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"thicket" Definitions
  1. a group of bushes or small trees growing closely together
  2. a large number of things that are not easy to understand or separate
"thicket" Antonyms

597 Sentences With "thicket"

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

On February 21st, the Supreme Court went into the thicket.
Switzerland has achieved similar status through a thicket of treaties.
That's a minefield in a thicket, socked in by fog.
Ms. Wojcicki and her staff considered their thicket of policies.
Piecemeal reforms also require balancing a thicket of competing interests.
Untangling their accomplishments will always be a thicket of controversy.
She found him in a thicket of vines and thorns.
Feiler plunges into this thicket with verve, intelligence and style.
She was in a thicket at one point, Gobeil said.
Disney had to navigate a thicket of agencies, bureaucrats and officials.
Doing business overseas requires navigating through a dense "thicket" of regulations.
A loose thicket of arms suddenly rose out of the crowd.
Can Iowa and the DNC find a way through this thicket?
Another factor is the nearly impenetrable landscape, known as valley thicket.
Each point will have a unique thicket of paths emanating from it.
A "thicket of melancholy and suspicion" follows, von Wilmsdorff says off camera.
But guiding borrowers through the complex thicket of plans can be complicated.
The story is an uninteresting thicket of brawls, machinations and useful coincidences.
His errant second shot plugged deep into a wet thicket of rough.
I walked off the road and into a thicket of boreal forest.
They want help making sense of the thicket of information that surrounds them.
But that challenge moved the administration into a thicket of difficult health questions.
Sonos has done a lot of work to make paths through the thicket.
There are a number of reasons for Nigeria's impenetrable thicket of red tape.
But a thicket of regulations in Obamacare has made this redistribution more dramatic.
Aluminum rink light glinted off a thicket of surfaces: ice, plexiglass, helmets, sticks.
Mr. Bewley braved a tangled thicket of bureaucratic agencies, eventually planting 140 acres.
Miscalculations can be traced to the thicket of regulations that govern college pricing.
Even if businesses could access credit easily, a thicket of regulations deters expansion.
A coach will help you cut a path through your thicket of preconceptions.
You could pay an expert to guide you through this thicket of fine print.
"Once you get into the political thicket", he cautioned, "you will not get out."
He is a prolific if understated storyteller, and Austin was a thicket of prompts.
Families struggled to find reasons to follow their hopes through the thicket of fear.
There was a deep thicket of brush nearby that had survived a 2015 wildfire.
AT&T believed it could get the deal through the thicket of regulatory approval.
The path to a possible meeting led through a thicket of hostility and feints.
Ms. Reno retained the post through a thicket of drug, murder and corruption cases.
Even insurers admit patients are ultimately on their own to navigate the directory thicket.
The small deer's rough cough startled me when it came from a nearby thicket.
A fat teenager lies sobbing in a mesquite thicket; the group left him behind.
In June, I realized that right out my kitchen window was a thicket of blackberries.
Instead of sweeping away a thicket of EU regulations, Ms Rudd will be adding more.
It had rejoined the forest, growing into a thicket of red cedars, oaks, and birches.
A thicket of cables carries data straight from the experiment to computers that analyze it.
Now they're in a thicket of nine East teams with between four and six wins.
The path forward is through a thicket of interesting, albeit also very expensive, design challenges.
But under the thicket of guilt and self-recrimination, I'd glimpsed something of true adulthood.
I got back on track, eventually, with EXCUSE ME (fab reference), REDWOOD, WATCHDOG and THICKET.
"The Curse of Bigness" moves nimbly through the thicket, embracing the boons of being small.
It clear-cut an apparent path to success through the messy thicket of my life.
To be seen in a thicket of hashtags and heard above the din, people screech.
The claim ended up pulling Credico into a legal thicket that continues to this day.
That commingling created a thicket of ethical issues that became more pointed after the election.
But Mr. Kushner has an ethical thicket to navigate, while advising his father-in-law.
They don't have the time, money, or lawyers to navigate a thicket of complex rules.
A thicket of restrictions has cooled the market, slowing purchases and choking off loans to developers.
Ransom and Ayers-Rigsby pick through a dense thicket and a floor carpeted with spiky bromeliads.
"We went through the woods – through the thicket and the briars," volunteer Donna Harris told WTVD.
As they navigate this thicket, the justices have a jumble of prior rulings to guide them.
They don't have the time, money or lawyers to cut through a thicket of complex rules.
Come, take my hand and walk with me into the thicket of her self-shot videos.
Just as American businesses were crawling out from the Obama-era regulatory thicket, here comes Sen.
As a result, the sport has been a thicket of doping sanctions and accusations for generations.
The pianists, like trusted guides, take the orchestra (and listeners) through a pulsing thicket of music.
It just reverberates with history and beauty and my imagination goes slightly haywire in the thicket.
WarnerMedia will have to navigate a thicket of contracts with existing distributors like Comcast and Netflix.
But a thicket of technological, safety and policy issues will have to be ironed out first.
The latest iteration has been mired for years in a thicket of regulatory and legal hurdles.
Then I noticed a thicket of tripods and cameras pointed at the footbridge I was on.
It's been easy to get lost in the thicket of court cases around the travel ban.
Even better, a thicket of LLCs that would make it more difficult to connect different purchases up.
Just like it has with HDMI, Sonos is stepping into a complex thicket of digital assistant technology.
Running a solar business in an informal settlement like "near Hebbal flyover" involves a thicket of problems.
Both sides sliced their way through the interpretive thicket by appealing to common language and common sense.
He peeked through the thicket of cameras and notepads and noticed the grounds crew springing to action.
It also allows voters plenty of time to make their way through the ballot's thicket of choices.
The crowd clung to her as she went, her thicket of admirers pushed slowly along like peristalsis.
It rises in a thicket of trees, next to a trail teeming with runners, bicyclists and wanderers.
His towering bronze tree trunks were clustered on the concrete floor, an unexpected indoor thicket in metal.
U.S. corporate leaders regularly complain about the challenges of navigating the bureaucratic and political thicket in Cuba.
Dr. Shulkin will inherit a thicket of challenges in the aging and overburdened veterans health care system.
He has the wiry frame of a regular yoga practitioner, and an enviable thicket of gray hair.
You'll end up with a thicket of all possible loops that begin and end at the base point.
Old signs for grocery stores, camera shops and beauty parlors are barely visible through a thicket of vines.
For all its politics, the real pleasure of Mr Bartlett's garden is its dense thicket of literary allusion.
This week has featured overnight Senate sessions as GOP leaders are grinding through a thicket of controversial picks.
The problem for Facebook is that the company already has entered the thicket of regulating truth and falsehood.
Maposa pushes through a thicket of thorn-bushes to a raised dirt grave with a simple cement headstone.
"Underground Airlines" is landing in a thicket of fictional works about slavery and its lingering legacy in America.
Even before that, researchers have long contended with a notoriously complex and often opaque thicket of access restrictions.
The outlier is Wells Fargo, which is still trying to extricate itself from a thicket of legal problems.
Don't trust that rock with your weight, misjudge the depth of the juniper thicket, or turn in circles.
Loan servicers have tremendous power to guide borrowers through an often bewildering thicket of federal loan repayment options.
Undertones of the blues crop up briefly, often tossed into an impressionist thicket of arpeggios and wandering lines.
The woods themselves were a bit magical, a thicket in the middle of a city of 20 million.
ONE of the many indignities associated with being poor in India is navigating the country's thicket of welfare programmes.
He notes that AbbVie's "patent thicket" means Humira will not face biosimilar competition for years to come in America.
To stop insurers designing plans so as to attract only healthy people, a thicket of regulations guarantees minimum standards.
The energy world is full of complicated technologies and regulations, usually expressed in a thicket of off-putting acronyms.
It has branched out into a thicket of unrelated items, including playing cards, sanitary towels, sports kit and electronics.
And it is a thicket of limits on how long lives can last and how much life can accomplish.
For Facebook, the evolution of events into a major new attack surface has generated another thicket of difficult choices.
Chief Justice Roberts has made it clear that he wants the court to stay out of the political thicket.
The thicket of rules that decide which state will take a particular case are known as the Brussels regulation.
"Once you get into the business of regulating truth, that's a really complicated thicket to enter into," Bhagwat said.
Many of these interrogations ended up in the same thorny thicket: Who designed the system this way, and why?
Through the thicket of cypress trees, I could hear their sounds of laughter, of playing, of a happy childhood.
In other school districts, teachers and principals are subject to a thicket of rules, imposed by a central bureaucracy.
As has become increasingly clear in recent days, Mr. Brown's successor will face a thicket of high-stakes challenges.
It careened down the hill from the main road into a thicket of trees, scattering a crowd of spectators.
Or would that overstep the court's own bounds and plunge it deeper into the political thicket of legislative duties?
Leaving a sea of purple-blossomed potato fields behind, the group disappeared into the thicket of Volcanoes National Park.
One guy has so many tattoos on his face he seems to be peering out from behind a thicket.
Caney Fork River in Tennessee was named for the cane breaks — a thicket of grasses — found on its banks.
We need to address the regulatory thicket in ways that will make the retirement crisis better rather than worse.
Mr. Cornyn said AbbVie had tried to block competition for Humira by surrounding it with a thicket of patents.
To pull all this off, Amazon and Clise had to create an "ecodistrict" (navigating a thicket of city bureaucracy).
If the Senate does find a path through the policy thicket and passes a bill, Republicans have two options.
As for Ms. Sarsons, a young economist who will have to navigate this thicket, she is taking her own advice.
The agreement shies away from slashing subsidies or toppling tariffs, and instead hacks at the thicket of regulatory trade barriers.
His Jheri Curl was a dense, dripping thicket perched atop an inch-perfect beard; he–a kid from South Central!
Parris helped cut through the thicket of local regulations that baffle companies accustomed to China's form of bare-knuckle capitalism.
In the preceding decades a thicket of protectionism had strangled commerce and slowed recovery from the Depression of the 1930s.
A Mitt Romney aide arranged to secretly meet him on a back road when he emerged from the wooded thicket.
Meanwhile, Iraqi forces are poised to retake Mosul, unearthing a thicket of complex problems and looming questions about Iraq's future.
As the government undertook greater responsibilities in the 20th century, the thicket of federal policies and government agencies grew exponentially.
Still, there is no denying that Yahoo was a pioneer that cleared the thicket for those other businesses to flourish.
George Wittemyer, the scientific director of the conservation group Save the Elephants, steered the car toward movement in a thicket.
Chapman kept tossing and Davis kept hacking, like a man chopping with a machete at a dense thicket of underbrush.
We were dry-eyed as Mr. Biden walked me through the emotional and literary thicket that brought me to him.
Light slips through perforations in the roof to dapple the sanctuary floor, like sun passing through a thicket of mangroves.
Even with Tuesday's federal order, there remains a thicket of conflicting state laws and local school policies on bathroom use.
