Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

"instructive" Definitions
  1. giving a lot of useful information

976 Sentences With "instructive"

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

"If you look to the words from the past that I think are instructive, they're instructive because they were right then and they're right now," Cipollone said.
But their differences are myriad — and far more instructive.
The results are instructive — and may make you thirsty.
Take, for instance, "The Road to The Temple of Honour and Fame, An Instructive and Entertaining Game" (1811), or "Science in Sport or the Pleasures of Astronomy, A New Instructive Pastime" (1804).
Clinton often cited should have been instructive, Ms. Whitson said.
Pop culture doesn't need to be instructive to be good.
I never beat him, but they were very, very instructive.
Kehlani's development as an artist and ally is also instructive.
My [personal] dirty talk is more instructive than in porn.
The results of BAML's latest fund manager survey are instructive.
As a Republican, I think her selection should be instructive.
I think that's instructive for people who will come afterwards.
The case of nikkeijin, immigrants of Japanese extraction, is instructive.
The longer answer is more complicated, but it's also instructive.
At this point, the South Africa example is most instructive.
Such examples can prove instructive, especially to local, grassroots organizations.
The Square partnership is instructive in light of this acquisition.
I think that looking at history can be very instructive.
A comparison with the Arab Spring in 2011 is instructive.
And "Green Lantern" was instructive for what not to do.
The issue of gun control is one instructive case study.
But it is instructive to revisit it in full context.
On the issue of his successor, history may prove instructive.
Just sitting in on dozens of those presentations was instructive.
The differing approaches of California and New York are instructive.
Gutierrez' experience is instructive because she is not an immigrant.
Tuesday's Wisconsin Supreme Court election results were stunning, and instructive.
And here the past serves as an instructive prologue; we've
The reasons are instructive for 2016, if not directly applicable.
But the lesson of Tim Tebow may be instructive here.
Is that instructive for other congressional districts like Pennsylvania's 18th?
That should be instructive for the U.S. and its allies.
That it's obviously ridiculous doesn't make it any less instructive.
Clinton's win was instructive for Emerge America, Gholar told Vox.
But it's instructive to look at Kelly's own management style.
A bakery situated in Tokyo's busy Ueno district is instructive.
The story of her "gaffe" about coal miners is instructive.
Some research from 2014 published in Health Affairs is instructive.
Sometimes I write about failures — because they can be instructive.
For me, the last couple years have been very instructive.
The short life of Altee Tenpenny is instructive on many levels.
A look back at the 1998 Microsoft antitrust case is instructive.
The story of the Hitler Diaries ends with an instructive coda.
How McConnell sold the bill to its members was also instructive.
In that way, these images are empowering and instructive and real.
And the way it played out was both stunning and instructive.
There's also an instructive exposé of corporate America's addiction to NDAs.
It's also instructive that Zuckerberg is a fan of the GDPR.
An anti-malaria campaign in the 1950s and 1960s is instructive.
What it does, however, is instructive to where Facebook is headed.
It is a painful lesson, but one that is universally instructive.
But it could, if we're paying attention, be an instructive one.
It is an instructive way of looking at how to live.
Here it is instructive to mention Scorpio, my favorite fake boyfriend.
What Navy leaders learn from this pause will probably be instructive.
The Lefever confirmation process offers some instructive lessons for senators today.
Those earlier forays into the city were instructive, Mr. Zwirner said.
"To his very last days, dad's life was instructive," Bush said.
The lessons SOPA/PIPA fighters learned are instructive to us again.
It's instructive in some ways to look to an old master.
The experience in California over the last two decades is instructive.
A Supreme Court ruling in the mid-'90s is instructive here.
The current debate over Brett Kavanaugh's nomination provides an instructive example.
Thus began my complicated, passionate and instructive love affair with basketball.
But the work had been instructive in many other ways, too.
Here again, the case of the 9/11 attacks is instructive.
But its re-emergence in an ad this week is instructive.
The history of the Affordable Care Act is especially instructive here.
But they are instructive if we hope to avoid another crisis.
This method is simple for you and instructive for media companies.
But most instructive of all may be Mr. McConnell's own words.
Mr. Goldstein offered an instructive anecdote from the 2018 midterm elections.
In those contexts, the example of the Ingebrigtsens can be instructive.
But seeing "2001" broken down into these components is nevertheless instructive.
Here, the intellectual conflict Packer only briefly alludes to is instructive.
It was very important to me to be entertaining and instructive.
The experience of the Buttigieg campaign and Mr. Baccio is instructive.
It can be interesting, and instructive, when a book provokes animosity.
And, importantly, what instructive lessons do they hold for Donald Trump?
He called the story of the Rwandan genocide "instructive" to Americans.
But for now, the experience in Philly may again be instructive.
So I think neither of those answers actually are very instructive.
It's instructive to begin with what hasn't changed from past surveys.
It's instructive to look at how the Freedom Caucus negotiations worked.
JR: I think the Lucy Flores case will be very instructive.
It was an instructive moment, one that's weighed heavy ever since.
That's a nice touch, although it wasn't something I found very instructive.
In this respect, the Hall and Fischer expeditions are an instructive example.
The fate of UK Prime Minister Theresa May is an instructive story.
Now this is subjective self-reporting, but it's still useful and instructive.
It is possible to create an empathetic yet instructive guide for refugees.
IS THERE AN EXPERIENCE YOU'VE HAD WITH HIM THAT YOU FIND INSTRUCTIVE?
This story, recounted in Neil Taylor's new history of Estonia, is instructive.
No matter how the decisions were actually made, the scandal is instructive.
That the Texas Senate adjourned shortly after the House did was instructive.
Of the three books, the most instructive may well be the parody.
Early in the debate, this produced an instructive clash over health policy.
Our collective sense of helplessness has become more instructive through the years.
So the first month of the season may not be very instructive.
For this, Cohen's book with its focus on '90s companies is instructive.
App-based ride-hail company Lyft's recently filed IPO prospectus is instructive.
And so Singapore, Taiwan and Hong Kong might be more instructive examples.
All signs are that the coming years will prove even more instructive.
More instructive, perhaps, are the points of departure between father and son.
Colorado, with a large technology sector, was perhaps the most instructive example.
They are meant to be restorative and instructive, without veering too didactic.
But even the namesake of the Fed&aposs offices can be instructive.
They pointed to the problems in Iowa caucuses as an instructive example.
"I think that the 2009 time frame is very instructive," Mullen said.
But his most recent memory may be the most instructive for him.
Yet a comparison with the 1980s, the original lost decade, is instructive.
But it's instructive to look at the way the two shows differ.
Looking at the policy that sparked the most recent protests is instructive.
As such, it's instructive about why Oz is so resistant to being modernized.
So in some ways the polls today is not that instructive on that.
The state-level decarbonization bills like the one from Maine could prove instructive.
Too few disengagements indicate a lack of instructive situations from which to learn.
That's not an exact analogue to Google's system, but it is nonetheless instructive.
And this is where the various DNAs of each player become most instructive.
How investigators tied these anonymity-obsessed individuals to the illegal activities is instructive.
It's also sort of instructive about what you do, and how press works.
Here the recent history of climate science in the public domain is instructive.
What you learn from smart hardware can be not just informative but instructive.
But it's instructive to look at how other famous witnesses have changed history.
But it's instructive, and I learn a lot from that kind of storytelling.
Facebook's recent announcement, followed by the immediate update to AdBlock Plus, is instructive.
An instructive example is Egypt's troubled cotton industry, once the country's "white gold".
Central School District No. 1 (1972) is instructive, receiving favor in other circuits.
The most instructive recollection was that of a United States naval pilot, Cmdr.
Real war isn't as bloodless or as morally instructive as G.I. Joe cartoons.
But historical motivations for voting are becoming less instructive as climate change worsens.
The experience of labor and civil rights in the midcentury is instructive today.
The case of Officer Haste, who shot Mr. Graham in 2012, is instructive.
Obama's path is instructive to Harris -- and not just because of their race.
The most instructive piece of Mr. Ocean's data dump is that 45 minutes.
Her 2008 primary battle with Barack Obama furnished an instructive case study, Mrs.
Parente said watching oil majors position ahead of the auctions had been "instructive".
Now that ITT is in bankruptcy, Mr. Graves's whistle-blower experience is instructive.
The RESTORE Act structure should be instructive in cases like the Volkswagen settlement.
The trailer's centerpiece is instructive because the scene deviates from Mr. King's book.
Mining the same territory, "Head Over Heels" is more carefully and consciously instructive.
"Marcel" and "The Art of Laughter" are more amusing and instructive than hilarious.
What it means: The first instructive jobs report won't arrive until early May.
It's a relatable predicament, and his response is instructive: He learns to cope.
The explanation is as depressing as it is instructive about our national politics.
It is instructive to consider other conflicts between medical privacy and public interest.
It seems instructive that "The Return" doesn't use the TV conventions you mention.
"I think everything is instructive for what you're trying to do," he said.
To understand the coming developments in the market, chess offers an instructive example.
His recently released memoir, "Call Sign Chaos," is interesting, instructive and, ultimately, unsatisfying.
The parallels are striking, and instructive; Amazon's critics need only consider Sears today.
It is, then, instructive to understand the political views of our business leaders.
The FBI offers an instructive test case on what Nixon's rash antipathy yielded.
There's probably something instructive in that, but whatever: We'd just forget about it anyway.
So different, in fact, that our treatment of past technologies fails to be instructive.
The growth of the nine-year-old company is a bit breathtaking — and instructive.
The Clinton/Sanders split is instructive, particularly following on the heels of President Obama.
It's instructive to compare Pacino's Hoffa with Jack Nicholson's, in the underrated "Hoffa" (1992).
But that doesn't mean that the situation unfolding in San Juan County isn't instructive.
But understanding what's happening in the poorest corners of white America is certainly instructive.
In a time of Trumpian nativism, that might be even more instructive for whites.
One need look no further than the current transportation market for an instructive analogy.
A comparison with Swedish public spending is instructive, given talk of a Nordic approach.
I won't take you through the whole exercise, but a quick look is instructive.
Here, too, it might have been instructive for Ovitz to expand on the experience.
A comparison of New Hampshire primary exit polls from 2008 and 2016 is instructive.
This should all be more than a little instructive to the incoming President Trump.
That Biyombo is now gone should be instructive to Ujiri and Raptors fans alike.
The airline industry offers an instructive example of how businesses are addressing the threat.
In the meantime, here are some other interesting — and instructive — outtakes from that conversation.
But the reaction was highly instructive of what to expect in the months ahead.
And as a morally instructive fable, it needs to examine these issues of prejudice.
Even if they fail, these attempts to reinvigorate space will be instructive and thrilling.
Or maybe Bowie's example is instructive: Some just haven't really been in love yet.
The case of St. George's, an elite boarding school in Middletown, R.I., is instructive.
What happened when the Cold War ended provides instructive lessons into its actual nature.
The success of that kind of work in demography, especially historical demography, is instructive.
The rapprochement with Libya The history of the U.S. rapprochement with Libya is instructive.
Natan: Co-teaching the J.A.S.A. class with Finn is pretty lovely, and instructive besides.
The one much longer-lasting modest correction on the above chart is possibly instructive.
And while their report isn't a perfect analogy to military families, it is instructive.
Moreover, it is instructive that free exchange of information is precisely what tyrants fear.
Diversity is important, but a museum's handling of content is more instructive, he added.
But on this biographical question, the Calov volumes turn out to be acutely instructive.
To be clear, there's obvious instructive value in recognizing similarities between past and present.
It's instructive, here, to look at the history of al-Qaeda in Iraq again.
That's why Happy Together, which airs right after The Neighborhood, could prove so instructive.
The book is instructive in the multiple hazards and difficulties of foreign training missions.
Sanders's stance on Nicaragua provides a particularly instructive example of his leftist dictator problem.
The experience of President Obama over the last eight years should be instructive here.
I hope our experience — in the spirit of science transcending borders — can be instructive.
Reagan, among other things: These are only a few examples, but they are instructive.
Listening to the speeches delivered by the masters of the house is always instructive.
This nostalgia, like the frustration that underlies it, has a long and instructive history.
The story of 1917 may be instructive for President Vladimir Putin's Kremlin as well.
It's an unexpected evolution, to say the least, but possibly also an instructive one.
A look back at the Republican race for the 2016 nomination can be instructive.
How he begins to represent gay love in these early paintings is interestingly instructive.
But when it comes to the deepening impeachment inquiry into Trump, Johnson is instructive.
The way in which Mr. Trump has argued for a wall also is instructive.
That said, the impeachment of Andrew Johnson strikes me as the most instructive precedent.
