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"proximate" Definitions
  1. nearest in time, order, etc. to something

321 Sentences With "proximate"

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

Her buttocks and genitalia were physically proximate to Duggan's pelvis.
We need more male leaders proximate to issues of inequality.
No one has to abandon any of those proximate concerns.
It historically comprises two parts: actual causation, and proximate causation.
The proximate cause is growing fear of conflict with Iran.
The technology is the proximate cause, not the root cause.
The proximate cause was a shortage of yuan in Hong Kong.
The latest leg-up in the dollar has a proximate cause.
Tablets, despite being proximate to both phones and laptops, are unique.
The proximate cause seems to be central bank action and inaction.
You have to get proximate to this problem and this issue.
Stories with more proximate causes: Those people bought in dangerous places.
Six months before he became lead director -- those are proximate times.
Too much effort is wasted and wrongfully applied at the proximate stage.
As for the Indians, the Miller acquisition clearly demarcated their proximate plans.
I could certainly see splitting games in the future between proximate markets.
Well, clearly, the proximate trigger was the election of Donald Trump. Right.
It's not just anger and frustration at the immediate or proximate cause.
The proximate peg for this invective, incidentally, was the expiration of Christopher Hitchens.
His proximate challenge in that goal is broadening his appeal to older people.
How does this compare to the most proximate events that we've dealt with?
It's unclear what, if anything, is the proximate cause of these particular incidents.
And he did not hesitate to identify the proximate cause of the shift.
Warren is an immediate threat to Sanders and a proximate threat to Biden.
But the metro-accessible, downtown-DC-proximate, and relatively dense Crystal City won out.
When your people are proximate to you, that's who you reflect on versus ... Yes.
The still-pending cases appear to have been transferred to proximate U.S. attorneys' offices.
The American story is more consistent with one of proximate solutions to insoluble problems.
Even when legislation addresses more proximate need, there's usually some plausible excuse for it.
I paired them with bunny print socks to achieve a proximate Moxi Girl look.
Volkswagen's deeply embedded, conformist ethos was seen as a proximate cause of the scandal.
When we talked, his gravelly voice sounded strangely proximate, right there in my earlobe.
The proximate cause of O'Rourke's fall was not in the unorthodox things he did.
Some examples: Find email addresses proximate to certain keywords for spamming purposes/lead generation.
The proximate cause seemed to be a growing concern about political risks to the euro.
What changes in background atmospheric conditions do is raise the probability of more proximate threats.
As a reporter, he had been proximate to tragedy before, but this time felt different.
In the proximate political environment, its support for a carbon tax proposal means very little.
But very briefly, yeah, the proximate cause was what the president was saying and doing.
Twitter helped us build community [without having] to be physically proximate to people all the time.
Ms Sturgeon's only proximate chance of losing power is if her own party turns against her.
The utter absence of an appropriate, proximate response tacitly concedes the legitimacy of this utter craziness.
Some of Christie's historic unpopularity in his home state has to do with that proximate cause.
"John's situation is a proximate cause for all of us signing letters and protesting," Hayden added.
This, rather than any Supreme Court ruling, has been the proximate political barrier to regulating guns.
The proximate heartbeat to watch in this case is the Dow Jones Industrial Average, or Dow.
Friendships change over time, and "temporary proximate relation" certainly defines at least someone in everyone's past.
In one act of violence, people blamed the most proximate instrument used by the criminal — guns.
Such is the far reach of white supremacy and the desire to remain proximate with whiteness.
So the proximate cause ... And before I ... He's also reflecting a feeling that is out there.
The proximate cause, as President George H.W. Bush explained it, was General Noriega's "reckless threats" against Americans.
The revolution's proximate cause is voters' fury at the uselessness and self-dealing of their ruling class.
The proximate causes of this somewhat surreal exchange are North Korea's recent nuclear test and satellite launch.
It would also create "two nuclear threats that are proximate simultaneously rather than just one," warns Rice.
If this seems like a proximate analogy to how this game went, then yes, you are correct.
Mantel's genius for a history deeply known and lightly worn made the Tudors unaccountably gripping and proximate.
Their proximate fear isn't the general election in 2016, or even the composition of the Supreme Court.
The proximate cause was a string of recent controversies, including making an on-air comparison between Sen.
The threat of a ban in bitcoin-trading in South Korea was the proximate cause of the plunge.
"But to state that she was a victim of Mr. Holder's apartment … I don't see the proximate cause."
Yet monopoly bargaining, the proximate cause of so-called free riders, is itself a product of union advocacy.
Global conflicts have more proximate causes and are driven by state actors pursuing political power and strategic interests.
While Ukraine is the proximate event, how the president has dealt with Mr. Putin is the overarching theme.
The poverty of these places is a proximate cause as to why they agree to situate such prisons.
The temptation to look at this behavior and see a proximate cause for the shooting in Jacksonville is real.
The initial triage location for the children and adults seeking asylum was harsh holding facilities proximate to the border.
We humans tend to think of ourselves as affected by proximate things that we can see, hear or touch.
His defiance of the vast country looming over his proximate island would define him, along with a growing megalomania.
The proximate effect of an economy-wide carbon tax will be to accelerate a switch from coal to gas.
But while some dates are certain or proximate, there's a lot to be unsure about down here on Earth.
Just these folks were captured because they were so proximate to the investigations that the inspector general was looking at.
And when creators tell new stories — think Her, Ex Machina or Black Mirror — they're generally set in the proximate future.
The proximate causes of the downfall seemed to be slashed guidance for 2020 and weakness in Celgene's psoriatic arthritis drug.
The proximate causes of the move are external – mainly the threat to economic activity from Trump's confrontational stance on trade.
Margot Livesey's new novel, "Mercury," features a married couple who have drifted into this proximate but distant state of coexistence.
The proximate cause is pretty obvious: President Trump is threatening a trade war with China and perhaps other trading partners.
Otherwise he is always speaking to a proximate audience; unlike other presidents, the speaking, not the speech, is the point.
