Donald Trump promised to create a huge number of jobs, and he was probably following through on that promise when he jump-started the "nasty woman" novelty T-shirt, novelty hoodie, novelty tote bag, novelty mug, novelty pin, and novelty needlepoint micro-economy.
|
|
There's a novelty and then, I think, right, there's a novelty part of it.
|
|
Novelty underwear Valentine's Day is the perfect excuse to get your boyfriend some novelty underwear.
|
|
Novelty, and the sunk cost of waiting in line to get a novelty item, doesn't hurt either.
|
|
Having an advanced degree in psychology was still a novelty; with that novelty came a certain authority.
|
|
Novelty search can find novelty within only one domain at a time—solving a maze or walking a robot.
|
|
That said, Rubin mentioned an important caveat to novelty-seeking: You have to know what "novelty" means for you.
|
|
For stay-at-home laggards and office drones with earphone privileges, it's new novelty music, hence fresher than old novelty music.
|
|
"User habits and market forces will make the password a novelty, but it'll still be a supported novelty for a long time," McDowell says.
|
|
If novelty were her only virtue, 15 would still delight, for an album that comprises 15 short, snappy novelty songs is a wondrous thing.
|
|
There's a good amount of novelty in the product, but I fear that, as with the previous two generations, that novelty will fade quickly.
|
|
If she is a radical novelty in this world, I remember asking myself, how can I help her preserve that novelty and not suppress her uniqueness?
|
|
"The most exciting jewelry brands understand that just like fashion needs novelty, jewelry needs novelty, too," said Giovanna Battaglia Engelbert, former editor of Vogue Gioiello, the Italian jewelry magazine.
|
|
WOW Novelty Air and Water Bouncer – Ducky, $299.98; samsclub.
|
|
WOW Novelty Air and Water Bouncer – Turtler, $299.98; samsclub.
|
|
This mythology of the genius loner is all about novelty and not about tension between novelty and familiarity and the conversation between a time and a place and the person working there.
|
|
The act of lounging on a novelty pool float, or, more specifically, the photographic evidence of one lounging on a novelty pool float, has become visual shorthand for a carefree, idyllic lifestyle.
|
|
The real novelty is how the cars will be used.
|
|
It's more of a fun novelty than an indispensable addition.
|
|
Excess and novelty are perfectly good reasons to try something.
|
|
Don't get us wrong, we love a good novelty doughnut.
|
|
It doesn't push far enough into VR's novelty or weirdness.
|
|
The trick is finding a balance between utility and novelty.
|
|
That was a $10 billion industry driven by young ... Novelty.
|
|
Back then, a woman riding a motorcycle was a novelty.
|
|
Still, the impression of novelty may serve a useful purpose.
|
|
There is a tendency for novelty to capture our attention.
|
|
But without deeper support, Qeexo's technology is just a novelty.
|
|
Save on Caribbean Joe Novelty Printed and Solid Sheet Sets
|
|
But by "Sharknado 3," the novelty appeared to be cooling.
|
|
For Vero, the novelty begins with its strictly chronological feed.
|
|
He could have done well with highbrow novelty songs alone.
|
|
These devices combine the perfect amounts of novelty and utility.
|
|
Part of the attraction is the novelty of his menu.
|
|
More often than not, it comes off as pure novelty.
|
|
What helps makes a flu strain pandemic is its novelty.
|
|
Nearly two decades ago, the Internet was still a novelty.
|
|
It was a product so singular that it became novelty.
|
|
Their makeup gets treated like a novelty rather than normality.
|
|
BarCraft Tropical Chic Novelty Glass Drinking Jars (Set of 4)
|
|
Just that I feel that it's more than a novelty.
|
|
Few novelty puzzles have had as long of a career.
|
|
At first I wondered when Stolen's novelty would wear off.
|
|
For now, Wiechec believes the app will be a novelty.
|
|
Then there is the sort of novelty that broadens choice.
|
|
"By trip 20," he tells NBC, "the novelty is gone."
|
|
But permanent novelty can only stay exciting for so long.
|
|
They are a novelty, a luxury: they fill the time.
|
|
The novelty of these arrangements can obscure their straightforward influence.
|
|
"Number one obviously being the novelty of it," she said.
|
|
But don't mistake her for someone who creates novelty pieces.
|
|
"Novelty is probably my main ingredient for life," she says.
|
|
Regardless, the phone will be a breakthrough and a novelty.
|
|
Online media outlets are desperate for any kind of novelty.
|
|
It's clever, but for me, the novelty wears off quickly.
|
|
"The incidents lose their novelty, they're covered less," he said.
|
|
No putters on the town's elaborate fantasias of novelty golf.
|
|
" Now, Mr. Dillon said, Mr. Sanders isn't "a novelty anymore.
|
|
The market is thrilled with newness and novelty and innovation.
|
|
Messing with the formula delivers surface novelty and little else.
|
|
Wireless charging is a neat innovation, but it's a novelty.
|
|
If you feel underwhelmed by shopping, the promise is novelty.
|
|
Guitar heroes are more of a novelty than a fixture.
|
|
The novelty will wear off, and good teams will adjust.
|
|
Chatbots' high engagement rates may be helped by their novelty.
|
|
For now, however, it feels like more of a novelty.
|
|
Novelty, limited functionality, and occasional compliments aren't necessarily worth $200.
|
|
But he was far more than an MLB novelty act.
|
|
One reason might be novelty — for themselves or nearby females.
|
|
And this "novelty" hypothesis has been shown in other studies.
|
|
The King is not initially smitten by this human novelty.
|
|
None have succeeded, but all had their share of novelty.
|
|
Before 1919, the music was considered more novelty than art.
|
|
Part of the novelty of Magnum's negatives is their indexicality.
|
|
It's clear that people enjoyed the novelty of being filmed.
|
|
Novelty Street Fighter socks from the kind people at Stance.
|
|
But Novelty Automation is no public collection of vintage contraptions.
|
|
I thought, you know, it was the novelty of them.
|
|
Even as it searches for novelty, photography is fundamentally additive.
|
|
A traditional USB port almost feels like a novelty of late.
|
|
The creepy novelty costume comes from the folks at  Yandy.
|
|
The novelty of her existence in the sport has worn off.
|
|
Arguments that 280 characters are an unnecessary novelty are overwhelmingly valid.
|
|
For the most part, V2I struck me as a fun novelty.
|
|
The Lime rides in Madrid's center seemed mostly a tourist novelty.
|
|
Makani isn't alone in trying to bring novelty to wind energy.
|
|
Lenses are cool, but they're a novelty that wears off quickly.
|
|
Look, here's a human wearing an oversized novelty whoopie cushion getup.
|
|
But style transfer isn't just a novelty, it's also a tool.
|
|
I think there is a novelty in 'Let's see Buffy bake!
|
|
I thought the novelty would wear off fast, but it didn't.
|
|
It's still more of a limited novelty than a cinematic revolution.
|
|
LONDON — The novelty of swiping on Tinder has officially worn off.
|
|
It never hits you over the head with novelty and gimmicks.
|
|
Is this your husband with you, or is it novelty night?
|
|
Turns out, the novelty of American Vandal can sustain another season.
|
|
The legal docs also include hair extensions and ornamental novelty pins.
|
|
"The only novelty was the idea of the butter," he said.
|
|
But these aren't novelty souvenirs for tourists after a "medieval" tat.
|
|
For decades small press was necessary and now it's a novelty.
|
|
Single-player AR Mode works, but the novelty wears off quickly.
|
|
Wearables are no longer an early novelty and competition is fierce.
|
|
"The novelty of crutches wore off very quickly," recalls Scott-Trammell.
|
|
The world of Korean beauty is no stranger to novelty packaging.
|
|
Using discounts to shift clothes is no novelty in fashion retailing.
|
|
But the novelty of their success is not lost on me.
|
|
In a normal universe, Jayden would have delighted at the novelty.
|
|
It's a novelty that boils down to 140 characters or less.
|
|
One way of looking at it, certainly, is as amusing novelty.
|
|
In recent years, 2000D printing has lost some of its novelty.
|
|
On the latest MacBook Air, it remains just that: a novelty.
|
|
But by the third or fourth time, it lost its novelty.
|
|
Back then, owning your own skates was less of a novelty.
|
|
The Maxwell House Haggadah has gone all in on novelty too.
|
|
That even in a world where formula is king, novelty sells.
|
|
But this is a novelty; nothing like it has ever happened.
|
|
At the time, the idea was a mere novelty to me.
|
|
Some people only see two women getting married and see novelty.
|
|
But that's exactly what the index has become: a historic novelty.
|
|
Needless to say, somehow this novelty record was a huge hit.
|
|
"We've spent a lot of time being a novelty," he said.
|
|
"For my generation a suit is a novelty," Mr. Eckstein said.
|
|
The novelty of our relationship became an asset, not a liability.
|
|
It is a tricky time to introduce novelty and innovative gadgets.
|
|
The novelty, Llewellyn said, is in demonstrating all these features together.
|
|
For first-timers, the novelty definitely makes it worth a trip.
|
|
Paying with your phone isn't a novelty in China these days.
|
|
TheShadowBrokers is being disappointed peoples no seeing novelty of auction solution.
|
|
People love novelty so much that they're willing to overlook functionality.
|
|
Today, Trump is our novelty president, and our real one, too.
|
|
Then came the doughnuts, the Pegasus floats and the novelty coffins.
|
|
Launching and operating shared bikes and scooters has lost its novelty.
|
|
At a visitor's urging, Whitlock showed his display of novelty trophies.
|
|
It's such a topical novelty sweater, I couldn't pass on this.
|
|
A little bit of the novelty has worn off for Samsung.
