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"surfeit" Definitions
  1. surfeit (of something) an amount that is too large
"surfeit" Synonyms
excess oversupply superabundance superfluity surplus glut bellyful overindulgence plethora abundance satiety avalanche deluge fat overabundance overage overconsumption overdose overflow overkill gluttony overeating satiation saturation curvaceousness roundness voluptuousness repletion sufficiency ampleness completeness entirety wholeness profusion plenty swelling totality vastness wealth plenitude multitude mass lot heap host multiplicity tonne(UK) ton(US) slew pile stack quantity loads mountain myriad orgy binge splurge spree bout fit spell run session sesh bender expedition unrestrained bout stint marathon extended activity sustained activity disgust aversion loathing hatred revulsion detestation abhorrence repugnance antipathy distaste dislike abomination odium horror repulsion execration disrelish nausea repellency objection backlog store supply stockpile stock reserve reservoir hoard accumulation inventory logjam accretion buildup resources build-up congestion crowding overcrowding clogging bottleneck snarl-up blockage blocking jam obstruction choking plugging stoppage stuffing gridlock cramming crowdedness jamming cram gorge stuff fill overfeed satiate overfill overindulge sate sicken nauseate cloy eat indulge jade overeat pall satisfy feed guzzle pig out drink gormandise(UK) gormandize(US) binge-eat feast gluttonize gourmandize swill be greedy gorge oneself overdo it overindulge oneself pig load pack charge brim squeeze wedge lade deposit stow place gratify fulfil(UK) fulfill(US) quench content please humor(US) humour(UK) serve slake gladden meet suit cheer overcharge overload overburden burden oppress strain overtask overtax encumber overwhelm tax saddle exhaust overstretch overstrain surcharge weigh down revolt repel repulse squick turn off put off be repugnant to gross out make shudder turn stomach be repulsive to be distasteful to make sick make someone want to throw up cause to feel nauseous cause aversion More

272 Sentences With "surfeit"

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

Nowadays there is a surfeit rather than a lack of communication.
But now Democrats worry they might have a surfeit of enthusiasm.
The vote for Brexit gives rise to a surfeit of it.
The deceptive simplicity of this photograph allows a surfeit of interpretations.
A surfeit of gold and oil — bigger problems have plagued nations.
A surfeit of ugly knowledge is a feature of our age.
It all added up to a surfeit of dairy at home.
Get used to that smarmy smile and a surfeit of oleaginous speeches.
In most areas of politics this surfeit of uncertainty would be worrying.
We had a surfeit of love, self-respect, humor, hope, and pride.
It fits into our lifestyles despite busy schedules and a surfeit of children.
The banks grumble about a surfeit of rules as well as of capital.
They may opportunistically be attempting to shift a surfeit of Chinese PV abroad.
Betting that a surfeit of clangorous music would obscure any particularly galling note.
A surfeit of veto points, many supplied by the Senate, makes that impossible.
Since then censors have been busy deleting posts about the surfeit of political puffery.
That competition should benefit consumers, who can expect a surfeit of high-quality fare.
But there's a surfeit of talent at the door that wants to work here.
As for the residents who enjoy a surfeit of shared spaces, they aren't complaining.
A surfeit of dystopian apparel was evident on the men's wear runways this year.
With this president there's a surfeit of provocation and a dearth of due diligence.
The addition of yet another communications tool can result in a surfeit of information.
What we ultimately do with this surfeit of voice technology remains to be seen.
And StanChart has a surfeit of dollar deposits, meaning it would improve Barclays' funding position.
After a surfeit of press early on, the gilets jaunes' abrupt decline has been conspicuous.
Though FringeNYC selection is juried, some critics have grumbled about a surfeit of substandard shows.
Layered in her own surfeit of furs, Judy carried herself like a czar in minks.
How astonishing that it can be left out and there's still a surfeit to rue.
No matter how talented Ripley is, he can never have that surfeit of self-belief.
There is a shortage of maths and science teachers, but a surfeit of physical-education instructors.
Dubai comes top by virtue of having both a surfeit of shops and relatively cheap prices.
Investors hate uncertainty and the result of the referendum gives rise to a surfeit of it.
And this surfeit of contenders may keep some institutional pillars of the left on the sidelines.
I first noticed a surfeit of oddly boastful eulogies when Nora Ephron died six years ago.
This is an abiding complaint among young men in a country with a surfeit of them.
With Trump it looks like there will be a deficit of trust and a surfeit of action.
But the surfeit of technology platforms can make it difficult for airlines to track and address complaints.
The film's stilted acting, elliptical plot and surfeit of symbolism make its messages difficult to pin down.
Strange, who does not have a surfeit of charisma, took the seat that was vacated when Sen.
They tend to be uncrowded, and so less at risk of a sudden surfeit of sellers over buyers.
A surfeit of controversial incidents besieged the U.S. military and confounded official Washington as to what to do.
It's the surfeit and excesses of Black Friday that I want to discuss in relation to Civilization 6.
UCLA also balances its brawn with a surfeit of backcourt skill in Ball, Hamilton, Alford and Aaron Holiday.
With the accretion of China's skilled labor force, and the surfeit of cheap metal flows around the world.
I felt small and very helpless weeks ago, when smoke from a surfeit of Canadian wildfires smothered Seattle.
It lasts because of Willy and the queasy surfeit of admiration and contempt with which Miller portrays him.