In the case of America First, that history is dark but also deeply instructive.
It should be not just instructive but the final word in most important pursuits.
I think the comparison with a jewelry display is instructive in its unintended irony.
Before getting to the predictions, it's instructive to think back on George W. Bush.
This 2009 New England Journal of Medicine paper, from Emory's Saad Omer, is also instructive.
Arai's talk was probably the more instructive on just how smart the robots have become.
But suffice to say that there is no more instructive story in the present climate.
Ms. Tomes writes a fluent and immensely readable chronology, minutely referenced, instructive and ruefully entertaining.
The case of Janet Napolitano, the former Democratic governor of Arizona may be instructive here.
It offers an instructive reminder of how fragile and dangerous China was not long ago.
Commentary from Paul Begala A dial group sponsored by Women's Voices/Women's Votes is instructive.
Both should be a painful but instructive read for prison officials planning the government's overhaul.
The images benefit from historical context but are instructive and engaging all on their own.
Taking even 15–30 minutes every morning to read uplifting and instructive information changes you.
Comparing the HB2 compromise to the resolution of a similar controversy in Indiana is instructive.
The story of terrorism is written by the state and it is therefore highly instructive.
He engages in an instructive, ideological debate with Carrie over the uses of inflammatory speech.
Ultimately I don't think fighting over which nerve endings led to the orgasm is instructive.
It'll be up to teachers to create instructive worlds, and therein could be the problem.
"These steps provide an instructive playbook for other leaders facing crises like this," Yohn said.
International examples of political interference in banking also offer instructive lessons to bear in mind.
Regan's case is instructive: She was particularly vulnerable because of her age and marital status.
It is instructive to determine why the Kim dictators have pursued nuclear weapons so emphatically.
BCRA's fate since 2002 is also instructive for how Warren's bill would fare if passed.
Two previous episodes when the United States threatened to withdraw from international organizations are instructive.
That both have been locked in their curious purgatories for so long, though, is instructive.
It's in those areas, I would say the conversations have been most instructive for me.
"The Patriot" is an instructive movie; "Saving Captain Asgill" might be an inspiring one. ♦
On this point, Steven Levitsky and Daniel Ziblatt's "How Democracies Die" is probably more instructive.
It might be instructive to analyze that, too, in terms of a lingering inferiority complex.
Mr. Erdogan's zeal for construction, where much of the overborrowing took place, may be instructive.
A look at the continent's three leading economies, Nigeria, South Africa and Egypt, is instructive.
I always look out for that, it's a good experience and very instructive, as well.
The regulatory story of this chemical is particularly instructive about the E.P.A. under President Trump.
A look at the two justices who have professed fidelity to the doctrine is instructive.
But they're learning more by the day — and what we know so far is instructive.
It's instructive to help us understand that capitalism does not equalize these conditions under racism.
Yet it is instructive that you can be an English major without having read Shakespeare.
He associated novels with improbable romances, or mere entertainments; "Pamela" was intended to be instructive.
In that respect, playing alongside Wolff for the first time was especially instructive for Spieth.
It's a sad but instructive look at how children deal with danger, trauma and grief.
This shift in how we describe our world (from birds to software) is itself instructive.
Patton's role was particularly instructive, given that she willingly went along with Meadows' disgusting act.
This alarming situation in North Carolina should prove instructive for Mr. Trump and his party.
In that respect, playing alongside Wolff for the first time was especially instructive for Spieth.
And so it's instructive for them to look at and respond to Del Baldo's portraits.
"Look at where soda taxes have taken effect in the US, it's instructive," he added.
And in that one sense, the decision in Frye is instructive, though not technically precedent-setting.
I thought I'd share this with you, it isn't much material but it's fun and instructive.
Delving into the history of Stormfront's creation is deeply instructive of the predicament we're currently in.
That no Republican electors cast faithless votes in that election is instructive to our current situation.
California offers an instructive example of what that could look like for the rest of America.
The change that's most instructive about the future might be the newly combined Google Nest group.
Here, Shinji's reaction in episode four — which, by the way, is called "Hedgehog's Dilemma" — is instructive.
It's going to be instructive to see how the two negotiate this part of the merger.
It is also highly instructive of what worked this year for audiences — and what did not.
This approach is often instructive, allowing the reader to see familiar events through a different lens.
And Ethiopia's experience could prove instructive in showing what works in reducing obstacles to birth control.
That one of the Harvard researchers is dressed as Pikachu while presenting their results is instructive.
Again, Trump's travel is instructive -- he is campaigning in Maine, New Hampshire and Iowa on Friday.
Yet what's happening in the trenches before those funding announcements roll out is often more instructive.
Isn't it instructive, too, that Erin Moure, who lives in Quebec, there spells her name Mouré?
The 2008 election is instructive, when the young Barack Obama took on the old John McCain.
Also surprising and instructive are the contradictions of North Korean cultural and political life on display.
It's instructive to look back at CableCard to see how this played out in the past.
This is instructive to an extent, but European crime drama is functioning somewhat differently in America.
We still don't think the ending of this instructive story involves everything going on as before.
This series is itself an instructive example of Disney's synergy-centric approach to its video service.
His ability to place himself perfectly, at the right moment, was instructive, to say the least.
While this assessment might seem unsurprising at first blush, the reason for Kim's attitude is instructive.
With free speech in mind, a 2003 Virginia case concerning intimidation and free speech is instructive.
Today, the country again faces a profound political crisis, and the summer of 1968 is instructive.
The newest, which opened this month at Plaza de las Americas on 175th Street, is instructive.
At the opening of her exhibition, Washko screened a clip from one of Julien's "instructive" videos.
What our agency learned in that era is instructive today in Flint and across the country.
The recent report's findings are especially astonishing — and instructive — in the field of climate change policies.
In retrospect, the lessons to be taken from this small but immensely instructive episode appear obvious.
The mixed findings are instructive regarding both the benefits and the inherent limitations of such efforts.
And we get an instructive preview of how this will play out in work to come.
But it's instructive to put the two side by side, because they act as a pair.
But precisely because of those reasons, it's treatment of fascism can be surprising, empathetic, and instructive.
Saturday's concert had a similarly instructive angle, this time focused on Bartok's appetite for folk music.
The way that the game forgets about the creatures called elums is its most instructive quality.
It would be instructive to ask wealthy taxpayers who oppose this policy change to explain why.
It's also instructive as the presidential race shifts here this week amid bleak prospects for Sanders.
But perhaps Kelly's most instructive experiences at Southcom involved the scourge of trafficking — drugs, weapons, people.
By that point, you've already been through the better part of an instructive and generous life.
But it will also be instructive to see how far politicians try to push the Fed.
The video is painful to watch, but instructive in the history of white American willful unknowing.
But what happens in the Somali region in the coming months and years may be instructive.
But this week's hearings were instructive about where the Republican Party stands as of Thanksgiving 2019.
That sea change, symbolized by this transformation of the Commons, submerges a lot of instructive history.
There are many instructive public interest technologies that focus on designing with (not just for) users.
Apparently, she is reading Gretchen Rubin's best-seller Happier at Home and finding it very instructive.
An examination of the H.15 Selected Interest Rates release from the Board of Governors is instructive.
Though she's reluctant to get too personal, the film's most instructive clips come from Gund's television appearances.
The company's recent "Resistance Radio" project for Amazon's The Man in the High Castle was particularly instructive.
But as with the wine book, the biggest challenge was making the book's content instructive yet accessible.
It is instructive to keep this in mind as China again talks of opening its financial system.
The example of Switzerland, where NIRP has been in place for more than a year, is instructive.
The IPO market was the most transparent proxy we could find, and while imperfect, it is instructive.
And in this respect, Casement's refusal to condone exploitation of any kind makes for an instructive difference.
"I think the debate tomorrow will be instructive," Carson said when asked whether he'd endorse a candidate.
And it's an instructive stock disaster, reminding investors that it's not just the masses that chase performance.
The interesting and instructive thing about this is we did that because we kicked the diplomats out.
But nothing has been instructive as The Weather Channel's surreal recreation of flooding powered by Unreal Engine.
However, there were several tweaks to the post-meeting statement that market participants likely will find instructive.
The old house was gone, Yan said, but the story of its destruction was an instructive parable.
It's instructive to draw on 1974, when I covered the House and the impeachment of Richard Nixon.
The extremely consequential jurisprudence of former Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy is instructive in this latter regard.
It may be instructive that the cure for addiction is to trade in one tyrant for another.
Indeed, for those lost in the theatrics, the story of Spartacus is instructive as suggested by Booker.
These episodes could be instructive in how Trump wields the privilege in the political standoffs to come.
Still, it is an instructive account of the power of groupthink and the value of independent minds.
What we know about the current president's finances are instructive as to the importance of tax returns.
As it happens, Davos might serve a real purpose in the end -- providing an instructive litmus test.
It is instructive as to just how far away from the popular will the U.S. government stands.
The puzzles range from approachable-but-surprising question #1's to difficult-and-instructive question #5's.
That instructive experience with my client decades ago remains in my perspective of American social action today.
But even setting aside, if only for a moment, the troubling gender assumptions, the line is instructive.
It was instructive to see how several of the company's stars were, successfully, addressing a larger audience.
No story is as instructive as that of the Japanese, arguably the most diligent of Hamilton's disciples.
And I think the final season is instructive when it comes to how the show uses Piper.
His voice is instructive but not didactic; opinionated but not at all polemical — in fact, anti-polemical.
But for progressive activists, the legislative maneuvering in Lansing and in Madison, Wisconsin's capital, has been instructive.
"It's very instructive that the bond market is giving a completely opposite story," Mr. Sri-Kumar said.
The reactions of the rest of the Premier League's elite to City's dominance last year are instructive.
Mr. Cohen's situation is instructive, as we explain in a new paper about the possible pardon strategy.
The shame of Sofia is not unique, in that context, but it is instructive in two ways.
But it's also an instructive one, in that it highlights how the two countries deal with extremism.
Colleagues said his experience at MD Anderson was instructive for how Hahn would approach the FDA job.
It's interesting and perhaps instructive that the pipe bomb addressed to Brennan was actually sent to CNN.
The debut show, "Muff Busters: Vagina Myths and How to Fight Them," is intentionally general and instructive.
STEEL STRENGTH Steel's reaction to Monday's release of a disappointing set of Chinese macroeconomic indicators was instructive.
The whole exercise illustrated it is possible for a lesson to be instructive and entertaining at once.
We once spent an instructive day driving around the very old old master sites of Etruscan art.
I appreciate the restorative aspects of yoga, but, truth be told, I like it more because it's instructive.
It's an instructive and novel combination, and we suggest picking up the book, especially if you love history.
The Apple / IBM deal is more than instructive in this case; it will help fuel this new venture.
Trump's Twitter account is just one part of the president-elect's information diet, but it's an instructive one.
Plus, there isn't yet an instructive model in the United States for areligious, sober-ambivalent booze-free bars.
Indeed, it's instructive that Gingrich could not handle Kelly's pressing him recently in an interview about Trump's morality.
I don't want to be burdened with the responsibility of thinking: How can this be instructive or valuable?
These are the "instructive" works of sex education teacher, sex shop owner, writer and visual artist Zoe Ligon.
It is instructive that President Xi of China has made it clear he wants the negotiations to proceed.
Sunday's comment by National Security Advisor John Bolton that Libyan denuclearization is an instructive historical model may backfire.
Well, the downfall of the famous Roman general who inspired this Shakespeare tragedy may be less than instructive.
However, a drill-down look at where copper has been arriving in the LME warehouse network is instructive.
Trump exchanged barbs with fellow Republicans throughout the year, but his fight with Flake was the most instructive.
For the BJP's critics, the fact that the Taj is located in Uttar Pradesh (UP) state is instructive.
These companies need to maintain their market share while being perceived to be helpful and instructive, he added.
Yet California transitioned from red to deep blue, and this should be instructive for the national Democratic Party.
A conversation during Mr. Trump's transition with Cecile Richards, then the president of Planned Parenthood, was particularly instructive.
"The fact that the room's full is instructive — there are a lot of questions about the bill," Rep.
It is highly enjoyable and instructive, even nearly 50 years on, and you won't regret the effort paid.
It's an instructive case study in how local government leadership has to work collaboratively to make things happen.
The demonstration of how little one has to do to suggest a face and features is also instructive.
It's interesting and instructive to see how the two worlds function in real time, especially when news hits.
That postcard, by contrast, might have an image or text that is particular and, therefore, potentially historically instructive.
No one measures anything, but Ms. Bennison does her best to fill in the blanks with instructive narration.
At the least, though, the contrast throws into relief how un-pat, instructive and necessary "She Said" is.
