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"grumble" Definitions
  1. grumble (about something) | grumble (that…) something that you complain about because you are not satisfied
  2. a long low sound synonym rumble

428 Sentences With "grumble"

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

I grumble, I grumble, and then some idea comes along.
Unlike the normal 5s, the 5se (grumble, grumble) will have NFC for all your Apple Pay needs and Live Photos.
The final series finale — the last of three parts which easily could have been one more concise part, grumble grumble — feels like more of a launching point than an ending.
Purists would grumble, but purists grumbled about the forward pass.
The delay, Italian bankers grumble, has discouraged other possible mergers.
Bankers grumble about regulation as well as low interest rates.
But many grumble that the big fish swim off unharmed.
Think of it as the gremlin making your stomach grumble.
Villagers sometimes grumble that addiction is as bad as ever.
But they also grumble about it from time to time.
Still, Christian conservatives could have had more to grumble about.
They grumble about delays, poor train etiquette and rising fares.
Already, some of the differences are making House Republicans grumble.
At another music festival, customers might grumble, or even riot.
So, will we grumble and tweet the same tired outrage?
The symptoms: Simple — you look at your paycheck and grumble.
Most real estate agents grumble about online home estimates, too.
Only real musicians should make music, goes the initial grumble.
But some hospitals still grumble they have not seen the discounts.
Many riders grumble about high prices, poor service and technological weaknesses.
Democrats grumble about possible leaks, and prefer investing in renewable energy.
Locals grumble about regulation, fuel costs and the dearth of crew.
I grumble the whole way with N. sympathetically patting my back.
Many have struggled to find work, and conservatives grumble about ghettoisation.
And critics grumble that they're lending charm to a repressive regime.
They grumble about tax, but have become superb at avoiding it.
There's no deep grumble in my voice to strengthen these words.
Some monks grumble about the tide of visitors overwhelming their devotions.
Republicans may grumble over this, but they are Trump's indecent enablers.
They must muddle through in a fog of grumble and contempt.
Salaries, they grumble, have been virtually flat for almost two decades.
MANY PARENTS and grandparents will grumble about today's screen-obsessed youth.
Both foreign and local competitors grumble about the circumstances of Jio's birth.
Chinese travellers abroad often grumble about other countries' backwardness in electronic payments.
Sceptics of capitalism grumble that the scheme has enriched dodgy fund managers.
But there are those who will grumble about how this came about.
It assumes that activists can be appeased with specific promises, while the moderation of many older Democrats manifests itself more in general cultural attitudes (the kids these days with their political correctness, grumble grumble) than detailed policy preferences.
Some might quietly grumble that, rude or not, Mr Bonderman had a point.
The banks grumble about a surfeit of rules as well as of capital.
That is affecting revenue, which is what is really behind Mr Sorahan's grumble.
Everyone starts looking for Rory through the house, while Matt continues to grumble.
Some cinemagoers grumble that today's Egyptian cinema emphasises glamour and women over plot.
It ends up serving as the "farm team" for Silicon Valley, Canadians grumble.
Investors began to grumble for bigger profits, as they are wont to do.
Ron switched off his camera with a grumble, commiserating with a nearby malcontent.
Again, that's for free unless you're about to grumble about your tax dollars.
Wealth Matters Every year around this time, people grumble about their tax bills.
Beyond that, Republican moderates are starting to grumble about Democratic tactics more generally.
My colleagues around the country grumble about students' sloppy emails and blithe informality.
In parts of Africa people grumble about competition from Chinese shopkeepers or construction firms.
Most New Yorkers grumble when they see the telltale "No Parking" signs on lampposts.
The telltale grumble is replaced with a sonic quality closer to gasoline direct-injection.
Allies grumble that American officials have not shared hard evidence to back their claims.
Image by APMost of us can do little more than grumble about Donald Trump.
Europeans grumble that American firms engage in too many clever tricks to avoid tax.
Although orthodox economists grumble about Mr Macri's gradualism, Argentine investors seem to endorse it.
Those able to afford tickets to the Games have also found reasons to grumble.
But even that indirect reference to history prompted some in the community to grumble.
The well-to-do in Kolkata (formerly Calcutta) still grumble about Marwari money-men.
Pundits grumble that the campaign, like "Seinfeld", an American sit-com, is "about nothing".
The French love a grumble; no day quite satisfies without its dose of bile.
While most of us grumble about our taxes at some point, we pay them.
I could smell the chili frying from outside, and my stomach started to grumble.
Instead, Great Hill seemed to think that they'd grumble and then do as told.
Politicians and companies in the West constantly grumble about Chinese rivals pilfering their intellectual property.
Still, while they grumble about higher rates, they aren't getting hit with the full amount.
The defense budget adheres to the agreement, but there's still plenty lawmakers will grumble at.
More worrying, managers grumble that being in the public eye has become a gigantic headache.
Rich countries grumble that poor ones can still get away with too much carbon-emitting.
LONDON (Reuters) - Rafael Nadal had plenty to grumble about during the first week of Wimbledon.
My stomach starts to grumble so I eat a snack of apples and peanut butter.
Some American politicians grumble about the involvement of a navy so unfriendly to the West.
I eat my chicken, pear, and apple salad and grumble about the Mondayest Tuesday ever.
But lately, we've been feeling like something's missing (cue low and empty stomach grumble): food.
Shareholders may occasionally grumble that Amazon always deploys all the capital it generates into expansion.
Wells has a deep, oaky baritone that roughens to a grumble in its lower register.
Researchers discover vulnerabilities in software; they disclose them to vendors; vendors grumble and fix it.
But residents have already started to grumble about the newcomers encroaching on their quiet town.
Outside of public hearings, some Republicans are beginning to grumble about Pruitt's approach to policymaking.
No doubt some fans will grumble and moan, but he has delivered on his promises.
Some White House reporters privately grumble that he strays way too far into advocacy territory.
When things are slow, dip-netters grumble that the larger boats take too many fish.
"You can grumble all you want about those idiots in the Congress," he told NPR.
Some of the family members grumble about the accommodations the military affords the terrorism suspects.
Local business leaders quietly grumble there is no dynamism on the ground, little consumer demand.
Business people, once friendly to Mr Hernández, grumble about slowing growth, corruption and rising taxes.
The possibility of him listening to her grumble about her "bad days" is a paramount request.
You've already been tossing and turning for a few hours when your stomach starts to grumble.
I would like to take this opportunity, again, to grumble about the show's pop culture inconsistencies.
Local businessmen grumble that South African firms with operations in Botswana do not spend enough locally.
Business owners grumble at Scandinavian-level VAT rates of 24% and a series of new taxes.
Users already grumble about having to scroll through pages of ads before getting to search results.
Though some Mexicans grumble about pensioners pushing up house prices, many welcome the trade they bring.
Rich countries grumble that poor ones can still get away with emitting too much carbon dioxide.
Indian firms grumble, with some justification, about their products being shut out of the Chinese market.
But there's a perpetual sense of meaning being lost as characters grumble incomprehensibly into the gale.