They're the proximate cause of the decline and they'll tell us all we need to know at 9:30 a.m.
The FHA requires proximate cause — or some direct relation between the injury asserted and the alleged misconduct — to file suit.
Insofar as being an NTR means prizing those norms above more proximate policy goals — and what else could it mean?
It is the presence of a group that is proximate, yet segregated — close but far — that precipitates the politics of division.
The proximate cause for the underperformance of these high-profile bond investors: the monstrous rally in U.S. corporate bonds and Treasuries.
I just know that the screen is broken, and there was no obvious proximate cause for the bulge that broke it.
The proximate cause this week was a brace of supply outages in Libya and Venezuela, both of which are in upheaval.
"The proximate target was John Brennan, but the real intent of today's announcement was to simultaneously shift and silence," he said.
I think Dateline ... And you weren't on the ranch, but it suggested that you were near the ... We were ranch-proximate.
The proximate cause is a dispute over cabinet posts, which are divvied up between political blocs based on sect and ethnicity.
The proximate cause was Trump's executive order banning all refugees and immigrants from seven Muslim countries from entering the United States.
Even to a disaffected teen-ager, the world is still proximate and new, and one's relationship to things is often fetishistic.
Many distinct and intersecting forces drive broad social and political change, so it's useful to think about proximate and underlying causes.
Does that change how you might make monetary policy, if the proximate cause of what's happening in the market cannot exist tomorrow?
The presence of John Ortiz is just the most proximate reminder that she has a whole human self she hasn't been feeding.
"The proximate cause of this tragedy was the direct result of avoidable human error, compounded by process and equipment failures," Campbell said.
Climate activism, the thinking goes, can only succeed as a kind of adjunct to more proximate activism focused on more immediate concerns.
Some of them, not the majority, will choose the candidate that is most proximate on the ideological spectrum to their own beliefs.
It's that heavy internet users are much less likely to have contact with their proximate neighbors to exchange favors and extend care.
"We want to have cutting-edge tech companies working in health care proximate to us," said Verily's business development lead Andrew Harrison.
While the proximate cause of this fire may have been human action, perhaps even arson, climate conditions have primed the area for fires.
Toward a new triangular era To implement even some of his bold goals, Duterte needs stability at home and in the proximate region.
Jackson said in Friday's ruling the victims could not prove the theater was the "proximate cause" of what he deemed a horrible tragedy.
Climate scientists told Axios that global climate change is a significant factor behind the heat event, even though it's not the proximate cause.
All I can say is that collective effervescence can uplift whether or not the proximate cause of said effervescence tends to fall flat.
He thought he was the only queer or trans Armenian on the planet, even though he grew up proximate to LA (Little Armenia).
Written between late 2008 and 2010, Slight Exaggeration offers a bracingly proximate encounter with Zagajewski's thinking as he moves among various speculative preoccupations.
The dissenters contended that Illinois Brick was based not on the formality of who contracts with purchasers but on principles of proximate cause.
The proximate cause of the impasse on both occasions is Avigdor Liberman, whose party won five seats in April and eight in September.
The same goes for drop-offs, where riders are being let out at a proximate corner rather than the exact address of their destination.
Yet if the chemical components and proximate causes of air pollution across South Asia are different, the ultimate source is the same: poor governance.
His mother and his wife have written memoirs about living with him, as have touring musicians who were only briefly proximate to his genius.
Worse yet, it will do so slowly, even subtly, after long illness, possibly without you ever even recognizing that it was the proximate cause.
The proximate issue in Stevens's column is that in 2008, a narrow conservative majority on the Supreme Court chose in District of Columbia v.
In reality, not only does equality between groups not exist, but true interpersonal contact across groups seldom takes place, even when groups are proximate.
In the longer term, we must strengthen protections for this work force that is so proximate to and responsible for so many vulnerable populations.
The aftermath of Hurricane Maria has turned into a disaster for the island of Puerto Rico, with massive power outages the biggest proximate problem.
Indeed, the proximate upshot of post-Watergate congressional investigations into Nixon's abuses of power was to further insulate the FBI from direct political control.
Far from being a proximate cause of military conflict, the dollar's central global role has often been used to contain adversaries without military intervention.
But the massive demand for cash flows by an aging global investor base and return-starved institutions are the proximate actors on these markets.
"The proximate cause for my departure was, in fact, the impossibility of our getting corporate insurance with me still at the helm," he explained.
The proximate threat to labor demand isn't whiz-bang technology, it's the hegemonic influence of the excessively inflation-averse financial sector over monetary policy.
No. For any particular instance of tripping and falling, there will be proximate causes — a slippery patch on the sidewalk, a moment's inattention, whatever.
In the docs, obtained by TMZ, the family claims that Trinity's action -- or lack thereof -- was a direct and proximate cause of Prince's death.
From Trump's vantage point, the proximate cause of his troubles wasn't the news being reported on, but the fact that it had been leaked.
The same goes for drop-offs, where UberPool riders are being let out at a proximate corner rather than the exact address of their destination.
The proximate cause of that decision is tariffs imposed by the European Union in retaliation for tariffs imposed on European goods by the Trump administration.
While the recent scandals mark the proximate cause of the protests roiling Puerto Rico, residents of the island have faced other frustrations in recent years.
The proximate occasion for these discussions has been China's first Aerospace Day, marked on April 505th in honor of China's first satellite launch in 217.
As investigators piece together the evidence, it will be necessary to analyze these events in terms of their proximate, intermediate, and remote causes and stages.
The athletes are always a walking story, not just their story, but potentially for proximate strangers who can selfie or photo-bomb themselves into prominence.
"Older people need to get proximate to the young, finding ways to build contact with the younger generation into their daily lives," he told me.
A series of smaller photographs and three videos by Linke instead relates to Junghuhn's scientific records and how we build understanding of these proximate giants today.
It is very hard to know, on any given matter of importance, what Trump's concrete, proximate goals are and how his administration plans to achieve them.
