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986 Sentences With "to the point"

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

Ms. Kawakubo is shy to the point of reclusive, quiet to the point of absent, and indifferent to the celebrities other designers court.
Mason alleged Watson "strangled her to the point where she couldn't breathe and to the point where she lost consciousness," according to the affidavit.
If you met me at this time, I was most likely friendly, just to the point of getting close and aloof to the point of getting cold.
The Trump administration announced Tuesday that a songbird once threatened to the point of near-extinction has rebounded to the point where federal protections are no longer necessary.
Mr. Blake has worked a smart array of subtle variations into his sound: delicate, high-voiced, musically spacious to the point of near-transparency, ebb-tide to the point of miasma.
Therefore, China will try to squeeze Kim, not to the point of denuclearization (let alone collapse) but to the point where he does not further provoke the United States or Japan.
And more to the point — it's a new thing.
So, let's get to the point -- are they banging?
Bret: Hopeful to the point of prayerful — but skeptical.
" He called the man's thoughts "straight to the point.
Here was proof of the extent to which our nascent wellness culture had finally matured: a woman whose lifestyle was extreme to the point of inscrutability and expensive to the point of implausibility.
Their conversation was short and to the point, Jackson said.
Much more to the point, his daughter would be safe.
It's almost to the point where it drives you crazy.
Can't stand the stuff, almost to the point of phobia.
And, more to the point, are we investing in people?
Who is Cruz, and more to the point, who's his
This is just way too direct and to the point.
It is a portfolio diverse to the point of weirdness.
A lasting makeover — or under — to the point of unrecognizability?
He was strong and brave to the point of recklessness.
Worse and worse This premise takes us to the point.
More to the point, can it get out of it?
It got to the point that it was every night.
I've not gotten to the point of being an authority.
Almost to the point where you forget where you are.
They are territorial and proud to the point of hubris.
The rap is short and gets right to the point.
It got to the point where it was visibly gone.
AKQA founding chairman Tom Bedecarre gets right to the point.
I'm getting to the point where I'm a bit drained.
It was never commercialized to the point of becoming bastardized.
More to the point, she makes way more than him.
Get to the point and people will appreciate your brevity.
It's to the point of it's what we need almost.
Big to the point where you cover their entire eyesight?
We're getting to the point where it's easier and easier.
Get to the point quickly and don't waste their time.
You have to be quite, you know, to the point.
I got to the point where I felt pretty hopeless.
It's warm and casual to the point of being seductive.
More to the point, imagine if none of them do.
It got to the point where my hair fell out.
Rose's messaging has been uncomplicated to the point of simplicity.
I was scared, nearly to the point of wetting myself.
Or it could be weakened to the point of irrelevance.
To the point where I couldn't resist documenting it all.
His postgame media session was short and to the point.
But more to the point, he thinks Lee's a racist.
Tucker Caliban is taciturn almost to the point of mute.
The humour is earthy, often to the point of bitterness.
More to the point, the tests are degrading and unnecessary.
He answers [questions] instantly and is straight to the point.
" Zuckerberg came straight to the point, saying, "Yes, it is.
Much easier — to the point of being almost too easy.
What we're witnessing is disturbing to the point of scary.
How were the matches transported to the point of sale?
"I'm happy to the point where I worry," she said.
It got to the point where it didn't hurt anymore.
None of it's convincing or, more to the point, helpful.
He denied ever drinking to the point of blacking out.
I've changed to the point where I almost feel unrecognisable.
You're all about getting straight to the point today, Scorpio.
They will evolve to the point that they seem human.
More to the point, it's exactly what happened last time.
Virginia Tech was in disarray to the point of disaster.
Some suggested they were frantic to the point of unapproachable.
It got to the point where I couldn't make enough!
More to the point, the feeling is far from reciprocal.
He got to the point where he understood the machinery.
More to the point, why didn't he resign in protest?
Or is it all annoying to the point of distraction?
As he tells it, he got right to the point.
His office was tidy to the point of seeming sterile.
