, his work is emblematic of what makes Iranian cinema some of the world's most compelling.
|
|
Eager to change the status quo, she is emblematic of the leftist candidates' core support base.
|
|
Which is why this photo, taken during the Spanish royals' visit, is so emblematic of Melania.
|
|
That's emblematic of a broader trend of Trump's weakness and ineffectiveness in responding to the scandal.
|
|
The strength in the services sector is emblematic of a U.S. economy that looks increasingly healthy.
|
|
No player has been more emblematic of this than Alexis Sánchez, a 30-year-old striker.
|
|
The marriage between Harry and Meghan is emblematic of a modern shift in the British monarchy.
|
|
The Model X and mansion are, in some ways, emblematic of the Tesla lifestyle and approach.
|
|
Even Bobby Charlton's Trump-ian flap of hair has become emblematic of a more glorious era.
|
|
Lövin's photo op wasn't just a one-off but rather is emblematic of Sweden's governing philosophy.
|
|
What we saw was uniquely beautiful yet troubling, emblematic of existence in this world while trans.
|
|
At the time, this felt emblematic of a larger shift happening across the landscape of gaming.
|
|
Stewart is emblematic of the increasingly vocal wing of the GOP obsessed with white identity politics.
|
|
" "It's emblematic of the abandonment of the national Democratic Party for things like the labor movement.
|
|
Moore is emblematic of all the dangers of that fusion of the GOP with pious fanaticism.
|
|
The buildings have become emblematic of the degradation of the area and its thriving drug trade.
|
|
There is nothing more emblematic of New York City baby life than the beat-up stroller.
|
|
In contrast to the emblematic cutout characters of fables, flesh-and-blood Mephisto cannot stop talking.
|
|
What the bar association had done, he said, was emblematic of a larger problem in China.
|
|
But Sunday's events are emblematic of a wider problem that is only now revealing itself fully.
|
|
And so, the song very quickly became emblematic of that sucker punch of a happy ending.
|
|
The antics with the tourists were emblematic of a certain part of the artist's multifaceted personality.
|
|
Emblematic of this growth are the ubiquitous cranes soaring over the city's legally set height limits.
|
|
To Mr. Rosenstein, the hiring process was emblematic of broader dysfunction stemming from the White House.
|
|
Made by self-taught artist-designers, many of them are emblematic examples of visionary outsider art.
|
|
Haggard's ambivalence was emblematic of how many people felt at the time: sometimes hawkish, sometimes dovish.
|
|
These were major rebukes, emblematic of a growing political crisis whose outcome is far from certain.
|
|
For Richard Gamble, Kerns's business partner, the club was emblematic of their New York-centric gathering.
|
|
Acuña's battle to stop Conga, in the northern region of Cajamarca, has become emblematic in Peru.
|
|
Mr. Molinaro has seized on the conviction of Mr. Percoco as emblematic of the administration's problems.
|
|
And it's not just him — the shift is emblematic of a broader trend at Fox News.
|
|
"It is one of the most emblematic cases," said Erick Monterrosas, a lawyer for the group.
|
|
"Jason Botel is emblematic of some of the larger tensions in the administration," Mr. Toch said.
|
|
But as is emblematic of Facebook's past mistakes, it's putting too much idealistic faith in society.
|
|
This case in particular is emblematic of how misguided the debate about Islam here has become.
|
|
Not only is Afghanistan restoring its most emblematic building, it is doing so entirely by itself.
|
|
An NBC News survey released this week is emblematic of the frustrations Libertarians have with pollsters.
|
|
Protesters see this legislation as emblematic of a broader erosion of the city's autonomy from Beijing.
|
|
But Trump's critics say incidents such as the Qatar spat are emblematic of a larger problem.
|
|
Most emblematic is Foxconn, a Taiwanese electronics company known now as the main assembler of iPhones.
|
|
"Chicago is the megalopolis in the Midwest -- emblematic of urban growth and economic success," Lurigio said.
|
|
In many ways, this picture for me is really emblematic of becoming a work of art.
|
|
"Asli Erdogan, whom I admire a lot, is emblematic, and her case is heartbreaking," he said.
|
|
The film's "temblores" — Spanish for "tremors" — are emblematic of the script's preference for allusion over depth.
|
|
The whole thing is emblematic of Dyson's typical messaging: We are extra in everything we do.
|
|
A 1999 Harvard Business Review article is emblematic of the thinking behind microfinance two decades ago.
|
|
It tends to follow young famous women who we deem emblematic of a time and a place.
|
|
Microsoft, which announced a $75 million computer science education initiative last year, is emblematic of that cause.
|
|
But life for Simkin wouldn't be simple or emblematic of a happily meditating baby in Lotus pose.
|
|
The big picture: The 2018 midterm elections produced a divided Congress that's emblematic of a split America.
|
|
Now, it needs to rebuild a company that was once emblematic of powerful marketing and iconic brands.
|
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And without going into spoilers, their corniness serves a purpose that's emblematic of Arkane's approach to storytelling.
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Anthony Padilla, a YouTube veteran, is perhaps the most emblematic case of exploitation in the YouTube world.
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This makes Mr Trump's proposal emblematic of his willingness to break with his party on some issues.
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The public reckoning of Wansink's work, other researchers say, is emblematic of psychological research as a whole.
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"This case is really emblematic of the wider rights violation against juvenile offenders in Iran," Mills says.
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Instead, they claim they're emblematic of the relative impunity with which police all over the country operate.
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This shift is emblematic of Lucasfilm's larger problem in determining the future of the Star Wars franchise.
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"Elizabeth Short was emblematic of her times," Ellroy told PEOPLE at the time of his book's release.
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These infamous incidents have become emblematic of Black-Korean conflict, which has been widely documented and researched.
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Scammers like Williams are "emblematic of gazillions of people doing variants of the same thing," Bricker said.
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CRN reports that these massive layoffs are emblematic of Cisco's transition from focusing on hardware to software.
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Fitch views 2Q17 results as emblematic of KEY's longer-run performance and supportive of the current ratings.
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The battle over trade is emblematic of a broader fight on economic policy within the Trump administration.
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Biden often talks about his own family's struggles as emblematic of the concerns of the middle class.
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But if Akzo becomes emblematic of a new fortress mentality, the continent will pay a hefty price.
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And there might be no more emblematic example of that than Sony's groundbreaking Eggo line of headphones.
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Campaign groups say Beatriz's case is emblematic of the harm that harsh anti-abortion laws can cause.
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But Mnuchin is more than just an emblematic traveler though the Wall Street-to-Washington revolving door.
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In a lot of ways Star Fox Zero is emblematic of the Wii U as a whole.
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The situation, which got Disney sued by its former employees, has become emblematic of H-21B abuses.
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The story of Leland Ratcliff, captain of the US Forest Service's Feather River Hotshot crew, is emblematic.
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It is also emblematic of a much deeper issue for our culture and the way we govern.
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"Popular uprisings across history and in this contemporary period are emblematic of the youth," Ruya's statement continued.
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That strategy is emblematic of a kind of field operation known as "distributed organizing," which fueled Sen.
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His plea is emblematic of how our systems and institutions treat people with the disease of addiction.
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"Minnesota is emblematic of the problem that Democrats have around the rest of the country," George said.
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Some of Trump's supporters see him as emblematic of the Washington dysfunction that has angered many Republicans.
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Arteaga has become emblematic for government critics of security forces' tough tactics against protesters in recent months.
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And yet, the yearslong effort to dodge accountability in an emblematic case of institutional failure was predictable.
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In 113, criminal-justice reform advocates seized on Patricia Spottedcrow's case as emblematic of overzealous drug sentencing.
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Nineteen children and six adults died in the collapsed school, one of the earthquake's most emblematic tragedies.
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I heard a story recently that is emblematic of all of the suffering in Aleppo right now.
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Its very existence is emblematic of the adaptability that's a big part of the AR family's appeal.
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While likely unintentional, the unfortunate timing is emblematic of how utterly detached from the world Swift is.
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The steady stream of hulking ships is emblematic of Fiji's popularity, and a major source of income.
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That ranking is emblematic of almost a decade of fights between election rights groups and Mr. Kemp.
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That blockade was emblematic of the fate of broader bipartisan measures that tread on politically sensitive turf.
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However, the repatriation is emblematic of a much larger movement of historical reckoning sweeping across the globe.
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Over the decades, it's become so emblematic of this unhappy state that it's regularly subject to parody.
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Osorio has little patience for the criticism, which he considers emblematic of Mexico's problematic attitude toward soccer.
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Her campaign is emblematic of a growing movement of far-right parties across Europe and the globe.
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In a sense, the recent streak is emblematic of a markedly restrained level of stock market volatility.
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The rule is emblematic of this administration's unilateral overreach and utter disdain for state and public input.
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Over the years, critics concurred, he conceived some of the most emblematic camera movements in world cinema.
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The status quo of the ESA is emblematic of government at its worst: costly, burdensome and uncertain.
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Perhaps no case is more emblematic of the court's ability to act swiftly than Bush v. Gore.
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"Walgreens is emblematic of the challenges you&aposre seeing in simple non-vertically integrated pharmacy," he said.
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The scandal was emblematic of the cronyism and corruption that has soured many Bolivians on Mr. Morales.
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BeiGene, founded in 2010, is emblematic of China's fast-changing pharmaceuticals industry—in more ways than one.
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The White House officials ascribed the reversal over Mr. Bharara as emblematic of a chaotic transition process.
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The arrival of the anarchists—a roving band of hard-left protesters—was emblematic of that effort.
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I don't think that's emblematic, but I think that tells you something about how complicated taste is.
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"That they botched this process is emblematic of their inability to run a meeting," Ms. Slamen said.
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ATAP, a secretive skunk-works project within Google, was once emblematic of the company's zany, innovative streak.
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The mushroom clouds that are emblematic of nuclear explosions disappear into surreal swirls of dirt and radiation.
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If you had to describe an emblematic piece of content right now, what would make Girlboss work?
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It is also emblematic of the African continent's pivot toward Chinese investment over the last 15 years.
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He sees the product as both lazy and emblematic of our mistaken views on what censorship accomplishes.