|
|
The show sells continuity as well as novelty, nostalgia alongside relevance.
|
|
It's the novelty art object for nostalgic former smokers like me.
|
|
We've seen novelty, kitsch and playfulness coming back into the sphere.
|
|
But beyond the smart storage system, the S Pen's novelty is thin.
|
|
So if loving a novelty sip is basic, then bring it on!
|
|
Being able to weave at night is still a novelty for Haba.
|
|
She describes previously feeling like a novelty when it comes to relationships.
|
|
"Her book was considered a fun read, and a novelty," Lundy says.
|
|
But for the vast majority, sooner or later, the novelty wears off.
|
|
In a tough market for handbags, novelty items are bucking the trend.
|
|
Now, what began as an amusing novelty is starting to get annoying.
|
|
And I don't mean in a novelty way, from top to bottom.
|
|
They also found dozens of inactive novelty grenades that had been modified.
|
|
Virtual reality arcades are here, but they're still in the novelty period.
|
|
A city like Istanbul generates foreign exchange from both antiquity and novelty.
|
|
Abandoning it after the novelty wears off hurts more dogs than one.
|
|
Aside from the novelty, a machine does not expect to be tipped.
|
|
Any kind of novelty drives up the dopamine system in the brain.
|
|
Is the success of such endeavors due to the novelty of VR?
|
|
I think I probably found success by virtue of being a novelty.
|
|
Kassidy Meredith Meredith works at an adult novelty store in Richmond, Virginia.
|
|
And consumers almost everywhere seem to have acquired a taste for novelty.
|
|
In the meantime, the novelty of the print should keep us entertained.
|
|
But the novelty of seeing famous men brought down will soon fade.
|
|
YouTube is absolutely stuffed with covers using all sorts of novelty approaches.
|
|
It was more of a novelty type thing than a real lollipop.
|
|
In this series, the novelty at least will ensure a full house.
|
|
These remakes started out as a novelty; now novelties are the norm.
|
|
Do you think there's more potential for novelty items around the holidays?
|
|
Though its novelty wore off almost instantly, the song refused to disappear.
|
|
It is not a gimmick, nor is it a novelty food item.
|
|
Trump is a candidate for the nomination now, no longer a novelty.
|
|
It's impressive, and the song holds up even after the novelty fades.
|
|
Fueled by the novelty of the taboo, she got into the performance.
|
|
Once the novelty wears off, a creeping, empty joylessness settles in instead.
|
|
But even this would lose its novelty, become one more draining thing.
|
|
Growth often stems from reducing inputs or introducing novelty, not expanding volumes.
|
|
But his need for a friend rapidly overwhelms the novelty of superiority.
|
|
Games and media lose their novelty in a way social networking doesn't.
|
|
C by GE are more of a novelty than a lighting system.
|
|
Rich people, on the other hand, are stimulated by uncertainty and novelty.
|
|
Famous international brands are a bit of a novelty in South Africa.
|
|
I can guarantee the novelty alone will get you from 9 a.m.
|
|
He liked it, but it was more a novelty than a delicacy.
|
|
In this downstairs shop, clothing shared shelves with novelty items like books ...
|
|
You probably jumped on the novelty pool float trend at some point.
|
|
He and Charles Kennard manufactured the board as the Kennard Novelty Company.
|
|
"The novelty was gone," Mr. Wexner said in an interview this spring.
|
|
The promise of all competitive first-person shooters is about delivering novelty.
|
|
Within Vizcaya's European-traditionalist aesthetic, contemporary art has an unusual novelty here.
|
|
"Aside from the novelty aspect, they do taste very good," Cimarusti said.
|
|
They love things in stackable sections with peely lids and novelty packaging.
|
|
Hand-tinted photographs were regarded as both a luxury and a novelty.
|
|
Even his egg flipper was some novelty thing your mum would buy.
|
|
True novelty is hard to come by in the world of food.
|
|
Granted, customized razor handles is probably more of a novelty than anything.
|
|
In fact, the salvific use of science is not an absolute novelty.
|
|
Once the novelty wears off, trackers are just like any other bracelet.
|
|
If they do, they are evaluated as to novelty and inventive step.
|
|
The strategic novelty is combining different kinds of hot and cold beverages.
|
|
The novelty of Hersey's approach doesn't mean that it lacked a lineage.
|
|
In its novelty, it can sometimes veer toward the bizarre and inscrutable.
|
|
Mr. Penn makes the most of that context's novelty without overselling it.
|
|
It would be a curiosity, a novelty, perhaps an inconvenience to many.
|
|
"'Yesterday' is more of a novelty earworm than a classic," he wrote.
|
|
Instead the interest lies more in the pure novelty of the idea.
|
|
In tech stocks, there can also be a novelty factor at IPOs.
|
|
Perhaps through novelty, or plain old-fashioned bafflement, they were selling well.
|
|
The red flags are long gone, but the novelty effect is back.
|
|
And new stadiums almost always draw more fans because of their novelty.
|
|
A group of American kayakers on their beach was definitely a novelty.
|
|
It's not hard to envision TikToks losing momentum as its novelty fades.
|
|
This is the year's novelty viral song to beat (sorry, "LaCroix Boi").
|
|
The petroleum-driven automobile is an evolutionary novelty, barely 150 years old.
|
|
The novelty was burning off; the industry's pervasive idealism was increasingly dubious.
|
|
When he arrives, he is nonplussed by the novelty of the setup.
|
|
However, the novelty of this marvel wore off quicker than I expected.
|
|
The Black Lips, Novelty Daughter, Lettuce and more pop and rock concerts.
|
|
But many others were interested in it primarily as a linguistic novelty.
|
|
Sex tech didn't just bring fun and novelty to the show floor.
|
|
Why was it treated like a novelty instead of apex game design?
|
|
The new petition stressed the novelty and importance of the second dispute.
|
|
The novelty of the hands-on approach soon revealed its dark side.
|
|
Users can easily get bored as the novelty of games wear off.
|
|
The novelty of Dr. Rogerson's method is the map projection he used.
|
|
They are likely to value order and tradition over chaos and novelty.
|
|
The high-end shop sells drugstore goods like cosmetics and novelty items.
|
|
If anything, she'd benefit from lavishing greater attention upon gimmick and novelty.
|
|
Still, $70,000 would have bought a lot of novelty perforated $2 bills.
|
|
It seems to me this is the monogram equivalent of the novelty T-shirt, though more about vanity than, say, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's novelty socks, which are pretty obviously chosen for their strategic appeal to various constituencies.
|
|
We spoke to Korine about his new show, ghosts, novelty foods, and Florida.
|
|
Maybe for the occasional drinker, the Christmas party lightweight, it's a biannual novelty.
|
|
No, he bought a parcel of novelty tees at a nearby gift shop.
|
|
Paksh Novelty 7-Piece Italian Crafted Glass Decanter & Whiskey Glasses Set, $34.99; amazon.
|
|
The novelty and the spectacle of the thing is typically a draw too.
|
|
Kids have less experience with the world, and novelty can intensify emotional experiences.
|
|
Without the novelty of 4DX, this experience would be the absolute pits, though.
|
|
If it hadn't, well, novelty can only carry a broken app so far.
|
|
The novelty has worn off and I have nothing to show for it.
|
|
By this point, the novelty had begun to wear off in the office.
|
|
To middle-class white women, work still seems like somewhat of a novelty.
|
|
Right: Soldiers pose for a novelty portrait at a Broadway photo studio, 1944.
|
|
A novelty song didn't have to go so hard, but "Monster Mash" did.
|
|
The European Central Bank allows the production of €0 notes as novelty items.
|
|
The novelty has worn off, however, and the losing has taken its toll.
|
|
But what the image lacks in style, it makes up for in novelty.
|
|
As a novelty feature, having voice commands on a microwave is pretty cool.
|
|
Plus you'll save so much money (to be spent on novelty fitness classes).
|
|
For a majority of us, 360 video is, at best, an occasional novelty.
|
|
But the irresistibility of the show lies its execution rather than its novelty.
|
|
Sixteen months into the console's life and the novelty still hasn't worn off.
|
|
The modular G268 was a novel device, but novelty alone doesn't sell phones.
|
|
Toss a pack in the fridge the night before for a novelty dessert.
|
|
Baked by Melissa's bite-size cupcakes are the stuff of novelty dessert legend.
|
|
And unlike Dogecoin or other earlier novelty currencies, they've attracted serious regulatory attention.
|
|
We feel comfortable in saying that it's a novelty in television and film.
|
|
The parade includes 16 giant character balloons, 43 novelty balloons and 26 floats.
|
|
Other types of novelty pets include foxes, which are legal in certain states.
|
|
Marketers in the food industry know the unusual appeal of a novelty hamburger.
|
|
Is it just harmless novelty, or is there more to these culinary monstrosities?
|
|
That is mainly because of one of his main strengths, his relative novelty.
|
|
However, it's unclear whether the novelty factor will wear off after some time.
|
|
Blaster, a big, fun novelty gun, is the most engaging of the bunch.
|
|
But Hammer deftly handled questions about the novelty or strangeness of the event.
|
|
For all the novelty of such a thing, how practically is it, ultimately?
|
|
But we're finally getting to a point where novelty is turning into practicality.
|
|
For most users, iris scanning is a novelty, but it's a cool one.
|
|
I see heaps, but these days, it's got to be a novelty meltdown.
|
|
What they lack in novelty value, they can make up for with variety.
|
|
She also explained why this could be more than just a cool novelty.
|
|
When will electric cars no longer be a novelty item for early adopters?
|
|
This new volcano offshore from Mayotte, though, is definitely a novelty for science.
|
|
Come Monday, you'll remember a novelty-packed weekend as feeling like more time.