I thought it'd be fun and instructive to tour McKelvey's digs just a few blocks north of NYU.
Perhaps it's no surprise that my most instructive visit was to the Interior Department's Washington headquarters in 2018.
Perhaps it's no surprise that my most instructive visit was to the Interior Department's Washington headquarters in 2018.
But the incident was instructive for both men, who discovered they are the yin to the other's yang.
If Jackson withdraws, as seems likely, the difference between how Bush and Trump handled their missteps is instructive.
The case of the Hillary Clinton tour of excuses is also instructive on how liberals respond to failure.
This show, subtitled "Iranian, Turkish and Indian highlights from N.Y.U.'s Abby Weed Grey Collection," should be instructive.
It's instructive to consider the sorts of things presidents could get away with if Dershowitz's argument were accepted.
Even if you don't have a device that uses iOS the test can still be instructive for others.
" His answer was instructive: "As we have done since the beginning," we will tackle it "step by step.
After an election in which facts could be oh so elusive, it's instructive to look back to 2003.
The 2013 debt ceiling vote is particularly instructive and highlights another glaring defect in H. J. Res. 2.
"Rather than being instructive, what we do [at Montblanc] is we listen and then we guide," Kamal said.
Separately, Alvarado said that California offers a particularly instructive example for Republicans when it comes to Latino voters.
I thought it would be instructive to share my habits, not because they're noteworthy but because they're mainstream.
In evaluating that commitment, the record is instructive — so, as the sportscasters say, let's go to the tape.
These places are perhaps the purest microcosms of capitalism, and their lessons are instructive for all of us.
" We need to get a little lost, pursue "productive and instructive disorientation, distraction, wild-goose chases, dead ends.
And the California experience is instructive for other states that might want to close some of their loopholes.
The paintings are instructive, divulging what might happen to people consumed by sin and those who fight it.
While her animation has academia in mind, I think it is truly instructive for a much broader audience.
Fast Times at Ridgemont High is a comedy in its essence, but it's of the sobering, instructive kind.
If you've listened to a Google earnings call before, you know that Pichai didn't give a particularly instructive answer.
The Frye case is instructive, he says, because judges regularly look at robots as entities that strictly follow orders.
Writing in Politico, Tucker Carlson tells an instructive story about how he had once insulted Trump's hair on CNN.
A case from 2016 involving actions taken by the head of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau could be instructive.
Still, this is an instructive example of how technology works, both in the economy and in relationship to investment.
The disconnect between the two markets is instructive but international players ignore "local" problems in China at their peril.
Her videos are peppy and instructive, featuring step-by-step tutorials, product reviews, and snippets of life around Shenzhen.
That movement was powerful but short-lived, and is thus instructive for the position we find ourselves in now.
The app features drool-worthy #foodporn captioned with simple yet instructive instructions on how to make the dishes yourself.
The comparison between the fortunes of the United States' two biggest aluminum suppliers is slightly misleading but still instructive.
Also instructive is the experience of Samsung's most direct rival, Apple, with the Antennagate scandal around the iPhone 4.
His mother recalled a conversation she had had with the three-time Olympic breaststroker Brendan Hansen that proved instructive.
But four categories seem particularly instructive: the super-rich, the military men, the establishment foes, and the Washington insiders.
Regardless, while Nicki and Cardi's feud might seem superficially entertaining, there's also something deeper and instructive embedded within it.
These examples can be instructive for U.S. regulators seeking to get their arms around the large and messy industry.
To the latter point, Trump's spelling foibles are almost always less interesting, or instructive, than our response to them.
The comparison between the fortunes of the United States' two biggest aluminium suppliers is slightly misleading but still instructive.
It is instructive to compare these works with the contemporaneous views of Mont Sainte-Victoire painted by Paul Cézanne.
Moreover, with his victory, Lamb has provided a tremendously instructive model for Democrats to follow this midterm election cycle.
It's an instructive example of how false narratives and talking points in Washington are amplified by inaccurate media coverage.
CHIP enjoys broad bipartisan support, but the details of the policy negotiations to reauthorize its funding mechanism are instructive.
And that's where the result in Ohio can be instructive -- in judging the size of the coming Democratic wave.
One instructive text might be his address in 2015 to law-school students at the Catholic University of America.
Even though McGovern and Clinton didn't win, their candidacies are instructive on why Iowa and New Hampshire are important.
While it's useful to know the extent of Pruitt's grift, his scandals are instructive when viewed from another angle.
Since then, scientists have been trying to understand what goes into making this blueprint, and how instructive it is.
Ohio is a particularly instructive example of how the health law can avoid failure if states want it to.
His story is also instructive of how difficult that might be, as baseball in Cuba remains fraught with politics.
The juxtaposition is instructive, illustrating how the political has become its own aesthetic category over the last few generations.
When considering the fate of mindfulness in the American marketplace, it's instructive to look at the evolution of yoga.
It is particularly instructive to track and review conversion rate over time and regularly run experiments to improve it.
While Clinton does a decent job pointing out what happened, it's not instructive in the way she probably intended.
Is there something instructive to be found in the film as far as current-day political issues are concerned?
Portraiture was ranked below historical and mythological painting which was deemed, when successful, to be intellectually and morally instructive.
The appeal now is how it's proving to be an instructive worst-case scenario of our current freak-out.
But men themselves have played a major role in lifting taboos, in ways that are instructive for the West.
But his legacy, to me, is powerful and instructive in any field: The purity of the effort matters most.
Trump's invocation of Watergate in one of the tweets is instructive, though not in the way the president means.
What's instructive to the Knicks is that losing (and the resulting draft leverage) provides multiple possibilities but no guarantees.
It is instructive that three would-be candidates were military men whose high rank clearly could not protect them.
Ms. Yahya, of the Carnegie Middle East Center, said such responses send an instructive message to other Arab strongmen.
Mike Braun (R-Ind.) says the impeachment trial "ought to be instructive" to President Trump's behavior in the future.
Kazin's work is an instructive one, an important book in chronicling a too often neglected chapter in our history.
Still, it's instructive that at one point Tonya lectures the audience on its complicity in how she was treated.
Cardi became famous on Instagram, and her first viral Instagram video, posted in 20183 and now deleted, is instructive.
But failure can be instructive, too (as is the fashion these days in both tech startups and child rearing).
One old woman won't stop telling instructive stories about her horses, and everyone else groans whenever she starts one.
Comparisons with Latin America and Europe are instructive — though perhaps not in the way that many political scientists intend.
While 10,000 may seem like an arbitrary milestone, it's an instructive one, especially when you consider how fast it's come.
Yet like most efforts it will be instructive, both to others attempting to tame the zeitgeist, and hopefully to Musk.
The result is a deeply instructive and fair look at one of the most important political figures in the country.
I'm not suggesting we should naively take what's said on stage at face value, but paying attention can be instructive.
In the meantime, TikTok is tackling the job of crafting the sort of community it wants through these instructive videos.
Sucker Punch is actually one of the more divisive movies in Snyder's already divisive canon — and in really instructive ways.
Manafort's firm, Davis Manafort, had produced an analysis of the Orange Revolution that Yanukovych found instructive, according to one report.
The ways that CNM emphasizes communication can be instructive for singles as well as people in other kinds of relationships.
The decision could be instructive for understanding how one of the SEC's two ongoing investigations into Tesla might play out.
Waiser said the expected listing of rival taxi firm Lyft would be instructive for Gett's strategy to raise public cash.
The experiences of that city is instructive: Austin did not immediately fall back into the clutches of evil taxi companies.
Whether that appeal succeeds or fails, what is most instructive to the voting public has been Trump's response to Khan.
They are very instructive, revealing not only Musk's own thinking about journalism, but Silicon Valley's attitude toward even minimal scrutiny.
Though that fact is significant: Written letters between friends or family members are not just therapeutic; they are also instructive.
It's an instructive window into their worldview: Mnuchin has made a lot, which means he's been taxed a fair amount.
"He understands that consulting monetary policy rules can provide both instructive guidance for the Fed and transparency for the public."
To Fong-Jones, the security team's answer was both shocking and instructive; she didn't realize a leaker could be protected.
An instructive, if imperfect, analogy can be drawn with the cases of Cincinnati and Louisville, universities about 100 miles apart.
To understand the potential societal and economic impacts of AI, it is instructive to look back at the industrial revolution.
It's a self-examination of the national corpus, something that is instructive, whether we learn anything from it or not.
The instructive nature of the series isn't even the real bone she has to pick with the critically acclaimed show.
Their names are instructive and evocative: Eagle Rising; Fighting for Trump; Patriot Tribune; Revive America; US Herald; The Last Resistance.
But perhaps as instructive as what happened in Illinois is what occurred in Tuesday's other primaries in Arizona and Illinois.
Awdish's journey from physician to helpless patient and then back to reformed physician is equal parts dramatic, engaging and instructive.
In fact, looking for what's missing from the candidates' words might be more instructive than what actually gets said onstage.
But as you come to know this dizzying, sobering and surprisingly instructive drama queen, standing back is hardly an option.
This is central to the Brown approach, because he himself prefers literature that is instructive and, ideally, not wholly invented.
Instructive self-talk can be useful beyond finding your lost car keys or picking out a friend in a crowd.
I was looking through it and it's so incredibly instructive how venture deals come together and possible pitfalls to avoid.
The successful transition to popular government in Tunisia should be instructive for a region plagued by dictatorship, instability, and turmoil.
This year, as in most years, I looked to smaller museums and university galleries for unusually inspiring and instructive shows.
Her discussion of her philosophy and her methods — the why and the how of her movies — is incisive and instructive.
We're not forecasting winners and losers in the gubernatorial races, though the polling averages in these states are quite instructive.
He learned lessons from the experienceThe difficulty Xu had in raising that round was instructive for him and the company.
That would have been the beginning of a decent, possibly instructive memoir, or at least something beyond these sleepy musings.
If evolution theory can be instructive, it would tell us that the winning strategy will come to dominate the environment.
Then again, it could be instructive: Is only trying every other year the new market inefficiency that nobody knows about?
But the story didn't end there — and what came next is instructive for understanding the consequences of Trump's presidency so far.
Sometimes it affects who'll be the next president, in others it shapes the election year agenda, and often it's politically instructive.
"He added, "It is instructive that even in the Disney film, young Ms. Mulan falls in love with her superior officer!
I want to talk through a specific example of a tech keynote being instructive: Amazon's big 80-product extravaganza last week.
An instructive example of what such a Galaxy S8 might look like is provided by Xiaomi's recently introduced Mi Mix smartphone.
But it may be instructive to look at what happened back in the 1990s when spam was the scourge of consumers.
A number of space experts think a new lunar mission could prove instructive before making a journey to the red planet.
"It's become very instructive as a 'tell' to the direction of global equities in general, and potential inflection points," Lyons said.
But it may be especially instructive about one key demographic — affluent, college-educated Republicans, who trended away from Trump last year
That first interaction between Spicer and the press was instructive -- and a telling indicator of all that would come after it.
According to Pew, the question of religion versus religiosity yields a more instructive answer than any related to a specific faith.
As someone who recently argued that playing bad games can be instructive, even I have a hard time recommending The Bunker.
Price is a factor, sure, but it's instructive that teams aren't even jazzed about the idea of Cutler as a backup.
The latter of these is very instructive when you consider how a movie theater chain might fit into the Amazon pantheon.
The recent success of the gun control movement in the corporate space is instructive for progressive activists of every stripe today.
In fact, it's instructive to remember that global recessions have usually begun suddenly and been a real surprise to most people.
The failures of Web 2.0 are also incredibly instructive: Facebook and YouTube are the premier platforms for brainwashing and recruiting extremists.
You might think it unusual for a music video to offer something so instructive, but for Loudon, that was the idea.
For the moment, though, it's amusing and instructive to see Twitter tantrums erupt among some of the show's most loyal partisans.
Lesnar's recent match is the most instructive in trying to figure out the strange and symbiotic relationship between the two promotions.
But three things made this race different — things that could prove instructive for Republicans, if we choose to look at them.
The Congressional Budget Office offered an estimate about what would happen if the president stopped making the payments, and it's instructive.
When Times reporters take on social phenomena, it's often instructive to imagine what headline The Onion would put on the story.
This all may seem rude to point out on the eve of the company's big hardware event, but it's also instructive.
The results of my polling, if that's what it can be called, are far from scientifically verifiable, but they are instructive.
High school relationships can be so emotionally instructive that it's best not to impose yourself too strongly on their inner workings.
In the Video Op-Ed above, I show how the parable is much more instructive when applied to Trump's political rise.
