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"overemphasize" Definitions
  1. overemphasize something to give too much emphasis or importance to something

140 Sentences With "overemphasize"

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

It is easy to overemphasize the meaning of all this.
Many just overemphasize every blazing climax and drive tempos frantically.
It's hard to overemphasize Sondheim's influence on American musical theater.
"I can't overemphasize the importance of this leaked news," Cramer said.
"I can't overemphasize how important these infrastructure issues are," he said.
Especially with little ones, we often overemphasize the importance of individual achievements.
For the core progressive audience, they don't want to overemphasize Trump news.
Afterwards I was wondering, did I overemphasize the difficulty of that full moon?
It's hard to overemphasize how taboo busting Sanders's advocacy of Palestinian rights is.
It's hard to overemphasize just how devastating a 4 degree warming would be.
But Wallace also warned not to overemphasize the importance of a Japanese carrier.
"We don't want to overemphasize the deaths," the IRI's John Tomaszewski told CNN.
And it's hard to overemphasize how important this project is to the Navy.
Surprisingly, perhaps, people sometimes overlook this basic fact of filmmaking and overemphasize technique instead.
Some programmers are even withholding their creations from companies that they think overemphasize 2996.
We tend to overemphasize small slights and slip ups that matter to a few.
"We don't want to overemphasize the deaths," the IRI's John Tomaszewski told CNN Monday.
Sometimes they overemphasize particularly underrepresented voters, like 19-year-old black male Trump voters.
I can't overemphasize how terrific Terrance McKnight's "Leonard Bernstein's Black America" is, on WQXR.
I know I just said the stakes were different, but I can't overemphasize that.
But in Greece, they almost overemphasize education, so we have mathematics PhDs and biology PhDs.
It's hard to overemphasize how much of a radical shift block-granting Medicaid would be.
I don't want to overemphasize that particular star couple, but they're there all the time.
"I can't overemphasize how important that is," he said in his 2017 conversation with Gates.
It's almost impossible to overemphasize the importance of intentionally building a positive culture from the start.
It's difficult to overemphasize Vince Clarke's central role in the world-conquering rise of electronic pop.
We can overemphasize how scary it is to the point where people feel hopeless and panicked.
" He described his technique: "As a portrait artist, you want to slightly overemphasize a distinguishing characteristic.
It's hard to overemphasize the degree to which Trump lives in the heads of elected Republicans.
Their recommendation: outlets should take pains not to overemphasize or hype the names and photos of shooters.
I don't want to overemphasize — it isn't like they had a lot to say about the company.
However, when we overemphasize race, nationality, faith, or income or education level, we forget our many similarities.
I think a lot of times we can overemphasize, or over play, the wind threat in a hurricane.
I can't overemphasize the importance here that must be placed on keeping the company neutral in this fight.
They also worry that the suits will overemphasize pressure to succeed and contribute to burnout for certain children.
It's hard to overemphasize the significance of the Republican proposal to cut the corporate tax rate to 21 percent.
"We cannot overemphasize how essential stock-based compensation is to a startup's ability to recruit and retain talent," they wrote.
"I cannot overemphasize how insane this policy is," writes Michael Siegel, a professor of community health sciences at Boston University.
I will point out some similarities, but I want to drop a cautionary note that one doesn't want to overemphasize them.
Li says Chinese companies overemphasize "emotional resilience" or "perseverance" but fail to tell employees when to quit putting on a brave face.
For example, such ads tend to overemphasize the benefits of a drug, diminish knowledge of side effects, and neglect to discuss alternatives.
"I can hardly overemphasize enough how lucky I was to get that opportunity to work in Dr. Brodie's laboratory," Dr. Carlsson wrote.
"We cannot overemphasize how essential stock-based compensation is to a startup's ability to recruit and retain talent," they wrote. http://bit.
Mr. Hiep said the United States and South Korea should be careful not to overemphasize the comparison between North Korea and Vietnam.
Seeing these models of intentional communities threw into relief the ways our culture can overemphasize the importance of a nuclear family structure.
Our elite schools overemphasize leadership partly because they're preparing students for the corporate world, and they assume that this is what businesses need.
"It is impossible to overemphasize how important that decision was to the preservation of Spoleto Festival U.S.A.," Mr. Redden wrote in an email.
We talked about the power of suggestion, and how critical it was that I be careful in the way I write, and not overemphasize.
