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"naively" Definitions
  1. (disapproving) in a way that shows you lack knowledge, good judgement or experience of life and are willing to believe that people always tell you the truth
  2. (art) in a style which is deliberately very simple, often uses bright colours and is similar to that produced by a child

291 Sentences With "naively"

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

I am very hopeful — some may say naively so.
Erica Anderson: Yeah, naively, like Claire, I was really excited.
To supporters, it is "growing up" and acting less naively.
Honestly, I haven't thought about it that much, maybe naively.
Perhaps naively, that is still an enduring mystery to me.
"But Elvis had jet black hair," you're saying, very naively. WRONG.
Some people believe (naively) in the power of brain training games.
He questions her, naively asking why she can't follow her dreams.
I naively thought the harder you work, the faster you climb.
It's amazing how naively some of them considered their time there.
This, Ueberroth naively declared, would be the end of baseball's drug problem.
At the end of 2016, we naively hoped 13 would be better.
Right now, many people naively believe what they read on social media.
Manafort joined the Trump campaign I perhaps naively thought that it was
Deep down, I knew the answer, but I naively maintained my optimism.
They did it quite naturally, quite naively in a way, but very nice.
Despite all this, President Obama naively claims the Iran deal is a success.
Look at it: I assumed, naively I realise now, that that was that.
Naively, I thought the colorists could re-create these looks in a snap.
My fiancé—who, naively, thought that love was stronger than addiction—left me.
"This is not some naively optimistic view; it's backed by data," he writes.
And yet I still want, maybe naively, for the writing to be enough. ●
So, why on earth would men sign up to Boompi, I ask, perhaps naively.
The Dutch signers of the Nashville Statement seemed naively surprised by the vehement reactions.
"He obviously had at least three more years in him," Cavan said, perhaps naively.
Did the Bush administration believe — however naively — that they had a long-term solution?
"  "I'm not sitting here naively trusting what the Russians may or may not do.
So I kind of wandered in a bit blindly and naively, as I always do.
I naively assumed that the real deal in its native land would automatically be better.
Naively, most systems were saying [until now], we systems ourselves are in a privileged position.
Some development wonks naively promoted the Weberian model, without building up capacity to implement it.
Trump walked into this trade war by naively making American 2202s trade policy mistakes — again.
Critics of the deal naively believe that the city will pay Amazon $3 billion dollars.
Yet, under the current congressional schedule, that aspiration seems either naively quaint or complete lunacy.
I believed, naively, that rock and roll could still save the world at that time.
Naively, you'd assume that the stick would break into two pieces; but it never does.
I am not naively suggesting that media -- albeit unintentionally -- has never taken sides in wars.
And at that point we thought, naively, that it was going to take us three years.
Under a microscope, seal whiskers are not circular when sliced through, as might naively be expected.
Many observers, perhaps naively, had expected some sign of increased pressure on Israel to make compromises.
Nobly, naively or both, Elwood thinks it is his duty to resist the rackets and cruelties.
I chose "Rainbow Connection" from the Muppets movie because I naively thought it would be easy.
I just naively said, 'Well there must be a number two then, so I'm not interested.
Naively, it seems like even deeper material, at even hotter temperatures, would also be a fluid.
For years, some in Washington naively hoped that elusive "moderates" within the regime would solve everything.
After that high, I naively wore the binder constantly; I never wanted to take it off.
We kind of naively went into it thinking it would be an extremely limited-run series.
As story after story poured out, I naively hoped that the number of tragedies would be finite.
We don't understand it and therefore, naively, dangerously, we figure it's doing just fine or will rebound.
Alice Schwarzer, Germany's leading feminist, says that Germany is "naively importing male violence, sexism and anti-Semitism".
Finding what I thought was the right cache file, I naively threw it at Pete's visualisation tool.
"I naively believed it was important to share my perspective on my friend's situation," Dunham tweeted Sunday.
" I think I naively assumed that he wouldn't want me to, so I said, "I'm not sure.
Like Rauch, I see the anti-politics tendencies in much traditional good-government reform as naively misguided.
Naively, he believes that he can live in the world and still keep his hands clean of violence.
I think she's very quickly running towards trouble very naively, and thinking she knows better than she does.
Rather naively, I gave little thought about who I'd be living with when I committed to the room.
Trump is either incredibly tone-deaf or naively oblivious to a tremendously large concern to all of Florida.
"The optimists naively assume that UBI will be a catalyst for people to reinvent themselves professionally," he wrote.
Possibly naively, I hoped that I would have fun once I got used to the tactics and controls.
These fictional characters embody the mythology and romance that foreigners naively assign to distant landscapes and their inhabitants.
What if that history had involved painting whole religions as extremist, or as naively superstitious, or as terroristic?
In 2016, these voters aren't looking for another naively affable Bible-thumper—they want someone who can win.
He naively didn't think the Trump administration would try to end the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program.