"What's instructive to her?" asked Representative Anna G. Eshoo, Ms. Pelosi's fellow California Democrat and a close friend of the speaker.
Milch's capacity for honest self-reflection even as time and physiology take his talents away is unprecedented, instructive, and deeply moving.
Now the report, and the instructive history it contains, is at risk of remaining under wraps for more than a decade.
They do not have all the answers, but they do have novel, albeit sometimes foolish, approaches that are in themselves instructive.
Marsch regards one of them, Bob Bradley, as the "biggest mentor" in his career, and he has found Bradley's experiences instructive.
The short answer is most likely yes, with the experience of Indonesia's ban on its nickel ore exports in 2014 being instructive.
Over 22016 caricatures of Richard Nixon offer an instructive precedent for artists struggling to overcome political and creative blocks in one leap.
An instructive video illustrates the process, adding in some stars-and-stripes motif shoes to emphasize the underlying "Kick Him Out" message.
It is instructive to compare shale with another natural-resources business that has had to cope with a collapse in commodity prices.
But that doesn't necessarily mean it was the most interesting or instructive race out of all the ones featured in the documentary.
It's also instructive to consider Pizzolatto's apparent interest in the idea that some might see what Hays and West do as justice.
We thought it would be instructive to review just how the best intentions of FTC's Do Not Track initiative went so wrong.
Malcolm Gladwell's analysis of why his stories work can be instructive, but it's not what you'd think of as a writing course.
Just because the blood pressure status quo hasn't been improving lately doesn't mean it won't — and the Canadian example is instructive here.
It'd be 10,000 times more instructive than a sideline interview, and I very much hope that someday it becomes a real thing.
There are a few historical analogies to this elevated fear, like the Red Scare and Japanese internment, and they are all instructive.
"Their ability to engage on ideas and yet respect one another's abilities and maintain a friendship is an instructive lesson," he added.
The instructive lesson is that the private sector will almost always do a better job of making that progress in these areas.
The most consequential and instructive phrases in political life are rarely the product of focus groups or high-level strategic skull sessions.
That's exactly how Nixon won the White House in '68, to use one last example from that very similar and instructive year.
In thinking about what happens next in the Senate vote, I find it instructive to look at the House's health care process.
Her Story, which had players searching a computer database of interviews about a missing person, should have been instructive for The Bunker.
Dan Jeffries provides some instructive examples of what this could look like: deflationary coins could automatically adjust their value to track inflation.
It's an instructive comment about how HHS sees the exchanges, and who it sees as the potential customer base for ACA coverage.
The event is designed to be mostly instructive and inspirational for the freelance software engineers who use Google's tools to build things.
The GOP's willingness to hold CHIP hostage is instructive: It opposes welfare for reasons that have nothing to do with the deficit.
Clinton wins the nomination — and especially after the two party conventions — will provide a somewhat more instructive comparison between the two candidates.
With the Energiewende well underway, and with so many similar features, its progress might prove instructive for the backers of the GND.
And then there's this instructive sequence, perfectly encapsulating Holiday's newfound aggression when placed in a situation that encourages him to let loose.
The arc of the Trump-Tillerson relationship should be instructive for Pompeo, Cotton and any of the other current Cabinet members, however.
But health care costs are wildly above the median in both the U.S. and Switzerland, so the author's comparison isn't particularly instructive.
Instead Mr. Cornelissen, who has a reputation as the most unyielding of natural winemakers, thinks it's more instructive to taste his failures.
Michael Robertson's " The Last Utopians: Four Late Nineteenth-Century Visionaries and Their Legacy " (Princeton) is instructive and touching, if sometimes inadvertently funny.
For those who believe the violence is the product of some intrinsic aspect of South American culture, the Brazilian case is instructive.
Although these are often thought of as negative reactions, Morris and his team found that they can actually serve an instructive purpose.
Unlike most Met Gala themes, this year's happens to come with a rather instructive seminal essay explaining precisely what the theme is.
Comparisons between "Summertime" and "Blue Is the Warmest Color" — Abdellatif Kechiche's controversial and acclaimed tale of lesbian love — are inevitable and instructive.
Straight Babylon ting, Desus Nice would say, but instructive all the same, and be sure to run through the photo slide show.
My research on this issue over many decades has identified the following thought experiment as an instructive way to view this problem.
And I think that that's really instructive on a day-to-day basis as to, like, what do you want to do?
It will be very instructive to see how Remind fares in its monetization efforts moving forward and how the educational community responds.
It's instructive to recall that the war in Vietnam only ended when the United States Congress refused to continue to fund it.
For political insiders like Mr. Sheinkopf, some of the more local races "were more instructive about what's going to happen" next year.
To Nevada conservatives, it was an instructive moment — and one they said Mr. Heller appears not to have learned a lesson from.
Velasco said she considers the true-to-life angle of the "Joker" film to be potentially instructive to audiences rather than harmful.
Porat said on the earnings call that "it is most instructive to focus on year-on-year changes" to TAC growth rate.
The concerns that he expressed could prove instructive as the Mr. Trump looks to sell his own ambitious tax plan this year.
This wouldn't be such an issue if the tests are high-quality or instructive, but they aren't, for a variety of reasons.
"Their ability to engage on ideas and yet respect one another's abilities and maintain a friendship is an instructive lesson," Scalia added.
Crowd sizes — always an imprecise measure of enthusiasm — are even less instructive in the small, rural areas Klobuchar visited over the weekend.
And so, it may be instructive to revisit the evidence that (according to his own definition) Trump himself is a sometimes socialist.
In the increasing gig economy, the Alia model may be instructive for a range of employees across local, state and federal levels.
For me, the most instructive section was the short appendix by Akazawa Mari discussing the Japanese residential architecture depicted in these images.
If history is instructive, what comes next for Mr. Bannon is a relentless blend of mass repetition, capital lettering and brazen punctuation.
But still, the differences between the millennial and over-30 crowd are instructive in understanding what different generations think of the stocks.
Below is three examples which may serve as instructive for the ecosystem of stakeholders including technologists, philanthropy, academics, non profits, and government officials.
She just believes it isn't the most realistic or instructive tool, because it's not an accurate reflection of what sex actually looks like.
For Beach House, music is not instructive, nor is it a protest; instead, it is the beginning step in a very personal journey.
You can click on the video at page bottom to see the full conversation, but some highlights that we found particularly instructive follow.
Mystery leads to experimentation, and while that experimentation might result in immediate failure, often those failures are instructive, humorous, or, at least, interesting.
" The second definition, now obsolete, is instructive as well: "Ostentation, display of the outward tokens of position, as riches, dress; vain-glory, pomp.
The results: The Great Recession and slow recovery period are instructive for understanding ethno-racial elements of citizens' political attitudes beyond partisan distinctions.
Perhaps we can learn from instructive international examples in Brazil or in Paris, where €100 million per year is allocated through the process.
This instructive and historic moment was helpfully dramatized in the Beverly Hills 90210 episode "Something in the Air" (season three, episode 28, 1993).
IF ONE wants proof that the past is, indeed, a different country, it is instructive to look at the rate of baby-killing.
But Lincoln's curiosity and learning process -- forged in real time -- can be instructive today, if only Mr. Trump would be willing to try.
The Pew study comes on the heels of an April Pew study about belief in God in America, and the differences are instructive.
The results are instructive, to say the least — if they are right, PV could potentially provide fully half of global electricity by 230.
Those failures, the ones that are supposedly instructive, are about making room for the player to succeed at something else later in time.
Bad work experiences are instructive: (A) what I shouldn't do again; (B) how things are done wrong and how I can do better.
The story of the screwworm, a particularly nasty insect that once caused millions of dollars of losses in the livestock industry, is instructive.
Memoiristic writing by ordinary, unimportant people should be read in the same way as fiction: as descriptive, not instructive, with no greater meaning.
But rather than looking at the standings, it may be more instructive to compare each team with its expectations before the season began.
No precise tally exists of the costs from the president's ill-advised approach, but some of the numbers already in circulation are instructive.
It may also be instructive for U.S. government officials to take a close look at what the British are doing on this topic.
And it is never less than instructive, too, about the way musicals, bookless or not, can turn even the saddest history into beauty.
That's probably because I knew I might end up reversing the Facebook deletion for the sake of writing instructive articles like this one.
It's instructive to anybody in the word business: Instead of wandering around in abstraction, she gives the reader images and scenes to imagine.
But to be instructive, the similarities need to be real—and with Cold War analogies and emerging technologies, they more than often aren't.
That effort, under the most intense pressure possible, without his best stuff, was instructive for the evolution Chapman would eventually have to make.
Now that President Trump has signed into law a federal criminal justice reform bill, California's experience, and the political fallout, is especially instructive.
An instructive point in Berman's book — if not a central one — is that antidemocratic forces mutate as frequently as anything else in politics.
What researchers have found in classrooms could be instructive for the small conference rooms at work where we hash out ideas and plans.
What gets lost in superficial analogies is that, despite some valid and instructive parallels between the two pandemics, there are many more differences.
Because the images are clearly advertising, it's tempting to take them in at a sweep, but considering them one by one is instructive.
Our colleagues Trip Gabriel and Jonathan Martin have an instructive profile of Stewart, who is running to unseat Tim Kaine, the Democratic incumbent.
It was simple, instructive and Jeffersonian, backing the notion that there's an easy alternative to all the awful additives at the American table.
If the opening weeks of the season have been instructive, the Yankees might really be something when they get the entire band together.
Auriemma had a simple answer, one that is instructive when evaluating the rise of the Oregon women's basketball program under Coach Kelly Graves.
But it was far more instructive to return home and realize how the lens of identity has transformed American reporting in recent years.
But there is a more instructive way to think about what Judge Gorsuch's impact will be after he is sworn in on Monday.
But as the #MeToo movement forces us to reckon with the varied forms of harassment infecting our workplaces, Mr. Trump's smear is instructive.
But learning the truth about it was instructive, steering me away from my fantasy of being an astronaut and towards storytelling for a living.
Everywhere I looked I saw a photograph of a teddy bear or the real thing, sitting in the gloom, complete with an instructive label.
It's instructive—if dispiriting—to watch Peduto slowly realize over the course of the last few months that Kalnick and Uber aren't his friends.
TERRY QUINNEmeritus directorInternational Bureau of Weights and MeasuresSèvres, France It is instructive to compare the development of quantum technologies with that of artificial intelligence.
All of these programs improve over time as more people use them and keep feeding the AI learning mechanism the instructive data it needs.
Seeing the book and the film through the lens of everything that's come since is instructive: The world has changed, and so has representation.
And it provides an instructive preview of looming battles among government agencies for control over industries like drones, smartphones and gadgets yet to come.
Advocates of a deal point to President Barack Obama's 2015 accord with China aimed at reducing commercial cyber espionage as an instructive case study.
Rubrik's beginnings makes for an interesting and instructive story for people looking at what might be an interesting area to tap for a startup.
It's actually instructive to look back at lists from years gone by to see just how dumb some of those acquisitions could have been.
As unlikely as it seems in the midst of our collective post-election hysteria, it's instructive to remember that Democrats have been here before.
Here it's instructive to know that he surely believed that the man who would soon be inaugurated as President would always have his back.
Clinton's particular problems are interesting as historical chronicle, but are much less instructive than the generic problems, which will recur no matter the candidate.
Yet Trump's similarities with Jackson—and the wider forces marshaled by both men—are more instructive than the comparisons to Nixon's obstruction of justice.
I noted last week that Trump's invocation of Watergate in one of the tweets is instructive, though not in the way the president means.
Now, they are differing on how to provide paid family leave, in ways that are instructive for other states and for the federal government.
Kitwood believed not only that a happy life is possible with dementia but that such lives could be instructive to the rest of us.
Read more: The 2 types of difficult conversations all couples should have before marriageThe cartoons and instructive nature of the book don't hurt either.
How this all plays out will no doubt be instructive, but let's not lose sight of the humanitarian crisis playing out on the streets.
This is another race where there isn't a ton of ideological space between the campaigns, so the candidates pre-2016 careers seem most instructive.
The "how to open a bar or restaurant and then how to run it" book, which is hidden amid prolix self-observation, is instructive.
Now, as he and Mr. Cruz travel the state, the most instructive contrast between them may come in the questions voters think to ask.
So while turnout numbers can be instructive, it's important to remember they may not be a good gauge of Democratic enthusiasm across the country.
Mike Braun on Sunday said he hopes the impeachment process will "be instructive" for President Donald Trump's conduct if he's acquitted by the Senate.
But one of the most dramatic and instructive cases is Turkey, which formally entered the "Not Free" category after years of an accelerating slide.
Again, looking to other states would be instructive — no other state requires anything close to the amount of discovery New York's law now does.