I cannot overemphasize the importance of recognizing who benefits and who loses from these economic mistakes, because that difference is why these mistakes persist.
"I'm generally a believer that we overemphasize the importance of the Fed as opposed to the economic backdrop and the earnings backdrop," said Golub.
It can be difficult to balance concerns for employee safety with the need to resist panicking over media reports that tend to overemphasize threats.
"In this case the cognitive factor is cognitive bias, (which means) we tend to overemphasize things that are recent and very vivid," he explained.
In reality, many people are too inwardly focused on themselves to notice or care much about the details you tend to overemphasize in your mind.
"The press always plays a role, whether by being passive or by being aggressive, but it's a mistake to overemphasize" the impact of media coverage.
"It's hard to overemphasize Sondheim's influence on American musical theater," Mr. Miranda writes, and then offers a portrait of its history in a single paragraph.
In the field of cancer, "there is a huge opportunity for hype to exaggerate and overemphasize what has been done to date," Dr. Prasad said.
Soul Electronics didn't overemphasize the bass on Emotion, instead delivering a well-balanced sound that keeps the bass to what you might expect from a track.
TeamViewer (iOS, Android, web, Windows, macOS)Image: TeamViewerIt's hard to overemphasize the importance of being able to log into computers remotely for the average remote worker.
"…Observers tend to overemphasize the difference that the precise composition of the government in Berlin would make," he wrote in a note to clients on Thursday.
There are some comparisons to be made between the Trump era and the Nixon era, but I do caution that it's easy to overemphasize the comparisons.
"What we saw today was one oil company begrudgingly accept the scientific consensus while trying to overemphasize the extent of scientific uncertainty," Herrera said in a statement.
"It's a typical immigrant experience to overemphasize some of the things you want to remember," he said, "and underemphasize some of the things you want to forget."
What each side must watch for The prosecution must take care not to overemphasize the ostrich leather aspects of the evidence -- in other words, Manafort's luxurious lifestyle.
Their basic mistake is that they overemphasize differences between Muslims, like the Sunni-Shia split, and assume that ISIS and al-Qaeda are aberrant distortions of Islam.
New Mexico State Senator Cathrynn Brown, a Carlsbad native, said she "cannot overemphasize how much of a public safety issue" roads in the oil-producing areas have become.
Bolstering statements normally sound like this: "Well, to tell you the truth" or "In all honesty" and are used to overemphasize the sincerity and truthfulness of a comment.
In sales I can't overemphasize how important it is to promote a service you believe in, and are confident will be delivered in a way that helps your customers.
"Hard to overemphasize how much this will change the narrative about the EU. No longer the world's sick man," tweeted Nicolas Veron, an economist at Brussels think tank Bruegel.
It's impossible to overemphasize the arduous work it takes for women, on a daily basis, to stay in optimal physical shape while working to perfect their technique and artistry.
While the show shouldn't shy away from addressing the negative, it would be a shame to overemphasize it and only depict the tech scene as a toxic place for women.
"Early reviews have been impacted by negative sentiment around a character progression system that publications and consumers believe overemphasize microtransactions," analyst Michael Olson wrote in a note to clients Tuesday.
"You list charitable deductions on Schedule A, but that's where people also tend to get aggressive and overemphasize what they give," said Gavin Morrissey, managing partner at Financial Strategy Associates in Needham, Massachusetts.
Patrick Walker: I can't overemphasize how much I agree with you on the "cult of personality" and gratuitous nature of so many interviews; reading "artists" indulging in their own myth-building and so forth.
"We shouldn't overemphasize the effectiveness of technology," he said, adding that a government requirement for warning devices would initially have minimal impact, because the vast majority of cars on the road are years old.
When we talk about startups, we overemphasize the exciting launches, exhilarating exits and demoralizing defeats — and we don't talk enough about the middle part of the story, Adobe Chief Product Officer Scott Belsky says.
One perhaps less obvious danger of covering mass shootings so extensively is that it might overemphasize their role in gun violence in America, furthering the false impression that mass shootings are what's driving the epidemic.
" Let's heed the advice/warning by the great historian and resist the temptation to overemphasize what Thomas Hylland Eriksen has called, with particular reference to the power of the media, the "tyranny of the moment.
"We cannot overemphasize how essential stock-based compensation is to a startup's ability to recruit and retain talent," they wrote in a missive, organized by one of their Washington, D.C.-focused advocacy groups, called Engine.