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"We are expecting the university to set a record that would be emblematic and positive," Reyes said.
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To so-called "Bitcoin maximalists," the DAO fork is emblematic of Ethereum's trust-dependency, and therefore its weakness.
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As the city fell, Americans desperately fled aboard helicopters in scenes emblematic of the U.S. failure in Vietnam.
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Once there, it's impossible not to make the detour to Pizza Charly, the market's most emblematic food stall.
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Pat Caddell, the pollster for Jimmy Carter who was emblematic of the consultant class Blumenthal described, in 2011.
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It was emblematic of the type of company Bogle had built and of his legacy, McNabb told CNBC.
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These demonstrations are all emblematic of a larger cultural issues of gender discrimination and sexism in the country.
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Dorsey's statement is emblematic of that stance, prioritizing user count, share price, and revenue over safety and civility.
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Others see delays and disappointing results as emblematic of the company's inability to deliver on Musk's soaring rhetoric.
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The ruling delivered the first convictions in a case emblematic of state-sponsored human rights violations in Peru.
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Though he singled out Sawyer in his statement, LePage said the actions were emblematic of the Cruz campaign.
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Our correspondents write about a fraudulent dairy project that is emblematic of South Africa's corruption and entrenched inequalities.
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Mr. Uchida contends that the fate of the Hotel Okura is emblematic of a trend afflicting Japan's capital.
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Cole's comments are emblematic of the significant hurdles that remain between Teehee and taking her seat in Congress.
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Second, the U.S. drone strike is emblematic of the fact that the Taliban are coming back in Afghanistan.
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" The reconstruction of the skull and jaw of the soldier is emblematic of recent advances in "forensic archaeology.
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I think about this fractured grid as being emblematic of our time because it's nonsensical in many ways.
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Being goth/punk (I'll spare you the photos) was the only thing that felt emblematic of my identity.
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It was a repeatedly malfunctioning shark that gave those yellow barrels seen throughout the movie their emblematic status.
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Its future, and that of a score of other "emblematic" schools (especially choosy grammar schools) is under threat.
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It's a relatively low-profile issue, but the vote is completely emblematic of Congress's overall approach to governing.
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I love that it was an emblematic look the first Clare Waight Keller collection [for Givenchy] as well.
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It became emblematic of the first dotcom bubble, when loss-making startups fetched stratospheric valuations—until they didn't.
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For the likes of Mr Szilagyi, Felcsut is emblematic of everything that has gone wrong under Mr Orban.
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Democrats in Congress dismissed the policy as shameful, disgusting and emblematic of naked intolerance in the White House.
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And this is not the first time that a telling human portrait has become emblematic of a crisis.
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Perhaps no candidate was as emblematic of the 2018 resistance tide as Amy McGrath in Kentucky's Sixth District.
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The Syrian boy's death was emblematic of the ordeal Syrian refugees endure, some said in social media sites.
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Neither warning - one aimed at residents and the other at a business emblematic of the city - deterred demonstrators.
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Do you have an innovative product that's emblematic of one of those trends, or might even create one?
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But while Survive the Storm may emblematic of one of Fortnite's larger shortcomings, Battle Royale feels outright misguided.
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The clothes Ms. Nichanian designs for this emblematic French carriage-trade label alter little from season to season.
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THE emblematic image of the 2016 men's golf season so far has been one of despair, not triumph.
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This, along with an emphasis on speed and convenience, is emblematic of the evolving tech-dominated consumer economy.
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Rabin's robust debates with Peres are emblematic of Lincoln's lively tête-à-têtes with his individual cabinet members.
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For many, her death was emblematic of violence against transgender people, who are frequently the targets of beatings.
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This truncated, indoor, artificial beach is emblematic of the world that we have so grossly polluted and damaged.
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But it's emblematic of the larger problems with truth that this White House encounters on a daily basis.
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His death, which became emblematic of long-standing tensions between police and minority communities, was ruled a homicide.
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One car that was emblematic of a cooling market was the 21991 Porsche 21994 coupe offered by Bonhams.
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When thinking back on the president's campaign promises, steel is emblematic of the changes he promised to bring.
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It was emblematic of the administration's yearslong effort to erect additional bureaucratic hurdles in the US immigration process.
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It is emblematic of the nation's crumbling transportation infrastructure coast to coast — including locks, ports, highways and railroads.
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However, the idea that the Internet is emblematic of a "Wild West" frontier environment doesn't comport with reality.
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This shift in rhetoric is emblematic of GOP lawmakers' selective hearing when it comes to Trump's racist comments.
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Iguodala enables Golden State's groundbreaking adaptability with an individual flair that's emblematic of how they want to play.
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It was precisely and perfectly emblematic of Trump's all-out, continuing assault on facts and on truth itself.
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That's fairly emblematic of Trump critics' frustrations with McCain's behavior in the final chapter of his political career.
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A short text that had described Maurras as an "emblematic and controversial figure" had also been taken down.
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For much of the 22th century, perhaps nothing was more emblematic of high style and luxury than fur.
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These "distorted replicas" are emblematic of our struggle as a society to conform our realities to the ideal.
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While there, he painted a colorful canvas, crowded with his emblematic figures, for the interior of the museum.
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Today, Mr. Li's acquisition of A.C. Milan appears to be emblematic of a string of troubled Chinese deals.
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They were emblematic of the town's earlier heyday as a summer spa in the 18th and 19th centuries.
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Then came the exchange with Mr. Mason, which was emblematic of the president's escalating attacks on the press.
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Erdogan's critics see the latest arrests as emblematic of the purge that has followed a failed 2016 coup.
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Another of Mr. Ballhaus's camera movements is so emblematic that it has its own name: the Copa shot.
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The region of Emilia Romagna, which includes the emblematic city of Bologna, has traditionally supported left-leaning parties.
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The cases of the five men facing federal execution are emblematic of the federal death penalty system's flaws.
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Clinton's options are simultaneously specific to her and emblematic of larger struggles women across the United States face.
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LEGAL PIONEER She became Supreme Court president two years ago and is emblematic of its surprisingly modern face.
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As such, he takes the piss out of painting in an emblematic way, second only to Andy Warhol.
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The network is emblematic of a trend that's been seen throughout the cash-strapped news business: A collaborative streak.
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It's a blow to national pride which some Iraqis see as emblematic of Iran's growing hold on their country.
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"Kemp is emblematic of the attacks on voting rights we have seen in the last several years," Changa said.
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Photo: Alex Cranz (Gizmodo)The HP Stream is emblematic of many of the $300-and-below Windows 10 machines.
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The release of Mr Mubarak, while thousands of his opponents languish in prison, is emblematic of that sad fact.
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The retailer has been emblematic of the decline of brick-and-mortar in the face of competition from Amazon.
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Yves—the locale's most emblematic server, and the person I've come to see—is around 60 and extremely friendly.
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Once the world's tallest railway station, the vacant building became emblematic of the city's descent into bankruptcy and despair.
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Monaco is "mobilizing" as a community to assist in the repair of Notre Dame — "the emblematic heart" of Paris.
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The moment was emblematic of Trump's treatment of the press throughout the campaign -- particularly in the last 24 hours.
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Rather than damaging the emblematic purpose for which this sort of prestige architecture was conceived, such shortcomings enrich it.
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Almost all clambered aboard the now emblematic rusting vessels which risk disaster to cross the Mediterranean Sea to Italy.
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The 2016 Cadillac CT6 Cadillac's new mirror is emblematic of how technology is reshaping human life in the car.
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"A musical icon known for his artistic brilliance, Love Symbol #2 is emblematic of Prince's distinctive style," she said.
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For others it all seemed ludicrous, narcissistic, and emblematic of the liberal, politically correct bubble that the company occupies.
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Trump's tweets attacking Merkel's policy highlighted the emblematic role Germany has come to play in global debates on migration.
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In Game 4, Lee delivered a performance that was at once an aberration and emblematic of his entire career.
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If there was a brand emblematic of the rising American middle class, suburbia as swinging cool, it was Cadillac.
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Are there particular outfits that you see as emblematic of Katherine's shift toward a more experimental approach to fashion?
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Because of my work, I knew the way little things like this set me off was emblematic of PTSD.
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The GOP's struggle over whether to include such provisions is perhaps emblematic of the entire Trump tax reform dilemma.
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In recent online propaganda linked to IS, the city's emblematic Sagrada Família basilica was featured as a possible target.
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Ryan's success is emblematic of a digital-savvy generation that's been able to turn social media into a goldmine.
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With his idiosyncratic behavior and his unconventional (and sometimes outlandish) remarks, Neumann has been emblematic of WeWork's strangest excesses.
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The shift away from comedy is emblematic of the fraught relationship between the WHCA and the Trump White House.
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Descendant offers products emblematic of the cultural hybridization Mr. Fujiwara did so much to inspire all those years ago.
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We landed on this idea of a supermarket because it felt emblematic of the mundanity of being a mom.
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The point being that everything can connect, everything can be emblematic, everything is lying in wait to be uncovered.
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Foxconn, most of whose factories are in China, is emblematic of the challenges facing the Chinese economy at large.
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The scene was emblematic of problems plaguing the stagnated "police pacification unit" program, or UPP, which started in 2008.
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They are deeply emblematic of the pulse of pop culture, and pop culture is the pulse of the world.
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For an occasional series about the country, he invites readers to suggest destinations that are both emblematic and unconventional.
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It's a teardrop in the federal budget, but is emblematic of the ocean of wrong coming from this president.
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This was emblematic of a bigger problem: The police department regularly fails to hold its officers accountable for misconduct.
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The block had stood since 1931, its immigrant-owned small businesses emblematic of the changing ethnic diversity of Queens.
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In late September, I decided to find one family with a story that would be emblematic of these struggles.
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And Michael Snyder wrote a deep dive for Eater about aguachile, a dish that's emblematic of Mexico's Sinaloan cooking.
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His reliance on ambiguity, emblematic of Post-Modernism, was new to his predecessors and rubbed some the wrong way.
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Her killing just a few months later became emblematic of the threats faced by environmental activists in Latin America.
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That said, I have some works of art that mean a lot to me and are emblematic of relationships.
