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"hark" Definitions
  1. used only as an order to tell somebody to listen

262 Sentences With "hark"

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

Teal runs Hark Hub, home of the latest Hark videos and social threads.
" Having dropped Hark at the edge of a Tony Robbins-like breakthrough in Part 1, the story unravels some in Part 2 — for Hark and for "Hark.
"She thought the song was about someone telling their friend Hark that the herald angels were singing," Hark tells Fraz.
In his new book, "Hark," Lipsyte, 50, takes on the attention industry with a satire centered on a reluctant messiah named Hark.
" Or as Sarah J. Early wrote in 1894: "Hark!
Hark back to 22015, when Meantime was extolling "our philosophy".
And now we'd like to do 'Hark, the Angels Come'.
The works hark back to Obata's work as an illustrator.
They also hark back to Mr. Adams's memories of childhood.
I was so overwhelmed I almost wept: hark, a flavor.
Such unpalatable compromises hark back to the era of Col.
Hark begins with a biblical epigraph and a stark, scriptural tone.
Hark the herald sad trombone sings: the holidays are officially over.
Expect more companies of a certain age to hark back to youth.
Virginia Attorney General Hark Herring (D) has also admitted to wearing blackface.
Her vocal finesse and the production hark back to vintage Latin pop.
Hark, the age of the non-car form of transportation has dawned.
If you're as sad about this glitter thing as I am: Hark!
The difference is that in "Hark" the riffing has more serious consequences.
"Hark" is split into halves, the first of which is extremely funny.
A guy named Cornelius the Corporate Impostor had the gig before Hark.
But the battle between Hark and Fraz is never a fair fight.
THE faded modernist façades along Copacabana's beachfront hark back to Brazil's optimistic past.
Joe Rizk is founder and partner at HARK, a design-led venture firm.
"But we couldn't fight it," said Mr. Hark, a director at WCBS-TV.
"They always want people to remember that, hark back to that," Wright says.
Such positions hark back to the 1930s, when Mexico nationalized its oil industry.
Some songs hark back to the plush extroversion of 1960s and 1970s pop.
Players wear uniforms that hark back to the early beginning of the game.
She collects antiques, particularly those that hark to a lost West Virginia past.
Even the author can't make up his mind about Hark and mental archery.
Hark, the voice on television was announcing that the fox had become a vegetarian.
Finally, Sam, for a particular generation of writers and readers, you've been our Hark.
Many sovereign myths hark back to the creation, in 1913, of the Federal Reserve.
These videos display homegrown ingenuity at its finest, combined with true seasonal spirit. Hark!
They are less pleased when foreigners import words that hark back to Germany's darkest chapter.
They hark back to plans from the 1980s meant to steer capital into blighted neighborhoods.
By resetting, the new season does more than hark back to the show's better years.
He has a friend named Hark, whose wife, Esther (Gabrielle Union), is raped soon after.
"Hark" is Lipsyte's first novel since 2010's much-loved "The Ask," and similarities abound.
Much of that will come from an existing medical app called Hark, which DeepMind is acquiring.
The experience's vibes hark back to lesser days when women held more subservient roles than men.
Hark back to 2007, and the dating landscape looked very different to how it looks now.
But hark, as the Bard no doubt would have said: What hath happened to our clues?
Hark seems to me a wilder, but also deeper and bleaker, book than you've written before.
"It's not about the monthly costs, it's really about not having any control," said Mr. Hark.
There are also two portraits that hark back to Miró's great early efforts in the genre.
Hark never meant to be a guru: It was the people around him who anointed him.
The main level now holds 17 small retail spaces that hark back to the building's original purpose.
It would have to contain a sense of nostalgia, a hark back to an ashen childhood lost.
And, she's happy to report, the paintings he's doing now hark back to the man she married.
I always hark back to the first episode of the first season, when Philip wanted to defect.
Blythe Lin Casner, a daughter of Linda B. Casner and Hark M. Casner of Steamboat Springs, Colo.
In an attempt to give Hark a bit more flesh some information gets sprinkled in — he's a cop's kid, his favorite drink is ice — but it's a tough sell that smart, damaged, witty, miserable people would lend Hark their attention for longer than it would take to ridicule him.
The Klarsfelds' offices, on Rue de la Boeite in the center of Paris, hark back to another era.
The searches of Mr. Cohen's documents hark back to the pre-dawn F.B.I. raid of Mr. Manafort's home.
When that happens, all you can do is pay up, as happened with Jason Hark and Kenneth Larivee.
However, it makes little sense to hark back to a halcyon era of technocratic, supposedly dispassionate decision-making.
Mr. Reitmeyer said the moves could hark back to the early 1980s, a heyday for tax-avoiding structures.
Its proposed name and high-tech focus notwithstanding, the European Future Fund would hark back to decades past.
Many of these are dazzling, but hardly all of them, and Hark is in the book a lot.