But we have -- perhaps naively -- seemed immune to the division and violence tearing apart so many communities elsewhere.
This is a marriage born out of convenience and greed, but May-ling naively believes it can work out.
At one point or another, we'll all have to say goodbye to something we naively thought would last forever.
Furthermore, it seemed even at the start of the year that investors were naively optimistic about the administration's agenda.
I self-reported on November 2 and naively wanted to close the door on the manner after seeking counsel.
The duchess added that as an American, she "very naively" couldn't comprehend the thought of her appearing in tabloids.
Some hoped, naively, that the election of the first black president would create a new era of "postracial" politics.
They didn't expect the impact a uniquely demanding schedule would have on someone they'd naively perceived to be bulletproof.
Facebook has naively put its faith in humanity and repeatedly been abused, exploited, and proven either negligent or complicit.
Many people naively think that the Food and Drug Administration will approve a drug only if it is effective.
But the bigger loss has been suffered by voters, who naively believed their politicians wanted anything more than power. ■
In fact, some would say fundamentally so: When we try to naively stitch the two together, we get nonsense answers.
I felt confident in my choice and naively believed that others saw my story in a positive light, as well.
I'm not suggesting we should naively take what's said on stage at face value, but paying attention can be instructive.
For years, powerful leaders in the American fashion industry have ignored, either purposefully or naively, how our clothing is made.
But although we naively believe it also calls for recognition of Israel as the Jewish state, that's not the case.
Naively or not, the company bought into white supremacy's slightly more palatable public-facing image in shaping its policy platforms.
When I contacted him through a gay sugar daddy page on Facebook, I naively assumed he was a sugar daddy.
In my head, I naively thought I would meet someone and I'd be able to share that experience with them.
By the standards of a traditional academy, with its prioritizing of taste and finish, such works might seem naively inarticulate.
And yet, we still believe – naively or not – that these same experts know more about the economy than we do.
The Bush White House congratulated itself, naively, one might add, on supporting a strategic counter to a nuclear-armed China.
Naively forgetting this was a visual novel, I quickly accepted, thinking it would be for something like a friendly night cap.
Zip Lash is just one example of where Nintendo has undercooked its products by naively assuming "kids" don't want fuller games.
Vafa had been working to rule out large swaths of the 10^^500 different possible universes that string theory naively allows.
He has displayed a businessman's exaggerated disdain for government, meddled naively in court politics and expressed few firm or original views.
Pass. I skipped using it in the cilantro dressing (naively thinking it would still kind of work) and it definitely tanked.
I threw it out earlier this year, naively assuming I no longer needed to be afraid of my own federal government.
But what the Cambridge Analytica scandal shows is not that the company naively opened itself up to fraudsters and Russian hackers.
That suggests a more general point about the conflict of 1914-1918, naively hailed as the "war to end all wars".
At the time, I naively hoped such changes would mean more opportunities for younger staffers and people of color at home.
As a counterweight to growing Chinese power, recent U.S. presidents have sought to maintain productive ties to Russia, though sometimes naively.
The accusations mostly came from individuals aligned with the opposition and, in that moment, I naively thought they were politically motivated.
I was healthy and so was my partner, and I naively expected I'd be a mom by the time I was 31.
The fesso might cheer a new clean-air law in his city, naively taking an announcement by the elites at face value.
When we turned the corner on 2016, most of us were pretty relieved, perhaps naively assuming that 2017 would be way cooler.
Recently, researchers at Georgia Institute of Technology naively suggested that AI could learn human values and social conventions by reading simple stories.
I naively, egotistically imagined that my input would shape his interests, that nurture would be the most powerful part of the equation.
Even more naively, this person could just share their private encryption key with the person they want to share the file with.
We value journalism, in part, because we hope, perhaps naively, that the material journalists put into the world can guide decision-making.
When I meet Viehweger near the train station, I naively assume that we'll be starting our journey deep, deep in the forest.
Naively, she believed that it would remain a contained document, that it would not be sent to untrustworthy figures or go public.
I'm also hopeful (perhaps naively so) that this new Mac framework will be powerful and flexible enough for many different kinds of apps.
Still, many of the newly elected House Democrats from swing districts are (perhaps naively) optimistic about trying to get an infrastructure bill passed.
"The '1964 witnesses' story, I had always been somewhat suspect of, maybe naively, because I thought how could that be?" he tells PEOPLE.
Luckily, but perhaps also a bit naively, the survey results indicate that most workers today don't yet feel the threat of technological disruption.
But even a well-meaning app developer who naively fails to secure their data properly poses a serious a threat to users' privacy.
My thinking was naively simple: I wanted a laptop that could do everything and I was prepared to invest heavily to obtain it.
As we've seen, we're starting out by naively streaming video games in the same way that we stream static audio and video content.
I naively assumed that these lessons from war and ones from history books would teach us the true futility of walls and barriers.
Those who naively ask, "Aren't they all Muslims?" betray a gross ignorance of the complex varieties of religious matters in the Middle East.