Ironically, a surfeit of cash can tempt a company into making unwise or badly priced acquisitions as well.
Scroll through Explorest to find a surfeit of futuristic high-rises, minimalist staircases, and rooftop views perfect for selfies.
But the surfeit of fringe at shows this week owes a debt to an entirely different cast of characters.
The result has been a surfeit of information and a dearth of responsibility, as competing factions jostle for supremacy.
There's a surfeit of young talent coming in next year and no one should feel their position is assured.
The crises in the periphery of the euro zone were reflected in deficits caused by a surfeit of unproductive spending.
Other Liberal politicians argued against extending the franchise on the grounds that liberty could not survive a surfeit of democracy.
I'm happy to report, in any case, that the release of "Love & Friendship" mitigates both the shortage and the surfeit.
The cross-currency basis swap is a measure of demand for dollars, or an indicator of a surfeit of euros.
This surfeit of attention leaves out a bunch of other politically relevant factors beyond what is 'true' about Hillary internally.
By that time in his tenure at the Globe, he said, he had had his surfeit of kings and princes.
I ventured up to the third floor and found a table with a surfeit of cake options, but no labels.
It is system that functioned well when France had a surfeit of general practitioners, many of whom made house calls.
Soon, consumers will be presented with a surfeit of streaming options — but their budgets may only tolerate so many subscriptions.
There is now a surfeit of luxury apartments for sale in Manhattan, many of them shrinking in scale and price.
The Wookiees do not have a large treehouse, but they nonetheless have a surfeit of visual devices for entertainment and communication.
Were it semantically accurate, then the gig economy would represent a surfeit of fun, high-paying jobs that require little time.
Much of the script is in blank verse, with a heady surfeit of expanding metaphors, lyrical soliloquies and discreetly rhymed couplets.
If anything, these markets are indicating a surfeit of dollars with currency swaps in yen and euros at five-year highs.
And even amidst all the brand activations, crowded streets, and surfeit vats of queso, there will be some show-making moments.
As Mr. Duncan realized, this market faces what might seem an enviable problem: a surfeit of demand for its limited supply.
Is it just me, or has there been a surfeit of bel canto repertory at the Metropolitan Opera in recent years?
One is somewhat smaller than the other; both display a surfeit of greens — a color somewhat scarce in Mr. Johns's repertory.
The fear now is not that countries will run out of food but that a surfeit of babies will retard their development.
If you can slip away from the family then you've got a surfeit of excellent video games on which to gorge yourself.
Benefiting from huge, homogeneous home markets, America's and China's tech giants have a surfeit of the most vital resource for AI: data.
There is a surfeit of natural conscious agents, enough to handle whatever tasks should be reserved for such special and privileged entities.
Whether it's doctored balls or simply an inexplicable surfeit of sluggers, home runs are up across the board in MLB — way up.
Many problems may in fact be caused as much by inadequate planning by local governments as by a surfeit of day-trippers.
But the production, directed by Kristin Marting, too often feels swamped amid the surfeit and shallowness of its source material (2224:2866).
But the production, directed by Kristin Marting, too often feels swamped amid the surfeit and shallowness of its source material (218:2866).
If the Kennedy conspiracies were rooted in an absence of documentary evidence, the 9/11 theories benefited from a surfeit of it.
Given the surfeit of colleges and the growing deficit of students, some economists have predicted that the higher education bubble will burst.
The series of killings has renewed calls for more effective gun control in a country long plagued by a surfeit of unlicensed firearms.
That surfeit of enthusiasm doesn't originate just with journalists though — they are merely channeling the wild optimism of researchers and startup founders alike.
The practice of public safety depends upon a surfeit of simulation—simulated raids, fake houses, and special furniture designed to take a bullet.
Crude's 30 percent rise in the last month was partly based on hopes that drivers would soak up the surfeit in the fuel.
"Trying to help someone who suffers from a surfeit of feeling by encouraging them to let out more feelings is absurd," she said.
And such a surfeit doesn't provide any sense of certainty, either of the outcome of the trial, or — more troubling, sometimes — the truth.
There's been a lot of talk in the business about "Too Much TV" — the surfeit of hundreds of original scripted series every year.
With an anti-capitalist crusade focused on a surfeit of stuff once again gathering steam among eco-socialists, it is a timely assertion.
As an affluent society, America automatically produces a surfeit of jobs and wealth, and the problem is solely one of distributing the bounty.
In a country that prides itself on liberality and tolerance, people of color have faced a surfeit of racism in the last decade.
Such a surfeit of general news, with the explosion of millennial-oriented properties — and advertising targeted against categories and influencers tends to perform better.
Companies in America spent over $700bn; freight rates grew by 30% last year owing to a surfeit of cargo and a shortage of drivers.
He was not well-known in Kenya, where there is such a surfeit of world-class runners that few qualify for the national team.
Reporters had a surfeit of hearings, drafts, amendments, CBO reports, speeches, symposia and votes to cover, and those stories commanded prime media real estate.
My initial grumpiness at finding just one clam in the wide platter was rapidly allayed by a surfeit of tilapia, mussels, squid and shrimp.
The first Lego film , in 2014, with its unrelenting surfeit of gags, both visual and verbal, was directed by Phil Lord and Christopher Miller.
Mr. Khan, by contrast, seems to be focusing on the environment, introducing measures intended to reduce air pollution and, now, its surfeit of plastic.