Some still grumble about Bill Clinton's ruinous insistence, as president, that Haiti drop its rice tariffs.
Buried beneath all the "mustn't grumble" and "I'm terribly sorry, but…" is a streak of rebellion.
While businesses have jumped at the opportunities, some of their workers grumble about the customers' attitudes.
"We all might grumble here or there or sweat and curse a bit," Ms. Boesky said.
People grumble about the traffic, the fees that organizers pocket and the lack of vendors' originality.
They grumble that your work, career or ambition is getting in the way of the relationship.
Some of us may grumble about the darkness (which hits the Southern Hemisphere in six months).
He would look back at her and grumble, maybe stop talking, but he would keep grinning.
Two days before she went missing, she texted a friend to grumble about a vendor dispute.
No-one likes red tape, yet we grumble and go along with it when it's necessary.
Everybody else has to cut costs, slash investments and cling on to cash, chief executives grumble.
Airlines generally worry about how customers vote with their wallets not how they grumble with their words.
In order to get this sort of prolonged, low-frequency grumble, you'd need something big to resonate.
Even genuine refugees should not be able to "shop" for asylum in their preferred country, they grumble.
And householders generally grumble a lot if they have to pay extra to have their rubbish collected.
Some of the developers I spoke to at WWDC were ready to grumble about today's status quo.
Visitors to any of the country's national parks grumble about overflowing waste bins and shuttered public toilets.
Mr Trump is hardly the first American president to grumble about Chinese trade practices or Russian adventurism.
Some officers grumble that this distracts attention from drugs, which yield most profit for organised-crime gangs.
My coworkers and I all grumble about how we're all behind on preparing for student-teaching conferences.
And any of them may make you want to endlessly grumble about how utterly horrible she is.
Baku's taxi-drivers now grumble about rising prices and the money being wasted on the Grand Prix.
She would get up the next morning, grumble, shower, and be ready do it all over again.
But now their retail customers may grumble that the country's competition watchdog has spared them a mauling.
Despite all this, insiders grumble that civilians have not forced services to change spending patterns drastically enough.
Leaders in the Pentagon quietly grumble that by focusing on bands, Congress is going after small potatoes.
Foreign workers, unable to party in Dubai on weekends, grumble about the claustrophobia of buttoned-up Doha.
Migrants grumble they only get sandwiches, apples and fruit juice while frequent rain floods into their tents.
He would look back at her and grumble, and maybe stop talking, but he would keep grinning.
Employees complain about parking, suck up to their boss, and grumble about their pay and budget cuts.
Studied up on all the various stories and investigative threads we were pursuing that he might grumble about.
"Customers grumble for a while, but then get on with it," said Paul Harris of Seahawk Marine Foods.
They grumble that green activists and politically correct urban types have allowed the return of an old enemy.
Ontario is already an expensive place to do business, especially because of its high energy costs, firms grumble.
Crime is up, and longtime residents grumble about Eastern Europeans who have moved in and keep to themselves.
This is the time for family and friends, food and television—and often, the pious grumble, for overindulgence.
The province now sells nearly all its oil to the United States, which pays too little, Albertans grumble.
While one can quibble with his methods, Trump is correct to grumble about the inequities inside NATO today.
In Leh, Buddhist women grumble that there aren't enough Buddhist men around because so many have become monks.
GRUMBLE JONES CT., 14015, No. B-Heather K. Nicholson to James E.M. Shaw and Angela Lynn Johnson, $260,000.
Not all of these books were successful, and some poor titles even caused retailers to grumble about sales.
Some fans, many of them European, grumble that modern gymnastics has forsaken artistry for the sake of athleticism.
Many in Brussels grumble that she has yet to spell out what she wants in the long run.
Some grumble when environmental objections are raised, given that two-thirds of Kenya's electricity already comes from renewable energy.
I find my voice lowering to a grumble, my words shrinking to monosyllables, my eyes gluing to the wall.
Street-side cafes are filled with the grumble and hiss of polished coffee machines serving up espressos and macchiatos.
If there is a grumble about the example that Dow sets, it is that consumers may lose from consolidation.
If this happens, free-traders will surely grumble that Mr Trump has again chosen commercial conflict over co-operation.
Even Hansen would struggle to find much to grumble about from last week's 42-8 victory over the Wallabies.
Yet many Gazans grumble (quietly, since Hamas has informants everywhere) that it has, in effect, given up the fight.
In America economists grumble that prominent researchers are more likely to have the connections needed to obtain such data.
From there she slipped, via a rambling, rumbling grumble about Hawk-Eye, to a 6-4 6-2 defeat.
When he was sent to the minors after throwing six shutout innings as a rookie, he did not grumble.
You get the nurses, the handmaidens, the soldiers who grumble and complain about the political figures of the day.
Arab politicians grumble that these projects are happening too slowly, but admit that the money is making a difference.
The only signs of life are in the faculty rooms, where the underemployed professors grumble about their enforced sabbatical.
There was a slight grumble and some speculation when Valiant previewed the book in August and announced Clinton's inclusion.
Privately, Republicans frequently grumble about having to respond to the latest presidential tweet, scandal or attack on sitting lawmakers.
To an aviation enthusiast or history lover, little compares with the joyous grumble of a large radial aircraft engine.
Some of his political allies have already begun to grumble, complaining Tuesday that the agreement was not "inclusive" enough.
Whenever a product is updated, there inevitably are people who grumble about change and wish things had stayed the same.
CDP candidates grumble that they would do even better but if Ms Koike was not splitting the anti-LDP vote.
The overall result, bosses grumble, is that American firms are puny in China, making 4% of their global sales there.
Tan said his employees used to grumble about "leg pain, back pain, everywhere pain" but now they don't complain anymore.
Uighurs, a mostly Muslim ethnic-Turkic people who make up nearly half of Xinjiang's residents, have particular reason to grumble.
Dear Heloise: As a wedding planner, I've discovered some of the major things people grumble about at weddings: Cash bars.
People in the U.K. sometimes are so unaware of what goes on elsewhere that they will grumble about the £230.
The similarities are so clear to Klobuchar aides that they often grumble when Buttigieg uses similar phrases to the senator.
I've also been able to take this experience and write about it in my new book, The Grumble Free Year.
The shots might make our stomachs grumble as a result, but our searches often lead to new culinary hotspots to try.
Sydneysiders stuck in traffic jams still grumble that all that money would have been better spent improving the city's creaking infrastructure.
Having stayed mum in China, American businesses would grumble to their own government, which would take their complaints to the Chinese.
The football fans that grumble about being muddled by ABBA will be irritated even more by Mr Palacios-Huerta's next suggestion.
I'm not ready to install tiny microphones all over my house that can listen to my grumbles—and I do grumble.
Users continue to grumble over Snapchat's vastly unpopular redesign, resulting in the departure of several high-profile users and declining engagement.
Google decided to use a custom AC adapter instead of USB, which I will grumble about but ultimately not worry about.
But with its severely tarnished public image, the financial institutions could grumble, although there wasn't much they could do about it.