Others have lost limbs after hitting grenades and mines with hoes while planting and clearing the thicket around their crops.
The resulting book is intimate and engrossing but can also have a claustrophobic, cluttered feel in its thicket of details.
Any start-up looking to shake up an industry will inevitably face a regulatory thicket, and Airbnb is no different.
Jeomar Etulle, a Filipino farmer, walks through a thicket of trees in Cebu planted by an organization he helps manage.
It took me a while to realize that crouching behind the thicket of mustache was none other than Ewan McGregor.
The dense murmur of the jungle is somehow vivid enough to evoke a thicket of trees before the audience's very eyes.
"Even if tiered, this shift is likely to simplify the thicket of taxes in place now," she told CNBC by email.
Building out that infrastructure is a tortuous process that entails navigating a thicket of stakeholders, from local landowners to federal regulators.
The system is mad, but the thicket of rules and vigilant regulators will prevent crazy lending from taking place, they argue.
What they don't typically do is enter the thicket of licensing and regulatory issues that entangle traditional taxi and hotel businesses.
Hossein soon found himself in a large cell, caught in a thicket of limbs and enveloped by the smell of sweat.
The result is a thicket of laws, precedents, and practices that determine when a federal or tribal government will bring charges.
Mr. Guterres said that the lesson applied to countries, too, and that his role was helping them see through the thicket.
Into this landscape recently, one careful step after another, Mr. Kalmykov pushed deeper into a thicket of vines and fallen branches.
The visit comes nearly a year into Macron's presidency, and as he trudges through a thicket of difficulties on other fronts.
He relentlessly drove through the Warriors' thicket of limbs in the paint, throwing his body against whoever stood in his way.
Looking back, I realize that Trump's campaign was a relative pleasure to deal with compared with the coiled thicket of Clintonia.
In other words, the thicket of red tape often hampering American businesses is sprouting faster than those businesses can keep up.
The sketch shows a thicket growing from the pitch of a sports stadium, with thousands of people watching in the stands.
That's a thing your Carpetbagger often wonders as he wanders through a dense thicket of celebrities at an award-season party.
Think of the filter in a mask not as a sieve but as a thicket—a dense tangle of minuscule filaments.
He had to keep moving in order to keep his blood circulating, but became enmeshed in a dense thicket of branches.
The social network is blocked in China, has stumbled in India and is facing a thicket of regulatory questions in Europe.
"Generation Revolution" is at its strongest when describing the thicket of its characters' personal struggles — with faith, family, friendships and sex.
Keir Charles, who plays the manservant Brass, is particularly overzealous, though one must commend a thicket of hair worthy of Prince.
In the water lapping at the thicket of roots, young fish, like snapper and grouper, and plankton take refuge from predators.
Espitia allegedly told police he blacked out and had no recollection of what happened, and awoke confused in a thicket of bushes.
That levy was designed to replace a thicket of indirect central and state taxes that critics previously argued blunted India's economic competitiveness.
China's blueprints for trade deals are also much more conservative than America's, barely touching the regulatory thicket that made the TPP important.
By 1998, the tobacco industry faced not only public anger but also a thicket of lawsuits -- and the mounting possibility of bankruptcy.
He had spent 25 years stealing Social Security numbers and fabricating new aliases, leaving behind a thicket of confusing and falsified records.
Incumbents are sheltered by a thicket of state and federal regulations, and running a free-standing digital-only bank is nigh-impossible.
As Facebook's AML group went to work on Camera last summer, it waded into a thicket of wildly popular rival camera products.
The law's thicket of new provisions will affect families and businesses across the nation, in ways The Hill has previously reported upon.
He drives his mini-bus at a crawl and peers into the thicket of bush by the main road leading from Ntsholotsho.
By rapidly comparing the two, the machine compiles a thicket of statistical correlations, associating words and phrases with their likely foreign counterparts.
Adda is east of all that, under a National Guard recruiting office, surrounded by a thicket of railroad tracks and highway overpasses.
Realizing a rocket was hurtling directly towards them, they jumped into a bamboo thicket and narrowly escaped almost certain injury or death.
For another, any targeted attempt to engineer population decline is going to run into an unholy thicket of moral and political resistance.
In executing his real estate strategy, Mr. Lampert has put himself at the center of a thicket of related companies and investments.
Kingsbury, the police chief, read from a statement while fumbling with a thicket of microphones piled onto the lectern by visiting reporters.
He faces intense pressure to resolve a thicket of policy issues while defending his party against potential blame if the government shutters.
She seemed to enter a meditative state as she worked from the interior regions of Mr. Gladwell's thicket to its wild borderlands.
Yet the script is incapable of penetrating the moral thicket that the actors and the cinematographer, Zachary Galler, have so carefully woven.
But many remain skeptical because of the complexities and unpredictability in tunneling and the need to navigate a thicket of government regulations.
There's a great warmth to the record, and Madlib's work has a new kind of interiority—less sonic thicket and more sunlight.
At the back, a parking lot meets the slow-moving Wandle River, which is lined with a thicket of trees and shrubs.
Now he is contending with a thicket of ethical and legal considerations as his former boss — Donald J. Trump — serves as president.
Portman, a startling amalgam of cheekbones, sharp brows, and a thicket of root beer-colored hair, lets out a breathy, biting rebuke.
Instead, he applied more subtle means of control, a thicket of regulations that made the school's continued operation difficult and, eventually, impossible.
You smell the close-up fragrance of the thicket, where there's little "in front" or "behind" except for the central, rustling beech.
They're more of a free-flowing exchange from both sides as they navigate the timeframes, policies and politics of the looming legislative thicket.
That's going to be a lot for a TSO to track — a thicket of new rules, new enforcement mechanisms, and sheer computational bulk.
The actress debuted on Twitter and Instagram on Tuesday with photo of herself topless in a thicket of bamboo, shot from the back.
"That's a pretty nasty thicket of numbers from all sorts of industries, in some cases with some very ugly read-throughs," Cramer said.
By creating AMP, Google blithely walked right into the center of a thicket comprised of developers concerned about the future of the web.
And the dense thicket of international sanctions against their country prevents them from taking advantage of the opportunities offered by the global economy.
That became more problematic as assets ballooned globally and started to include non-standardized instruments including derivatives, resulting in a thicket of processes.
Any new company looking to make a dent in health care costs will have to navigate a thicket of state and federal rules.
A thicket of regulations will determine precisely who must comply; those in school or taking care of a family member will be exempt.
It makes me stupidly proud when visitors pause to enjoy the view through the bridge's window: the small brown watercourse, the sunlit thicket.
He belted several batting-practice fastballs high off the Dedeaux Field scoreboard and into the thicket of trees beyond the right-field wall.
After all, Donald Trump Jr. and Jared Kushner, the president's son-in-law, are both caught in the thicket of the Russia investigation.
Political troubles The deepening questions about Russia are combining with a thicket of more conventional political troubles bearing down on the White House.
One of the most pressing issues will be the thicket of questions surrounding aggressive acts in cyberspace by state and non-state actors.
Early inquiries with foreign studios dead-ended in a thicket of legal fears and uncertainty over who — if anyone — possessed the missing material.
Then, last year, India rolled out an ambitious tax plan to replace a thicket of indirect levies that critics argued blunted economic competitiveness.
Occasionally Shepard dazzles himself with his stacks of research, and the result is a thicket of veracity that threatens to strangle the story.
Cardinal Pell, 76, was flanked by police officers as he entered Melbourne Magistrates' Court through a thicket of camera crews, reporters and photographers.
But as Uber experiments with recording riders and passengers in the United States, it will have to confront a thicket of privacy issues.
Why on Earth would Japan, a very avowedly anti-nuclear-weapons country, even want to get into the thicket of Russian nuclear deterrence?
Clear recycling bags full of natural pet food cans and soy milk cartons and a thicket of moldering Christmas trees ran alongside the ramp.
To set some kind of federal standard, lawmakers will have to navigate a thicket of complex implications for tax, antitrust and gender equity laws.
There is something anxious, and very intriguing, in the degree of experimentation in this memoir, in its elaborately titivated sentences, its thicket of citations.
At the same time, a thicket of regulation guarantees minimum standards of coverage, to stop insurers designing skimpy plans that attract only healthy buyers.
In the clip, sublime notes flow from his fingers, yielding otherworldly chords and a sense of urgency normally lost in the thicket of pop.
The entrance is via a rickety wooden bridge over a dyke; a path through a dense thicket delivers you into a sudden green wildness.
Moreover, restarting even cross-border tourism, let alone heftier trade or investment, is impossible given the dense thicket of international sanctions around the North.
He pledged to cut the "dense thicket of rules, regulations and red tape" that project developers face as part of his forthcoming infrastructure plan.
In Silsbee, a working-class town of 6,700 in a wooded region known as the Big Thicket, Mr. Georgas and his support for Mrs.
Few of us ever consider the communication between the pilot and the air traffic controllers who help planes navigate the thicket of the skies.
"His general ideological orientation makes me very skeptical he'd vote to have courts enter this 'political thicket,' " he said in a tweet on Thursday.
If this is a time for drafting first editions of Ryan's congressional legacy, two clear narrative lines emerge from the thicket of instant reactions.
A strange menagerie of legislative add-ons made their way through the legislative thicket, to compensate for earlier laws that Republicans wished to nullify.
Bear with me as I try to clear a path through the thicket, keeping in mind that I'm talking about Medicare based on age.
The "long drop," an outhouse over an abnormally deep hole, sat nestled in a thicket of silver beech 150 feet north of the hut.
The introductions to most important works from more than a century ago serve as sense-makers, maps to consult before diving into the thicket.
When cooked exactly to doneness, the thicket of choke protecting the innermost heart can be pried away with nothing sharper than your gentle thumb.
A thicket of red tape and regulations have made it difficult for volcanologists to build monitoring stations along Mount Hood and other active volcanoes.
We battled our way through the thicket of federal financial-aid forms, visited the tutoring center, and hungrily collected flyers posting apartments for rent.
Most borrowers with federal student loans are eligible for an income-based repayment plan, but navigating the thicket of different plans can be complicated.
It makes no sense to export the regulatory thicket that governs political ads on TV to the new and democratizing technology of the internet.
Almost every national title had offices within a half-mile radius, with a dense thicket of pubs and bars catering to their notoriously thirsty journalists.
It isn't impossible to see something like Libra taken up, but it will require local support; most countries have a thicket of regulation around banking.
Even so they are restive, insisting that they got over the crisis years ago but are still being held back by a thicket of regulation.
The answer to that is still being hammered out through an ever-growing thicket of crisscrossing treaties, national court rulings, and shifting tech company policies.
Once it owned Humira, AbbVie protected it with a thicket of patents — roughly 136 of them, and it has aggressively sued to protect those patents.
As I exit the thicket, there is a nearby mountain over a few more hills, and since I've already come so far, I scale it.