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This compulsory work is emblematic of a broader culture of reconciliation, development and social control asserted by the government.
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And the issue has become emblematic of a broader battle in Israel over religion and gender in public spaces.
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Its location, opposite the emblematic seafront Malecon in Havana, has attracted Cuban music legends and stars throughout its history.
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This whole episode is sadly emblematic of our morally compromised president, and the party that continues to defend him.
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It brought styles like the Papasan chair to the US, becoming an emblematic part of 1960s culture and aesthetics.
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Jonathan Morrison, a 45-year-old commercial drone operator who lives in Mason City, is my emblematic Iowa Democrat.
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Nonetheless for now, Mr. Macron can point to his newly named cabinet as emblematic of his style of governance.
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They have been housed in a three-bedroom apartment, a stone's throw from the Sagrada Família, Barcelona's emblematic basilica.
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It's emblematic of how we've grown disconnected [from] where our food comes from, who makes and grows our food.
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The song Welcome to the Black Parade, which is about literally welcoming death, became emblematic of emo culture itself.
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The emblematic design dates is based on a patent devised by athlete and entrepreneur Lino Di Iorio in 43.
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This is emblematic of a contradiction that tails the Food Ranger, as both a person and a YouTube brand.
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But, emblematic of the foodie craze, she has enthusiastically adopted her unofficial role as the basketball team's meal czar.
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Klopp insists this is not an immediate threat to user security, but it is emblematic of the greater problem.
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Many long-suffering Lions fans saw the failed demolition as emblematic of their team's fortunes — or of their city's.
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Roughly 1,200 people marched, according to the Frankfurt police, many wearing the pink knit hats emblematic of the movement.
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The move is emblematic of a trend in the fast-food industry toward more "natural" and socially conscious foods.
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Those two initiatives are emblematic of just how widespread the congressional campaign to separate Washington and Riyadh really is.
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He's emblematic of the way white male anxiety is producing new and powerful political movements across the West today.
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The houses seen in these videos are often not isolated cases, but emblematic of whole neighborhoods falling into disrepair.
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The effort to oust him proved unsuccessful but it served as emblematic of the pressure cooker environment he often faced.
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"But I do think it's emblematic of us as a larger society, and the industry as a whole," he said.
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As Pichai dodged pointed questions or provided evasive answers, the spectacle felt emblematic of his and the company's tough year.
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Is their entry on the scene emblematic of a fresh Florida rap renaissance, or merely a bit of local color?
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These feature seven elements from the emblematic "First Work Set" (1963–69): 210 monochrome items made of heavy cotton sailcloth.
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In the eight months since it hit radio waves, Anti has become emblematic of a paradigm shift among certain artists.
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Apple isn't alone here, but the iPhone has become emblematic of this mindset and what environmental groups consider excessive wastefulness.
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The most emblematic ritual for finishers of the pilgrimage is to leave behind something that one took on the journey.
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Nissan's U.S. operations, once a big contributor to its international sales and profit, are now emblematic of its global challenges.
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"I feel a little more trepidation with this [character] because she's so emblematic of people's nostalgia," Blunt told the magazine.
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The Nintendo focus on local multiplayer and complete offline single-player games is certainly emblematic of this point of view.
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They're an emblematic symbol of the museum, and thanks to popular TV shows, they've become such a heavily photographed space.
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The company is also emblematic of the trouble caused when lavish lifestyles drive up burn rates and bleed companies dry.
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For instance, Szpajdel's emblematic design for Norwegian black metal band Emperor calls upon a fiercely balanced symmetry of unapproachable barbs.
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It is emblematic of the strange moment we've arrived at in the selling of misinformation online, particularly the medical variety.
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As it turned out, "[Josh] is emblematic of a lot of things I see our fans going through," Bemis explains.
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Trump's camp is trying to spin this as a good thing, emblematic of Trump's idiosyncratic personality and media-fueled campaign.
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Nike's potential retrenchment from the surfwear market is emblematic of the stance of most major consumer companies towards the sector.
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So its evolution is emblematic of the pendulum swinging back and forth on climate change within industry and conservative circles.
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" To Talbot's point, the situation is emblematic of what criminal justice reform advocates have called the "school-to-prison pipeline.
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Two years later, the hundred-year anniversary of Rasputin's assassination, Zerazion opened Florence's first speakeasy, named after the emblematic figure.
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If there's one dish that's emblematic of the dizzying cultural melting pot that is Macau, that dish would be minchi.
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David Cassidy, a 1970s teen heartthrob emblematic of the era, died of organ failure Tuesday at the age of 67.
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This all might seem pretty amazing, but it's also emblematic of how Lazar's claims can seem less impressive under scrutiny.
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Not just ideology or voting record No Republican senator Bannon is targeting is more emblematic of the quest than Sen.
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The government shutdown over one-tenth of 85033 percent of the federal budget devoted to a border wall is emblematic.
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This seems emblematic of the racial divide in the local and national reaction to the tragedy that unfolded in Ferguson.
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The iPhone maker has been emblematic of global trade, employing thousands and selling a ton of products in both countries.
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The speed with which GOP leaders recovered from Thursday night's scare on the bill was emblematic of the entire process.
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The rule change was emblematic of the administration's yearslong effort to erect additional bureaucratic hurdles in the US immigration process.
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Criminal-justice reform advocates seized on Spottedcrow's case as emblematic of overzealous drug sentencing, which disproportionately affects people of color.
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Rather than treating him as a potential spoiler, Democrats should portray Schultz as emblematic of everything wrong with Trump's America.
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That sound, feeble and yet piercing by association, is emblematic of the drawbacks and advantages of Ms. Chuma's working methods.
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The episode, regardless of how effectively it was handled by the Bucks, remains emblematic of Sanders' standing with NBA teams.
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That's emblematic of a larger trend among the world's biggest oil companies that I also expect will accelerate in 2018.
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A year ago this stretch of road was dotted with lodgepole pine trees, an emblematic species of the Canadian Rockies.
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My queerness became emblematic of a larger personal history, and I wanted that to be seen by the outside world.
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But, their post-fight patter was emblematic of the night as a whole—it all just felt a little flat.
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The case has become emblematic of the government's indifference toward victims' demands and of the corruption underlying the drug war.
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Volusia County's zero-tolerance policy is emblematic of the law-and-order approach Florida has adopted to prevent school shootings.
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Emblematic of its noble but stilted ambitions is its casting of the Swedish actor Max von Sydow as Jesus Christ.
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The way the Vietnam War series portrayed Vietnam is emblematic of the way the United States relates to the world.
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Keanu is emblematic of our new interest in reevaluating and reassessing what we value most in our most beloved actors.
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In this typology, Carlo was emblematic of "active" while Nello and others like him were kept in the "passive" camp.
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"The Stanley Cup is not emblematic of the Canadian honors, but of the hockey championship of the world," Foran said.
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The magazine initially asked Mr. Parks to find one emblematic image about poverty in each of seven Latin American countries.
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" Democratic Senator Bob Menendez, the top Democrat on the Foreign Relations Committee, told reporters: "It's emblematic of President Trump's style.
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Mr. Manson's story is emblematic of the kind of fog into which the lives of the homeless tend to descend.
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"President Trump is a master of communication and branding, and his campaign merchandise is emblematic of that," Mr. Murtaugh said.
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In summary, the need for the Right to Try movement is emblematic of FDA's "protect health at all costs" ideology.
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The to-and-fro of nutrition science is emblematic of a larger dynamic related to fickle research findings across disciplines.
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She is emblematic of the denizens of the Deep State that everyone in Washington likes to tell us doesn't exist.
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Phys Ed Two numbers are, to me, particularly emblematic of what science had to tell us about fitness this year.
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But the fact that the letter is coming from a white congressional supporter is emblematic of the South Bend, Ind.
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This past year's winner of the Man Booker International Prize, "The Vegetarian," by the Korean writer Han Kang, was emblematic.
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A weaker U.S. dollar, while emblematic of the problems in the nation's capital, is also a boost to the economy.
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The episode is emblematic of the selfie culture in which some people have died trying to get the ultimate photo.
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Doing the best with the least so overtly and seductively, Flavin is the most magical and emblematic of the Minimalists.
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This idea of an odd fit that turns out to be just right is emblematic of the entire Hunters crew.
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It was emblematic of the adulatory coverage news outlets controlled by the Chinese government have bestowed on Apple this week.
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The 2013 branding of the metro station at Madrid's most emblematic square had sparked protests from companies to social activists.
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Oh is emblematic of not just one, but an array of issues that Hollywood faces in how it imagines performers.
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The dress had been worn before by Geri Halliwell and others, but it was Lopez who made the frock emblematic.
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Some of Fox's detractors said the error was emblematic of ignorance, and worse, on the network's right-wing talk shows.
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It's a contemporary of "collateral damage," another term emblematic of what had not yet been termed the military-industrial complex.
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Heartman is emblematic of how a certain strain of cinema, its tone and its characters, comes together in Death Stranding.
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The conviction of the oil tycoon Mikhail Khodorkovsky and the liquidation of his company was perhaps the most emblematic example.
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We visit Buch, a safe, cozy community in Germany that is emblematic of the forces threatening to upend Western politics.
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She also described her experience as being emblematic of a more deeply rooted political problem -- one that crosses partisan lines.
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Nevertheless, Doğan's case is emblematic of the challenges artists and journalists face who remain living and working in Diyarbakır today.
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Gray's death seemed emblematic of a "rough ride" — when police officers purposely give someone a dangerous ride to cause injuries.
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The state official who was tasked with representing indigenous issues at the meeting, for Kawlo, was emblematic of the problem.
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The internal frictions that has started to emerge within the GOP is emblematic of the party's broader political dilemma on Obamacare.
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Almost every detail of this event and its aftermath is emblematic of the difficulties women face when they've been sexually assaulted.
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The hero US Airways pilot credited with the "Miracle on the Hudson" is "emblematic of public safety and trust," Sonnenfeld said.
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Venezuelan state television broadcast images of people marching in Caracas, waving signs supporting President Nicolas Maduro in their emblematic red garb.
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It also taught a smaller, style-based lesson: forget rose colored glasses — sequined bikinis are the most emblematic accessory of optimism.
