Bad-tempered tweets, dashed off in seconds, elicit bad-tempered responses, creating a culture of vitriol.
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Tempered expectations There were tempered expectations heading into Trump's visit for major breakthroughs on trade or other matters.
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If the chocolate is tempered, a knife tip dipped into tempered chocolate will set with a nice shine after 60 seconds in the refrigerator.
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"I should be a little bit more tempered," he said.
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On the other hand, Renault tempered sector gains, falling 2.3%.
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Yet at the same time Nantong has tempered its ambitions.
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That report tempered investors' expectations of a Fed rate cut.
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This finally tempered the sword, and it magically caught fire.
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Analysts did not seem too concerned about the tempered guidance.
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There's a certain faith in rationality, tempered by some humility.
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But their new found hope should be tempered with caution.
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But management's outlook for loan growth has nonetheless been tempered.
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His national security team seems to have tempered this policy.
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He was tempered, measured and forceful with a friendly demeanor.
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But that history hasn't tempered the criticism from GOP conservatives.
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It has to be tempered with all of the evidence.
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Mr. Bush tempered his own ambition with empathy and dignity.
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"He is impressively levelheaded and even tempered," Mr. Torres said.
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But when has Trump ever played the tempered pacifist before?
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The hope some people felt was tempered by those realities.
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Obama and Ms. Abrams by offering optimism tempered with realism.
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But seemingly against the odds, Beijing has tempered its approach.
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But that win has been tempered by some bad losses.
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But the optimism is tempered by a sense of deliberation.
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Its agonies are tempered, its regrets hushed, its restraint powerful.
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That was perhaps when Federer's tempered expectations helped him most.
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But some analysts have tempered expectations for a widespread conflict.
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However, lingering worries over the coronavirus tempered sentiment on Thursday.
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Yet that has not tempered the hype around the I.P.O.s.
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With our own kids, the love was tempered by responsibility.
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But Alphabet's outlook is tempered by cost concerns, and Amazon.
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The preliminary data are encouraging, but enthusiasm must be tempered.
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Mr. Obama insisted that in private conversations, Republican bluster was tempered.
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But although tempered, the soul of the noni cannot be banished.
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Equity bullishness is being tempered, however, by rising global bond yields.
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The layoffs were tempered by a technical triumph for the company.
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They were all trying to appear even-tempered, adult, and presidential.
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But pricing was tempered last quarter due to competition among insurers.
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He hopes to return this weekend, though his expectations are tempered.
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Losses for gold stocks were tempered by gains for fertilizer companies.
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Authorities said he was "even-tempered" and "cooperative" during the arrest.
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Rebar is that tempered steel often seen holding together concrete structures.
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They're more likely to be jostled around and generally tempered with.
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Gold tempered recent gains ahead of the Federal Reserve statement Wednesday.
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Baltimore's win was tempered by an injury to guard Alex Lewis.
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Gunn plays Naomi with surgical precision, even-tempered and in control.
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Or Archie Bunker, American television's bad-tempered bigot from the 1970s?
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A drop in oil prices, however, tempered the broader market gains.
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Democratic optimism is tempered by Arizona's long history of voting Republican.
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It had to be tempered even by the Russian President himself.
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Espousing a foreign policy "tempered by realism," Mr. Trump portrayed Mrs.
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But that hasn't tempered their sky-high support for the president.
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The swimmer's father Park In-ho said his joy was tempered.
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Trump tempered his response to some degree in the follow-up.
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He has a solid reputation for even-tempered and professional judgment.
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He's violent, short-tempered, a sore loser, and not exactly honest.
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His criticism of the people he serves is tempered but vigorous.
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The video shows a softer side of the hot-tempered chef.
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On this score, advocates for the disappeared have tempered their hopes.
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But this condiment's heat is tempered by sweetly smoky fried onions.
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It has been that sort of evening: fractious and bad-tempered.
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The latest scandal in Austria shows that extremists can't be tempered.
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Suburban Democrats have already tempered some of the more progressive proposals.
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NZXT H200 Mini-ITX PC Gaming Case with Tempered Glass Panel
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That criticism has been tempered, but there are still many doubters.
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They were in awe, albeit tempered by a distrust of Arafat.
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The rise has been tempered by comments from central bank officials.
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It would also be easier if regulators tempered their emissions expectations.
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But the encouraging turnout was tempered by concerns about the process.
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He got really short-tempered, probably resentful about what had happened.
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My fear, however, was tempered by the protection of my anonymity.
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None of this history seems to have tempered Mr. Trump's enthusiasm.
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Some have tempered their critiques in hopes of achieving policy accomplishments.
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S. trade conflict, although U.S. President Donald Trump tempered market expectations.
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Paired, they illustrate the value of dreams, tempered with grounded pragmatism.
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The results for Clinton are more tempered than you might suspect.
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Yet he was known to be quick-tempered and a brooder.
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Our democracy is based on majority rule tempered by minority rights.
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The discussion became ill-tempered and heated; Jones eventually walked out.
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Later, she told me the program had already tempered her expectations.
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Dany's worst impulses are luckily tempered by an entourage that she trusts.
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He was also famously short tempered, opinionated and hard to work with.
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|
Gains were tempered by falls in Australia's largest wealth manager AMP Ltd.
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Its moves were also tempered by a modest firming of the dollar.
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"After today, I tend to think I'm a tempered Republican," Beatty said.
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Even the celebrations in Puebla are much more tempered and family oriented.
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In swing states and districts, Democrats are calling for more tempered reforms.
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If we don't have that, earnings are going to be tempered some.
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|
Some of their reaction to Oprah was tempered because they view Sen.
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Mr Trump's love of coal, however, may be tempered by market forces.
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|
In the meantime, euphoria over Ms Rousseff's exit is tempered with caution.
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|
Huawei, for one, seems to have tempered its expectations around the category.
|
|
All the excitement around this announcement needs to be somewhat tempered, however.
|
|
Her on-screen charisma is tempered by a mischievous sense of humor.
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|
"Expectations need to be tempered about what they can do," Augelli said.
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|
However, political realities have tempered expectations for changes to the tax system.
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|
Editorials in Chinese state-run media were tempered with notes of caution.
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|
Even at its darkest, her comedy is tempered with a physical silliness.
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The attorney general has discretion, but it is tempered by the law.
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|
Some analysts, however, believe sales growth expectations this year could be tempered.
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|
Those expectations are tempered by the unclear status of Julio Jones's health.
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"This is a moderate, tempered approach that we are taking," he said.
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|
Indulging in whiskey-smoked s'mores is tempered by plenty of boring salads.
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|
But gains were tempered with equities at record highs and valuations elevated.
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|
He tempered Hetfield's angst and channeled those feelings down a creative route.
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|
The spicy ranch added a nice creamy kick and tempered my disappointment.
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|
Even then her '60s idealism was well tempered by a Niebuhrian realism.
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|
On Wednesday, he was even-tempered on a conference call with analysts.
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|
But he might listen to, and be tempered by, a responsible hawk.
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|
Others have tempered their criticism somewhat for fear of losing his seat.
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|
Still, he remains calm and sweet-tempered as the crowd presses in.
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|
These actions might make for more boring news and more tempered enthusiasm.
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|
They fell only after leaders tempered their rhetoric about resurrecting the lira.
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|
His white-hot virtuosity is tempered by coolheaded thinking and lyrical sensitivity.
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|
Patient, and well tempered, he also possesses the signal virtue of punctuality.
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|
The Senate Finance Committee chairman's comments briefly tempered U.S. stock market sentiment.
|
|
His subject matter was tempered slightly, but his sonic approach changed drastically.
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|
My self-centeredness is usually tempered with happiness for my pals, though.
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|
While his approach is far more tempered than that of Massachusetts Sen.
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Moving into the White House appears not to have tempered that anxiety.
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|
Mr. Trump's election hasn't tempered his tongue when it comes to adversaries.
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|
Would his first speech to the international body be tempered and diplomatic?
|
|
Jinyu stoic and cool-tempered, the perfect foil to Haruko's mischievous personality.
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|
What's next: Protesters' jubilation has been tempered by uncertainty about the future.
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|
But weaker retail sales tempered those fears — at least for equity investors.
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|
Everywhere you go, foul-tempered dudes are there to ruin your fun.
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|
The bakers are tasked with creating chocolate centerpieces using tempered and white chocolate.
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|
Still, predictions of de Blasio's imminent unraveling should be tempered -- as history suggests.
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|
She watched us warily, her usual boundless energy tempered by bleary-eyed lethargy.
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|
"I'm getting very ill-tempered over this," the South Carolina senator told reporters.
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|
And Mnuchin was involved in a bad-tempered spat with California Democratic Rep.
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He&aposs been tempered, and he&aposs stepped in when he needed to.
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And every time he earns a victory, it's tempered by that dark realization.
|
|
With expectations tempered, backup quarterback Nick Foles was tapped to lead the team.
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|
Some economists tempered their views even further following the dismal performance in 2016.
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|
But stubbornness can turn into pigheadedness if it is not tempered by realism.
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|
But on the whole, Shias have tempered their talk of extra-worldly deliverance.
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|
Yields were tempered by concerns that wage growth may fall short of expectations.
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|
Canada's foray into legal cannabis last year was intentionally slow, methodical and tempered.
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|
Optimism, however, has been tempered by concerns about the nature of the revival.
|
|
This happy revelation must be tempered by thoughts of what might have been.
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|
However, Miami's win was tempered by a back injury suffered by DeVante Parker.
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|
Those expectations were tempered by a closely-watched U.S. labor report on Friday.
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|
A former EPA scientist offered a more tempered, though no less disappointed, response.
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|
Gains were tempered by investor caution ahead of Donald Trump's inauguration on Friday.
|
|
Temperatures here are usually tempered by the cooler air over the Pacific Ocean.
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It will come in four colours: Matte Black, Silver, Tempered Blue and Copper.
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It is available in four colours Matte Black, Silver, Tempered Blue and Copper.
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But in Indonesia, the response to the man's arrest was far more tempered.
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|
They remind me of the tempered scares and monsters of days long past.
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My jubilation was tempered by the difficult circumstances with which I currently contend.
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Conversely, the ratings are tempered by high leverage, as well as industry cyclicality.
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The Bannermans' signature style satisfies the British desire for grandness tempered by whimsy.
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|
As save-the-whales rhetoric rose up around him, he grew bad tempered.
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|
He has tempered warnings to protesters with expressions of sympathy for their plight.
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|
L. Some big names have also tempered their sell recommendations on UK equities.
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|
The rush was tempered by an Internal Revenue Service advisory issued on Dec.
|
|
I don't wish her cheerful friends, a bustling hearth, a sweet-tempered housemaid.
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"My expectations have tempered a little bit because I haven't played," he said.
|
|
A tempered glass staircase from the attic leads to another treasure, an altana.