|
|
Now that the novelty has worn off, though, we're begging you to stop.
|
|
But they are still only notable for their novelty, not yet their ubiquity.
|
|
The ArcaMini, as this new board is called, has none of that novelty.
|
|
Trophy hunters seeking novelty might pay more to hunt these unusually colored individuals.
|
|
In among all the novelty, old sorts of forecasts will be overhauled, too.
|
|
Democracy is a relative novelty; Nepalis are divided by caste, religion and language.
|
|
The novelty of a female president is also not what it once was.
|
|
Signorelli von Braunhut told me that Harold's purest novelty was his Invisible Goldfish.
|
|
But there's one change that's bigger than the explosion in novelty-food choices.
|
|
"That is a novelty, it's not the conventional way to go," McDade said.
|
|
Freeze-dried 'astronaut food' doesn't taste very good, but sure is a novelty.
|
|
While I appreciate the novelty, the layout feels more school textbook than thriller.
|
|
Since I was in first class, I didn't get to appreciate that novelty.
|
|
Another was whether it would hold up when the cameras lost their novelty.
|
|
Each set a precedent in All-Star history, likely portending more novelty tonight.
|
|
As a novelty, its graham cracker crust was ground fine and served atop.
|
|
On a neurological level, we're attracted to novelty, and actively seek it out.
|
|
"E-mail My Heart" is an endearing reminder of the novelty of email.
|
|
Eventually the novelty of the big trucks wears off after a few races.
|
|
But for American chef Matt Orlando, Christiania is more than just a novelty.
|
|
We found novelty glasses and cut them up and put Maglites in them.
|
|
People will be able to make anything from novelty guns to AR-15s.
|
|
However the novelty of quad stacks wore off after a year or two.
|
|
I mean that it began as a novelty: Ooh, pumpkin spice, what's that?
|
|
But the novelty wore off, training continued and, over time, the jabs subsided.
|
|
But the novelty of a new ZIP code won't produce long-term satisfaction.
|
|
V.A.R. remains something of a novelty, but we have already internalized its semaphore.
|
|
Amid buzz and chatter of novelty, the shows that made clothes, not news.
|
|
And as the novelty fades with each additional day indoors, the resentment grows.
|
|
Still, children's tastes are in evolution, forming day by day, open to novelty.
|
|
On Tennis PARIS — Tennis does two story lines particularly well: history and novelty.
|
|
The novelty of cheering for an out-of-town team never wore off.
|
|
While a few merchants now accept bitcoin, this has mostly been a novelty.
|
|
Valentine's Day is the perfect excuse to get your boyfriend some novelty underwear.
|
|
I think my maximum pull-up was 50 kg, just for a novelty!
|
|
"We came in at the right time for a novelty story," Messer said.
|
|
Trump opponents, the academics say, are open-minded and value independence and novelty.
|
|
But minds are not muscles and could be influenced by novelty, he says.
|
|
"Boys of this age in war are not a novelty," The Times said.
|
|
Even he acknowledges that novelty and psychosomatic benefits may contribute to his convalescence.
|
|
"I think when we started we were considered a novelty," Mr. Silberstein said.
|
|
Food trucks, once a novelty, are now seemingly on every city street corner.
|
|
But novelty aside, Tesla CEO Elon Musk is serious about in-car entertainment.
|
|
Mr. Sanders drew notice as a novelty but never came close to winning.
|
|
The essential point isn't the novelty of this strategy but its routine nature.
|
|
The novelty of such travel nevertheless compelled amazed participants to record their progress.
|
|
The novelty of such travel nevertheless compelled amazed participants to record their progress.
|
|
And this is obviously about more than the novelty of his crystal ball.
|
|
Still, many of their male colleagues saw them as something of a novelty.
|
|
But a life under constant threat of novelty isn't a life; it's exhaustion.
|
|
Asian small-clawed otters are increasingly popular as novelty pets, particularly in Japan.
|
|
"Let Up" is what happens when the novelty of the wish wears off.
|
|
Not much distinguishes this album from 2015's Sremmlife except maybe dimmed novelty.
|
|
There is too much else to experience, too much novelty to drink in.
|
|
Novelty Automation, he insists, is a place to have fun and be social.
|
|
Then, one evening a month or two after I moved, the novelty suddenly dissipated.
|
|
I also want it to be demure and tasteful…not too provocative or novelty.
|
|
The novelty of the walk wears off quickly and we make our way home.
|
|
I enjoyed the novelty of a car performing its own lane changes — who wouldn't?
|
|
"It's still a novelty," she told Glaser about calling each other husband and wife.
|
|
Once the novelty wears off, teens' Snapchat feeds might one day return to normalcy.
|
|
Some are sweet and flower-shaped, while others are salty and savory novelty creations.
|
|
The novelty of a Kenyan woman marrying a Chinese man had got people's attention.
|
|
Instead, Futurism glorified war, power, chaos, and destruction – ways of forcing humankind into novelty.
|
|
Porsche isn't resting on the novelty of its first electric vehicle to drive sales.
|
|
But pearl parties still garner exponentially more views, partially due to novelty and showmanship.
|
|
In a less anxious world, Pepper might come across as a cute technological novelty.
|
|
He sometimes wears a fake magic-trick novelty thumb because his finger is sensitive.
|
|
Instead, we're met with large crowds of drunks in novelty glasses and nonsensical looks.
|
|
But at least 4DX lends an element of novelty to the whole boring endeavor.
|
|
We know that nothing puts a smile on your face like a novelty mug.
|
|
Honestly, though, novelty is the only reason I can think of to watch this.
|
|
If there is a novelty, it lies partly in the crushing of old hierarchies.
|
|
Tesla owners have been delighted by the novelty of seeing their vehicle drive itself.
|
|
Unlike the other sex-focused apps on our list, this isn't a fun novelty.
|
|
Dozens of companies operate novelty steam rides in Britain, often on private, dedicated tracks.
|
|
Active-shooter training consultants are still covered in the media as a dark novelty.
|
|
George meets Harrison, the inventor of Drop Shades—novelty glasses which react to sound.
|
|
But it was also a novelty dance tune released by Alvin Cash in 1967.
|
|
The novelty would probably last a bit longer on my kids, but not much.
|
|
After a while, that food loses its novelty and no one wants it anymore.
|
|
However, it's unclear how much of this attention is due to the technology's novelty.
|
|
We don't have those in New Zealand and it's still a novelty for me.
|
|
"We like novelty, we like things that are new, that are different," Rosenberg said.
|
|
That's where a lot of novelty items come in: appealing to that indulgent consumer.
|
|
But over the years, the novelty wore off and I forgot about it completely.
|
|
The strengths and weaknesses of the center stemmed from the same things—its novelty.
|
|
While it looks fun, Kuri is priced as an expensive novelty now at $699.
|
|
The idea of compelling Apple to build passcode-breaking software was still a novelty.
|
|
I found myself marveling (if you'll pardon the pun) at the novelty of this.
|
|
Jobs with more civilised hours tout the fact as though it were a novelty.
|
|
Granted, as we've written before, it's a limited-edition novelty device that costs $350.
|
|
This is basically a "novelty" designed by a watchmaker to sell to rich people.
|
|
"Spinner Cube wraps up novelty, evolution, and build quality all in one," he says.
|
|
By now though, the novelty of marrying two tracks together has long worn thin.
|
|
Japanese patrons have quickly hit KFC outlets to try out the new novelty item.
|
|
"It has to do, I suppose, with the technological novelty of it," he says.
|
|
What the show lacked in narrative substance it made up for in unprocessed novelty.
|
|
Almost every home had a hardwired, landline telephone and cellphones were an emerging novelty.
|
|
Still, though: I wouldn't say no to a new novelty song or Europop hit.
|
|
The category's growth seemed almost unprecedented, moving from novelty to ubiquity in no time.
|
|
Make them prioritize novelty or interestingness instead of the ability to walk or talk.
|
|
"I wouldn't be concerned about it, it's just a novelty statement," he told CNN.
|
|
"The only novelty was the idea of the butter," he said in a statement.
|
|
The big picture: What started out as a novelty for genealogists has gone mainstream.
|
|
Colin: Bootleg Sonic memorabilia...novelty weed paraphernalia...two great tastes that taste great together.
|
|
Each one is signed by Sheeran himself and comes in a novelty speaker box.
|
|
The book is slightly guilty of exaggerating the novelty of present-day advertising techniques.
|
|
It's not just the novelty of ketamine that makes its potential so huge, though.
|
|
The novelty is reflected in the names of the shoes in the new collection.
|
|
Cultural destruction as a punishable crime, however, is not a novelty in international law.
|
|
When you're down there, in the Twilight Zone, everything you see is a novelty.
|
|
And all stories, and certainly all franchises, are a journey from novelty to ubiquity.
|
|
Not so: Up until now, political advertisers have treated the Internet as a novelty.
|
|
London has been a testing ground for quite a few novelty pop-ups recently.
|
|
Bieschke: The bar became a more hipster novelty toward the end because of Christmas.
|
|
For now, the locations largely thrive on the novelty of providing limited human interaction.
|
|
Announced during the 2016 holiday season, Go still feels like a novelty for retail.
|
|
Flamingo Plaza [in Hialeah] is always dope because it's weird and a total novelty.
|
|
Save on Caribbean Joe Novelty Printed and Solid Sheet Sets (Assorted Colors and Sizes)
|
|
Alvarez Correa said that locals don't find that bizarre because "we understand its novelty."
|
|
Rather than a novelty, he's an Everyman, surrounded by people who share his values.
|
|
The other issue is the novelty factor wearing off in a crowded competitive space.
|
|
Intimacy relies on familiarity and repetition, while desire thrives on novelty and the unknown.