Esther's husband Hark (Colman Domingo) says he won't allow it, and Nat tries to reason with both of them.
Some Ethiopians resent the Chinese influence and hark back to when French and European influence was felt more widely.
In dramatic terms, Nat and Hark are the victims, the ones on whom the task of seeking justice falls.
WEST ORANGE Paintings and mixed media by Gaelen juried art show award winners Lorraine DeProspo and Ellen Hark. Sept.
Even its office accouterments hark back to the '90s startup culture, with arcade games, skating ramps and napping couches.
Since this was a prequel, he wanted to hark back to the '80s design of the original Transformers cartoon.
The dining room is sleek and romantic, with radiant cherry-red banquettes that hark back to the Russian Tea Room.
"The rich blue suits and sheer overcoats hark back to the ubiquitous theme of the Madonna and child," Tusa suggested.
But hark, who is this leaping into the breach, rescuing young cadets from certain death with a well-placed blade?
Her final phase of work, from the 2000s, culminated in gorgeous patinated bronzes that hark back to a prehistoric age.
Let's hark back to the childhood game of musical chairs to talk about fossil fuels and climate change (yes really!).
There are also bits of melody that either hark back to the Adagio or look forward to the known conclusion.
"There's this sort of preindustrial agricultural bucolic dream of England which we hark back to whenever we can," he said.
We're talking dramatic puffed sleeves, long floral skirts, and bright, busy blouses, all of which hark back to longer, warmer days.
In between the travel images, several other photographers hark back to Donovan's idea of home and the disruption of its illusion.
The results often hark back to the late 1960s; in a way, "A Moon Shaped Pool" is Radiohead's psych-folk album.
One of the most poignant threads in Hark, I think, is just how beaten down and ultimately compromised the characters are.
She's still fond of basic patterns, just three or four chords, that hark back to doo-wop and vintage reggae songwriting.
The future scenes evoke the creepiness and claustrophobia of "Ex Machina" and, like that film, hark back to the "Frankenstein" story.
The footage hark back to the New York of the 1980s, still very much present to some of the precinct's residents.
Not only because so much of "Hark" is brilliantly alive, but because everyone in it could use a bit of mercy.
Hark, the 2020 Shelby GT500 roars, both the most powerful street legal Mustang ever, and the most powerful Ford production car ever.
The current alliances on the subcontinent and the unsettling arms race between Pakistan and India hark back to the war of 1962.
Mr. Bratton said the efforts hark back to lessons from the mid-1990s, when the police began tracking shootings with clinical specificity.
Ganser uses ingredients that hark back to the era of Gang of Four, Siouxsie and the Banshees, the Raincoats and the Fall.
Exaggerated and feminine collars, which hark back to another trend of the 1960s and 1970s, are poised to make a major comeback.
The recent controversies over the conflict between freedom of expression and granting everyone access to speech hark back to another telling moment.
An engineering marvel expansive enough for showers and sleekly designed bars, the planes hark back to the age when flying had glamour.
LONDON — Hark back to history lessons during your school days, and the chances are you'll have learned about a lot of important men.
It's too cliché for me to hark on about how the tea itself—again, I'm British—is also a travesty, so I won't.
But it's a brilliant book and it feels apt now to hark back to it and what, for me, is its central message.
What's particularly weird about this case is that it seems to hark back to an era in the industry that is mostly defunct.
These goths hark back to the youth subculture that branched out of early 1980s punk music, particularly two bands: The Cure and Bauhaus.
They embrace the landscape when little is growing but frost and hark back to the origins of skating as a means of travel.
Some of the lessons are easy to spot — as in video pieces that hark back to the hallucinatory effects pioneered by Ms. Zazeela.
We may never know the full scale of its potential sketchy handouts that hark back to the bad old days of boy's club bribery.
Jennifer Hark Dietz, executive director of People Assisting the Homeless, outlined the connection between higher housing prices and the rise in homelessness and poverty.
Psychologists used to think that nostalgia – the use of memory to sentimentally hark back to good times in the past—was negative and harmful.
The looks are expected to hark back to the 1980s and feature shirtdresses, well-defined, generous cuts, ruffles and clothes that transcend the seasons.
Hark himself is a kind of harmless pseudo-messiah who ends up martyred nonetheless, and maybe even turns out to be the real thing.
Concrete-framed sections of the facade have factory style windows that hark back to the steel versions on the area's 19th-century industrial plants.
HARK Sometimes if I don't have to go to Brooklyn I'll go to Evensong at St. John the Divine, or to a later concert.
Chinatown Soup, a gallery on the Lower East Side, hosts a screening of "Green Snake," a classic fantasy by the Chinese director Tsui Hark.
The identical mosaic tile maps of New York City on the sides of the police substation in Times Square hark back to a different era.
Today's Polish nationalists hark back to the country's commonwealth with Lithuania, which at its height, in the 17th century, was one of Europe's great powers.