Robert Xavier Rodriguez's "As: A Surfeit of Similes" has a Norton Juster text, a poem of 44 four-line stanzas in the same rhythm.
Other uses include shifting electricity supply from the day, when solar panels often produce a surfeit of power, to the evening, when demand rises.
The usual suspects are often to blame: the cartels and gangs, the surfeit of guns, frequently from the United States, the paralyzed legal systems.
The performance owed much to Australia's ability to attract a surfeit of skilled migrants, which kept population growth at a rapid 1.6 percent a year.
I realized that I prefer work that leaves room for reflection — rather than pulling me into polemics or, in Moon's case, a surfeit of celebration.
Many segments of the shipping industry, including dry bulk commodities, are struggling with tougher conditions due to world economic worries and a surfeit of vessels.
Today's surfeit of soak-the-rich ideas from Democrats may be just a prelude to major thrusts at hiking middle-class taxes down the road.
It takes a surfeit of positive thinking to even begin to go in an innovative direction rather than just accept society for what it is.
Of the stormy pansexual surfeit of his later life (he died of AIDS in 1993, at the age of fifty-four) we see no sign.
Falafel is defiantly unspherical — really, of no legible shape at all — and jewel-bright within, emerald-green from a surfeit of parsley, celery and cilantro.
As it is, it is not as if there is a great surfeit of pro-Trump news and opinion in the pages of The Times.
None of that has come to pass, and Trump, who is constitutionally incapable of acknowledging his own surfeit of personal and professional failures, blames Congress.
In the United States, this will examine the surfeit of athletic, industrious midfielders and defenders, and the absence — Christian Pulisic aside — of creative, imaginative prospects.
European airlines are locked in a battle for supremacy, with a surfeit of seats holding down revenues and higher fuel costs adding to the pressure.
His government worries that a surfeit of half-hearted party members is a strain on resources, a risk to its reputation and an invitation to graft.
Crude oil prices have slumped by nearly three-quarters since June 2014 as traders and investors worried about flagging global growth and a surfeit of demand.
With $611 billion in spending, China rekindled growth but added to its surfeit of steel mills, cement kilns and glass factories — as well as empty homes.
When there's a surfeit of venture capital in the marketplace, as we saw in 2013 and 2014, founders have more leverage when it comes to fundraising.
In fact, Ms. Friedman had tried to solicit a surfeit of friends' surplus tuxedos but she learned that most men don't have closets full of extras.
Netflix's "Making a Murderer" shares the credit, or blame — along with HBO's "Jinx" and public radio's "Serial" — for the current surfeit of true-crime documentary series.
Education is highly valued there, he said, and as parents see their discretionary income rise, they'll often spend some of the surfeit on their children's educations.
As the cabinet nominees submit to their inquisitions and Trump holds his first news conference since the election, there's a surfeit of political spectacle this week.
Facebook isn't the only one of those companies (um, hey Google) but Facebook's products aren't singular enough to be worth fooling yourself into a surfeit of trust.
One of the clearest pieces of evidence that his style was spot-on is from the surfeit of praise from people about episodes that featured their hometowns.
The property market has fallen a little closer to Earth: prices dropped by 13% between September and January, largely because of a surfeit of pricey new flats.
The complexity of Birk's canvases and their surfeit of action is reminiscent of paintings from the 17th and 18th centuries that depict historical, mythological, or religious scenes.
Japan and Russia have both suffered from a lack of young workers and a surfeit of retired people, who consume goods and services but don't produce them.
A surfeit of global uncertainties — Brexit, President Trump's threats to dismantle institutions at the heart of the global order — have perhaps made companies reluctant to add costs.
Whereas the West was re-engineered to account for a shortage of water, the Gulf of Mexico was re-engineered to account for a surfeit of oil.
Barack Obama, on the other hand, raised eyebrows with his surfeit of discipline, manifest in his nighttime snack of precisely seven almonds, or so the legend went.
If I'm going to go with a real estate investment trust, I'm going to go where I think that there is now no longer a surfeit of properties.
Somehow creating a surfeit of currency through domestic monetary expansion by purchasing domestic assets is readily accepted but using that currency for direct exchange rate intervention is not.
Flashback: Psychologist Barry Schwartz introduced "the paradox of choice" in his 2004 book of that name, finding that a surfeit of options paralyzes people instead of delighting them.
Both conform to the established gaming PC aesthetic, using red and black coloring, industrial textures like faux carbon fiber, and a surfeit of a angular lines and grills.
Along with other early Verdi works, "Macbeth" was long dismissed as a surfeit of oompah music, but here in Chicago in 2013, Mr. Muti revealed its moody nuances.
The result is a relative paucity of memorable stories, and an absolute surfeit of memorable songs—more, surely, than would exist if Strait had been less single-minded.
"I want you to know that I love you," he begins, squeezing the girls' hands with "a surfeit of feeling," and then he breaks the news: he's gay.
Fast-paced and gripping, this is an unusually lucid staging of a bloody history play, whose surfeit of schemes and villainy could make a daytime-drama writer blush.
More than his predecessors, the president needs competent, even-keeled people around him, and there's no surfeit of A-list takers for even the administration's highest-ranking jobs.
Decades of serving international high-rollers have left Whistler with no shortage of high-end steakhouses, bistros and wine bars — not to mention a surfeit of culinary talent.
