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134 Sentences With "guideposts"

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

"Ethics and standards have to be major guideposts," he said.
If you're trying to determine the right option, some guideposts may help.
The top U.S. export markets provide good guideposts for trade policy focus.
Sometimes they become major policy guideposts that help shepherd keystone legislation into being.
They're our closest guideposts to figure out what's possible in the broader universe.
But the changing political landscape has diminished the value of some old guideposts.
But there are some essential guideposts in even a rescue of this colossal difficulty.
Nonetheless, that failure offers two valuable guideposts for the next 40 years of research.
She called this process mapping, but there were no guideposts to show the way.
The chapter titles are opaque, more like symbolic poetry than guideposts for the book.
But Supreme Court precedents offer few definitive guideposts, giving the attorney general broad latitude.
Here are a few activities that unblocked problems and set guideposts where they were needed.
Ant Farm's work served as both inspiration and guideposts for Future Wife co-founder Beau Burrows.
But like many guideposts, the right direction, wrong track question doesn't signal what it used to.
The image of the man in the wig shop, I shot for Guideposts, a religion magazine.
This small curatorial excursion isn't able to answer that question, but its offerings act as guideposts.
Those were my guideposts in working with corporate CEOs and movie directors' and just general client hierarchies.
I am, I'm sure, one among many women writers who look to established women authors as guideposts.
These numerical guideposts are in the tax code and are thought to constrain the Treasury's legal authority.
So we need to stop using the same old frameworks -- and guideposts -- to describe and measure him.
The goal of the enlargement process, its supporters say, is to provide the guideposts for better governance.
History, geography and demography are the go-to guideposts as we head towards the 2018 midterm elections.
While these guideposts are helpful, they won't tell you if a stock is right for your portfolio.
Parties used to be known for their histories and principles — factors that provided substantive guideposts for voters' decisions.
Cyber crime is such a recent phenomenon that there are few guideposts for judges to use, experts say.
Stories are the guideposts that keep Westworld contained, limiting hosts to operate within the confines of interlocking narratives.
Over time, we'd succeeded in delegitimizing the media altogether — all the normal guideposts were down, the referees discredited.
They havebeen my guideposts throughout my career, and I will continue to adhereto them no matter the test.
Nearly 40 years ago, the Congress set two main guideposts for that task: maximum employment and price stability.
Space mission deadlines are like video game release dates, they're just guideposts that could be changed at any time.
And then you have this headline unemployment stat thrown in, to the extent you have guideposts for the economy.
We all need guideposts through this (at times, uncharted) desert, so that we know we're on the right path.
He began as an editor at Reader's Digest and then became editor in chief of the Christian magazine Guideposts.
The plan, however, is vague and even senior Republican lawmakers described it as offering only "guideposts" for legislative changes.
The 'Road Map' was simply that — a series of guideposts if the House Judiciary Committee wished to follow them.
As we do the difficult work of coming into ourselves despite our losses and traumas, sometimes our guideposts dim.
Those have been my guideposts throughout my career, and I will continue to adhere to them no matter the test.
Its discrete scenes and guideposts encourage tight pacing, instead of asking players to sift through a gestalt of environmental props.
They have been my guideposts throughout my career, and I will continue to adhere to them no matter the test.
He has put his cards on the table his entire presidency with slogans such as "America First" as policy guideposts.
I would bet, however, that to most American readers the subject is new; a few guideposts would have been helpful.
To make up more ground, look toward bookish guideposts — publishers, international literary prizes and journals that specialize in global literature.
It didn't take away the grief or the fear — Right, but it gives you guideposts to do — Just something to do.
Essentially, standards are the basis on which you build assessments, and they're a set of guideposts for teachers and curriculum developers.
The Seaboard intentionally looks like a melted, rubberized keyboard, but those keys are intended only as guideposts for traditional piano keys.
They provide guideposts that will help major companies, small operators and individuals demonstrate that they handle data in a trustworthy manner.
In so doing, Trump's pick to head the Treasury Department dismissed the validity of one of the nation's central economic guideposts.
To decide whether you should get screened, here are some guideposts on skin cancer research and the views of some experts.
Whatever their ages, all of us are part of Generation Rx — a huge, uncontrolled experiment with little precedent and few guideposts.
He fired back that he was acting with "integrity and honor," and emphasized that "law and the Constitution" are his guideposts.
These places may better serve as guideposts, directing researchers to spots for further investigations into what's really happening on the ground.
" We need history, he insists in his introduction, to give us interpretive guideposts — "wooden stakes marking a road through heavy snow.
Roker and Roberts, 58, recently opened up to Guideposts magazine for their May cover story about raising a child with special needs.