Hark back instead to the Second World War, which to believe our television and tabloid press is where our national pride is most safely invested.
These people hark back to the original trustbusters of the early 20th century, who were most concerned about preventing corporations from gaining too much power.
To an extent, this contested convention would hark back to the way the nomination process went down decades ago, before primaries and caucuses reigned supreme.
This idea is reinforced by the ink drawings that sometimes cover her canvases — networks of lines and shapes that hark back to her early abstractions.
There are no mentions of cellphones or internet searches or other 21st-century markers, and some of the tenants' memories hark back to midcentury childhoods.
Mr. Trump's comments hark back to the 19803s, when the Reagan administration criticized Japan for what it called unfair trade policies in the auto business.
Many of the new shoes expected to be introduced in the next three to six months are casual or hark back to classic Nike styles.
These Cruise shows hark back to the '50s and 60s world of couture, when clients began a relationship with a designer that could last a lifetime.
The more Shulman thinks about his photographs of films, the more he realizes that their origins hark back to childhood days when he collected 8mm film.
Instead, the figurines hark back to a once-common use for human waste: to fertilize farm fields and grow more food in the days before agrochemicals.
After speaking with siding companies, Mr. Hark estimated that if his unit had been a stand-alone property, the project would have cost closer to $7,500.
While they can hark back to rockabilly, soul, country, garage rock and gospel, Spiritualized songs are never simply retro; they have their own uprooted, unmoored tone.
On the surface, Ocasek's early Cars songs seemed to hark back to the more innocent, pre-psychedelic years of pop -- imagine American AM radio in 1965.
Murderous geisha robots in the film hark back to "Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex" as well as the 2004 sequel to the original movie.
When critics charge that conservatives' views hark back to the Domostroi, a set of household rules popular during the reign of Ivan the Terrible, Ms Mamikonyan objects.
Anyway, if you wanted to hark back to that glorious era, while also listening to the dulcet tones of Lana Del Rey, then you are in luck.
Imposing steel rafters and soaring 29-foot ceilings there hark back to a time when the space was used as a gymnasium and an indoor running track.
With its brazenness and high-profile target, the killing seemed to hark back to an era of political violence in Cambodia that many had hoped was over.
If such a motion were to be made, the chief justice would have to decide it, and under principles of law that hark back to Marbury v.
A cursory Google search of the Young Lords will produce a slew of black-and-white images that hark back to the prototypical male revolutionaries of yesteryear.
Decades from now, at their college reunions, this will be one of the things those students remember, what they hark back to, what they have in common.
The artist's signature mirrored domes and cupolas hark back to baroque art's awesome classical forms, but also make the viewer the subject of their own distorted reality.
It sounds like a hark back to the times we lived together in Norwich and London… let's be honest, you spent a lot of time being idle.
And while certain parts of Brooklyn have seen streets transformed with bike lanes, some riders say parts of the borough hark back to a less bike-friendly era.
Many were shocked by the attack in broad daylight in a public park, an episode that seemed to hark back to a more lawless time in the city.
" Stevenson says that by seeking numerous death sentences, prosecutors in the Deep South "hark back to the history of using the criminal-justice system to maintain racial control.
For a start, I couldn't believe that within our modern times we're getting images that hark back two or three thousand years all the way to Greek imagery.
At the same time, though, it's not hard to see how her hiring could also serve a signal: Hark, a new, more female-friendly era at Baylor begins.
Dry ciders hark back to the Thanksgivings of the earliest days of the country, and after many decades of being ignored, good cider is now on the rebound.
The films of the Hong Kong director Ann Hui ("A Simple Life") can be less flashy than those of her regional contemporaries, like Tsui Hark and John Woo.
Both work with grids: Ms. Hart's "Nebulae" (1982) is a lovely jumble of pastel rectangles, and Ms. Sekimachi's muted-linen squares hark back to the Bauhaus weaving tradition.
No spoilers, of course, but as for what becomes of Hark, can a man who stands for pure focus fare well in the land of the perpetually distracted?
Roland's clothing and strong-silent-type routine hark back to one of King's professed influences on the series, Clint Eastwood's Man With No Name from Sergio Leone's spaghetti Westerns.
Supporters hark back to a supposed golden age of meritocracy in which grammar school boys were to be found at the head of business, the civil service and politics.
It might serve you well to hark back to a mythic past that not only connotes a sense of uplift but also one of teetering slippage that requires resurrection.
The Smiths were categorized as post-punk, but their music and Morrissey's solo albums largely hark back to pre-punk: to full-bodied 1960s folk-rock and studio pop.
Boîte With the city's constant churn of night-life offerings, it's not uncommon for hoteliers and bar owners to hark back to New York's rich cultural past for inspiration.
Donald Tricarico, a professor of sociology at Queensborough Community College, told me that the terms hark back to a time when some didn't consider Italians really to be white.