"Us" runs a little longer, but its surfeit of stuff — its cinephilia, bunnies of doom, sharp political detours and less-successful mythmaking — can make it feel unproductively cluttered.
Rick articulated his nostalgia in the season 3 premiere of the show this past April, which generated a surfeit of interest in the long-discontinued fast food condiment.
Over the past few years, he's expanded into the art world, applying his designs to a surfeit of unconventional surfaces including ostrich-egg shells, dollar bills and burned tortillas.
Catalonia pays more into the central kitty than it gets back, but its transport systems have been neglected while Madrid has spiffy metro lines and a surfeit of motorways.
What they're saying: "The impact of the sanctions is going to be largely softened as a result of this allowance," Surfeit Vijayakar of the energy consultancy Trisect tells Reuters.
As strange as it may seem, that doesn't make them particularly unique in the year 2018; there is a surfeit of drone-helicopter hybrids being tested around the globe.
U.S. new vehicle sales are expected to drop in 2019 due to rising interest rates and competition from a surfeit of cheaper, nearly-new used vehicles on the market.
And joining the ranks are an unknown number of local individuals (with no battlefield experience but a surfeit of anger and motivation) seeking a role in ISIS's global assault.
While there is a surfeit of luxury condos in Manhattan, the for-sale market in Brooklyn still has room to grow in several neighborhoods, Mr. Miller, the appraiser, said.
Tolkien, now played by Nicholas Hoult, lodges in a house whose décor, overstuffed and precious, with a surfeit of William Morris wallpapers, makes it seem like a cozy jungle.
Almost one in three of the Afghan women surveyed think women already have a surfeit of rights and a similar proportion say they are "too emotional" to be leaders.
Its surfeit of quality reminded me that there is probably no current music director in the country I would rather hear conduct on a weekly basis than Mr. Nelsons.
His new book is both an apologia and an indictment: an illuminating primer for outsiders who may not live there but have a surfeit of opinions about those who do.
The old me, echoing Louis Brandeis, thought the antidote for falsities was "more speech," but I now know that more speech achieves nothing when there is a surfeit of talk.
It is a quintessence of pococurantism, emptiness, surfeit, endless attempts at satiation with material possessions and utter hypocrisy—evidenced in the attempt to promote high moral values to its citizens.
"There's nothing excessive about these women, save perhaps a surfeit of health, an absence of everything, be it morbid or passionate, that is conducive to mystery," he wrote in 1925.
And that's how the book reads, as the record of an obsession, with the surfeit of granular detail, the loose anecdotal structure and the numerous cul-de-sacs that implies.
It's a behavior more often associated with youth, irreverence and a surfeit of free time — though certainly plenty of old, aggrieved people have picked up the habit in recent years.
Where Judd usually prided himself on pieces that the viewer comprehended by circumnavigating, here we are limited to a single side but granted a surfeit of information to sort through.
So it stands to reason that a country of supersize celebrity and riches would have a surfeit of charlatans, including some who see even the White House as fair game.
But what comes across most forcefully in this overstuffed workplace drama is tedium: the ceaseless petty bickering of employees amid a surfeit of exposition about their jobs and company policy.
With the Super Bowl in Atlanta, the N.F.L. had a surfeit of local musicians to choose from for the halftime show: Outkast, T.I., Lil Jon, Future, 2 Chainz and Migos.
With all of these disparate threads, Nineteen Nineteen runs the risk of either collapsing in on itself with too many nodes or spinning off kilter with a surfeit of unrelated ideas.
It doesn't help that with the roof up the 570S seems to have a surfeit of blind spots making changing lanes less a traffic maneuver and more a leap of faith.
The island has a well-educated, bilingual middle-class, including a surfeit of engineers, trained at the well-regarded University of Puerto Rico for the manufacturing industry, and cheap to hire.
The prevailing view today, like Weber's in 1919, is that "Germany has a surfeit of Gesinnungsethik," says Wolfgang Nowak, who served as an adviser to Gerhard Schröder when he was chancellor.
That's fine for a while, because the Star Wars galaxy has a surfeit of memorable characters on which to draw, but what comes after Disney has exhausted the series' main characters?
The Asian Financial Crisis was set off in 1998 by a surfeit of dollar-denominated debt in countries that had pegged their currencies to the greenback, but were forced to devalue.
Morgan Stanley has, on paper, a surfeit of capital: Its Tier 1 common equity ratio of 14.5 percent is way above the 10 percent minimum it needs to hold by 2019.
But as students with psychiatric diagnoses are asking to reside on campus with their own animals, schools with no-pet housing policies are scrambling to address a surfeit of new problems.
Mr. Selznick's emphasis on wonder — represented by the story's surfeit of enchantments and the near-miraculously fitted parts — can feel bullying, as if he were demanding delight instead of earning it.
The competition between the two, who call each other friends, has resulted in an unusual surfeit of progressive ideas for voters to mull over as they pick their party's 2020 candidate.
With such a surfeit of parking, most of it free, it is little wonder that most people get around Silicon Valley by car, or that the area has such appalling traffic jams.
The very strong GOP performances in the 2010 and 2014 midterm elections meant that Republicans were blessed with a surfeit of basically qualified statewide elected officials to run for president in 2016.
A surfeit of ugly knowledge is a feature of our age, a result of the internet carrying to our doorstep, like a tomcat with a dead rat, all manner of brutal information.