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This begrudging recognition of genius in women is emblematic of the larger problem we have with talking about black women artists.
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The dramatic FV2030 concept car, shown here with its gull-wing doors open, is emblematic of Chery's leap into the future.
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CompuLab's IPO today is really emblematic of the push to become public and get that big liquidation and financing round going.
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When he was young, Tester lost three fingers to a meat-grinding accident, a point that's become emblematic of his authenticity.
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"Love Symbol #2 is emblematic of Prince's distinctive style," Laurie Pressman, the Pantone Color Institute's vice president, said in a statement.
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For all of the AR advances made this year, the company most emblematic of AR's numerous challenges was clearly Magic Leap .
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The midterms produced a divided Congress that's emblematic of a split America, drifting further apart and pointing to poisonous years ahead.
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Officials told the Journal that the massive snafu is emblematic of greater concerns that have surrounded the security of international shipping.
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Chinese battery and car manufacturer BYD — short for "Build Your Dreams" — was emblematic of the post–financial crisis Chinese outbound boom.
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This year's voter registration drive is emblematic of the march's growth from a single protest into a force in electoral politics.
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" They will hold a contest to decide on the specific designs, which should be "emblematic of the United States space program.
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It's emblematic of the revolving door between the upper echelons of the United States government and powerful Silicon Valley technology companies.
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The effect of the best medical memoirs, like those of Sacks, is to make idiosyncratic cases seem emblematic of wider maladies.
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The growth of Amazon's stock is emblematic of a gradual rise among tech or technology-related stocks that are in the .
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But they are emblematic of de Blasio's laissez-faire approach to the legislative branch, an attitude forged during his first term.
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They called it "Middletown," to conceal the identity of a place they felt was emblematic of the country as a whole.
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Nothing could be more emblematic of Trump's complicity in money-driven establishment politics than he openly confessed history of buying politicians.
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The exhibition is emblematic of an enduring fascination with Russian high culture in the West, despite tense relations with today's leadership.
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Beyond New York City, the shutdown is emblematic of the kind of criminal justice reform that's taking shape across the country.
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"Are Democrats blowing it in Virginia?" asked a CNN headline that was emblematic of coverage of the country's highest-profile contest.
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Hemingway and National Review are emblematic of the broader right, whose consensus is that firing Comey was justified, whatever the motive.
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WHEN historians come to write about the 2016 Presidential election, one moment may stand as emblematic of the Republican primary campaign.
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However, the private-public works project is also emblematic of Facebook's hyperactive approach to problems, both legitimate and public-relations-wise.
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The relationship that the US has with the bicycle kick is emblematic of its relationship to the game as a whole.
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Just two miles from the Boulevard de la Croisette, Cannes's emblematic seafront promenade, the chateau is reached by a stiff climb.
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In hindsight, it is a performance — by those two players and by the team — emblematic of what is to come. OCT.
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But in 2018, the 2016 National Teacher of the Year is emblematic of a midterm election season full of fresh faces.
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This week marks the tenth anniversary of the fall of Lehman Brothers, seen as the emblematic event of the financial crisis.
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They are emblematic of a Democratic Party struggling to connect with the blue-collar workers who once made up its core.
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"We introduced what we thought was a spectacular, beautiful, emblematic red cup," former Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz said at the time.
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However, Washington's typical approach to infrastructure is emblematic of the mentality that the swamp is the best place to make decisions.
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That the surge came despite a lack of concrete information about MGT's plans is emblematic of high-risk speculation, traders said.
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As Beijing chips away at Hong Kong's freedoms, Ho has become an emblematic figure of the territory—embattled, emboldened, and unbeholden.
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And he's in emblematic form on "Live in Los Angeles," a five-track digital album now on iTunes and Apple Music.
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Op-Ed Contributor COPENHAGEN — An exchange in a recent debate on national TV was emblematic of changing times in Danish politics.
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The John Doe case is emblematic of the challenges that Western democracies face when their citizens are captured fighting for ISIS.
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That's especially because Blasey is a compelling, even emblematic, figure, and the fight against sexual assault a good and necessary cause.
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Newsbook Controversy, bitter rivalry and unlikely wins have become emblematic of the Olympic Games, this year hosted in Pyeonchang, South Korea.
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The man reading the newspaper is emblematic of what it is like to be living in a world rent by war.
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Emblematic of my experience in Cambodia was the first news conference held by the newly arrived American ambassador, John Gunther Dean.
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The living conditions of the 100 or so residents of the Eagle Avenue apartments are emblematic of sweeping neglect by Nycha.
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The Democratic senator from Virginia is emblematic of the shifting politics for big technology companies, which face congressional hearings this week.
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Emblematic of this dynamic is Trump Tower, the talisman of privilege that established Donald Trump as a player in New York.
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It is emblematic of disarray in the Housing Authority's lead policy that stretches back decades, an examination by The Times found.
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Lima's case became emblematic because it was the first case of alleged femicide to be escalated to the Mexican Supreme Court.
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Lewandowski's journey from obscure New Hampshire political operative to celebrity power broker was emblematic of how Trump's election scrambled Washington's hierarchies.
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Perhaps the most emblematic complex of structures honoring those who fought for the Confederacy is here in Richmond, its former capital.
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The study is emblematic of genetics as a field not seriously reckoning with its potential for misuse by 21st century pseudoscience.
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It's so emblematic of the '80s that, Leno says, all that's missing is a cassette tape of the Miami Vice soundtrack.
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That positive reinforcement is emblematic of the Saudi approach to its homegrown jihadists, which would not translate well to the West.
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The collapse of Toys R Us, which officially closed its doors in June 2018, became emblematic of the private-equity problem.
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This week's episode is emblematic of the selfie culture in which some people have died trying to get the ultimate photo.
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The chaotic, up-again, down-again day was emblematic of the emotional turmoil many migrants are facing on the Mexican border.
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The dairy farm case is emblematic of the many ills afflicting South Africa a quarter-century after the end of apartheid.
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The changes, which are expected to be proposed later this month, are emblematic of the larger deregulatory effort underway in Washington.
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Its reconstruction took a different form: the sterile apartment blocks that became emblematic of the German Democratic Republic, or East Germany.
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His characters are people emblematic of our time, when the notions of duty and sacrifice are by and large in abeyance.
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The efforts have been met with resistance that is emblematic of the wider reckoning tech faces around its impact on society.
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Can you tell us about one work in particular from this collection that you feel is emblematic of the whole group?
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The turnover in this administration has been stunning and is emblematic of an administration where governance is not a top priority.
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The halting progress is emblematic of the country's larger transportation problems — its potholed roads, dysfunctional subways, dilapidated bridges and shabby airports.
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Mexico City (CNN)Their faces have become emblematic in a country where violence seems to win over the rule of law.
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Leitch's vetting for values proposal is emblematic of that, she said, but cutting off immigration entirely would worsen the racial tension.
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Then, we're taking you to the Southern Hemisphere for a look at how a dilapidated stadium is emblematic of one nation's recession.
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Public Citizen Research Director Rick Claypool told Motherboard in an email that the FTC's issues are emblematic of a much bigger problem.
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The court is meant to try rebels and military officials for emblematic cases of human rights abuses which occurred during the conflict.
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Mead Johnson & Co. created two emblematic products of the 1950s, though neither were exactly food, nor were they designed for general consumption.
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Most emblematic is America's decision to withhold "market-economy status" from China, which allows higher duties to be put on Chinese imports.
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Though like counts may seem like a relatively minor feature, it's one that's become emblematic of the social pressures often surrounding Instagram.
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The treatment of Luis Manuel Otero Alcantara is emblematic of a struggle in Cuba over who defines and controls art and culture.
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The treatment of Luis Manuel Otero Alcántara is emblematic of a struggle in Cuba over who defines and controls art and culture.
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Gurriel's departure from Cuba was jarring, and most emblematic of a grander problem for the country, and the sport's place in it.
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Conservative critics say she is emblematic of a youth culture that has been infected with what they see as laziness and promiscuity.
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Bragging about beating one of the world's top apps before his has even launched is emblematic of Nigam's and Genies' brash style.
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Lu Xun's publicly enunciated motives for becoming a writer have subsequently been seen as emblematic of modern Chinese literature's obsession with politics.
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Prosecutors say their actions are emblematic of the alleged "code of silence" within the police department that shields fellow officers from justice.
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"Bouillabaisse is emblematic of Marseille," Robert explains, as he shows me a folder of press cuttings from his years as head chef.
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In recent days, Cruz has been making comments of the GOP nominee that are emblematic of the tightrope he's trying to walk.
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James Poniewozik, a television critic for The Times, writes that the updated version is emblematic of today's shinier and richer New York.
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The people making this argument tend to feel it's emblematic of Last Jedi's larger disrespect for the Star Wars franchise and characters.
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Staying true to their style, the song's music video features some classic synchrony and modern dance emblematic of their early 25s stardom.
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Because I can't think of anything more emblematic of a new religion coalescing than an argument about when to put a holiday.
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Hawley's belief that government forcing websites to offer political counterarguments to every opinion is somehow emblematic of free speech is bafflingly preposterous.
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Cleaver is a Y Combinator alum, oversees a team of engineers, and otherwise comes off as an emblematic Silicon Valley startup founder.
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The Alex Awards are emblematic of how the lines between YA and the rest of the literary world are starting to blur.
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It's emblematic of a continued practice that, thanks to AI, can continue to thrive in the way it was always destined to.
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Even the act of tying the four opposite quadrants of the cloth that shaped the bundles was emblematic of keeping things intact.
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The Dark Ones are emblematic of a changed world where it may not even be possible to recover what the survivors lost.
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It's also not like eating out is emblematic of our generation; I know plenty of people who do cook all the time.
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These dynamics, which have become emblematic of the status quo after World War II, do not necessarily equate to optimal policy outcomes.
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In the producers' view, the family was, as EP Scott Alexander put it, "emblematic" of the start of a tabloid-ruled era.
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The House Science Committee report said the 2010 breach was emblematic of another problem at the agency: intentional evasion of congressional oversight.
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The potential deal, reportedly worth up to $8 billion, is emblematic of China's strengthening of economic, diplomatic and cultural ties with Argentina.