Hezbollah fighters and supporters openly disdain the Syrian Army, and grumble that Russia has not given air support to its fighters.
Seinfeld's delivery often ascended to a high-pitched warble; David favored a guttural grumble that could become a yell without warning.
My stomach started to grumble, so I headed to Main Street, a charming section of State Route 29 in St. Helena.
Salaries for entry-level white-collar jobs are so low that people grumble about it being more profitable to work construction.
Jag purists may grumble about adding a sport utility vehicle, but don't forget the excellent business decision it was for Porsche.
Tribal opponents grumble that General Hifter's army is dominated by his Furjan clan, and that his sons act as his enforcers.
I feel like I too am muddling through in a fog of many feelings but definitely, in there, grumble and contempt.
Adults certainly grumble about bosses and banging radiators, but that doesn't mean we aren't thankful for our jobs and heated homes.
Grumble Plum, a creature reminiscent of "Star Wars": She looks like an obese Chewbacca but sounds more like Jabba the Hutt.
With the 6.6-liter engine loping along without strain at highway speeds, there's little diesel engine grumble to assault the eardrums.
The parents grumble and embrace, and the kids bicker, just like my siblings and I did when we went to Disneyworld.
They grumble that the country saves too much and spends too little and that Germany exports far more goods than it imports.
That day, seismographs all over the world registered a very low-frequency tremor, a strange grumble that lasted for around 30 minutes.
If i-buyers can dispense with at least some of them, and speed up home sales in the process, few would grumble.
And will the Tony Pulis magic remain at West Brom, keeping them up even as fans increasingly grumble about his pragmatic approach?
Russia has already begun reaching out to Jordan and Lebanon, which grumble about the difficulty of absorbing huge numbers of Syrian refugees.
Though locals in Danang grumble about the rudeness of Chinese gamblers, "we welcome everyone," says a Danang official, with a stiff smile.
While some podcast veterans grumble about the rise of celebrity talk shows, famous podcasters are good for the industry as a whole.
Some grumble that high-flyers will struggle to order their constables to carry out tasks they have not had to do themselves.
While deficit-hawks look on in disgust and tax experts grumble about fine print which is an utter mess, bosses are ecstatic.
While some hardcore adblock fans might grumble, they'll have to either accept seeing ads, or miss out on the service Facebook provides.
Another would oblige the environmental regulator to decide on licences for projects within ten months; this can now take years, investors grumble.
Kong tilted his head up and, with Miller tweaking the nose, sniffed at Ann's feet and then let out a satisfied grumble.
Every year on May 9, Victory Day, Russians grumble at the West's refusal to acknowledge that Russia won the Second World War.
While many people will grumble about the change, Apple argues that it will actually make users better off in the long run.
Then there are those who grumble that, for a conservative institution rived by mutually hating factions, it is merely business as usual.
While some US researchers grumble about delays in sharing epidemiological data, China's overall transparency is far better today than in the past.
Its new chief, Gustavo Vega, is a non-partisan academic, though some observers grumble that he and his colleagues lack expertise in elections.
It is healthy for investors to force mature firms to penny-pinch—however much their bosses grumble—and redirect funds to growing companies.
A slimmer majority would embolden Tories who disagree with her brand of Conservatism—and there are plenty of them—to grumble more loudly.
But French people who settle in the French-speaking province regard it as a rough outpost of empire, or so some Quebeckers grumble.
It hopes to win seats in resource-dependent parts of Queensland, and so has not committed to phasing out coal-mining, they grumble.
Lin's iPhone-shot series originally began on his Instagram account, after the artist noticed a gap in how people grumble on social media.
We can't complain when teams shiv a guy on the way out of town, then grumble that we're missing out when they don't.
Supporters will grumble under their breath, the stadium will turn monochrome, and the discordant tinkling of a grand piano will echo through Islington.
And, while publishers still grumble about Amazon, they've settled into an uneasy truce with e-books, of which the market share has plateaued.
The Japanese grumble that the South Koreans are emotional, renege on agreements and have made hostility to Japan part of their national identity.
Revenue: Between $250 million and $500 millionEmployees: 1,000Marketers often grumble about wanting to be able to work with more than one marketing cloud.
We grumble when the Obamas travel so expensively to Hawaii, site of the president's youth; it's because that's probably where his heart is.
Mr. Netanyahu, 43, is calculating and gruff; he picks his words slowly and carefully, his deep voice coming across almost like a grumble.
Others grumble about his handling of the ATP Cup, which will be relaunched in the opening week of the 2020 season in Australia.
The ones who grumble the most are the business travelers who now have to spend two-and-a-half hours laying over somewhere.
My excitement only continued to build (and my stomach let out another grumble) as I watched the floating plates rotate around the bar.
You might grumble skeptically at the notion that parks and plants make a real difference in our happiness, but the research is convincing.
While Republicans continue to grumble about Trump in private, they&aposre afraid to stand up to him publicly, even on the smallest matters.
As the boys got closer, the other Middle House boys began to grumble that Zaka gave Nicodemus privileges that were denied to them.
It's the perfect day to overindulge in food, watch some funny commercials and grumble over the fact that your team didn't make it.
Of course, the Sanders wing of the Democratic Party will grumble at Clinton's "selling out" as she tacks back to the political center.
All this should placate shareholders, who have had plenty to grumble about—and whom Mr Thiam faces at the annual meeting on April 28th.
In London 45,000 homes have been built since 2014—the highest rate in ten years—but locals grumble many are pads for footloose foreigners.
While ordinary Saudis grumble at the austerity on social media, many say they understand the need for it, and businessmen praise the authorities' decisiveness.
I definitely grumble when I file my business taxes, and I have certainly complained about having to take red-eye flights to make gigs.
Other GPs grumble that Babylon is stealing their young and healthy patients, funding for whom has historically subsidised the care of older, infirm folk.
So before you scroll through this list, one note: Don't grumble about what's missing without searching the page for whatever you're hoping to find.
The reaction — to the bad jokes, to the poll's cancellation, to the size of the field and to everything else — has been to grumble.
As long as the BAT does not specifically target China, Beijing will grumble, hope others take the lead, and itself remain on the sidelines.
While Israeli politicians grumble that their country is unfairly portrayed by the media, its television producers are cashing in on Israel's reputation for spymastery.
While senators grumble about the need for education and transparency, they are forgetting the primary reason a Supreme Court exists in the first place.
And some Republicans in the upper chamber grumble that the House has raced out ahead on tax reform without enough input from the Senate.
We all grumble and grimace as we trudge through the snow, heads down, faces firmly looking at the ground to avoid the stinging wind.
Many members of the Saxon CDU, perhaps the country's most conservative branch, grumble about the cordon sanitaire their leadership has erected around the AfD.
Yet many grumble that a city of 418,000 people — including numerous descendants of Red Army soldiers — and 2,000 monuments does not need another one.
On Pro Football Some players grumble about a lot of rules to curb dangerous tackles but insist they are still hitting very, very hard.