American elections are saturated with cash, drag on forever, foster a corrosive permanent campaign and can overemphasize the concerns of the most radical activists out of step with voters more representative of the wider national electorate.
It's hard to overemphasize the extent to which the puerile humor yields diminishing returns, as the filmmakers (Henson and writer Todd Berger) hammer away at dirty-puppet jokes to the point of wearing holes in them.
I can't overemphasize how much this hot tub was sitting on a patch of gravel behind a high school and it was the middle of the day and Astrid was compelled to wear her pants into the water.
For this kind of wackiness to resonate with the audience, the comic timing and execution need to be pitch perfect, But director James Fargo has a faulty instinct to overemphasize the least funny aspects of his film's comedy.
Insurers are starting to pressure providers to use medication assisted treatment, or M.A.T. "It's really the linchpin of our strategy going forward — I can't overemphasize that," said Daniel Knecht, vice president of clinical strategy and policy at Aetna.
While Garcia did not overemphasize the point, the prosecution's argument has revolved around the notion that Zarate did not find the gun on the pier that day but rather brought it with him and hid it in his clothing.
It's a quality that Ms. Thede knows will immediately set her apart from her many competitors — a distinction that she embraces and hopes will give her show a unique voice, but one that she doesn't want to overemphasize, either.
"We cannot overemphasize how essential stock-based compensation is to a startup's ability to recruit and retain talent," said a letter signed by more than 500 people from the tech industry, including Sam Altman, Dustin Moskovitz and Max Levchin.
"We're all just getting used to using social media ourselves, as a society, so we overemphasize the Islamic State's effectiveness because they use it too," says Charles Kurzman, a sociology professor at the University of North Carolina who studies Islamic terrorism.
"The selling rate came in at a relatively disappointing 13.4 million units per year in July, and while we wouldn't want to overemphasize one month's result, recent results have seen a weaker SAAR than earlier in the year," LMC analyst Emiliano Lewis said.
"When I attended the New York screening of the first episode for Kickstarter backers and saw how much the people who, I cannot overemphasize this enough, paid for the show really enjoyed it and felt good about it, that was the best feeling," said Kalan.
Many otherwise solid studies overemphasize the role of "terrorists" (often singling out ISIS) in profiting from antiquities trafficking — even though looting in Syria has been conducted or overseen by all parties to the conflict, and ISIS is apparently not responsible for most of it.
It is no surprise that when a disaster happens, whether it's an oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico or flooding in Louisiana, political reporters overemphasize questions like whether Obama looks like he's responding to the crisis effectively, and underemphasize questions like: Is the response working?
Perhaps as a result of this perspective, he tends to overemphasize the role of subordinate commanders like John Logan, while underestimating Sherman's extraordinary ability to juggle troop movements, logistics and intelligence, all while adapting to a new way of war built around the railroad and the telegraph.
It's funny that you mention the medicated kids film because I did that after the crystal meth one and it was an eye-opener to the way in which we overemphasize the problem of illegal drugs and tend to be more blasé with the problems of legal drugs.
"It's difficult to overemphasize the role of the military as a socialization agent" for young men, Turnbull said, many of whom join the military "after their first year of university, barely out of high school" and have little interaction with women during that time except female K-Pop groups who perform at bases.
Democrats must reject a DNC model that services a system of a Washington-based consultant industrial complex composed of individuals who often work for big banks and Big Pharma when they aren't working for Democrats, make far too much money even when they lose elections, and overemphasize large-scale television ads paid for by big donor fundraising.
This can translate into actions that devalue feminine characteristics and overemphasize the characteristics of strength and superiority attributed to masculinity, (59).
Those diagnosed with narcissistic personality disorder tend to view themselves as unrealistically superior and overemphasize their strengths but understate their weaknesses. As such, narcissists use exaggeration and minimization to defend against psychic pain.
Tufte coined the term "chartjunk" to refer to useless, non-informative, or information-obscuring elements of quantitative information displays, such as the use of graphics to overemphasize the importance of certain pieces of data or information.
Daniel Furber and Suzanne Sherry argue that the proportion of Jews and Asians who are successful relative to the white male population poses an intractable puzzle for proponents of what they call "radical multiculturism", who they say overemphasize the role of sex and race in American society.
Observers making attributions about the behavior of others may overemphasize internal attributions and underestimate external attributions; this is known as the fundamental attribution error. Conversely, when an individual makes an attribution about their own behavior they may overestimate external attributions and underestimate internal attributions. This is called actor-observer bias.