Secreted away in a thicket of trees, and bathed in soft neons, a DJ stood still and silent, shepherding slow, formless music into the forest.
Brexit, the nickname for Thursday's referendum on whether the U.K. should leave or remain in the European Union, concerns a thicket of issues: Employment rights.
Asylum applications in France take an average of two years to process, but officials in Cergy cut through the bureaucratic thicket and speeded things up.
You can almost feel the flecks of Mungo's spittle hit your face as she roars, clawing through a thicket neck-snapping riffs and explosive percussion.
Most major league pitchers are tough enough to handle big league pressure, or they never would have made it through the thicket of the minors.
Untangling the thicket of deeds and liens on the 56-year-old home required a trip to the Essex County Hall of Records in Newark.
Even businesses left in private hands faced an unmanageable thicket of regulation over every imaginable aspect of their operations, hemming them in on all sides.
But the thicket of other investigatory news makes it clear that if Mueller does wrap up soon, Trumpworld's legal jeopardy will remain very serious indeed.
Around him was an almost impenetrable mechanical thicket — pipes, wires, machinery and conduit, all servicing amplifiers, control boards, lights, sprinkler systems, winches and cooling ducts.
RIVNE, Ukraine — The target lived on the sixth floor of a cheerless, salmon-colored building on Vidinska Street, across from a thicket of weeping willows.
She canceled her afternoon plans and, with Ms. Hammond close behind her, disappeared into the thicket of punching bags with the rest of the class.
At the end of the first episode, as she sinks into a hot bath, her skin is revealed to be a thicket of scar tissue.
For thinkers on the right, the U.B.I. seems like a simpler, and more libertarian, alternative to the thicket of anti-poverty and social-welfare programs.
Assuming the Congress is able to work through this winding thicket of procedural and substantive issues, it will arrive at the door to tax reform.
Mr. Trump's decision, a high-risk foray into the thicket of the Middle East, was driven not by diplomatic calculations but by a campaign promise.
Aside from the thicket of legal issues raised by the case, does Apple have a moral obligation to help the government learn more about the attack?
It stands on Silver Place, a tiny side street in Soho, a sliver virtually unreachable by car or cab, in a thicket of mall-like shopping.
I look forward to the President nominating a strong director who will keep the FBI focused on its core mission and out of the political thicket.
But a raft of federal permits are required to lease, mortgage, mine, or drill - a bureaucratic thicket that critics say contributes to higher poverty on reservations.
On early autumn afternoons you can buy tomatoes, greens, chilies and honey all produced across the road from a dense thicket of brick two-storey homes.
Business and social service groups have put out calls for interpreters to help relatives navigate the thicket of paperwork, particularly difficult during a time of grief.
That is felt most acutely by small businesses, which lack the resources of larger competitors to stay in compliance with the thicket of rules and requirements.
As a result, skiers started pursuing straighter lines, thrashing through the hinged poles in the manner of an explorer cutting through a thicket with a machete.
Trump lawyer John Dowd threw a grenade into that thicket of legal issues earlier this week when he asserted that the President simply cannot obstruct justice.
He encountered them in a thicket of tall grass and trees, and told them he would bring them to a central processing center in McAllen, Texas.
It does not seem to matter the year or the names — the Red Sox lineup, against the Yankees at Fenway, is always a thicket of thorns.
Since the New Deal era, we've created a thicket of programs for the poor that are notorious for their complexity, their expense and sometimes their inadequacy.
Slightly more problematic is the remedial work he must occasionally perform with the back story; he can abandon us in a thicket of the past perfect.
The problem isn't limited to high-tech fiascos, either; as Arbesman points out, even our legal system has become an impenetrable thicket of rules and regulations.
I did not have a problem grasping the theme, which was straightforward and fun, but I found myself bemused and bewildered by a thicket of clues.
At the same time, the Gherkin became less visible, almost enclosed in a thicket of other skyscrapers that is only going to grow in coming years.
The threads of the central mystery led ever onward through a thicket of procedural and scripted missions, but the path they traced was a disappointing circle.
Even in this seemingly endless, dense thicket of news, we should be able to hold these competing ideas in our heads and not fall to pieces.
Before it could complete the rules, the Obama administration had to spend years fighting through a thicket of lawsuits filed by the for-profit college industry.
Like virtually every other candidate for president, Trump campaigned against this thicket of money and influence, positioning himself as an outsider who would ''drain the swamp.
But in the thicket along the river where smugglers can easily hide, the horse patrol unit plays an essential role in efforts to detect illegal activity.
When guests arrive, setting the appetizers tray on that adorable "Ram in the Thicket" statuette, pictured above (gold, silver, lapis lazuli and more, 20163-2400 B.C.).
But a raft of federal permits are required to lease, mortgage, mine, or drill – a bureaucratic thicket that critics say contributes to higher poverty on reservations.
They also argued that once freed from an oppressive thicket of EU regulations spewed by Brussels bureaucrats, Britain's feeble economy could once again regain its lost glory.
" Bob Woodward tells me this "is a legal thicket and really has not been settled": "I think a president can only be reached through impeachment and removal.
Economists say Italy's thicket of rules and regulations is one of the reasons why the economy has proved such a serial underperformer over the past two decades.
Indeed, when constitutionally required to leave office after two terms, rather than enjoy life, give speeches, and make money, Uribe stayed in the thicket of Colombian politics.
Instead of directly protesting Elizabeth, Greenblatt argues, Shakespeare reacted to the thicket of conspiracy and fear that surrounded Catholicism and its suppression in the post-Reformation era.
But Abloh cast it as a more intellectual enterprise than his earlier brand, presenting the clothes in a thicket of references ranging from Caravaggio to the Bauhaus .
A few minutes before halftime in the Knicks' game on Sunday night, Carmelo Anthony scrapped through a thicket of Toronto Raptors players to execute a tough layup.
In "Leaves and Vines" (2017), an allover thicket of jagged, mossy green brushstrokes admits, like a curtain left a crack open, a wedge of sun-brightened foliage.
It eventually became clear that a thicket of bureaucratic and intensely political complexity had ended up making the biennial a mash-up of competing claims and interests.
But now we're in the thicket of numbers, like Donald Duck in Mathmagic Land, and honestly, it's less fun there than just using something like common sense.
Whether we can find a path through this thicket depends on all Americans recognizing this is about the legitimacy of our constitutional democracy, not typical partisan divisions.
Simply repealing that rule would create a thicket of new legal challenges, but Mr. Pruitt could replace it with water regulations that were more limited in scope.
While Mr. Peskanov worked on his weekend concert menus — Haydn, Beethoven, Prokofiev and Brahms — crossover dribbling was the artistry down at the thicket of riverfront basketball courts.
WASHINGTON — Congress has until Friday to reach an agreement on a thicket of thorny issues, and the talks don't appear to be going very smoothly right now.
The abrupt turnabout was the latest example of the ethical thicket the president-elect and his family face as he prepares to take the oath of office.
Shlomo Fitusi, a welder, 69, slowly makes his way through the thicket of shoppers on a bicycle, with kosher wine hanging from the handlebars in a bag.
A thicket of trees shielded the Playboy Club from public view, and it was set at the end of a long driveway, reachable only by winding country roads.
But the effort, which involves digging up streets and gettting access rights to utility poles, is extremely costly and subject to a thicket of regulatory and competitive challenges.
"The rangers ... saw movement in the thicket, heard voices and opened fire, accidentally shooting and killing on the spot the pair," the parks agency said in a statement.
One of the men is suspected of drugging the woman's drink in a Freiburg nightclub before they all took turns at sexually assaulting her in a thicket outside.
More prosaically, Bank of America has trimmed back the bewildering thicket of products and systems left over from the acquisitions of Mr Lewis and his predecessor, Hugh McColl.
While the cacophony of the Yeltsin-era democracy has quieted, a thicket of competing bureaucratic, security and financial interests survives, stalling even strategic projects backed by the Kremlin.
Two Senate committees tasked with looking into the charges couldn't find their way through the thicket of allegations, and no expulsion vote was ever held for either man.
The Twitch chat rooms around "The French Chef" and "Joy of Painting" events were a thicket of gamer in-jokes, jargon and emojis (they're called "emotes" on Twitch).
If this makes you think of the circularity of "La Ronde" while also recalling "The Vagina Monologues," you're only partway through the thicket of the play's theatrical references.
With its profits sagging and a growing thicket of legal and regulatory disputes, Qualcomm has gone from a lion of the cellphone industry to a plum takeover target.
She needs a ventilator to breathe and a thicket of tubes and wires to feed her, keep her airway clear and monitor her pulse and blood oxygen levels.
But some of the world's best security researchers have also been prohibited from poking and prodding at these machines by a thicket of copyright and anti-tampering laws.
The other morning, Mr. Landau and David Lowin, the park's executive vice president, climbed into a power boat to inspect the thicket of pilings just below the park.
When you move to subtler notions of equivalence, with their infinite towers of paths between paths, even a simple rule like the associative property turns into a thicket.
Supply-siders promised that the problems were just ones of incentives and politics; once the thicket of regulations and taxes was cleared away, the American miracle would resume.
If one were judging only by the outcomes of these projects, it might be reasonable to guess that the scientific literature would be a thicket of opposing findings.
The commission's recommendations offer a bipartisan guide for cutting through the thicket of legal, bureaucratic and cultural barriers that hinder evidence-building activities across all levels of government.
It's music that's easy to overdo, to pile more and more sounds on top of one another until the thicket blocks out the sun, but Hoffmeier values space too.
Every time a brief glimmer of hope and happiness emerges through the thicket of absolute fuckery that is day to day living, it get's extinguished by yet more bollocks.
It's just not available yet, and because of the thicket of rules the state legislature imposed to keep marijuana as medical as possible, Castleberry worries it never will be.
While the top federal tax rate on corporate profits is 35 percent, American companies pay far less, thanks to a thicket of deductions and loopholes in the tax code.
Why it matters: It's not just that Democratic dominance at the Capitol would speed impeachment proceedings and trap the White House in a thicket of oversight probes and hearings.
And even if Mr. Bugaev were to get allotted land, developing it would require cooperation from 22 different government agencies responsible for enforcing a thicket of rules and regulations.
By third grade, the children's copies of "Charlie and the Chocolate Factory" are a thicket of neon Post-it notes, pointing to key details or words they didn't understand.
At Columbia, the response is to lean heavily on the company's long experience in navigating the thicket of trade restrictions it has faced in the United States and abroad.
SATURDAY PUZZLE — Mark Diehl crafts his puzzles from very original material, usually with a seed entry or two and then a big thicket of interesting words that somehow click.
The pitch for such offerings: eliminating the hassle of dealing with venture capitalists and investment bankers, while also avoiding the thicket of regulations that accompany traditional initial public offerings.