The thought experiment is instructive because it compels us to ponder some of the fundamental forces shaping American culture and politics at the moment.
This is particularly instructive in the so-called progressive lane, where Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren have been fighting over the party's excitable base.
A parent can create a complex and instructive "self" for the child, and it can be distressing when the "real," flawed self breaks through.
It's instructive that Mr. Decker once taught architecture alongside Samuel Mockbee, the beloved, charismatic co-founder of the Rural Studio, who died in 2001.
Reading class did provide other lessons: in a weird way, the condensing of words, and worlds, in those digests proved instructive for a poet.
In brief, of the two distinct but inseparable strands that constitute this book, one is instructive and engaging, the other highly subjective and distracting.
If this, in turn, proves difficult, the difficulty is as instructive as the difficulty men have in telling the difference when women see one.
A 2016 case on federal agency power is potentially more instructive on how he might approach broad moves to slash current regulation, according to experts.
For an answer to that, it's instructive to look at Vermont, where yet another GOP governor is cruising to reelection in a very blue state.
Whatever the outcome, that's also a reason to revisit the past; it can be instructive in helping you understand just how far you've come, too.
As to whether China will realise its ambitions, or whether it will continue to be dependent on foreign chip technology, Taiwan's own experience is instructive.
Unlike more text-heavy magazines whose style wouldn't fit on Discover, Cosmo's quick hits of pop news and instructive beauty tips feel digestible on Snapchat.
Police said Friday the suspect has yet to give a motive for the attack, but court records and Ramos' own social media accounts are instructive.
I think [it's] kind of the instructive, most fundamental element of horror storytelling—there's no relief from the fact that you live in the world.
But Ms. Merkel also speaks for a large number of Germans, if not the majority, a fact that is as instructive as it is depressing.
Kellyanne Conway' comment is instructive too because people describe my husband as 'Kellyanne Conway's husband' more often than they describe him by his first name.
The company is also working on ways to make the experience more instructive in order to help customers better understand how the car is working.
Ulysses S. Grant is an especially instructive case, because he faced the grimmest temptation to tamper with the election of 1864 during the Civil War.
It will be only the second state to do so, but in many ways, it's a more interesting and instructive case than the first, California.
As a result, there is no single tactic that will ensure the vitality of religious congregations in the US. But the Mormon experience is instructive.
The primaries were instructive of how well a candidate can run a campaign, but they were not determinative of the outcome of the selection process.
This is a challenge facing artist and data journalist Mona Chalabi, whose instructive and reassuring illustrations about the pandemic have gone viral on social media.
In the meantime, Rogier is quick to note that MasterClass has a variety of kid-friendly content that's instructive — if best consumed with parental supervision.
Amina's short and tragic story, inspired no doubt by 2015's searing media image of the drowned Syrian child Alan Kurdi, is harrowing and instructive.
These national polls are instructive in states where there has been a dearth of recent polling, like Alabama, a state with 52 delegates on offer.
The challenge became an opportunity, however: Spain's 3-0 demolition of Italy in Madrid was, arguably, the most instructive result of the European qualifying campaign.
While China's propaganda channels on Facebook are not nearly as subtle as Russian groups when it comes to influencing opinion, their techniques are nonetheless instructive.
Yet the story of abolition becomes more complicated, and more instructive, when readers understand that even the Great Emancipator was ambivalent about full black citizenship.
If ecstatic at times, Hollinghurst's characters are not especially heroic, but it's still instructive to see how easily they change or are overridden by time.
Finally, welfare reform offers an instructive lesson in making policy based on rigorous social research and honest evaluation, rather than ideological abstractions and reflexive partisanship.
I found it particularly instructive when Rothman detailed a realization Gibson had about the internet — about how cyberspace has begun to change the physical world.
Residente's solo album will arrive with a documentary on the making of it, as well as an instructive website that's already partly online, and more.
"I actually do believe that episode has been instructive for him, and I do believe you'll see something a little different going forward," Carson said.
Fiasco's house acting style might be described as one of instructive transparency, in which flamboyant performances never get in the way of the textual meaning.
It's instructive how normalized its permanent war has become, with its high body count, bloodlessness and fascist chic (the black uniforms evoking the Nazi SS).
It makes an instructive contrast with "The Brink," Alison Klayman's intimate, intelligent documentary on Steve Bannon, who helped put President Trump into the White House.
The Sofacy Group's chosen target—the aerospace industry—is instructive, insofar as it speaks to the growing vulnerability of space systems in the information age.
It would also have been instructive—if expensive and politically difficult—to give grants to residents of entire towns to see how local economies are affected.
One instructive example comes from the career of George Conway, the husband of presidential counselor Kellyanne Conway and a possible candidate to be Trump's solicitor general.
I don't think it's everyone's job to be a bridge, but in this political and cultural climate, I try my best to be patient and instructive.
Other startups aren't quite as dependent on human labor just to operate, but rely on it nonetheless to make sure the data coming in is instructive.
It also can be instructive to look at markets outside the U.S. In East Asia, businesses are taking a more aggressive posture vis-à-vis insurance.
What I hope people take away from these images is the understanding that the practice of close, patient observation of nature is tremendously rewarding and instructive.
It's instructive for determining how best to deploy the hundreds of billions of dollars that are currently flowing overwhelmingly to a single model of higher education.
Though Negan immediately relieves Gabriel of his weapon, the two nevertheless have an instructive back and forth, with Gabriel convinced he has to take Negan's confession.
Initial reactions of Trump's friends and foes were instructive when it comes to what may happen next in the new political landscape shaped by the report.
It would be instructive if they, including the Treasury, were to redo their calculations in the light of what we now know to be Brexit policy.
I realize a great many people have discovered this before me, but it's been an instructive lesson for someone who'd previously written the entire thing off.
Snyder's emails are instructive because they show, at least in part, how officials responded to the growing concerns about toxic lead contamination in Flint's tap water.
The anecdotes are amusing and instructive; plenty of wry internet-based and internet-like art projects get name-checked, and you'll want to Google them all.
For all the thumb suckery that's been expended on the various "Why Trump, Why Now" analyses, the lessons of Rubio's failure might be just as instructive.
Having just come from Australia, where I was for the Sydney Writers Festival, it was instructive for me that so many people were following our coverage.
But the primary obstacle has come from men's own silence on the subject — and here is where the Middle East can serve as an instructive example.
Much less often in the spotlight, the border between the United States and Canada nonetheless offers Americans an instructive window onto their past, present and future.
But it is also instructive to recall an episode from 1974, when President Gerald Ford pardoned his predecessor, Richard M. Nixon, for his alleged Watergate crimes.
But however well intentioned and instructive those memorandums and analyses might be, they do not begin to approach the weight of an actual Supreme Court decision.
Often shrouded in secrecy, these rites may include instructive-allegorical dramas, acted out by members dressed in special costumes and guided by traditional scripts or customs.
The cardigan-clad Fred Rogers, who died in 2003, touched generations of children for more than 30 years with his warm, instructive approach and positive messages.
It was instructive, Thompson said, to recognize that she loved Leo all the more because of his unruly ears, something others might see as a defect.
That said, the fallout from his pedophilia comments, which resulted in his disinvitation from CPAC, his book cancellation, and his resignation from Breitbart, is uniquely instructive.
While felony disenfranchisement is determined by the states, the 2017 midterms in Virginia — one of four states that permanently ban felons from voting — are instructive. Gov.
The experiences of Lombardy and Veneto, two neighboring Italian regions that took two different strategies for their coronavirus response and saw two different results, are instructive.
As instructive as it can be to look back, the real power of a question like this one is using it as a guide going forward.
Governments may not be doing as much on UBI as individuals like Maezawa and Yang would like, but they've definitely run some noteworthy and instructive experiments.
It might not have been illegal, but bringing people like the Mercers before Congress to explain their motives would be very instructive to the voting public.
The Cybertruck case is especially instructive "in terms of how to win support for an idea and how to bring new technologies to market," they added.
The Affordable Care Act's Medicaid expansion is instructive, with many states declining to participate despite the federal government's promise to cover 90 percent of the cost.
She was never instructive, nor was she relentlessly dark — there was always lightness, both in her touch and in her insistence on an essential human goodness.
On the Runway So Kim Kardashian West is back — on social media, and with an instructive lesson in image management and control of the personal narrative.
When the colonists reach Coyote, our spaceman has already provided them with their very own instructive myths and fireside tales, strong enough to last for generations.
Mukherjee centers his article on the work of David Allis and Danny Reinberg, who think that "epigenetic" mechanisms play a causative, instructive role in gene regulation.
Remember that Trump is a day-to-day president; what he says today isn't terribly instructive about what he will do tomorrow or the next day.
Perhaps an instructive example can be found in Mastodon, the open-source social media platform that mimics Twitter in some ways while differing in important others.
"Talking with the audience after the panel on sports was really instructive on the divide within the attendees at NAB," Selander told Mashable in an email interview.
It is as instructive about the challenges and compromises of running a large organisation as it is about the process of putting on plays that change lives.
Green had lots of instructive advice, including on the waning power of celebrity endorsements, the power of offline retail, and why expensive catalogs can still make sense.
"We have yet to see the 21990 pages that have not been yet released about the 29/211 report, and that may well be instructive," he said.
For those wondering when U.S. rates markets might turn, a look at behavior around the recent policy reversals in Sweden, the euro zone and Australia is instructive.
Roth's pessimism about the prospect of national redemption should be instructive to critics of President Donald Trump's policy of caging migrant children in isolation from their parents.
" Going one step further into true industry inside baseball, McDormand left with an instructive mic drop: "I have two words to leave with you tonight ... inclusion rider.
One thing that Amazon is instructive about, though, is when considering how Orderful's data trove could be used for more analytics and business intelligence down the line.
In searching for a parallel crisis to Brexit in Britain, Bagehot (November 24th) glossed over some of the instructive detail of ditching the gold standard in 1931.
But what makes Bungie's efforts with the sequel to its shooter / MMO hybrid so interesting is how instructive it is for the rest of the game industry.
Indeed, America's attempts in the 1890s and early 1900s to deal with an earlier version throw up some curious and instructive parallels with France, and Europe, today.
From our conversation, there were three broad takeaways that may be instructive for others trying to bring data-driven innovation to governance, particularly on the urban level.
That may be instructive today, particularly as the global retail industry struggles to adapt to a world of seemingly limitless inventory and increasingly rapid fulfillment and delivery.
This tragic event is instructive -- in how we as a society relate to it, how we deal with the aftermath and in how we can avoid denial.
Even his exit was instructive, when he calmly and almost incidentally remarked to his executioners that his plan to kill Michael Corleone was nothing personal, just business.
Yet it is instructive, if only because a Pentagon plan to allow transgender Americans to serve openly in uniform remains stalled by a similar, albeit quieter, debate.
The Iranian model is instructive here: Governments, companies, individuals, and banks will need to decide whether to do business with the United States or with its adversary.
That remains the case and should be instructive as congressional leaders meet and discuss how to move forward and reconcile the competing House and Senate energy legislation.
Its weakness is that it's a relatively small, object-focused show, whereas some of her most exciting and instructive art has been collaborative, public, and even ephemeral.
He added that Congress's judgment about what qualifies as a concrete harm was "instructive and important," a point that will help Mr. Robins in the Ninth Circuit.
There are technical, scientific, and cultural factors that are instructive in exploring why humans, and Earth as currently constructed, aren't well-suited to having a universal language.
Perhaps, instead of considering the possibility of separating the art from the artist, it's instructive to think of the impossibility of separating the artist from his industry.
Seeing his work for the first time now, when we need to be reminded about the fluidity of borders, history and cultures, is especially instructive and gratifying.
"Her eye was tool to the home" sat with me for a long time as a half-poetic, half-instructive line that spoke to the installation's experience.
But it has been instructive about one thing: The political forces that have torn at the global order and the European Union have settled into the mainstream.
It is instructive to look more closely at exactly where NERC and Perry part ways — it helps expose the crony capitalism at the core of Perry's proposal.
It is therefore instructive that President Xi chose this moment to assert the PRC's power over Hong Kong and create today's public spectacle of violence and unrest.
It is instructive that the two likeliest names to replace him, long term, in Munich are Julian Nagelsmann, of Hoffenheim, and Thomas Tuchel, once of Borussia Dortmund.
" Skull-and-crossbones symbols, he went on, "you'd think would be kind of a dark thing," but they're instructive reminders of mortality—" 'admonishments to improve moral behavior.
Ohio's efforts are also instructive for the ongoing debate over ObamaCare repeal and replace in Washington D.C. Earlier this year, Arkansas made national waves after state Rep.