Or hark back to the swelter of summer streets with a tube of ice candy, a meld of milk, sugar and maybe cantaloupe or avocado, depending on the day.
The Fuji and Impossible instant film images by Sophi Skin-Tight (Fred Attenborough) of performers and personalities in the Brooklyn scene hark back to the defining days of drag.
Everything on the internet these days seems to hark a revival of the 1990s trends I adopted the first time around: tattoo necklaces, scrunchies, Alice hairbands, even Troll dolls.
Fear of the divisive in politics seems to hark back to our original, still-undealt-with divides, one of which leads straight to the current occupant of 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue.
The president, who spoke before a crowd of more than 50,000 in the school's football stadium here, called on the graduates to reject politicians who hark back to better days.
Some of these studies hark back to the practice of sea-bathing in the 18th century or to the craze for sojourns in elegant cold-water sanatoriums a century later.
I mean, if Hark was published ten or twenty years ago, I think Fraz would probably be center stage the whole time and he'd have full run of the show.
And no one was ever identified as the hanger of the lynched bananas around the AU campus, a clear hark back to America's murderous racist past and an intimidation tactic.
Its nervous electro pulse and intensifying salvos of guitar noise hark back all the way to the Nine Inch Nails of "Head Like a Hole" from its 1989 debut album.
The company is not only the major employer in far-flung cities such as Krasnoyarsk and Bratsk but is also the de facto government, another hark back to Soviet days.
ISLAMABAD (Reuters) - As cheap Chinese-made motorbikes flood Pakistan's roads, fans of vintage Vespa scooters are scrambling to find spare parts and preserve models that hark back to a bygone era.
Some members still hark back to the mid-1990s when conservative president Jacques Chirac, whose family is from the region, swayed what is normally a left-wing bastion to vote right.
The dead-fowl tradition is sort of silly, but it does hark back to the good old days when people thought about shooting in terms of sport and scaring off burglars.
But ever ready for a fight, he seemed to hark back to last year's election by referring to an insulting term that Hillary Clinton once used for some of his supporters.
But where Fraz has been sinking since birth, Hark is rising — as in "glory to the newborn king" rising — through mental archery, a quasi-religious mindfulness regimen of his own creation.
Alagem's paintings hark back to the sensual Pop art of Tom Wesselmann's Great American Nudes, in which the artist reduced nude female forms into their basic shapes, in other words, objectifying them.
But they also hark back to an older model from Honduras's banana-republic days, when the country in effect turned over swathes of territory to giant firms like the United Fruit Company.
Though not confirmation by any means, the report seems to corroborate previous rumors that claimed the iPhone 8 will hark back to the iPhone 4 and iPhone 4S's iconic "glass sandwich" design.
While she does so with formal means that hark back to Russian Constructivism, she also evokes the brash colors and dynamic planes of 1980s design, as if Memphis had rejiggered El Lissitzky.
Put another way, she's Kafka with a paintbrush, mindful of the nightmares of history and partial to somber, social-realist colors (muddy browns and greens) that hark back to Depression-era art.
Their organization, the Pillars Fund, would hark back to what similar groups did for Irish, Italian and Chinese immigrants: support organizations working in an ethnic community while trying to counter negative perceptions.
Its midtempo groove, deliberate bass line and informal backup vocals hark back to Sly and the Family Stone, while Syd doles out her come-ons just a few syllables at a time.
It's going to be a little while longer until we see the third season of Stranger Things, but when it does, expect it to hark back to Chevy Chase at his most prolific.
Their world is a version of the lost and longed-for territory of fantasy and romance, genres that hark back to an elemental, folkloric past roamed by monsters and infested with ghastly wonders.
Like Hark, Lipsyte's writing makes us focus, with wild yet surgical swipes, dissecting the rampant jargon that assails us daily, the beautiful crap of culture, the ridiculous delusions that sustain our ridiculous lives.
Often these hark back nostalgically to an earlier phase of entertainment: the 1952 musical Singin' in the Rain , for instance, is set 20 years earlier during the transition between silent movies and talkies.
Woo turned Hong Kong into the epicenter of a fascinating and highly influential movement in action filmmaking, with his countrymen Ringo Lam and Tsui Hark also conducting mad experiments with death-defying stunts.
To critics, Rooney's signing would hark back to the early days of M.L.S., when the league often signed players well past their prime for their name value as much as their soccer talent.
Several of his works in this show hark back to a hysterical episode that swept the United States in the 1980s and '90s, when countless American parents accused preschools of Satanist child abuse.
Polos in tropical flower patterns and baggy shorts of aqua camo hark back to the 1970s, not only in their loud patterns and colors but also in the combustible material — 92 percent polyester.
Pin Museum helps keep my stress at a minimum by creating pins of famous artworks, allowing one to hark back to their high falutin pasts, without having to talk to anyone about Adorno.