|
|
Still, novelty and originality aren't the only ways a repertory company can distinguish itself.
|
|
The novelty and engagement potential of V.R. makes it a powerful tool for learning.
|
|
First he was praised; then he was mocked; now he is a novelty rapper.
|
|
When you're not working, keep things fun by seeking out some novelty, suggests DeGeare.
|
|
But what was a novelty then has become a business necessity for some entrepreneurs.
|
|
Is the novelty of video enough to carry more than four hours of music?
|
|
Every season, Kate Spade comes out with novelty items built around a specific theme.
|
|
There was no guarantee that this or that novelty would last until next year.
|
|
We were still in our 20s though she was already married, a weird novelty.
|
|
Moriarty has tapped into a trendy therapeutic topic that gives her book its novelty.
|
|
We didn't win because of the novelty of an all-female slate of candidates.
|
|
He was also a novelty: one of the first Indigenous players in the league.
|
|
People are being spooked by the novelty rather than the severity of the infection.
|
|
But as the novelty recedes, on further viewing, what remains is a peculiar loneliness.
|
|
The novelty has prompted a lot of publicity, including by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation.
|
|
But what was lost in the novelty, his former employees say, was real scrutiny.
|
|
E.D.T. Part 2, with novelty and variety Sudoku, goes from 2 to 3:30.
|
|
But as the fake igloo concept expands, the novelty also starts to wear off.
|
|
The privileged status of English stemmed from the novelty of the American-bred gangsters.
|
|
Several expert sites reviewed the Miswak Club kit because of the novelty of it.
|
|
But the novelty wore off, cheaters came in, prize money dwindled and copycats emerged.
|
|
It's not as cool, but you don't lose anything aside from the novelty factor.
|
|
It was all about finding that novelty thing that nobody had ever seen before.
|
|
The novelty here is the Irish Cream syrup, which combines vanilla and cocoa flavors.
|
|
It may seem like a novelty, but it actually works because science says so.
|
|
Once that sort-of novelty wears off, what "Hellboy" isn't, consistently, is much fun.
|
|
This gift is guaranteed to be greatly appreciated for both its novelty and utility.
|
|
Human/Dog social structures are RIDDLED with novelty and sentimentality, and ripe for exploiting.
|
|
"Food trucks aren't dying, but we are no longer a novelty," Mr. Francis said.
|
|
The robot bartender as it exists today is a novelty — not an effective alternative.
|
|
Then the Chainsmokers stuck around, longer than most artists behind so-called novelty singles.
|
|
I intentionally wanted to present the show in that conceptual context, as a novelty.
|
|
Not long ago, however, photography demanded intention, while documentation retained a trace of novelty.
|
|
"Fair trade phones," with modular components, are still a novelty but gaining a foothold.
|
|
Long associated with all things kitsch — including tiki culture and the novelty performer Tiny Tim — the ukelele is easy to dismiss as a novelty instrument, or as a prop for hipsters and improv comedians, but Mr. Murray insisted that players are dead serious.
|
|
How are you explaining they are actually getting their money's worth beyond the novelty buy?
|
|
But if everyone jumps on the notch bandwagon, the novelty of the feature will disappear.
|
|
PlaygroundScreenshot: Gizmodo (Google)It wouldn't be a 2018 tech presentation without some novelty AR stickers.
|
|
JNCO jeans were one of the earliest and most infamous of the novelty pants brands.
|
|
For one, kids have less experience with the world, and novelty can intensify emotional experiences.
|
|
It also creates the potential for that novelty to change in a million different ways.
|
|
Even when illusions aren't part of the image, there's a fun novelty to each photograph.
|
|
The games don't offer a lot of depth, and the novelty will wear off quickly.
|
|
Another novelty involved using combination printing to visualize sitters' private thoughts within the photographic frame.
|
|
Flatter me This is a novelty, but it may be Alexa's most human-like skill.
|
|
The bill had a number of charges from an adult novelty store near the hotel.
|
|
And there was this novelty song called "Tennessee Stud" and I had to have it!
|
|
They've even shockingly ventured into the unchartered novelty territories of canned drinks and candy canes.
|
|
Also, my boss banned novelty status emoji, so I'm still a little salty about that.
|
|
It's time for Snapchat to go beyond the novelty factor of mustaches and dog ears.
|
|
It sounds ... mostly pointless, but also a fun novelty — especially if you're into slow TV.
|
|
There's no flashy gender-swapped-Ghostbusters-style tagline that portrays powerful women as a novelty.
|
|
Cherry, on the other hand, are more of a novelty and are manufactured in Germany.
|
|
Kevin: I think they've gone past the novelty thing because it's been going ten years.
|
|
It is fetching significant higher prices as a novelty item on websites such as eBay.
|
|
Can reviewers see past current novelty and future promises to make that call for us?
|
|
Its stock price is strong, and its payment processor has gone from novelty to ubiquitous.
|
|
Kids leave a novelty shop in New York City with masks on Halloween night, 1949.
|
|
Luckily, there are a surprising number of whimsical novelty cat beds available on the Internet.
|
|
Donald Trump: There hasn't been a novelty act this annoying since Alvin and the Chipmunks.
|
|
Roman said she is no novelty candidate and her popularity is about policies and pedigree.
|
|
But why separate everything into boxes of novelty versus necessity when you can have both?
|
|
There's also a modern remote controller, in case the novelty of hearing the ka-chunk!
|
|
At $69, it's affordable enough to be a novelty gift or a casual beachgoing accessory.
|
|
We're bad at assessing risk, we get taken in by novelty, and we're cognitively lazy.
|
|
If the novelty of 3D printers wears off, they will be replaced by something else.
|
|
"Flippy is novel, but definitely not a novelty," Zito told TechCrunch ahead of the announcement.
|
|
That interest is driven in part by the novelty of his having a husband, Chasten.
|
|
Even having to wait in a queue at your local café is an unwelcome novelty.
|
|
It may feel like a novelty, but it looks like a nice piece of hardware.
|
|
An impulse buy rack in the Bluegrass Airport's gift shop hawks PooPoo Paper novelty stationery.
|
|
And the whole charade could cast him as a novelty act, not a serious candidate.
|
|
"We'd seen lots of novelty robotics stuff and wanted to avoid that," he told me.
|
|
"This was not a novelty thing," Ms. Poepjes (pronounced PO-pee-us) said by phone.
|
|
It's an improbable concoction, but it's one you can recommend for reasons beyond its novelty.
|
|
How do these novelty food trends sort of relate to food trends as a whole?
|
|
So basically because the middle class is dying, novelty food items will keep getting weirder?
|
|
The virus's novelty to the region means that "almost everybody" is susceptible, the body said.
|
|
Let's be real: a lot of novelty foods are unnecessary, but kind of cool anyway.
|
|
They were a novelty to attract tourism, visually emphasizing the colossal size of the trees.
|
|
Why was it centered around space pants, as opposed to another kind of novelty pant?
|
|
They might seem like a novelty today, but at least they keep Facebook interesting. 8.
|
|
On the other side of the equation, there's a novelty effect going on right now.
|
|
BetDSI: We actually offer novelty odds across the board... sports, entertainment, politics, technology, finance, anything.
|
|
Aron cautions that novelty alone is probably not enough to save a marriage in crisis.
|
|
He is a novelty candidate akin to Herman Cain or Michele Bachmann, Mr. Fallows explained.
|
|
He views the race as a contest between Clinton's experience and Sanders's novelty and idealism.
|
|
In fact, the tech could be a novelty for the 2020 Games in neighboring Tokyo.
|
|
Mr. Frémaux emphasized the section's international reach and novelty, which feels especially noticeable this year.
|
|
"It's a bit of a novelty, but it's part of an American tradition," Yocom said.
|
|
Konono's steady improvement over four albums may have cost them primitivist cachet and novelty appeal.
|
|
" At a recent investment conference, Dimon said, "Right now, cryptocurrencies are kind of a novelty.
|
|
For now, CGI influencers are a novelty, because it's still fairly clear they aren't real.
|
|
The platform calls for short, fast videos, and a lot of novelty in the mix.
|
|
And after the first of the year, the novelty of eggnog goes down to zero.
|
|
His father, William, a manufacturer and salesman of novelty items, was an immigrant from Russia.
|
|
In the process, what began as a novelty act veers into the realm of tragedy.
|
|
Crime will happen, people will do stupid things — and they'll make headlines as novelty news.
|
|
Fans saw it as either a well-executed novelty hit or a well-aimed prank.
|
|
"It's a huge part of our lives, so I think that novelty draws people in."
|
|
Novelty mug, $10.99, available on AmazonNothing gets the day started like a cup of coffee.
|
|
I also wore a novelty gun belt and holster, which would later chafe my waist.
|
|
Novelty beard decor has come a long way since we became a "peak beard" society.
|
|
The pros of novelty are outweighed by the cons of outsourcing parental roles to technology.
|
|
I'd never used a dating app before, so it was a bit of a novelty.
|
|
It is exactly as-advertised: A novelty system for playing a bunch of old games.
|
|
The drive to recapture a feeling of novelty within the beloved is common in gaming.
|
|
The era of sporting a smartwatch for the sheer novelty has drawn to a close.
|
|
This exercise makes you more aware of your environment and allows you to enjoy novelty.
|
|
Perhaps the payments would go out as novelty checks with the governor's face on them.
|
|
By the second day of the convention, however, some of the novelty had worn off.
|
|
Some are inspired, some are quick to judge, some are just fascinated with the novelty.
|
|
Some people have it all, but still crave luxury, novelty and access without irksome hurdles.
|
|
Do you think these tests are just a novelty, or can they reveal anything meaningful?
|
|
"It" isn't the only forthcoming film to capitalize on this mix of nostalgia and novelty.