The tweet was from his heart and to the point.
But more to the point is the quality of survival.
The slow pieces were languid to the point of stasis.
So much so to the point where she wasn't stable.
Which returns us to the point with which I started.
We might come to the point that they interfere overtly.
Communication and honesty to the point of vulnerability is crucial.
You'll get to the point where uneventful is really good.
"It's irrelevant to the point" of the story, Biden said.
How he wielded those billions seemed more to the point.
The cake inscription was short, sweet, and to the point.
It's gotten to the point where I can't do it.
This tribute, though, is idiosyncratic to the point of alienation.
But mostly you felt overwhelmed to the point of giddiness.
The old order has frayed to the point of dissolution.
Look, is Beth's death sentimental to the point of parody?
It changes people to the point of yielding to vice.
The wording in both is straightforward and to the point.
To the point that the universe just jettisoned physics altogether.
While past mattress experiences are nothing but "firm to the point where it feels like a doctor's table" or "squishy to the point where you're sinking," Casper offers that rare balance of softness and support.
Keeping it short and to the point will do the trick.
We kept the aesthetic clean to the point being somewhat sparse.
But she was never a zealot to the point of madness.
Dread blankets the film, to the point where it's almost suffocating.
More to the point, your answers to certain questions matter most.
Obviously, not to the point of a crisis state, that is.
Apparently, inclusiveness to the point of overpopulation is a thing now.
Herbert was an absolute no-nonsense guy and to the point.
Roth: The metaphor has now improved to the point of unimprovability.
"We never eat to the point of being stuffed," she says.
The suspect was voluble and animated to the point of cartoonishness.
I physically felt happy to the point where I'd almost cry.
Well, to the point where he wouldn't come [in to work].
GUILFOYLE: Juan, your rebuttal to the ombudsman to the point is.
It's to the point that we expect everything to go in.
First, the light is very bright to the point of blinding.
" Her caption is straight to the point, "We are all Dreamers.
I try to keep my responses short and to the point.
Get to the point Other wearables are on the smaller side.
The first is weather — perfect to the point of being boring.
Very soon, refugee flows decreased to the point of ceasing completely.
B: It's got to the point where it's so saturated now.
But more to the point: Why are will still buying it?
It does get to the point where you think you're crazy.
More to the point: "men are trash" is not hate speech.
People sent texts, but they were short and to the point.
To the point where they were actually too fantastic to believe.
Gets straight to the point without the long old-man rant.
Can you format a spreadsheet to the point of mystical perfection?
When Conway asked what he meant, Wolff got to the point.
Or more to the point, they are all worse than Nougat.
More to the point, how will they shape the region's autocracies?
It's gotten to the point where I've simply considered giving up.
Number two: Develop your recipe to the point where it's foolproof.
"We've never gotten to the point to test images," she said.
I also don't like guys who immediately get to the point.
It came to the point where I just didn't love myself.
I'm not to the point of wanting mine to be split.
It was vintage Nick Buoniconti: honest, raw and to the point.
Some protect abortion access up to the point of fetal viability.
More to the point, there was a culture of truth telling.
But more to the point, no one owes you their vote.
But more to the point, I disagree with what she said.
Or perhaps more to the point, how fragile must he be?
Since then, they have politicized it to the point of absurdity.
As we ordered our second round, he got to the point.
Get right to the point in about six to eight words.
"The atmosphere was confident to the point of snarkiness," she said.
" Lt. C. R. Timms got right to the point: "I'm free.
The baby is vomiting to the point they&aposre urinating less.
We're still great and, more to the point, we're actually good.
"  "So it hasn't gotten to the point where they're changing action.
To the point where it's kinda like, it's probably super annoying.
It got to the point where l was scared of him.
She bends and distorts each component to the point of confusion.
For years, they were careful to the point of being obstinate.
It's not exactly original, but it gets to the point, right?
Male customers are much more relaxed, more straight to the point.
Every act is diverse to the point that they're completely incomparable.
I love Dr. Pepper because she shoots straight to the point.