Later, Qualcomm developed the chip sets used for the basic radio communications in mobile phones, and its technology gave Qualcomm a leading position, protected by a thicket of patents.
CreditCreditKarsten Moran for The New York Times EAST HAMPTON, N.Y. — Beyond a thicket of dahlias, Katie Couric climbed through a tangle of vines to pick a squat little eggplant.
While Uber and Airbnb exploded in the gray areas in regulations that governed taxis and hotels, Bridge had trouble operating within the thicket of complicated, restrictive Kenyan education regulations.
So we have to find our way through the thicket and begin to rebuild critical industries just as we've done with our automotive industry," she said on "Power Lunch.
Unlike many other industries, in which the regulatory thicket spans a number of agencies and levels of government, almost every aspect of aviation is exclusively regulated by the FAA.
While the House bill they barely passed gave them a legislative victory — something they badly needed for party morale — it does not get them out of the political thicket.
After he lifted Earth, Wind & Fire's "That's the Way of the World" above Pentatonix's thicket of vocal beatboxing and a cappella harmonies, he called for universal accessibility for the disabled.
And the way that regulation works, the way that the payers, the company who doesn't even really want to be in the process ... They've made quite a thicket, haven't they?
Through a thicket of laws and regulations, the U.S. government has broad control over what can get exported to whom, particularly in areas with sensitive technology or national security concerns.
China's market is tightly controlled and officials, wary of bubbles, impose a thicket of restraints to keep demand cool, from curbs on multiple home purchases to high down-payment requirements.
What Tillerson appears to have met in Moscow is an impenetrable thorny thicket of diplomatic defenses while simultaneously realizing how few tools he has to fight his way through it.
From the foyer, one can see a thicket of plaster in the main gallery, but thanks to the whiteness of the walls and of the materials, the tone is elegiac.
After three weeks in Ghana, Simpson-Kent was arrested near the town of Butre, having been smoked from a thicket where he was hiding armed with a knife, authorities said.
The Supreme Court will then have a little more than two months to find a way out of the thicket before the justices go on their summer break in July.
Lefty had a chance in 22016, too, before he took a triple-bogey on Sunday's fourth hole, when he hacked it around in the adjoining bamboo thicket like Indiana Jones.
Big thicket is home to 40 miles of hiking trails and excellent bird watching oh, also it has 37 oil wells used for some good old fashioned Texas oil drilling.
The basic problem remains: It is difficult to build housing in California, thanks in part to a thicket of local parking regulations, building requirements, zoning restrictions, and bureaucratic choke points.
Though the city is most famous for its thicket of skyscrapers—it has more high-rises than any other place in the world—most of its land area is undeveloped.
The centerpiece of the party's production is the massive white maw of a jaguar protruding from a thicket of trees, upon which psychedelic projection-mapped visuals are blasted all night.
She's much given to sudden rhetorical gearshifts — she'll swerve from a flight of melancholy lyricism straight into a thicket of profanity, shaking off her own eloquence like a bad mood.
Over a decade ago, they completed the home that would become their ultimate statement, a dwelling in dialogue with the thicket of 13-foot juniper trees in which it hides.
Together, they are the engine powering the city's first Bangladeshi restaurant, housed in a former deli in Journal Square, just blocks from the thicket of Indian restaurants on Newark Avenue.
The answer lies in the intricate thicket of licensing and copyright law, which in the past has given political campaigns a lot of leeway to choose whatever songs they like.
Their approaches to navigating the thicket of runoffs and recounts, litigation and delayed certifications, show that there is no set playbook for candidates whose political fates are up for grabs.
He has taken up art as a hobby — "I'm a tenth-rate painter," he said, gesturing at a thicket of brushes — and expects to spend the summer in Provincetown, Mass.
Nearly everything in the thicket is edible to the mega-herbivores such as elephants and so nearly everything has evolved thorns and spikes in a kind of vegetarian arms race.
While the eastern Upper East Side has seen booms before — a thicket of condos sprouted in the 1980s — the latest wave offers more opulence than in the past, brokers say.
It would be "absurd", the judges wrote, to stay out of the thicket and ask plaintiffs to seek redress from "the entity that committed the alleged violation in the first place".
Throughout it all, Fishman experimented with style and medium, yet she ultimately remained true to abstraction, employing a thicket of brush strokes that are dynamic, bold, energetic, passionate, and intensely physical.
Now they are back with Machine, Platform, Crowd, a guide for business leaders through the thicket presented by artificial intelligence, tech companies with tremendous reach, and the power of the crowd.
President Donald Trump's plan to scrap a landmark rule to cut planet-warming emissions from power plants will likely be a drawn-out process and face a thicket of legal obstacles.
By the same token, a thicket of environmental rules in California has given NIMBYs (short for "not in my backyard") a host of ways to stall, shrink or stop new projects.
It is not difficult to appreciate the court's reluctance to wade into the districting thicket, and to try to develop judicially manageable ground rules for reviewing the drawing of district lines.
It includes his "Masks" series, which depicts well-dressed urbanites wearing white masks, a commentary on China's rapid social transformation in the mid-1990s, and his haunting, thicket-filled abstract landscapes.
Wavery pitches, melting tones, swooping glissandos, ephemeral loops, controlled static and a soothing yet varying pulse emerge from a thicket of knobs and patch cords, serene but never merely ambient. J.P.
Six of the eight share overlapping biographies and experiences, which makes their very different intellectual journeys through the same historical thicket both instructive to today's searchers and relevant to today's crises.
Mr. Mitchell's unit, which he said he got on sale for around $200, pointed to a thicket of chest-high brush just off Center Drive, near the Victorian Gardens amusement park.
For those more curious than martial, one useful path through this thicket is to look at areas where extremists and eccentrics from very different worlds are talking about the same subject.
However, that policy package was rebuffed in the Senate, where Republican Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell denounced the bill for creating a "thicket of bureaucracy" that will kill thousands of jobs.
To get opioids to market and keep them there in one of the most regulated industries in the United States, manufacturers had to navigate a thicket of federal and state regulations.
This tuft, called a pappus, is made up of a sparse thicket of filaments, or bristles, that look something like the sprouting hair on the head of the Chinese crested dog.
Several people got trapped in their cars Tuesday after strong winds blew a thicket of tumbleweeds into a portion of a state highway, according to Washington State Patrol Trooper Chris Thorson.
But from the viewpoint of her inner animal brain, who wants to pucker up to a mouth fringed by a thicket of hair that might contain tiny, squirmy, maggot-like creatures?
He has a thicket of reddish-brown hair growing into a pointy beard sculpted in the Chechen manner, and a guttural voice with the bass-amped rumble of a heavy truck.
But embedding their demands in a thicket of culture war conflicts could make the road to justice tougher, said Matthias Katsch, a Canisius alumnus who in 2010 told of his abuse.
Missoni has always been a fanatic for colors, and in the garden she disappears into a thicket of high-stemmed blue hydrangeas to pick a particularly purple bloom for her bouquet.
The four victims were between 20163 and 30 years old when they were "marched to a thicket where they were executed," according to a 1946 story in The New York Times.
He coped with emergencies, pulling a client clear of a stampede or a vehicle from a bog, treating snakebites or tracking a wounded lion in a thicket — his most dangerous game.
The task force has taken a middle road through the thicket, estimating that screening 1,000 women from age 50 every two years for 20 years will avert seven deaths from breast cancer.
In a potential conflict with China in the Pacific, the US Air Force would have to deal with a thicket of air and ground defense that would challenge its ability to operate.
Still, promising to remove verification badges from accounts that violate Twitter's rules will likely create a thicket of tricky editorial decisions for a company that has historically prided itself on free speech.
They spent it out near the lake, walking in a thicket of trees where Ernest used to play as a child, less out of nostalgia than as a way to maintain privacy.
You could do a lot worse, for example, than pressing AbbVie CEO Richard Gonzalez about the thicket of patents that continue to stave off competition for Humira, the world's best-selling drug.
Barons, cowboys, outlaws and gunslingers all vying for their voice by rushing for content gold in this unbridled sphere of influence — but they are stumbling in the thicket of the emigrant trails.
He stood up, turned and walked to the periphery of Pruitt's property, where the yard was rimmed by a thicket of wild, knee-high spartina grasses, matted by wind and salt spray.
Or the thoughtfulness of Mr. Blondel, who, when he saw me struggling to tackle an unwieldy thicket of vines, picked up a pair of secateurs and faced me on the other side.
In a 2012 study in the South African Journal of Science, the authors evaluated the cultural significance of the thicket, and found ties between use of the traditional language and the land.
Jerry Brown has been around long enough to have learned to pick his battles carefully, especially when it comes to navigating the complicated thicket of initiatives on the California ballot next week.
The three men were scouring a thicket on the edge of a soybean field, hoping to stumble across the buck's carcass, when Eric noticed a peculiar stonelike object lying on the ground.
Frantic album opener "Depra" splices cold, bright tremolo and strangled, sporadic howls with a thicket of moody, melodic riffs and explosive percussion, setting an ambitious tone for the rest of the album.
In the meantime, we asked seven lawyers with relevant expertise to help us untangle the thicket — how much change is permissible, and who gets to decide whether the script crosses that line?
Finally, by a thicket of acacia trees, the legionnaires spotted a turbaned suspect in flip-flops, carrying an AK-213, who set off at a sprint and melted away in the distance.
Even though I had a perfectly good razor I used to shave my facial hair, I felt strongly that I needed something pink or purple to tackle the thicket on my legs.
The generic competitors, facing a thicket of patents AbbVie has obtained to try to maintain exclusive rights, have reached a settlement which means their alternatives to Humira won't be available until 20203.
Some might also think of birdsong and insects, or summon thoughts of thick foliage in the understory, the crunch of leaves or pine needles underfoot, or overgrown trails meandering into the thicket.
The jungle is either a verdant mecca for scientists seeking some magical cure and adventurers in search of treasure, or a 1.4 billion-acre thicket of threats including cannibalistic tribes and giant anacondas.
Maybe you'd expect an album of cowboy songs, given his natural barbed wire inclinations and white thicket of facial hair that makes him resemble the cosmic kin of Yosemite Sam or The Lorax.
Some in the tech industry continue to nurture the hope that Congress can come together to pass a bill that just expands high-skilled visas, avoiding the political thicket of other immigration reforms.
Netflix's upcoming docuseries Wormwood mixes fiction and nonfiction to investigate a thicket of decades-long conspiracy theories around the CIA — and how one family may have paid the price for the agency's secrets.
Inside an abandoned cinema from the 1930s, the architect Sou Fujimoto collaborated with COS to create the "Forest of Light" — an immersive installation that forms a glowing thicket of towering cones of light.
China has a thicket of regulations on funds and companies, which is one of several reasons we see specifically China-focused vehicles (such as Lightspeed and Lightspeed China or Sequoia and Sequoia China).