The decline of the birth rate and the numbers of abortions are the proximate causes for this need of new people from outside the given country.
Given the unlikelihood that President Trump will have a change of heart and begin to champion human rights, the proximate question is: What should be done?
"The support and hard work of RBI staff, officers and management has been the proximate driver of the Bank's considerable accomplishments in recent years," he said.
Telemedicine can play a major role in this outbreak by allowing providers to avoid proximate risk of infection while electronically visiting large numbers of patients daily.
If the global investor class decides to shift money into American investment assets, the proximate result will be to bid up the price of the dollar.
He needs to focus the climate discussion on more proximate questions, like: Do you also accept the IPCC's target of 50 percent carbon reductions by 2030?
Holmes chose the specific theater he did, in his own words, because it was "isolated, proximate, large" — qualities three other theaters in his immediate vicinity lacked.
But even if he doesn't, I'm more concerned with you finding folks who will support you than encouraging you to tee off on proximate co-workers.
"These instruments are the proximate cause of the madness you are now seeing," the "Mad Money" host said, pointing to four specific funds exacerbating the pain.
It's a country built on cities and developments proximate to cities; the Census Bureau estimates that 80.7 percent of Americans lived in urban areas in 2010.
Image: NAOJ/ESA/Go MyazakiJapan's Proximate Object Close Flyby with Optical Navigation (PROCYON) has been lost in space ever since its ion thrusters blew out in 2014.
HBO's broad political satire is called Veep for a reason — the vice president is the ultimate comic figure in American politics, proximate to power but personally powerless.
Since 85033, however, the DOJ has directed over $3 billion in settlements to third parties, despite the fact that these organizations suffered neither direct nor proximate harm.
And there's the idea that actual death is less proximate than living death, the drudge we live in where we've lost all sense of adjacency to others.
And the proximate cause of many of those August recession warnings, a sharp drop in longer-term interest rates and a yield curve inversion, was partly reversed.
I'm convinced that the American withdrawal from Iraq in 2011 was the proximate cause of the speed with which al Qaeda in Iraq and later ISIS reconstituted.
Maybe that will focus his mind on the need to rein in the ballooning U.S. budget deficit, which is the proximate cause of our widening trade deficit.
The proximate rationale for this non-action, reiterated in your editorial, is the extension of our disastrous Iraq experience to rule out as counterproductive any military action.
If air pollution were a proximate cause of death, it would occupy the third position on the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's list of leading causes.
The descent and return never disturbed the dude a step behind or ahead, regardless of how proximate he was to the others — and space is pretty tight.
Whatever the deeper roots of our distress, the proximate cause is ideological extremism: Powerful factions are committed to false views of the world, regardless of the evidence.
The most important proximate cause concerns the types of women's groups that dominated the civic scene over the decades and, relatedly, the types of issues they embraced.
They are more proximate threats to our African partners and they want to deal with them on their own but they ask for our help in doing that.
"[T]o establish proximate cause under the FHA", Justice Breyer held, "a plaintiff must do more than show that its injuries foreseeably flowed from the alleged statutory violation".
The proximate cause appears to be a combination of looser credit – average first-home mortgage rates have nosed down in recent months – and some easing of purchasing limits.
The math simply didn't work out, leading the Du and his colleagues to conclude that A. afarensis is the best fit as the most proximate ancestor of Homo.
Trump's offenses against basic decency burn so hot and so proximate that they occlude distant liberal complaints about Romney the way sunlight makes the stars invisible until nightfall.
Most Wall Street analysts pointed to the Trump win as the proximate cause of the drop, given his rocky history with tech and also Silicon Valley so far.
The world's manifold terrors are transmitted to Kathy through the computer screen; shut it, and the proximate peacefulness of trees and birds and street noise takes its place.
A more proximate possibility is that peace talks collapse or drag on unproductively, in which case it seems quite possible that President Trump would accelerate the full withdrawal.
Likewise, in a society like the United States that suppresses non-white people, many have chosen to proximate themselves toward European heritage as a political tool of survival.
Of particular note is that the proximate cause of the Bush-era collapse of the American economy was his administration's belief that banks should not really be regulated.
The proximate cause for the Republican attacks on the CBO is the agency's habit of pouring cold water on attempts to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act.
Clearly, the proximate causes of the meltdown were uncertainty about the economic impacts of the rapidly spreading coronavirus and the incipient price war between Saudi Arabia and Russia.
Indeed, Egypt's closing of the straits to Israeli shipping was among the proximate causes of Egyptian-Israeli fighting in the 1956 Suez Crisis and 85033 Six-Day War.
The proximate cause was the vehicle's safety driver, who was distracted by her smartphone, glancing away from the road 23 times in the three minutes before the crash.
You often go to a museum expecting to catch a whiff of authenticity—the thrill of being proximate to something touched long ago by one of the greats.
And I, for the first time in my career, just thought, Is there an emotional cost, is there some toll connected to being proximate to all this suffering?
The Millennium Tower, completed in 2009 at a mere 184 meters, is proximate to Salesforce, and from the latter's observation deck you can gaze down onto the former's roof.
Almost the exact moment I was about to enter the land of nod, the sound-system of a popular and, as I quickly discovered, extremely proximate nightclub cranked up.
That thought might help all the proximate states avoid a second Korean War as they struggle to maintain the status quo after the tensions return to the divided peninsula.
The proximate causes of this slide were PERA's lowering the expected rate of return from 28500 percent to 6900 percent, and adopting new actuarial tables that assume longer lifespans.
We'd have to go as far back as slavery to fully grasp the racial history of US health care, but I'll start at a much more proximate place: 1946.
" The proximate cause of Mr. Trump's outrage was an accusation by the House speaker, Nancy Pelosi, made earlier in the day, that he "is engaged in a cover-up.
He has provided proximate proof that any deal the United States makes, even a successful one, may be tossed aside on the whim of this or any other president.
That may not happen this time because so many Americans have such strong antipathy for Trump and because responsibility for the proximate cause (killing Soleimani) will be so clear.