Republicans could also face an uphill battle with Republicans from border towns, whose constituents would likely grumble at construction projects running through their backyards.
While Ms. Pelosi gets generally good marks from her rank and file, some centrist members now grumble privately that she made some tactical missteps.
A senior executive at Euro Disney suggests that the smallest investors are unlikely to grumble about that price, even if they are out of pocket.
Christa Scott-Reed achieves the most distinctly different interpretations, in roles ranging from a serene spirit guide to a ghost who does nothing but grumble.
Some people in China privately grumble that the party itself, with its intolerance of dissent, is the biggest obstacle to the country's soft-power development.
Rather, she calmly confronts her husband's biases, hands him her purse, thanks him, and turns away to do her job, leaving him there to grumble.
And what's striking is how few Republicans, however much they may grumble privately, have been willing to stand up against this redefinition of the party.
The two men grumble about how long it takes for the bus to arrive, but neither man is particularly impressed or intrigued by the other.
I don't recall reporters combing the poorest, most crime-ridden parts of Britain in 2012 to find people ready to grumble about the London Olympics.
She can hear the echo of it deep in her ears, even amid the clatter and scrape of silverware, the grumble of voices around them.
At a campaign stop in Northern Virginia, he avoided mentioning the Khans by name, but continued to grumble about his treatment by the news media.
It was our local fault line having a midnight grumble, letting off some steam, as opposed to "the big one" we all know is coming.
Ever since Protomartyr's 2012 debut album, "No Passion All Technique," Mr. Casey has placed his weary grumble of a voice somewhere between speech and song.
More often than not, frustrated residents can only plead their case to disinterested neighbors in the hopes of influencing the outcome, or simply to grumble.
Though lawmakers are likely to grumble, the decision is unlikely to be challenged in court or to provoke the fury of Mr. Johnson's last suspension.
This was not supposed to be, as some in Seoul grumble, the "Pyongyang Games," a play on the North Korean capital's phonetic similarity to Pyeongchang.
A lot of non-evangelicals say they are outraged by prominent evangelicals' support for Trump, and I've even heard some evangelicals grumble privately about it.
With flailing arms, kicking legs, and the occasional put-out grunt or grumble, the maître d's expressiveness adds a lot of character to the process.
Especially amongst those who started early and have stuck with the game, it's not uncommon to hear people grumble about how they wish they'd chosen differently.
Mr Trump continues to grumble about the NFL on Twitter, but he lost this fight: not only players, but Republican team owners came out against him.
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell plans to hold a procedural vote on it anyway next week, while Trump and other Republicans grumble about what went wrong.
Imports are allowed from Chile (at up to twice the price Mexican ones used to fetch), and also from Peru, though Ticos grumble about the taste.
Fred turned back to take one last look at the fish and chip shop, and heard the faint grumble of another train pulling into the station.
It will also grumble that the deal forces it to implement the central government's austerity policies, given that Scotland still has very limited power to borrow.
His idea of small talk was to grumble about the phone bill his wife incurred in nightly calls to their son, a homesick refugee in Germany.
Russians may grumble at Putin's policies, but even his domestic opponents praise his pursuit of Russian derzhavnost, and chafe at Western attempts to ignore this pursuit.
Bankers grumble about subterranean official interest rates—they must pay the European Central Bank 20123% a year to deposit cash—that show no sign of rising.
Originalists will probably grumble about this darker spin's lack of camp and flair, but there's plenty to like here, even with so many superhero-story options.
John and I suggested a "grumble-free" challenge to our kids and promised a family cruise if we worked on learning to be grateful without grumbling.
The Global Times took a bluntly majoritarian line in its editorial, suggesting that when Western elites grumble about Uighurs, they underplay the rights of all Chinese.
We can choose to grumble our way through April Fools, OR we can sip the onslaught of pranks down as smoothly as that second double-espresso shot.
As more and more goes wrong on the voyage, and the wind dies, the sailors begin to grumble that someone must have forgotten to touch the horseshoe.
Public market investors continue to grumble over how many big new tech IPOs are designed with dual-class structures that give disproportionate voting control to founder/CEOs.
Yet even thriving local businesses there grumble that America gets the raw end of trade deals, and that foreign rivals benefit from unfair subsidies and lax regulation.
Her comments have led other members of the 21-person commission to grumble that Turner is more interested in sowing discord as a publicity and fundraising tool.
At the same time, music executives grumble that it has never been a substantial source of revenue and is a vexing outlet for leaks and unauthorized material.
Some shop owners whisper that they feel as if they are under occupation or grumble that they were forced to paint the Syrian flag on their doors.
Inner voices are a facet of ordinary life: They grumble and chastise and offer up opinions, though to what extent differs from one person to the next.
Some trimmers grumble about "cherry pickers," who select the largest cannabis buds for themselves, leaving the others with smaller specimens that won't amount to as much weight.
Some Democrats grumble about the size of the field, but—short of running out of money—no candidate yet has a strong enough incentive to drop out.
Ordinary Uzbeks, too, feel free to lampoon the campaign and grumble about the political class, without fear of being dragged off in the middle of the night.
On a private Facebook group for flex drivers working the Hanover, Md., station near B.W.I., the replacements for postal workers and FedEx truckers trade tips and grumble.
Ellison hails from the progressive wing of the party, and some Democrats privately grumble that the party didn't lose the 85033 election because they weren't liberal enough.
Many of these lawmakers admit to Conyers' long list of accomplishments, yet they privately grumble he has been in office too long and should have left already.
Local women copy the fashion, makeup and hairstyles of the actresses; local musicians grumble at the popularity of Nigerian imports, like Don Jazzy and the P-Square twins.
The notion of the EU as a "global player" looks farcical at a time when Beijing, for example, barely pays attention to Brussels (and vice versa, grumble some).
What is more, the Democrats retort, it is a bit rich for Republicans to grumble that the names of Americans were not revealed to the intelligence oversight court.
Most likely, Hillary Clinton will win the election in two weeks, and Trump supporters will grumble about it but won't try to defy the will of the voters.
Hence, Miracle Workers is set in heaven, among the angels who grumble about their boss (God), while also sharing some DNA with series like The Office or Superstore.
Many liberal intellectuals, particularly those active in opposition politics, grumble about the beautification efforts, which went into high gear after mass anti-Putin protests in Moscow in 2011.
"Some incumbents grumble about having to provide wholesale access to their competitors," Blais said to the annual conference of the Canadian Chapter of the International Institute of Communications.
" As a lifelong New Yorker, she recalled how in the age before social media "all you could really do was shake your fist and grumble under your breath.
In the eighth inning, he threw 10 consecutive pitches out of the strike zone, and the crowd, often critical of home plate umpires, had no cause to grumble.
But while you may grumble in the privacy of your armchair, the journalists who hold the mirror up to you do so publicly and at great risk to themselves.
In remote hamlets and villages, with names such as Le Bacon and Le Bacon Vieux, mayors grumble about a lack of local schools, jobs, or phone and internet connections.