The night's biggest shindig was on West 14th Street at Up & Down, where Rihanna celebrated her Michael Jackson Video Vanguard Award, and the sidewalk was a thicket of paparazzi, stymied hopefuls and oglers.
In government, the regulatory thicket, diverse stakeholders, and unfunded (or chronically underfunded) mandates for outcomes require the ability to navigate the obscure flexibilities that already exist in order to truly drive mission success.
I know all too well that fighting through the thicket of your own mind is the work of a lifetime and not a couple of years' worth of TV. But Fleabag did it.
"Nuts gig, but fuckin' bummed they didn't play "3's & 7's" ay," one pie-eyed straggler said while heading for the exit in a thicket of sweaty bodies and half-empty cans.
He would later tell the Hong Kong police that he had strangled her, stuffed her body in a suitcase and dumped it in a thicket of bushes near a subway station in Taipei.
The approval came as congressional leaders from both parties met with Mr. Trump at the White House to talk about the thicket of issues facing lawmakers as the end of the year approaches.
Which is how I found myself in a bureaucratic and cultural thicket recently, when my husband and I were finalizing our move back to the U.A.E., where we had lived a decade earlier.
The bass line bounces up and down an octave within a dense thicket of other sounds: chirps, blips, whistles, swoops, taps, glassy sustained tones and now and then, for comic relief, a burp.
Carr, was among the most fractious of the 20th century because the dissenters saw it as a disastrous intrusion into the domain of legislators — a "political thicket" that would inevitably politicize the court.
Heads Up Head south: past the gas station, the chicken shop and the bodybuilder gym, through a thicket of enormous public housing estates, constructed in varying shades of beige and beiger and brown.
The joint venture, to overhaul a Kushner tower on Fifth Avenue, highlights the ethical thicket Mr. Kushner would face while advising his father-in-law on policy that could affect his bottom line.
Now, those deals, struck with the Persian Gulf nation of Qatar and other investors, have come back to haunt Barclays as it is trying to escape a thicket of legal and reputational problems.
For a time, after the partition of British India in 1947, Prince Cyrus lived with his mother, Wilayat, and sister, Princess Sakina, in an old hunting lodge in a jungle thicket inside Delhi.
There are more animals and insects: a horse on a highway, a bird bleached white against a black sky (or is it a black wall?), a deer peering quizzically out of a thicket.
"It would be kind of boring if everything was the same," she said through a thicket of pink and green strobe lights at the bar, which sits in an upper-level parking lot.
It got its start as an anime forum, but quickly grew into a thicket of misogyny and racism, fed by a laissez-faire moderation approach where anything that wasn't explicitly illegal was allowed.
Even in full protective bodysuits, each group of workers could spend only a few minutes inside the structure, working by the light of portable electric lamps amid a thicket of machinery, pipes, and catwalks.
In addition to direct Congressional interference is what Andrew Natsios, who led USAID under George W. Bush, calls the "counter-bureaucracy": a thicket of regulations and regulatory bodies concerned with compliance rather than results.
And, even if Republicans find a way through the political thicket surrounding this legislation -- or, more likely, push forward in spite of it -- they still have to figure out the legislative end of things.
To drive home the point, Bollywood superstar Amitabh Bachchan has appeared in a promotional video in which he weaves a cat's cradle between the fingers of his hands - symbolizing India's thicket of old taxes.
When I asked the 48-year-old former prosecutor to explain her position on the nominee, she offered a this-too-shall-pass sort of smile, then proceeded into a thicket of noncommittal verbiage.
As officials continue their investigation, the cascade of crumbling foundations poses a thicket of legal, emotional and financial issues and has prompted the state to create an official web page dedicated to the problem.
To drive home the point, Bollywood superstar Amitabh Bachchan has appeared in a promotional video in which he weaves a cat's cradle between the fingers of his hands - symbolising India's thicket of old taxes.
The new Goods and Services Tax (GST) regime replaces a thicket of indirect central and state levies that critics argue have blunted economic competitiveness and hobbled efforts to lift more people out of poverty.
Miller follows the twists and turns of the case, giving a blow-by-blow account of the trial that initially has the pace of a TV procedural before crawling through a thicket of detail.
Sitting down for an interview at a nearby hotel earlier that day, a pastel scarf slung around his neck and a thicket of white hair tousled on his head, he had been similarly epigrammatic.
"There's a significant number of potential students — folks who live in the North Country — who just think that college is not for them, and find the thicket of financial aid guidelines daunting," she added.
Mont Péko Journal MONT PÉKO NATIONAL PARK, Ivory Coast — Tramping through a thicket of brush alongside soldiers with Kalashnikovs, Kpolo Ouattara stopped at the sight of an interloper: a cocoa tree, gray with rot.
The new system should not be built solely on a thicket of narrow rules, Ms. Hackitt argued, because a legalistic adherence to those rules could still result in buildings like Grenfell that were unsafe.
It cuts through a thicket of dormant trees, passing a half-dozen trailer homes and after almost a mile runs into a line of boulders and a rusted railing with a sign: Road Closed.
Their new Piggyback NYC will serve cha ca la Vong, the Vietnamese fish classic in a thicket of herbs; charcoal-smoked rib-eye; and Filipino lumpia spring rolls with Shanghai-style sweet chile sauce.
LOS ANGELES — In the early hours of Monday morning, Kenley Jansen stood in front of a thicket of cameras and microphones in a quiet Los Angeles Dodgers clubhouse, and insisted he was not tired.
The region is, in many ways, a stepchild, a place where most people trace their ethnic roots to Myanmar or China, and where a thicket of separatist militias have waged decades-long fights for independence.
It finds KEN Mode in peak fighting condition, their sharp, angular noise rock riffs jabbing and feinting through a thicket of distortion and warped, woozy melody, thrumming bass and Jesse Matthewson's jack-o-lantern snarl.
It's all good until the sun sets, of course, at which point you'd better hope you stumble your way into a clearing or—better yet—make it to the edge of the thicket of trees.
Half a decade ago, a 50-inch 1080p TV would have been an aspirational item, whereas today we are walking through a thicket of even larger 4K TVs strewn across the Las Vegas Convention Center.
One of the highlights of the New Museum's siege was the cluster of massive arches erected directly outside the elevator doors; as the doors slid open, the looming thicket all but pushed you back inside.
By the same measure, patchwork solutions to address modern realities have created a complicated thicket of rules and regulation, which not only put an unnecessary burden on taxpayers, but also allow for subjectivity and politicization.
The project received about 2,200 weekend hours of track time affecting that area, a thicket of intensely used rails, from December 53 to March 2017, according to a Times analysis of previously undisclosed Amtrak records.
This is where Tchelitchew comes in and a magnifying glass proves handy — look carefully at "Thicket" (1958), and you will likely see a ghostly face synonymous with the undergrowth in the lower right hand corner.
Among Williamson's 20 points against Yale was a balletic layup on which he appeared to float through a thicket of Elis before softly dropping the ball through the basket, but also yet another thunderous dunk.
Perhaps most significantly, Ms. McMahon became the first prominent industry insider to admit publicly that wrestling was scripted, as part of a largely successful bid to bypass a thicket of regulations from state athletic commissions.
" To which the Republican State Leadership Committee replied, "A holding in their favor would politicize the courts and would go far beyond intervention in the 'political thicket'; it would impale the judiciary on its thorns.
If you can look beyond the horrendous, wig-like thicket that clings to the head of the title character in "Nancy," you might see something to admire in the movie's uncompromising portrait of extreme misery.
In particular, Mr. Trump has said he will be taking aim at the Dodd-Frank regulatory overhaul, passed in the wake of the financial crisis, which contains a thicket of restrictions on trading and oversight.
Into this thicket of trouble, Mike Pompeo announced on Monday that the State Department would reverse a 41-year-old legal opinion claiming that Israeli settlements in the West Bank were inconsistent with international law.
Yet the Miramonti, built on porphyry rock amid a thicket of trees, still has miles of woodland paths just out its back door, and the Merano 2000 ski slopes are a short shuttle ride away.
Gina Telaroli notes that Have a chew on me epitomizes his mixed feelings on its subject, William A. Wellman, and one cannot help but see Farber's own authorial stamp in the painting's thicket of train tracks.
Scrutinising district lines, Justice Felix Frankfurter wrote in 1946, could be a fraught exercise that brings judges into "the political thicket"; Paul Clement, the lawyer defending the North Carolina gerrymander, cited that warning on March 26th.
High fees also reflect anti-competitive behaviour and a growing thicket of Western money-laundering rules which are meant to police al-Qaeda barons, but which have ended up being a nightmare for expatriate Filipina maids.
For average investors, funds are essential because the bond market is a thicket, with literally millions of securities, in contrast to about 100,000 common stocks traded on global markets, according to Morningstar research manager Maciej Kowara.
Its charms are emergent; suddenly from a dazed lull, a cluster of church bell tones will swell into a dense thicket as woozily overwhelming as any of his collaborations with the similarly glossine composer Harold Budd.
As is typical for Mexico, the preparations run late, and swarms of staff are still setting up when the Desert Hearts crew arrive and rustle their way through the thicket of vegetation leading to the plot.
By so doing, the Court avoided, at least for the time being, straying even more deeply into the political thicket of voting and representational equality first entered under Chief Justice Earl Warren in the 1960's.
Researchers say minority patients use fewer opioids, and they offer a thicket of possible explanations, including a lack of insurance coverage and a greater reluctance among minorities to take opioid painkillers even if they are prescribed.
The streets of the city are alive with all kinds of vendors, many of them ambulatory, and all with their own tactics for cutting through the auditory thicket, from recordings to pan flutes to hand bells.
Even a state as big, wealthy and liberal as California — with the world's fifth-largest economy and nearly 40 million people — would find itself hamstrung by money, a legal and regulatory thicket, and highly motivated opposition.
Here's one: that time climbing through a hillside bamboo thicket during a military operation when the heat felt so intense it got inside me, and yet I couldn't seem to drink enough water and was vomiting.
The majority opinion's author, Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, is one of the court's clearest writers, but even her clean prose couldn't lift a dense opinion from the complex statutory thicket in which the case was mired.
Heralded as the world's toughest watchdog of Silicon Valley technology giants, Europe has clamped down on violent content, hate speech and misinformation online through a thicket of new laws and regulations over the past five years.
And if it doesn't show up — if, instead, recent trends hold and the nation remains narrowly divided along partisan lines — a Sanders presidency would face the same thicket of structural hurdles that any Democratic presidency would.
The promotion of Ms. DeRosa, a tough loyalist credited with steering some of Mr. Cuomo's biggest legislative victories, also resurrects a thicket of questions about her familial ties to industries with business before the state government.
The leave argument rested heavily on the notion that, once freed from an oppressive thicket of EU regulations spewed by Brussels bureaucrats, Britain's feeble economy would once again regain its glory as a fully independent world power.