Eventually you get to the point where they couldn't finance themselves.
But it was, and to the point of white-hot fury.
We have not negotiated this to the point of agreement yet.
Beyond that, he was altruistic to the point of feeling stale.
The Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty could fray to the point of meaninglessness.
He's a character that's incredibly gregarious to the point of megalomania.
As a result, they ring "off," to the point of artifice.
The AHCA weakens these protections almost to the point of nonexistence.
It's gotten to the point where we're running out of slack.
Another player was forced to eat to the point of vomiting.
He drinks hard liquor, to the point of an occasional hangover.
Eventually, they may get to the point of abstinence-based care.
That could weaken bank balance sheets to the point of crisis.
She got to the point where the high notes just bloom.
I was afraid to the point I tried to kill myself.
More to the point, why are they getting away with it?
Or maybe more to the point: by not stepping fearlessly aside.
More to the point, do we need any major new ideas?
Or more to the point, the preference of your sleeping partner.
Sometimes they were chocked to the point where they became unconscious.
"It got to the point where I was suicidal," she said.
Again, and again, to the point of repetition (and somewhat, confusion).
"I annoyed Lucy to the point of loving me," he said.
It's gotten to the point where right's organizations are getting involved.
Recruiters also recommended keeping your message short and to the point.
She might have said something more to the point, Gina thought.
He got right to the point without being asked a question.
And Colbert delivered: he dragged Trump to the point of evisceration.
To get to the point they were going to get to.
Luckily this thing didn't escalate to the point of no return.
The CEO also suggests emails be brief and to the point.
And we're very, very close to the point of no return.
Almost to the point where I'll wear too much of it.
More to the point: Can an artificial human even have one?
And perhaps more to the point: what matches your personal brand.
Tudor shredded his hand to the point that he needed stitches.
" He continued, "Get to the point that impeachment is politically possible.
It's excess and artificiality to the point of joyful, absurd parody.
Trump's sentences are short, and, more to the point, often repeated.
The menu is to the point: meat, and above all lamb.
Many possible morals have been overblown, sometimes to the point of exploitation.
Jordan is obsessed with himself to the point where it is startling.
More to the point, these were all substantial works of comparable stature.
To the point where our relationship during the record was severely damaged.
Force the situation to the point of the 1960s [Cuban missile] crisis?
Is this what divides our country to the point of no return?
Digital health startups seem to be struggling to the point of failure.
"It was definitely to the point, her hamstring was gone," Williams said.
Speakers were encouraged to be outspoken, almost to the point of satire.
More to the point, PV could be integrated into just about anything.
We should never get to the point where fashion isn't fun anymore.
In the event, the budget was restrained to the point of dullness.
This frustrated the Organic Trade Association to the point of legal action.
Then he got right to the point: He was a contract killer.
To the point that they might be re-programmed to kill you.
This perception can drive a person to the point of blind rage.
It's now to the point where any lip sync delay is unnoticeable.
They basically take it to the point where it's like the Gestapo.
Ultimately, what works best is being consistent to the point of pestering.
The mission requirements were constrained to the point the you felt railroaded.
I got to the point where I easily made $16,000 each month.
Facts First: Trump's claim is baseless to the point of being nonsensical.
Cody's wheelhouse is well-defined, but not to the point of boredom.
I was bullied to the point of suicidal thoughts in middle school.
It's getting to the point where Scholten wonders if King's trolling him.
So it seemed a little more streamlined and straight to the point.
I just got to the point that I was just shutting down.
But more to the point, it's equally damaging to the national conversation.
What's more, the states' argument is weak to the point of frivolousness.
Most women on this show are objectified to the point of absurdity.
It's also the most provocative — arguably to the point of being counterproductive.
But inside the hall everything is calm to the point of blandness.
But for us, it got to the point where it was dangerous.
I picked this cover because it was simple and to the point.
" The existing market is also monopolised "to the point where innovation suffers.
It's gorgeous, gut wrenching, and poignant to the point of being disturbed.
Twinning to the point of becoming indistinguishable from one's fictional GIRLS character.