|
|
"We're not here to make novelty products," says Jason Gerdon, head of global strategic communications.
|
|
The place is decorated with novelty pillows and vintage textiles, handmade pottery and found furniture.
|
|
Once the novelty (and the nasty hangovers) wore off, sales of Crimean wine nose-dived.
|
|
Mr. Pinho, shooting in 16-millimeter film, fuses nostalgia with a militant sense of novelty.
|
|
At first, Cicierega became known primarily for the novelty of being a preteen internet artist.
|
|
All this makes "Always Another Country," a graceful memoir by Sisonke Msimang, a welcome novelty.
|
|
So much for the idea that art museums are supposed to offer novelty and diversity.
|
|
But as the novelty wears off, they tend to lose motivation by the third week.
|
|
Other recent revivals have experienced significant ratings losses once the novelty of their returns faded.
|
|
Getting paper money from a bank teller may be less a novelty than a necessity.
|
|
In his book, Bergner cites research suggesting that women desire novelty as much as men.
|
|
Maybe it's just the novelty of existence experienced without the principal hallmark of being alive.
|
|
That's partly because nutritional knowledge doesn't tend to change that much, and novelty is powerful.
|
|
By and large, though, each new terminal will offer little novelty to disturb your reverie.
|
|
Fast fashion, then, appears to be the simple solution to appease our desire for novelty.
|
|
Politicos of all stripes are styled as saints and stamped onto novelty devotional prayer candles.
|
|
The voice control is a nice luxury, but for me, it's more of a novelty.
|
|
Ms. Sheehan said hotel guests and event planners liked the novelty of the food truck.
|
|
As such there are three ways to enter the sector: brute force, stealth, and novelty.
|
|
The company, BenShot, sells novelty glassware with bullets embedded, according to the Appleton Post-Crescent.
|
|
And the novelty of seeing celebrities try to pull it off wears thin pretty fast.
|
|
Victor winds up an old phonograph and puts on a novelty record of people laughing.
|
|
In most Western countries such alternatives are still a novelty, but sales are growing fast.
|
|
The thrill of it and novelty of it will never go away, nor should it.
|
|
Despite its intricacy and novelty, though, it still felt utterly true to the characters' stories.
|
|
Moreover, the novelty factor inspires Flowers to get truly silly, romping through bucketloads of camp.
|
|
It's something far more slippery, slithering between the two spaces and arriving at pop novelty.
|
|
The phones are probably what you think of when you picture a 'novelty Garfield phone.
|
|
He doesn't want to make products that are more about novelty and status than utility.
|
|
And at the same time, Snap still seems like a novelty to lots of people.
|
|
Back then, the Islamic State was a novelty, a fringe group that controlled a few areas.
|
|
The big picture: Computer-composed music has been around for few years, mostly in novelty form.
|
|
A pressure-sensitive in-display fingerprint reader is the highlight novelty with the Mi 8 Pro.
|
|
As impressive as it is, much of its appeal rests of the novelty of its creations.
|
|
Thankfully for novelty-seeking NBA Fans, this unstoppable manifestation of Golden State will break apart, eventually.
|
|
The novelty of fist bumps, dancing, and reporting the weather with cute animations wears off quickly.
|
|
Once derided as a silly novelty, emojis are coming into their own as a communication tool.
|
|
It's not a case of the novelty wearing off, but of non-augmented reality reasserting control.
|
|
I have no favorites but, most appreciate decorative and novelty typography that enhances and reinforces content.
|
|
They're not a huge deal: The water flowing over the seawall is part novelty, part nuisance.
|
|
Outside of a small contingent of tech enthusiasts, smartwatches still mostly remain a novelty, after all.
|
|
Your dad probably has enough personalised mugs and novelty T-shirts to last him a lifetime.
|
|
Goff says Clinton's staff is careful to avoid using digital tools for the sake of novelty.
|
|
Kids' brains prioritize novelty… This means more opportunities for high emotional highs and low emotional lows.
|
|
Until then, they are creepy, always-listening novelty services that are using you to collect data.
|
|
"Like with Pulp Fiction, I grew up with all these kind of novelty dances," he explained.
|
|
This one should amuse fans of pop radio, absurd velocity, and the wonderful spirit of novelty.
|
|
It's freeform and funny, supple enough beneath Beck's rhymes to save itself from pure novelty status.
|
|
But the international novelty of Élite has me yelling for more of this trashy fun. —K.
|
|
Why go Instagram official when you could say so much more with a novelty clothing item?
|
|
Being Canadian instead of American made me a novelty, a fellow spectator of the United States.
|
|
Buckley calls the camp a test — a marker of what's to come, rather than a novelty.
|
|
Dr Leclercq got similar results when she tested the preferences of her mice for social novelty.
|
|
Live streaming virtual reality might seem like an odd novelty until you try it for yourself.
|
|
The novelty of being a woman is limited by the long, excessive habit to her name.
|
|
The retailing giant is also increasing its selection of holiday and novelty items by 40 percent.
|
|
POLITICS is no novelty at Brazil's carnival celebrations, but some themes are more danceable than others.
|
|
What would Twitter advertise to me based on this, novelty ties or DVDs of Full House?
|
|
The app needs to push you to use it even when the novelty effect wears off.
|
|
"Sites will have a disclaimer, claiming it's for novelty purposes or similar qualifying statements," said Berg.
|
|
ModCloth: Retro styles, novelty prints, and more for the adorkable plus-size gal in your life.
|
|
Still, it's a semi-unselfish act from Uber, which is a bit of a novelty. 3.
|
|
He appreciated the novelty of bundling up in multiple layers, and he marveled at the snow.
|
|
Certainly the mere novelty of owning a wrist-worn computer seems to be fading fairly rapidly.
|
|
Entomophagy—the consumption of insects—has progressed from a Fear Factor novelty to a business opportunity.
|
|
Human beings are wired both for familiarity and novelty, the gas-and-brake system of evolution.
|
|
These questions may go unanswered, but Japan's novelty foods are nothing if not full of surprises.
|
|
Just after 8:30 P.M., Conway followed two corgi-related novelty Twitter accounts in rapid succession.
|
|
He's still a novelty to many people and they're not sure what to make of him.
|
|
Was there a start to the trend of "novelty food items" as we know them today?
|
|
Asteroids are, in other words, death, destroyers of worlds, but also life, bringers of biological novelty.
|
|
Not all that long ago, September brought with it a year's worth of small-screen novelty.
|
|
Low mortgage rates are no longer a novelty, hence no longer a sudden incentive for borrowers.
|
|
Affluent consumers in China are particularly keen on the novelty and exclusiveness associated with tropical fruits.
|
|
Sure, progress had to overtake our novelty pizza joints at some point, but at what cost?
|
|
In 2018, sex-positive Black artistic expression may not seem like so much of a novelty.
|
|
The novelty has worn off and the limited utility of the technology has been made clear.
|
|
There was one thing I enjoyed about using a female condom, though: the novelty of it.
|
|
In the United States, the bird is often served more as a novelty than a staple.
|
|
Rather than turn supporters off, each inflammatory statement only seemed to reinforce Trump's novelty and appeal.
|
|
Kansas City catcher Drew Butera adjusted his pregame routine given Lopez's novelty to the American League.
|
|
That's the novelty of our study, just demonstrating that they're now different from before the Anthropocene.
|
|
Even as we mourned the loss of the fight we had to marvel at the novelty.
|
|
This time, though, the novelty was to know your position anywhere that you happened to be.
|
|
So, it's time to cast away any notion of the Hawaiian shirt as a novelty garment.
|
|
The novelty on that wore off roughly five seconds after the city applied for a team.
|
|
The dishwasher still makes him smile: for him it's a relative novelty, a toy of privilege.
|
|
Novelty search, which completely ignored how close each bot was to the exit, succeeded 39 times.
|
|
Part of the novelty of this approach is how durable the surface is, Dr. Bhushan said.
|
|
And Curry was there to talk about reality, a novelty in this most unreal of spectacles.
|
|
Novelty ice cube molds are quirky, and allow us to make ice that reflects our interests.
|
|
What "economic nationalism" does is lend legitimacy and novelty to what is otherwise a crude revanchism.
|
|
Some sellers and buyers are drawn to the hunt and the novelty of collecting rare products.
|
|
It might be a cool novelty, but what makes it even cooler is not seeing it.
|
|
This office is at war against the Camorra, and this is an absolute novelty for Naples.
|
|
Once a person has dementia, the time for novelty and cosmopolitanism is past, the staff thought.
|
|
Once the novelty of its attention-grabbing gimmick wears off, how will it keep an audience?
|
|
For the novelty factor and the wow factor, there was no surpassing the American Simone Biles.
|
|
Bitcoin and other virtual currencies are no longer just a technological novelty or a speculative bubble.
|
|
The new Ugly Gerry font isn't the first novelty product released to raise awareness about gerrymandering.
|
|
The College Basketball Invitational has 16 teams and the novelty of a best-of-three final.
|
|
She was still reeling from the novelty of what she had seen in the city center.
|
|
So, you've come all this way just for the novelty of seeing one in the UK?
|
|
Apart from providing motivation, the boost of novelty could even offer a built-in painkilling perk.
|
|
They sold a few million records, but once they stopped covering ABBA the novelty wore off.
|
|
The novelty wore off, and I started to notice all the things I normally cover up.
|
|
It's a mess, but a beautiful mess for anyone who loves excess sugar and novelty food.
|
|
I've been making teletext pages for about five years and the 'novelty' still hasn't worn off!
|
|
Burger King has shifted its focus to novelty items (lest we forget the Cheetos Chicken Fries).
|
|
Close on the heels of beauty is alcohol (profound!), the second largest novelty advent calendar market.