The leave argument rests heavily on the notion that, once freed from an oppressive thicket of EU regulations spewed by Brussels bureaucrats, Britain's feeble economy will once again regain its glory as a fully independent world power.
Before you know it, a few synths zoom in, a thicket of guitar noise encroaches, and the bottom drops out, revealing pitch-shifted autobiographical bon mots and astral-projection tones on top of a gently skittering beat.
Defenses duck under every screen he navigates, betting that they can cut off his drive before it starts and that he won't be able to thread a pass through a thicket of limbs before they do so.
BANGALORE, India — Lawmakers cleared the way on Wednesday for India to forge a single economic zone from its thicket of overlapping federal and state taxes, the most important economic measure since India opened its markets in 7.63.
Remember, oh, remember, the small, shy animal that would come out of the thicket of thinking when we sat quietly by, without a thing to do in this world, nothing pinging or vibrating or alerting us otherwise?
On Monday night, though, with its biggest star joining Mr. Trump at a raucous campaign event, Fox News entered new territory — a thicket in which it's hard to tell where the network ends and the president begins.
After two years off and all that he had gone through, he was not what he was at Washington, but there were flickers of it when he would acrobatically snatch the ball amid a thicket of defenders.
Jordan Morris, the most industrious player for the United States men's national team on a scorching Tuesday afternoon here, jumped in next to keep the play alive, leaping to head it toward a thicket of Honduran defenders.
The skills they developed as counselors — how to listen, how to interpret, how to advocate and negotiate — couldn't be better preparation, they say, for guiding clients through the thicket that is home-buying in New York City.
It has now grown to include a series of suites surrounding a central lodge and an encampment of 15 tents — rustic, but deluxe — secluded in a thicket of wilderness in the South African province of KwaZulu-Natal.
President Trump took aim at financial regulations and other federal rules on Monday, signing an executive order to trim back the federal regulatory thicket and promising to do "a big number" on Obama-era Wall Street restrictions.
CAMPOS LINDOS, Brazil (Reuters) - When farmer Julimar Pansera purchased land in Brazil's interior seven years ago, it was blanketed in tiers of fruit trees, twisted shrubs and the occasional palm standing tall in a thicket of undergrowth.
Having previously produced a magisterial three-volume biography of Liszt, Alan Walker has searched for new primary sources from Warsaw to Washington, shed new light on many aspects of Chopin's life and cleared away a thicket of myths.
You need to be focused on bread and butter issues, and you need to be showing up in the barbershops, beauty salons, living rooms, worship services, — and yes, Lizard Thicket— with a message that resonates with working families.
I've written before that these data sovereignty regulations ultimately benefit the largest service providers, since they're the only ones with the scale to be able to competently handle the thicket of constantly changing regulations that govern this space.
As both PPI and the libertarian Mercatus Center have shown, the result is a thicket of outdated, overlapping, and conflicting rules that inhibit economic investment and innovation, and impose growing compliance and opportunity costs on entrepreneurs and businesses.
Ethics lawyers and presidential law experts say that despite a thicket of rules governing business interests in the executive branch, there is no rule that would prevent Trump from owning or promoting The Trump Organization if he's elected.
The Trump Organization is not so much a company as a dense thicket of disparate properties, acquired and developed over more than three decades, linked in a complex network of interconnected individual corporations, limited liability companies and partnerships.
While beautiful, they of course immediately become foreboding once you know their past significance: the labyrinthine foliage of a forest of pines is also a thicket of uncertainty; lights illuminating a house could suggest safety but also danger.
Families hoping to win release for the thousands of migrant children being held by federal immigration authorities are finding they have to navigate an exhausting, intimidating — and sometimes expensive — thicket of requirements before the youngsters can be released.
He navigates the thicket of languages by conducting his prematch and halftime team talks in both English and French; his assistant Mustapha Hadji, a popular member of Morocco's 1998 World Cup squad, steps in when Arabic is required.
Experienced counsel in a case like Mr. Nashiri's is critical, Commander Mizer said, because the thicket of charges stemming from a series of attacks is complicated further by evidence gathered through years of torture at C.I.A. black sites.
You'll drive past a thicket of short, squat mango trees, sufaidas (eucalyptus) that are chopped for firewood, and date trees that in five or six months will yield bundles of silky-skinned fruit the size of a baby.
I still see myself standing naked in the living room of our suburban New Jersey house, my heart thundering as I watched her through the screen door, rustling through the thicket of shrubbery that girdled the front porch.
On dozens of screens, glowing in the low light, were the various components of a human body: the dislocated sphere of an eyeball, the strange topography of skin in extreme close-up, a thicket of sprouting hair follicles.
By eliminating trade tariffs and removing a thicket of regulatory and other non-tariff barriers, the TPP makes it possible for our companies to sell more Made-In-America semiconductors to the massive markets in the Asia-Pacific.
Janice Parker, a landscape architect, planted a thicket of bamboo among them and fashioned a moon gate from green pussy willow branches, among other interventions that recall, she said, the influences of Tony Duquette, Bermuda, China and Hollywood.
They have navigated a bureaucratic thicket to get Ms. Serrano named Danny's "sponsor": A home inspection; fingerprinting for background checks; frequent phone calls with Danny's social worker in New York, Lupe in Texas and relatives back in Honduras.
"Ain't nobody parachuting into the black community thinking that you can hang out and say 'I won Iowa,' and go to Lizard's Thicket and say, 'I'm the one," he added, referring to a renown barbecue restaurant in South Carolina.
Nilay Patel: We've talked a lot on the Vergecast about just how difficult it is to start a competitor to Spotify, because of the enormous thicket of copyright trivia you have to know, and then everyone's mad at you.
But just as the CEM added a valuable forum to the thicket of international efforts to deploy clean energy — by elevating clean energy cooperation to the highest political levels — so too can the MIM raise the profile of innovation.
A widely used standard called Eurorack allows modules to interconnect, encouraging many small companies to manufacture their own modules; more than a dozen outfits shared a "modular marketplace" at Moogfest, demonstrating their capabilities in a thicket of patch cords.
The result is a thicket of intersecting relationships among police, coroners and a wide network of scientists the company taps, a Reuters examination of hundreds of wrongful death lawsuits and interviews with lawyers for both plaintiffs and police found.
To shed light on that -- and to guide me through the dense thicket that is campaign finance law -- I reached out to Larry Noble, the senior director and general counsel at the Campaign Legal Center and a CNN contributor.
Schwimmer is taking a bold step, assuming the $12 billion in debt that the Blackstone-led investors piled on the company and betting he can navigate a shareholder vote and a thicket of regulatory reviews to get it approved.
Worse was to come for Koepka, who from the middle of the fairway, put his fourth shot into a thicket of trees left of the green and had to traipse some 70 meters back to take a drop shot.
Inside the Quicken Loans Arena, a thicket of American flags behind him, he portrayed himself, over and over, as an almost messianic figure prepared to rescue the country from the ills of urban crime, illegal immigration and global terrorism.
But Like a Fading Shadow, with its compulsive regurgitation of facts and its awkward mix of memoir, history, and fiction, has a wayward feel to it, as if the author got lost in the thicket of his own investigation.
"There are still a lot of legal issues around video game preservation, but these rules do clear away some of that thicket so it will make it easier for institutions to preserve videogames, and that's really important," Albert said.
It can be hard to know what to say to a person in the thicket of grief; when someone is grieving a loved one's suicide, the right words — any words, even — can feel all the more elusive and fraught.
Oshie banged in a power-play rebound, and Wilson converted Kuznetsov's pass — the first of his four assists, the most in a Stanley Cup finals game since Joe Sakic for Colorado in 1996 — through a thicket in the slot.
In the dense thicket of the internet lies a verdant patch of grass where dappled sunbeams peek through the leaves, resting fawns doze about, a troop of woodland mushrooms grows underfoot, and a brook faintly burbles in the distance.
Under the Mobile Workforce Act, no matter where a worker is traveling, state income taxes are only triggered after 30 days – simplifying the current income tax thicket comprised of the 50 states and their numerous relationships with each other.
So if the push for tax reform ends up slashing through the thicket of business deductions, exemptions and loopholes, companies that currently take full advantage of those tax breaks would end up paying more to the Treasury, not less.
Talasnik's work is an elegant thicket of 160 cuts of yellow cedar, the logs and planks arranged to form two rough triangles that look like a pair of oversize wings, belonging to either a superhuman or an early wood airplane model.
The region is, in many ways, a stepchild to the rest of the country, a place where most people trace their ethnic roots to Myanmar or China, and where a thicket of separatist militias have waged decades-long fights for independence.
Gorsuch has written that in order to adjudicate the thicket of American law, judges must search for the moral principles that best justify the law as it is written, and then use moral philosophy to tease out further moral implications.
And though several GOP fundraisers have told CNN in recent months that it was Manafort himself who brought them on board, bundlers like Hughey said Wednesday that all they could do during a shake-up was charge through the thicket.
As the convergence of healthcare and technology continues, technology companies (and investors) are increasingly finding themselves lost in a thicket of unique legal issues, enforced by unfamiliar regulators, including privacy of patient information, consumer protection and fraud and patient safety.
In "The Golden State Killer Is Tracked Through a Thicket of DNA, and Experts Shudder," Gina Kolata and Heather Murphy write: Genetic testing services have become enormously popular with people looking for long-lost relatives or clues to hereditary diseases.
From here you can see the Montgomery skyline through the thicket of hanging columns, the river where the enslaved were sold and the State Capitol building that once housed the Confederacy, whose monuments the current Alabama governor has vowed to protect.
Up a steep, verdant incline and through a fragile, low wooden gate is Suter's working studio — a light-filled space with screen doors that open onto a deck overlooking the thicket of plants that now obscures her view of the lake.
In a chapter titled "We're All a Little Bit Sexist," Lipman walks us through the thicket of research on cultural biases against women, which start almost from birth: Mothers overestimate the crawling ability of sons and underestimate that of daughters.
Noah's daughter Whitney will be whiny and away at school, and his son Martin will be angry, but when it comes down to it, the psychological thicket in which Noah, Helen and Alison reside is the sum of the show's world.
For the past two weeks, Mr. Schulte's former colleagues and law enforcement officials have taken the stand to explain a thicket of C.I.A. computer networks, guiding jurors through a digital trail that prosecutors say led to Mr. Schulte as the leaker.
It's been three decades since the last major overhaul, and our tax code has grown even more bloated and unwieldy, saddling individual taxpayers with a thicket of paperwork and businesses with the highest corporate tax rate in the developed world.
Into this thicket, the Trump administration is hoping to strike a quick and decisive blow in a widening U.S. trade war that most economists, and many of his advisors, say will only provoke a global backlash that will hurt U.S. workers.
The additional upfront costs to homeowners from the mandate are relatively small (again, probably much smaller than CEC estimated), especially compared to the thicket of other charges and barriers facing them in California — and the general effect of skyrocketing prices.