Children today are surrounded by a surfeit of unwholesome, easy-to-consume calorie-dense foods and snacks accompanied by a deficit of opportunities to expend those extra calories through regular physical activity.
These critics say it should be used to pull back funding that can't be properly absorbed by a program because of a surfeit of funding, a backlog of obligations or other reasons.
Intensifying interest in O'Keeffe as both a painter and a personality, and a surfeit of recent shows, are now bringing forward her less known work, like the Hawaiian paintings, the curator explained.
He was at Davos last January shortly after Giridharadas tweeted a crack about the surfeit of hollow corporate sanctimony there—phrases like win-win, do well by doing good, and conscious capitalism.
OSLO (Reuters) - The coming year will be another challenging one for offshore drillers due to a surfeit of rigs even though prices are starting to improve, the chief executive of Seadrill SDRL.
Listening to this five-hour production is like getting stuck at a dinner party beside a guy whose money and surfeit of ideas has convinced him that he should do all the talking.
Fighting sports are no exception; in fact, fighting sports tend to have a surfeit of health and safety regulations because the risk of injury is deemed higher than that of most other sports.
The studio has generated a surfeit of audience goodwill that gives filmmakers like Markus and McFeely the freedom to be ambitious and expansive in their storytelling in ways that wouldn't otherwise be possible.
Both plot and structure suffer from a crucial lack of balance as some scenes are played out at needless length — a surfeit of classroom Shakespeare, for instance — while others are only glancingly sketched.
By building up a surfeit of laws that treat fetuses like people, supporters of the so-called fetal personhood movement hope that they can one day use this legislation to unwind Roe v.
But the show — directed by Kristin Marting and created by Matthew Cohn, Mr. Darvish, Ms. MacCary, Enormvs Muñoz and Jen Taher — too often feels swamped by the surfeit and shallowness of its source material.
This makes a lot of sense: People I've talked to in this sector have told me that the problem isn't a lack of data but a surfeit of it, and poorly kept at that.
Vegetation across much of the drought-stricken west eagerly soaked up the surfeit of water from the wet winter, leading to a rapid, vast growth spurt in trees, grasses, and shrubs in the spring.
Trendspotting 8 Photos View Slide Show ' The hoodie, the streetwear insignia of rappers, hackers and girls with forbidding tattoos, reared its head unexpectedly this week in a surfeit of springtime tints, weights and forms.
He fell into Tova's arms, hugging and kissing her, and pretended he was dying of a surfeit of lust, then began joking with her about some poet and literary critic I'd never heard of.
But due to the surfeit of communication Slack creates and the interruptions that causes, the very system meant to facilitate work actually prevents users from getting work done, causing a slew of other issues.
London's status as a powerhouse of the market was obvious during the week of Frieze, with the city teeming with foreign visitors, drawn by the surfeit of high-quality fairs, dealer exhibitions and auctions.
Second, and more interestingly, Russo has forgone the plottiness of "Empire Falls," a book somewhat marred by the surfeit of action — everything from a school shooting to a flood — crowded into its final pages.
The answer seems to be somewhere in between, and It Comes at Night rides that line easily thanks to a combination of fantastic acting, tense plotting, and, in particular, a surfeit of sumptuous aesthetics.
In the late 1990s, Thailand was "Ground Zero" for the Asian Financial Crisis after a surfeit of dollar-denominated debt combined with a forced devaluation of the baht, when it was allowed to float freely.
In a time of exhausting demands on our attention — not least the enervating drama of the postelection news cycle — "Primitive Technology" acts as a quiet corrective, an escape from a surfeit of vanity and strife.
But a surfeit of anger doesn't necessarily make for a compelling narrative, and The Morning Show has been largely panned by critics, many of whom have honed in on the show's lack of cohesive identity.
On Tuesday, Facebook, in partnership with a surfeit of other large and powerful corporations, including Uber, Spotify, PayPal and VISA, announced that it would lead the effort to create a new global currency called Libra.
A new report by the Department of Transportation warns that US pilot training no longer helps airline pilots maintain the ability to fly commercial flights manually, because of the surfeit of autonomous technology inside the cockpit.
Just kidding.) Ms. Prebble's "Enron," an account of the fall of that Texas energy company (seen briefly on Broadway in 2010), was an economics pageant that imploded under a surfeit of ardent exposition and flashy gimmickry.
A little later, I began following a guy who lives in Hong Kong, seemingly in his late 20s, who has a surfeit of cash, a penchant to vomit hashtags and a nascent interest in street wear.
Under this scenario, some of the surfeit of votes moving to the clear favorite, Boris Johnson, could have been "lent" to other candidates as part of a push to ensure that Mr. Stewart was knocked out.
The Democratic oversight effort is intensifying after Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein unleashed a Washington firestorm Monday by warning of the dangers of a surfeit of transparency as the special counsel's investigation draws to a close.
Nor is the thickness of Lerner's description mere skylarking; in each of the proliferating niches where Adam looks for depth, we find instead the twinned signs of surfeit and hunger, of narrowing possibilities and compensatory aggression.
For Mr. Trump, however, the lack of a decision on the climate accord put an uncertain ending on an ambitious first presidential trip abroad that began as a respite from the surfeit of scandal at home.
Like many of her fellow Democrats vying for the party's nomination, the Massachusetts senator has railed against the uber-rich like Cooperman, promising to tax them to pay for the surfeit of domestic programs she has proposed.