|
|
First envisioned in 2015, this is where the novelty calendar market should have begun and ended.
|
|
The dunk contest, which had begun in 1984, was still somewhat of a novelty back then.
|
|
Rather than being a one-dimensional novelty brand, Duke Cannon actually supports its source of inspiration.
|
|
Even so, for a novelty-seeker there is nothing as rewarding as virtual reality right now.
|
|
Today, many breweries have embraced a similar model of quasi-independent corporate partnership and persistent novelty.
|
|
On the one hand, they're simply not new and don't scratch news hounds' itch for novelty.
|
|
And the novelty of an Instagrammable outdoor spectacle is something brands crave now more than ever.
|
|
Peloton solves the novelty problem in the same way Netflix does: It creates can't-miss programming.
|
|
The event was something of a novelty until the 1950s, when a few star riders emerged.
|
|
I don't think that it's a lack of novelty or that games are somehow getting worse.
|
|
"The novelty bags are very popular," says Erica Russo, Bloomingdale's fashion director of accessories and beauty.
|
|
Yet we inhabit a culture that privileges novelty and growth over the cyclical and the regenerative.
|
|
But as the tactic has lost its novelty, it has become less of a sure thing.
|
|
My wife, Flora, has become inured to the novelty of a beach littered with primeval relics.
|
|
This preference for novelty is, of course, the reason manufacturers periodically tweak product packaging and advertising.
|
|
They are sold in convenience stores, gas stations, drug paraphernalia shops, novelty stores and even online.
|
|
The novelty of the product was exciting, but the premise and the name made me uneasy.
|
|
Sure, it's a novelty, but you have to admit: you wish you had thought of it.
|
|
"Invisible keyboards" already exist using laser projection, but they're a novelty rather than a serious tool.
|
|
It&aposs great because it&aposs not just a novelty item, but also serves a function.
|
|
At its laziest, it relies on novelty, presenting scenes as listicles that both mythicize and oversimplify.
|
|
The third category of launch is novelty: entirely new launch techniques like SpinLaunch or Leo Aerospace.
|
|
All in all, the reviewer labelled it "a cute novelty item," but not an essential buy.
|
|
The album includes a couple of novelty songs, presumably to evoke fond memories in longtime fans.
|
|
In 2017, two children perished following a fire started by one such poorly made novelty device.
|
|
The song itself, going viral since 2018, could have come and gone as a novelty ditty.
|
|
Consider jazz: A century ago, many in the U.S. considered it no more than a novelty.
|
|
Yet for many Californians the novelty of readily accessible marijuana wore off a long time ago.
|
|
Part of Zooropa's appeal is its novelty: U2 making the least U2 album of their career.
|
|
In January, I began setting up my own smart apartment, but not simply for the novelty.
|
|
Probably wouldn't go for the novelty: I'd probably debate going no nonsense and trudging through it.
|
|
Whether customers will continue using the service once the novelty wears off remains to be seen.
|
|
The creation of four computer science students at Rice University—who put it together in a 36 hour hackathon—it's surely a novelty language, but it's also a very perfect novelty language, embodying the nonsense, bombasity, and even the frothing white nationalism of the actual presidential candidate.
|
|
There was a time when HD graphics were enough of a novelty to impress on their own.
|
|
Part of the novelty of "Gum in My Hair" is just how much it tries to do.
|
|
Female newsreaders appear regularly on many Afghan channels, but an entire station for women is a novelty.
|
|
And, while you're at it, it's probably worth exploring the rest of the Novelty Plates page, right?
|
|
"The robot" is one of the most recognizable novelty dances, but its history is anything but mechanical.
|
|
The current glut of lists has all but zapped them of their novelty, not to mention impact.
|
|
Clearly the novelty is completely gone from the celebrity thing, which is actually a really healthy development.
|
|
"When I first came to the Senate, being a woman was viewed as a novelty," says Mikulski.
|
|
LONDON — Your home isn't complete unless you've got at least one novelty Game of Thrones accessory, okay?
|
|
Presidential campaign merchandise is usually perfunctory at best: T-shirts, buttons, maybe the odd novelty belt buckle.
|
|
Its algorithms don't just exploit the natural human failing for sensationalist novelty; they amplify and aggravate it.
|
|
Elm Street Tattoo in Dallas, Texas is gaining some buzz over one of its novelty tattoo ideas.
|
|
Among them are a fro-yo store, a furniture company, and a line of novelty adult toys.
|
|
Dimon didn't explain why he thinks Libra will fail, though he did question the novelty of it.
|
|
But at the end of that day, that experience seems more like novelty than actually driving commerce.
|
|
This framing almost made Lil Wayne a novelty, which seems absurd to try to even imagine now.
|
|
The more dramatic the novelty and the more visually appealing and recognizably different it is, the better.
|
|
Roberts is wary that, though a novelty initially, users who overdose on bots might be turned off.
|
|
The high prices have fallen to more reasonable numbers, indicating that the novelty may have worn off.
|
|
"Ten years ago, political betting was just a novelty, PR-led loss-leader for bookmakers," he said.
|
|
The novelty in the ICRC's bond is that the money raised will be used in conflict zones.
|
|
At this point, West's relationship with controversy, once a novelty, has taken on a dull, routine quality.
|
|
Let's just dive right into the big novelty of the U12 Plus and why it's so bad.
|
|
It signaled a weakness for Johnson on foreign policy and underscored the perceived novelty of his campaign.
|
|
Below that is a fingerprint sensor for security, still something of a novelty on truly budget handsets.
|
|
It's bad enough that I think the poor image quality outweighs the novelty of the Clips entirely.
|
|
PRESIDENTIAL CAMPAIGN MERCHANDISE is usually perfunctory at best: T-shirts, buttons, maybe the odd novelty belt buckle.
|
|
And innovation implies dissidence, overthrow and revolution: For Islamists, especially Wahhabists, behind every novelty lurks the devil.
|
|
The novelty of the lots is important to bringing people back year after year, festival trustees said.
|
|
What's interesting beyond the novelty side of things is that Nabisco is extremely secretive about its process.
|
|
Perhaps the greatest novelty of GP-led deals, however, has been to ease the ten-year straitjacket.
|
|
They both attract people who are into novelty and they're both also definitely old time-y passion.
|
|
For that you can thank—or curse, depending on your tolerance for novelty—a confluence of factors.
|
|
This novelty also helps send the immune system into meltdown, leading to both more pneumonia and sepsis.
|
|
Novelty games, Pitagora explains, are those that encourage exploration of desires that have remained fantasies or curiosities.
|
|
The novelty, and then once it wears off, the content is stagnant, it's always the same style.
|
|
Schumer's presence in a movie is a mark, if not necessarily of quality, at least of novelty.
|
|
Up to that point, science fiction references in popular music had been mostly of the novelty variety.
|
|
Maybe after so many hero wars, that traditional model will start to look like a novelty again.
|
|
But for those who might think you're a novelty, what do you have to say to them?
|
|
Another helpful addition: a cute graphic disposable camera and a novelty towel to feel road-trip ready.
|
|
Physics aside, the novelty of the whole things seemed to carry the man nearly to the rafters.
|
|
And will it be something that the rest of us find compelling as more than a novelty?
|
|
After that exchange, the novelty of the experiment began to wear off, and I started feeling grumpy.
|
|
That novelty will soon wear thin if there aren't any meaningful contests for Cyborg within the promotion.
|
|
A Forrester Research study concluded that early adopters are driven by three things: novelty, information, and status.
|
|
That this music could only have been produced in the studio contributed further to the album's novelty.
|
|
Those of us who grew up Latinx in the U.S. know the novelty songs all too well.
|
|
"More details to follow soon, novelty use only, don't do anything stupid lol," the product description reads.
|
|
Fans, accustomed to constant novelty, no longer have the patience for artists to take unhurried new shapes.
|
|
Characters' faces are often as stretched and distorted as Marge's smeared face on a novelty T-Shirt.
|
|
Still, the high octane physicality and outrageous storylines of professional wrestling remain a novelty in the region.
|
|
In the modern era, massive migration itself is not a novelty, nor is it a sporadic event.
|
|
Hickory Farms grew explosively in the early years, thanks to what was then a novelty: free samples.
|
|
Beyond a novelty hit or two, cracking the international market remained a distant dream for reggae artists.
|
|
China's new class of super-rich is bringing another novelty to the country: the stratospheric divorce settlement.
|
|
The tomato and pickle cushions are only sold by Seletti, the company that created the novelty furniture.
|
|
They've become a way for people to express themselves, leading consumers to stock up on novelty packs.
|
|
Despite the novelty of a Dewey Decimal structure, this part of "Duat" is fairly conventional confessional stuff.
|
|
Novelty is the spice of life and salts our daily round even when we lose our sight.
|
|
The novelty is that the words are presented in logical sequences and in diminishing or augmenting typeface.
|
|
It's still a novelty item, so it wouldn't be something that employees at a store would use.
|
|
Characters from one television series have appeared on another often enough to no longer be a novelty.
|
|
But having a robot like that in the home was still entirely novelty value, it wasn't practical.
|
|
It is an inevitability, as there is little room for novelty and uniqueness in the modern age.
|
|
It looked like a novelty game on release, not this massive hit that's also breaking into eSports.
|
|
The fact that Ng's narrator seems "spooky" suggests that omniscience is a novelty to some contemporary readers.
|
|
How to work from home without losing your sanity After the novelty wears off, things get real.
|
|
Novelty often crumbles when faced with rigors of the environment it's setting out to mock or mimic.
|
|
What made a Saturday night mall party such a huge deal, besides the novelty factor and charm?
|
|
There's novelty in targeting Warren, so that's what many who need to boost clicks or ratings want.