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|
Mr. Ganim's triumph last year was quickly tempered by the city's financial reality.
|
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The stock tempered gains by the overall energy group, which climbed 252 percent.
|
|
Complex, flawed Katniss, with her bow and her braid and her tempered fury.
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Evaggelia, her 59-year-old, fiery-tempered madam, immediately went into her pitch.
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The tempered start to the year resulted in a reduced outlook for 2019.
|
|
Also: Tesla and Panasonic have tempered expansion plans for their huge battery factory.
|
|
But Trump's malevolence has been tempered by incompetence, to quote Lawfare's Benjamin Wittes.
|
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If the products don't survive this tempered cooling, they won't survive everyday use.
|
|
Following this week's revelations, though, the bullish mood on Wall Street has tempered.
|
|
China's tempered approach is born, in part, out of a position of weakness.
|
|
Sarah grows up, it seems, relatively normally after that, with the surveillance tempered.
|
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Nesbit said that for the hot-tempered Thaw, it was a "mild" tantrum.
|
|
Moran had tempered Krytzer's expectations as he headed into the room with Lisa.
|
|
The amFilm Tempered Glass screen protector protects the display from dings and bumps.
|
|
A drop in the jobless rate tempered market expectations of a rate cut.
|
|
Investor sentiment was also boosted as fears of rapidly rising inflation were tempered.
|
|
He has a cocky, loyal, hot-tempered friend (the agile, rascally Mikey Ruiz).
|
|
The former showed up last night, appearing at times restrained, aspirational, and tempered.
|
|
Their urgency, though, was tempered by a degree of sentimentality, verging on nostalgia.
|
|
Contributing Opinion Writer We're a hot mess, this bad-tempered country of ours.
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Still, expectations are not so tempered where the downturn is most keenly felt.
|
|
Vesper Vineyards makes this fruity, smoky, well-balanced carignan tempered by citrus highlights.
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|
I tempered my habit of turning to my phone at every possible moment.
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|
The scale is made of tempered glass and is approximately 11.8-inches square.
|
|
But enthusiasm should be tempered that reducing opioid deaths is one of them.
|
|
Maybe my tempered expectations were partly why the concert made a profound impression.
|
|
Recent comments have tempered expectations about the speed of the increase in production, though.
|
|
Merkel's office was more tempered, pledging to work closely with the new US president.
|
|
And executives at the company tempered expectations that Snap will commit to either route.
|
|
But he was more tempered during an interview on NBC's "Today" show in April.
|
|
Nevertheless, he expressed some tempered optimism in other areas like tax and infrastructure reforms.
|
|
Auto-makers and parts manufacturers also tempered broad gains as they slid 0.4 percent.
|
|
My nature is serious, righteous and just, And tempered with the love of Christ.
|
|
In an ideal political environment, the narcissism is tempered and the worst narcissists foiled.
|
|
That will need more evidence than just another hot-tempered tweet from the President.
|
|
And Lloyd Mayor and Lauren Newman tempered tautness with a loosening of the joints.
|
|
As an ill-tempered election in June draws near, however, that proviso is worrying.
|
|
Its even-tempered, kind-hearted judge, Berry, exited forever, leaving fans in the dust.
|
|
It was a tempered move; Castro still maintained tight control over life in Cuba.
|
|
Even there, though, interest in the technology was tempered by concerns over Facebook's role.
|
|
Humanity's love of speed needs to be tempered by considerations of safety and pollution.
|
|
A stronger-than-expected June jobs report tempered expectations for a more aggressive easing.
|
|
So it shouldn't surprise us that even Balthus's simple still life is darkly tempered.
|
|
With these restrictions, department stores have still tried to evolve, in a tempered way.
|
|
Perhaps the spiritual experiences he has had in the dream state tempered his ambition.
|
|
Apple's warning tempered expectations so effectively that its actual earnings report was well-received.
|
|
Promises of future successes are inevitably tempered with something approaching apology for the hype.
|
|
Isn't it the officer who should be calm, steady, even tempered, composed and courteous?
|
|
County prosecutor Jeffrey Getting said the alleged gunman was "even-tempered" during his arrest.
|
|
Perhaps Trump's connection to the sport tempered one luchador's message to the GOP nominee.
|
|
After the two failed joint ventures, Pemex has tempered its expectations for the year.
|
|
He can be fun but also short-tempered and demanding, the former aide said.
|
|
Collins called Gettleman a "liar" earlier this offseason and hasn't tempered his emotions since.
|
|
He is said, by acquaintances, to be generally even tempered and rarely seems ruffled.
|
|
The celebration was tempered this year by reminders of the massacre in Orlando, Fla.
|
|
But Zervos suggested that the impact on the stock markets may be more tempered.
|
|
The president and his top advisers have tempered public expectations about the outcome (CNBC).
|
|
Kovacs tempered hopeful sentiment by reiterating that UBS was still "neutral" on South Africa.
|
|
Workers need their firms to be profitable, and that recognition has always tempered demands.
|
|
Thursday's Aries moon is hot-headed and short-tempered, so choose your words wisely.
|
|
But fears of another global economic slowdown have tempered expectations for further tightening there.
|
|
In this way, mercy tempered justice, to justify importing kingly clemency into the republic.
|
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We've asked whether he's so hot-tempered that his election would risk nuclear war.
|
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Alone, this mixture of lemon tempered by butter and sugar is good but incomplete.
|
|
Portents of destruction are tempered by images of desire, like lesbian couples making love.
|
|
The rebound was tempered somewhat by a slide in crude oil and energy stocks.
|
|
But it has already tempered expectations about how much money its I.P.O. will raise.
|
|
Has playing "The Well-Tempered Clavier" in your ensemble affected your take on Beethoven?
|
|
It's so tempered, so soothing, that you barely notice it's meant to be desperate.
|
|
Still, when I met Russell recently, his optimism was tempered by previous electoral disappointments.
|
|
For a strong, protective screen protector, we recommend the amFilm Tempered Glass Screen Protector.
|
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The Rockies' eagerness for Reyes's return may well be tempered by Story's fast start.
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Barr isn't alone in alluding to a more tempered report than some might want.
|
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Iran's reaction to Solemani was tempered enough to not provoke Trump but save face.
|
|
A weakening of Irma over the United States also tempered demand for safer assets.
|
|
Revisiting it at the Lyceum, after a restful weekend, my responses were more tempered.
|
|
"I'm very comfortable with risk that is tempered," Barton told CNN Business' Rachel Crane.
|
|
After more than three decades in prison, Dailey seemed even-tempered, agreeable, even acquiescent.
|
|
The trade war with America seems to have tempered hiring, especially in export industries.
|
|
But Mr. Hader's dialed-down take reflects the movie's tempered refinement of the original.
|
|
"Watching the process has meant that my objections are now … tempered," she said, temperately.
|
|
What's next: Protesters' jubilation has been tempered by a wary uncertainty about the future.
|
|
After a while I poured the tempered white chocolate over them and sprinkled pistachios.
|
|
It is not an ideology that can be challenged with facts or tempered with reason.
|
|
But their optimism is tempered by their desire for something more tangible than public sentiment.
|
|
If the studio had tempered expectations ahead of release, it might have lessened the backlash.
|
|
But then the dot com crash and the September 11 attacks tempered optimism and funding.
|
|
I may even finally get started on Far Cry 5, with my expectations fully tempered.
|
|
The tiles themselves are made with tempered glass to protect the underlying panels from damage.
|
|
The corps of beat writers covering the Philadelphia Eagles is massive, persistent, and ill-tempered.
|
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The flotation has tempered the black market and revived foreign currency flows via the banks.
|
|
Any gains may be tempered by an escalation in the U.S.-China trade war, however.
|
|
Collin's best friend is a fast-talking hustler, a short-tempered shit-starter, and white.
|
|
Christie and Kasich can be foul-tempered to subordinates, political colleagues and the public alike.
|
|
It recomposed J.S. Bach's The Well-Tempered Clavier into procedural poetry, and then into music.
|
|
A strong June jobs report released Friday tempered expectations for multiple rate cuts this year.
|
|
However, expectations for a more aggressive cut were tempered by the jobs data released Friday.
|
|
Min-seo is a short tempered delinquent of sorts, who is working through a lot.
|
|
Yet, the dollar's Fed-driven downside is being tempered by policy easings in other countries.
|
|
When a hockey player scores on an opponent's empty net, there's typically a tempered celebration.
|
|
The budding actor portrayed hot-tempered Action, one of the Jets, in the stage production.
|
|
Despite Uber's forecast and more tempered tone, the company is pushing ahead on autonomous vehicles.
|
|
Which means it will need to be tempered by...yes, killing the woman he loves.
|
|
Call it cynicism, call it tempered expectations after more than 15 years in the business.
|
|
The proposed cuts are a starting point in negotiations with Congress, and could be tempered.
|
|
The fall in yields, however, was somewhat tempered by reports of U.S. labor market tightening.
|
|
He went on to note how soda-lime glass is tempered to improve its strength.
|
|
Black people have been screwed over enough by society that we're already tempered for this.
|
|
This gold serving cart is equipped with two tempered glass shelves and three bottle rings.
|
|
Wells Fargo shares, however, slipped 3.0% as the bank tempered its outlook for cutting costs.
|
|
It's also available in four colours: Silver White, Matte Black, Tempered Blue and Copper White.
|
|
But its rally was tempered by Friday's weaker-than-expected housing and consumer sentiment data.
|
|
Wells Fargo shares, however, slipped 3.1% as the bank tempered its outlook for cutting costs.
|
|
Gains were tempered by a drop in equity indexes, which weakened sentiment on oil markets.
|
|
However, the decision tempered investor fears of a rapid increase in interest rates, bankers said.
|
|
But the gains were tempered by a drop in energy and late-losses in techs.
|
|
Although relations with Bosnia and Croatia are sometimes bad-tempered, no serious ructions are likely.
|
|
Trump desperately needs tempered and measured voices around him, Bolton is neither of those things.
|
|
It's a surprise to many observers that the laconic and even-tempered Straus has persevered.
|
|
He's tempered some of the voltage from the language he used in his earlier books.
|
|
"He was very intelligent, very even tempered and reasoned," Stephen Huddleston told the Courier-Journal.
|
|
Or, you can be the even-tempered professional who suppresses the 'sky is falling' dynamic.
|
|
But he's also tempered expectations for what he might be able to do stop it.
|
|
"A well-tempered, normal, relatively slow-growth environment is the best for us," he said.
|
|
Back in 2013, residents interviewed in Daku described the colonel as hot tempered and loudmouthed.
|
|
After hitting record high prices last year, wool demand had tempered before stabilizing mid-year.
|
|
But the bitumen needs to be tempered with polymers to keep it durable and flexible.
|
|
While slightly higher than expected, its financials were met with a tempered reaction from investors.
|
|
The president and administration officials have since tempered their language surrounding the withdrawal from Syria.
|
|
McDermott had a long history of quick-tempered violence and a huge taste for gambling.