We had lasted longer than expected for a first love, but still shorter than I had hoped, and I felt (in hindsight, naively) blindsided.
Bois's analyses of Kelly's art school realism emphasizes how these naively naturalistic works portend the stripped-down semi-abstractions that were soon to come.
Many observers, perhaps naively, had expected some sign of increased pressure on Israel to make compromises, but Mr Trump gave no hint of that.
Iranian hardliners had accused Rouhani's government of naively negotiating with an unreliable partner, and Trump has now proven that the US is indeed unreliable.
I proudly and naively voted for Ralph "I killed the Corvair because I hate decent handling and weight-distribution" Nader in the 2000 election.
Absolutely. He's actually showing how these tactics will get you into trouble if you read this book naively and take it at face value.
Early versions of Google took a naively data-driven approach, assuming that a link from one site to another was a sign of quality.
But perhaps the most egregious paeans to unity come from those who seem to naively believe that voters in this country can actually be united.
Maybe — hopefully — in retrospect we'll also look back at this time, chortling at how naively arrogant we were for believing we'd be the last generation.
In a prior interview, I once (naively) asked him if his fantastic achievements gave him any insight on happiness that most of us don't possess.
"Time On My Hands", a novel published in 2008 by Giorgio Vasta, shadows a group of schoolboys who grow naively obsessed with the Red Brigades.
Both Cobb and Kasowitz have naively provided publicity for the social media vultures they tried to crush -- to the detriment of their client, the President.
In Beijing on Tuesday, Foreign Ministry spokesman Geng Shuang said Canada should not "naively believe" that mustering allies to pressure China would have any effect.
"I sort of naively assumed everything was the same," Monroe said of her understanding of Costco stores in her early days as the Costco Connoisseur.
The problem for modern people is that we can no longer perform this magic naively, with an undoubting faith in the reality of our inventions.
"Naively, the way you can think about it is, the Standard Model particles want to pull their Higgs up and make the Higgs heavy," he said.
As Islamic State metastasised, he tried—and failed—to make his countrymen see it in a long perspective which, to many of them, seemed naively otherworldly.
"It started off playing very naively like a human beginner, [but] over time it played games which were hard to differentiate from human professionals," he said.
Confused and jealous, Ralph just wants his friend back, which paves the way for the cascading threat that he naively unleashes and must try to fix.
Given that 70 million Americans have high cholesterol, I approached big food companies and investors, naively thinking they would love my idea and want to help.
That may seem like a palatable amount to many readers, but only if one naively overlooks that the federal government has an unquenchable thirst for revenue.
" Nielsen also said during prepared remarks that the U.S. "will no long naively assume that a nation state with cyber capabilities chooses not to use them.
"Our modern culture fears death and old age, so we hide it out of sight, we naively worship youth, and we run from grief," Nabeel said.
He was convinced, however naively, that the church would accept the pill as a form of "natural" contraception if it were presented in the right light.
China has also realized that it naively thought it could control its Frankenstein pit-bull, but it now is realizing it has to confront hard decisions.
Instead, he uses solar and wind energy to continue shaming the character in the video when he naively assumes his Tesla will soon run on clean energy.
But when Trump so easily and naively accepts Putin's line about not being involved, I can understand why Ds think Putin must have the goods on him.
It had been just two years since Sports Illustrated naively predicted a playoff run for a 73 Indians team that went on to lose 101 games instead.
"I had this big blind spot about the profession where I just naively went along with whatever any naturopath told me was safe and effective," she says.
Over the next ten years, I naively thought I could treat my "mood swings" with good old-fashioned diet and exercise, no matter how bad they got.
Oxford classicist Llewellyn Morgan remembers taking a class with Peter Parsons as an undergraduate and asking him ("naively," in Morgan's words) where the Oxyrhynchus papyri were kept.
"Anti-Russian reflexes are just as dangerous as naively... remaining silent over the nationalist-tinged policies of the current Russian leadership," he wrote in Die Welt newspaper.
Her marriage was falling apart, she had recently been rejected by esteemed print house Gemini after walking in and naively asking if they could print her work.
She "naively" didn't think it would be "a thing," she says, but look: It's such a charmingly low-stakes secret that of course it would be a thing.
"I naively believed it was important to share my perspective on my friend's situation as it has transpired behind the scenes over the last few months," Dunham wrote.
Going into the tournament, some experts naively presumed that the machine wouldn't have a chance against a human in a game notorious for its complexity and sophisticated gameplay.
He frames his critics as bullies and dismisses rational arguments against his naively rosy view that it's possible for everyone to just drop the baggage and come together.
When I started my career at Warburg Pincus, I inherited a portfolio of technology companies that senior partners naively believed would solve major problems in our education system.
On trade, Mrs Clinton offers what my colleague Lexington calls "homeopathy politics": giving voters just a little of a bad idea, hoping, naively, that it will mollify them.