"We are not quite sure how to interpret this, to be fair, but it could hark back to suggestions that the color of an eclipse was some sort of omen or signal," said Edmunds.
But, he added, "memories are clouded of what life was really like," and many people hark back to a lost, albeit mostly imaginary, era of secure, tightknit communities built around coal mines and manufacturing.
"This fall, we will all have the opportunity to put our differences aside and celebrate the rights that unite us as Americans," says Colman Domingo, who plays a slave named Hark in the movie.
For Esther, we can assume only that this is the final blow to her dignity; for Hark and Turner, we see something else: their transformation into men emboldened enough to fully defy their master.
There are a lot of toilets lying around the galleries that hark back to Marcel Duchamp's scandalous "Fountain" (1917), a repurposed urinal, but also proving that women can make puerile, potty-humored art, too.
Itineraries The announcement by American Airlines seemed to hark to another era: The airline would be adding shuttle service between New York and Chicago this spring — and serving free beer and wine, no less.
In the early stages of his career, Opelka, who is listed as 6-11 but has acknowledged that he is even taller, does not have a deeply successful professional past to hark back to.
The harsh restrictions on dogs — which hark back to anti-pet rules in earlier decades of Communist rule and reflect continuing tensions over the place of dogs in society — officially took effect on Thursday.
Leftists and liberals, meanwhile, often hark back to their own participatory politics, founded upon the civic advocacy of grassroots organizations, such as unions and civil rights groups, as the engines for political change and democracy.
While its bikes like the Scout and the just-released Scout Bobber are aimed at younger buyers, most models revel in heritage, with styling and names that hark back to the company's prewar glory days.
J.C. Boogarins, from Brazil, hark back to the spirit and fuzztone of tropicália, the Brazilian psychedelia that resisted a dictatorship; they're also kindred spirits, at least in this song, to the Mexican experimenters Café Tacvba.
" The production, like nearly the entire album, uses layers of keyboards with improvisational tendrils and puffy, quavery, analog-sounding tones that hark back to 1970s Stevie Wonder, particularly "Journey Through the Secret Life of Plants.
Two female characters are raped in the film, and the more graphic scene involves the wife of Turner's friend Hark, played by Gabrielle Union, who penned her own piece on why she took the part.
How apt that Sam Lipsyte's new novel, Hark, is about a pseudo-messiah and the rabble of weary citizens—bewildered by contemporary life, crushed by the jackboot of capitalism—who have found themselves in his thrall.
They hark back to the 1960s, '70s and '80s, when community organizations like the Fifth Avenue Committee, Banana Kelly and the Bedford-Stuyvesant Restoration Program helped save endangered neighborhoods, from the South Bronx to South Brooklyn.
What is unusual is that these celebrations don't just glorify the current militaries in all these countries; they also clearly hark back to the earlier glory and might of an old military — that of the superpower Soviets.
A handful of Wesleyan soccer players were in their driveway, basking in the sun and marking asphalt with chalk for the childhood game four square (they were using a hacky sack as a ball — hark, the 1990s!).
The sweeps hark back to the workplace actions of President George W. Bush's administration, and deviated significantly from the Department of Homeland Security's longstanding enforcement strategy of avoiding roundups of unauthorized workers and instead targeting abusive employers.
For civil rights groups, the restrictions hark back to the days of poll taxes, literacy tests, and other rules that were imposed to block minorities from voting until the Voting Rights Act of 1965 effectively banned such laws.
However, Xi has wholeheartedly embraced the party's founding ideology and re-introduced study sessions that hark back to the Mao era, as he stresses the need for China to be confident in its revolutionary history and political system.
Huawei is also appending the Leica brand to some filter effects, with the devices offering, for example a 'Leica Film Mode' that supports three photo processing styles — evidently designed to hark back to the film cameras of old.
The museum, opened in 2100 after the Taliban were run out of the capital three years earlier, gets around 20193,22019 visitors a year, but its contents hark back to an earlier period in Afghanistan's long history of war.
With a career spanning four decades and encompassing more than 100 movies, she has collaborated with masters like King Hu, Edward Yang and Tsui Hark, and starred alongside the likes of Chow Yun-fat and Samuel L. Jackson.
But the star ingredient in their recipe for success is nostalgia: Janeway takes vocal cues from the likes of Al Green and Sam Cooke, backed by brass-laden arrangements that hark back to Southern soul of the 1960s.
The film is a meandering chronicle of Bindu (Parineeti Chopra) and Abhimanyu's (Ayushmann Khurrana) love story and tries to hark back to a gentler time when mixed tapes were popular, kids climbed trees and technology hadn't pervaded our lives.
But they also hark back to a Columbus of a less complicated era, where The Republic's list of divorce filings and dismissals was perhaps its best-read feature and the police patrolled for teenagers breaking the 11 p.m. curfew.