|
|
Timely and cordial in certain contexts, Reid is equally foul-tempered and confrontational in others.
|
|
In a Trump Administration, our actions in the Middle East will be tempered by realism.
|
|
Mr. Khashoggi was regarded as low key and even-tempered by those who knew him.
|
|
But even that improvement is tempered by the program's significant price tag, said Mr. Winters.
|
|
Beautiful, bad-tempered, scandal-prone, she makes for unfailingly good copy, and heaps of it.
|
|
For now, Lynn has tempered her ambition about climbing to the top of her profession.
|
|
An older, wiser Woods returned last year from his fourth back operation with tempered expectations.
|
|
Woods may have tempered his expectations at the start of the week, but not anymore.
|
|
When we delve into "The Well-Tempered Clavier," we're a little closer to his workshop.
|
|
"Hers is a survivor's sensibility," he said of Ms. Yamauchi, "its disillusionment tempered by tenacity."
|
|
Given how tempered and loving the guardians are, the cat's fate never seems in doubt.
|
|
Your behavior is fueling an unhelpful perception of your leadership — thin-skinned and short-tempered.
|
|
But hopes for détente have been tempered by deep skepticism over the North's sudden overtures.
|
|
The automaker acknowledged that tempered glass, which is used in side windows, was less expensive.
|
|
And I can't hear them because they're on the other side of the tempered glass.
|
|
Sales in the domestic market are projected to slide at a tempered pace in 2020.
|
|
The celebrations were tempered, though, by the way that Rutte had pandered to the right.
|
|
However, China, the world's largest importer of oil, has tempered expectations for a trade resolution.
|
|
The actress tempered her voluminous frock with a flashy, structured bun wrapped in French braids.
|
|
At least rates tempered for the time being, and everything is so oversensitive right now.
|
|
" But, she added, "Since I left the trading floor I have tempered my colorful language.
|
|
" But, she added, "Since I left the trading floor I have tempered my colorful language.
|
|
His voice had an easy sweetness to it, tempered with just a touch of reluctance.
|
|
But Xie noted recent comments from PBOC Governor Yi Gang had tempered market expectations somewhat.
|
|
His grandiosity exerted a paradoxical magnetism, tempered as it was by an easygoing self-deprecation.
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The famously hot-tempered Tortorella laughed as he recalled watching the game-winning goal develop.
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For those who chase severe storms the thrill of the chase is tempered by danger.
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Wall Street has also tempered its view on the high-flying stock in recent months.
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Robert E. Murray, an outspoken mining executive, recently suggested tempered expectations for a coal rebound.
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In her testimony before the committee, she was calm, even-tempered and at times deferential.
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While that growth tempered slightly in 2017, the fervor for quirky, silly games has not.
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Since then, more thorough research on kava's effects has tempered some of the initial alarm.
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If a husband was moody and disinterested, the new person is even-tempered and attentive.
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Today, though, that anger has tempered and voters "are much more discerning," Mr. Roy said.
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But protesters' jubilation was tempered by uncertainty about what might replace Mr. al-Bashir, 75.
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Copper and other metals fell as U.S. President Donald Trump tempered optimism that a China-U.
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The couple said they went forward with the wedding with tempered enthusiasm because of the experience.
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Put tempered glass on the display so that it feels horrible every time you touch it.
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Trader Tim Seymour said the relatively tempered move in Toyota Motor was "rational" for the market.
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In addition to more tempered store growth, Starbucks also identified weaknesses in its in-cafe operations.
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I'd worked hard in college, but as an old millennial, the expectations for labor were tempered.
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I think ambition can be tempered as you see the limits of what your peers achieve.
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The glass must have been tempered or bulletproof, though, because he was getting nowhere with it.
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I'd steer clear of the absurd $50 tempered glass screen protector for the 2 XL, though.
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The lessons of the Libya experience have not tempered her more aggressive approach to international crises.
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In simple terms, that means when the glass is more tempered, it often scratches more easily.
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Let's turn America's nukes over to a bad-tempered asshole with no knowledge of foreign policy.
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Business groups offered tempered praise of the announcement, and the market opened slightly higher on Monday.
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Stronger-than-expected payroll data at the end of last week tempered market expectations of cuts.
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The three-way fight on the right has imprinted an ill-tempered character on the campaign.
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Slightly tempered ambition might be no bad thing for a president with a tendency to hubris.
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According to Tadych's co-workers, he is a short-tempered and angry person capable of murder.
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Those have largely been tempered by relatively benign inflation in other key commodities costs, he said.
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The CSRC noted that the circuit breaker helped protect stockholders from bigger losses and tempered nerves.
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The euro's rally was tempered later after some ECB officials voiced worries about the currency's strength.
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A turbulent economic environment and sliding profits for big banks have not tempered one analyst's expectations.
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However, crude gave up most of its gains as expectations for production cuts were tempered. —CNBC.
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The euro's rally was tempered later as some ECB officials voiced worries about the currency's strength.
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Those victories are of course tempered with the very real issues that face the LGBT community.
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But in 1999, the government began banning known troublemakers from stadiums, which tempered fan violence noticeably.
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Gains in soybeans, however, were tempered by a lack of confirmation of any fresh export deals.
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However, gains in soybeans were tempered by a lack of confirmation of any fresh export deals.
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Often the balance of power is contested in an ill-tempered battle between principals and police.
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Merkel -- who is running for her fourth term as Chancellor -- hasn't tempered her tone since then.
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That appears to be the case now, days after the Federal Reserve tempered U.S. growth forecast.
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"Investor sentiment could become more tempered amid increasing visibility into AMD share gain momentum," Rakers said.
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Obama has always preferred tempered rhetoric, almost always opting to lower the temperature rather raise it.
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But the existing sanctions are tempered by the relatively weak economic connections between our two countries.
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"He wasn't a troublemaker, but he was short-tempered," Ko told the Washington Post last year.
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That tempered expectations for a spate of interest rate increases this year by the Federal Reserve.
|
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The latter has already, wisely, tempered its expectations, having earlier targeted a much larger mooted offer.
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That said, falls in the currency might be tempered by intervention in the foreign exchange market.
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But four years ago, it announced $1 billion in cost cuts as it tempered those ambitions.
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South Africa's first two postapartheid presidents, Mbeki and Mandela, were personally virtuous, calm-tempered international darlings.
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He has since tempered those comments to state that the extremist group is "mostly" wiped out.
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Whatever confidence exists that such dangerous interactions could easily be halted also needs to be tempered.
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Hopes of an upturn in U.S. wheat exports have been tempered and the Black Sea region.
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They are clear sheets of tempered glass that stick directly on top of your iPhone's screen.
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But rhetoric had tempered in recent days, with Secretary of State Rex TillersonRex Wayne TillersonState Dept.
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Both GOP senators and the White House have tempered their criticisms of Moore in recent weeks.
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The batch furnace could belch fire out of its chimney, like an ill-tempered whiskey drinker.
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"The entire process went smoothly, and family members were even-tempered," the county government announced afterward.
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Their joy was tempered by shock at the men's condition: They were gaunt and hollow-eyed.
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Mr. Céspedes attempted to befriend Lolita, Mr. Corbé's large, ill-tempered cat, but was largely unsuccessful.
|
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One recent stop was Yale, where they tempered their robust debate by playfully wielding boxing gloves.
|
|
Those impulsive goodbyes, however, were engineered by George Steinbrenner, not his more even-tempered son, Hal.
|
|
Dick's Sporting Goods said Tuesday it has tempered its full-year outlook due to COVID-19.
|
|
" Not Neal Gamby, the nasty-tempered, aggressively striving school administrator he now plays in "Vice Principals.
|
|
In the 1920s, a "bearcat" referred to a hot-tempered woman with a lot of spirit.
|
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The gains were tempered by a sharp fall in oil prices that weighed on energy shares.
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Sunday's achievement, however impressive, is certain to be tempered by widespread doping scandals in distance running.
|
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Tottenham Hotspur's South Korean striker Son Heung-min said it had been a bad-tempered match.
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The results are historic in scale, a fact tempered by their coming instantly after historic declines.
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Multipurpose and made of tempered glass, they can be neatly stacked and suit a tight budget.
|
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On Thursday, some of the administration's harshest critics on vaping offered tempered praise for the announcement.
|
|
This immense and incredibly long-term task requires a very forward-looking perspective tempered by humility.
|
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Dr. Wang's pride in what she accomplished was tempered by what she and her family endured.
|
|
The fall of Michael Flynn and the prospect of congressional hearings, though, have tempered the enthusiasm.
|
|
In the outside world, no one really understood me, or the value of tempered blue screws.
|
|
So when Mr. Rivlin offered his annual New Year's message on Thursday, his optimism was tempered.
|
|
However, sparse details on his plans have tempered the rally and have raised concerns on valuations.
|
|
Our anxiety was tempered only by the fact that our small son had already fallen asleep.
|
|
Any concession to Mr. Sisi by Mr. Trump could, however, be tempered by resistance from Congress.
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I praised the same things I've praised above but offered tempered criticism about his trans jokes.
|
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But the gain will be tempered by a 7877 percent cut in production of 2777 widebodies.
|
|
The shift has, for months, become evident, in Mr. de Blasio's more tempered approach to Gov.
|
|
Maybe the total velocity of ambition supporting the exhibition was tempered because of the subject matter?
|
|
Those expectations may be tempered because the Fed uses rate hikes to contain gains in inflation.
|
|
On Wednesday, Trump's top economic advisor Larry Kudlow tempered expectations about progress at the G-20 summit.
|
|
But acceleration in employment growth likely was tempered by Hurricane Michael, which struck Florida in mid-October.
|
|
Beto-mania might be somewhat tempered by a more sober assessment of what actually happened in Texas.
|
|
More from Tonic: I wondered if my own depression could be tempered if I expressed it creatively.
|
|
But his conviction is tempered with patience that such changes will only come over the longer term.
|
|
The handset comes in a choice of four colors: Polished Blue, Polished Copper, Tempered Blue and Steel.
|
|
The buzzy pop punk remains but is now tempered with a more rounded approach to pop music.
|
|
But acceleration in employment growth likely was tempered by Hurricane Michael, which struck Florida in mid-October.
|
|
The effects of home-field advantage might be more tempered in baseball's postseason compared to other sports.
|
|
With the dollar supported by market expectations of aggressive rate cuts tempered, most emerging-market currencies fell.
|
|
Futures gains, however, were tempered stiff competition in export markets that has limited sales of U.S. supplies.
|
|
Clinton has offered a more tempered approach, saying she would seek to re-evaluate NAFTA if elected.
|
|
By the third day, she tends to be on the verge of a tempered chocolate-induced breakdown.
|
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That comment sparked attacks from the left, but the plan Biden announced Tuesday has tempered that criticism.
|
|
But with an aluminum base and tempered frosted glass top, its looks match its advanced functionality.[Withings]
|
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The claim has sparked a debate among economists that is as ill-tempered as it is geeky.