The plot is episodic, chasing new conflicts from scene to scene, and the film's period, the summer of 1962, is more naively constructed than Main Street in Disneyland.
To show you how horrible and political it is, in fact naively, when I fired him, I said, 'Finally I'm going to do something in a bipartisan way.
When I saw the video of the shooting of Castile, I naively assumed the group would come out in full force in support of the slain gun owner.
Perhaps naively, I always assumed red carpets were a legitimate walkway, traversed for reasons of getting from one place to another, a means of entering the night's event.
He seemed to delight in his "brutal honesty," and was just generally a person who naively believes they have a higher moral duty to the truth than others.
"What I've learned from this ordeal is that those five words 'liberty and justice for all' aren't as linear of a concept as I naively believed," she adds.
There's the naively trusting Betty (Liv Hill), the housemaid who seems to view Faraday as something of a family savior, perhaps as a reflection of how he views himself.
Many people — myself included — were perhaps naively thinking that Daenerys' two remaining dragons would be enough to bring down the Night King's chilly beast in the final Thrones season.
We don't need to be validated by the people who villainize us as criminals or by those who naively push the narrative of DACA recipients as being helpless children.
The first was confusion: I had, maybe naively, never really thought about the market for turning ephemeral memes into a tangible product, neither on the supply nor demand side.
Tech is getting its moment in this unwanted spotlight because it claimed to have changed the paradigm, and we naively believed in what really was aspiration masquerading as achievement.
The three releases sound and feel like some kind of noise jazz filtered through the medium of electronic music, rudimentary, naively un-structured and improvised, and nakedly collage-oriented.
Mr Trump simultaneously grumbled that the Obama administration had both betrayed Reaganite ideas about freedom, and naively thought that democracy could ever be brought to such countries as Iraq.
I naively assured myself that despite how horrific the toll of that war was, at least we had learned from our mistakes and would never let that happen again.
Mueller naively trusted that William Barr, the attorney general, would act honorably and patriotically, as well, and let Barr decide how to handle the initial release of Mueller's report.
This official acknowledged a split in the White House: One group is naively oblivious to a risk that the bottom could fall out of Trump's support in the Senate.
The three previous administrations naively thought we could talk the North Korean regime out of its pursuit of nuclear weapons, which, to repeat, is the main reason for existence.
After graduating from Wesleyan, I decided I wanted to continue my education — and naively, I thought there would be folks like Sean who would find ways to accommodate me.
It's hard to say where Trump got this idea, but he has a long history of naively restating things he heard from one person — even random people on Twitter.
In her sermon, Wartick recalled how as a child, she'd naively assumed that racism was something from the past, or that structural racism in America was limited to the South.
The conflicts eventually come to a head in the season finale, during a town hall meeting (naively held as an attempt to quell campus racial tensions) and a simultaneous protest.
Sources close to the president view Shannon as a rogue force who, in their view, naively puts too much faith in diplomacy at the expense of hardline actions like sanctions.
When our last printer refused to print a beautiful image of a blowjob, I was really sad, surprised, and naively never thought that it was going to be a problem.
We assumed, naively, that the ice cream itself would be vanilla, or some other traditional flavor, which would then be rolled, Chipwich-style, in some sort of crushed orange snack.
Though he hoped that the US would succumb to financial woes, he criticized those in al Qaeda who he thought naively put too much emphasis on the country's weakening dollar.
I mean, what's going on in the country now, regardless of whether you're a Trump fan or not, these were things that I naively thought we were past in this country.
No state has an obligation to commit the suicide of its culture by naively turning it over to those who reject its premises or refuse to participate in its public life.
Banno's satire has a clear target and message—the impotence of well-intentioned environmentalists who naively believe that they can reverse the damage of industrial pollution with enough marches and bonfires.
So I'm not naively optimistic, like, about the Sun rising tomorrow regardless of what we do, but I'm optimistic that if we do the right things, the outcome will be great.
If we naively accept that "uninsured" means "lacking access to health insurance," we might be quick to assume the uninsured are without options, stuck between a rock and a hard place.
She notes that many founders naively launch a company without fully understanding how isolating the job is, how much pressure they will be under or how likely they are to fail.
In 11th grade, I naively thought I was ready and mature enough to work in a professional kitchen, so I got an internship at Lucques and tried my hand at it.
Iyad Rahwan, a computer scientist at MIT and one of the paper's authors, says that the team do not intend their findings to be translated naively into policy by carmakers or governments.
"I had once naively believed that if you are a great artist and you produce great things, you will leave a great legacy, but I have learned that isn't true," said Magid.
Unadorned grayish windows on opposing sides of the elevator shaft come off as distinctly gnomic formations, while the naively painted green landscape and cloud-filled blue sky seem partitioned into neat grids.
"By naively connecting everything to the Internet, we have made our possessions and personal information extremely vulnerable," Deepak Patel, the vice president of engineering for security firm Imperva said at the time.