San Francisco has, along with other Bay Area cities, used ranked choice voting since 2002 and while there are many who grumble, the method generally seems to be popular.
Snooty critics might grumble about his folksy style, but it is hard to think of any other journalist who has explained as many complicated subjects to so many people.
Chewie faced plenty of disrespect even in just the first movie, between the medal snub and Leia's memorable grumble about getting "this big walking carpet" out of her way.
"One thing about Andrew is that I never once heard him grumble, I never found him once without a smile on his face," his wife told The Daily Mail.
Hence, Miracle Workers can be set in heaven, among the angels who grumble about their boss (God), while also having some of the vibe of The Office or Superstore.
But those same Londoners are also quietly impressed by the way Transport for London runs the capital's transport network — you can tell, because they don't constantly grumble about it.
Although some companies and their shareholders will surely grumble, this would hardly be a burden, given that 1 percent represents a typical daily fluctuation in many companies' stock prices.
If he leaves the UFC with a grumble, western Long Island might shed a tear or break an alarm clock and bedside lamp, but the UFC machine will keep chugging.
Doubtless some will grumble over this, much as Margaret Thatcher did after the British-Argentine conflict of 1982 when a service of remembrance recalled the war dead of both countries.
Erdogan has made no hint so far that he might pull out of the deal, but Turkish officials grumble that Europe is not living up to its side of it.
The part of the sound spectrum where the NightHawks do most of their work is the low end, where they rumble and grumble with a satisfyingly full and rich bass.
Locals grumble over the prices they receive for their grains, sugar cane and tapioca, as almost everyone works on the land (just over a third of Thai workers do overall).
Sometimes the snowday warning was a misfire: There are forecasts when everyone rushes and hunkers for an apocalypse that never comes; and then people grumble that the city's gone soft.
And middle-age and older shoppers continue to grumble about a sliding quality of fabric and fit in many of the classic items on which M & S made its name.
Many fans have started to grumble about the repetitive tedium, and this week's episode feels like one of the first to want a resolution as badly as the viewers do.
It's another to make it a place that people really want to go, producing dishes that sway even critics who might otherwise grumble about the whole towering Jean-Georges edifice.
French distributors grumble that Mr. Besson's films — like "Lucy," his 2014 English-language blockbuster starring Scarlett Johansson — skew French box-office ratings, since he wildly outperforms every other French director.
In America, it is now used interchangeably with "person of color" and "nonwhite," and while there are those who will grumble, "minority" just isn't that much of a feather-ruffler.
The band of bike-riding unpaid vigilantes chases down petty criminals in Vietnam's largest city and the neighboring province of Binh Duong, where residents grumble about rising crime and ineffectual policing.
EDUARDO ENGELFormer president of the Presidential Advisory Council on Conflicts of Interest, Influence Peddling and CorruptionSantiago, Chile "Grumble and be damned" (March 11th) alleged a lack of free speech in Singapore.
Giving Sanders more Hillary Clinton/Wall Street ammunition to grumble about, billionaire hedge fund manager James Simons gave $3.5 million to Priorities USA Action, the Super PAC supporting Clinton, in January.
As much as marijuana providers may grumble about the tax and regulatory obligations imposed on them, Mr. Stroup, who founded Norml in 1970, considers it merely a cost of doing business.
U.S. officials privately grumble that the fighting has allowed al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula -- al Qaeda's most deadly branch in the region -- and ISIS to strengthen their gains in Yemen.
Archaic government regulations have in recent years pushed up production costs to around 20173 rupees ($2.70) per kilogram, well above average auction prices of 140 rupees, which makes large cultivators grumble.
Executives grumble that it is causing more of a headache than Britain leaving the EU. If Mr Sanders ends up in the White House, they will face a transatlantic pincer movement.
Lawyers like Robert Lighthizer, the United States Trade Representative, grumble that the WTO has allowed China to take advantage of everyone else and its outdated rules have stopped America protecting itself.
Everyone was Very Much Over It™, so when Lindsay offered him the last rose during the first ceremony, fans watching let out a collective grumble in one direction: the producers.
With another shift it could more than double its output, but managers at the factory grumble that their bosses in Japan do not want to make full use of their investment.
It's long been my reporting experience that among the few things that many Canadians grumble about more than their governments are the election campaigns that allow them to change those governments.
The cynical will grumble that Obama is merely making a rhetorical shift for supporters in an election year, at a time when he knows he cannot pass anything resembling a public plan.
Trump retains strong support within his party, especially in the South, even as loyalists grumble about his failure to persuade a friendly Congress to pass his bill to repeal and replace Obamacare.
Instead, Barry Levinson lets Pacino grumble and sigh; the question of complicity seems less of a focus than what happens when your time is up, and now you have to go away.
The necessary level of repair can be mandated, and it will get done, with the state and local governments deciding how to best shoulder the costs as they grumble about the burden.
Fifteen years ago, the writer Robert Klara landed an assignment for a travel article in a magazine, only to grumble that the editors did not have a more glamorous destination in mind.
Sometimes, he said, he complains about how much he runs before the snap — "My Fitbit goes off the charts," Kittle said — but he is rewarded when defenders grumble about the same thing.
But in a brief demo ride, I thought it sounded fun and unique, somewhere in between the high-pitched whirring of most electric vehicles and the grumble of a sports car engine.
Subway riders, meanwhile, grumble about having to walk to stops farther away, settle for more indirect train routes or rely on temporary shuttle buses, which carry them to the next available station.
Mr. Trump, meanwhile, was uncharacteristically silent for much of the morning — until he began to grumble, on Twitter, that he had been denied due credit for a silver medalist's performance in the caucuses.
New Zealand politicians periodically grumble about Australian deportations, but the political mood between the two countries soured markedly when a 17-year-old was recently thrown into an adult detention centre in Melbourne.
The employers' groups grumble that England has the highest commercial property tax in the rich world and that business rates have increased from a third of rental value in 53 to half today.
Despite the territory's high wages and plentiful jobs, many in Macau, especially the young, grumble about the cost of buying a home, a shortage of social housing, poor public transport and overcrowded hospitals.
Cross the parking lot to visit the unemployment office, and you'll hear some people say the influx of immigrants gave the region's economy a boost, while others grumble it cost them their jobs.
Some of the elderly grumble that life was more secure in the old days, but their memories may be tinged with regret that they are no longer as young as they were then.
Around him bundled bodies grumble and gasp like snoozing cattle; the air inside the tent feels iron cold against his cheeks and nose, and has a stewed and crotch-like reek to it.
This year, taxpayers who lost the deduction for state and local taxes in the 2017 tax overhaul bill — mainly those in California and states in the Northeast — are going to grumble even more.
Prosecutors grumble a lot about "technicalities," because they're law enforcement officials — their job is to protect public safety, and if someone they know to be guilty goes free, they see it as a defeat.
At some South Korean companies, officials grumble that their government is powerless to counter China and has not done enough in the face of what they see as unfair subsidies and other trade practices.