Make them navigate a thicket of long-ass limbs so that every dribble, every pass, every cut has to be as precise as possible in order for it to work, because even when it does, they get beat up a little bit.
But now one federal official, who happens to be a Republican, has proposed what amounts to a return to Glass-Steagall as an act of deregulation: trading a dense thicket of complex rules for a couple that might be easier to enforce.
Increasingly, however, Ari is a thicket of sleek high-rise buildings and indie cool-kid hangouts with international flavors: German beer gardens, Latin American restaurants, Korean canteens, Japanese izakayas, American-style food trucks and numerous freshly minted cafes stocked with Italian espresso makers.
I can remember the first time my father taught me to shoot a rifle, how he had me sit on the concrete driveway and use my knee for a rest, aiming for a cardboard target in a honeysuckle thicket across the road.
Whoever Trump picks will have to wade through a thicket of thorny issues, including Trump's crude comments about Mexican immigrants, his call for a renegotiation of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) and his demand that Mexico pay for the wall.
In place of a thicket of forces that held inflation down in recent years, the economy is digesting massive fiscal stimulus from the Trump administration's tax cuts and spending as well as import tariffs that have sent steel and aluminum prices higher.
His successor will have to maneuver through a thicket of difficult global challenges, such as holding countries accountable to the promises they made on climate change, finding new ways to help people displaced by war and resolving conflicts fueled by powerful countries.
Akron, Iowa (CNN)At a northwest Iowa hunting preserve more than 1,000 miles from Washington, a group of hunters clad in neon orange formed a line at the top of a hill, proceeding forward through a deep thicket of brush, kicking up pheasants.
Critics also say drug companies are abusing the patent system by taking out patents on even the most minor component of a drug, then reformulating those components and taking out a whole new "thicket" of patents — keeping generics at bay even longer.
But the decision will instead push federal courts further into the political thicket, and, in states with substantial minority voter populations, force courts to make logically impossible determinations about whether racial reasons or partisan motives predominate when a party gerrymanders for political advantage.
In Hunters Point, the thicket of gleaming towers by the river began to take shape in 1997 with the construction of the Citylights condop, and filled out in subsequent years with five contributions from the Elghanayan family, a major Long Island City builder.
You may go from bushwhacking through a dense thicket of young fir trees that were planted in the 1970s, into a stand of mature second-growth, where moss-covered Douglas fir, Western red cedar and Sitka spruce loom over a more spacious understory.
"I don't think there's ever been a time in the post-World War II period where issues as important as nuclear weapons are on the table, and there is no serious scientist there to help the president through the thicket," he said.
As tempting as it must have been to hit back at Daniels, Trump kept quiet, possibly seeking to avoid being drawn any deeper into a thicket of litigation by three women who have brought sex-related civil cases to which he is linked.
There is a potentially effective and focused attack on Sanders obscured in the thicket of Clinton exaggeration: Sanders, the argument goes, is just too pure to actually govern, and he prefers casting a perfect "no" to crafting an imperfect-but-valuable compromise.
The Atlantic City-born lawyer, a guitarist in a rock band who has a personality to match Mr. Trump's, will be the legal arbiter for the complicated thicket of ethical issues awaiting a president-elect who has built a vast business empire.
Around that same time, Oberhuber was producing his own paintings in the spirit of art informel, such as "Zerstörte Formen" ("Destroyed Forms," 1949), a thicket of wiry skeins of paint in an earth-toned palette that create an abstract, texture-rich topography.
Their reunion sows the seeds for the dense thicket of Rebeck's satisfying plot, which meanders over several years and tracks the lives of these two people who are miserable without each other yet can't seem to find their way back into the same orbit.
If this were not enough, not only is there a thorny patent thicket to manage but the firm must fight and win a case seeking to overturn its own intellectual-property claims on the ground that it was not the first to invent them.
My brain subconsciously peels back years of interactions with my wife to decode the message appearing on my phone, but between her and me there's still a thicket of sociotechnical mediation, a stew of people and history and parts, that can never be untangled.
In the score, the word "dead" was marked with a thicket of inflections, to indicate that it should be stuttered rather than merely spoken, and Benjamin asked Orendt to dwell on the initial words of his reply before landing, decisively, on the conclusive syllable.
" HHS Secretary Azar, who served as president of drugmaker Eli Lilly's U.S. operations before joining the Trump administration, said the plan the bring down drug prices "has to include looking at the thicket of manufacturer rebates and discounts that aren't working for many Americans.
And because of the thicket of patents around Revlimid®, payers are projected to spend $45 billion in excess costs on that drug alone as compared to what they could be paying if generic competitors were to enter when the first patent expires in 2019.
After several rounds of deadlock in the parliament, India rolled out the Goods and Services Tax (GST) on July 1, replacing a thicket of indirect central and state levies that critics argue have blunted economic competitiveness and hobbled efforts to lift more out of poverty.
Even after a provision in the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, of 2002, began requiring C.E.O.s and C.F.O.s to certify the accuracy of corporate financial reports, few executives were charged with violating the law, because the companies threw up a thicket of subcertifications to buffer accountability.
Online lenders and other so-called fintech firms — including the payment processor Square, the online lender Lending Club and the cryptocurrency exchange Coinbase — have pressed for regulatory routes that would let them cut through the thicket of state and federal laws that govern financial businesses.
Along the way the poem offers a compendium of Hindu metaphysics of the era — the obligation to one's duty (dharma), the imperative to work without care for reward — and the thicket of elliptical, contradictory remarks on violence that have found it such unlikely devotees.
To eat a pupusa the Salvadoran way, tear off a piece of sweet-scented masa, severing the strings of cheese still clinging to the tortilla, then use your thumb to secure a thicket of crunchy curtido slaw doused in tart tomato purée with each bite.
More likely is that the two similar events wrestle for market share and talent, with the strongest surviving and the weakest disappearing or switching dates in an attempt to hack out a better place in a tennis calendar that looks ever more like a thicket.
It can be found in the same book as "The Beauty Starves the Beast," which tells the saga of a handsome prince who cut down a thicket of taxes, and was saved from a witch's curse when Congress arrived with matching cuts in spending.
Whatever the end result, the case has serious implications for the acquisition of startups, and corporate development heads are paying close attention to how to improve processes — particularly around due diligence — to ensure they aren't caught in an intellectual property thicket like Uber is facing right now.
Grande, meanwhile, is a Starbucks unicorn Frap in human form, a thicket of hair pulled into a ponytail on her crown, a swoop of black eyeliner, an oversize sweater dress that makes her look like even more of an adorable, tiny baby than she already does.
But that's the thing: if everyone in Korea is used to seeing a thicket of carrier apps and nonsense preloaded on their phone, if no one is showing consumers a better option, they just accept it as an unhappy status quo and get on with life.
"A four-year legal process and a dense thicket of jurisprudential argument provide a far less attractive route to redress than the use of 24/7 media and the associated parliamentary support to pressurise the regulator to short circuit due process in contentious cases," Griffith-Jones said.
The best way to manage through this thicket is to speak out on the national issues that matter most to your employees, connect with them on your outreach to those same powers that be – and ensure they have a job to go to the next day.
At the same time, the justices could avoid a thicket of thorny constitutional questions—in this case, about the president's national-security powers to restrict immigration, how much justification he needs to use them, and what limits can be placed on them beyond those imposed by Congress.
Mr. Mealey offered me a few wood sorrels, tiny clover-looking plants of the forest floor that deliver a bright citrus flash on the tongue, then we punched back into the thicket, this time stepping softly on a lush bed of pillowy moss that glowed bright green.
While the event's reputation as an Academy Award bellwether has somewhat dimmed, the Globes' position kicking off awards season has elevated its significance in setting the tone for addressing controversies, as the entertainment industry navigates a thorny political and public-relations thicket of black-tie ceremonies.
Despite being unsung, the dam — which is less than 215 miles north of the Bronx and is in a thicket of brush and boulders near Interstate 20133, a shopping center, a local middle school and hundreds of homes — has a history dating to the early 22013s.
The fiscal deal eases the pressure to resolve a thicket of pressing issues this month, but it sets up a high-stakes face-off later this year when lawmakers will need to agree on another funding measure to keep the government open in the long term.
"The wars in the East were hidden behind a thicket of language: patriotism, democracy, loyalty, freedom — the words bounced around, changing purpose, as if they were made out of some funny plastic," she wrote in her best-known story, "Twilight of the Superheroes," set on Sept.
President Trump has wandered into the renewable-fuels-standard debate, too, and found himself caught in a thicket, at one moment poised to reform the fuel standard completely and the very next snagged by the interest of a powerful agriculture industry grown accustomed to its enormous benefit.
As Kentucky pushes forward, many who work with the poor are worried that the thicket of new documentation requirements in Medicaid will be daunting for low-income people, who may have little education and struggle with transportation, paying for cellphone minutes and getting access to the internet.
Sample lines from the guide lays out a thicket of issues that women have to be mindful of when running for office: Voters are in tune to whether a woman candidate sounds authoritative or bossy, serious or boring, high-pitched and unsure, or clear and steady.
In the case of Mr. Mnuchin at Treasury, his experience as a principal investor who made large sums of money through high-risk, high-return wagers suggests that he will look critically at the thicket of regulations that now constrain the risk-taking activities of investment banks.
What neighbors said was once a small patch of bamboo has swelled over the years into a thicket, reaching above the utility lines, pushing to the edge of the property and nearly swallowing a white house on Borodell Place, with only a sliver left poking out.
"We don't know what Justice Kavanaugh thinks specifically about partisan gerrymandering, but his general ideological orientation makes me very skeptical he'd vote to have courts enter this 'political thicket,'" wrote Rick Hasen, an election law expert and professor at the University of California, Irvine, in a tweet on Thursday.
"I don't think there's ever been a time in the post-World War II period where issues as important as nuclear weapons are on the table, and there is no serious scientist there to help the president through the thicket," Princeton University professor Michael Oppenheimer told the paper.
The judge said she disagreed, but that there was no need to get into a "legal thicket" over the issue because she assumed Trump or his social media director Dan Scavino, who also was a defendant in the case, would unblock the users in light of her decision.
His job will not be about preventing cancer or launching rocket ships, but to keep Google's advertising machine humming, to keep innovating in emerging areas like machine learning and virtual reality — all while steering the company through a thicket of regulatory troubles that could drag on for years.
"And once you get into the political thicket, you will not get out, and you will tarnish the image of this court for the other cases where it needs that reputation for independence so people can understand the fundamental difference between judging and all other politics," Clement said.
Curled myself all the way inside The inside of our last joke, the punched line we lured The most, as thicket as our thievery, our ashed plot Unfallowing me like a neck's own woods toward a choice Choke of light: I can't imagine, I reckon I can only imagine.
"And once you get into the political thicket, you will not get out and you will tarnish the image of this Court for the other cases where it needs that reputation for independence so people can understand the fundamental difference between judging and all other politicism," he said.