The search for instructive precedents quickly leads to a company called Sidecar, which started in 2011, in San Francisco, as one of the first ride-sharing businesses.
Especially instructive should be one of the Catalonian separatists' arguments for leaving Spain: that their region is the wealthiest, and they'd like to stop subsidizing the rest.
Shelby's zeal is instructive, because sleeping is the best version of what we all do on trains anyway: as little as possible, ideally while ignoring one another.
But it's also deeply instructive about the quirkiness of making games, and how little control the people developing them ultimately have over what they've spent years building.
Though her husband showed her videotapes about trans people to help her understand me, I believe the most instructive thing he did was to show her love.
If so, they would surely benefit from visiting the new, charmingly instructive adaptation of Charles Dickens's evergreen of Yuletide redemption, which opened Wednesday at the Lyceum Theater.
But a discipline like statistics can offer a new and amusing — even instructive — look at something as intuitive and artistic as a novel, and that's exciting, too.
And I will tell you something about Mark ... I haven't met him many times, I've done work, but there is something that I think is quite instructive.
This debate is instructive because it's so abstract, yet so familiar, and it happened within a community that tends to view its hobby as historical yet profoundly apolitical.
But I still think that, despite the harsh realities we've faced in the wake of Obama's election, the feelings we felt on that triumphant night can be instructive.
At the Met's blockbuster show, Michelangelo's figures twist and turn and dive through 133 drawings; the marble sculptures and architectural model that accompany it are instructive and transporting.
The state of Georgia offers an instructive example on the consequences of such deregulation: In 103, Governor Sonny Perdue slashed the state's food safety budget by 29 percent.
Given the parallels between the current US administration and totalitarian regimes of the past, the museum seems like an ideal place to examine troubling and instructive historical precedents.
I'm recalling it now because the current race is reminiscent of it and because I think the outcome and lasting legacy of the Louisiana race may be instructive.
Now, as Mr. Christie vets potential appointees for a Trump administration, a look at how he operated in New Jersey — and the one-constituency rule — might be instructive.
But the case against the old AT&T in the early 1980s, then the sole provider of phone service throughout most of the US, could prove more instructive.
Consider one instructive augur: Back in 1988, a punishing conflict broke out between two Soviet republics—Armenia and Azerbaijan, whose Nagorno-​Karabakh region voted to unify with Armenia.
It's instructive that "Hank Williams: The Biography," the book that the movie is based on, suggests that even those who thought themselves closest to Williams didn't know him.
The culprit may not yet be confirmed, though ultimately that answer is likely to be less instructive than why the hack was so effective in the first place.
"It's actually really instructive at the beginning because it's the greatest hits of the best of meditation and all the best of psychology," she told the Hollywood Reporter.
The history is instructive and also sentimental in familiar ways, positing a struggle for control between idealistic, artistic entrepreneurs (and their legions of fans) and soulless corporate greedheads.
But to understand how little ball movement the Eagles generated under Foles, an instructive statistic is his adjusted yards per attempt, which accounts for the effect of interceptions.
It's instructive to read the high-minded defenses of Trump offered by writers in Breitbart, The Washington Times, The Federalist, and the rest of the pro-Trump press.
The blowup between Chuck and his one-time protégé Bryan Connerty makes for an instructive example, not least because it's not really a blowup between them at all.
The repurposing of such a loaded symbolic object could have easily appeared obvious to the point of artlessness, but in Beasley's hands the machine becomes something more instructive.
The illustrations she has included are colorful and instructive — I especially like the etching of Robert Elliston, Austen's favorite comic actor, who doesn't look anything like Colin Firth.
The longer slots could have been a bit more exciting, but over all, this grid was very instructive for me in learning to work with constrictive grid designs.
It's one reason "I want to take the other side of today's trade [and] why I find today's trade [to be] just instructive and nothing more," he said.
In some style: Spain's 3-0 win against Italy in qualifying was probably the most instructive result any of the major contenders recorded on the way to Russia.
In fact, the gap between the antinuclear movement, arguably the most spontaneous grass-roots movement in history, and other environmental groups and movements is both striking and instructive.
Kushner's answer here is instructive: He doesn't get into any specifics about MBS's role in the Khashoggi murder and then suggests this sort of thing is best handled privately.
But in terms of testing the hypothesis of how much capital the startup ecosystem can handle, the firm's early-stage investments could be more fun, and instructive, to watch.
But, we did learn a few things last night and over the course of the last week that will be instructive in the final weeks of this historic contest.
It was a debate that was more instructive as a microcosm of a generally dispiriting election race than as a moment to change the minds of undecided American voters.
Between the lines: In a field as competitive as self-driving cars, it's instructive to pay attention to the language of partnership announcements and to the motivations behind them.
Instead, you take the show as instructive, so that it makes you want to do everything you can in our own world to keep Gilead from coming to pass.
To get a deeper read on what the White House may actually be thinking, looking at two other sources is instructive: Trump's top advisers and the US military's actions.
These messages about the contingency of progress and the trials of activism remain applicable and instructive for gay people and AIDS sufferers, but also for other contemporary activist movements.
That shaming aspect was even more present from another instructive card game of this era, Old Maid, where the object was not to be left holding the titular card.
One of the most instructive hints about what's to come is thanks to Jughead's voice over that notes this crime destroys what hope was left in the town itself.
In fact, the battle over the Copyright Directive could prove instructive in understanding how the European Parliament is likely to handle Big Tech in the wake of the elections.
The contrast between the PREPA deal — which was largely worked out under existing law prior to PROMESA — and the likely fate of creditors of other public utilities is instructive.
The Cameco and Kazatomprom cutbacks took about 16.5 percent of annual uranium ore supply from the market, but the price action in the wake of the cutbacks is instructive.
To better understand what this means for investors, it's instructive to start with the reasons for the drop in U.S. listings (which fell 22004 percent from 229 to 1103).
The story in The Times of Jozsef Angyan, who formerly worked with Mr. Orban in the mistaken belief that they shared the goal of helping small farmers, is instructive.
And now, as we near Independence Day, I think it is instructive to call to mind an insight Karl Popper had that is at the core of American exceptionalism.
Recent polling from the Pew Research Center is instructive: Fifty-nine percent of the public said immigrants "strengthen the country," while only 33 percent said they were a burden.
Peter Singer, a specialist on the future of war at New America, a think tank in Washington, suggested there was an instructive parallel in the history of submarine warfare.
The two works, and two companies, offer instructive lessons in national and company styles, but what is clear from both ballets is Mr. Peck's bold and adventurous choreographic voice.
But good luck finding out how to use Kylie's Lip Kit or achieve Kim's contouring technique without the instructive public service videos we've been disseminating via Instagram and Snapchat.
They fought under kickboxing rules, so both men fought at somewhat of a disadvantage, but the encounter was an instructive look at fluidity and speed versus power and aggression.
But the leaked emails make for instructive reading nonetheless, though they can be somewhat uncomfortable, if you happen to be the author and recipient of a few of them.
The call for blue-staters to cultivate empathy isn't about finding instructive truths in others' worldviews; it's about understanding their motivations well enough to persuade them to vote differently.
After three-plus decades, it has grown to a weeklong festival, featuring more than 90 official mini-gatherings as well as instructive activities and spur-of-the-moment songfests.
A numerical comparison of the achievements of the two craft is instructive: The shuttle worked for 19 years and ran through tens of millions of miles of airless space.
Before the teams play Game 1 Monday night in Boston, it's instructive to see just how the Blues went from worst in the N.H.L. to best in the West.
Although it's important to learn from states at the top, it's perhaps more instructive to see what states with large improvements are doing, or have done, to get better.
Tiny Timothia (Emery Jones) is an only child here, and the crowded Cratchit Christmas that Dickens made so joyous and instructive in love becomes a dour little affair. Mrs.
It might be instructive for reporters to continue to press both of them, as well as the president, about what kind of compromise over slavery they have in mind.
But sometimes it's instructive — relieving, even — to think ahead to the future, and to imagine what kind of problems we'll be facing five or 10 years down the line.
It's instructive to compare this brilliant but somehow hollow affair with "The Head and the Load," Kentridge's monumental theatrical tribute to African soldiers who served in the Great War.
The example of Boris Nemtsov is instructive: He was also attacked with chemical solutions; a toilet was dropped onto his car; he lived in constant expectation of new attacks.
What's instructive is EIA data on Germany, where residential retail electric prices have risen, and are expected to keep rising, due to higher taxes and fees for renewable power.
It's instructive how what passes as erudition can fly in the face of felt harm — and this is one of the key threads that runs through all the stories.
In that context, I think that games like Lichenia, in all of their complication and abstraction, will be much more instructive and helpful than the traditional city builders of old.
Unlike most political spats, though, this one turned out to be at least minimally instructive, because it underscored a legitimate strategic concern many liberals have about Sanders and his allies.
Such a degree of mistrust is unprecedented, but it might be instructive to draw a comparison with another incoming President who faced a tense relationship with the national security establishment.
But all experience is not equal: Less complicated miles, like those on uncongested freeways, are easy to accumulate though less instructive per mile than those in a challenging urban environment.
In that context, the fact that Democratic voters on the front lines have mostly selected moderates, to campaign on bread-and-butter issues rather than transgender rights, should be instructive.
Take the S8's iris scanner as an instructive example: it requires both great hardware and software to work correctly, and I'm astounded by its accuracy on Samsung's new phone.
Mr Monkman hopes that his art is instructive and may contribute to the reconciliatory work that is being done; "Shame and Prejudice" is making its way across Canada through 2020.
The back and forth between Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump was perhaps more instructive in terms of what was not mentioned -- Syria's civil war, for instance -- than what was discussed.
Here, it's instructive to think about the Tea Party, which quickly turned into a partisan electoral force that's still — via its offshoot the Freedom Caucus — a powerful constituency in Congress.
The Laurel and Yanny thing might get old, but I feel like it&aposs been really instructive over the past week to understand how people can see things so differently.
The loss of Iranian cargoes, though, doesn't explain the entire drop in China's crude imports in May from the previous month, and it's here that other data may be instructive.
It can be instructive as to how you can satisfy both your wants and needs, leading you down a path toward balance and agreement between your sun and moon signs.
Colorful Character Reynolds' biography exists largely in his own telling — much of it offered on late-night talk shows — and is instructive in its self-analysis, PEOPLE observed in 19883.
The advice may also prove instructive to American Airlines, which on Friday found itself caught in the middle of a controversy stemming from an on-board altercation caught on video.
It's instructive when people ask how a legal cocaine market might work: We can just point to the existing legal market and say, 'well, like that—just a bit bigger.
Okay, so if you're not as experienced as Klein this is likely to be a slow and halting process, but this sort of live feedback is instructive for learning too.
Packingham is the only Supreme Court case I find to extensively use "internet" in lowercase, but two others (the only two to use lowercase substantively, to my knowledge) are instructive.
But their attempts are instructive—and not just because the policies they proposed are likely to pop up, gremlin-like, in bill after bill until Republicans are swept from office.
But in this year when the Park Service is celebrating its centennial with all sorts of hand-wringing about the future, it's instructive to remember how language can save landscape.
As he prepares to appear on Capitol Hill, it is instructive to note that Mueller rarely veers off script for any personal commentary, nor does he engage in self aggrandizement.
Lum lost the case in Supreme Court, but the battle he chose to fight—securing the privileges of whiteness for his daughter, rather than against a racist system—is instructive.
"The torrent of informative abuse that will come your way from people who want to tell you how stupid, witless, and uninformed you are will be very instructive," he says.
But they are still instructive: Like all good propaganda, they tap into existing prejudices and polarizations, spreading fact-free messages that both scapegoat marginalized communities and amplify the fear factor.
"You can't teach kids investing principles per se, but if you put it in a story, it becomes instructive in a way the dry, abstract stuff will not," she said.
The wins and losses are not really the point; the comparison is instructive, though, because every time Jordan went to (and won) the Finals, he had an unbelievable supporting cast.
For small-business owners seeking to sell in what remains a strong environment for mergers and acquisitions, the lessons learned by those who have gone before them can be instructive.
It is instructive to go back to the Reagan days and note that the Superfund law specifically requires that the government select a protective and cost-effective clean-up plan.
The language used by the police chief Jeff Ledford to describe Dylann Roof, the white supremacist who killed nine African-Americans in a Charleston, S.C., church, is more than instructive.
The instructive use of beautiful waxen women for Enlightenment-era medical educations is explored in depth within Joanna Ebenstein's book The Anatomical Venus, previously reviewed by Claire Voon for Hyperallergic.
But taking King's scenario to its logical extreme is actually kind of instructive in explaining why asking Apple to build vulnerabilities into its own software is almost certain to backfire.