But I think it's useful to treat the reasons the election was competitive as structural, while the proximate causes of actual outcome were rooted in far more situational factors.
A hairdressing school 230 meters down the road was the proximate cause for Mellow Yellow blazing out; a new rule states that they must be at least 250 meters apart.
Why it matters: The proximate cause for the rise of Trumpism was the financial crisis, where no senior bankers were prosecuted even as millions of Americans saw their livelihoods destroyed.
I think she thought that anything she did that was proximate would look like an endorsement, and I wanted to say that I think that was possibly overthinking it. Possibly.
A process euphemistically known as a "market correction" will continue, using trade and other media-hyped issues as proximate causes for further risk-adjusted valuations driven by changing economic fundamentals.
It was with her I found the body of a young deer, fallen in a clearing, fresh snow powdering the deer's coat like fresh ash fallen from a proximate fire.
The more proximate cause was a big and doomy magazine story about the effects of climate change that pointed, ominously and insistently, in the direction of a jarringly imminent apocalypse. Mondays!
Like the agitation throughout the country, the agitation at Berkeley had many long-roiling causes, but its proximate cause was easy to identify: a right-wing professional irritant named Milo Yiannopoulos.
Up until now, Doris has been merely proximate to the pleasures of youthful indulgence, commuting every day from Staten Island to her job as a bookkeeper at a hip ad agency.
"Wild boar live very proximate to humans, but no one really thinks about them much, except to kill them," Ledgard said between slurps of pea soup, when we met in Prague.
Ndemic says it's "not clear to us if this removal is linked to the ongoing coronavirus outbreak that China is facing," but it certainly seems like the most likely proximate cause.
Thomas said he would have held that Miami's injuries fall outside the FHA's zone of interests and that Miami's alleged injuries are too remote to satisfy the FHA's proximate-cause requirement.
The proximate cause of this heat wave is a massive area of high pressure, also referred to as a heat dome, that extends from the Southwest into the Northeast Pacific Ocean.
"We are even more convinced than we were when we began this enterprise that these companies are the proximate cause for the epidemic in our state and in our country," he said.
"The plaintiff did not meet his legal burden of establishing any breach of duty of care or that such a breach was the proximate cause to his injury," Woods said in court.
Further to my own concerns, I was shocked to find that the curatorial students who were my only consistent proximate cohort were equally dismayed with the content and quality of the program.
Immediately, Kremlin-proximate sources teed up explanations that this was all a provokatsiya: Why would President Putin kill an anti-Putin journalist when he would be the first person everyone would accuse?
"We conclude that foreseeability alone is not sufficient to establish proximate cause under the FHA, and therefore vacate the judgment below," Breyer wrote, sending the case back down to the lower court.
As defense secretary, he is the chief custodian and proximate controller of the nation's military resources, which affords him considerable clout in the interagency process, and he has strong ties in Congress.
According to the two authors, The proximate cause of the populist vote is anxiety that pervasive cultural changes and an influx of foreigners are eroding the cultural norms one knew since childhood.
The proximate thread to the safety net isn't an intellectual inability to comprehend a feasible means of using money to help people in need, it's the Republican Party's passion for low taxes.
Whatever the proximate cause, a back-of-the-envelope calculation by The Economist finds that if pedestrian deaths had continued their secular decline since 2009 an additional 20,000 deaths could have been averted.
The proximate cause for the row is Germany's decision last November to suspend all weapons exports to Saudi Arabia, following the murder and dismemberment of Jamal Khashoggi, a Saudi journalist, by state goons.
In her 73-page decision, Caproni said the investors plausibly alleged that the five banks recklessly created "artificial price dynamics" for gold, and that their misconduct was the "proximate cause" of the distortions.
That includes social change, cultural change, immigration, and globalization, yes — but it would take a blind fool not to identify technology as the proximate cause of much, if not most, of this wave.
And, while the proximate causes were largely political — primarily grievances with President Bashar al Assad, new scientific research adds support to the argument that climate change helped to trigger Syria's descent into violence.
The proximate timing of the Sentinel article and Mr. Trump's donation, and suspicions of a quid pro quo, have driven a narrative that has dogged Mr. Trump and Ms. Bondi for three years.
Lawyers for some of the victims claimed in a lawsuit filed on Wednesday that lax equipment maintenance by an electric utility was the proximate cause of the fire, which officially remains under investigation.
But the more proximate issue is the transformation of the Republican Party, which bears little if any resemblance to the institution it used to be, say during the Watergate hearings of the 1970s.
What's most proximate to that reality right now is the direct control of women's bodies and their reproduction, because if you don't control your reproduction, you don't control anything else about your life.
It's not clear that the ad was the proximate cause for that, but the experience left Mellman confident that there could be a campaign making an electability case against Sanders, without a real backlash.
The proximate question posed by impeachment, however, is whether or not conservative voters would rather see Vice President Pence, a conventional Republican seemingly without the baggage of Trump, take over in the White House.
Whether divine intervention is the proximate cause, the kwacha's recovery has surprised some of even the most jaded observers of the fast-moving foreign exchange market, which sees $5.3 trillion in average daily turnover.
It grew worse in 2013 after she deployed to Afghanistan, where she underwent several physically traumatic experiences, including being in an aircraft that came under fire and being proximate to an explosion, she said.
"Right now we know the proximate cause behind the decline in our markets is China, more specifically the Chinese yuan devaluation and the breakdown of the Chinese stock market, " the "Mad Money " host said.
The 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said that the lower court erred when it held that Victoria Jackson failed to adequately plead that the alleged defects were the proximate cause of the crash.
As Haile-Selassie pointed out during the press conference, we can no longer say A. afarensis is the more proximate species to Homo in terms of our evolutionary lineage, as multiple possibilities are emerging.
"By buying AT&T's securities at these artificially inflated and artificially maintained prices, the Class members suffered economic losses, which losses were a direct and proximate result of Defendants' fraudulent conduct," the suit states.