This goes to the point that baseball is quite a random sport.
But if not, try this site and get right to the point.
To the point that they're cooking up some pretty sick dugout celebrations.
And it got to the point where it was too locked up.
She's not starving herself or exercising to the point of passing out.
It always works—to the point that I once lost my erection.
They weren't overly sexualized to the point of being soft-core porn.
"Because he betrayed my trust to the point that it's totally broken."
In the end it all snowballed to the point of no return.
My mom always looks good, to the point where she radiates good.
He hasn't gotten to the point where he'll put it on himself.
In other words, the trade is chaotic to the point of irrationality.
The film portrays Saudi culture as incomprehensible to the point of absurdity.
Which brings us to the point of me handing out some advice.
Her response gets right to the point and makes a good argument.
To the point where Tim Heidecker's character was almost entirely comic relief.
Love would improve them right away, perhaps to the point of approaching .
JOHN HARWOOD: But that gets to the point that I was raising.
He obsessed over sex to the point that it ruined his life.
This line just gets to the point and actually looks cool, too.
And maybe even more to the point, there was no online advertising.
People get to the point where they don't know who they are.
Most people have been pretty bullish, even to the point of complacency.
Only one firm, though, has persisted to the point of regulatory approval.
Gold developed disordered eating to the point of imagining taking her life.
Some, like Jameela Jameel, even overcompensate to the point that it's cloying.
Their remains, he said, were charred to the point of being unrecognizable.
More to the point is the question, how do dying doctors live?
He is often humorous to the point of slapstick, but never ironic.
You're getting to the point  where you're approaching having an artificial pancreas.
More to the point, they can't imagine any other course of action.
Mr. Albee loved words and wordplay — sometimes to the point of giddiness.
"I'm to the point where I'm 75 years old," he told KBTV.
"Devastated to the point of posting a bikini photo," another person said.
"This happens every day," she said, angry to the point of tears.
Human activities can also stress bee colonies to the point of collapse.
Sadly, the smoothie is sickly sweet to the point of being undrinkable.
Parry-Okeden is known to be private to the point of reclusive.
More to the point, does Giuliani even know what he's talking about?
I've gotten to the point where my family means everything to me.
FISA court abuse, to the point where they lied to four judges.
Or, more to the point, what does a self-driving car do?
Neruda's quote has always made me envious to the point of agita.
And then bacteria evolved, to the point antibiotics eventually became increasingly useless.
They've gotten to the point where they've adopted all of the restrictions.
It got to the point where I had to start cutting it.
Just to the point that they'd have tears running down their eyes.
Eventually, men advanced to the point that they began to build cities.
More to the point, let's look at some of Frontiers' awful retractions.
It got to the point where I would dread the 6 p.m.
But I did not drink beer to the point of blacking out.
"I was like to the point of like, losing it," Paul said.
Their clothes, especially white fabrics, are translucent to the point of perviness.
The action doesn't make sense to the point of making me cringe.
Modern American political discourse can seem disjointed to the point of absurdism.
We need to get to the point where we understand the frameworks.
They brought me to the point, when I was reeling, to live.
He's in therapy, to the point where it becomes a constant refrain.
The Q. and A. format is precise to the point of exasperation.
He downplayed his excessive youthful drinking to the point of rank dishonesty.
He is only interested in biology up to the point of visibility.
"It gets to the point where you need to laugh," she said.
"The Point" refers to the point of the thumbtack in the logo.
Scudamore wasted no time, getting straight to the point of his visit.
As a composer, Sorey is unpredictable to the point of being unnerving.
King's homemade sign written in Sharpie was short and to the point.
These movie moments will make you laugh to the point of tears.
They protest peacefully, even to the point of being arrested and imprisoned.
The population is swelling to the point of straining the transit system.
To the point now where I stopped putting it in my music.
Don's work was always sticking to the point, and not overly embellished.
His colleagues insist the charge is unlikely to the point of ludicrous.
The plums are summer-sweet and ripe to the point of bruising.