In this exclusive clip provided to Mashable, watch what is by far the best exchange between them, when a light criticism of Dafoe's cooking leads to one of the most intense monologues of the Oscar-nominated actor's career. Hark!
Trump's celebrity and bluster hark back to the earlier days of another South Florida tour stop, the Inverrary Classic, when it was hosted by the television star Jackie Gleason, a more transcendent figure than any player in the field.
Additionally, the cinematography in Dear White People is a visual masterpiece, and creative Cancers will instantly take note of the extreme camera angles and stylized, elongated scenes that hark back to film giants like Stanley Kubrick and Alfred Hitchcock.
For years facilities have been providing patients with spaces that hark back to their younger years — perhaps a faux office with a roll top desk and dial phone or a nonfunctioning kitchen with wooden spoons and an ironing board.
Inevitably, these two team up to agitate the denizens of Mulderrig in a series of maneuvers that hark back to E.F. Benson's Mapp and Lucia stories of village gossip and skulduggery, though the secrets of Mulderrig are far darker.
Yet even as animation veterans and Sausage Party co-directors Conrad Vernon and Greg Tiernan hark back to the origins of The Addams Family, they fail to capture the spirit that made the clan such a hit to begin with.
Similarly, hark back to the mother of all kitchen sinks in 16003, when new Time Warner CEO Richard Parsons took a $98.7 billion charge to write off the acquisition of America Online two years earlier led by the man he replaced.
This was a big part of The Ask, and it reaches some sort of apex in Hark: the idea that maybe the only way to survive in this world is to trade in your ideals for some small semblance of security.
The rape, at the hands of a white man visiting Samuel's plantation, takes place offscreen — Esther quietly enters and exits the master's house, her trauma implied by her sunken stare and her collapse into the arms of her husband, Hark.
Thus they hark back to the ephemerality of pre-internet media consumption, when one likely had to buy a periodical to read that specific issue or watch a TV show in its broadcast time slot or else risk missing it forever.
Her policies and life story offer a mix of views with appeal both to voters who like the more modern image Ms. Merkel has given the party, and to those who hark back to its more socially conservative, Christian roots.
Her policies and life story offer a mix of views with appeal both to voters who like the more modern image Ms. Merkel has given the party and to those who hark back to its more socially conservative Christian roots.
" She notes passing place names that hark back to the Cherokee, and marvels at the unimaginable eruption of modern Atlanta, its skyscrapers like "rocket ships of glass and chrome" and its inhabitants all "clutching newspapers, cardboard cups of coffee and cellphones.
The joint album has been long in the making, Jay-Z said in an interview with The New York Times; the care shows in tracks that can hark back to vintage R&B or delve into eerie, disorienting electronic soundscapes.
Many offerings hark back to the chaatwallahs of Chowpatty Beach, overlooking the Arabian Sea, like muthiya, steamed dumplings of shredded long squash, suffused with bittersweet methi (fenugreek) and gingery disks of potato submerged in a ragda (stew) of white lentils.
Still, some politicians expressed frustration with a U.S. playbook that appears to hark back to the 1980s, when Japan accounted for a much bigger chunk of the U.S. trade deficit and its companies had yet to step up their direct investment in America.
"The damage has been done on the Gulf Coast, where rocketing refinery runs - hark, above 0003 million barrels per day - and low net imports have drawn down oil inventories by 7 million barrels," said Matt Smith, director of commodity research at ClipperData.
When Amanda Foreman and Lucas Wittmann founded House of SpeakEasy, the organization behind their literary cabaret series, "Seriously Entertaining," they wanted to break from the format of typical bookstore readings and hark back to the performative styles of authors like Dickens and Twain.
The games are based on well-worn tropes of the genre and hark back to simple, free puzzle games of decades past: bring a line to an end point, set a number of squares on a line without any of them touching.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads With their heightened colors and abstracted, organic forms, Gregory Amenoff's paintings hark back to the dawn of American Modernism — back to Arthur Dove and Marsden Hartley, who similarly sought the lyrical and transcendental in earthbound motifs.
These perhaps hark back to what Mr. Bayrle has described as a formative experience — sneaking into a local Catholic church and hearing a group of women reciting the rosary — or later, listening to Buddhist monks in Asia meditating to droning wind instruments.
Governors have so far remained quiet about whether they would seek waivers, but for many people who rely on the individual insurance market, these provisions hark back to a time when insurers scrutinized the health of all individuals before they could sign up.
More than that, they wanted a performance that would hark back to a different time — the time before anyone had heard that Heimlich, 20.76, their hero, had pleaded guilty to a felony: sexually molesting his 20.076-year-old niece when he was 15.
Those of us with long memories inevitably hark back to the Handel tercentenary year, 1985, and an epochal trifecta mounted by Pepsico Summerfare in Purchase, N.Y.: radically varied productions of "Teseo" (directed by Nicholas McGegan), "Giulio Cesare" (Peter Sellars) and "Tamerlano" (Andrew Porter).