|
|
In the latest poll, bullishness was tempered on rising global bond yields and expectations for increased volatility.
|
|
Strangely, when I would relay even the most horrific details, the reaction by juries was always tempered.
|
|
However, a 2.5 percent decline in oil prices tempered the gains from a rise in bank stocks.
|
|
But they may also be tempered by the grief of parents whose daughters are never coming home.
|
|
Its safety-tempered glass shelves are adorned with geometric silkscreen patterns for an added touch of personality.
|
|
Trump was ill-tempered the whole night, constantly interrupting not just Clinton but also moderator Martha Raddatz.
|
|
It's a sincere stance, reflective of his own inquisitive and tempered optimism towards the world around him.
|
|
Question him about controversial topics and his answers come quickly, but always tempered by a Midwestern sincerity.
|
|
But the rush of excitement was quickly tempered by the realization of what of was to come.
|
|
But Brown believes this time, the self-belief of Jill Ellis's team will be a little tempered.
|
|
A 0.6 percent fall in prices of oil, a key Russian export, tempered gains among local equities.
|
|
So the customer decided to "test" the durability of his tempered glass by shooting it with a .
|
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Moments of individual brilliance by players were quickly forgotten amid bad-tempered clashes and avoidable refereeing controversies.
|
|
That has seemingly tempered demand for its existing phones, which means its core growth engine is stalling.
|
|
Downturns would be tempered by an expectation of protracted stimulus later on to make up lost ground.
|
|
It comes in white or black, and its surface is made of a high-strength, tempered glass.
|
|
Yet such praise has to be tempered by the fact that Trump's newfound normality is only relative.
|
|
Thanks to Instagram, Snapchat, and the good ol' net, fashion month FOMO has tempered in recent seasons.
|
|
U.S. corn prices have been tempered in recent years thanks to expanding competition from other producing countries.
|
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That boosted Chinese equities and tempered some of the gloom around Beijing's bitter trade fight with Washington.
|
|
The administration has since tempered its language on the pullout, and placed conditions on a full withdrawal.
|
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These collage paintings conjure the gestural explosiveness of Abstract Expressionism tempered by geometric rhythms and graceful nuances.
|
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Rich tempered passion's eruptions with reason, rhetoric, severity and a dislike for everything slack, sybaritic and exclusionary.
|
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Enthusiasm for the group was tempered by a 2.7% decline in Nvidia shares following the chipmaker's report.
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Is your sympathy at all tempered by the fact that such an enormous bottle of rosé exists?
|
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To evoke the quality of 19th-century engravings, Huston tempered his Technicolor images with a monochromatic overlay.
|
|
But risk appetite had tempered by Monday with Asian stocks sinking on uncertainty around the Sino-U.
|
|
He had become grumpy and short-tempered, acting as if life had dealt him a bad hand.
|
|
The grand ambitions tempered or blocked by recession and time, an inflexible Congress and a man's aloofness.
|
|
Through graduated escalation, occasionally tempered with sugar-coated placation, Pyongyang will compel the South to pay up.
|
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Avoid them: Switch from non-stick cookware to ceramic coated, tempered glass, cast iron, or stainless steel.
|
|
But the story, in which a hot-tempered runaway largely builds character through fight training, is generic.
|
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The two opposing forces are portrayed musically by untempered naturally-occurring-overtones music, and tempered-tuning music.
|
|
Six-foot-13 and still lithe and sinewy, he speaks with a calm and even-tempered voice.
|
|
Investments in "new initiatives," which include bike sharing and car-hailing, have "tempered" the firm's rising profitability.
|
|
But also I think your perspective is tempered with a clarity maybe that you didn't have before.
|
|
In many ways, it's reassuring to know that a malevolent administration's actions will be tempered by incompetence.
|
|
It needed nothing, though a slather of perfectly tempered cultured butter made it that much more magnificent.
|
|
Users like the tempered glass lids for checking on food and the lids' holes for venting steam.
|
|
The agency also tempered its outlook for 2018, knocking its WTI forecast down to $49.58 from $53.61.
|
|
Ingratitude leaves us in a state of perpetual discontent, short-tempered, rarely at peace, rarely at rest.
|
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Their joy was soon tempered by news that the documents would most likely be manufactured in France.
|
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The action obviously tempered the behavior of Negro American athletes who were involved in victory ceremonies today.
|
|
The salt was frank, barely tempered by a douse of kecap manis, the Indonesian sweet soy sauce.
|
|
"Trump has the most to gain by appearing presidential and even-tempered," said a New Hampshire Republican.
|
|
The financial success has been tempered in recent years by a series of controversies inside the company.
|
|
Any acquisition may be tempered by current valuations, particularly since it would be an all-cash transaction.
|
|
It's simply experience accumulated pleasurably, tempered with a recognition that complexities and wisdom differ from insistent opinions.
|
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In recent days, Trump has tempered his pro-Russia comments and even criticized its actions in Ukraine.
|
|
To Garner's satisfaction, the bears were ostensibly shaken out — albeit messily — and the bulls' euphoria was tempered.
|
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Well-tempered chocolate will look shiny, and you'll hear a snap when you break off a piece.
|
|
The U.S. seems to have tempered down the U.N. procedures that they were going to put in.
|
|
While umpires still get an earful from M.L.B. managers, technology has tempered the days of genuine contempt.
|
|
Initially, Rozinisa was ecstatic to see this part of the record, but she quickly tempered her expectations.
|
|
That set up a brief but pointed clash of dueling ideologies: Biden's tempered and institutional incrementalism vs.
|
|
His disappointment at being priced out of Manhattan is tempered by his appreciation for his new neighborhood.
|
|
But those positive signs are tempered by some registered Republicans' hope for a challenger to the President.
|
|
The set includes a saucepan, casserole, stockpot, and two nonstick frypans, with tempered glass lids for each.
|
|
In some ways this cluelessness may be a good thing: malevolence may indeed be tempered by incompetence.
|
|
That could be tempered in future years, given the shifting public sentiment and urgency on climate change.
|
|
Now that she is actually training for those events, she has tempered her expectations, if only slightly.
|
|
The ill-tempered Basil Fawlty ran his hotel with a blend of disdain and obsequiousness toward guests.
|
|
"There are very tempered and cautious expectations on what may come out of this," the person said.
|
|
But the bleakness of this account is also tempered with the redemption that comes at the end.
|
|
One wonders if the war fever might have been tempered if key policy managers were in place.
|
|
But doing good must be tempered by always thinking about what can go wrong in the process.
|
|
He said his excitement over the settlement was tempered by the trauma he has endured for decades.
|
|
" A Scottish critic praised Aldridge's performance as Aaron as "remarkable for energy, tempered by dignity and discretion.
|
|
The blowback he will face is also tempered by the reality of what he is leaving, too.
|
|
Then there was the matter of replacing all of the floor-to-ceiling windows with tempered glass.
|
|
Its own risk-taking urges were tempered by a disastrous debt-laden foray into telecommunications in the 1990s.
|
|
With its tempered glass base and sustainably sourced cork sleeve, this portable mug is sleek, and it works.
|
|
S. trade standoff were tempered by disappointing results from U.S. chipmaker Nvidia Corp which slugged the tech sector.
|
|
"The initial optimism that Trump's truculence was bluster was tempered," said Michael Hewson, chief market analyst at CMC.
|
|
Along with the tempered estimates for rates, the committee nudged lower its projections both for GDP and inflation.
|
|
China has been generally tempered in its official response to Trump's comments, attributing much of it to inexperience.
|
|
The dollar briefly fell below 106 yen on the report, which tempered somewhat expectations of additional monetary easing.
|
|
Your "choices" will amount to paying for basic coverage, and will be tempered by what you can afford.
|
|
But evidence of rising output in the United States has tempered money managers' appetite to push prices higher.
|
|
Trump didn't take the bait when he was attacked, and remained even-tempered — no name-calling or insults.
|
|
There's still a bit of confusion when it comes to tempered glass screen protectors and the Galaxy S10.
|
|
Futures gains, however, were tempered by stiff competition in export markets that has limited sales of U.S. supplies.
|
|
Success, adroit public relations and strategic philanthropy have tempered these concerns, and political donations probably haven't hurt, either.
|
|
While the Fed's minutes tempered some dovish expectations, markets still broadly expect further rate cuts as growth slows.
|
|
The property market remains a source of potential risk, but several macro-prudential measures have tempered mortgage growth.
|
|
Sealed tight with beeswax, the wood is then tempered with oil, giving the instrument its distinctive rich sound.
|
|
In turn, India, because of the constant aggravation from Pakistan, has become bad-tempered with its smaller neighbours.
|
|
They weakened as investors bought the dollar after a Federal Reserve official tempered expectations for aggressive monetary easing.
|
|
But for others, those hopes have been tempered by the present state of the golf industry in Scotland.
|
|
Any rise in yields would be tempered by political uncertainty in the United States and Europe, analysts said.
|
|
More recently, however, McConnell has tempered his view, saying Alabama voters should determine whether Moore should be elected.
|
|
What Mr Sánchez mocked as "the primary of the right" stamped an ill-tempered character on the campaign.
|
|
The move tempered worries over slowing economic growth amid the ongoing trade war between the U.S. and China.
|
|
Bitcoin, which had hit a 17-month high just two weeks ago, has tempered some of today's losses.
|
|
But now that I knew who she really was, I hoped my anger would become tempered with compassion.
|
|
Unlike others in the administration, he is also unfailingly polite and even-tempered in his dealings with reporters.
|
|
I can be volatile and ill-tempered, and too often I express my opinions harshly and without tact.
|
|
Culp had tempered investor expectations for this year in previous comments, as he seeks to turn GE around.
|
|
The tempered and moderate approach of democrats has voters feeling some type of way, and it's not inspired.
|
|
Enthusiasm over some of the upbeat results was also tempered by the growing political uncertainty around the world.
|
|
Rising supplies tempered data from Asia that suggested the region's buoyant economy would ensure solid demand for energy.
|
|
In light of our tempered view and the strong share price run, we downgrade Comcast to Sector Perform.
|
|
Eric Trump has a more tempered persona, and, probably not by chance, a less active social media presence.
|
|
But those voices were tempered by conservatives who argue the agreement harms American jobs and punishes US taxpayers.
|
|
That's not to say that my rage over the incident is tempered; I'm just a disillusioned black dude.
|
|
Embarrassed, I deleted my ill-tempered post and resolved to learn more about activists' goals before speaking up.
|
|
Simmering tensions on the Korean peninsula have also tempered optimism among stock market investors, but not by much.
|
|
Affection for my wry, sweet-tempered father, meanwhile, left me immune to much of J.F.K.'s chivalric glamour.
|
|
"We are nervous that market turmoil could result in tempered Q2 guidance from corporate management teams," Bell said.
|
|
Other Republican presidential candidates have come out against Apple's decision this week, but in a more tempered manner.