|
|
Novelty will give any new venture a boost, but Tin House wasn't just new, it was distinctive.
|
|
"The first time I rode my bike to Logan, it was mostly for the novelty," he said.
|
|
But there is also a fundamental tension between the media's desire for novelty and the scientific method.
|
|
The arc of fashion week is long, to paraphrase an old paraphrase, but it bends toward novelty.
|
|
That said, the twists are genuinely surprising and the surroundings have a novelty value all their own.
|
|
Etsy, known for things like novelty needlepoints, is not generally an emergency backstop for pandemic cleaning supplies.
|
|
Anderson's quarterfinal opponent will be top-seeded Roger Federer, for whom a Wimbledon quarterfinal is no novelty.
|
|
I went for everything — novelty character pops, classic sandwiches, ice cream bars co-branded with candy bars.
|
|
In its final act, Mr Eggers allows "The Lighthouse" to move from period novelty into timeless myth.
|
|
Synthetic cannabinoids are sold in convenience stores, gas stations, drug paraphernalia shops, novelty stores and even online.
|
|
No matter who emerges as the nominee, women running for the presidency is no longer a novelty.
|
|
To be a group's game-winning hero, if only for a day, was a complete, disorienting novelty.
|
|
Where they saw inconvenient travel and slushy roads, I saw something beautiful if frivolous, a minor novelty.
|
|
Some photos are high-res; others are strangely grainy, and not in, like, a fashion novelty way.
|
|
Disappointingly — but unsurprisingly for a novelty toy like this — it charges over Micro USB, not USB-C.
|
|
UNLOCK YOUR HOTEL ROOM WITH A SMARTPHONE A few years ago, digital room keys were a novelty.
|
|
And Trump may have lost his shine—or his novelty—by the time France's election takes place.
|
|
The lack of a novelty factor isn't surprising, because there aren't many workable new options in Afghanistan.
|
|
There remain matchups offering genuine novelty and intrigue in the Champions League's first knockout round, of course.
|
|
Email was a novelty; things like text messages, streaming video, and social media were still years away.
|
|
At the time, the idea that anyone at all would move to the region was a novelty.
|
|
There is some temerity in this, and some novelty in the way Mr. Anderson depicts their relationship.
|
|
By contrast, a brilliant novelty of a different kind, Balanchine's "Union Jack," exploited Ms. Von Aroldingen's bravura.
|
|
If you're accustomed to finding amusement in novelty, absurdity, and cultural detritus, the function of We Beefin?
|
|
What's interesting about Kraushaar's column isn't the novelty of the thesis but the persistence of the metathesis.
|
|
Liberals are more open to new experiences, novelty and disruption; conservatives prefer stability and the status quo.
|
|
But it's very hard to maintain excitement or novelty that way, and that can definitely create unhappiness.
|
|
Three years later, what seemed like novelty becomes standard procedure as they tweak their style in passing.
|
|
Consumers aren't up for too much experimentation, but they want a little something, some level of novelty.
|
|
Every permutation of novelty has been mined and exploited in the interests of capturing jaded diners' imaginations.
|
|
There are also likely to be novelty users, those who partake in an occasional spot of robot sex.
|
|
But even with the novelty and political victory of the casting, "The Big Sick" still feels slightly stale.
|
|
And, at the end of the day, isn't that what truly great novelty food (or drink) should do?
|
|
Some of Maoyuan's handcrafted sculptures have two or more heads, which add to their novelty and strange appeal.
|
|
Once was enough, said Dame Margaret Weston, the museum's director, back when a lunar landing was a novelty.
|
|
B. and I convince everyone to get more Neurons, since they are such a novelty for us both.
|
|
"It's simply a novelty," Glasco said, adding that a fully automatic weapon can sell for $50,000 to $100,000.
|
|
The novelty, nostalgia and limited availability of these boxes make them ideal pieces for collectors and everyday consumers.
|
|
Japan has a national gift for holding in balance the stateliness of tradition and the marvel of novelty.
|
|
These novelty boxers have your name printed above the design with the words "was here" and lips below.
|
|
Sonnen has several such communities in Germany, but the idea is still a novelty in the United States.
|
|
Do you think people are buying these for novelty value, or are they actually getting off with them?
|
|
There's no novelty left in the idea that games can be an escape from the stresses of life.
|
|
It's important they know that what really gave them pleasure was the novelty, the experience of something different.
|
|
CNNMoney: Facebook's 'trending topics' spark debate In social media news, that trend is always going to be novelty.
|
|
The meme-to-merch cycle is nothing new, but unlike most novelty products, "ok boomer" merch is selling.
|
|
But I think the novelty on this is that there is a genetic influence on that causal pathway.
|
|
It's mostly a novelty at this point, but it's an attempt to make the whole thing more lifelike.
|
|
Wireless is still a novelty, as few car manufacturers even have the feature built into their own vehicles.
|
|
These somewhat old-fashioned narrative skills tend to appeal more to readers than to novelty-seeking prize juries.
|
|
The word novelty has appeared in 291 New York Times articles in the past year, including on Jan.
|
|
When one spot gets too crowded and its novelty used up, the next is slotted into its place.
|
|
Still, the novelty of yelling at a speaker and telling it (occasionally) to shut up hasn't worn off.
|
|
Shashua thinks MyMe can succeed where both failed — mostly because it's offering a service that goes beyond novelty.
|
|
It's a world of novelty and strange combinations, of roads peopled with ghosts and demons stuffed in wardrobes.
|
|
What's perhaps most notable about the OnePlus 53, however, is how devoid of novelty the phone itself is.
|
|
"Yay successful Xmas morning," Barrymore captioned a photo of herself and Kopelman holding two novelty-sized beer mugs.
|
|
Donald Trump was elected president, and "FDT" took on new urgency, blossoming from a novelty into an anthem.
|
|
"Unbreakable" was released a few months later, so films which took superheroes seriously were still a refreshing novelty.
|
|
The Seattle Mariners began selling toasted grasshoppers at Safeco Field this season as a sort of novelty item.
|
|
But with a price tag of $20, Kikkerland isn't pretending this multitool is anything more than a novelty.
|
|
That's something that it's no longer a novelty where people are just buying them, adding to their home.
|
|
How did you make the jump from selling a few novelty items to becoming a much bigger business?
|
|
Treat the college graduate to a high-end espresso machine, fancy French press, or cute novelty coffee maker.
|
|
I'm looking forward to the day when being a photographer while female isn't a surprise or a novelty.
|
|
And when that happens, electric cars will stop being such a novelty and begin to truly take over.
|
|
In that context, Shakespeare is more than a novelty play; it has an educational component to it, too.
|
|
While Live has novelty, it's hard to say whether ads or autoplay prompts will significantly improve its reach.
|
|
Novelty Song is a fast, high-flying, well-illustrated indie that will appeal to garageband impresarios and plagiarists.
|
|
We rely on them to help us decide everything from the perfect frying pan to novelty inflatable food.
|
|
"I would say that we have the odd novelty hats, but we actually don't encourage it," she says.
|
|
As a result of its relative novelty, the cyber insurance market remains small, although it is growing rapidly.
|
|
Tourists bartering for novelty t-shirts jostle in overcrowded alleys with vendors selling monkeys, parrots, and fighting cocks.
|
|
The feeling of novelty is left for advertisers and cities looking to celebrate this biennial and that anniversary.
|
|
That's because until this year, vintage makeup was a novelty — something we only dreamed of one day owning.
|
|
Created by a small team on a modest budget, the shooter finds novelty in the creatively exhausted genre.
|
|
NYU Game Center director Frank Lantz told Motherboard that Dota Auto Chess is more than just a novelty.
|
|
Is this a novelty, a PR stunt, or a small step, a slow creep, towards a RoboCop future?
|
|
The fields of sexual health and sexual pleasure are entwining as the adult novelty business continues to grow.
|
|
Also new — but definitely more on the novelty side for a majority of users — is Super Slow-Mo.
|
|
The sight of a sitting American president setting foot on the island was a novelty for most Cubans.
|
|
It's an impressive feature, but honestly, in the majority of cases, it's probably little more than a novelty.
|
|
This novelty effect can wear off and people might end up choosing convenience instead of Menu Next Door.
|
|
While it is unclear whether automatic photo cutouts will be a killer feature or ephemeral novelty for Thinga.
|
|
We're talking burgers that have been stacked high between layers of decadent toppings and sandwiched between novelty buns.
|
|
Maybe it's the novelty of those sliders (which might explain Krystal's appearance as the most-craveable runner-up).
|
|
The novelty of the newest tech will always wear off when the next generation of hardware eclipses it.
|
|
At some point, specific game mechanics become generic conventions — they let you build novelty onto a proven foundation.
|
|
Nunez showed me on his computer where he had bought the badge: a Web site selling novelty I.D.s.
|
|
But it is unclear how much novelty he is planning, and whether it will satisfy Chile's restive people.
|
|
I'd imagine the novelty wears off quickly at 2500 cents per round and $22008 per 303-round mag.
|
|
Electric bikes first went on sale around 1996, but remained a novelty in a sea of pedaled bicycles.
|
|
Indonesia's first F1 driver Rio Haryanto will also add a novelty factor when he debuts for Manor Racing.
|
|
It has few tangible assets, it relies on technology to distribute its wares and its customers crave novelty.
|
|
GEOFFREY CHAPMANHonolulu I am disappointed that The Economist has never tried to change the world with novelty socks.
|
|
The effect was carnivalesque, a presentation indebted to the Dr. Demento era of stylistic novelty and excessive quirk.
|
|
Likely Samsung is bracing for 21869156G to become less of a novelty in the next year or so.
|
|
When he was 220, Kassan launched a business selling novelty T-shirts that included a microphone and lights.