If you enter the thicket behind the beach and whack your way through the overgrown trails (and poison ivy, watch out!), you'll come across abandoned bunkers, derelict batteries, missile sites and munitions dumps, left to nature and to graffiti artists since the military base was decommissioned in the '70s.
The Furbers found the five undeveloped acres through a newspaper listing that advertised them as "not for the faint of heart," and the first time they visited the land — strung along a narrow slope overgrown with a thicket of wild roses — they thought building there would be impossible.
The American photographer Fazal Sheikh's portraits of Somali refugees — taken in camps in eastern Kenya in the early '90s and then in 2000, and collected in his 2001 book "A Camel for the Son" (available in-full online) — are unnervingly direct, piercing through the thicket of rhetoric around immigration.
Until recently little more than a thoroughfare between the Manhattan Bridge exit and other parts of Brooklyn, a section of Flatbush Avenue, which touches Fort Greene and Boerum Hill and is often considered part of Downtown, now gleams with theaters and concert halls, amid a thicket of glassy towers.
As he claws his way through the bureaucratic thicket created by internecine battles of which he's only dimly aware, he starts to feel a little like the reporters he has been trying, and failing, to handle: He doesn't like being in the dark any more than they do.
Thousands of objects from the museum's collection are available to search, such as the "Ram in a Thicket," one of a pair found in Ur in present-day Iraq (the other is in the British Museum); the colossal granite Sphinx of Ramesses II; and Queen Puabi's gold leaf and jewel headdress.
The recent death of Andrew Finch, slain when a feud between two Call of Duty players ended in a SWAT team being summoned to his home in Wichita, Kansas, leads us into a thorny thicket of questions that demand introspection from policymakers, technology and gaming studio executives, and fan communities.
I want to step off the edge and go into the underbrush Clearing another way, because that's also what she taught Not how to repave her road but how to lay another Even if it meant the grass came through the cracks of the pavement, and the thicket ate it up.
Given the dense bamboo thicket that limits visual contact in most panda habitats and the brevity of panda mating season — females ovulate just once a year and can conceive for only a few days — the pandas' ability to perceive the bleat is critical to reproduction among this once-endangered species.
For example there is the copper wool that becomes a thicket of red hair in "Conductor" (2018), with wire bent into large hoops and pyramids hanging from the figure's ears to remind me of the "door knocker" earrings worn by women around the way where I grew up in the Bronx.
Escaping the midday sun in a thicket of trees beside the motorway, munching on watermelon and apricots to cool off, Mrs Erman rattled off a long list of grievances, including the jailing of more than 100 journalists and the destruction of forests in a construction boom led by companies close to the government.
Zillah, Washington: 163 dead, 5 injuredAt about 12:25 PM, one or more hunters, whom police believe were after birds, fired from a canal into a tree thicket only to hit five orchard workers about 2 yards away, obscured from view just past the trees, in what police are calling a negligent shooting.
The beard, otherwise known as the unkempt, untamed, unruly thicket of wires located on the cheeks and chin of forward John Shurna, became the unofficial mascot of Valencia's winning streak, a lucky charm that inspired everyone around it but — unlike most other furry mascots — also seemed to grow like virulent kitchen mold.
In issuing the memo, Sessions is injecting the department into a thicket of highly charged legal questions that have repeatedly reached the U.S. Supreme Court, most notably in the 2014 Hobby Lobby case that said corporations with religious objections could opt out of a health law requirement to cover contraceptives for women.
CRISTIANO ZANIN MARTINSLawyer for Luiz Inácio Lulada Silva São Paulo When I told The Economist that "sustainability is about being a little less awful" an onslaught of e-mails challenged my statement, so I feel obliged to explain why I believe it to be true ("In the thicket of it", July 30th).
In questioning Gorsuch, they should get him to acknowledge what he has written, which is that in order to adjudicate the thicket of American law, judges must search for the moral principles that best justify the law as it is written, and then use moral philosophy to tease out further moral implications.
Long ago, I contacted Kidd about working on an article together, because I was fascinated by one of his other projects — he had produced a digital edition, one that used embedded hyperlinks to make the novel's vast thicket of references and allusions, patterns and connections all available to the reader at a click.
The purpose of my book on Victoria was to hack through the thicket of clichés around the great queen: that she was an implacable puritan, a harsh mother who hated her children, a reluctant monarch, a puppet and a creature of the men around her, and a widow who refused to rule.
Hooked up to an amplifier on a small hand truck, it was the foundation for a thicket of cheerful percussion: a balafon (wooden xylophone) played while hanging from a musician's neck; a djembe (goblet drum); cowbell; and drumsticks applied liberally to trash cans, street signs and lampposts as the half-hour march progressed.
It's hard not to look at America's balkanized electricity transmission system — with its multiple separate grids, state-by-state regulations, tangle of overlapping authorities, and thicket of well-meaning but time-consuming environmental, community, labor, and procurement requirements — and think that it could benefit from at least a little more centralized control.
The 39-page-summary of the meetings involving U.S. Transportation Department officials and industry, labor, and advocacy groups illustrated the thicket of legal, safety and social issues that have to be worked out as companies such as Alphabet Inc's Waymo unit and General Motors Co gear up to deploy self-driving cars for public use.
The first two-thirds-plus zealously posits that the impeachment articles are not merely insufficient in that they fail to state impeachable offenses; they are subversive of the Constitution, envisioning a standard that would threaten all future presidents — landing us in the very thicket of politicized abuse of the impeachment power that the Framers feared.
One of the commonest responses to his work has been wonder: how did he turn a ton of welded 12-inch spikes into, for example, "Grist" (2004), a wonderfully dangerous-looking bristling thicket, or "Helio" (2006), a stunning circle of even spike stacks that might be the cog for some mighty tool-and-dye machine?
I'd found no pidgeys or charizards in the 97-degree heat, but I had found rattlesnake sheddings beneath the thicket of one-inch huisache thorns, I'd seen armadillos and skinks scurrying through the mesquite, and I'd seen enough sign of feral hogs to wonder if I should have brought along a more substantial weapon than a Buck knife.
The interplay of instruments and voice (all members of the Metropolis Ensemble) in four movements of the seminal cantata "Le marteau sans maître" evoked the conversations, understandings and genial disagreements of a better society: In the eighth section, the flute line (Emi Ferguson, who stood out in an excellent group) winds through an exotic yet friendly thicket of percussion.
The report is the first of what the Fed intends as a twice a year exercise in flagging risks and delving deep into the weeds of the massive U.S. private credit system — from bank funding to household credit card default levels and into the thicket of issues like hedge fund borrowing that even the central bank cannot fully surveil.
Instead of reconsidering the ACA's thicket of costly and contradictory regulations, the law's cheerleaders remain romantically attached to the unlikely notion that a "public option" could lower premiums — unlikely because it would only succeed if the government-run insurer paid doctors and hospitals far less than private insurers do, and forced providers to accept those lower rates.
While climate wonks are forever coming up with grand schemes meant to change everything at once (see: carbon tax), the truth is that American politics is a thicket of local civic and political groups — homeowners associations, trade groups, town and county boards and governments — with overlapping fiefdoms, each capable of serving as sand in the gears.
Or, if that's impossible, you've got a meeting to lead tomorrow that's like 20 slides and a whole thicket of appendices, and you know there are going to be sticking points with Important Stakeholders and all you really want to do is, like, apply to become a park ranger and move wherever they tell you to move?
Democrats sense a tantalising thicket of embarrassment: that the president paid ludicrously low amounts of tax (as the few leaked excerpts suggest); that he is not worth as much as he claims; the possibility of bank, insurance and tax fraud (as his former consigliere Michael Cohen claimed under oath in his testimony to Congress) and large, undisclosed entanglements with Saudi and Russian companies.
Let's get ourselves out of this thicket, then, by supposing instead that no time traveling takes place and instead we're an Austrian living in the town of Braunau am Inn in 1889 who has a strong premonition that the wee baby Adolf is going to grow up to kill tens of millions of people, and we are thus driven to kill him.
"One of the things we got asked a lot when we started was whether the museum was going to be an athenaeum, with leather chairs and lots of oak," Andrew Anway, its lead designer, said, standing near a thicket of potted palms, part of an immersive temporary installation inspired by the nature poetry (and Hawaiian garden) of W. S. Merwin.
These are pleasant, familiar views — but if you turn back toward the private terrace's adjoined apartment (which is owned by a television producer), you'll spot the roof's true focal point: a dense thicket of plants, grounded in weathered terra-cotta pots, layered with such variety and quantity as to completely shroud the walls and corners of this 754-square-foot deck.
In high school, we would spend some of our evenings at youth group, where we sang about Jesus, and others going to teen night at a Houston club, driving into the thicket of liquor stores and strip clubs a mile up on Westheimer, entering a dark room where the girls wore miniskirts and everyone sought amnesty in a different way.
The two create a peculiarly domestic scene that beckons closer examination: the mat is the work of Do Ho Suh, its uniform thicket of rubber tines revealing, upon squatted inspection, an army of individual figures standing with arms raised; the photograph is the work of Dorothea Lange, its classical composition of a migrant mother and child, lit by the California sun, instantly evoking Depression-era American history.
"Either way, the bottom line is simple: we're in a market that turns on a dime, and until we have more stability, you need to be ready to buy your favorites on market-induced weakness, as nearly every stock seems susceptible to fickle intra-day agony and ecstasy that you can profit from if you can handle the emotional thicket," the "Mad Money" host said.
Daum's essays often take amusing turns along dark paths, but in Scaachi Koul's self-aware debut, "One Day We'll All Be Dead and None of This Will Matter," humor is the way through a thicket of harder stuff: the fears and comfort administered by Koul's parents, Indian immigrants who settled in Calgary, Alberta; the way clothing can both mask and amplify a woman's insecurities; social media bullying.
There's nothing approaching a "Council of Elrond" episode in Jason Dessen's thicket of multiple-universe paradoxes, and such explication as we get generally arrives in the plot interstices between moments when Jason watches someone he loves get shot in the head, or faces death by freezing and starvation in a post-apocalyptic Chicago, or fends off wolves in a version of North America that has reverted to wilderness.
They won a game as time expired, on a play called Seven Heaven, on a deep corner route that Stefon Diggs runs all the time in practice but, according to receiver Jarius Wright, one in which he has never actually caught the ball — let alone turn a 213-yard heave toward a thicket of players into a 221-yard touchdown, nearly losing his balance before dashing untouched into the end zone.
And the steam table is loaded three rows deep, with more platters crowded on top: whole fish bronzed with turmeric, under kinked ribbons of caramelized onions; small curls of shrimp peeking from a dark thicket of spinach; shutki, sun-dried fish hardly the length of a finger, broken down in a pan with eggplant just enough that you can still taste the eggplant's meatiness and feel the crunch of tiny bones.

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