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The ceremony is emblematic of the best of multi-ethnic Britain, of immigrants promising fealty to their new country and its values.
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"We call on the Mexican authorities to ensure a thorough, effective, impartial, independent and prompt investigation into this emblematic case," she said.
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COLORADO Clinton's advantage in Colorado is emblematic of the fears some Republicans have about the party's future in an increasingly diverse America.
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In recent years, he has become emblematic of China's assertive stance on blocking websites, censoring content and tracking users within its borders.
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In many ways, "The Deuce" is a classic David Simon urban joint: it treats sex workers as emblematic of any alienated workforce.
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Schmolz+Bickenbach's 2015 report was emblematic of Vekselberg's suffering Swiss empire that has stumbled over exposure to slumping oil and gas prices.
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Stroh came of age among the manicured lawns and stately manors of Grosse Pointe, the most emblematic of old-money Midwestern suburbs.
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The uncertainty in neuroscience research funding is emblematic of the danger the U.S. faces in losing its competitive edge in biomedical innovation.
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Consider trigger warnings, which aren't as widespread as the media sometimes suggests but which do exist and are emblematic of something larger.
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But the words became so emblematic of Nationwide's ethos that Mr. Raphaelson's typewritten memo once hung in the lobby of its headquarters.
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Ocasio-Cortez's triumph over a 10-term congressman is emblematic of the battle Democrats are having for the future of their party.
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This is a nice change from the norm, and it's emblematic of Eisler's humane and grounded approach to writing a tall tale.
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"Adding emoji emblematic to users' life experiences helps foster a diverse culture that is inclusive of disability," Apple said in its proposal.
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It's a moment emblematic of how quickly she skips from introspection to self-deprecation to joy, in person and in her music.
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The LiveWire does create a sound, but it is an entirely different one, more futuristic an emblematic of the bike's electric powertrain.
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Marshall Chiles, a spokesperson for the now-shut-down Marines United group and a former Marine himself, is emblematic of this attitude.
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That mindset is emblematic of a larger trend among the world's biggest oil companies that we're seeing more and more this year.
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Jesse Jarnow, author of Heads: A Biography of Psychedelic America, cites experimental electronic group Wolf Eyes as emblematic of modern psychedelic music.
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Emblematic of this unprecedented surveillance apparatus are the facial recognition devices deployed in Shenzhen last April that are meant to deter jaywalkers.
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It was a holdover from the sport's Southern past and emblematic of the backwoods image it has spent decades trying to shed.
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Frieze's Los Angeles location — in a custom tent on the Paramount Pictures studio lot — is also emblematic of the fair's Hollywood ambitions.
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This tweak has been emblematic of her approach to diversity efforts, as she's comfortable with experimenting and reconfiguring outdated policies when needed.
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In this respect, the creativity, commitment, and constraint that is emblematic of the demoscene is baked in to its very organizational structure.
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Janet's triumph is soon dampened and eventually spoiled by her friends, most of whom prove a convenient, presumably emblematic collection of narcissists.
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But it is emblematic of Tillerson's style, in a way that shows how he managed to alienate his own employees so thoroughly.
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In contrast to this imagery, the floating, emblematic forms in his current show do not resolve themselves into heads, shoulders and torsos.
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It's also emblematic of the way 13 Reasons Why tells a story, which is always, always, to pick the most frustrating approach.
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The authors call for the adoption of the color beige as the emblematic and symbolic color of architecture in place of white.
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They're a public sanity one, emblematic of too many people's willful disregard of evidence, proud suspicion of expertise and estrangement from reason.
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The N.B.A.'s emblematic player is the Golden State Warriors' Stephen Curry, the two-time most valuable player and three-time champion.
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Ms. Cáceres's case is emblematic of the impunity and repression that exist in Honduras today, but it is just one of many.
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Nomos is emblematic of the renaissance in fine watchmaking that has taken place in Glashütte since the fall of Communism in 21.
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The victory is emblematic of a nation "accustomed to being robbed of public services — or even robbed by them," one author writes.
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Jerry Kavesh, who offers Western wear like $85 cowboy boots on Amazon, is emblematic of the supply issues that its sellers face.
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While they didn't necessarily kick off the trend, they were emblematic of a lot of issues with crowdfunding on Tumblr-based projects.
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"It's emblematic of what's happened in private markets," said Phil Haslett, co-founder of EquityZen, a secondary marketplace for pre-IPO transactions.
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Jerry Kavesh, who offers Western wear like $85 cowboy boots on Amazon, is emblematic of the supply issues that its sellers face.
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Many South Koreans saw her failure to take charge of the emergency as emblematic of what they considered her aloofness as leader.
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These ads, which cost both candidates roughly $10 million dollars, are emblematic of the astronomical ad spends in 2020&aposs presidential contest.
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Some gay rights advocates rallied to his defense, seeing him as emblematic of young people who are abused because of their sexuality.
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During the 23 campaign he complained that it was actually part of (or emblematic of?) the media's attempt to rig the election.
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But in June, Chief Executive Officer Ken Frazier told CNBC that the situation is emblematic of a broader problem with the marketplace.
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Emblematic of the problem is the fact that Riyadh's King Abdullah Financial District, begun a decade ago, has more skyscrapers than tenants.
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Take Palo Alto, the Silicon Valley city that has become emblematic of the state's reputation for rampant not-in-my-backyard politics.
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Sure, there are cases of student protestors who angrily denounce practices that previous generations thought were emblematic of fairness or free expression.
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" The implication for Dann is clear: "The pinxter flower was emblematic of a kind of personal Pentecost for Thoreau; he could now . . .
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The story of Share Now, formerly known as Car2Go, is emblematic of the twisty path that transportation services took in the 2010s.
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Their riff on the country's strong pickle culture is emblematic; take the kimchee-like banana peppers with local-toasted sunflower-seed oil.
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The eco-friendly, millennial-driven shift to sharing is emblematic of how younger generations view the world they live in, Schulman said.
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Amber Katz, a writer in her 153s living in New York City, is emblematic of the enthusiasm shoppers have for Target's collaborations.
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In this way, the 1944 gang-rape of one black woman in Alabama becomes emblematic of the effacement of an entire gender.
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It would be an audacious, possibly offensive act in a city still recovering from the tragedy, but it is emblematic of Indecline.
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After leaving the White House, Mr. Short became emblematic of the controversy some former aides have faced over working for Mr. Trump.
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Meek Mill, a rapper, has become emblematic of an unjust parole system that too easily drags previously convicted criminals back into prisons.
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The iconic Gitanes gypsy dancer and flying Gauloises helmet cigarette logos have become emblematic of a rooted culture of smoking in France.
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The emblematic mustache he wore throughout his career as a cop has been shaved off, lending him a softer, more fragile appearance.
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A conversation with the trans artist Emmett Ramstad explores how public bathrooms are contested spaces emblematic of how the United States functions.
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Artist Emmett Ramstad, a trans artist living in Minneapolis, sees public bathrooms as contested spaces emblematic of how the United States functions.
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Britpop and indie had become emblematic of the city's nostalgia, in a way that felt tired to a new generation of musicians.
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Eliminating these agreements is not merely emblematic of good intentions, it marks a major first step toward taking toxic and discriminatory behavior seriously.
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And I think she is emblematic of one of the biggest problems of the system: the Adoptions and Safe Family Act of 1997.
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Across Hollywood and inside Apple, the show has become emblematic of the challenges faced by the technology giant as it pushes into entertainment.
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Harvey's ceramic collage portraits of historical figures meld together different symbols and relics, emblematic of what can only be described as British-ness.
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And that situation is emblematic of the kind of middle-ground position that Stamos says invites the most criticism toward Zuckerberg's existing approach.
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As a wartime wife, Mamie all but created the archetype of the wholesome, dutiful housewife that has become emblematic of 1950s American women.
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Some years later, as a teenage Maoist, I regarded these bloated houses and their enormous parks as emblematic of pre-capitalist injustice, etc.
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Hainan can also be viewed as emblematic of much of what "China's rise", a much-used if often ill-defined phrase, actually means.
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It's also emblematic of the show's primary objective — since the beginning, Twin Peaks has been an exploration of the aftereffects of sexual violence.
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The three retweets since January are emblematic of the president's habit of amplifying online praise from random or troublesome corners of the Internet.
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The launch was technically flawless and visually arresting, but it was also emblematic of a changing of the guards in the space industry.
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"This lawsuit really is emblematic of the stakes of who owns this groundbreaking technology," said Michael Ramsey, a smart mobility analyst at Gartner.
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About 2,300 people gathered beneath a canvas tent emblematic of Graham's 1949 Los Angeles revival that marked his breakthrough as a religious leader.
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This deal was emblematic of a pair of strategic imperatives that's becoming increasingly clear and, in this case at least, were highly complementary.
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Image: AP Photo/Robert F. BukatySome people choose to be buried with objects that are emblematic of what they cared for in life.
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Though Confederate soldiers waved a number of flags, none have become as culturally emblematic and parasitic as the rebel flag we know today.
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The sites in New Mexico and Argentina are gorgeous and sublime, yet also emblematic of our anthropocentric disregard for, and exploitation of, nature.
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What would be a better example of a pardon, or at least something emblematic of the way you'd like to see them used?
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Emblematic of a globalized political economy, the fabric also points to how the fashion market obscures international state boundaries and theories of identity.
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The party's campaign arm has repeatedly tried to portray Trump as emblematic of all Republicans, even those who've lashed out against their nominee.
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"He's emblematic of a generation of Japanese politicians who are tone deaf to this kind of issue and out of touch," Cleveland said.
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And Republicans have made it abundantly clear that the Green New Deal is emblematic of their new boogeyman for the 2020 campaign: socialism.
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The overall package is emblematic of the sell-first-fix-later attitude that's getting more and more common in the video game industry.
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Perhaps the most emblematic moment marking the beginning of the end for Christie came several years before he was ever formally a candidate.
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Although it remains on hold, the travel ban is emblematic of Trump's reliance on executive power during his first 85033 days in office.
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Miguel Rivas, who heads the organization's coastal campaigns, said that the Tajamar case is "emblematic" of the struggle to protect mangroves in Mexico.