According to one study, Freedom House's rankings "overemphasize the more formal aspects of democracy while failing to capture the informal but real power relations and pathways of influence ... and frequently lead to de facto deviations from democracy." States can therefore "look formally liberal- democratic but might be rather illiberal in their actual workings".
Andreas Demetriou suggests that theories which overemphasize the autonomy of the domains are as simplistic as the theories that overemphasize the role of general intelligence and ignore the domains. He agrees with Gardner that there are indeed domains of intelligence that are relevantly autonomous of each other. Some of the domains, such as verbal, spatial, mathematical, and social intelligence are identified by most lines of research in psychology. In Demetriou's theory, one of the neo-Piagetian theories of cognitive development, Gardner is criticized for underestimating the effects exerted on the various domains of intelligences by the various subprocesses that define overall processing efficiency, such as speed of processing, executive functions, working memory, and meta-cognitive processes underlying self- awareness and self-regulation.
Another specialization problem may come as a result of security compartmentalization. An analytic team with unique access to a source may overemphasize that source's significance. This can be a major problem with long-term HUMINT relationships, in which partners develop personal bonds. Groups (like individual analysts) can also reject evidence which contradicts prior conclusions.
Entrepreneurs tend to believe they have more degree of control over events, discounting the role of luck. Below are some of the most critical decision biases of entrepreneurs to start up a new business. # Overconfidence: Perceive a subjective certainty higher than the objective accuracy. # Illusion of control: Overemphasize how much skills, instead of chance, improve performance.
It would invent or seek out and overemphasize historical crimes committed by or conflicts with Jewish figures. Judenforschung was also used in the formalizing of the Nazis' race science to determine who did and did not count as Jewish by their standards. Judenforschung was a part of the Nazis' propaganda campaigns. It served to make their goals appear rational and supported by science and historical record.
The Allmusic review by Steve Huey awarded the album 4 stars and states "it's another fine, eclectic outing that falls squarely into the signature CTI fusion sound: smooth but not slick, accessible but not simplistic... All in all, Salt Song has dated well, partly because the arrangements don't overemphasize electric piano, but mostly on the strength of Turrentine's always-soulful playing".Huey, S. [ Allmusic Review] accessed January 15, 2010.
According to Arnold, some people believed that individuals could not invent because society and the sciences had become too complex—"no man can know all and therefore no man can invent." Consequently, these people overemphasize teamwork. Arnold said such efforts will fail because "the creative process is an individual process and, as John Steinbeck said, 'it lies in the lonely mind of a man.'" Arnold's stressed that society needed engineers who could form and justify their own thoughts.
In Italian, female job titles are easily formed with , and other feminine suffixes: a female teacher is a , a female doctor is a . However, for jobs that have only recently opened up to women, there is some resistance to using the feminine forms, which are considered ugly or ridiculous. For example, a female lawyer can be called or (feminine) but some might prefer to use the word (masculine). Opponents of these feminine forms claim that they're offensive because they overemphasize the gender, or that they're incorrect neologisms.
Together these forces provide an advantage for the status quo; people are motivated to do nothing or to maintain current or previous decisions. Change is avoided, and decision makers stick with what has been done in the past. Changes from the status quo will typically involve both gains and losses, with the change having good overall consequences if the gains outweigh these losses. A tendency to overemphasize the avoidance of losses will thus favour retaining the status quo, resulting in a status quo bias.
The point of the test is to not overemphasize or privilege the gender of a female scientist. Even Finkbeiner, who vowed to "ignore gender" in her writing, actually tripped up on the tendency to focus on sex; in an astronomer's profile she mentioned that the scientist was the "first" to win a certain award. "After a reader urged Finkbeiner to stick to her pledge, she removed it." The tactic of singling out women as "role models" can also distort gender equality in the reception of news reporting.
Ward 2003, pp. 96–97. He believes that by this time Dickinson was probably familiar with Proust's description of taste and smell awakening recollections of the past. Dickinson may have turned down the head of the cellist to contribute to the effect of a view from an elevated position, as well as the eliminate the gaze, which would overemphasize the head and weaken the effect of allover visual flow. But it also suggests that the cellist is dreaming, which contributes to the idea of recollection.