|
|
Hillary Clinton responded in an even-tempered fashion after the latest attacks in the United States last weekend.
|
|
"She's supersmart, well prepared, even-tempered," said Mr. Sperling, who worked with Ms. Brainard in the Obama administration.
|
|
That tempered concerns following earlier reports that OPEC could ease the output limits at its June 22 meeting.
|
|
The absence of a detailed plan may be a sign that U.S. expectations are being tempered by reality.
|
|
But Ryan's optimism might be tempered going forward, because now committees have to hash out the actual details.
|
|
Notably more even-tempered than during his appearances in the primaries, Trump hinted at his more "presidential" demeanor.
|
|
Despite low levels of impaired loans, asset quality is tempered by large credit concentrations by name and industry.
|
|
Abbott expects Texas will have "robust" growth this year but it may be "tempered" due to trade issues.
|
|
"Your behavior is fueling an unhelpful perception of your leadership — thin-skinned and short-tempered," Mr. Munster wrote.
|
|
FDA Commissioner Stephen Hahn carefully tempered the President's remarks regarding his team's work to develop treatments for coronavirus.
|
|
During the 2016 campaign season he would disavow Trump's racist remarks, but he has now tempered his condemnations.
|
|
Rather, as Mr. Bruni observes, he is the "tempered pacifist," perhaps fearful of what will be publicly revealed.
|
|
Enthusiasm among conservatives for the chief justice has tempered since President George W. Bush nominated him in 2005.
|
|
A win for the quick-tempered Mr. Prabowo, however, could spell the return of a more autocratic government.
|
|
The Boulez and Xenakis have always been tempered with the softer voices of John Adams or Steve Reich.
|
|
It's essential that enthusiasm is tempered with the acknowledgement of how much progress has yet to be made.
|
|
It's "middle" in the way a middle-aged person is considered to be "middle": It's even-tempered, mature.
|
|
"I'm very comfortable with risk that is tempered," he said in an interview with CNN Business' Rachel Crane.
|
|
Mr. Madsen, above, a celebrated figure with a reputation as ill-tempered, has been charged with involuntary manslaughter.
|
|
But most Republicans, who hold majorities in the House and Senate, were far more tempered in their assessments.
|
|
Tempered inflation next year could signal Thursday's rate hike will be the last for some time, analysts said.
|
|
That prompted a debate about sportsmanship, aimed at one of the most respected, even-tempered stars in hockey.
|
|
In the front space, Mr. Morley's latest paintings suggest that these tendencies have been tempered, or even outgrown.
|
|
But these suggestions are all tempered by Mr. Overstreet's brilliant use of color and process, and by beauty.
|
|
Her misanthropy is tempered somewhat by her employees, played wonderfully by David H. Holmes and Da'Vine Joy Randolph.
|
|
Aspirations to withdraw U.S. forces from Afghanistan in the coming year must be tempered by these real risks.
|
|
Mr. Lewandowski, Mr. Trump's hot-tempered first campaign manager, was fired in June but never really went away.
|
|
As the giants, Morris Robinson (Fasolt) was dignified and Ain Anger (Fafner) rightly more malevolent and hot-tempered.
|
|
That tempered worries caused by Apple's warning it might miss sales targets due to pressure on supply chains.
|
|
Tempered expectations have been set as to what the party will be able to accomplish as the majority.
|
|
Most Democrats reject the label and say they believe in capitalism tempered by regulation and a welfare state.
|
|
General optimism was tempered by Andrey Kostin, the chairman and president of Russia's second-largest lender VTB Bank.
|
|
Where Muratova is calm and cheerful, Sam's family is raucous and ill-tempered (not to mention foul-mouthed).
|
|
Wells Fargo, Citigroup Inc and JPMorgan Chase & Co had tempered their outlooks for net interest income last month.
|
|
The polls tempered investor sentiment at home, leaving the mid-cap FTSE 250 with modest gains of 0.2%.
|
|
"I like literature," he added, in a bad-tempered exchange during a news conference in Stockholm last week.
|
|
Granted, it's not every day you see a demi-demon who's foul mouthed, bad tempered and guzzles tequila.
|
|
Those remarks were tempered by a forecast of potential shale oil growth from the U.S. International Energy Agency.
|
|
His staff consists of two foul-tempered office assistants who make appointments, take payments and hand out prescriptions.
|
|
This lilting Nashville rock trio gives new meaning to the label "easy listening" with their tempered, dreamy psychedelia.
|
|
By late morning both WTI and Brent had tempered most of their gains, but they've since rallied again.
|
|
Franich offers a sweetly tempered eulogy to a beloved TV series in this extended breakdown of the finale.
|
|
To his credit, Mullin has tempered expectations while making the rounds in a seemingly months-long media tour.
|
|
Turns out the power fantasy it has on Earth is tempered and informed by a rather melancholy reality.
|
|
During his party nomination speech, Trump famously said, "I alone can fix it," and if the actual experience of the presidency has perhaps tempered that view a bit, it hasn't tempered it enough for Trump to work in a truly collaborative, consistent way with the other parts of the government.
|
|
But the recent surge in U.S. long-term bond yields to near four-year highs has tempered the rally.
|
|
As a consequence, any ideas Trump may have of splitting the two continental giants should be tempered by reality.
|
|
Meanwhile, tracks like "Child of Light" and "Broken Hymn" exude Iris' most tempered and methodical death and funeral doom.
|
|
" Many who watched the whole spectacle might agree that it -- and not just the Mueller letter -- was "ill-tempered.
|
|
SS Teo: When I was younger, I was more bad-tempered, so I was more (of) a hard leader.
|
|
"When I was younger, I was more bad-tempered, so I was more (of) a hard leader," said Teo.
|
|
This has happened when, for instance, short-tempered people develop more tense facial muscles than other more relaxed people.
|
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European capitals were also unnerved by Trump's campaign trail dismissals of NATO, which he's largely tempered since taking office.
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Encana Corp, which holds its investor day on Wednesday, tempered some of declines, rising 2.8 percent to C$14.70.
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Finally, fears that US foreign policy will be militarized should be tempered by the reality of recent American history.
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Do you think the world's most sensitive, quick-tempered crybaby (raises hand) wants to admit to constantly picking fights?
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I've heard good things about this product, but as always, I try to approach it with reasonable, tempered expectations.
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But companies including Whitestone have confirmed that their tempered glass protectors won't inhibit the S10's fingerprint scanning functionality.
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Okay, you have tempered glass on gaming cases now — but that's only to expose the internal LED lights better!
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The practical benefits of adherence to Iran are, however, being tempered with a degree of Iraqi (and Arab) nationalism.
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Equity markets around the world gained as hopes for stimulus in major economies tempered fears of a global recession.
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For a brief period, Mr Mugabe's destructive economic impulses were tempered by a power-sharing arrangement with the opposition.
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The effects of such radical views will be tempered by two factors: the party's mandate and the country's means.
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U.S. government debt yields rose Wednesday after Federal Reserve policymakers tempered expectations in the markets for aggressive monetary easing.
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Donald Trump comes in and is very measured, very tempered and actually very diplomatic in what he&aposs doing.
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What I thought, at times, was awful, but it was tempered by familial love, friends, and a supportive school.
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The amazing person he was, the funny charming genius comedian creative hot tempered crazy calm person that he was.
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As trade expectations are tempered, Bell sees more of a consolidation occurring in markets rather than a sell-off.
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"Strangely, when I would relay even the most horrific details, the reaction by juries was always tempered," she says.
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U.S. Treasury yields fell following Friday's first-quarter growth report as weak inflation data tempered the strong headline figure.
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If the opposition feels any private glee that the ANC is destroying itself, it is surely tempered by sadness.
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Wal-Mart shares dipped after Thursday's investor meeting, when it tempered its earnings forecast for fiscal 2018 and 2019.
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It means "disagreeably ill-tempered," which we're guessing is not how most people in Washington would describe Robert Mueller.
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If it weren't for this dope soundtrack I would have laughed out loud (I let out a tempered chuckle).
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Still, the lack of detail on Trump's plans has raised questions about valuations and tempered the post-election rally.
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The tempered outlook comes as oil prices fell from highs seen earlier in the year during the second quarter.
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Police seized a semiautomatic handgun from Dalton, whom Getting described as "even-tempered" at the time of his arrest.
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Whitehouse offered a more tempered reaction, telling CNN's Wolf Blitzer that at very least, Kushner's clearance should be reviewed.
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These strengths are tempered by Kuwait's heavily oil- dependent economy, geopolitical risk, weak governance and a poor business environment.
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But the economic outlook was tempered by a fall in consumer confidence this month amid a stock market rout.
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" Ashbery went on to state: "A curious anxiety, tempered by the exhilaration of her novel optics is the result.
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Even-tempered, she listens to this, then invites him in for tea — characteristically unfazed by such a heartfelt admission.
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But he said that tough public stance had been tempered by a mature position in the closed-door discussions.
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Lenovo and Motorola have a slightly more tempered, and achievable, ambition to make the smartphone modular in steady steps.
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During the Cold War, right-wing anti-liberalism was slightly tempered by the need for a bipartisan foreign policy.
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The annex houses a luxury kitchen fitted with appliances by Gaggenau and tempered-glass cupboards and countertops by Valcuccine.
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Hindemith's "Ragtime (Well-Tempered)," from 1921, which opened the concert, whips one of Bach's fugues into a tart carnival.
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P&G tempered lagging sales with improving margins, reporting adjusted earnings of $1.09 a share, a penny above expectations.
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"I never would have imagined my simple, naïve, quick-tempered brother would turn into a human monster," he said.
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Still, some firms feared the lift from U.S. economic growth could be tempered by rising protectionism and reduced competitiveness.
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The newest solar roof is made with tempered glass; collectively, the product consists of both solar and nonsolar tiles.
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Here are 31 photos showing the struggle to stay cool, hydrated, and even-tempered during a particularly hot summer.
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Financials stocks dropped after the minutes from the Federal Reserve's latest meeting tempered expectations of faster interest rate hikes.
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But the house-made pâté brings lushness and an honest funk, the flavor of the chicken livers barely tempered.
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Mr. Thornton took a Method approach to the hard-drinking, bad-tempered Willie and sometimes clashed with Mr. Zwigoff.
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They are moved by the idea of an economic system that is tempered, constrained, and restrained by democratic values.
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"Your camel has to be bad-tempered for riders to get a place here," one person joked to another.
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Romney was a harsh critic of Trump during the 2016 presidential race, but he has since tempered his criticism.
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Comments from Larry Kudlow, director of the White House National Economic Council Kudlow, may have also tempered some jitters.
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Although MbS clearly has reformist instincts, some of his actions show a reckless side that needs to be tempered.
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But these feelings have been tempered now that Trump, who has shown his appreciation for Duterte, is in office.
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He's since tempered his outlook, though his administration still believes that it can reach 3 percent sustained annual growth.