And that has been very instructive for me, and I hope it is for other filmmakers and aspiring filmmakers who see the film—that you need to think that way.
And on Monday, after reading from an anti-bullying book to a classroom of Michigan schoolchildren, she said the message was instructive for the current occupant of the Oval Office.
The 2010 death of Khaled Said, an activist whom many deemed the "martyr of the state of emergency," provides an instructive look at how the law enabled brutality in Egypt.
"The MoneyGram episode is potentially instructive because it seems that concerns around a Chinese company having access to data on US citizens motivated the blocking of that transaction," said Williams.
But, if they look carefully, visitors will see that the 22007 objects on view, which include paintings, prints, decorative arts and literary works, present the fashions in an instructive context.
Well, not quite, though it's always instructive to watch how many different ways one movie can go wrong and to guess what happened between a first feature and a second.
"It was instructive in Iraq and Syria — when you take away big terrain from them, they move into smaller cells and they pop up in strange places," General Miller said.
Well over half of the 235 House Democrats have backed an impeachment inquiry, but more instructive is the caution among the 43 freshmen who won Republican-held seats last year.
The Romney example is particularly instructive: What happened in those few weeks was, essentially, that Romney got a ton of unenthusiastic feedback from party insiders — staffers, admirers, donors, and politicians.
Something that I think is both funny and instructive about your work is that people often get the Dunning-Kruger effect wrong, and take away the wrong conclusions from it.
My personal story is instructive here: While I never participated in the darkest corners of the web, the culture where racist and violent memes are shared is familiar to me.
Poliakoff's ability to fracture and mend space, illuminate flat planes, and structure abstract forms into a figural unity is as instructive to contemporary painting as it is awakening to witness.
However, he's wrong in a way that is instructive and unfortunately common: He misunderstands platform businesses, like Uber (and Apple, which we'll get to in a second), and how they work.
The comparison to Uber is instructive: having spent years waging total war against municipal governments, Kalanick and his company now have more to fear from drivers and customers than the president.
In an old but instructive study of typists ranging in age from 19 to 72, older workers typed just as fast as younger ones, even though their tapping speed was slower.
Yet the comparison is mainly instructive because of the way the 9/11 report and its sober reception represented a scrupulously bipartisan effort to uncover the truth of a national disaster.
It's also instructive to note that the more weight added in redundant systems requires more fuel for propulsion, which can mean more launches from the Earth to prepare for the trip.
It still may not be as relatively prosperous as it was in its heyday, but it is instructive to compare Manchester with Detroit, which the United States simply let go bankrupt.
"It's instructive to remember that in that one year, 1967, Sidney made To Sir, With Love, Guess Who's Coming to Dinner, and In the Heat of the Night," noted Mirisch, 95.
We started at the bottom working through all this substance and worked our way up to Secretary Kerry and Foreign Minister Zarif, but what I think is instructive about the Iran.
Landslide electoral losses are tough pills to swallow, but they are so much more instructive than the relatively close presidential elections that have been the norm over the last 16 years.
Meantime, it is instructive to look at the different reactions of U.S. bond and equity markets, Neil Dwane, chief investment officer equity Europe at Allianz Global Investors, told CNBC on Friday.
All the contingency of their lived bodies (tattoos, body hair, skin tone) — not to mention the complete set of limbs and a head — creates an instructive contrast with the sculpture, however.
So it is instructive to turn to the Universal Service Fund (USF), a government telecom subsidies program, which can and should be used to support the expansion of rural broadband services.
Ms. Friedlander said her experience in law enforcement should prove instructive to corporate clients in learning how to deal with authorities during an investigation into a breach of a company's network.
Few things can be more instructive than a life story, and comedian-turned-broadcaster Marc Maron draws the ups and downs of life out of people with a certain raucous grace.
It is instructive, as coal mining companies go bankrupt and coal plants shut down, to watch as industry leaders vigorously shed their purported free market principles in support of public assistance.
"We have yet to see the 28 pages that have not been yet released about the 9/11 report, and that may well be instructive," Cornyn said at the news conference.
She was very interested in how I worked, and she was very instructive to me on how to use the room, because I didn't want to go in the writers' room.
That blueprint is instructive here: It relies heavily on cuts to Medicaid and the health insurance subsidies of Obamacare — cuts that it projects would total nearly $3 trillion over 10 years.
Six of the eight share overlapping biographies and experiences, which makes their very different intellectual journeys through the same historical thicket both instructive to today's searchers and relevant to today's crises.
In fact the most relevant, instructive thing they have in common may not be military service but the refusal to let their races be nationalized and their insistence on outsider status.
"It was an encouraging and instructive surprise to find archaeology that contributes to the interpretation of the Moche as a technologically advanced society, which is socio-politically very complex," he said.
The American people have endured a year of the campaign, but at the end of the day it&aposs instructive to see what that&aposs all amounted to for the frontrunners. 
The fate of Democrats who opposed the Affordable Care Act is instructive and shows that bucking the party on a difficult vote doesn't necessarily protect a lawmaker in the next election.
It is instructive then that Carlyle, led by David Rubenstein, is embarking on its biggest quest for distressed assets at a time when tax-cut hopes are fanning Wall Street euphoria.
However, New Orleans' pre-Katrina education reforms and the actions taken immediately following the disaster can prove to be instructive as school systems in southeast Texas and Florida begin their recoveries.
His forecasts, made with an open-source program that he maintains as a teaching tool on his Yale website, are not always entirely on the mark, but they are always instructive.
Perhaps most instructive is that both reports describe how in Thailand and Indonesia, SCL set up operations centers full of computers and TV screens that were designed to look quite impressive.
What is instructive here -- no matter what Trump ultimately decides to do in regards Iran -- is that Trump is doing exactly what he warned Republicans Obama was doing in 2012 and 2013.
That's instructive: though every Google tablet had some hardware pluses to go along with the minuses, every single one of them had software that didn't work well on a big tablet screen.
As instructive as Stuxnet was, nuclear officials can only learn so much from one attack and, because successful attacks are rare, there is a small pool of data from which to learn.
So the idea that this is a replay to some more detail about that life, I don&apost know how that&aposs instructive on what&aposs going on in the country today.
While the case "will be instructive for other courts," broader policy questions about reasonable law enforcement access to encrypted data will likely need to be resolved by Congress and others, Comey said.
Before we went, I should have shown him Flirting with Disaster, which has an instructive B&B scene that shows how they're different from Airbnbs: the clutter, the pancakes, the eccentric proprietors.
Given the strong performance of gold and gold equities so far in 2016, it is instructive to examine factors contributing to this strength and assess their likelihood to continue in the future.
To narrow the transition window further, it is instructive to look at horse populations in the U.S. Figure 5 shows horse population versus registered vehicles in the U.S. from 1900 through 1930.
Speaking to Gary from Glasgow St. Pauli is instructive on this point, in that he knows as well as anyone that some people want an alternative to their city's presiding football culture.
I think the latter is true in a general sense, but I think the hard-right slogan is instructive nevertheless and points, if unintentionally, to a maddening feedback loop in American life.
His superiors had judged that he was ill-suited to the role of manuductor, and that therefore it would be a useful trial for him and an instructive one for the novices.
The article is an honest and transparent assessment of the true strategic aims and impacts of this legislation, and it is just as relevant and instructive today as it was in 1981.
The instructive parts rise from Robertson's evocation and analysis of a series of authors who aren't likely to be well known to American readers, even those of a radical turn of mind.
To understand what changed most recently to make AI a household word, it is instructive to compare the progress in AI to the stages at which children show different facets of intelligence.
While the case "will be instructive for other courts," larger policy questions about reasonable law enforcement access to encrypted data will likely need to be resolved by Congress and others, Comey said.
Nevertheless, I think it is a highly instructive experience to try to see how many Big Five services you can cut from your life, even if it's just for a few days.
But the pettiness of last week's brawl in D.C.—not just using a sledgehammer to squash a fly, but the desperate narrative backfill claiming that the fly was at fault—is instructive.
Still, there are some instructive dialogues being had about the actual meaning of landmark status and what it would mean to have these types of objects officially considered as works of art.
In 2018, scientists at MIT published a study that's instructive on this issue, and makes me wonder if false news and conspiracy theories are a problem tech platforms can ever really solve.
If his first day as a candidate is instructive, Mr. Biden's skeptics are likely to focus instead on areas of his long record that have not aged well with the party's base.
The stories she goes on to tell — intimate, harrowing, instructive — are not unlike what you might overhear as a child listening to the women in the family talk around the kitchen table.
We can't really know for sure that these predictions about the health care market will materialize until we try it, but the experience of the rural labor market in India is instructive.
Now he is sketching out what a far more toxic YouTube politics of ressentiment might look like, under the threadbare cover of ironic bigotry, the recent history of which is worryingly instructive.
Granted, there&aposs ample overlap with the other participants in the race as well, but concentrating on the Warren-Sanders faction is instructive because it illustrates how much is at stake here.
" Based on the "instructive" example of South Korea, Mattis said he proposed repeatedly in White House meetings that at least 10,000 American troops remain in Afghanistan "without any specified timeline for withdrawal.
It is Wilson's insistence that race and class are inseparable that, I think, makes his play an instructive riposte to Arthur Miller's "Death of a Salesman," to which "Fences" is often compared.
However, Stevens's work, here entirely in black and white, and like all his pen-and-ink drawings, obsessively cross-hatched, offers instructive contrast rather than mere parallel to the Renaissance master's paintings.
That unprecedented burden of injury and the instructive medical research it generated, researchers say, may even be helping gun fatalities stabilize in this country — while the rate of gunshot injuries has increased.
And Chris Jones, the theater critic for The Chicago Tribune, is known for authoritative but also instructive reviews that producers say often help them persuade creative teams to make difficult but necessary changes.
Khloé's trademark sense of humor and dirty mouth add a whole lot of character to her tutorial, so even if it's not as instructive as others, we like it a little bit better.
While some of this is obvious to anyone following technology, it's still instructive to hear the leader of one of the country's largest banks discuss the transition to the mobile and digital era.
Overall, the mining sector is still battling to attract significant M&A, and it's instructive that gold, one of the best performers so far this year, is the preferred choice of many investors.
I think it will be most instructive to show readers how to develop a theme, rather than tell them, so let's allow our minds to wander and see what we come up with.
Trump's victory ironically was made possible by the very forces he decries It's instructive and ironic that President Trump has consistently railed against the forces that made the Baghdadi operation such a success.
The data we have on mobile apps and devices to track and encourage exercise, though, may be instructive: It suggests they only lead to temporary changes among most users, which eventually fade away.
You have to phrase questions in a way that makes your intentions clear to the widest possible audience in a manner in which they'll offer answers instructive enough to inform business strategy decisions.
And yet, looking back at how political ads have changed in the last 15 or so years yields some pretty instructive contrasts about whom the campaigns of yore hoped to reach — and why.
The four-part miniseries, which premiered tonight on ABC, chronicles the rise of the LGBTQ movement, and does so with a sort of slow, instructive poetry that walks us into the present day.
Using Apple as an instructive company for how to do business in China, Hoffman noted that Apple approached the market with patience, and it paid off compared to Google's fractious relationship with China.
It would be interesting to go back further than five years, but it is also instructive to examine what is effectively the "unicorn era" in which private companies raised unprecedented amounts of capital.
Equally instructive, though, is the preceding passage, in which it's detailed how Akers would unfailingly accompany Bergkamp – who is famously afraid of flying – on his painstaking car journeys to each European away trip.
While watching the different takes and more expansive canvasses can be instructive, it hasn't solved the riddle of why King adaptations have so often been disappointing, which hasn't dissuaded producers from repeatedly trying.
It certainly accommodated any number of racists, from both parties, for many years—though it's instructive that both parties voted in large majorities to dismantle the American system of apartheid in the 1960s.
It is instructive that secular liberalism grew organically out of the Judeo Christian world and is based on a Christian tradition that recognizes the dignity of each person as a child of God.
The amount of support for the new amendment could be particularly instructive for Capitol Hill as it begins the process of evaluating whether to reauthorize the law allowing for the NSA collection programs.
For an instructive comparison, viewers should watch not just any entertaining daytime soap, but even a relatively sharp and setting-specific nighttime serial like "Gossip Girl"; the ruthless efficiency of "Empire" is unparalleled.
Our approach isn't as instructive when it comes to the major contours of the race, but does give us a great angle as to which candidates are competing for overlapping groups of constituents.
Fights over the DNC's role and allocation of resources, like we've seen in the aftermath of a recent run of special elections, can be ugly, but they are rooted in valuable, instructive disputes.