As well as worrying that the two firms compete with each other in some markets, especially for sales of mortar, Sika's other investors grumble that Mr de Chalendar should be looking much further afield.
Mr Luo is one of many people from the eight parties who are rewarded for their subservience with memberships of advisory bodies (just as much flower vases as the parties themselves, many Chinese grumble).
The more people grumble about a dysfunctional health insurance system, the more willing the public is to throw up its hands and embrace a single-payer program — and Democrats are already setting that stage.
Mr. Raskin's donor list is heavy with lawyers and professors; Ms. Matthews's includes an array of Washington movers and shakers (including some, Raskin backers grumble, who have appeared as guests on her husband's show).
The car manufacturers usually grumble whenever the politicians and bureaucrats decide to significantly increase the standards, but they eventually play along because they know ideologically driven bureaucrats and environmentalists can make their lives miserable.
"When I told him once how everyone was grumbling about me, he looked at me — like a father would look at a son — and said sternly: "You're doing the right thing, let them grumble.
It's the end of history, basically—and though a group of underground democrats grumble about its rigid political system, the rational, enlightened, science-friendly Foundation has clearly triumphed over the forces of darkness and anarchy.
Players took to Twitter and clubhouse media guys to grumble about Byrd the way they grumbled about Dee Gordon a month ago; Justin Verlander, the Detroit Tigers pitcher, has been prominent among them both times.
While some grumble privately, Prince Mohammed has forged ahead with a clear mandate from King Salman, who also put him second in line to the throne, after Crown Prince Mohammed bin Nayef, the interior minister.
Some Syrian officers and government officials grumble about Iran and Hezbollah impinging on their sovereignty, complaining that their fighters earn more than the Syrians and blow past road checkpoints with the flash of a badge.
There's the low grumble of hot steel held between the powerful thighs of lesbians and their friends and lovers, who have long been the much-loved unofficial openers — and protectors — of pride marches across North America.
American commanders in the Pacific grumble that whereas China can pile up ground-based missiles (over 95% of its missiles fall in the INF range) America must rely on those launched from ships, submarines and aircraft.
Foreign bankers in India privately grumble about the lack of a substantial number of M&A and equity underwriting deals worth more than $1 billion, making it harder for them to justify costs to their headquarters.
Although critics grumble that private rather than state-owned firms bore the brunt of enforced closures of mines and mills, the strategy has worked, as prices have recovered and margins have risen for the surviving producers.
Passengers may grumble about paying extra for baggage, seats and meals, but the 80-year-old industry veteran - the co-founder and managing partner of Phoenix-based private equity firm Indigo Partners LLC - offers no apologies.
When Forbes proclaimed Kylie Jenner the youngest self-made billionaire in March, many took to Twitter to grumble that the term did not properly reflect that her moneyed upbringing provided her with the platform for success.
And while conservative Republicans grumble that President Obama's decision to pull Andrew Jackson off the front of the $85033 bill is playing politics with currency, they feel there's scant motivation in their ranks to stop him.
Car lovers may miss the angry sewing machine clack of a Porsche 911's flat-six, the throaty grumble and whine of a supercharged Dodge Hemi V8, or the cranial wail of a Ferrari V-12.
If your tax situation is advanced, you&aposll pay less with FreeTaxUSAYou might come across online customer reviews in which users grumble about FreeTaxUSA not really being free since you have to pay for state returns.
Some Republicans grumble, but almost all follow Trump's lead: Unlike Trump, Republicans largely favored NAFTA and several GOP senators said they felt taken for granted as the White House bent over backwards to secure Democratic votes.
A Tesla co-founder, Ian Wright, who left the company early on, is building a turbine-powered garbage truck to eliminate the obnoxious diesel grumble and noxious black fumes that follow these necessary evils through the streets.
Western firms in the mining and oil-and-gas industry meanwhile grumble that rivals from China, Russia or elsewhere have "advantages" bidding for contracts in, say, parts of Africa, as they face few limits on bribe-paying.
Some of the liveliest writing comes from the office's antics — when they accidentally buy ribs for a funk musician who's gone vegetarian, or grumble about who gets to control the music that plays in their shared workspace.
Malaysians grumble about Mr. Najib's wealth, which he claims to have inherited, and the extravagance of his wife, Rosmah Mansor, who is known for epic overseas shopping excursions and her multimillion-dollar collection of Hermès Birkin handbags.
The number of players in the Korean cafes continues to go up, but already some players are starting to grumble on the official forums and on Reddit that there aren't enough maps, modes, or heroes in Overwatch.
Yes, money knows no boundaries, but some CEOs and venture capitalists do grumble about whether a country with a shoddy human rights record should be holding the purse strings in the American economy's most vibrant, innovative sector.
And some of them grumble that neither Mr. Sanders, who is a year older than Mr. Biden, nor the 72-year-old current occupant of the Oval Office face the same amount of questions about his age.
Kenney chafes at the success of "SNL," which mined Lampoon discoveries like Chevy Chase (played by Joel McHale), John Belushi and Gilda Radner, prompting him to grumble "This should have been ours" as he watches the premiere.
Tammy DuckworthLadda (Tammy) Tammy DuckworthMissouri Republican wins annual craft brewing competition for lawmakers Democrats ignore Asian American and Pacific Islander voters at their peril Republicans grumble over Trump shifting military funds to wall MORE (D-Ill.), Sen.
While some members of the media like to sensationalize and grumble about how PED users undermine the fabric of the national game, baseball players are the only class of people who are actually cheated out of anything.
"I know I'm asking for an effort from the oldest, that sometimes some of them grumble," Macron told reporters after a pensioner complained to him on the sidelines of a visit to a military site in the east.
Local Jews are grateful for the supply but older ones, remembering the days when they had their own bakers, grumble that matzo should be round, instead of square like the factory-made European variety sent by Mr. Leviev.
Trump is widely seen inside the building as his own communications director — a media mastermind who can change a news cycle with a single tweet and who has been known to grumble when aides encroach on his spotlight.
In British Columbia, where students from abroad make up 18 percent of the total enrollment, people in the province are beginning to grumble that locals are being passed over in favor of non-Canadians who pay higher fees.
Still, some longtime party figures privately grumble that Felix does not measure up to Etienne, whose body has lain in a Brussels morgue for two years because the government feared its repatriation to Congo would kick off demonstrations.
A second Democratic senator who said colleagues grumble about "wasted resources" nevertheless said Kennedy has a right to run for higher office and that fellow Democratic senators shouldn't be spared from competition just because they represent deep-blue states.
The odd thing is, the older we get, the more we grumble about change, yet so many of us have already faced the greatest change of all: going from independence to dependence, with little or no preparation at all.
Some local leaders, like Newark Mayor Ras Baraka, have been grumbling that bail reform lets too many accused criminals out on the street, despite the accompanying drop in crime; if they grumble louder, the reforms could be in danger.
Maybe you wake up the next day and grumble about the surge pricing, maybe you wish you'd just saved the bucks and walked, but then you drown your sorrows in a plate of some egg-based scramble and forget about it.