Here are a few: The whistle-blower gets right to the point.
More to the point, it's the most powerful muscle car on sale.
You don't want to get to the point where you're wearing Depends.
But neuroscientists will tell you that's oversimplifying to the point of inaccuracy.
Do they get flooded out to the point where they can't operate?
The development process of the GTR was short and to the point.
Tequila got to the point where it's like Tyson chicken—that's Cuervo.
But perhaps more to the point, the timing may be just right.
You get to the point where you are so dead and tired.
They both lie to the point nothing they say can be trusted.
"It's crazy that it's gotten to the point of baby-stealing now."
It probes the banal content of life to the point of exhaustion.
Bill's response is pure Belichick ... short, sweet and right to the point.
Grassley asked a follow-up question that went right to the point.
Faint, sleepy, subtle to the point of indistinction, the album never materializes.
And if Judge confirms that Kavanaugh did drink to the point of blackout or memory loss, then (21982) Kavanaugh's denial that he attacked Ford loses much of its credibility, because he might well have drank to the point of memory loss on the night of the attack, and (21) Kavanaugh's own Senate testimony that he did not drink to the point of blackout is false.
Yesterday it got to the point where I couldn't grip the bat anymore.
He also was solicitous, almost to the point of tenderness, towards his audience.
One afternoon, Canaan became totally listless — to the point of almost looking dead.
And we have to get back to the point of treason as well.
More to the point, you have to be able to "handle stressful situations."
So don't be confident to the point of being a know-it-all!
GUILFOYLE: He&aposs saying follow the laws, go to the point of entry.
They've allowed their designers to get imaginative, to the point of near absurdity.
" "Still," J-Zone said, "it gets to the point where it gets ridiculous.
"It got to the point where I started using them recreationally," Mandy said.
I loved Gypsy to the point where I would...do anything for her.
But things have gotten to the point where even the simulation is breaking.
They need to be adapted to the point where they are field deployable.
"We got to the point that we couldn't agree on reality," he said.
But getting to the point of a potential legal challenge is highly unlikely.
After teasing the news in a few tweets, Gamble got to the point.
She expects that Powell's comments will be well prepared and to the point.
He'll defend the institution up to the point that he may cross Trump.
She was beside herself, almost to the point of jumping up and down.
His friend said he'd gotten to the point where he ignored the signs.
More to the point, will he get a chance to be great again?
Both women are powerful, intelligent, and stubborn to the point of being rebellious.
Facts First: The President's claim is baseless to the point of being nonsensical.
We are gilding lilies to the point that they resemble bloated, glitzy hippopotami.
For those keeping count, Trump only sniffled to the point of detection twice.
Which sounds cool… but is also ambiguous to the point of being meaningless.
D.D. mentality that people need to be short and quick to the point.
Sleeve Death: When a sleeve is damaged to the point of being unusable.
But I never fall in love to the point of destroying my family.
The response from Black Twitter was swift and to the point, as expected.
Both the forms and the motions are simple to the point of banality.
You've punished your body to the point where throwing up is not uncommon.
He's genuinely shocked, to the point where he asks Khloe if she's joking.
More to the point, technology has become more than simply a business sector.
Miss S, we'll call her, was vague to the point of non-existence.
Has tech made us callous to the point that we're comfortable with ghosting?
To the point where I even put her in track and she quit.
That angered people in Pakistan to the point they've actually killed polio vaccinators.
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Her artistic experimentation varies vastly, to the point that it's hard to categorize.
The item crafting system is streamlined to the point of almost being automatic.
Helen gives a simple and to-the-point answer: because you let them.
Tweets get right to the point with the information or thoughts that matter.
Finally, after 28 minutes, Trump lifted the suspense and got to the point.
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More to the point, Kavanaugh holds the standard right-wing positions you'd expect.
I read up to the point in time where we finished episode 10.
And that's before you even get to the point of choosing specific investments.
To the point where I was like, 'Can he just wake up now?
They skip filler introductions, keep their paragraphs short, and get to the point.