This misjudges the extent of their appeal, the composition of their threat, and naively places faith in the American populace that it will reject nativist, xenophobic, racist ideologies for their core maliciousness.
Though I knew intelligence officers would conduct an investigation into my life to grant me a security clearance, I naively didn't think having a high school girlfriend would turn up or matter.
Perhaps naively, Americans have always looked to the presidency for exemplary moral behavior, and when there are obvious personal or moral failures, as with Nixon and Clinton, there is disappointment, even anger.
They seem to have a total lack of self-reflection, which, for most of the show, keeps them self-centered and naively self-destructive; they are children living in a world of adults.
Over in "PLAYA" land, things have gone awry for Pryce, who naively let Nacho check out his new ride and, unbeknownst to him, catch a glimpse of his car's registration — and home address.
Mira is a dear friend and even the fact that she so naively posted my private card to her on her social means that we meant nothing wrong and didn't realize the consequences.
So, when it clashes with Neptune, all of these wonderful things tend to elude us—or worse, we end up naively believing in fantasies we've made up about love, our worth, or money.
Then the crash happened, and all that time I'd put in, pre-service, crunching Voronoi space for dollar vans—which I'd naively thought the govbots didn't know about—suddenly became interesting to UNDATA.
"Naively, we thought there wouldn't be any problem setting something up to support providers," says Rick van Pelt, the Brigham and Women's anesthesiologist, who helped create a program similar to Missouri's in Boston.
It's the kind of document Wes Anderson could only dream of making as a film prop, but subverts the twee-ness that often results from intentionally trying to make something so naively styled.
That morning, with the entire staff crowded into the conference room, someone naively asked the HR consultant, a hired gun, if we could at least have the weekend to pull our things together.
I remember being  taken aback by her attentive questions about my sex life and deep interest in the nature of romantic intimacy I had experienced, and blushing naively at her curiosity in my response.
"I naively didn't realize that it would be a thing that I was going to different places and trying the onion rings at each of those places," the New Zealand native told Jimmy Fallon.
Still, some on Capitol Hill (anonymously) tell journalists that she is more flash than substance and that her unabashedly progressive stances, naively or not, endanger the chance of Democrats winning voters across the country.
Even through February and early March, as the first reports surfaced about the rise of cases in the U.S., we naively hoped that we could go ahead with our nuptials but with reduced attendance.
Naively, I had assumed no one would notice if I took a couple quick snaps of the exterior, despite the clear depiction of a camera with a slash through it posted on the door.
For years, and through multiple presidential administrations — Clinton, Bush and Obama — the United States has naively looked the other way while China cheated its way to an unfair advantage in the international trade market.
This is policy is built on foundations of national interest and represents a decisive transition from the present Washington status quo of naively idealistic democratic messianism, whether of the liberal internationalist or neoconservative variant.
Not only did he walk away from last season's showdown naively thinking he still had the upper hand, he seemingly did not anticipate his biggest rivals planning a first strike and marching to his doorstep.
Kate's initially enthusiastic about the idea, naively believing the issue at hand to be Kevin's inability to deal with his father's death, but as we soon learn, the pain that Kevin's carrying goes much deeper.
I felt like my documentary about my travels in Latin America could be relatable to anyone, I had naively never thought about how unattainable it would make someone feel depending on their health and circumstances.
Let's use our own website to illustrate the basic point:When you go to Gizmodo dot com in your web browser, you might understandably but naively think you are actually only connecting to Gizmodo dot com.
Critics have already expressed fears that the Obama administration will be taken in by the Nusra Front's deception and naively (or wittingly) use the political ruse as an excuse to stop bombing the Nusra Front.
"No country naively made an agreement with the United States on the basis of one or two of its policies," said Robert Orr, special adviser on climate change to U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon.
But It's clear from the Senate's actions that in order to protect Dreamers the energy is going to have to keep coming from the bottom-up and not naively waiting for a top-down approach.
Yang is an outsider (he's never run for office before) and has built a large online support base thanks to his willingness to think differently -- some would say naively -- about how to solve the nation's problems.
Yet its movement toward capitalism, at least at the individual level, was naively believed to signal that nation's movement away from an authoritarian and doctrinaire approach — and possibly away from communism altogether at some future point.
The woman who screamed his name clasps her hands over her mouth and looks like she's in physical pain, so much so that I have to ask if she's happy or (as I naively imagined) upset.
Perhaps the reason Coppola was so drawn to this story is that she is a child of Hollywood, so she knows what it's like to be doing naively debauched teenage things in glamorous and plush surroundings.
Manny and Hank are presented as two halves of one person: The corpse naively and unashamedly wonders about human nature, while the shipwrecked soul keeps trying to shoot him down, letting his fears influence every decision.
The statement described the U.S. attack as rash and irresponsible and showing Washington was "naively pulled behind a false propaganda campaign" - a reference to accusations that the Syrian government carried out a chemical attack this week.