|
|
Clinton is trying to win an election, and it isn't the time for novelty or tilting at windmills.
|
|
"Looking back, I think the novelty of such a background resonated with HBS's search for diversity," Rivkin said.
|
|
Landlines are already a rare sight, and they'll only become more of a novelty in the next decade.
|
|
The currencies could flame out, lose their novelty or a vital regulatory issue could emerge, according to Boockvar.
|
|
One time, I booked a woman's home and had the novelty of having a parrot in the listing.
|
|
But Trump is no longer a novelty candidate, a branding magnate, or a B-List TV show host.
|
|
Until then, VR will remain a novelty act — no matter how many installations they bring to Park City.
|
|
Historically pranked with novelty songs, these charts now incorporate streaming platform plays as a metric for tabulating rankings.
|
|
Most employees are on the younger end of the millennial set, sporting novelty hair colors, piercings, and tattoos.
|
|
But after a brief attendance surge, the novelty wore off and the Wolf Pack name returned in 2013.
|
|
One Christmas cover is fun; three is a novelty moment in the alt club in your home town.
|
|
They got a big novelty check: And this is by no means the only big gaming charity event.
|
|
So there's the novelty appreciation, the ability to focus on the present and then there's the general disinhibition.
|
|
Bags that take a more-is-more approach, complete with 3-D embellishments, statement straps, and novelty shapes.
|
|
But beyond that novelty, the jokes are tired references to current events that never build on one another.
|
|
It's a novelty, for sure, but it's one that makes sense in the broader context of the phone.
|
|
Augmented reality has been a buzzword for years, but for the most part, it has remained a novelty.
|
|
As a rematch, it lacks the novelty of Diaz and McGregor's first 2003-pound meeting back in March.
|
|
I just wouldn't expect too much more out of the union apart from the novelty of that fact.
|
|
Mr. Vaccarello added some silkiness and sparkle (as well as a number of women), but not much novelty.
|
|
What makes "Jerry Springer" shimmer so unexpectedly isn't its satirical side, the novelty of which wears off quickly.
|
|
So if you're looking for speedy publication, my advice is to push the boundaries of originality and novelty!
|
|
Most of the people whom I interviewed there were, like me, there for the novelty of the experience.
|
|
MallforAfrica CEO Chris Folayan points to the novelty of online sales in many of Africa eShop's new markets.
|
|
It's the kind of cheap novelty toy for adults that insufferable relatives nationwide will find hilarious and charming.
|
|
The ultimate novelty in American music is not eros and race-mixing, but technology, capital and global distribution.
|
|
With four days still left for bidding, the price of these novelty Oreos is expected to keep climbing.
|
|
One involves novelty: We are conditioned to focus heavily on new threats, looking for any cause for alarm.
|
|
Communities with a good balance of people who seek out diversity, complexity, novelty, new and exciting experiences etc.
|
|
Given the novelty of the program, you might have expected him to speak to the audience about it.
|
|
Others are also betting on Chad's increasing appeal among a certain set of adventure- and novelty-seeking travelers.
|
|
But that is precisely the type of narrow-minded, novelty-seeking behavior that Chiang is pointing out here.
|
|
Still, the novelty clothing item's popularity dipped off pretty much as soon as the summer of 2017 ended.
|
|
"Having a presidential candidate from your state is not a novelty if you live in Massachusetts," he said.
|
|
This isn't just another instance of a gimmicky relocation of a canonical work by novelty-seeking theater artists.
|
|
And Mr. Simons is that, a welcome, if exacting, novelty in a city and business lost in indecision.
|
|
As cute as the Jigglypuff speaker is, though, these sorts of novelty speakers don't usually sound very good.
|
|
But beyond the novelty of a silent film in the IMAX era, there's not much to it. 15.
|
|
They giggled at a novelty target on the wall featuring a cartoon zombie holding a box of pizza.
|
|
Such a relationship has to be cultivated and nurtured, and protected from the temptations that novelty can present.
|
|
The lamp will leave the air in mom's home so fresh, plus, it's a pretty cool novelty decoration.
|
|
"The Court recognizes that the SALT cap is in many ways a novelty," Oetken wrote in his opinion.
|
|
For some, the novelty of it all might be enough to justify a purchase, but not for me.
|
|
The typical detective series offers its readers soothing familiarity spiced by the mild novelty of each installment's crime.
|
|
The Amazon Lockers idea will be a novelty, used a lot in the beginning, but quickly to fade.
|
|
We sort of thought it would be a novelty, but turns out to be really satisfying and fun.
|
|
Airplanes, a novelty technology that had first been series-manufactured a few years earlier, were dispatched for reconnaissance.
|
|
It was enough of a novelty that Hammacher Schlemmer carried it — for $495, equal to about $3,500 today.
|
|
The pendants were crude—"nothing beautiful about them"—but they were novel, in a place that craved novelty.
|
|
And our response to this pain and trauma should not ever be dependent on novelty or body count.
|
|
Given their size, the Tiny Arcades are ultimately more of a novelty item than a great gaming experience.
|
|
He was a novelty who resisted being just that, a symbol who wouldn't be content with mere symbolism.
|
|
On the site, gowns are split up by category, including limited-edition metallics, maternity options, and novelty prints.
|
|
But here was the novelty: You didn't have to wait until the game was over to cash in.
|
|
Would a couple in the second decade of the 21st century really find smoking marijuana a forbidden novelty?
|
|
It's not just that he's an old-school performer in a media landscape biased toward novelty and provocation.
|
|
"Electronic gizmos of all kinds typically have a 'novelty' effect that wears off after a while," Ekkekakis said.
|
|
Tebow just had zero desire to entertain a baseball career, even down to being a novelty drat pick.
|
|
Did you know Jerry Lucas made a small fortune writing a series of novelty books about improving memory?
|
|
All year long, Thon Maker was more a prodigious novelty than a helpful contributor for the Milwaukee Bucks.
|
|
For Kate, it meant tweaking its assortment of novelty products to juice full-price sales at its branded stores.
|
|
Plus, there seems to be, among most VR games, an emphasis on novelty of platform over quality of gameplay.
|
|
Beyond a few days of heartwarming novelty, most consumer bots like the Vector ultimately leave you feeling strangely empty.
|
|
If Sony doesn't deliver, however, there's still hope that Aibo might one day be more than just a novelty.
|
|
So if they are buying [the toys] for novelty value or as a joke, we are cool with that.
|
|
But Beaudreau sees animation as a novelty practice, a cathartic experience that allows him to blow off some steam.
|
|
"Once the novelty wears off, most people will ask if meal kits fit conveniently into their life," says Witcher.
|
|
So even besides the novelty of it all, flashing back to Beth's part in everything is just smart storytelling.
|
|
Ignoring the novelty factor of it all, Wheatland has a fairly matter-of-fact approach to the whole practice.
|
|
It's clear that the Olsens' turn from TV to fashion is way beyond a novelty at this point. 2.
|
|
That is partly because guests are so taken with the novelty of it that they order more room service.
|
|
The big firms can seize on novelty almost as quickly as startups do—and with a lot more oomph.
|
|
But what is Halloween if not the season of novelty, an occasion for goofy artifice, for plastic and foam?
|
|
The common ground of landscape painting, even when loosely defined, allows an artist to invent freely while avoiding novelty.
|
|
The novelty of this capacitor is that we've managed to modify commercially available materials to make them more effective.
|
|
At a cool $200,000 a pop for the top model, it sounds like a great lunch time novelty destination.
|
|
People with less space on their phones will likely get rid of it soon after the novelty wears off.
|
|
The radio icon looks like a radio from the 1950s or something, which, okay, I guess that's a novelty.
|
|
But while it's easy to mock the novelty of a Harry Potter coloring book, their decline will be felt.
|
|
You can take that energy home and it can help open you both up to novelty and sexual exploration.
|
|
When Richardson Ajayi created the Bridge Clinic in 1003, in vitro fertilisation (IVF) was still a novelty in Nigeria.
|
|
We see drag queens dressed as church ladies who lip-sync to Christian novelty songs at a gay bar.
|
|
Granted, it's not the most wallet-friendly of innovations, but nevertheless it's a novelty befitting our fast-paced lives.
|
|
The obvious novelty of the game is that they look like they're performing oral sex on their male colleagues.
|
|
By then, the game was skating by on novelty, absurdity, and how much South Park references made you laugh.
|
|
In the age of Instagram, a cup of coffee's novelty factor can be just as important as the caffeine.
|
|
Getting your product used beyond a one-time novelty experiment is hard and means re-thinking many UX aspects.
|
|
Not only that, but treadmills have a knack for collecting dust at home once the novelty has worn off.
|
|
IGTV is for now a novelty, but how it continues to craft itself around creators will determine its success.
|
|
Meanwhile, wall-themed novelty toy sellers and failed political action committees have left behind some disappointed customers and donors.
|
|
But, eventually, the sheer amount of reptiles at the expo meant that the novelty of everything wore off quickly.
|
|
As Netflix's influence grew from novelty to household brand, streaming services became a threat to long-standing cable companies.
|
|
But the novelty fades, the early adopters disperse, and a few weeks later everyone goes back to eating Chipotle.
|
|
That novelty soon wore off and I came to regard the making of "mixtape" MiniDisks as a complete chore.
|
|
This bit of breakfast fun can easily be had with a customizable toaster from the Vermont Novelty Toaster Corporation.
|
|
While the authors may overstate the novelty of some of their ideas, they combine them in a new way.
|
|
Click here to view original GIFSo far, 360° videos have mostly worked as novelty items that are rarely impressive.
|
|
"It was a big transparent bowl with two small lots," he told reporters eager for details of the novelty.
|
|