The other actor was Colman Domingo, who played Hark in the slave revolt film "The Birth of a Nation," which, for the first half of this year, before controversy engulfed it, was considered one of the brightest prospects for the awards season.
All it lacks (besides convincing digital special-effects work — again, that skyscraper is just ludicrous) is the exhilarating sense of breaking cinematic ground that marked the work of Mr. Lam and peers such as John Woo and Tsui Hark almost 30 years ago.
The company also acquired an existing early stage clinical task management app, called Hark, built by a team from Imperial College London — evidently with the intention of building on that base tech, but giving it a more specific medical focus in the first instance.
So if we talk about automation, then one of the works we can do is not just to hark back to some kind of golden age, but to trouble that legacy as well, to talk about who worked then and under what conditions, you know?
Suiseki, exceptionally formed Japanese rocks found in nature, sit on the surface of this sculpture, standing upright in a geometric formation that hark back to the Chinese scholar's desk or study, where quotidian materials were transformed into rare objects due to unique placement or purpose.
Jef Huereque's painting "My Parents in Their Matching Zoot Suits" (1973) and Judith F. Baca's '163s photographs of herself as a femme fatale hark back to 1940s Los Angeles, while Laura Aguilar's pictures document people who frequented the Plush Pony lesbian bar in the '90s.
Mr. Hinterhäuser's taste seems to hark back to the tumultuous 1990s tenure of the impresario Gerard Mortier, who arrived with an agenda: to jolt a festival that, to his mind, had grown elitist and stultified during the long reign of the conductor Herbert von Karajan.
At first, in his first weeks as Manchester United manager, Ole Gunnar Solskjaer had a tendency, an instinct, to hark back to the club's golden past, mentioning Barcelona and 20183 and Alex Ferguson so freely and so easily that it seemed to be automatic.
Opinion on the royal couple was divided on a recent day during high tea, a popular ritual at the imposing and luxurious Empress Hotel, which was opened in 1908, and boasts vaulted ceilings and Bengal tiger head furnishings that hark back to the British Raj.
In a week when the United Nations is pushing governments to preserve software from around the world, and after a year of seeing what a loathsome, awful, horrid place the web can truly be, 64 Bits is a pure, wholesome hark back to the early days.
They also hark back to the height of the war in Afghanistan, when about 100,000 American troops were fanned out across the country and intelligence was regularly harvested in an effort to produce more targets for fleets of American aircraft and hundreds of Special Operations forces.
By combining vintage film clips with animated effects, Sholim crafts surreal dreamscapes that hark back to the works of M.C. Escher, and Terry Gilliam, but these are arguably better, because they move (and are packed with enough detail that you'll want to watch them over and over again).
Hark Morner, the enigmatic figure at the center of Lipsyte's fourth novel, is a failed stand-up comic who becomes a self-help guru of sorts by espousing a form of deep concentration called "mental archery," which helps people find focus in a time of chaos and distraction.
If her old friend's arrest seemed to hark toward the past and the turbulence of the life she successfully escaped, then the fight portended its own disorienting future — one rife with messy microcelebs, constantly competing for public attention by further offending the sensibilities of an increasingly numb audience.
The songs on "Singing for My Supper" have a foundation of vintage instruments — guitars swaying in reverb and tremolo, the steamy tones of a Hammond B3 organ, the self-contained cool of a Wurlitzer electric piano — and arrangements that hark back to the Nashville and California of yesteryear.
And party officials often hark back to 2004 — a year in which there was also a Republican incumbent — when Senator John Kerry of Massachusetts, a staid moderate, prevailed in the caucuses despite signs in the months before that Howard Dean, the feisty former governor of Vermont, was surging.
While my minty drink was good, it lacked the matcha whipped cream, caramel sauce, cranberries and that elusive strawberry slice (not to mention the panache of actually looking like a decorated tree.)   Not to be defeated, I went to the second-nearest Starbucks, where they proudly advertised the specialty drink. Hark!
That is partly because both ideas hark back to a post-war golden age of social mobility, in which bright, poor children could take the 11-plus entrance exam to win entry to a good school, before proceeding to a free university and, later, a career in business, government or science.
Many domestic and international efforts are already underway, but they have been overshadowed by the politically-charged rhetoric surrounding the U.S.-China trade dispute and its accompanying proposals that seem to hark from another era, when we didn't possess the accumulated technological know-how that we now have at our disposal.
The newish prime minister has courted the elderly, with policies that hark back to the good old days (including a plan to revive selective grammar schools) and endorsements of traditional values (she attacked the National Trust, a conservation charity, for organising an egg-hunt that supposedly failed to give sufficient mention to Easter).
One Nation Tories hark back to a philosophy invented by Benjamin Disraeli, one of the great Victorian prime ministers, which dominated the party from the 234s to the 233s; basically traditionalist, moderately reforming, friendly to business but at the same time plausibly cast as being on the side of the common man.