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He vows to treat those in his life better while he still can, reneging on his ill-tempered mood.
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Many said that the unusually swift response from the mayor and the police commissioner had tempered the community's reaction.
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Democrats have seized on Mr. McConnell's remarks as proof that Republican candidates' tempered remarks are nothing but campaign artifice.
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In other words, while the impulse to share may not have gone away, it has been tempered by consequences.
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But all of that good news is tempered by a lack of consistency on both sides of the ball.
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It is an intelligence that is tempered with knowledge of our bodies, of our place in families and history.
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He was occasionally short-tempered — what father isn't sometimes — but he loved us and he let us know it.
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For some players, the sense of beginnings and hope is tempered by the thought: Is this my last one?
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But Mr. Trump has not tempered his tone, instead betting that his fear-based appeals will resonate with women.
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Lucy's coming-of-age is tempered by her constant brush-ups against the constrictions society places on her sex.
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It commences, like a super-sleuth literary or political biography, with tempered gloating about the author's indefatigable fact-finding.
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Turning lumber into veneers required the quarter-inch-thick planks to be separately tempered, a very labor-intensive process.
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Wallace was indirectly referring to a flare-up in coverage about how ill tempered the president had been lately.
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Action planet Mars clashes with Jupiter today, bringing important information—but watch out for a competitive, hot-tempered atmosphere.
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For now, the criticism is tempered in part by the fact that the imperial family remains beloved in Japan.
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Mr. Obama and Mr. Bloomberg also have a complicated history, but their relationship is tempered by their past collaborations.
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Jo was short-tempered; I got kicked out of two summer camps for refusing to listen to my counselors.
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Ill-tempered and erratic to begin with, a Trump energized by rage will be even more unstable and dangerous.
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That might have taken even the hot-tempered six-term Senator and war hero to new levels of outrage.
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It's a show about an ill-tempered, alcoholic scientific genius named Rick Sanchez and his teenage grandson, Morty Smith.
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The retailer offers two sizes starting at about $7,000, with the almost 7-foot structure consisting of tempered glass.
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Financial markets globally stand near record highs, and trust in the financial services industry has made a tempered comeback.
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But it will be tempered with quiet excitement as I think about things like my neighborhood in the fall.
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Shreds of green papaya are tossed in, bathed in a blast of fermented fish paste tempered by palm sugar.
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This will be tempered by a further rise in yields and inflation, lowering the index's price-to-earnings multiple.
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HR's ratings are tempered by weak contingent liquidity and a persistently high dividend payout ratio which impedes cash retention.
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A serious, sharp-tempered widow of twenty-nine, Lib is disdainful of most things where the Irish are concerned.
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China's growth is on track, but the reports are always tempered by warnings of doom, or suspect economic figures.
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It has a large, tempered glass surface, operates on four AAA batteries, and comes with a five-year warranty.
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But as successful as the G-Shock has become, Mr. Kikuo Ibe is still a man tempered by contrition.
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Some in the West, familiar only with Al Jazeera's tempered English offering, have compared it to biased stations in America.
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However, rising U.S. production, which is on the verge of breaking through 10 million bpd, has tempered the bullish outlook.
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During the 2016 campaign season he would disavow Trump's racist remarks, but he tempered his condemnations once Trump took office.
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And after that, we tempered the EPS growth rate to a 10% growth rate for long-term shareholder value creation.
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As you come out of episode five, do you think Matt still has some faith, and it's just been tempered?
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She's simply short tempered, quick to cast blame on the man who is sitting across from her unswollen and unpregnant.
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Britain's pound and bond yields slipped as data showing subdued inflation tempered expectations for an interest rate rise this year.
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But that has not tempered criticism of Dallas District Attorney Faith Johnson, who was voted out of office in November.
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But far from being frictionless, the transition from Pax Britannica to Pax Americana was messy, muddled and frequently bad-tempered.
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While its ambitions were tempered, Maine's Green New Deal is laying the foundation for a more comprehensive climate change bill.
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Youth, it seems, have their own ideas about life that can only be tempered by the actual act of living.
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The rapid growth of automobility after World War I might have tempered enthusiasm for driving too fast and too recklessly.
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The worries of civil-liberties campaigners are tempered by the fact that the devices can expose wrongdoing by officials, too.
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And his furious finger-waving at the moderators to make sure he got to rebut Clinton's jibes seemed ill-tempered.
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Former employees remember him being easily angered and "extraordinarily vindictive," no matter how small the outlet or tempered the critique.
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Elsewhere, U.S. Treasury yields fell following Friday's first-quarter growth report as weak inflation data tempered the strong headline figure.
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Meanwhile, a measure of business prices underwhelmed economic forecasts in April, suggesting that inflation throughout the American economy remains tempered.
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After an exhausting day at the office, you may be short-tempered or irritable, and unintentionally bring those feelings home.
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It's impossible to say one way or the other, but it certainly might have tempered Kendall's wrath a tiny bit.
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There's Jamie Foxx as Bats, a short-tempered con who takes pride in being the craziest one on the team.
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Amma from Sharp Objects (Eliza Scanlen) as the ill-tempered daughter-scammer losing her faith in Christmas and Santa together.
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Trump left staff with the impression he would proceed with tariffs, but has tempered his views amid the internal pressure.
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The reality however, may be tempered by the still-moderate economic activity at home and fiscal unknowns around the globe.
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But the numbers were in line with forecasts and weak eurozone GDP data for the quarter had already tempered expectations.
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But the widespread jubilation was quickly tempered by a sobering reality: No one's sure what's next for the US territory.
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The study is the latest to make the case that our alcohol habits could stand to be tempered a bit.
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Owners overwhelmingly backed executive pay and directors at the $256 billion bank's at times ill-tempered annual meeting on Tuesday.
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Lacklustre U.S. market debuts from Uber and Lyft have tempered enthusiasm for ride-hailing in general, raising question about profitability.
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But reaction was tempered by talk that Argentine wheat would be supplied at the lowest price cited in the tender.
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A particular artist's opinion of the first black President is tempered by the their mistrust or acceptance of establishment politics.
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Her speech took a more tempered view of Russia, indicating that she was moving in the direction of Trump's isolationism.
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Trump is also reportedly upset over an SNL skit where Melissa McCarthy imitated Sean Spicer, Trump's hot-tempered press secretary.
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While he insists on his innocence, Gooding Jr.'s O.J. is also shifty, childish, entitled, and hot-tempered — even maniacal.
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At least, the bad news was tempered by his medical team's assessment: It was a highly curable form of cancer.
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Expectations of what might emerge from the Fed's annual conference in Jackson Hole, Wyoming are also "relatively tempered," Northey said.
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And investment in Saudi Arabia has generally been tempered since the killing of the Saudi dissident Jamal Khashoggi last year.
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It means "heavy," but refers to someone who's self-absorbed, arrogant or ill-tempered, all cardinal sins to a Cuban.
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Elsewhere on the table are salsas, red and green, the first quick-tempered, the second with a slow-rising ire.
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Expectations for a more aggressive cut were tempered, however, following the stronger-than-expected monthly jobs data released on Friday.
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All those great divisions of the past were ultimately tempered by institutions that today seem incapable of bringing us together.
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In the lead-up to the summit, skeptics — realists — tempered expectations of any tangible deliverables from the Trump-Kim meeting.
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Molinari also featured in the 2010 and 2012 triumphs but his joy then was tempered by not winning a match.
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"So the good news story about bloodstream infections falling is tempered by the rise of locally untreatable bacteria," Feasey said.
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However, after many Republicans started to panic about the direction of his campaign he tempered his tone toward the judge.
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The discouragement that many voters feel when they observe the presidential choices before them should be tempered by this fact.
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But Ryan's optimism might be tempered by early conversations over tax reform, which already indicate some division within the party.
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For a while I wasn't listening to much music at all, with the exception of [Bach's] The Well-Tempered Clavier.
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Going back decades, scientific collaborations have tempered tensions between Russia and its rival nations, and allowed cooler heads to prevail.
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Sixty-eight percent of those surveyed do not believe Trump is "even-tempered" while just 28 percent believe he is.
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But as the sport's Olympic buildup began here this weekend on the Grand Prix circuit, anticipation was tempered by uncertainty.
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Martin told Ava Steil, 16, and Brianna Jesionowski, 16, that every April she finds herself becoming irritable, weepy, short-tempered.
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German Chancellor Angela Merkel, however, tempered expectations for fiscal stimulus, saying her government is sticking to its balanced budget policy.
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In the office, his father was revered, but at home, he was short-tempered and impatient with his only son.
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Often described as an even-tempered and practical public servant, Mr. Luján typically favored local solutions over sweeping federal legislation.
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An obvious counterargument like that should have tempered my seeming certainty about how the Trump-Bush rivalry would turn out.
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But material success did not make him happy, and by his own admission he had been short-tempered and egotistic.
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Being short-tempered can be a contributor to heart disease, but it can also be a sign of self-preservation.
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Many North Korea experts said Mr. Kim did no such thing, and Mr. Trump has since tempered his public expectations.
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She accepts her sister's offer to dog-sit and house-sit for the summer with a sigh of tempered relief.
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Efficiency in energy use and the growth of renewable energy around the world also have tempered the demand for oil.
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Reappraise a situation next time you notice you're feeling short-tempered, practice mindfulness meditation or say your own custom mantra.
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But on Thursday, he seemed to indicate that his admiration of the current governor was tempered by a fearful respect.
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Rudian, who becomes an object of desire for the two young women, is selfish, bad-tempered, occasionally violent, but gifted.
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Gold has tempered its rise slightly in recent days, and is currently near $210,230, looking at futures contracts for December.
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But for the boys, they made an exception, sharing an enthusiastic adventure tempered by thoughts of what might have been.
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However, while many industries were quick to adopt the public cloud, Wall Street firms have taken a more tempered approach.
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Ms. Ziani's joy at her release was quickly tempered by the thought of so many fellow protesters still in prison.
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Excitement was tempered by caution and an understanding that Amacher's presence had always been central to presentations of her music.
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Some tempered their praise with concern about how the state could hit its targets on renewable energy without nuclear power.
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EST (2300 GMT) on Sunday, although trading volumes may be tempered by Monday's Martin Luther King Day U.S. public holiday.
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But Mr. Trump's candidacy, which has been divisive even among Jewish Republicans, has tempered those ambitions for the presidential campaign.
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The day's mood - tempered with weariness at the flow of trade news - was best illustrated by the New Zealand dollar.
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With few ryes nowadays tempered and grown complex with age, it's hard to think of it as a sipping spirit.
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In an art market that has been tempered by the uncertainty of world events — will President Trump implement tax reform?
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Congressional Republicans in the 1860s, tempered in the fire of the Civil War, put their country before a traitorous President.
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However Suva said the tempered expectations are the best thing for the stock, which is up nearly 40% this year.
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AQR has downgraded its returns outlook for virtually every major asset class, driven primarily by its tempered expectations for cash.