On most issues — including both extension of insurance coverage and funding of public higher education — the proximate barrier to more progressive policy is in the statehouse or the House of Representatives, not the White House.
The lawsuit alleges that Prince's death was a "direct and proximate cause" of the Trinity Medical Centre's alleged failure to diagnose and treat the overdose, alongside an apparent failure to investigate the cause of it.
"While it's the proximate cause of a medical crisis, the way many of us will be hurt first is economically, that we'll lose jobs or have new childcare costs or other unforeseen costs," Huston said.
The street-level construction to improve access at both terminuses of the tunnel, which has been the ire of proximate small businesses, will start to wrap up next month in Williamsburg, and January in Manhattan.
Instead, the argument has turned on whether the warrantless search, a violation of constitutional rights, was the "proximate cause" that made the deputies liable for the shooting, or if it was merely a contributing factor.
Securing oil supply is not always the proximate or primary cause of what we do — it's too simple to say we "fought wars for oil" — but it always sets the conditions and limits of our engagement.
Subsequently, its discovers, a team led by Lee Berger from the University of the Witwatersrand, argued—and continue to argue—that A. sediba is the direct, most proximate ancestral species from which the Homo genus emerged.
From the Baltic to the Black Sea, Russia poses a proximate and growing threat not just to NATO-member states but also to the unfortunate few — like Georgia and Ukraine — caught in the no-man's-land.
Following a complicated tragedy with no clear proximate cause, First Special Forces Command issued reprimands with inaccuracies and inconsistencies, focusing on predeployment training and personnel issues, instead of operational decisions made leading up to the ambush.
Read more " _____ • Jamelle Bouie in Slate: "Yes, the proximate reason for Unite the Right was to defend the city's Confederate memorials, but the actual reason was for the marchers to show their strength as a movement.
Just forest fires have their proximate cause in the carelessness or maliciousness of human behavior, or lightning strike, on dried woodlands – so too must the destruction of tenuous market values always have a point of ignition.
The proximate cause, he explained, is that Snap spends a fortune on the cloud: with hundreds of millions of users uploading and downloading Snapchat content every day, the parent company has to pay for the digital space.
"All of them have the same proximate cause which is concerns expressed by other reporters in the building that his behavior toward them has been harassing or threatening," Haq told BuzzFeed News while the investigation was ongoing.
Between the lines: The heat wave's proximate cause is a traffic jam in the upper atmosphere, with a wavy jet stream pattern dominated by two sprawling areas of high pressure — one over Greenland and another across Europe.
Triple damages are mandatory under the False Claims Act, but the defendants said there were no damages to triple because the government failed to show that violations of that law were the "proximate" cause of its losses.
But the judge dismissed claims under the federal racketeering law known as RICO because of a lack of evidence that the Trumps' alleged misconduct was the proximate cause of, or directly related to, the investors' alleged losses.
The proximate cause was a question about what has now become Donald Trump's standard talking point -- quite unusual for either a Republican or Democrat during an election year -- that he'd remain "neutral" on the Israeli-Palestinian issue.
But more than wage growth or the uptick in 10-year Treasury yields, Sonders said the proximate cause of the sell-off was likely overextended sentiment in the market that came to a head in late December.
The judge expressed "serious concerns about the viability of the economic injury aspect of the city's claim with regard to proximate cause," but said Wells Fargo did not show why the entire FHA claim should be dismissed.
The proximate charge as Democrats impeached him for high crimes and misdemeanors on party-line votes Wednesday night was the president's campaign to pressure Ukraine to help him against his domestic political rivals while withholding security aid.
The protests called for the resignation of Prime Minister Dmitri Medvedev; their proximate cause was a 50-minute video produced by Aleksei Navalny and other opposition allies and viewed more than 13 million times on social media.
" According to the legal filing: "As a direct and proximate result of her refusing his sexual advances and in retaliation for Carlson's complaints about discrimination and harassment, Ailes terminated her employment, causing her significant, emotional and professional harm.
According to the legal filing: "As a direct and proximate result of her refusing his sexual advances and in retaliation for Carlson's complaints about discrimination and harassment, Ailes terminated her employment, causing her significant, emotional and professional harm."
These are just a few examples that illustrate how, through the work of time, a punishing alchemy of public policy and cultural mores has made queerness proximate to repulsiveness, to something that must be reined in: It's criminal.
I don't know, and neither do the legions of armchair generals who are criticizing Israel for the steps it took to prevent a catastrophe among the residents of Kibbutzim and towns that are proximate to the border fence.
There are several different formulations of federal obstruction of justice, but as a general matter, the prosecution must establish proof of an obstructive act or attempt to influence a reasonably foreseeable and proximate federal proceeding with corrupt intent.
China's engagement there expresses its appreciation of the region's strategic value as well as its seamless connection to the maritime theater more proximate to the Asian mainland, the South and the East China Seas, and the Philippine Sea.
The intensity of the debate is surprising, given that its proximate cause is a rather mundane bit of road construction and whether to add a traffic roundabout on Route 2146, which runs down the spine of this peninsula.
If the ultimate goal of North Korean denuclearization seems like a long shot, Mr. Pompeo's proximate goal, according to one senior administration official, is at least to get North Korean officials to reveal their true intentions fairly quickly.
The proximate cause in each instance has been wars with unsatisfying outcomes – World War I, Vietnam, and President Bush's ill-conceived war of choice in Iraq that opened the floodgates of extremism and sectarianism across the Middle East.
Speaking to despondent fundraisers at the Plaza Hotel in New York to thank them for their support, Clinton pointed to the late-campaign letters from FBI Director Jim Comey and Russian hacking as proximate causes for her loss.
This is all within the context of Iran's financing and weapons supplies to the Youthi in Yemen, Shia-militia in Iraq, as well as the terror groups such as Islamic Jihad and Hamas that are proximate to Israel.
"Layleen suffered a seizure while in her cell and died as a direct and proximate result of the city's, its agents', and its employees' refusal to provide Layleen with a reasonable accommodation for her disability," the lawsuit said.