Everyone naively assumed this scenario was something we'd never have to deal with, but thanks to Chicago Cubs owner Tom Ricketts and the magic of faceswap, we have now seen things that can't possibly be unseen.
He is trying to push US companies out of China not because US investments in China pose a national security threat to the US, but because Trump is naively trying to bend China to his will.
But I thought there was no way that the gallery would have been aware of my work beforehand, and so I naively expected them to be properly horrified at the obvious similarities and to respond appropriately.
As Watson, Rockwell often steals the spotlight, playing his client's most ardent defender and, when called for, his most dismayed life coach, as Richard naively finds himself playing into the hands of his enemies again and again.
"Of course I started out being very conceited about my work but that was rapidly kicked out of me — now I think I have a fairly complete humility," he wrote, naively, in an introductory letter to Wood.
But overlaid with this is a clumsy attempt at a "Wag the Dog"-type satire in which cynical administration officials clash uncomprehendingly with the guys in uniform who naively think it is their job to win the war.
Highlighting the fractured character of language that pretends to be naively straightforward, her poems suggest that we can't say what things are, what lies before us, until we reclaim the body as the supreme origin of our experience.
" Often, he continues, people who feel that a spiritual dimension is missing in contemporary Western life may be attracted to the spiritual symbols of traditional cultures around the world, which are often "understood naively in terms of spirituality.
Each time I revisit this topic, I am thinking, perhaps naively, that China, Japan and South Korea, a quarter of the world economy, will soon improve their relations to rev up the rest of the region and beyond.
I thought naively that if I wrote about a summer I could get the reporting done in six months and get the book done in a year and a half … I spent that first summer looking for stories.
"We sort of naively thought that this is just a big mistake—that once the government realized, perhaps through media, that this was a mistake, it would be sort of rectified, clarified," Roee Kiviti told the news outlet.
Preskill (admittedly naively) assumes that until some sort of quantum error correction exists allowing for robust qubits and qubit interactions, NISQ-era quantum computers won't be able to reliably execute circuits with much more than 1,000 two-qubit operations.
And as soon as the economic crisis eased ("green shoots" of recovery were in sight), the administration turned toward the fantasy of a deal with Paul Ryan and congressional Republicans, naively taking seriously their rhetoric about debt and deficits.
Having lived in London for more than a decade, where less than half the population identify as white and British, I have – perhaps naively – been lulled into the idea that people don't judge me based on the color of my skin.
Trump and his allies have insisted the deal is too generous to Iran, naively allows Tehran to run out the clock on the deal's expiration date, and ignores its missile program and military adventures in Syria and elsewhere in the region.
Filmed during their recent royal tour of southern Africa, Meghan revealed that she "very naively" underestimated the British press as she was unfamiliar with them, being American, and that she had really tried to adopt a "stiff upper lip" attitude.
Bond's well-documented problem with women is something I've personally taken too long to truly wake up to, as I grew up watching, adoring, and naively glossing over the blatant issues of the Bond franchise before realising, yep, this ain't cool.
In Brazil, the world's most speciose country, the principal hotspots are not, as might naively be assumed, in the vast expanse of the Amazon basin, but rather in the few remaining patches of Atlantic rainforest that hug the south-eastern coast.
Ten years since the release of Dear Science, it's clear to me that Williamsburg and America in general are not on a fast track to the "Golden Age" as I might have naively thought when I was 21 years old.
Their conversation ends with Peter naively declaring that Mysterio is Iron Man's true successor, and handing over to Beck the AI program that Tony Stark had originally left for Peter, called E.D.I.T.H. But as soon as Peter leaves, guess what?
I think what I learned the most in doing this, and what I found the most shocking, was I went into this rather naively, as someone who doesn't have a law background or has not had involvement in the courts.
When they did, in September 2017, Flake thought, even more naively, that Republicans and Democrats could band together and pass a version of the DREAM Act, a bill that would have given a path to citizenship to young undocumented immigrants.
In that context, the very idea of being bored, let alone debating which of the millions of movies or TV shows currently streaming, may come off as naively trivial, a luxury that we might all look back on with disbelief.
"As innocents, we naively believed that keeping silent and avoiding interviews with the news media could provide an opportunity to resolve this issue in court, particularly after the judicial officials in Evin Prison rejected the initial espionage charges," Vafadari wrote.
"I sort of naively didn't realize it would be, like, a thing that I was going to different places and trying the onion rings at each of those places," she said, before Fallon made her admit, out loud, that it was her account.
You will note again and again that Judge Leon goes into incredible detail about the businesses of the past, like how the deal might affect cable TV negotiations, while naively glossing over the details of how media works in the present and future.
The spring break before my graduation, I naively booked a cheap flight to Los Angeles, thinking I could pop over to Silicon Valley from LA. With non-refundable tickets in-hand I googled driving directions from LA to San Jose … 5 hours!?