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Still, the firm, like a number of others on the Street, says expectations for the future need to be tempered.
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That has been tempered of late by Duterte's decision to put aside the maritime disputes and tap Beijing for business.
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The devastating results tempered the enthusiasm and suggested that more work needed to be done in advance of human trials.
|
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But in the last year or so, Duca has tempered her online persona: Her tweets are less frenetic and frequent.
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The candidates mostly tempered their criticism of one another and presented a united front on vital issues like climate change.
|
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Riyad Mansour, the Palestinian ambassador to the United Nations, welcomed the resolution's adoption but tempered his approval with a warning.
|
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It was a brief moment in an afternoon of ill-tempered futility exemplified by a clash between Lewandowski and Rep.
|
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" He added, "This is a world — then, now — where creative impulses are systematically tempered if not squashed by the system.
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After the shooting, some doctors talked about possible warning signs — that Dr. Bello was short-tempered and, at times, menacing.
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Wiley's love of abstraction is tempered by his awareness of what is going on outside the sanctuary of his studio.
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The alcohol gives it heat, which can be tempered with ice and a splash of lime and good tonic water.
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Perhaps the most glaring evidence that the startup's ambitions have been tempered: Wag's anticipated global launch has yet to happen.
|
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The Bills' joy was tempered by the loss of the 210,22018-yard rusher LeSean McCoy with a right ankle injury.
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It is then melted, tempered (a controlled crystallization that gives the chocolate the proper texture), and finally molded into bars.
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But the pick-up in job growth was likely tempered by Michael, which struck the Florida Panhandle in mid-October.
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Sunday's announcement had been telegraphed in British newspapers as the government tempered its statements when it came to the banking industry.
|
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The middle button on the device features the G-20 Summit logo, while the phone body is made of tempered titanium.
|
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And the big banks are hardly a sympathetic cause, making industry executives somewhat more tempered in their comments on a Brexit.
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Just remember, if you want real protection, avoid flimsy plastic variety and go for a tempered glass protector like this one.
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Expectations need still be tempered, but Hield is mid-blossom in a relatively stress-free situation while his old team crumbles.
|
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An imperfect, unpolished pop genius, Marina harnessed a gut sense for meaningful, personal lyrics and tempered it with radio-friendly sounds.
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"He has proved himself over and over again to be quick-tempered, defensive, prone to lash out," he wrote in Politico.
|
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Yes, he's tempered his tone, but if you read the statement, he talks a lot about how things are quite strong.
|
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In recent weeks Trump&aposs enthusiasm has been tempered somewhat by the challenge of deal-making with such an unpredictable opponent.
|
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Financial stocks dropped 593 percent after the minutes from the Federal Reserve's latest meeting tempered expectations of faster interest rate hikes.
|
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In September, expectations were sky-high for a fresh round of stimulus but those hopes have been tempered in recent months.
|
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But those cheers were tempered by fears that the incoming Trump administration will support the completion of the 1,172-mile pipeline.
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Additional support stemmed from optimistic comments from Washington and Beijing that tempered concerns about a further escalation in the trade war.
|
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The declines were somewhat tempered by the intensifying crisis in Venezuela, with the fall in the global Brent benchmark more muted.
|
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Hopefully, either Samsung will release its own screen protectors or slimmer tempered glass protectors won't require a hole for finger authentication.
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Each one is made of ice-tempered stainless steel and honed to a razor sharp edge for optimal slicing and dicing.
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A 4-0 start was quickly tempered by losses in three of their next four games — to Syracuse, Gonzaga and Maryland.
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PD: At times, almost painfully so, but this work has tempered my nostalgia by providing a space to reckon with it.
|
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Brooklyn's first African-American district attorney demonstrated courage and a toughness tempered by mercy in his handling of this tragic case.
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"The Russians have what you might call tempered but positive expectations," said Matt Rojansky, director of the Wilson Center's Kennan Institute.
|
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But that was before I learned her secret and realized her approach could be tempered so that it wasn't so wasteful.
|
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Put differently, predictions that U.S. monetary policy would chart a notably divergent path have been tempered by powerful crosscurrents from abroad.
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In a Friday Facebook post, Mark Zuckerberg took a similarly tempered tone, writing that he was "concerned" by Trump's executive order.
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Sessions has always been a key Trump adviser — and often been in the position of defending the president's less tempered statements.
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But it was tempered with the active assistance of Clinton's primary rival Bernie Sanders, who offered a strong prime-time endorsement.
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Chips are caught up in an increasingly bad-tempered rivalry between America, the incumbent techno-superpower, and China, the aspiring one.
|
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Ambassador John Bolton and other hardliners are clearly frustrated by Iran's tempered reaction to the U.S. withdrawal from the nuclear accord.
|
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As he became well-known, a second Mr Taleb emerged, a figure who indulged in bad-tempered spats with other thinkers.
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Mina is a notoriously bad-tempered ape, who has scratched and bitten dozens of locals on the Indonesian island of Sumatra.
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Those successes are tempered, however, by the fact that a number of long-standing hostage cases still need to be resolved.
|
|
Much to the chagrin of music critics, Post Malone is here to stay; however, his success is tempered with some disapproval.
|
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He claims to have tempered his erstwhile enthusiasm for trade and immigration; in reality, he has little to say about either.
|
|
Russian government forecasts for the upcoming 2019/20 season tempered expectations for bumper supplies in the world's biggest wheat exporting country.
|
|
The experience, they said, may have tempered her ambitions for the capacity of government and made her more of an incrementalist.
|
|
Seven days ago, its Test team were playing a highly competitive, though bad-tempered, series against South Africa and performing creditably.
|
|
But the dollar's upward momentum was tempered as investors differed on the pace of tightening while U.S. inflation remains relatively cool.
|
|
In Beethoven's day many of them met with incomprehension and dismay, which the short-tempered composer had to learn to accommodate.
|
|
Its lid is full-view tempered glass, so you can keep an eye on your rice and veggies as they steam.
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"Oil has perhaps tempered some sentiment near-term," said Terry Sandven, chief equity strategist at U.S. Bank Wealth Management in Minneapolis.
|
|
The euro pulled back from one-month highs after dovish-sounding comments from European Central Bank officials tempered its recent surge.
|
|
The ratings are tempered by the exposure to the volatility in prices of its main raw material (corn) and currency fluctuations.
|
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The whole kit, which includes the phone, VR headset, case, and tempered glass screen protector, is priced at $349.99 for preorders.
|
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Evan finds himself faced with the kind of moral dilemma that would send even the most tempered soul into crisis mode.
|
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The U.S. tempered response thus far has avoided further destabilizing the country but achieved its anti-terrorism goals in the country.
|
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The onset of the monsoon season has prompted tempered optimism that India may be spared a third straight year of drought.
|
|
And her speech was, at least, a pleasant change of tone from the noisy, ill-tempered events of earlier that day.
|
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He said that Unesco had found a new benefactor, but that the slow pace of work had clearly tempered donors' enthusiasm.
|
|
It is also clear that strong language from administration officials has not had the desired outcome of tempered North Korean behavior.
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|
But this was tempered by evidence of a high risk of interactions with heart medications with green tea, hawthorn and garlic.
|
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The Holly & Martin Zephs bar cart is sleek, modern, and stylish with its powder-coated metal frame and tempered glass shelves.
|
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Several GOP senators exiting the meeting offered a more tempered response to the proposed withdrawal after signs it is being slowed.
|
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Several GOP senators exiting the meeting offered a more tempered response to the proposed withdrawal after signs it is being slowed.
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He also countered that an increase in the tax burden would be tempered for many by the elimination of insurance premiums.
|
|
Over the medium term, the cost reductions noted above are likely to be tempered by a flat net interest margin (NIM).
|
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Strong compliance by OPEC has helped the price of oil rally, but gains have been tempered by rising U.S. oil production.
|
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But "the stock market's reaction [had] been tempered by the wage-growth numbers" immediately after the data were released, he said.
|
|
But President Trump is of course still very controversial nationwide, which makes Haley's more tempered approach to him the smarter move.
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She's a Marjorie Morgenstern with a dash of Yentl's ambition, a burgeoning Baby Houseman tempered with Abby and Ilana's sexual prowess.
|
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Alonso, from the center-right National Action Party (PAN), took office this month after winning a bad-tempered contest in July.
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The cavernous room must have been 20163 feet underground, but a thick, tempered glass ceiling allowed the sun to pass through.
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Public Company Accounting Oversight Board has questioned whether the president's removal powers are tempered when executive branch officials act as judges.
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Funnily enough, he was the only one tempered to attention, having being raised a child star with his own fan club.
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|
But that jubilation has been tempered by the nagging idea the Democratic establishment is still working to undermine Medicare-for-all.
|
|
The enthusiasm, however, was somewhat tempered by trade tensions and their effect on corporate results as the earnings season kicks off.
|
|
The tempered outlook landed as FedEx grapples with ongoing margin pressure at its Express and Ground units and speculation that Amazon.
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The "clues from today," let's call them, were a little outrageous, but they were tempered by some elegance, nostalgia and wine.
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Deep-fried chicken is tempered by a sticky sauce like unresolved candy, made of pickled garlic, tomato paste and defanged chiles.
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Later, low rumbles arrive and cacophony increases, yet that kind of drama has little effect on Mr. Brooks's even-tempered choreography.
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Over the past week, investors have tempered expectations for an aggressive easing package - pushing bond yields away from recent record lows.
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By contrast, the Führer, idol of millions, is an ill-tempered and nondescript figure with a bad case of body odor.
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The austere lines of 1930s design are tempered by the glassware, the textiles, and the more playful character of 1970s furniture.
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Norway's tourism board claims that Thor, the ill-tempered Norse warrior king, forged it by slamming his hammer into the earth.
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Vidal-Naquet sells this facile notion by keeping his protagonist a borderline cipher — even-tempered, accommodating, seemingly at peace with drifting.
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And while the spread of coronavirus has tempered some expectations for 2020, there is no denying the growth of the market.
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However, optimism was tempered by warnings from the south, where contagion and deaths are far less widespread but are rising steadily.
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The hot-tempered Paire was excluded from the Rio Games after the French Tennis Federation accused him of breaking team rules.
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MIKE MYERS: Well, originally I was hoping for Brett Kavanaugh's job, but Trump said I was too even-tempered for that.
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A sweet-tempered man who forswore carrying grudges, he was loving and endlessly solicitous of his invalided and complaining wife, Ida.
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Concerns still linger about the long-term effect of the trade war that has hit U.S. manufacturing and tempered global growth.
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Other presidents have tempered concerns about human rights overseas with what they perceived to be America's own security or economic interests.
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The celebrations were tempered by a flare-up along the border with Israel this week, underscoring the fragility of the reconciliation.
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Or perhaps all four would make more sense if seen on actual television, tempered there by the coolness of the medium.