Nakamura front-loads his narrative with tantalizing strangers and enigmatic acquaintances from Yurika's distant past, yet the novel's initial allure gives way to a surfeit of existential window dressing and brooding meditations on that old devil moon.
What's become of San Francisco — the nation's most childless city, traffic that is frozen all hours of the day, a surfeit of sketchy and unprosecuted property crimes, and 4,300 people on the street — is nothing to duplicate.
OPEC agreed last month to increase oil production by 600,000 barrels per day to meet demand while avoiding too high a surfeit, but Trump continues to take aim at the organization for pushing oil prices too high.
But even when the Booths sit down together for Thanksgiving dinner, and Wilkes, as they call him, provokes a fight about the war, this labored, fragmented play remains frustratingly inert, weighed down by a surfeit of story.
As well as having a surfeit of top fighters to hail from the city, Curitiba happens to be the most populous city of Brazil's South Region and is a significant cultural, political and financial hub of Latin America.
That would put a surfeit of discounted merchandise in the major fashion markets of New York and Los Angeles just as the holiday shopping season arrives — and long before other stores and brands put similar goods on sale.
Vigée (pronounced Vee-ZHAY) Le Brun was born with a surfeit of natural talent and ambition as well as beauty, charm, a head for business and making connections, and a gift for conversation that kept her sitters entertained.
There's a Chipotle right next door, and though I know it is a mortal sin to choose Chipotle over the surfeit of cheap, delicious Mexican food options available in Austin, I'm starving and I need to move quickly.
Our charming server talked us into gilding the lily with the flan: It arrived in a stemmed glass, dressed up like a sundae, with a surfeit of dulce de leche, whipped cream and a maraschino cherry on top.
Now I can't see that crisis any longer means a climax, unless we are willing to grant that every breath of wind has a climax (which I am), but then that obliterates climax, being a surfeit of such.
Despite the surfeit of violent deaths, the story at the fore — twin musicians, Rabbit and Alice Hatmaker, attend a high school music festival — remains a daffy coming-of-age story for siblings who get mixed up in murder.
And there is no evidence that government borrowing is "crowding out" private sector investment by taking up too much of the available financing: interest rates are extremely low, pointing to a surfeit of savings over profitable investment opportunities.
The program is able to generate this surfeit of meaning in part through the frictional trajectory of its participants' relationship with Apted himself — as both an individual and as a sort of imago, a figure of fraught authority.
Despite concerns about a surfeit of Richters up for auction this week — no fewer than 21986 — two 230s abstracts by the artist, each with a low estimate of $224.4 million, were the star lots of the Ames collection.
CreditCreditIllustration by James Graham A few years ago, Kedar Iyer, an entrepreneur in Silicon Valley, became acutely aware of a problem in his industry: A surfeit of talented coders were routinely overlooked by employers because they lacked elite pedigrees.
It's not as if there aren't at a surfeit of them, or at least some available that would give you what you're looking for without having to get into a potentially huge public fight here to acquire a company.
Though his portrait of a local cradle-to-grave hospital under threat of extinction has a surfeit of plot strands — including a murder mystery — it is above all a forum for Mr. Bennett to rant against his uncaring nation.
The comparative dearth of games with eight or nine assists or rebounds, and surfeit of those with exactly ten, strongly suggests that players with the opportunity for a triple-double change their actions on the court in order to attain one.
In March of 2012, Eli Pariser—one of the leaders of the activist group MoveOn—and Peter Koechley—also of MoveOn and an editor at The Onion—launched Upworthy with several million dollars of seed money and a surfeit of hope.
"Sleep No More" felt tired to me — it has been running for more than four years — and suffered from a surfeit of thronging, pushy visitors, by turns aimless and overly focused, who crowded one another out and overwhelmed the performance.
The origins of the crisis lay in global macroeconomic imbalances as well as in failures of the financial system's management and supervision: a surfeit of savings in China and other surplus economies was financing an American borrowing and property binge.
Perhaps unsurprisingly, given large price differentials between commercial vs personal drones, and the relative surfeit in production of the latter gizmos vs the former, Gartner notes increasing overlap between the two markets — with lower priced drones being appropriated for commercial ventures.
And unlike in election cycles past, where California -- despite its size -- was a competitive wasteland due to a redistricting process in 2011 that sought to firm up incumbents of both parties, there are a surfeit of competitive contests this year.
There is a surfeit of Eastern European names on the list this year because it has become customary for different regions to nominate one of their own for the top job, though nothing in the United Nations Charter requires it.
Adding to a surfeit of global mine supply, Zambia's copper production will rise by 5.5 percent to 750,000 tonnes this year and output is expected to double to 1.5 million tonnes in 2017, Mines Minister Christopher Yaluma said on Thursday.
This is an area where we might suffer from a surfeit of democracy: by losing interlocutors such as Rose, who could offer reassurance or mockery when we were at our most insecure, we've been left alone with our unmediated feelings.
With MLB rosters limited to 25 slots, teams replacing starters with a surfeit of relievers either need to carry fewer hitters—which could lead to worse offence, or to more injuries among position players—or to extract more innings from each reliever.
The other reasons are creeping social conservatism among party leaders—due in part to a desire to promote "traditional" Chinese culture over the insidious foreign kind—and the worry that a surfeit of unmarried men may pose a threat to social order.