U.S. District Judge Barbara Rothstein found it more likely than not that PwC's negligence was the proximate cause of FDIC damages from the August 200957 demise of Montgomery, Alabama's Colonial BancGroup Inc, once among the 25 largest U.S. banks.
"While the world is changing fast, our geography is not: Europe will always be our most proximate goods market, and ensuring we have free-flowing borders is crucial," May said, citing the importance of the automotive industry in particular.
The proximate cause is a bitter dispute over asylum laws between Seehofer, who leads Bavaria's conservative Christian Social Union, and Chancellor Angela Merkel of the Christian Democratic Union, which is the C.S.U.'s more centrist sister party outside Bavaria.
For instance, many children with incarcerated parents end up having to travel hundreds of miles for in-person contact: The Bureau of Prisons considers people to be proximate if they're housed up to 500 miles away from their place of residence.
Steve and Dwight Hammond, the jailed ranchers who Bundy and the two dozen or so militia members have pointed to as the proximate cause for their occupation, have received the equivalent of almost $250,000 in federal subsidies, according to Suckling.
Nodding to previous Supreme Court rulings, Mr Katyal admitted that the FHA allows cities to pursue certain lawsuits, but only when the lenders' actions are a "proximate cause" of the harm rather than six steps removed from its alleged trigger.
The SDF itself, of course, is opposed to the Assad regime but in a more proximate sense is clashing with Turkish-backed opposition groups and increasingly with Turkey itself, which has gotten more directly involved in Syria over the past year.
Read More Cramer's market anxiety survival guide "Right now we know the proximate cause behind the decline in our markets is China, more specifically the Chinese yuan devaluation and the breakdown of the Chinese stock market, " the "Mad Money " host said.
Each attack has its own proximate cause (Yann thinks Mr Olivier was mistaken for an Ivorian friend of his who had made someone cross), but no one doubts that India's resident African population has gone from feeling unwelcome to endangered.
"PHMSA's findings indicate that the proximate or direct cause of the Line 901 failure was external corrosion that thinned the pipe wall to a level where it ruptured suddenly and released heavy crude oil," the agency said in its Thursday report.
"Given the proximate threat of further presidential attempts to solicit foreign interference in our next election, we cannot wait to make a referral until our efforts to obtain additional testimony and documents wind their way through the courts," they wrote.
"Given the proximate threat of further presidential attempts to solicit foreign interference in our next election, we cannot wait to make a referral until our efforts to obtain additional testimony and documents wind their way through the courts," the report explains.
In Manhattan for a Women For Women International charity luncheon, Clinton once again pointed her finger at Russian interference and FBI Director James Comey's influence as the proximate reasons for her defeat, in her most extensive remarks yet on the topic.
"As a direct and proximate result of the foregoing acts and/or omissions by Madigan, Gonzales suffered injuries of a personal and pecuniary nature, including emotional distress, damage to reputation and further punishment despite being granted full pardons," the lawsuit said.
Brittman was recently buried Brittman "died, at least in part" because Mercy Hospital and Chicago police "convinced people, not authorized to make medical decisions on his behalf, to make life affecting determinations that were a proximate cause of death," the lawsuit said.
Wade would constitute giving material assistance: The evil, from the orthodox Catholic's point of view, is extremely evil (maybe even the ultimate evil), and though the evil is not at all proximate to the judge's decision, that it will occur is nearly certain.
According to the team, ultracool dwarf star systems like TRAPPIST-1 make up about 15 percent of the stars in the vicinity of our solar system, so they are a particularly promising population to sift through in the search for proximate Earth analogs.
"The proximate causes were modest improvements in macro data," such as ADP's US payrolls data, nonmanufacturing activity, and the Citi Economic Surprise Index, as well as increased optimism about the US-China trade war and recent upticks in the 10-year Treasury yield.
Whether it enacts the sacrifice of Christ or simply commemorates the transformation of cosmic reality through the proximate human presence of God in the world, it would seem to be too replete with meaning for any of its forms to be deficient.
Ultimately, as an electorate and as stewards of our future, we need to insist on a dialogue that goes beyond expressing these sentiments to developing practical and proximate strategies — public and private, professional and voluntary — that will enable us to realize them.
The issue, on some level, is that while McCain's personalistic approach to politics succeeded at its proximate goal of making him a well-regarded and frequently pivotal figure in American public life, it never quite managed to land him in the presidency.
The most obvious answer — or, rather, the most proximate answer — is that she's staying to try to find and rescue Hannah, which is a more or less understandable motivation, but doesn't get you past the, "How does June survive five minutes?" problem.
He chose the bar of Mick Hucknall's Piccadilly-proximate hotel, The Malmaison, as the venue for our chat because he was concerned about the ability of London-based writers to find some backstreet boozer in Prestwich or some working men's club in Salford.
And while the proximate causes of the National Weather Service's fire weather watches and red flag warnings lie in the more or less random fluctuations of day-to-day weather, there is compelling evidence that global warming has increased the risk substantially.
"Flechtheim did not sell the paintings to Franke, who usurped the collection for himself as a direct, proximate and foreseeable consequence of Flechtheim's racial persecution by the Nazi state," a lawyer for the Flechtheim heirs, Nicholas M. O'Donnell, wrote in the filing.
The proximate cause for today's events was last week's blockbuster story in the New York Times, which reported that Android co-founder Andy Rubin had been granted a $25 million exit package despite the company finding a sexual assault allegation about him to be credible.
"I don't know of a case like this where it was proximate to US forces like this before," said one military official, noting that "potentially" the rocket round was "within hundreds of yards" of the US forces and "within the security perimeter" of the base.
For example, many courts interpret "arising out of" to require only a broad (rather than a stricter proximate) causal connection between the injuries suffered and the specified cause, making no distinction between whether the language is contained in an insuring agreement or an exclusion.
Some background: When catastrophe struck the troubled U.S. financial system in September 2008, the proximate cause was the looming collapse of three companies — none of which were banks in the normal sense of the word, that is, institutions that take deposits and lend them out.