First, the Treasury Department is expected to file a report by the first week of June outlining its guideposts for financial reform.
For anyone serious about addressing Iran's ballistic missile threat, the JCPOA offers important guideposts to the art — and limits — of the possible.
And they were my guideposts as a mother; they whispered the lessons I prayed my children would learn: Ferdinand, the gentle bull?
The result by the majority, instead, required that the justices balance competing arguments, consider various guideposts to interpretation and make a call.
Ant Farm's work, and especially the Inflatocookbook, served as both inspiration and guideposts for Beau Burrows, co-founder of design collective Future Wife.
I've found guideposts in them: insights into who I was in formative years that have helped me piece together who I am now.
"The book wasn't intended to give investment advice, but I couldn't see us creating an entity of this kind without some guideposts," he said.
And still, it has been left to them to invent life at their age, without the guideposts or role models of their earlier years.
Building and maintaining momentum along the way is wildly important, which is why it helps if you have guideposts to keep you on your path.
As a result, few disputes have resulted in definitive judicial rulings that could serve as guideposts if both sides dig in over the Mueller files.
Every year, the tech industry experiences moments that serve as guideposts for future entrepreneurs and investors looking to profit from the wisdom of the past.
All that's to say that Jessie's insights into both leadership and learning serve as true guideposts for what it takes to helm a successful startup venture.
By stammering at what was a no-brainer question in recent presidential history, he showed traditional guideposts for the Democratic race as outdated as paper maps.
All the familiar guideposts and events — school days, family meals, summer travel, the simplest things that mark ordinary time in a family's life — were wiped away.
But mostly, candidates are exploiting their biographies and touting their endorsements from local officeholders, who can serve as guideposts for voters who don't know the candidates.
There are no shortcuts or even guideposts of what to do in the region, but some United States choices clearly were wrong from the get-go.
She finalizes the look with a little nose contouring; by holding the utensil flat against her nose, its outermost tines serve as guideposts for where to shade.
In so doing, Trump's pick to head the Treasury Department dismissed the validity of one of the nation's central economic guideposts, which currently sits at 4.7 percent.
But even at its most awkward, it demands active viewing; apart from its half-hour length, there are few guideposts to rely on from episode to episode.
"The data will provide the best guideposts there absolutely are, and one's judgment, I think, needs to submit, ultimately, to what the data tells you," he said.
In so doing, Trump's pick to head the Treasury Department dismissed the validity of one of the nation's central economic guideposts, which currently sits at 220006 percent.
"The principles outlined by the Trump administration today will serve as critical guideposts" as Congress and the administration work on tax changes, they said in a statement.
That would allow chaplains to feel a little less lost, and much more useful, in their roles as community guideposts during this ongoing college mental health crisis.
This sexism is pronounced in more ambiguous situations when we do not have clear guideposts, such as when choosing from a crowded field of variously qualified political nominees.
Could this really be the case, or are the markets simply putting too much stock in selected events to create their own guideposts given the Fed's poor communication strategy?
The notion that there are guideposts pointing us in the direction of our better selves is as old as religion, and yet it doesn't need religion to perpetuate them.
"All the new-mother books and websites and mommy blogs in the world couldn't ease the helplessness I felt whenever Vale's blue eyes filled with tears," she wrote in Guideposts.
In setting its standards for grants, it disposes of nationally recognized clinical standards, developed with the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, that have long been guideposts for family planning.
Three miles is not a great distance, compared with some of the epic homeward journeys that dogs have occasionally made, and a three-mile radius would be rich in odor guideposts.
And though he writes in an unabashedly atonal idiom, Mr. Wuorinen often structures his music in such a way that particular notes are frequently reiterated, providing the ear with subtle guideposts.
In June, Jay-Z released "4:44," his 13th studio album, his first in four years, and his first in a decade that didn't use maximalism and bombast as its guideposts.
"You begin to realize you've basically cut down all of these guideposts to be able to say, 'Look this is what is reliable, this is what is not reliable,' " Mr. Sykes said.
Three such guideposts that this document must include are: Iran's creeping imperialism is unacceptable; vanquishing the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria does not equal victory; and the JCPOA should be strengthened.
These days, Mr. Levitch, widely known as Speed, increasingly riffs on the humanity of the city itself, often in angular, funny soliloquies that use his command of the city's history as mere guideposts.
But if we are going to take the extraordinary step of removing a duly-elected president from office, we must adhere to the Constitution and hundreds of years of jurisprudence as our guideposts.
" Those words, wrote Pelosi biographer Elaine Povich, "emphasized that she is powerful and cannot be taken lightly when it comes to describing her motives -- particularly where they concern the guideposts of her religion.