There is a lot of fighting, of many varieties — kung fu and hatchets in the street for the Chinese characters, bare-knuckle brawling for the whites (mostly Irishmen), and some Wild West gunplay in a stand-alone episode at a stage stop that pays tribute to both John Ford and Tsui Hark.
More important than the charm factor is that La La Land's song-and-dance elements hark back to the glory days of Hollywood musicals, which were at their best during hard times, when people wanted not only to escape their troubles but also be reminded there was some goodness in the world.
Tensions between the two countries hark back more than six decades, since Japan occupied the Korean Peninsula from 1910 to 1945 during World War II. Both countries signed a treaty in 1965 — but relations continue to be strained over compensation for forced labor by Japanese companies and sexual slavery of Korean women in wartime brothels.
The tour amounts to a bet by the league that longboarding — which is surfing with long, plankish boards that hark to the sport's origins — deserves a competitive edge and another connection to the millions of hobby surfers worldwide, the ones who aren't dropping into 10-foot barrels at famed spots like Pipeline in Hawaii.
"Their fall can be as sudden and as dramatic as their rise to the height of fame," Lee Hark-joon, a South Korean journalist, who has produced a documentary and written a book about the Korean music industry, recently told The New York Times after Ms. Goo was found dead in her home in Seoul.
Should it hark back the New Deal and Great Society policy monuments of Franklin Roosevelt and Lyndon Johnson -- who signed Medicare into law 54 years ago to the day Tuesday -- or is the path back to power a recognition that in an age dominated by conservatives, the gentler more incremental and centrist progressivism of Bill Clinton and Barack Obama?
But the genre's rhythms and tropes, its politics, allegories and story arcs have become so familiar — Hark: Here's a character at the very end of a movie, staring into the distance, speaking to another character about how they'll have to get together and do this again, in a sequel — that you have to laugh at that, too.
Some hark back to Mr. Truong's time at Royal Siam, with the spices recalibrated slightly: rough cakes of ground mackerel suffused with lemongrass, fish sauce and kaffir lime leaves, akin to Thai tod mun pla; strips of steak steeped in nam prik pao, a Thai chile paste with a brash undersea funk, tangy and smoky-sweet.
Both Donald J. Trump and Paul D. Ryan, the House speaker, have released tax proposals that hark back to the supply-side programs of the Reagan and George W. Bush eras, promising that the multitrillion-dollar cost will be more than offset by the extra revenue flowing into the Treasury from the growth that will follow.
And the Ku Klux Klan and American fascist movements have experienced levels of attention and influence not seen since before World War II. Trump complains that he is being subjected to "witch hunts" and "McCarthyism" but has advocated policies — like a "registry" for Muslims — that hark back to the list-making and name-naming of the HUAC era.
It is possible that decades from now, if the team does at all well, some new sportswear behemoth with the franchise will hark back to these jerseys and decide to make a retro-inspired look for, say, World Cup 2046 that pays homage to the green zigzags (which, given they are already a homage, will be a kind of Dada experience).
Hark back to an earlier, perhaps more innocent time, when a Harvard student named Mark ZuckerbergMark Elliot ZuckerbergFacebook users in lawsuit say company failed to warn them of known risks before 2018 breach Social media never intended to be in the news business — but just wait till AI takes over Facebook exploring deals with media outlets for news section: report MORE was creating software.
Hark is trailed by a coterie of confused pilgrims, including Fraz Penzig, an underemployed tutor and gym-rat; Fraz's wife, Tovah, a stalled poet whose day job in educational technology keeps their family financially afloat, but who can't keep her marriage intact; and young heiress and group benefactor Kate Rumpler, who spends much of the novel trafficking bone marrow as penance for her privilege.
And after the flaming disaster of the Galaxy Note 7, which had to be recalled after some batteries caught fire, the risk-margin for Samsung on this potential release must be very tight indeed… No one wants a folding phone if that means screen glitches and/or a handset that feels tacky and whose dimensions hark back to the heft of late 1990s mobile devices.
For example, Team Trump — Ted Cruz of Texas, Brian Kemp of Georgia, Ron DeSantis of Florida, to name three — stuck to the party line that kept them in their positions, albeit in down-to-the-wire races, making their appearance in Republican red ties (the kind the president favors, the kind that hark back to the go-go days of Ronald Reagan) with dark suits and white shirts, the effect ironed and buttoned-up and very status quo.
The very form of her work, while consistently inventive within its traditional frame, trades on a kind of nostalgia, and that nostalgia often correlates with the novels' content; it seems no coincidence that Cusk's recent " Kudos " is set explicitly in the Europe of the Brexit era—fearful, ugly, divided—while Atkinson's books often hark back to the days of the Second World War and the Blitz, when plucky England came together as one, and triumphed in a European conflict that ended six years before Atkinson was born.

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