Villagers in the south of Algeria often grumble that too much of the nation's energy wealth heads to the north and the capital Algiers, so Sonatrach has promised to build new public facilities, such as a cultural center, hospital and stadium.
Negotiating partners will justifiably grumble if they find themselves having to adhere to two sets of standards, or if their car parts get hit with new tariffs because finished cars no longer contain enough content from the deal's co-signatories.
Leaving aside perennially hostile Pakistan, it has effortlessly dominated smaller neighbours much in the way that America does in the Caribbean: they may grumble and resent their sometimes clumsy big brother, but they have learned to stay out of its way.
Aging, paunchy generals regularly flank Maduro in televised events in a show of strength, but in private they are more inclined to grumble about his leadership, said Alonso Medina Roa, a lawyer who defends some of the military detainees. Gen.
Meanwhile the defence ministry, which calls the shots on such vital questions as procurement and promotions, is staffed with career bureaucrats and political appointees who lack not only technical knowledge but also, grumble ex-servicemen, much sympathy for people in uniform.
A section on foreign policy showed off Mr Sanders's quirky side and also his age, as he meandered into a long grumble about Mrs Clinton taking advice from Henry Kissinger, the Republican former Secretary of State to President Richard Nixon.
Some already privately grumble that recent signs of warming between the Vatican and China amount to a betrayal by the Vatican of those Catholics who have endured considerable hardship, including imprisonment, as a result of their support for the pope.
You'll grumble for a minute about the damnable lack of arrows and your near-empty wallet — which doesn't need to be upgraded, as has been the case previously — then gamely trot off to chart another new corner of the world.
Former aides who otherwise sing Clinton's praises vaguely grumble about her wonkish grasp of policy, prompting her to delineate the tradeoffs and costs, employing a level of nuance that frequently doesn't translate well amid an era of soundbite-oriented coverage.
Several on the buyside were quick to grumble when the sovereign returned to the dollar markets in July despite promises to cap this year's supply at the US$16.5bn it issued in April to pay holdout creditors and cure its default.
Hungry City 10 Photos View Slide Show ' Last June, Luda's Dumplings, a small pelmeni shop, pitched its yellow-and-white-striped awning on Shore Parkway in Sheepshead Bay, Brooklyn, an overpass away from the waterfront, where leafy trees hush the grumble of cars.
In many American states utilities grumble about the "net metering" rate they are required to pay such people—especially in states like Nevada where they have been required to credit the electricity fed in at the retail price, rather than the wholesale price.
It's tempting to argue that while core Tumblr users will grumble about the sitewide crackdown on porn, they'll recognize that while they can get the porn from other sites, it will be impossible to replace everything else that makes Tumblr what it is.
How the stock market reacted Trump gets mixed responses from corporations Wall Street Journal: "Donald Trump made the biggest policy blunder of his Presidency" Conservative lawmakers grumble Rust Belt Democrats praise Jonathan Swan: Trump effectively promised a trade war on the campaign.
Many journalists here have lucrative TV deals (including at The New York Times), but some grumble about Mr. Swan's gigs as a paid corporate speaker, including a roughly $20,000 appearance at Goldman Sachs that other news organizations would prohibit for their reporters.
He worked a little magic as the rookie coach of the Memphis Grizzlies in the 2016-17 season before his team ran upon a reef of injuries and an aging star started to grumble and the coach was tossed into the roiling sea.
I enjoy Barbara Pym's extra, excellent women; I relax as Judith Hearne slides into alcoholism and despair; I grumble along with the Underground Man; I follow Bernanos's country priest as he struggles to minister to a parish that really would rather he didn't.
Talk to less famous party members, in business, government or academia, and they grumble mightily about a "Study Xi" app that tens of millions of Chinese have been ordered to download to their smartphones, and that monitors how long they spend on political-thought work.
It&aposs a pretty classic modern "problem" for me to order something online and then grumble about two-day shipping, or settle into a new coffee shop only to find out that the internet is down, or worse yet, never existed in the first place.
When the lords of the N.F.L. boycotted Colin Kaepernick for the crime of silently taking a knee during the national anthem, they could do so in the reasonable expectation that their fans would either applaud, or grumble but still buy another sausage or team jersey.
When I answered, bringing the receiver slowly to my ear, the grumble of static seemed devoid of anything human, though I knew better, and my patient attention and increased effort drew from the susurration faint squeals, like the protests of drowning men fathoms deep.
The blanket of fog was so complete that even as the rocket blasted from the ground, with me craning my head to chase its grumble (despite knowing the speed of sound kept me lagging behind its actual path), I never got even a fleeting glimpse of it.
Ever found yourself squashed three people-deep at the bar on a Friday night, discreetly elbowing fellow patrons to be next in line as you impatiently tap your credit card against the counter and grumble that anyone could make a gin and tonic faster than this guy?
It's hard to grumble about the quality of the Beddit apps for Android and iOS, which are very nicely put together, and overall it's refreshing to have a sleep tracking device that you don't need to activate, wear or even charge (it plugs straight into the mains).
Fans of Deadpool, the foul-mouthed, ultra-violent comic book film starring the very, very handsome and irreverent Ryan Reynolds, let out a mournful grumble on Tuesday morning as the movie, despite all its accolades, failed to receive a Best Picture nomination for this year's Academy Awards.
Archaeologists who specialize in Italy's prehistory often grumble that, when wonders like the Pantheon and the Colosseum are a constant reminder of what was to come, it can be hard to stir up excitement about chipped spearheads or undecorated clay pots, even if they date back millenniums.
Mr. De Niro gives one of his best screen performances in years as Mr. Madoff, playing that securities broker as an embittered old man, more inclined to grumble that the world's become a garbage heap than to reckon with how much he's contributed to the stink.
White House officials continue to be blindsided by some of the President's off-hand remarks or tweets, whether he is moving the goalposts on policy issues or contradicting White House messaging, and Republicans on Capitol Hill continue to grumble about lackluster coordination in advancing policy priorities.
The "whining schoolboy...creeping like snail unwillingly to school", Shakespeare's second age, sums up industries like iron and steel, cement and power-generation, which produce about half of all energy-related CO2 emissions yet grumble over carbon-pricing schemes and renewable-energy mandates intended to change their behaviour.
In and of itself, this push from Hollywood's creative folks against their corporation's news division is fairly unprecedented, though it hasn't exactly been hard over the past two decades to find progressives who get paychecks from 20th Century Fox who also quietly grumble about the influence of Fox News.
In the House and Senate, several Republicans who sit on key committees are starting to grumble that the investigations have spanned the better part of the past nine months, contending that the Democratic push to extend the investigation well into next year could amount to a fishing expedition.
The deal effectively ratified the creeping influence of street wear and skate wear into fashion and the broader retail culture, and the appetite to tap its still-burgeoning potential, even as it bred resentment among some of the brand's longtime loyalists, who grumble that their idol has sold out.
With its quintessential Anderson moments — as when inmates escape from prison using tiny implements concealed in frothy pastries — the film "will delight his fans, but even those inclined to grumble that it's just more of the same patented whimsy might want to look again," A. O. Scott wrote in The Times.