Journalists tend to overemphasize the most extreme outcomes from a range of possibilities reported in scientific articles. A study that tracked press reports about a climate change article in the journal Nature found that "results and conclusions of the study were widely misrepresented, especially in the news media, to make the consequences seem more catastrophic and the timescale shorter." A 2020 study in PNAS found that newspapers tended to give greater coverage of press releases that opposed action on climate change than those that supported action.
Ethicist John Barton says there are three basic models, patterns or paradigms that form the basis of all ethics in the Bible: (1) obedience to God's will; (2) natural law; and (3) the imitation of God. Barton goes on to say the first is probably the strongest model. Obedience as a basis for ethics is found in Law and in the wisdom literature and in the Prophets. Eryl Davies says it is easy to overemphasize obedience as a paradigm since there is also a strong goal–oriented character to the moral teaching in the Bible.
In studies of obsessive-compulsive rituals, focus shifts to the lower level of gestures, resulting in goal demotion. For example, an obsessive-compulsive cleaning ritual may overemphasize the order, direction, and number of wipes used to clean the surface. The goal becomes less important than the actions used to achieve the goal, with the implication that magic rituals can persist without efficacy because the intent is lost within the act. Debate remains as to whether studies of obsessive-compulsive rituals can be extended to describe other kinds of rituals.
Instead of speaking of a hypothesis of an actor- observer asymmetry, some textbooks and research articles speak of an "actor- observer bias." The term "bias" is typically used to imply that one of the explainers (either the actor or the observer) is biased or incorrect in their explanations. But which one—the actor or the observer—is supposed to be incorrect is not clear from the literature. On the one hand, Ross's (1977) hypothesis of a "fundamental attribution error" suggests that observers are incorrect, because they show a general tendency to overemphasize dispositional explanations and underemphasize situational ones.
The influence of the pharmaceutical industry on medical research has been a major cause for concern. In 2009 a study found that "a number of academic institutions" do not have clear guidelines for relationships between Institutional Review Boards and industry.Policies regarding IRB members' industry relationships often lacking. In contrast to this viewpoint, an article and associated editorial in the New England Journal of Medicine in May 2015 emphasized the importance of pharmaceutical industry-physician interactions for the development of novel treatments, and argued that moral outrage over industry malfeasance had unjustifiably led many to overemphasize the problems created by financial conflicts of interest.
1387–1415) won a crushing victory against the Christian Amhara in Bale, despite the latter's numerical superiority. He described other allegedly significant victories won by the Adal sultan Jamal ad-Din II (d. 1433) in Bale and Dawaro, where the Muslim leader was said to have taken enough war booty to provide his poorer subjects with multiple slaves. Historian Ulrich Braukämper states that these works of Islamic historiography, while demonstrating the influence and military presence of the Adal sultanate in southern Ethiopia, tend to overemphasize the importance of military victories that at best led to temporary territorial control in regions such as Bale.
The Hellenes had either to fight for their freedom or submit. The desirability of these material objects was certainly economic, although considerations of defence and ideology may well have played a part. These are the motives generally accepted today, after long retrospect. Herodotus apparently knew of no such motives, or if he did, he did not care to analyse history at that level. J D Manville characterizes his approach as the attribution of “personal motivation” to players such as Aristagoras and Histiaeus. In his view, Herodotus “may seem to overemphasize personal motivation as a cause,” but he really does not.
In order to build trust in a one-on-one setting, the approach of the mentor is key. Mentors who prioritize relationship or friendship building tend to be more effective than those who focus largely on goals and reforming their students. Effective mentors are likely to be characterized by having a consistent presence in their mentees’ lives, respect for their mentees’ viewpoints, greater attention for their mentees’ desires or goals, and accountability for maintaining good relations. Less effective mentors typically do not meet with their mentees regularly, attempt to reform or transform their mentees, and overemphasize behavioral or academic changes.
The Little Baby Face Foundation is a New York City-based charitable organization whose goal is to provide free cosmetic surgery for children born with facial deformities, and/or who are bullied because of their appearance. Critics have charged that the Foundation's treatment of non-pathological cases overemphasize changing the bullied rather than the bullies.Tormented over their looks? Bullied teens seek free plastic surgery from a NYC nonprofit, by Melissa Dahl, at Today; published January 5, 2014; retrieved December 23, 2016 The Little Baby Face Foundation was founded in 2002, based on a new model of treatment to help children born with facial deformities, and features such as protruding ears.