A slew of reports finds a fresh reason for the chronic inability of American companies to fill skilled jobs: not a lack of skills, and hence a training-and-education crisis, but a surfeit of drug abuse, per the NYT's Nelson Schwartz.
Menya's study has already found that tobacco and alcohol are two of the factors likely to be responsible for the surfeit of oesophageal cancers in western Kenya—not entirely surprising, given that previous epidemiological studies have linked them to squamous cell carcinoma.
Analysts say sovereign borrowing by the six wealthy Gulf Arab oil exporters could total $20 billion or more in 2016 - a big shift from years past, when the region had a surfeit of funds and was lending to the rest of the world.
The surplus, the first in six months, was above market expectations for a surfeit of 30.5 billion reais thanks to the hefty revenues from a program that gave Brazilians criminal amnesty in exchange for paying taxes and fines over undeclared assets abroad.
But my ride took me over a great mix of hill and dale and farm and trail, providing a refreshing change from the surfeit of lovely but relentlessly horizontal landscapes so often torn by headwinds as you trace canal paths near the coast.
In all, the exhibition begins with boldness and then more tentative steps, as if the curators leaped into the space, and then finding themselves with a surfeit of ways that the body can be threatened and pulled apart, opted for one of each.
The collection, as filmy and shimmery as the one Mr. Armani showed for his Giorgio Armani label last month in Milan, was the usual surfeit of plenty, with an emphasis on soft suiting (pajama, track and tailored) and washed-out, watery colors.
There has since been such a surfeit of women beginning careers off such networks, many infusing their particular brand of far-right ideology with "trad" rhetoric, that it now seems irresponsible not to think about them, their roles and what they reveal.
The surfeit of inventory is dulling buyers' sense of urgency, Mr. Miller said, noting that there were 6,985 units for sale in the quarter, an increase of almost 11 percent over last year — the largest supply in the second quarter since 2011.
Opinion Columnist This month has brought a surfeit of interesting new books about American politics, most of them attempts to explain exactly how we reached our current era of gridlock and demagogy, in which disliked establishments and disreputable populists clash by night.
Menya's study has already found that tobacco and alcohol are two of the factors likely to be responsible for the surfeit of oesophageal cancers in western Kenya -- not entirely surprising, given that previous epidemiological studies have linked them to squamous cell carcinoma.
Anyone else, however, is likely to be bewildered by a haphazard structure, a surfeit of dill-pickled red herrings and the blank impenetrability of Michael Fassbender's Harry Hole, a supposedly rule-averse detective who does markedly little detecting over the course of two hours.
Indeed, in the face of the snowballing Cambridge Analytica data misuse scandal, the company's leadership (see also: Sheryl Sandberg) has been quick to try to spin an idea that it was simply too "idealistic and optimistic" — and that 'bad actors' exploited its surfeit of goodwill.
In contrast, Trump's campaign and his surfeit of divisive and abrasive remarks make it nearly impossible for him to come across as kind — especially since he has now effectively alienated the GOP establishment along with many moderate and even conservative Republican voters as a result.
Ten months and a public relations debacle later, a surfeit of lenders, including relationship banks with established ties to the miner and new lenders looking to forge a bond with one of Latin America's most frequent borrowers, are expected to flock to the transaction.
Adding a requirement of outdoor space, however, reduced their surfeit of options to three, which soon dwindled to two when the landlord of the nicest apartment by far, a one-bedroom in Prospect Lefferts, decided that she didn't want a dog in her garden.
With a gestural vocabulary of squiggles, lines, blots, swirls, and other pen marks — evoking script, calligraphy, ideograms, and glyphs, but lacking recognizable semantic content — her work is a Rorschach test, through which we can perceive our anxieties about the digital era's surfeit of written communication.
Even days after the election a surfeit of campaign signs remained visible in front of homes and businesses; in barber shops and cafeterias the memory of the night—"the fruition of a very long trek," as Moten put it, still glowed with an aura of pride.
The theory was that it would strengthen the ACA's risk pool by ensuring that there would be a surfeit of healthy people, who didn't use much care, to subsidize the premiums of sicker people in the pool who posed higher costs to the participating insurance companies.
But Zhang Wuzong, head of Shandong province's Shiheng Special Steel Group, said the targets laid out in an action plan in February would not be sufficient to tackle a surfeit of capacity estimated at around 400 million tonnes, especially as domestic steel demand continues to decline.
With a surfeit of pockets—of pouches, cavities, and receptacles—you end up stowing things variably and in effect can mislay things on your person; not to mention that it's harder to find or discern a pocketed article in a coat that has Nordic quantities of stuffing.
Over the next few months my life unraveled, but I found myself with a surfeit of material: moving to an affordable but remote neighborhood in Brooklyn; dating men who swallowed Viagra in front of me; getting the HPV vaccine three months before the age cutoff of 46.
However, if you constantly struggle to think of activities that you want to share with your partner (and vice versa), then that could be at least partially influenced by a lack of shared time and a surfeit of knowledge about how your partner likes to spend their free days.
Properties associated with tragedies such as suicide, murder, or "lonely deaths" are thought to bring bad luck in Japanese culture, making it harder to sell them on to a new owner and further feeding the surfeit of vacant properties that are slowly falling into disrepair around the country.
While this new surfeit of options has been a boon to people trying to get around town, it has also helped lay waste to the livelihoods of taxi drivers and turn New York's already busy streets into glorified parking lots — and leaders like Mayor Bill de Blasio and Gov.