When Sears, once America's largest retailer, made its bankruptcy filing Monday in a White Plains courthouse, the proximate cause was the decision by Eddie Lampert, by far its biggest individual creditor and shareholder, not to make a $134 million loan payment that was due.
"A choppy overnight session driven by conflicting signals regarding trade negotiations highlights the difficulty in chasing every 6.93 basis point move in yields, in that the proximate justification can unwind just as quickly," said Ian Lyngen, head of U.S. rates strategy at BMO Capital Markets.
"A choppy overnight session driven by conflicting signals regarding trade negotiations highlights the difficulty in chasing every 23 basis point move in yields, in that the proximate justification can unwind just as quickly," said Ian Lyngen, head of U.S. rates strategy at BMO Capital Markets.
"A choppy overnight session driven by conflicting signals regarding trade negotiations highlights the difficulty in chasing every 5 basis point move in yields, in that the proximate justification can unwind just as quickly," said Ian LLyngen, head of U.S. rates strategy at BMO Capital Markets.
"A choppy overnight session driven by conflicting signals regarding trade negotiations highlights the difficulty in chasing every 23 basis point move in yields, in that the proximate justification can unwind just as quickly," said Ian Lyngen, head of U.S. rates strategy at BMO Capital Markets.
The folderol that ensued was among the proximate causes of News Corp's decision to fire her from HarperCollins, a decision that touched off a twisted "did she fall or was she pushed" legal battle that eventually ended with Regan securing a $10 million settlement.
What led to the proximate cause that led Arthur Sulzberger to dismiss her was her decision to hire Janine Gibson from the Guardian U.S., which was a very successful journalism operation, and to bring her over to be a top editor at the Times.
In a complaint filed in July and obtained by PEOPLE, Hoge claims that he developed non-Hodgskins Lymphoma "as a direct and proximate result of being exposed to Roundup," which he used extensively while working on an Idaho farm as a young teenager beginning in 873.
His opponents' proximate challenge in the midterms is to put forward candidates compelling enough that as large as possible a share of the 56 percent of the 2016 electorate who voted for non-Trump candidates show up and vote for a member of the opposition party.
The proximate cause of his nomination seems to be a recent WSJ op-ed that Moore wrote claiming "the Trump administration's pro-growth policies have attracted investment from around the globe," and which, bizarrely, urged the Fed to link domestic interest rates to international commodity prices.
"As a senior adviser to Al Qaeda's networks in Syria and proximate environs, al-Adl could be especially useful in helping to define strategies that will help the group achieve confidence-inspiring successes," said Michael S. Smith II of Kronos Advisory, a terrorism research and analysis firm.
In a decision on Wednesday, U.S. District Judge Edward Chen in San Francisco agreed with Wells Fargo that there are substantial grounds for a difference of opinion on whether Oakland can establish that the bank was the proximate, or direct cause of its lost tax revenue.
Last year's unprecedented rainfall and flooding in Houston were the proximate result of Hurricane Harvey, a massive storm born northeast of Venezuela and reborn in the Gulf of Mexico, where it rapidly intensified, made landfall over Houston, and then stayed—parked, as it were, for five days.
Like the previously released tune from last week, "Above The Waves," the new beat finds the pair seemingly exploring a nautical theme—the Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ) is the name of the equatorially-proximate area around the world where the northeast and southeast trade winds meet.
Located in puck-crazed Western New York, which is proximate to Canada and a day's drive from major hockey hotbeds in New England and the Upper Midwest (OK, a long day, but still doable), Buffalo is perfectly positioned to become the place in the U.S. for hockey.
In Europe, Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany has been seen by many as a dam against rising populism, but some experts told us that they saw her as one of its proximate causes, arguing that her insistence on austerity drove countries to extremes and the E.U. apart.
In delivering the opinion of the court, Justice Stephen Breyer, however, said the 11th Circuit erred when it concluded that the city's complaints met the FHA's proximate-cause requirement based solely on the finding that the city's alleged financial injuries were foreseeable results of the banks' misconduct.
The aircraft fraud parts law carries stiff penalties, including a fine of $10 million for each violation by a company and a sentence of up to life in prison for individuals charged if the part involved was the "proximate cause" of a malfunction that resulted in death.
With respect to North Korea, the world's most proximate danger, the generals may soon have to do for Trump what Netanyahu's generals did for him -- back quietly away from the edge of an abyss that has no clear bottom if America or the world were to plunge into it.
Starting with his June 257th, 220 campaign announcement at Trump Tower and continuing through hundreds of rallies leading to his election, the president-to-be had a strong predilection, like stage performers of his ilk, for microphones so proximate to his mouth that they could readily absorb his spit.
The two party leaders, they argued, were making a profound error of strategic and historical analysis: Trump wasn't an aberration so much as a logical consequence of the GOP's adoption of the Southern strategy, and the more proximate decision to resist Obama's presidency with raw white grievance politics.
But other state and federal courts have required plaintiffs to show a direct link between a defendant's conduct and a plaintiff's alleged injuries – some imposing a "but-for" standard, some insisting on a more stringent proximate cause standard and still others not specifying what causation test they would apply.
I expected that startups would achieve more conservative proximate valuations in the post-WeWork world, as their leaders would aim to raise a bit less, and a bit more conservatively, and investors would be less starry-eyed in the prices they were willing to pay for startup equity.
In a decision on Monday, a unanimous three-judge panel of the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that the federal government will have to show that alleged falsehoods by the attorney, Robert Luce, were the proximate, or direct cause of losses it suffered when mortgages it insured defaulted.
The big picture: While the proximate causes for Australia's heat waves in late 2018 and early 2019 include a weak El Niño event in the tropical Pacific Ocean, the BOM and the country's main climate agency, CSIRO, have concluded that Australia's climate is changing as a result of human-caused global warming.