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If she's successful in building a global edtech business, she'll be emblematic of the meritocratic culture The Valley has falsely claimed to uphold.
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Dementors, the deadly, soul-sucking creatures that dim the light of whomever they descend upon, are widely thought to be emblematic of depression.
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The violin-making video is emblematic of this: it's full of attention being paid to small and otherwise unnoticed parts of the world.
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The regions of Lombardy and Veneto on Sunday conducted autonomy referendums likely to be followed by Piedmont, an emblematic part of Italian unity.
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Between the lines: Small systems like solar lanterns are emblematic of the low bar international organizations have set for solving global energy poverty.
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Naples Pier, stretching 1,000 feet into the sea, has become emblematic of the destination and is a great spot to catch the sunset.
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Duncan, who retired in 2016 and was perhaps the least flashy major star in the N.B.A., was emblematic of the team's unselfish style.
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He did not see its problems as emblematic of struggles in tech, but rather, as a symptom of problems in the grocery space.
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The trident-shape columns so emblematic of the wreckage are housed in a glass pavilion that makes them hard to see from outside.
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She was nervous about how her sexuality might be perceived, a feeling emblematic of how recently pop's seeming acceptance of queerness has developed.
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The cult boutique is revisiting Anna Sui's Grunge and Punk collections (from 1993 and 1994, respectively) by reissuing pieces emblematic of each range.
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This situation is tragic for those who are ill and their families, and is emblematic of society's neglect of our most vulnerable citizens.
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Her story is emblematic of a larger problem: the fact that millions of Americans work with little hope of finding security and comfort.
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But in a scene emblematic of the replay era, the Red Sox had to pause their celebration momentarily while the call was reviewed.
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It is also emblematic of Ramona's power, the command she conjures through the sheer boldness of her presence and bangingness of her body.
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What was shocking was these kids were a dark mirror inversion of the kids that were emblematic of peace and love and light.
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Many Chinese scientists said Dr. He's project was emblematic of their country's intense focus on scientific achievement and a disregard for ethical standards.
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Eovaldi is emblematic of something truly lazy: the ham-fisted attempt to hype a pitcher in the absence of truly hype-worthy players.
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That leniency, prosecutors say, was emblematic of a "grand accord" by the defendants to turn Olympics-related spending into opportunities for personal gain.
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Cosby said in a statement at the time that not all accusers are truthful, and that the Till case was emblematic of that.
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It was hardly the only problem in the Falcons' 20-17 loss to Carolina, but it was emblematic of the team's difficult season.
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When asked by CNN if Sunday night's protest was emblematic of Klobuchar's inability to garner support from racially diverse voters, Buoen said no.
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Plugable's success story was so emblematic that Amazon featured it in a video advertisement designed to lure new business owners to its platform.
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This term — "the hold" — is emblematic in Sharpe's concept of "wake work," referring to the psychic persistence of this space in black life.
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Suddenly, two police officers pull up, and we encounter something that seems to be emblematic of the changes in the Baltimore Police Department.
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He seems to regard it as emblematic of the stale rituals and process-driven nature of conventional politics that he looks down on.
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These are down-home, primal flavors, emblematic of so-called cucina povera, in which simple and delicious meals are made on the cheap.
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His government has promised to break with the failed drug war and end the corruption, most emblematic in police officials working with narcos.
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I could do an entire monologue dismantling that ridiculous article, but it's emblematic of the pervasive bias that we will witness tomorrow evening.
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His performances, while unfailingly musical and dramatic, were emblematic of the 20th century's dismissal of Romanticism in their authenticist strivings and deconstructive idiosyncrasies.
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Thursday's protest ended with a digital cacerolazo, the banging of pots and pans that has become emblematic of popular uprisings in Latin America.
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To these officials, it is a classic case of micromanagement — and emblematic of the way Mr. Tillerson has approached running the State Department.
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"His case is emblematic," said Marielena Hincapié, executive director of the National Immigration Law Center, one of the parties that filed the lawsuit.
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This year seems to be shaping into a make-or-break year for pharmacy companies, emblematic in Walgreens&apos earnings miss on Wednesday.
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That reaction, Mr. McGarry believes, is emblematic of a larger problem: peers assuming, incorrectly, that he prescribes sobriety to his colleagues and employees.
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KELLY EVANS: Even though you think the markets overall are expensive, these emblematic tech same names you actually don't think are that expensive?
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They say Porter's closeness to Kelly is emblematic of a broader tendency on the part of the chief of staff to play favorites.
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It's also emblematic of a broken system that, at every stop, is slanted against black men like Mr. Browder and other minority groups.
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The stultifying slowness of the Arab League summits has become a permanent feature of the Arab world, emblematic of its readiness for change.
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The work you do to see that wall is emblematic of the work to be done by visitors all over the historical galleries.
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Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez said a chant from President Donald Trump's supporters mocking her was emblematic of Trump finding a female politician to attack.
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But it is Mr. Goldstone's second career, as a pop publicist, that is truly emblematic of the British media's evolution since the 1990s.
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Hart Island, the writer Luc Sante says in an interview, is emblematic of an indifference that all cities cultivate out of practical necessity.
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Clinton, it depends whether you see her as somehow emblematic of women or this particular woman, marked and marred by her own history.
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This moment is emblematic of the biggest issue with Game of Thrones' handling of Dorne: It's almost completely unexplored both geographically and culturally.
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Fuhrman was in fact "cocky" and embodied the "hard-nosed white cop detective attitude" that was emblematic of the time, according to Domanick.
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Here resembling a seated frog, a bulging-eyed, broad-shouldered combination of man and animal is emblematic of both power and utter ignominy.
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That's because a lot of that is bringing to light internal issues that is sort of emblematic of the tech industry as well.
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Nonny de la Peña is an immersive journalist in Los Angeles and the chief executive of Emblematic, a company that makes virtual reality content.
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Other companies, like Emblematic Group and Vrse, aim to produce mind-blowing VR experiences; Ryot's goals are at once less artistic and more ambitious.
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On the streets, too, a slew of famous people were spotted, emblematic of the culture war that has been smoldering between Hollywood and Washington.
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From Coinage: See Where 6 Stars Were Before They Were Famous For Thompson, the incident was emblematic of a larger problem in show business.
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The most emblematic case was Berta Caceres, the award-winning Honduran environmental rights activist who was shot and killed at her home in March.
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SAA's woes are emblematic of the struggles of traditional flag carriers around the world, such as Malaysia Airlines, Air India and Air France-KLM.
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Images like S.J. Moodley's "Two women wearing Western attire" from 1981, and Lolo Veleko's "Girl in yellow" from 2003 are emblematic of this dynamic.
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While voice commands are nothing new for Xbox, Cortana's arrival is emblematic of a tightening link between the console and the Windows 10 ecosystem.
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Backed by the Ranchos de Taos Plaza, he is flanked by a white cross, an axe, and paper flowers, imagery emblematic of the Brotherhood.
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It is "emblematic" of the "wilful disregard of the wishes of traditional owners", argues Mick Gooda, a former member of the Human Rights Commission.
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"I think it's a combination of, this is not good for financials and, is this emblematic of what's going with the economy?" he said.
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What about Foxy's feels classically LA to you—that it could only exist in LA, or that it feels emblematic of what LA is?
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"I think it's a combination of, this is not good for financials and is this emblematic of what's going with the economy?" he added.
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"Because the wall has to be beautiful, it has been inspired in by Barragán's pink walls that are emblematic of Mexico," said the studio.
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In the same way Liv and Annalise's blowup is emblematic of how Scandal and HTGAWM can be great, their eventual resolution is equally special.
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The National Rifle Association, candidates argued, was emblematic of how large, well-funded lobbying groups and corporations exert too much influence on elections. Sen.
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Many others believe the magazine lost its voice after the attacks — not least because some of its most emblematic cartoonists died in the shooting.
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His death was emblematic of Yemen's complexity: Mr Saleh was killed by the Houthis, enemies who had become allies, only to become enemies again.
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The case became emblematic — unfairly, the university insisted — of the grip that fee-paying schools supposedly still have over admissions to Oxford and Cambridge.
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After her breakout role in Pretty Woman in the early '90s, everyone wanted that curly, wavy red hair — it was emblematic of the decade.
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In December, a socialist collective in one of Caracas' emblematic hilltop slums launched its own currency, the panal, to try to overcome cash shortages.
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The narratives that have manifested in the West's reception to The Wandering Earth are emblematic of broader narratives about China that the West propagates.
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The ISIS furor was especially emblematic of the kind of conduct that grates on the nerves of the Trump doubters within his own party.
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This former Nashua police officer -- who was the leader of New Hampshire's first SWAT team -- is emblematic of the unsettled base of Republican voters.
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"It's emblematic of how JPMorgan Chase increasingly sees this work as being somewhat central to understanding pretty significant changes in consumer behavior," Falvey said.
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My recent experience at a checkpoint located between Las Cruces and Alamogordo, N.M. is emblematic of the disrespectful treatment we are forced to endure.
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The story of Mr. van Braak's art project is emblematic of the larger narrative of Sonsbeek, which will run this year until Sept. 163.
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Organized into thematic constellations, the exhibition includes emblematic and lesser-known artworks that represent what González calls a regional "decolonial" art and cultural history.
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The cartoon is emblematic of both what most Cubans I spoke to think of the embargo and the view propagated by the Cuban government.
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And that most emblematic of Cannes landmarks, the Palais des Festivals, where every spring Hollywood A-listers are photographed on the famous red carpet?
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Ms. Luis's path to London is emblematic of the migratory patterns of young people seeking greener pastures while much of the Continent is struggling.
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The decision to tap Lau to manage her presidential campaign is emblematic of Warren's deep reliance on a tight-knit group of longtime aides.
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Make no mistake, though: Marc Schechter and Doug Campbell are emblematic of thousands of patients who have successfully traded their pills for a plant.
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Critics say the policy, which was recently altered to address some concerns of separation, is not emblematic of who we are as a nation.
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On the first floor, we also found this homage to Washington Heights in the form of a mural featuring symbols emblematic to the area.