Proponents of quantitative methods have also increasingly adopted the potential outcomes framework, developed by Donald Rubin, as a standard for inferring causality. Debates over the appropriate application of quantitative methods to infer causality resulted in increased attention to the reproducibility of studies. Critics of widely- practiced methodologies argued that researchers have engaged in P hacking to publish articles on the basis of spurious correlations. To prevent this, some have advocated that researchers preregister their research designs prior to conducting to their studies so that they do not inadvertently overemphasize a non-reproducible finding that was not the initial subject of inquiry but was found to be statistically significant during data analysis.
The intellectual aspects have been disputed due to its stress on fame and profit and its conflicts with Confucian ideology. The book appears to overemphasize the historical contributions from the School of Diplomacy, devaluing the book's historical importance. The book does not emphasize the historical facts or fiction, but appears to be an extensive collection of anecdotes with little bearing to the chronological order of chapter and narration. Since the 12th century, it has been widely debated whether the book should be considered a historical documentation from writer Chao Gongwu and Gao Sisun, and there have been attempts to categorize the book into a different genus.
The book has been described as containing only few revelations, among them Bush's account of his decision not to grant a stay of execution for Karla Faye Tucker, which he described as affecting him emotionally, contrary to media criticism at the time. Ghostwriter Michael Herskowitz was hired in 1999 to draft the book, but he was dismissed and Hughes took over after "the early chapters Herskowitz submitted were judged to overemphasize W.'s early difficulties, describing him, for instance, as having been unsuccessful in the oil business."Jacob Weisberg: "The Bush Tragedy". Excerpt, The New York Times, published February 1, 2008 The proceeds of the book were donated to charity.
However, the many common elements among these writers (such as an emphasis on living in the Spirit of Jesus, particular forms of meditative prayer, a pedagogy institutionalised in particular seminaries and schools), means that it can be considered as a distinct tradition of spirituality.David D Thayer, 'The French School', in Peter Tyler, ed, The Bloomsbury Guide to Christian Spirituality, (2012), p181 Recently, substantial Calvinist influences on Berulle were discovered, which are claimed to have caused his theology of the priesthood to overemphasize the priest's losing his own personality and gaining Christ's, thus preparing the 19th century culture of Catholic clericalism.McGrath-Merkle, Clare. Berulle's Spiritual Theology of Priesthood.
In her blog Alyric devotes an article to Central Coherence: > "There are differences in the kinds of 'big picture' here obviously. One > refers to systems and the others, of the kind that Frith and Happe > automatically assumed to be universal, have an essential social element." > Alyric (2005) the A Muse: Part 1 The Drive for Central Coherence Naja Melan claims that neurotypical people are often biased to overemphasize one context and neglecting all other contexts. This he states is an expression of WCC, as compared to autists who have the possibility of consciously focusing on multiple contexts if deemed appropriate by them or requested.
Critics of WAD argued that it failed to sufficiently address the differential power relations between women and men, and tended to overemphasize women's productive as opposed to reproductive roles. Also, rising criticism of the exclusion of men in WID and WAD led to a new theory termed Gender and Development (GAD). Drawing from insights developed in psychology, sociology, and gender studies, GAD theorists shifted from understanding women's problems as based on their sex (i.e. their biological differences from men) to understanding them as based on gender – the social relations between women and men, their social construction, and how women have been systematically subordinated in this relationship.
Hamowy adopted a multidisciplinary approach to teaching and scholarship. His seminar discussions moved freely across the breadth of the humanities and social sciences, including history, philosophy, law, political theory, social theory, pure economic theory, literature, medicine, and psychiatry. Although he shared the multidisciplinary approach with Rothbard, ten years his senior, on that point, one might too quickly overemphasize Rothbard's influence or Hamowy's time spent that was doing postgraduate work in Europe. Hamowy is best understood as the product of a unique scholarly era in America that was heavily influenced by thinkers immersed in the continental style, many of whom arrived, directly or indirectly, from Europe to the United States from the 1930s to the 1950s.
The fundamental attribution error refers to a bias in explaining others' behaviors. According to this error, when someone makes attributions about another person's actions, they are likely to overemphasize the role of dispositional factors while minimizing the influence of situational factors. For example, if a person sees a coworker bump into someone on his way to a meeting, that person is more likely to explain this behavior in terms of the coworker's carelessness or hastiness rather than considering that he was running late to a meeting. This term was first proposed in the early 1970s by psychologist Lee Ross following an experiment he conducted with Edward E. Jones and Victor Harris in 1967.