Jaroslaw Kaczynski, the leader of PiS who analysts say exerts large influence over government policies, said last year there are no other moral guideposts in Poland apart from the teachings of the Catholic church.
But as Merry notes, it was McKinley who first struck a balance between projecting power and serving humanitarian ends — between realism and idealism — that would become the guideposts of 20th-century American foreign policy.
The Yellen Fed has opposed both, arguing that auditing its rate decisions would inject politics into its meeting and that rules work well as guideposts but don't offer the right solution for real-world policymaking.
Midterms are imperfect guideposts for presidential elections: In 2010, Democrats were defeated across Midwestern swing states and Florida and lost control of the House, only to prevail convincingly in the presidential race two years later.
Well, I think that I can answer quickly, which is the data will provide the best guideposts there absolutely are, and one's judgment, I think, needs to submit, ultimately, to what the data tells you.
Those traits make them sometimes hated by financial advisors, but can also make them valuable guideposts to both credit markets and, because they are actively managed, a window into the thinking of fixed income leaders.
These guideposts are designed to help you find your way out of the endless diet maze and back to normalized eating: honoring hunger, feeling your fullness, challenging the food police, respecting your body, and so on.
These testimonies could provide guideposts for the ongoing investigations into the Big Four as regulators and lawmakers consider whether the tech giants have broken current laws or if the US's antitrust laws need a modern makeover.
That is why many of his closest supporters have long cautioned that the most headline-grabbing proposals of his run for the presidency should not be taken literally — they are guideposts, the supporters suggest, not plans.
The Today anchorman, who shares 17-year-old son Nicholas with wife and ABC News senior correspondent Deborah Roberts, recently opened up to Guideposts magazine for their May cover story about raising a child with special needs.
What follows are a few specific guideposts for decisionmakers to consider as this process continues: The president has set the direction he intends for the nation to follow to devote the necessary attention to our aging infrastructure.
Growing up there were guideposts pointing me in the direction of being a journalist, like my love of writing and politics and penchant to ask people lots of questions, but I took some detours along the way.
Fulton's son was the editor of the Christian magazine, Guideposts, as well as the founding editor of the magazine Angels on Earth, which purported to be about what the title suggests, the actual adventures of angels on earth.
That's right, after accessing all that code, her next job was to let the victims know exactly how she'd done it — and how they could stop someone with a different set of moral guideposts from doing the same.
The engineers say they were assigned tasks at Uber that were less meaningful, challenging, and important that the ones given to their white and male peers, and that Uber failed to give them concrete professional goals or guideposts.
However, in the interim, the central data team or office can still make a big difference by providing official guideposts: listing what's available, where it is and where there are multiple sources, the best place to get it.
As guideposts for a way forward, the Climate Justice Alliance has called for a Green New Deal rooted in "a just transition for workers and communities impacted by climate change" and as a tool to empower the grassroots.
But in Dale Schierholt's thoughtful documentary Nevelson: Awareness in the Fourth Dimension (21940), the artist savors her favorite phrase, "self-centered," explaining that it means being led by an inner compass rather than living scattershot by unreliable cultural guideposts.
The largely interconnected findings of the various climate reports will likely serve as important guideposts next week when a number of leaders meet at the U.N. Climate Change Conference in Poland to draft a rule book for the Paris climate agreement.
The interwar period, the post-Vietnam era, and other key inflection points provide the guideposts that allow the Army to learn from the past, replicate the success of AirLand Battle, and finally push itself squarely into the twenty-first century.
The moderate justices will be incentivized to work with these peers to build consensus decisions, but the ideological stances taken by the more partisan justices on tough issues of the day will also provide strong guideposts for shaping future decisions.
"There are no guideposts, if you will, for what is a legitimate, useful epidemiology study and what is not," Jay Vroom, CropLife America's president, said in an interview, explaining what he had told agency officials at this and other meetings.
Mr. Banks said he had found no examples of a lawsuit in which someone tried to challenge the factual basis for a president's determination that an emergency existed, leaving scant guideposts for what courts might do with any legal challenge.
The 196 square meter (21,100 square feet) home - which has a chicken coop, fish tank, vegetable garden and solar panels - is built on a floating platform of recycled plastic that enables it to rise above floodwaters by sliding on two guideposts.
It's common to hear those outraged by police behavior claim that cops too often skate in these instances, and without debating the merits of that assertion, it's important to examine the guideposts that the Supreme Court put in place in the 1980s.
Metz's mom Denise was rushed to the hospital after a "massive stroke" revealed two large clots in her carotid artery, and the This Is Us star, 38, reflected on those difficult days in a new essay, published Monday in the Christian publication Guideposts.
Many legal scholars have derided such claims as going too far, although no Supreme Court precedents offer definitive guideposts about whether Congress can make it illegal for a president to use his powers to supervise the Justice Department in a corrupt way.