If, for example, Richardson's aim in "Pamela," with the surfeit of overblown compliments bestowed on her, was to guarantee that readers knew exactly what they were supposed to think of his heroine, he also sought by the same method to insure that readers thought highly of the work itself.
Combine them with the ready or nearly-ready players already in the system like catcher Gary Sanchez, outfielder Aaron Judge, and the revivified Tyler Austin, and the Yankees have a surfeit of young talent that tops anything the Yankees have possessed since, and this is not a joke, the 1950s.
At Maison Margiela, John Galliano, who has in the past occasionally suffered from a surfeit of ideas, continued to explore the limits of the décortiqué approach he introduced a few seasons ago, which effectively means reducing garments to their bones and then layering and otherwise recombining them to challenge received convention.
While Mr. Kushner was raised in Livingston, an upper-middle-class town of 30,000 in neighboring Essex County, he attended school in Paramus, a middle-class town a dozen miles from the edge of Manhattan that, with its surfeit of malls, has long held the status of a punch line.
But in 2014, in "Unleashing the Second American Century: Four Forces for Economic Dominance," he largely dispensed with his earlier doomsaying, suggesting instead that the future was bright for a nation poised for energy independence, already leading in innovation, blessed with a surfeit of private capital and supported by a productive and expanding industrial base.
Whereas online lore does not at all prime users of subscription services that their viewing habits might be fair game for a few Twitter lolz because someone with a surfeit of festive spirit working out of the company's social media division had a poke around in the database and thought they'd found something funny.
Not that you have a surfeit of Gucci lying around or anything, but in the off case that you do (or if you're, like, Jared Leto), you'll enjoy this news: According to The RealReal, an e-tailer that consigns secondhand luxury goods for lower than their original retail value, Gucci is the most-searched label on its site.
Immediately prior to the outbreak of war in 1939, there was a surfeit of Austrian and Bavarian influences in the industry; in the late '80s, Black Monday gave way to the rise of a movement dubbed "deconstruction" that originated with the Belgian designer Martin Margiela, whose leitmotif was the unfinished hem and the inside-out seam.
I don't know if Sherie Rene Scott, who plays Mollie Malloy in the outstanding revival of Ben Hecht and Charles MacArthur's 1928 comedy, "The Front Page" (at the Broadhurst), is a gay icon yet, but I doubt she'll escape being one after this show, which has a surfeit of fantastic actors, who give the production everything they've got.
Long before the country found itself discussing Grenfell's dereliction — and of the contemptuous council response to a catastrophe of its own making, and the continuing imbroglio over the rehousing of survivors despite their borough's surfeit of empty homes — the ramifications of London's trajectory should have been the animating subject of its politics for the last decade.
Part of the canon of New Queer Cinema, the British filmmaker Derek Jarman's adaptation of Christopher Marlowe's play, starring Steven Waddington as the king and Andrew Tiernan as his lover, sought to give the Elizabethan text a modern resonance, drawing attention to contemporary homophobia and staging the play with a surfeit of sexual and violent imagery.
Today, we do so in a more involved and fascinating manner than usual, with the introduction of a full-blown How to Make Soup guide from Samin Nosrat that will help you build delicious concoctions out of what fats, aromatics and proteins you happen to have in your kitchen, with a minimum of fuss and a surfeit of flavor.
A surfeit of gentlemen is far from the worst fate to befall a sport, and complaining about it might seem obscenely small-minded coming at the end of the most spectacular era that the men's game has ever seen — Federer with a record 17 Grand Slam singles titles; Nadal, 213; Djokovic, 12, the three combining to win 43 of the last 53 majors.
Each member of the media has a work station with a brass nameplate, a leather swivel chair, a pair of computer monitors, and a surfeit of real-time tournament footage and information—far more data than one would be able to gather out on the golf course, especially because, outside the press building, reporters are not allowed to carry cell phones.
But I didn't answer, I made another band of these kisses, slightly higher than the first, and then another; I would cover him in kisses, that was what I wanted to do, and I would do it even though I could feel R.'s impatience, even as he said again Skups, and then, don't be cheesy, which was his warning against too much affection, against my surfeit of feeling.
Thanks to an unexpected collision of circumstances — a borough with a surfeit of unused industrial spaces; city planning (the realization on the part of the development corporation, among other agencies, "that there is enormous economic opportunity in encouraging this identity," according to Scott Cohen, one of the founders of New Lab); the rise of the maker movement, with its emphasis on small businesses thinking in a local and custom way; and the city's legacy as a fashion capital — New York, especially Brooklyn, has become "the natural home of the greater wearables movement," said Francis Bitonti, a designer who runs a namesake studio and whose primary tools are algorithms and 211D printers.
From the aristocratic brownstones of Park Slope, you work your way steadily down the socioeconomic ladder, past the towering Soviet-­style apartment complexes of Coney Island, through strips of pawn shops and gimcrack hotels that give way to rowhouses fronted with plaster statuary, until at last the journey comes to an end at the sun-­beaten waterfront of Long Beach, a haven for cops and firefighters looking to blow off summer steam, where you pay for access to the sand amid a throng of rented umbrellas and creatine-­engorged pectorals, all of which vanish at sundown into a surfeit of bwomp-­bwomping nightclubs along the strip.

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