Our own Taylor Hatmaker did a great job breaking it down: Zuckerberg suggests that providing a "range of perspectives" will combat fake news and sensational content over time, but this appears to naively assume users have some inherent drive to seek the truth.
Facebook is going back to college After graduating from college in 1994, I spent a few years at McKinsey & Co. — a young kid in an ill-fitting suit naively but energetically attempting to convince experienced and jaded managers to do their jobs differently.
The Walkers naively assumed that one of these tests would eventually reveal how to fix Evie's issues: "Then we started to realise that not only could we not fix it, we couldn't figure out what the problem was to start with," Alison says.
Misled by his productive association with the theorists of October, which published his book-length essay, "The Sexuality of Christ in Renaissance Art and in Modern Oblivion" (not in this collection), I naively asked him whether Michel Foucault's books had influenced him.
I&aposm not sure what paid interns make at magazines these days (if that position even still exists), but back in 2007 I thought, naively, that $13/hour was plenty to live on, in one of the most expensive cities in the world.
I, maybe a bit naively, believed that there was a need for someone in high elected office to be more open-minded and willing to not only govern from the middle but to try to shame everyone else into going to the middle.
We've heard a lot lately about the threats to democracy in the US and other Western countries where as recently as a year ago, we naively assumed certain truths to be self-evident, and certain structures and values to be in place.
"While we were filming ["San Junipero"], it felt like, yes, we were still in the midst of the struggle for equality, but that we were moving forward and I, however naively, thought we'd continue to struggle on a path that moved forward," Davis says.
In the 30-second spot titled "This Just In," comedian Brian Huskey plays a mock broadcaster who tries to deliver the news that "Bai is good for you and tastes amazing"—while the "Man of the Woods" singer is naively distracted by his braspberries.
"I tried, naively it turned out, to appeal to his higher instincts by pointing out that the intelligence community he was about to inherit is a national treasure, and that the people in it were committed to supporting him and making him successful," said Clapper.
When I decided to go natural almost a year ago, I naively thought it was going to be an easy transition process that I would be able to wing my way through — I read the blogs, I watched the videos, I talked to the experts.
" Clapper continued, "I tried, naively it turned out, to appeal to his 'higher instincts' -- by pointing out that the intelligence community he was about to inherit is a national treasure and that the people in it were committed to supporting him and making him successful.
Our previous leaders were willing to naively sell us out to China, letting the proverbial fox into the chicken coop, and Trump is putting a hard stop to all of that by pointing out that in fact China is a fox, not a friend.
The Oklahoma Republican suggested that Pruitt got tripped up with various ethics charges because he naively didn't know how some decisions, such as the around-the-clock security detail Pruitt requested or the $22019,000 soundproof booth he had built in his office, would be received.
Those who naively boasted a few short weeks ago that "ISIS had been defeated," must come to the realization that these sorts of low-tech attacks — Paris, London, Belgium, San Bernardino, Nice, Istanbul, Barcelona and Manhattan — are the new and deadly face of terrorism.
Somewhat naively and not really understanding what I was getting into, I used Nick's help with a few addresses and PO boxes to approach members of the gang and ask if they'd be interviewed, initially for a magazine piece and then later for my book.
I confess that prior to becoming a foster parent, I naively imagined a scenario in which a child who had been removed from an abusive or neglectful home would be relieved to be in a safe environment and would trust our motives and intentions immediately.
When I decided to transition my hair from relaxed to natural over the course of a year or so, I naively thought I could continue my usual lazy-girl routine — which basically consisted of going to the hairdresser and having someone else deal with my head.
" Despite these accounts of fans savvily crafting, or at least reinforcing, their own public image, the Historical Dictionary of American Slang still describes a bobby-soxer as a "teenage girl usually regarded as naively immature and an enthusiastic follower of youthful fads in music, fashion, etc.
But suddenly, what once signified convenience and the act of saving money for things naively deemed more important than dinner (see: concert tickets, out-of-my-price-range footwear) is now feeling an awful lot like a single serving of sadness in a microwave-safe container.
"I never thought I would issue a statement publicly supporting someone accused of sexual assault, but I naively believed it was important to share my perspective on my friend's situation as it has transpired behind the scenes over the last few months," Dunham said in a statement.
The Oklahoma Republican suggested that Pruitt got tripped up with various ethics charges because he naively didn't know how some decisions, such as the around-the-clock security detail Pruitt requested or the $43,000 sound-proof booth he had built in his office, would be received.
Even though I had spent a decade at Microsoft going to work every day at a male-dominated company in a male-dominated industry, I assumed — naively, it turned out — that momentum was on our side and invisible forces of progress would even things out soon enough.
When I was told that the latter artist would give me "a treatment focused on joints and bones" I perhaps naively expected to undergo some kind of therapy in the mud hut, but instead was confronted with an empty bamboo medical table and cluster of plants.