As the landmarks commission has designated more and more buildings, the conservancy program has helped insure the success of the very concept of landmarking, especially in neighborhoods beyond Manhattan, where landlords or co-op boards can grumble about needing the commission's approval when the time comes to replace bricks or windows.
Still, his critical observations are measured and nuanced, if not correct, although readers who worship the Boss may grumble at his preference for the supple, street-kid Bruce Springsteen who made the scene prior to "Born to Run," the 1975 breakthrough album faulted by Hajdu for its "grandiosity" and "cartoonish" vision.
Bill CassidyWilliam (Bill) Morgan CassidyEXCLUSIVE: Swing-state voters oppose 'surprise' medical bill legislation, Trump pollster warns Republicans grumble over Trump shifting military funds to wall Push on 'surprise' medical bills hits new roadblocks MORE (R-La.) would allow a third-party arbitrator to work out the disputed costs, rather than setting price controls.
Mr. Burke went on to grumble about Mr. Jacobs's last-minute, chaotic, costly approach to presenting a collection ("Literally a few days before the show, he could completely change his mind because it was not of this week") and to praise his successor at Louis Vuitton, Nicolas Ghesquière ("Nicolas does not work that way").
Bill CassidyWilliam (Bill) Morgan CassidyEXCLUSIVE: Swing-state voters oppose 'surprise' medical bill legislation, Trump pollster warns Republicans grumble over Trump shifting military funds to wall Push on 'surprise' medical bills hits new roadblocks MORE (R-La.) about a potential modification to the measure to help address doctors' concerns, though no deal has been reached yet.
That nine-figure discount has led some owners to grumble that the league should find a way to get out of the commitment, but others believe that just as Beckham's arrival helped bolster the credibility of M.L.S. with American fans and foreign players, his return as an owner would raise its global profile again.
The remaining members of the cabinet grumble off the record that "Bibi is stealing the show" and hint darkly that the timing of Israel's latest operation against Hezbollah tunnels — and especially the prime-time news briefings by the new defense minister — may have some connection to Mr. Netanyahu's desire to deflect attention from the latest police findings.
Some Senate Democrats grumble that they have major issues with the legislation despite the backing it has received from President Obama, Speaker Paul RyanPaul Davis RyanEmbattled Juul seeks allies in Washington Ex-Parkland students criticize Kellyanne Conway Latina leaders: 'It's a women's world more than anything' MORE (R-Wis.) and House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.).
In Hamburg, his work was prepared for by the building's architects, the Swiss firm Herzog & de Meuron, which added a double-insulation layer around each of the two concert halls to prevent the intrusion of foghorns and other city noise — something New Yorkers, used to the periodic grumble of subway trains below several performance spaces, might appreciate.
In the 11 days since he signed the spending bill that left Coulter and conservatives in Congress upset, Trump has continued to grumble about the lack of funding for the wall and privately blamed both members of his administration and Republican leaders in Congress for negotiating an unsatisfactory bill, three sources close to the President said.
As I watched this sequence unfold, I wondered if I would end up feeling like it was a cop-out, if I would grumble to myself at how creator Raphael Bob-Waksberg and his writers had tiptoed up to the precipice of holding their main character accountable in a forum larger than his own mind, then tiptoed right back.
It's a familiar grumble and not one that is expected to derail the vote or endanger the agreement, but it reveals the long-simmering schisms within the conference that pits the appropriators, leaders and practically-minded Republicans against their more ideological colleagues -- some of whom came to Washington on the promise of reining in government spending during the rise of the tea party.
But the heritage endures: in the Russian dialect spoken in the village of Ninilchik; in the state's name ("Alaska" is a Russian adaptation of an Aleut word meaning "the object toward which the action of the sea is directed"); in the thousands of adherents to the Russian Orthodox faith; and in the expansionist imaginations of some Russians who still grumble about the sale.
" In his memoirs, Nixon would later grumble that he met resistance when he tried to declassify the names of those tapped, showing how some of his predecessors had also used these tools to gain political advantage: "[M]y staff resisted me...most of my advisers argued that if I revealed the activities of previous administrations, it would look as if I were trying to divert attention from myself by smearing others.
But it enjoys an afterlife: in the Russian dialect spoken in the village of Ninilchik; in the name ("Alaska" is a Russian adaptation of an Aleut word meaning "the object toward which the action of the sea is directed"); in the thousands of adherents to the Russian Orthodox faith and an onion-domed church in Unalaska, above; and in the expansionist imaginations of some Russians who still grumble about the sale.
MORE (R-Mo.) and Dan SullivanDaniel Scott SullivanExclusive: Kushner tells GOP it needs to unify behind immigration plan Republicans grumble over Trump shifting military funds to wall Overnight Defense: Esper sworn in as Pentagon chief | Confirmed in 90-8 vote | Takes helm as Trump juggles foreign policy challenges | Senators meet with woman accusing defense nominee of sexual assault MORE (R-Alaska) also made complimentary remarks about Kushner and his work, according to a person in the room.
MORE (Okla.), McConnell, McSally, Dan SullivanDaniel Scott SullivanExclusive: Kushner tells GOP it needs to unify behind immigration plan Republicans grumble over Trump shifting military funds to wall Overnight Defense: Esper sworn in as Pentagon chief | Confirmed in 90-85033 vote | Takes helm as Trump juggles foreign policy challenges | Senators meet with woman accusing defense nominee of sexual assault MORE (Alaska) and Thom TillisThomas (Thom) Roland TillisTillis trails Democratic Senate challenger by 2 points: poll Kavanaugh impeachment push hits Capitol buzz saw The 13 Republicans needed to pass gun-control legislation MORE (N.C.).
AAPI candidates added to their gain from 2900, when Tammy DuckworthLadda (Tammy) Tammy DuckworthDemocrats ignore Asian American and Pacific Islander voters at their peril Republicans grumble over Trump shifting military funds to wall Lawmakers mark anniversary of Martin Luther King 'I have a dream' speech MORE (D-Ill.) and Kamala HarrisKamala Devi HarrisBiden lead shrinks, Sanders and Warren close gap: poll Defense bill talks set to start amid wall fight Media and candidates should be ashamed that they don't talk about obesity MORE (D-Calif.) were elected to the U.S. Senate and Pramila JayapalPramila JayapalPelosi woos progressives on prescription drug pricing plan Democrats ignore Asian American and Pacific Islander voters at their peril Overnight Health Care: Watchdog details severe trauma suffered by separated children | Judge approves B CVS-Aetna merger | House Dem Caucus chair backs 'Medicare for All' MORE (D-Wash.) and Stephanie MurphyStephanie MurphyDemocrats ignore Asian American and Pacific Islander voters at their peril Blue Dog Democrats urge action on election security Lawmakers urge DNC to name Asian American debate moderator MORE (D-Fla.) to the U.S. House, leading to a record high 220006 AAPI members of Congress, with three senators and 2202 representatives.

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