It is an incoherent film, even as racist evangelism goes, but it is instructive in this way: These are Bannon's purest impulses and juvenile hypotheses wrung into a bucket and left to ferment.
And the works of many great artists such as Beethoven and Chopin in music, or Chekhov and Ibsen in literature explore the landscape of sadness, a theme long recognized as instructive and valuable.
At once exultant and instructive, this large, looming rectangle of black metal shelving is profuse with leafy potted plants and some cacti — a bit of real Eden to pore over, become intimate with.
"India Pale Ale," directed with studious effervescence by Will Davis, is a cheerfully instructive work, created with the aim of bridging one of the many cultural gaps in these dangerously divided United States.
While there's no direct equivalent to what we are dealing with now in the modern history of the presidency, George W. Bush's numbers after the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks are somewhat instructive.
Although space exploration began as the pinnacle of animosity and military flexing between two superpowers, it has since evolved into one of the most beautiful and instructive examples of international collaboration and trust.
That she did so standing next to two little-known protestors at the Standing Rock Indian Reservation, rather than, say, Vin Diesel at the premiere of some action movie, is inspirational, and instructive.
The stats might not always tell the whole story, but they're pretty instructive in this one: 72 percent of the possession has been Mexico's, and South Korea has 212 fouls to Mexico's four.
And he show shakes up that model with corrective evidence: some 160 pieces of Swahili Coast art, all of it instructive, most of it eye-and-mind-absorbing, some of it really magnificent.
Because the Clinton impeachment saga is still relatively recent, it's been depressing — and instructive — to watch the two sides in that drama conveniently adopt the other's former rationale for their own partisan convenience.
Howard Wolfson, a top adviser, said that Mr. Bloomberg had watched "some" of the past Democratic debates for reference but that his own debate experience from mayoral campaigns had not been particularly instructive.
The case of two Bear Stearns hedge fund managers — Ralph Cioffi and Matthew Tannin — was particularly instructive about how poorly federal prosecutors handled one of the very few cases they chose to pursue.
That it does not appear on Pomfret's reading list is, I think, instructive, since Peyrefitte offers a perspective on China that might have made Pomfret's very good and important book even more valuable.
But equally instructive here is the response by Republicans, who, even after seeing the potential for buy-in among moderates like Durbin, aren't rushing to rally congressional support for this would-be deal.
Trump's interactions with United Technologies CEO Greg Hayes in persuading him to keep a Carrier furnace plant in Indiana rather than shifting production to a new, less costly facility in Mexico were instructive.
The central bank's actions and statements since it cut the Selic rate by half a percentage point to a then low of 20063% on July 31, and markets' reaction to them, are instructive.
Gibson, who was nominated for an Oscar for Best Director earlier this year and currently has a new movie in theaters, is an instructive figure for us to be looking at right now.
The central bank's actions and statements since it cut the Selic rate by half a percentage point to a then low of 6.00% on July 13, and markets' reaction to them, are instructive.
Michigan's 11th District might be instructive here: It is an open seat, being contested by a relatively unknown Republican and an equally unknown Democratic woman, neither of whom doesn't currently hold public office.
Additionally, the details of Trump's return would be instructive, too, answering questions about his charitable giving, if any, specifics about the losses he claimed -- $105 million in 2005 despite his tax bill, and more.
The rise and fall of Theranos doesn't lend itself to a single interpretation, because it shouldn't — it's not a fable, it's a mess that offers up all sorts of astonishing details and instructive lessons.
ESPN recently published an instructive report: Using a scoring system to evaluate players, 50 NFL coaches and talent evaluators ranked the former San Francisco 49ers quarterback ahead of six potential starting quarterbacks this year.
But he has already provided an instructive guide to the swampy world of corporations, law firms and Washington lobbying shops, and to how a tough prosecutor can bring some measure of justice to bear.
The current Pixel is built around the Snapdragon 821 chip — its speed and feature-rich architecture contribute to the excellent Pixel camera — but the instructive example for Google to beware is the Snapdragon 810.
While Los Angeles is capable of covering in this game at Wembley Stadium in London, it is instructive to note that only two of Cincinnati's seven losses have been by more than 10 points.
However, the number three was a sacred number in Irish mythology, so it does make sense for the shamrock to hold that connection to the Holy Trinity – just likely not in an instructive way.
This account of the debacle by a former diplomat is both a compelling portrait of a remarkable soldier and statesman and an instructive lesson in the limits of American power, even at its zenith.
But Solo: A Star Wars Story is classic Star Wars, and if it ends up being the last time Lawrence Kasdan writes a movie in this universe, it's one incredibly entertaining, instructive swan song.
There is an instructive connection between a nerve cell-assaulting virus and al Qaeda's attacks on 22011/220: They both represent trust, or the lack thereof, with violation of duty to the American people.
But just looking back at this mid-'90s idea of a world run by women — and one woman in particular — is instructive, due to both how much has changed and how little is different.
It is instructive now, as a road map for how we arrived at our present cyber-dystopia, and the dangers of building a world for "everyone" on the concerns and fantasies of the few.
When arguing over "how democratic" the parties' nominating processes are, and should be, it is always instructive to remember that the Framers feared direct democracy every bit as much as they did monarchical tyranny.
While it's true that South Africa and Ukraine are minnows in the overall China iron ore story, it's instructive that the four big miners have been unable to knock them out of the game.
But it's instructive as a mirror of American high-gloss dramas, some of which have developed their own tics and formulas — shock, testosterone, easy cynicism — that are as internationally replicable as any police procedural's.
In thinking about whether a resolution of the Turkish lira crisis will put an end to the recent rout in emerging market equities and currencies, an analogy from World War I might be instructive.
Draft No. 4 contains a carefully balanced ratio of directly instructive writing advice, behind-the-scenes views on McPhee's greatest hits, and war stories from the golden age of post-WWII American magazine publishing.
But it offers many instructive allusions, useful judgments and important refinements on these themes — and provides reassurance by its mere existence that someone in the author's position is grappling so earnestly with such questions.
Yet the differences between the two — evidenced in the younger director's rushed pacing, fragmented shooting style and peremptory characterizations — are more instructive, suggesting a filmmaker with no time for complexity or careful world building.
Books of The Times Jane Jacobs (1173-2006) was a heroic figure of intellectual life in the second half of the 20th century, and she is nearly always instructive and cheering to read about.
"When an agency response is like 'You're all wet, you don't know what you're doing,' they are certainly not taking the suggestions in the instructive way in which they are intended," Mr. DiNapoli said.
They deliberate together to invest real money, provided by donors, into startup firms across the US.And WeWork, Gordon quickly realized, has become something of a cautionary — and instructive — tale for investors of all kinds.
Consider two instructive pieces of legislation discussed by members of the House Natural Resources Subcommittee on Water, Oceans, and Wildlife last week: the Big Cat Public Safety Act and the SAVE Right Whales Act.
This one, from Gerald LeRoy, comes with a graphic element — a screen shot of the top of Thursday's home page with a few instructive numerals added every time a certain candidate's name is mentioned.
Jeff Bezos' empire has left stunning wreckage in its wake, but I'll give you one instructive example of how it has used its power to try to destroy and dominate the online-shopping world.
David D. Kirkpatrick's engrossing account of his time as the New York Times Cairo bureau chief covering the Egyptian revolution, "Into the Hands of the Soldiers," is a less uplifting but more instructive tale.
"It is instructive to remember the political risk associated with OFZ investments," said Abhishek Kumar at State Street Global Advisors, citing a fall of 65 percent from June-December 2014 during the Ukraine crisis.
As for compensation, I think that's a good idea, but it's instructive that we haven't heard about many (any?) concrete institutional actions that the industry is taking to correct its wrongs from the inside.
Like Brecht's similar works, the Oratorium was designed to be performed by nonprofessional actors and to be instructive about social problems, with nameless characters representing types –– for example, the writer, the heir, the homeowner.
Religion seems to be the intended bull's-eye, and it's certainly instructive to see how the church of "She" (whose name is thought to be unpronounceable) grows into a grotesque expression of mansplained feminism.
This brave decision gives his book the character of a mosaic, assembled piece by piece, rather than a smooth fresco — and makes it far more instructive than a simple narrative could ever have been.
The novel virus and Covid-219, the disease it causes, could quickly become President Trump's problem, and it's instructive to look back at what had to say about Ebola and Obama's response to it.
"It's more instructive to pay attention to the larger policy goals than it is to pay attention to every jot and tittle that he says," said the lobbyist, who works for a multinational company.
I'm not suggesting there could be grounds for a recall of Brown over the Sanctuary State law (although the idea is intriguing), but the recall is instructive of the power that Orange County yields.
It's instructive remember a crucial difference between computers and humans: When we learn a skill, there is no easy way to instantly transfer it to others — we don't have USB connectors to our brains.
He fell back a bit in the third round, but he was still doing well enough to be paired with Zach Johnson, the eventual winner, in the final round, and watching Johnson was instructive.
These works are only tangentially about Kennedy's presidency or his assassination, and in that way, they are probably more instructive about our own era than Kennedy's — shared history told through a self-preoccupied lens.
In a healthcare setting, where instructive outputs could be the difference between life and death, it's not the technology that's king; it's access to representative data sets that's key — that's where the real value lies.
One way the new finance minister wants to differentiate himself from Schaeuble on the European stage is by taking a less confrontational approach and striking a less instructive tone toward other governments, the person said.
The divergent vantage points on Libya may be instructive to understand how President Trump and Mr. Bolton, his new national security adviser, are approaching the coming talks with the North Korean leader, Kim Jong-un.
" It's instructive to imagine what Musk could have said instead: "I hand-picked her specifically because she has different strengths than I do, and she's always told me honestly when I have a bad idea.
Yet the gap between the online left and the Christian right on this topic is instructive, because it centers on a pretty big divide in how the two sides talk about these types of issues.
Read MoreA simple solution to Hobby Lobby outrage This is such an important story because it's instructive for all the people who actually care about making progress in women's health, education, or anti-poverty efforts.
Instead of focusing on the horse race, I think it would be instructive to consider what a Bloomberg presidency might look like — sound management practices, evidence-driven policies, middle-of-the-road politics, fiscal responsibility.
All of this is instructive, not just in how Germany relates to its established immigrant communities, but the million refugees who have recently entered the country and are now attempting to build a new life.
At the mosque, Riedwan, chair of the board of the Al Fitrah Foundation that runs the mosque, said working with other Africans from countries where LGBT+ communities face widespread discrimination is both empowering and instructive.
Here Beck's example is instructive: When he left Fox for The Blaze, he went from being the leading Wild Man of the histrionic anti-Obama right to being just one conservative media personality among many.
Looking back beyond the FTA's ratification is also instructive: Let's recall the period 15 years ago when policymakers in Washington decided to include Bahrain among our priorities for the next round of trade liberalization negotiations.
Finally, the fact that the GOP — which has known about this debt limit deadline since last year — still showed up to the Oval Office without a plan for passage is itself instructive in its redundancy.
What's more — and here is where Look's relationship to method is particularly instructive — these quiet proceduralists are often the writers whose work puts the lie to the stereotype that proceduralism must be cerebral and impersonal.
Closure is being betrayed by the imperative to resurrect, against time, precisely those stories, precisely those meanings, newer and more instructive, precisely those lives, which are not at rest, nor the generations that each represents.
To trivialize these horrors as mere titillation and not the painfully instructive breadcrumbs they're meant to be is to ignore the show's fundamental purpose: to explore the contours of human morality when unburdened by consequences.
In an appreciation, Tyler Kepner, who interviewed Halladay for a book about pitching this spring, wrote that his "legacy, to me, is powerful and instructive in any field: The purity of the effort matters most."
While Indonesia's intervention in the market was directly aimed at boosting prices for metals by restricting the supply of ores, what is instructive is that the market simply found ways to exist without Indonesian supply.
Standing up and walking around for five minutes every hour during the workday could lift your mood, combat lethargy without reducing focus and attention, and even dull hunger pangs, according to an instructive new study.
Patrick Kelly's life story and work should be instructive for these young black designers as they contend with such unsavory forces: Take that pain and turn it into power by channeling it through your work.
But the most instructive addition to the art itself is a smartphone app, in which WalkingStick takes us through the entire exhibition, explaining her thoughts on a couple dozen works for a few minutes each.
But perhaps most instructive might be Biden's limited involvement in climate policy during his time in the Obama White House, especially since a key part of his pitch is nostalgia for the pre-Trump era.
But since the very opposite has just happened, it might make for a distracting and instructive parlor game to imagine what Jean Genet would make of the ongoing American trembling he detected back in 1970.

No results under this filter, show 976 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.