While there is a certain predictable way a player will behave during a match — given that you have specific objectives to complete — in this sort of pre-match space, you don't have any objectives or guideposts to help you predict how they'll behave.
"Wouldn't it be better to set some guideposts that everybody in the country would know to follow rather than having one suit pop up here, and one suit pop up here, and another in another place, and everybody would be treated differently?" she asked.
In the context of a wider wave of movies about coming of age and larger conversations about the role of consent and sexuality among teens, they firmly situate themselves as guideposts, willing to capture what it means to be a teenage girl in all its hormonal glory.
Yes, it's action and it's immersive and there are certain guideposts, like you get to here, and then they show you a little clip, which just changes the narrative and then you have to ... but essentially there are many video games you're simply accomplishing something, right?
Pebble's activity notifications strike the right balance between ignorable and annoying And the reason why your daily step goals are constantly changing, rather than striving for "10K" every day, is because Pebble wants people to use their own personal bests as guideposts rather than an arbitrary number.
Policy Puzzle The quandary facing the Federal Reserve this summer is the same as it was back in the spring, and winter, and last fall: By traditional guideposts like the unemployment rate, it looks as if it is time for the Fed to be raising interest rates.
But under both Obama and Trump lawmakers have been unable to reach consensus on a proposal to replace that AUMF with one that could provide clearer authority and set new guideposts for combat against ISIS and other U.S. military activities in the Middle East and Afghanistan.
Wendy Cutler, a former deputy U.S. Trade Representative who was the chief negotiator on KORUS during the George W. Bush and Barack Obama administrations, said the Trump administration's recent draft notification letter to Congress for North American Free Trade Agreement talks sets out some guideposts for a KORUS negotiation.
On a recent visit, I relied on some of these paintings as guideposts to southern Vancouver Island (her oeuvre depicting First Nations artifacts could be the focus of an entirely different trip), along with her journal and memoirs, an excellent West Shore Arts Council map and a biography by Maria Tippett.
As guideposts in the journey to bio-resiliency, Kering has established a 2025 goal that aims to reduce the company's carbon emissions by 50%, and reduce the monetary value lost to unsustainable activities across the supply chain — a proprietary rubric called an Environmental Profit and Loss account, or EP&L — by 40%.
Mr. Ryan and Mr. Brady issued a joint statement with Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the majority leader, and Senator Orrin G. Hatch of Utah, the chairman of the Finance Committee, saying the principles outlined Wednesday would "serve as critical guideposts" as Congress and the administration worked together on a tax overhaul.
Day Trip It's a brighter idea than it may first appear to visit the Thomas Edison Center at Menlo Park in Edison, N.J. Guideposts like a giant light bulb sculpture and an Art Deco concrete tower topped with a nearly 14-foot bulb dwarf the two-room museum, at 37 Christie Street.
Joe Staten I'm a huge noir film fan and you know, ODST was really my first chance to be a creative director on a project where you're responsible for rallying people around hopefully a simple set of core ideas that they can all understand, and then let those be their guideposts for cool work.
Martin Lederman, a Georgetown University law professor who helped run the Justice Department's Office of Legal Counsel during the Obama administration, said that he had found no example of litigation in which a court had tested such "arcane language and conditions" in the transfer law, leaving few guideposts for how far the administration can stretch it. Maybe.
"They did a very good job fleshing out the issues and creating guideposts on how to deal with a question that is probably going to come up again and again," said Annette Gordon-Reed, a historian at Harvard Law School and a member of a committee that voted last year to scrap that school's seal, which honored a family of 18th-century slave owners.
The Committee isn't asking the government to turn its AI code into to law; rather, it's hoping that law makers and AI developers will use them as guideposts for both the development and regulation of AI. Each industry is going to face its own unique challenges, but these guidelines, argue the Committee, should be broad enough for each field, whether it be the finance sector or automobile manufacturers.
"The principles outlined by the Trump Administration today will serve as critical guideposts for Congress and the administration as we work together to overhaul the American tax system and ensure middle-class families and job creators are better positioned for the 21st century economy," Ryan, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, House Ways and Means Chairman Kevin Brady and Senate Finance Committee Chairman Orrin Hatch said in a joint statement.
"Carb cycling offers the perception of a 'middle ground,' where people don't need to limit their carb intake all the time but still instate some guideposts on their carbohydrate consumption," Ali Webster, associate director of nutrition communications for the International Food Information Council Foundation tells CNBC Make It. From a scientific standpoint, carb cycling makes a lot of sense, Armul tells CNBC Make It. "It's good practice for everyone, especially athletes, to change what you're eating based on what you're doing with workouts," she says.

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