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Breathe seems emblematic of Apple's larger watchOS 3 effort to help you achieve your goals without pressing its own methods and metrics upon you.
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The biggest opponents of earmarks often decried them as wasteful and emblematic of a Washington full of profligate and irresponsible spenders of taxpayer money.
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He was seen as the person who could head off a crisis that was becoming emblematic of the mayor's struggle to address income inequality.
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More generally, the decision in the Amex case is emblematic of how antitrust enforcement came to be so hamstrung in the last 40 years.
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Critics contend that the speeches are emblematic of the too-cozy relationship between public officials and the business sectors they are charged with regulating.
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For Cubans who weren't invited, like jewelry designer Mayelín Guevara, the show was nevertheless emblematic of the sort of attention Havana has long deserved.
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The story is emblematic of China's skill in infiltrating U.S. intelligence, David Wise, a historian and China expert, writes in the New York Times.
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Emblematic of larger issues, she acknowledged how these statements were hurtful, though this didn't mean she wouldn't go on to hurt me yet again.
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He has kept his connection to his birthplace — Scranton, Pa., emblematic of the working-class, Rust Belt territory that joined Trump Country in 2016.
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Listening is among Hassell's finest work and emblematic of his approach to music, one that seeks to transcend distinction between genre and culture alike.
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But the debate over Flint is also emblematic of a broader budget battle that is bound to be fierce in a presidential election year.
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Some of the biggest hits over the Khashoggi case have been in sectors the prince has pitched as emblematic of the new Saudi Arabia.
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These books are emblematic of two distinct strains of political ideology that together form a new reactionary coalition: conservative nationalism and anti-PC liberalism.
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On the left, opponents — including a number of tech startups — describe the TPP as a threat to IP laws and emblematic of opaque policymaking.
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It is in many ways emblematic of the onslaught of Brazil's development, which has yielded some social advances but is now mired in crisis.
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Many view Mr. Bush as emblematic of an approach to public life that has given way to the politics of polarization under President Trump.
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The contrast — some boys deeply engaged in the moment, others horsing around — was emblematic of a dynamic playing out around the country right now.
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They lack what Warhol once did so well, which was to make symbolist art that took reality into its scope in an emblematic way.
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"He is the emblematic example of the personalization of power," said Marc Lazar, a professor at Sciences Po, one of France's top academic institutions.
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The difficulty of understanding that historic vote is emblematic of something larger: just how hard it is to figure out who Roberts really is.
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Supporters of Mr. Sanders said these insiders — mostly elected officials, party leaders and donors — were emblematic of a "rigged" nomination system favoring Mrs. Clinton.
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It is emblematic of the play's thin concept of transformation that the signs of her change are a garage sale and a tennis dress.
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Since its debut, the three-level emporium has become as emblematic of the city as the soon-to-be-shuttered Right Bank stalwart Colette.
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It is emblematic of the yawning divide between Republican and Democratic views of the likely economic outcomes resulting from significantly cutting corporate tax rates.
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Learfield is emblematic of how college sports programs — notably football and men's basketball — began operating like Fortune 500 companies over the past two decades.
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While emblematic of a set of compact sporty coupes of its day, it ultimately could not compete with more popular models like the Mustang.
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The gesture was emblematic of how Hungary's reform-minded governing Communist party was jettisoning what had become the standard authoritarianism of the Soviet bloc.
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Many artists of my own and future generations would greatly benefit from having emblematic artworks, such as the Queen Idia masks, nearby for reference.
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It's a chain that is emblematic of the staying power that kind of merchandise has in retail — both in boom times, and in bust.
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Kijowska said she saw her character as emblematic of people who under communism had been unable to express themselves — emotionally as well as politically.
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Carlson: I also think that Theranos is very emblematic of the past decade or so in the United States and in the tech industry.
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" Ms. Phillipson described her submission as emblematic of today's world: "on the verge of collapse," with "other life-forms starting to prey on it.
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"Places like Reddit are emblematic of the kinds of successes we can have where people go to seek help and get help," Ayers said.
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And I think that's emblematic of what this deal's all about," said Seymour, who also appears regularly as a trader on CNBC's "Fast Money.
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"He is emblematic of the American character," said Julia Idlis, a Russian writer who wrote a play about Mr. Paulson that premiered in Moscow.
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Emblematic of the building's industrial past, the room had high ceilings and oversized windows that let in plenty of natural sunlight, with wooden shutters.
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But he has set an impossible standard for himself, and his late-game struggles against the Knicks were emblematic of a season gone awry.
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This combination of tourism and nuclear weapons is emblematic of Kim Jong Un's strategy for survival, say researchers and people familiar with the project.
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Today, the Miller House is thought to be one of Girard's greatest extant works, and is emblematic of his allusions to fantasy and magic.
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Centrist politicians, of whom Clinton is emblematic, can't see the bright point of light at the end of our very long and dark political tunnel.
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" Asked about the botched deliveries in an interview with Fox News on Monday, FedEx CEO Fred Smith said "Huawei is just emblematic of this problem.
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His decision was emblematic of his unconventional presidential bid that has eschewed traditional campaigning in favor of grassroots organizing through social media and selective interviews.
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But the strange case of Tom Cotton and the CIA is emblematic of Trump's struggle to attract, as he loves to say, the best people.
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In the 20th century it became an emblematic text for radical movements, as the titular character sacrifices herself for her principals against a tyrannical state.
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The Times shock and confusion here is perfectly emblematic of their complete ignorance of the working class in America to include the white working class.
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Devore's riffs were certainly obtuse, but he didn't have the kind of math-rock-indebted approach that was emblematic of bands like Coalesce or Converge.
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The late night host encouraged the students, who have become emblematic of the fight against gun control in the past four months, to keep fighting.
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The manner in which the seventh district has changed is emblematic of the Republican Party's bigger problem in Virginia: it is fading in the suburbs.
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That was emblematic in a T-shirt that some Clinton backers were wearing this week as the Democratic candidates campaigned across town from one another.
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In the same way the Wiimote became more emblematic than the console itself, the Joy-Con is designed to do the same for the Switch.
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That evening is emblematic of the polished and well-financed image cultivated by the Wounded Warrior Project, the country's largest and fastest-growing veterans charity.
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Perhaps the game most emblematic of what the Hawks could do—but didn't—was the one they played against Xavier in Cincinnati on January 14.
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The segregation of Jamaica Estates, then a gated community, was emblematic of what was going on within the city as a whole during that time.
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Image: Ringo H.W. Chiu/APBoth the Soberanes and Sand Fire are emblematic of the so-called 'megafires' that have become eerily common in recent years.
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She sees it as the emblematic catastrophe of the Anthropocene, the geological epoch during which human activity has become the dominant influence on the environment.
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Perhaps most emblematic of how Facebook is combining engineering and creativity to squeeze money out of the developing world is its new Slideshow ad format.
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The intervening years featured another development, the introduction of gay marriage, which for many conservative Christians is both emblematic of their decline and exceptionally aggravating.
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The Lakeview Gusher, which blew on the edge of Taft in 1910, became as emblematic of a boom era as the gold rush farther north.
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This do-it-yourself attitude, the spirit of developers overcoming any and all challenges put in their way, came to be emblematic of Net Yaroze.
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She's an easy target for Republicans who turned her into a poster child for socialism and emblematic of the future direction of the Democratic Party.
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Attractive or not, jobs in the RV industry are emblematic of the kind of work that is increasingly the best option for blue-collar workers.
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The negative tenor of the race is emblematic of a too-close-to-call contest that's likely to help determine which party controls the Senate.
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The triangle is emblematic of the basic graphical component of modern software rendering systems that create 3-D graphical images that the Nvidia hardware generates.
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Despite the particular demographic profile of the District, the population trends in Washington are emblematic of shifts taking place in a number of major cities.
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The Academy's decision not to include Shea Butter Baby, one of the best albums this year, is emblematic of the institution's racist and sexist history.
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Later, he said that he was not bothered by the question, but that it was emblematic of how he was learning to react to criticism.
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Capitals edge Devils in OT NEWARK, N.J. — The theme which emanated from opposite corners of the Prudential Center was emblematic of the Stanley Cup Playoffs.
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It was emblematic of the way the Blues played after a sluggish first period, as they allowed just eight shots in the last 226 minutes.
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It's a very confrontational film and emblematic for this retrospective in that the director is Italian — Franco Rosso — and was living and working in England.
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It's emblematic of a particular type of jealousy between women: It's not that Sarah has some sexual claim over Lauren, or even that she's prudish.
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Lena and Gerry are emblematic of the highly skilled journalists The Washington Post has deployed to cover this complex, ever-expanding and profoundly serious story.
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New York State Senator Daniel Squadron addressed a couple hundred distraught constituents gathered at a hip bowling alley emblematic of Brooklyn's gentrification in recent years.
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High-profile rebel David Davis said the hope is that an "emblematic" vote on the proposed amendment would spur the government to enter further discussions.
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Unlike their parents and grandparents, these new urbanites embraced the energy and authenticity — and the ethnic, racial and sexual diversity — that are emblematic of cities.
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An emblematic piece is Nauman's lithograph from 1973 that simply asks us, in reverse lettering, to "Pay Attention," and follows that address with an obscenity.
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And these signs, created by artist Claire Fontaine (and clearly inspired by artist Jenny Holzer's text-based installations) were emblematic of this post-2016 identity.
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Amazon's attitude toward labor is emblematic of the culture it grew out of — and an augur of the service economy that's on the rise today.
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And that felt so emblematic of the moment: I don't think the protesters were reacting to the play or even the Public's somewhat confrontational staging.
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And the idea of Elsa and her finger pushing through or cracking this ice is emblematic of her being outside and trying to get in.
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But Ms. Coe's experience is emblematic of a shift in how some arts enthusiasts, from wealthy individuals to grant-making foundations, are relating to creators.
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My brother's and his wife's losses, as well as their attempts to prevent them, are emblematic of what the epidemic has brought out across China.
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Each piece was whimsical in its own right, yet not at all caricature-like — a feat emblematic of Gurung's talent and eye for evocative design.
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The example of a young mother of three who in 2007 was refused an early abortion that she needed to receive cancer treatment is emblematic.