It would also cover real estate transactions by foreign nationals proximate not only to military bases, but also near "property of the United States Government that is sensitive for reasons relating to national security," a characterization in the bill text that would give its enforcers broad latitude to determine which locations qualify.
Euron straight up murdered his brother to take the throne and then send the Ironborn off to war — though in the books his proximate military objective is House Redwyne's fleet located near Oldtown (where Sam is studying to become a Maester) and not Daenerys, who is still in Essos in the book timeline.
The proximate causes of the dispute were British efforts to prevent US ships from trading with Europe, British naval captains "impressing" sailors on captured American vessels and forcing them to serve on British fleets, and some boundary disputes between the US and what we would now call Canada (more on this later).
The proximate cause: The alleged murder of Saudi dissident and journalist Jamal Khashoggi on orders from Saudi Arabian leaders, in an event that could put an end to the budding love affair between the Saudi money machine and the Silicon Valley titans who welcomed it with open arms just six months ago.
It would give the US, as Tillerson says, a "seat at the table," and open up opportunities for the US to make side deals on things that are climate-related but also serve other, more proximate goals — say, cuts in HFCs or cooperation on carbon capture and sequestration (which could help the US coal industry).
It would give the US, as Tillerson says, a "seat at the table, " and open up opportunities for the US to make side deals on things that are climate-related but also serve other, more proximate goals — say, cuts in HFCs or cooperation on carbon capture and sequestration (which could help the US coal industry).
"But the more proximate, specific thing that happened was what Nike did with Colin Kaepernick," Brown said, referring to the athletic wear company's ad campaign featuring the former San Francisco 49ers quarterback, who controversially chose to kneel rather than stand for the national anthem before a 2016 preseason NFL game to protest racial injustice.
The more proximate problem for America is that while the country desperately needs the kind of principled resistance to Trump's worst excesses that the Weekly Standard represented, it would be particularly useful for that resistance to take the form of ideas that are better than Trump's — rather than simply different and in many ways worse.
"If an archer shot an arrow from Main Street to Elm Street, her release of the arrow would be the proximate cause of damage inflicted by the arrow's landing, even though the arrow traveled through air and space to get from the beginning of its journey to its end," the administrators wrote in a brief with the justices.
" The victim's mother is seeking a jury trial for the school's alleged Title IX violation, the failure to train the campus police "on how to properly investigate allegations of sexual misconduct," and the intentional infliction of emotional stress that "as a direct and proximate result Cherelle suffered wrongful death" and immeasurable physical and emotional injury prior to her death," the lawsuit claims.
"As a direct and proximate result of Defendant's unlawful interference with Plaintiff's rights under the FMLA, Plaintiff has been deprived of economic and non-economic benefits including, but not limited to lost wages, pain and suffering, mental anguish, humiliation, loss of fringe benefits, disruption of her personal life and loss of enjoyment of the ordinary pleasures of life," the lawsuit states.
Former President Obama's policy of leading from behind, growing organically from his flawed belief that America is the proximate cause of much global turmoil, greased the skids for Vladimir Putin to become an international predator who, along with other miscreants speaking Chinese, Arabic and Farsi, have exploited Western distraction and/or weakness, the latter manifested by standing back from the fray, hoping that better angels will prevail.
The proximate cause for the protests is Beijing's efforts, through Lam, to push through an extradition law that would allow any citizen of Hong Kong, or even anyone residing in or traveling through the city, to be detained by Hong Kong police and extradited to the mainland to stand trial there for one of more than three dozen types of criminal offenses as defined by China.
Here's the legalese gobbledygook: A controller for interfacing wirelessly with a computing device is provided, including the following: a housing defined by a main body, a first extension extending from a first end of the main body, and a second extension extending from a second end of the main body, the first extension and the second extension for holding by a first hand and a second hand of a user, respectively; a touchscreen defined along the top surface of the main body between the first extension and the second extension; a first set of buttons disposed on the top surface of the main body proximate to the first extension and on a first side of the touchscreen; and a second set of buttons disposed on the top surface of the main body proximate to the second extension and on a second side of the touchscreen.
A conservative who subscribes to the flat-earth theory that the federal government's "homeownership policies," rather than the sharklike practices of subprime lenders, "were plausibly the proximate cause of the Great Recession," Buckley nevertheless earnestly seeks to explain — and he unpacks tables, charts and graphs to prove it — that there really is such a thing as income inequality and that the Republican Party should be doing something about it.
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Unlike the Kerner Commission and other bodies that focused on the proximate causes of the civil unrest, Professor Hirsch focused on the period immediately after the Great Depression and, in particular, the two decades following World War II. In that period, millions of African-Americans moved from the South to the North in a second Great Migration as transformative as the earlier one, which lasted from 21997 to 220.
He notes how Alberto Giacometti's hyper-attenuated figures make the concept of infinity visible and proximate; he dissects how Paul Cézanne's struggles in capturing contour led to an obsessive-compulsiveness in his practice that evolved into a single-handed renewal of the still-life genre; writing on the art of his friend Elaine de Kooning, he calls her decades-long work in abstraction a limitation on her talent, akin to the artist just "making conversation" before embarking on her breakthrough work in portraiture.
Last summer, Mr. Cohn displayed moral poverty by refusing to quit the administration while simultaneously alerting friends and the media that he was very upset when Mr. Trump said there were "very fine people on both sides" after neo-Nazis and white supremacists clashed with protesters, leaving a young woman dead, in Charlottesville, Va. And then there is the proximate cause for his actual departure: his failure to keep President Trump from imposing tariffs on steel and aluminum imports, which will hurt American allies and domestic industries that use those metals.
" O'Malley said that though most of the physical evidence was destroyed in the flames, and investigators were unable to identify the electrical cause of the fire, the DA's office is building its case on reports on the conditions of the warehouse prior to the fire and are alleging that Almena and Harris were aware of the dangers when they allowed people to both reside and attend events there, stating that their actions amounted "to a disregard for human life" and were "the proximate cause of the death of thirty-six individuals trapped inside the warehouse when the fire started.

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