When birth of American Pentecostalism arose through the Azusa Street Revival in California in 1906, Carrie, although hesitantly at first, eventually received her what Pentecostalism refers to as "Spirit baptism" in 1908, at age 50. Evangelist Francisco Olazábal was converted to Pentecostalism by the Montgomerys in 1916. This experience deeply impacted her life and spirituality and the theme of Spirit baptism became integrated into her magazine and her teaching. Because of her great reputation, she was used as a bridge between Evangelicals and Pentecostals. To the Evangelicals, she had a voice to introduce Spirit baptism to them without all the fanaticism and to the Pentecostals, she remained balanced and didn’t overemphasize the practice of speaking in tongues.
If you make a form that appears to be composed of color, then you have something, an object, that's pretty abstract. Just form alone would be more abstract, of course, because it's just a mental idea, but you don't have anything there for your perceptions to grapple with unless you make it out of a material. However, if you make it out of metal, or stone, or wood, or whatever, then you have something that to my mind may overemphasize the physical aspect and therefore be difficult to perceive as purely mental. An important thought behind this is that all things are essentially mental - that matter, while quite real on the one hand, is on the other hand composed of energy, and in turn, of pure thought.
According to the definition given by the most current edition of Diccionario de la Lengua Española (Dictionary of the Spanish Language) by the Royal Spanish Academy (DRAE),The Royal Spanish Academy is the final authority of the Spanish language in Spain. esperpento is: #A grotesque or unwise act #A literary genre created by Ramón del Valle-Inclán, a Spanish writer from the Generation of 1898, in which reality is deformed to overemphasize the grotesque and colloquial or harsh language is subjected to personal elaborations. #(colloquial) Person or thing notable for their ugliness, disarray, or rough appearance. The Royal Spanish Academy first defined the term esperpento in the fourteenth edition of the DRAE (1914), where the first and third meanings above were accepted.
The formal charge view of the CO2 molecule is essentially shown below: :200px The covalent (sharing) aspect of the bonding is overemphasized in the use of formal charges, since in reality there is a higher electron density around the oxygen atoms due to their higher electronegativity compared to the carbon atom. This can be most effectively visualized in an electrostatic potential map. With the oxidation state formalism, the electrons in the bonds are "awarded" to the atom with the greater electronegativity. The oxidation state view of the CO2 molecule is shown below: :200px Oxidation states overemphasize the ionic nature of the bonding; the difference in electronegativity between carbon and oxygen is insufficient to regard the bonds as being ionic in nature.
During the later period of the rebetiko revival there has been a cultural entente between Greek and Turkish musicians, mostly of the younger generations. One consequence of this has been a tendency to overemphasize the makam aspect of rebetiko at the expense of the European components and, most significantly, at the expense of perceiving and problematizing this music's truly syncretic nature. However it is important to note in this context that a considerable proportion of the rebetiko repertoire on Greek records until 1936 was not dramatically different, except in terms of language and musical "dialect", from Ottoman café music (played by musicians of various ethnic backgrounds) which the mainland Greeks called "Smyrneika " . This portion of the recorded repertoire was played almost exclusively on the instruments of Smyrneika/Ottoman café music, such as kanonaki, santouri, politikí lyra (gr.
The Quintet played varied styles with an instrumental line-up that was typical of blues bands: one guitarist, keyboardist, bassist, and drummer, and a member who could play either trumpet or saxophone. Despite the blues band line-up and a musical influence from the blues, the Quintet's live sets didn't overemphasize misery or tension in the lyrical content or musical feeling of the songs. In their sets and on record, the Quintet included such blues classics as "I Don't Believe" (originally by Bobby Blue Bland) along with the upbeat "Hey Little Girl" (originally by Texas blues man Frankie Lee Sims) and "T-Bone Shuffle" (originally by blues giant T-Bone Walker). The Sir Douglas Quintet is considered a pioneering influence in the history of rock and roll for incorporating Tex-Mex and Cajun styles into rock music.
The nationalization announcement was greeted very emotionally by the audience and, throughout the Arab world, thousands entered the streets shouting slogans of support. US ambassador Henry A. Byroade stated, "I cannot overemphasize [the] popularity of the Canal Company nationalization within Egypt, even among Nasser's enemies." Egyptian political scientist Mahmoud Hamad wrote that, prior to 1956, Nasser had consolidated control over Egypt's military and civilian bureaucracies, but it was only after the canal's nationalization that he gained near-total popular legitimacy and firmly established himself as the "charismatic leader" and "spokesman for the masses not only in Egypt, but all over the Third World". According to Aburish, this was Nasser's largest pan- Arab triumph at the time and "soon his pictures were to be found in the tents of Yemen, the souks of Marrakesh, and the posh villas of Syria".