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Conservative fears of a disappearing southern border or an ever-expanding Spanish-speaking underclass should be tempered somewhat by these shifts.
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At a time when "liberal Catholicism" was a movement, not a contradiction, his faith tempered and gave values to his progressivism.
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" He added, with barely tempered outrage, "I don't know of another organized-crime group that's as sophisticated in their corporate structure.
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But Mr. Trump tempered his optimism in an interview with the former Fox News host Bill O'Reilly about the trade deal.
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But the language around flavors was tempered today by the mention of other factors — including keeping the e-cigarette industry going.
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The comedian-turned-politician, who has been in office for less than a year, has tempered his expectations for these talks.
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The comments tempered earlier optimism that China and the United States would be able to avert a damaging global trade war.
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This show, like much of the group's music, tempered its urge to be theatrical with a simple urge to be heard.
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But my joy was tempered by something I'd seen at Babi Yar earlier in the day: an exhibit honoring Ivan Rohach.
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Trump tempered days of angry rhetoric and suggested Iran was "standing down" after it fired missiles at U.S. forces in Iraq.
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But optimism was tempered by concerns about the U.S.-China trade talks and the fallout of Turkey's military action in Syria.
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But, he also continues to expose himself as a short-tempered manchild, so that breakup is one step closer to happening.
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The fiery-tempered former prosecutor said he once hurled a Chinese man suspected of rape and murder out of a helicopter.
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Excitement about tax cuts and regulatory relief has been tempered by worries about the impact of less trade and less immigration.
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After a campaign of bashing The Times relentlessly, in the face of the actual journalists, he tempered his whining with flattery.
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Predictability is marginally tempered by the risks inherent to the SMB segment that Barracuda is exposed to through the economic cycles.
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And yet when you look at the data they came out came what most recently seems to have tempered a bit.
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Research yielded concrete tools to make cars safer: anti-lock brakes, collapsible steering columns, airbags, tempered glass and better seat belts.
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But with "Géhenne," the somewhat hopeful message of "Jihad" — that terrorists can come back from the dark side — has been tempered.
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Still, he says his disappointment in the outcome was tempered by his belief that Clinton's election defeat had a silver lining.
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But most economists expect the benefits will be tempered by a large increase in the federal debt, driving up interest rates.
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Our marriages, our homes, our health and our lives depend on the loony, whimsical fibs and tantrums of bad-tempered oligarchs.
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Attorney General Bill Barr is undoubtedly right: The president's ill-tempered tweets about pending criminal cases undermine the Justice Department's mission.
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The arrangements enact a tempered, unrelenting responsiveness in which lives lived under lifelong pressure aspire to a transcendence that's actively treasured.
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A former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff doles out lessons in restraint for a hot-tempered commander in chief.
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The fruit is tempered by plenty of the sangiovese grape's characteristic acidity, a slight but welcome bitterness and dusty, focusing tannins.
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"My conclusion is that they've probably tempered it, scaled it down a bit, and gotten better at hiding it," Lee said.
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I have always been out on stage, but I have also tempered the way that I presented myself to an audience.
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But the outlook for consumer spending was tempered by another report on Friday showing that sentiment among households ebbed in early February.
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In 2017, Citi called iPhone demand "modest" and "tempered," and Apple beat Wall Street projections for iPhone shipments by about 1 million.
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But its decision to increase its full-year profit forecast by 10 cents reflected a lower tax rate, which tempered investor enthusiasm.
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From outside to inside, the palindrome of same-tempered, same-textured flesh easily and predictably offers a medium-rare 130-degree doneness.
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Then we can nurture resilience, and tempered (rather than blind) optimism, and the resulting self-esteem will be made of steelier stuff.
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The feeling of empowerment, however, is tempered by a stark realization: even just looking at such a document can have legal ramifications.
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"He should have expected he would do some of this and provide more of the even-tempered, articulate, measured responses," Black said.
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Their excitement was tempered by cynicism about the numerous ideas for Halifax sports venues that have come and gone over the years.
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But the pound's rally was tempered after BoE Governor Mark Carney said any coming interest rate rises would be limited and gradual.
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Yet his pragmatism neither rendered him cold nor tempered his high aspirations for America's capacity to do better at home and abroad.
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But their gains had decreased as the rally in oil prices tempered to 3 percent from about 5 percent at the open.
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Another scenario is that the FRB rhythm isn't tempered by another object, and is sending out the pulses directly from the source.
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Mr Obama was more of a Wilsonian than a neo-Wilsonian; his idealism tempered by a cool realism that verged on cynicism.
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The latter of which helped turn footage Ferreira shot into the abstract, through-the-tempered-glass vectorial world presented in the film.
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Losses on the blue-chip Dow and the S&P 4.5 indexes were tempered by a 4.3% rise in Home Depot Inc.
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He tempered his view a few months later, saying he regretted calling bitcoin a fraud, but maintained his disinterest in the cryptocurrency.
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"I'd like to see him being more tempered, I think most people would say that -- even his most ardent supporters," Barringer said.
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Markets began the day in the red after Federal Reserve chairman Jerome Powell tempered expectations of an imminent cut to interest rates.
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"It is a very tempered reaction in the face of a strong build," Tony Headrick, energy market analyst at CHS Hedging LLC.
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The big banks were trading lower as the minutes from the Federal Reserve's latest meeting tempered expectations of faster interest rate hikes.
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However, all of these potential future scenarios have to be tempered with a strict application of best practices security and data privacy.
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Stocks in Asia were subdued on Wednesday after U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell tempered expectations for a potential interest rate cut.
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Weather worries have been tempered by large inventories, uncertain demand during a trade dispute with China, and bumper harvests in South America.
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The steel chassis has a tempered glass side panel, a bar to keep your cables in place, and support for AIO coolers.
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After dealing a direct and devastating blow to Haiti earlier in the week, Matthew's hotly-anticipated US arrival feels a bit tempered.
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"News that Iran's exports had risen tempered Brent's (earlier) gains," said Jeffrey Halley, senior market analyst at futures brokerage OANDA in Singapore.
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The fragrant still-hot-from-the-charcoals chicken and spicy chili sauce are tempered by the cool pickles and nutty tahina sauce.
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But in another, even more surprising 180 (albeit one that doesn't quite add up to 360), Coulter herself tempered her immigration rhetoric.
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The company originally wanted to raise as much as $500 million for its initial public offering, but it has since tempered expectations.
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It is in these "inferior courts," as the Constitution calls them, where our civil rights are most often tested, tried, and tempered.
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Episode 9 of Westworld, entitled "The Well-Tempered Clavier" basically confirmed every major theory to hit the internet since the show's inception.
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Ultimately, diplomats from several European countries stood in opposition to China's proposal and tempered some of the cuts to human rights personnel.
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Hiddleston recently tempered the rumors, telling the crowd at Philadelphia's Wizard World Comic Con last week to not get their hopes up.
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The shock of a parrot sprouting legs below his feathery torso is tempered by a vintage storybook aesthetic in Nives Widauer's watercolors.
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Western allies' concern for stability is tempered by reservations about what they see as his increasingly authoritarian attitude to media and opposition.
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But President Donald Trump tempered market expectations, tweeting on Thursday that Washington is "under no pressure to make a deal with China" .
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The Post said that the administration response was tempered by fears that Putin would react to harsher measures by escalating the crisis.
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It's bound to be ill-tempered on and off the pitch, feverish from start to finish, and horribly bitter in the aftermath.
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Recent optimism over the jobs outlook was tempered by a rise in weekly jobless claims to their highest level in six months.
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Their attempts to solve the mystery are only the opening act for a film that proves to be a sweet-tempered romance.
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It's fun to see the harshness of Game of Thrones tempered with some levity in the form of my favorite summertime treat.
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Both sides have since tempered their rhetoric but with North Korea's military capabilities growing, Japan has been looking to strengthen its defenses.
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While expectations may have tempered overall, there's no denying that Philly is still very much a strong team at home this season.
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But it also tempered its enthusiasm by noting that this was no great victory, just another day for proponents of ad-blocking.
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That silver lining should be tempered by the fact that our party obviously has not found a winning formula in recent years.
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Two elemental forces — hurricane-voiced Anna Mae Bullock and typhoon-tempered Ike Turner — are pitted in a struggle that nearly destroys both.
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Plus, buyers get JBL earbuds, an Incipio protective case for the phone and a 2.5D tempered glass screen protector in the bundle.
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What he's going for instead is a self-awareness of inner drive that is tempered by an empathy for one's team members.
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Those critical of the president's actions on the border as rash and ill-tempered are not paying attention to the consistent messaging.
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Amid this rising tide of global violence, we do see reason for tempered hope and a means to gain an upper hand.
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Fitch's view of BG's creditworthiness is tempered by the heightened competition it faces and the lack of a lender of last resort.
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While more tempered in their comments, the other Republican candidates have called for massive cuts to reduce the reach of the EPA.
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The weather risks have tempered bearish sentiment about large inventories, said Tobin Gorey, director of agricultural strategy at Commonwealth Bank of Australia.
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The courts have tempered some of Trump's most radical ideas, watering down a Muslim travel ban he authored early in his presidency.
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Schlumberger's results were "fairly in line after expectations had already been tempered," Capital One Securities analysts wrote in a note on Friday.
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Toll Brothers was off more than 2 percent after the luxury homebuilder posted a revenue miss and tempered its gross margin forecast.
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" The voice she found—pragmatic, syncopated, pained—is tempered by what her friend Bret Easton Ellis described to me as "thrilling neutrality.
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At least one major investor believes a sell-off would be tempered by the overwhelming demand for a return of any form.
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The endless hours of administrative nonsense that have sucked the joy out of medicine for so many of us could be tempered.
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Construction (forged versus stamped): A forged knife is made of a single piece of steel that's then tempered and hammered into shape.
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A stamped knife has a blade that's been cut cookie-cutter style from a sheet of steel before being tempered and hardened.
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The series's cancellation, he said, was a "profound disappointment," tempered only by the chance to resolve Richie's story line in the movie.
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It would be accurate to say that any enthusiasm I had for the thing was tempered with a healthy bit of skepticism.
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Any jubilation in the Cruz camp should be tempered, though, as the two top Democrats in the race outperformed all the GOP.
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Yet Mr. Gottlieb emphasized that the museum's vision of its future should be tempered by a healthy dose of humility and uncertainty.
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On stage, his anger is tempered by self-reflection and flights of fancy that make for a uniquely thoughtful night of comedy.
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A balcony of tempered glass was constructed so as not to block a seaview and runs the length of the three bedrooms.
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The dreamy sweetness is always tempered with neatly snapshotted reality ("Only got a couple friends," she admits to herself on "Lonely Weekend").
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Smartphone makers, including Apple Inc and Samsung, have tempered their sales outlook as they wrestle with a worldwide slowdown in the market.
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To me, duck boats will remain a symbol of a more innocent time tempered by the realization that disaster can strike anywhere.
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