No trailers, Wikipedia synopses, or cast interviews brought me any closer to understanding what exactly happens in the upcoming movie adaptation of Cats, and I naively thought that all would be revealed when the film premiered on Monday night and I could scour Twitter for reactions.
His story involves elites (and he includes President George W. Bush in this group) who naively toppled autocrats—"foreign regimes that we know nothing about, that we shouldn't be involved with," as he puts it—when they should have been hunting down terrorists with pitiless, single-minded violence.
From Swain's BBC article: However, the public mood surrounding brain implants soured with the publication of his book Physical Control of the Mind: Toward a Psychocivilized Society in 743, in which Delgado (somewhat naively) downplayed the Orwellian prospects of the devices and encouraged people to embrace the technology.
While the negotiations centered on limiting Iran's nuclear-power program in exchange for lifting economic sanctions, Kerry hoped -- naively to some officials, even in his own department -- that the deal could lead to cooperation on other pressing issues, such as fighting ISIS and ending the Syrian civil war.
Clinton's America applauded itself from the apex of boomer self-assurance; Bush's was gilded and blustering and fragile, both strident and utterly bereft of ideas; Obama's was cosmopolitan and smart from afar and naively inclined to assume facts not in evidence about the trajectories of various important things.
" Dunham quickly issued an apology and promised to believe the accuser despite saying that she did not believe there was an assault, tweeting, "I naively believed it was important to share my perspective on my friend's situation as it has transpired behind the scenes over the last few months.
"What Moon is trying to do is interpose himself between North Korea and the United States so that there is a kind of defusing role that the South Koreans play, naively or not, in trying to at least sort of forestall any ramping up of tensions," Graham said.
While maintaining that it remains in lockstep with the United States, South Korea has forged ahead with efforts to engage with North Korea, even as critics accused Moon of naively focusing on feel-good theatrics at the expense of real progress in persuading North Korea to give up its nuclear weapons.
But being upset about it because it's too "politically correct" to replace a very controversial white male president with a universally celebrated black woman abolitionist is, well, at best resistant to change or naively indifferent to historical oppression, and at worst incredibly racist, as the Breitbart News comment section showed us on Wednesday.
But when we signed up for these services in the 2000s, we naively trusted them — we didn't know that our photos would get deleted, or that Hotmail would deactivate our account if we didn't log in after 30 days, or that we could never find those old messages we sent our friends.
But most importantly, they codify the aspirations and values of a particular community A widely adopted CoC is the Contributor Covenant, whose preamble notes: Meritocracy also naively assumes a level playing field … These factors and more make contributing to open source a daunting prospect for many people, especially women and other underrepresented people So far so good!
I naively assumed it couldn't possibly be as scary as it seems on TV. For more of Julie's investigation with Ghost Adventures, pick up this week's issue of PEOPLE on newsstands now At the end of August, I met up with the team in Eureka, Utah, an old mining town just south of Salt Lake City.
Read more: The creator of 'Fortnite' is trying to shake up the PC gaming industry — here's why a lot of fans are very upset over it"I very naively thought what we were saying might get them to see the whole [Epic Game Store] debate as lightheartedly as we did," Wasser wrote in a post on Medium.
"At that point, we naively believed that would be the end of the story, and that never again would women be lying on the floor in their own blood in a hotel room because of a botched abortion," says Suzanne Braun Levine, who served as Ms.'s first editor from its founding in 21970 to 22003.
Everyone remembers how good the music was, but some time recently––maybe it was the rambling speech at the VMAs where he said he was running for president in 20133 and we naively thought he would do it as a Democrat––he crossed the threshold into floating, amorphous celebrity, where scandal is lifeblood and everything comes secondary to attention.
They resent their significant others, family members, and friends for messing up and leaning on them when it comes to "adulting"—Caps will help get your finances in order after you naively invested in a pyramid scheme, or help you sort things out after you foolishly thought you could move all your furniture to your new apartment without hiring any help.
The image, in context, has nothing to do with the meme, which started out as the visual equivalent of a jeering second-grader mockingly repeating back every naively heartfelt phrase you say, like so: But it also doubles easily as a way to express frustration with people who are lying to you, people with Bad Opinions, social systems that mock you, and, you know, politics.
"Tulsi Gabbard's signature stance on non-interventionism makes her the only principled opponent of American empire in the 2020 presidential race so far — and one who excites libertarians worn out by mainstream politicians who either know nothing about military adventurism or naively go along with worn-out notions of the United States as the 'indispensable nation' that must be fighting every battle in every corner of the world," said Nick Gillespie, editor-at-large of libertarianism's paper of record, Reason magazine, in an email.
In a speech in Long Island in July, he claimed that the US had naively opened its doors to gang members who snuck in as asylum seekers, then brought their brand of chaos and violence to previously peaceful American communities: You say what happened to the old days where people came into this country, they worked and they worked and they worked and they had families and they paid taxes and they did all sorts of things, and their families got stronger and they were closely knit.

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