In Derricotte's poetry, the taboo, the restricted, and the repressed figure prominently; they are often the catalysts that prompt her to write, to confess the painful. Often stylistically compared to so-called confessional poets like Sylvia Plath and Anne Sexton, Derricotte, in opting for candor over decorum, wants her "work to be a wedge into the world, as what is real and not what people want to hear." This self-dubbed "white-appearing Black person," reared as a Catholic in a black, working-class Detroit community, complicates the myth of monolithic blackness with poems that speak into consciousness obscure, unconventional black bodies. And in an academy whose poststructuralist theories often either depersonalize bodies with esoteric discourse or overemphasize them with hyperbolic identity politics, Toi Derricotte's poems brave the charged, murky depths of much current poetry, stamping the language with her own complex, quirky vision.
AstraZeneca, Johnson & Johnson and Eli Lilly have paid billions of dollars in federal settlements over allegations that they paid doctors to promote drugs for unapproved uses. Some prominent medical schools have since tightened rules on faculty acceptance of such payments by drug companies. In contrast to this viewpoint, an article and associated editorial in the New England Journal of Medicine in May 2015 emphasized the importance of pharmaceutical industry- physician interactions for the development of novel treatments, and argued that moral outrage over industry malfeasance had unjustifiably led many to overemphasize the problems created by financial conflicts of interest. The article noted that major healthcare organizations such as National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences of the National Institutes of Health, the President's Council of Advisors on Science and Technology, the World Economic Forum, the Gates Foundation, the Wellcome Trust, and the Food and Drug Administration had encouraged greater interactions between physicians and industry in order to bring greater benefits to patients.
The pair created specific shot lists and plans for blocking out scenes before they arrived on set, and were very particular about the colors they used; they planned the color palette of the entire film, and also produced color wheels detailing specific palettes for each set piece. These color wheels were sometimes adjusted several days into the filming of a sequence after digital intermediate work revealed a different look than Leitch and Sela had been anticipating. Elements that were carried over from the first film included the "moodiness" and saturation of scenes set in Deadpool's apartment, and the contrast with blacks in action sequences, while Cable's future had a new aesthetic unlike anything in the first film. Another example of these color wheels was the sequence in which Firefist is introduced, with Leitch taking advantage of the scene being set during day to overemphasize the lighting and create a general sepia/orange tone that represented the fire abilities the character displays.
" Retrieved February 11, 2014 Critics and scholars have likened the film to the work of Italian neorealist directors, particularly Vittorio De Sica and Roberto Rossellini, for its documentary aesthetic and use of mostly non- professional, on-location actors. Burnett has also been compared to Yasujirō Ozu for his strong sense of composition, Stanley Kubrick for his sharp ear for juxtaposing popular music with images, John Cassavetes for his knack for coaxing natural performances from amateur actors, and Robert Altman for his interest in the minutiae of human interaction. Burnett's self-professed influences are Jean Renoir, Basil Wright, and Federico Fellini, all of whom exemplify the tender, humane and compassionate qualities for which Burnett has been praised, qualities intensely present in Killer of Sheep. Critic Andrew O'Hehir, noting the strong influences of Jean Renoir, Roberto Rossellini, and Satyajit Ray, said, "It's hard to overemphasize how strange and ambitious and completely out of context it was for a black urban filmmaker with no money and no reputation to make that kind of movie in 1977.
On February 28, 2000, Lynch was nominated by President Bill Clinton to a seat on the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York vacated by John E. Sprizzo. After Lynch was nominated to the district court in 2000, some Senate Republicans expressed concerns that he was a judicial activist, citing a previous warning in writings by Lynch warning the legal community not to overemphasize words from "18th- and 19th-century dictionaries" when interpreting the United States Constitution. However, as part of a deal between Senate Democrats and Republicans that also paved the way for a vote to confirm Clinton's nomination of Republican Bradley A. Smith to the Federal Election Commission and United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit nominee Timothy B. Dyk, Lynch was confirmed by the United States Senate on May 24, 2000 in a 63–36 vote, and he received his commission the following day. As a district court judge, Lynch presided over the perjury trial of rap artist Lil' Kim in 2005.

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