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Perhaps the emblematic vocal style of the day, it's widely used in pop and hip-hop, but his ambiguity is of an elevated, refined sort.
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But it was his initial reaction to the event, immediately seeking evidence of an Iranian role, that many saw as emblematic of a conspiratorial bent.
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The challenge to civil-military norms through recent troop deployments at the US border therefore appears to be emblematic of a broader, potentially troubling trend.
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Attending A$AP Rocky's trial in Sweden is emblematic of how O'Brien will likely spend his time at the White House: as a Trump gofer.
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The man, "acted according to instinct, yet his brave gesture, with its knightly resonance, has an emblematic power" and grabbed it, according to the Guardian.
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In 2001, I started to look into Purdue Pharma and OxyContin, a company and a drug that have since become emblematic of the opioid epidemic.
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My sister told me if we ever got separated, to meet her at a Kinokuniya bookstore in the mall underneath the city's emblematic Petronas Towers.
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The failure of trade policy has become emblematic for the failure of economic policy more generally to deliver on the promise of the American dream.
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Unlike many engineers and computer scientists in Silicon Valley, Dr. Nilsson shied away from the start-up frenzy that has been emblematic of the region.
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It's not exactly a Protestant-Catholic split, but the fact that there are two distinct versions of the same chip is emblematic of those fissures.
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"This is emblematic of 'America First,'" said Jonathan Heiliger, an investor at Vertex Ventures, a firm backed heavily by a Singaporean sovereign wealth fund, Temasek.
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His preferred subject matter was books, singly and by the boxful, their creased, age-stained, sometimes Scotch-taped covers exuding companionable familiarity: "The Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas," by Gertrude Stein; "Farewell, My Lovely," by Raymond Chandler; James Joyce's "A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man"; the emblematic "Remembrance of Things Past," by Proust; and the perhaps even more emblematic "Speak, Memory," by Vladimir Nabokov.
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But there is a growing animal rights protest movement calling for a full ban, rallying outside places like Madrid's emblematic Las Ventas bullring during fighting season.
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And it's interesting because you had a deep dive into this one really rich case which was emblematic of sort of the entire wave 1.0, right?
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The pipeline is an emblematic project for President Ollanta Humala, who had hoped it would feed a future petrochemical complex and fast-growing demand for electricity.
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But for all their similarities, they are clearly walking different paths to a Democratic win, which is emblematic of a larger identity crisis for Texas Democrats.
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The success in the home constituency of war-time Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain was emblematic of the appeal of Blair's 'New Labour' in traditionally Conservative areas.
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Trump's decision to fight back under those circumstances, when other Republicans perhaps would not, is emblematic of what Hammer sees as one of his key virtues.
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And the branding of today's protests movements owes a debt to the graphic designers and AIDS activists who created logos like the emblematic "Silence=Death" project.
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He's emblematic of millennial "hustle" culture, an entrepreneur with a global profile who's snagging what he claims to be over $100,000 marketing deals with influential brands.
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Still, considering that LV once served Supreme a cease-and-desist order, this collaboration is emblematic of the ever-expanding intersection of high fashion and streetwear.
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Once emblematic of New York technology and innovation, Gilt Groupe has agreed to be acquired by Hudson's Bay Company for a quarter of its private valuation.
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He's supposed to be the main character's foil, representative of everything that Rick is not and emblematic of the most vile and deplorable acts of cruelty.
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Ms Bachelet imposed the cap on emblematic schools' ability to select based on merit as part of her quest to make the education system more equal.
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While common and emblematic of a new populist, anti-globalization stance held throughout the world, the campaign talk is "very dangerous and indeed irresponsible," he said.
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Except another player emblematic of the era of inflated muscles and pumped-up home-run totals, Sammy Sosa, stayed more or less precisely where he was.
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" When I asked Vic whether he felt that #TonyTigerGate was emblematic of the general misrepresentation and underrepresentation of furries, he replied: "I definitely think it is.
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Lu, a colorful and often brash official by Chinese standards, was at the height of his power seen as emblematic of China's increasingly pervasive internet controls.
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Though "DAMN." was the best-selling album of 2017, none of its tracks has become emblematic of black consciousness, as "Alright", a single off "Butterfly", has.
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She said she jokes that her husband at times behaves like an overgrown boy -- and that she saw his "Access Hollywood" remarks as emblematic of that.
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Singapore's approach is emblematic of the traditional form of "gifted" education, one that uses intelligence tests with strict thresholds to identify children with seemingly innate ability.
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To me, that's so emblematic, that this exists in the very center of a place that's focused on making that sort of impossible for everyone else.
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Mexican-British photographer Monica Alcazar-Duarte sees this color manipulation as emblematic of the way we romanticize what life would be like on the red planet.
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His financial involvement in beauty pageants and professional wrestling is particularly emblematic, in its monetization of women as objects of desire and men as primal brutes.
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Did you feel like the Boston Globe's choice of a photo for you was emblematic of broader ways that the media covers you, or covers women?
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The decision, coming amid the White House's manufacturing-themed week, was emblematic of the difficulty the administration has had navigating both sides of the immigration debate.
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Kim Cattrall, the actress who portrayed Samantha for all those year on SATC, recently paid homage to that emblematic moment by rolling up some sushi IRL.
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Still, while the recovery has outperformed the bear-rebound playbook, the market has not fully resumed the habits and attitudes emblematic of a humming bull market.
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Trump will now stump Monday night in Youngstown, Ohio -- a city emblematic of the decline of the steel industry in Ohio and the broader Rust Belt.
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This is emblematic of deeper administrative failings: "The Italian Rugby Union is not particularly forward-looking," says Rob Kitson, rugby union correspondent of the Guardian. Goalkickers.co.
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Fennessey thoughtfully dissects the problem, using the Netflix-produced Jason Sudeikis vehicle Kodachrome as an example: Kodachrome is emblematic of the morass of Netflix movie offerings.
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But to others, the murders were instead a symbol for 1960s America, emblematic of the Vietnam war, growing social unrest and the psychosis of the times.
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Her resistance makes Poland emblematic of the populist attacks on institutions which hold governing power to account, privileging "the will of the people" over all else.
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"A place that has become emblematic for all of Virginia's past sins/transgressions and yet possesses one of its most stunning achievements," said one Democratic insider.
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Singapore and Malaysia may find their relationship under pressure if the latter's new government withdraws from a rail project that's become emblematic of improved bilateral ties.
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The Magnitsky Acts, which are imposed visa sanctions and asset freezes on human rights violators, have become emblematic of fighting impunity and kleptocracy around the world.
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Still, the scrutiny over Huawei's dealings with those countries is emblematic of growing discord between the United States and China over control of global communications technology.
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Questions over player eligibility in sport are emblematic of wider issues, said Simon Chadwick, a professor of sports enterprise at the University of Salford in England.
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How could I make it emblematic of something larger than just a dislocated thumb, and turn it into a story that someone would want to read?
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Six courageous LGBT activists who, together, formed our flag and toured emblematic places in Russia, taking to every corner a fight that will never be silenced.
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Many antidoping experts and athletes see his dual role as a vice president of the I.O.C. as emblematic of the conflict they say is derailing WADA.
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The anecdote is also emblematic of Scott's higher ambitions: a depiction of a female boss who is critical without being bitchy, caring without being a sap.
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The game was emblematic of the long and hard-checking rivalry between the two Northern European neighbors, with a number of shoving matches and big hits.
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The song examines trust through the lens of cellphone passcodes, and it's emblematic of D.R.A.M.'s ability to find a sympathetic soulfulness in sometimes-unlikely situations.
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Whatever it is—I've got nothing against abstraction—it's emblematic of the show's unfulfilled hope of making its monologues rise to the level of watchable drama.
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These motorcyclist agitprops are emblematic of Harley's current problems, and why Mr. Trump's misguided trade strategy is hurting the company's employees, its shareholders and our economy.
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The Venice case is emblematic of the broader frustrations of the Black Lives Matter movement over a lack of progress, despite national attention to the problem.
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It's the sort of weather that, of course, feels emblematic of climate change, but everywhere you look, no one's really sure what to make of it.
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Especially emblematic of Ms. Simon's sensibility is a work installed on a purple wall (the ocher yellow vinyl floor is one of Ms. Mogadassi's few additions).
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The property in question, above, is emblematic of that: A rent-regulated building was torn down to make way for the 79-story luxury condominium tower.
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This is emblematic of the production's choice to deliver the story to the audience in as close to the Broadway manner as the material can accommodate.
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Raicovich has left the museum after three years reportedly due to differences of vision with the museum's board, but this exhibition is emblematic of her tenure.
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Sunshine Cinema, operated by Landmark Theaters, became popular among neighbors and enthusiasts for its distinct selection of films, emblematic honey-colored brick facade and stadium seating.
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Mr. Prince is emblematic of the type of parallel government apparatus that Mr. Bannon built inside the administration during his time as Mr. Trump's chief strategist.
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That was emblematic of Mr. Escalante's determination to break down barriers that have seemed to define art narrowly and make it the province of wealthy elites.
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It's emblematic of this film's tone that the role falls through — putting his work visa situation into a bad bind — a half-hour into the movie.
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The debate, hosted by CNN, was emblematic of the way in which the coronavirus crisis has altered the political world — and will continue to do so.
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"It is emblematic of just complete and total mutiny and unabated anger at the M.T.A. for the daily abuses that riders have to endure," he said.
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The most emblematic example of the Fox News pivot is what happened to Trish Regan, a reliably Trump-friendly host who has interviewed the president twice.
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The event made national headlines and was viewed by conservative commentators as emblematic of a nationwide problem: liberal students refusing to hear speech they disagreed with.
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Both are emblematic of a common theme in his early albums: loving tributes to Hayley, alongside literally dozens of songs which describe hateful acts toward women.
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Although the hawkers were unlicensed, they were supported by Hong Kong residents who saw them as emblematic of local culture, which they feel is under threat.
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Along with the composer Milton Babbitt, who died in 20143, he was once considered emblematic of so-called uptown, the world of the academic avant-garde.
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"JPY offers better investment prospects in our view and is more emblematic of a safe-haven currency than the USD at this point," the analysts added.
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