More to the point, the party blew one of its biggest set-pieces.
Bernie Sanders sits on that committee, and he got right to the point.
The situation can snowball to the point where buying coffee becomes an expectation.
They were beyond committed to me, devoted almost to the point of obsession.
"It's getting to the point you can't enjoy Mardi Gras," said Daikevia Whitfield.
Robert Downey Jr., meanwhile, kept his response simple and to the point. Nice.
It got to the point where I no longer even missed real cheese.
Like any writing, there are categories: some are simple and to the point.
I need to get to the point where I can decide on something.
Rubio came across as humorless and earnest to the point of being insufferable.
Seeing all this brought me to the point: I have to own up.
Or more to the point: to a microphone in your most private spaces?
" Biles adds his two cents to the point of compassionate culture: "Be generous.
"McMaster has been undermining the President to the point of insubordination," Cernovich said.
To the modern reader, this may seem chaotic to the point of inefficiency.
The concept of catastrophe has now been diluted to the point of absurdity.
When it gets to the point of settlement, we can do different things.
"It took them years to get to the point where they are now."
Starbucks' response to Business Insider's question was short and to the point: "No."
"We've got to the point where we have a waiting list," he said.
I was getting drunk to the point of passing out every single day.
On occasion, these allusions can be literal to the point of seeming silly.
Kebriaei. The question of how the United States got to the point where
However, he insisted that he never drank to the point of blacking out.
Smaller parties like the Liberal Democrats were squeezed to the point of collapse.
Not one to beat around the bush, Icahn got right to the point.
But he added that he never drank to the point of blacking out.
In many cases, those relationships can be personal, to the point of familial.
I've now gotten to the point where I'm going to support our nominee.
But more to the point, fearmongering is no substitute for vision and leadership.
They engaged with the speech, in one instance to the point of discomfort.
Because things have just mounted on to the point that it's become harder.
It has been inaccurate to the point of uselessness most of the time.
I am glad that I didn't get to the point of marrying him.
Get to the point, be clear and concise, while still maintaining your composure.
I was never discouraged to the point where I was like, 'What if?
The phrase "end of an era" is overused to the point of cliche.
" He continues: "It got to the point where he said to me, 'Fuck.
He started having panic attacks, to the point where he was throwing up.
More to the point, the bro never sounded tough, or even particularly meaty.
Civilization has survived, even to the point of sustaining groaningly bad academic puns.
These images, along with the audio, crescendo to the point of information overload.
That Baldessari thing has been fully absorbed to the point where it's understood.
They've gotten to the point that mere mortal developers can build on them.
They haven't gotten to the point of provoking people to flee their homes.
Flynn had eroded to the point where he had to make a change.
Sure I've been starstruck, but never to the point where I'm shaking uncontrollably.
He is confident to the point of autism, skilled and athletic and fierce.
And denial can be incredibly powerful, to the point of symptoms like depersonalization.
Chisora's career up to the point Haye managed him appeared to be similar.
Sure enough, the patty was well done to the point of being dry.
It's to the point, and it's not what the audience wanted to hear.
More to the point, many of us feel coerced into disclosing personal information.
And more to the point, he made deals like a swashbuckling stock trader.
He appears obsessed with this promise, to the point of actively undermining it.
The thing is, you can anticipate criticism to the point where you're paralyzed.
"He gets right to the point, the good and the bad," he said.
The game is short, sweet, and to the point, never overstaying its welcome.
Unobtrusiveness, almost to the point of invisibility, is part of Eve's skill set.
People were bundled in layers to the point of limited flexibility and identifiability.
We get to the point where the fear itself begins to take control.
But often even those end up being politicized to the point of dehumanizing.
His questions to the Manafort witnesses have been very much to the point.
It is, in other words, ambitious yet overstuffed to the point of unwieldiness.
Their overlapping existences are routine-driven and cozy to the point of claustrophobia.
For me, personally, it got to the point where you just can't care.
They shouldn't be places where newbies are hazed to the point of dying.
And today, I ran to the point of blacking out, and passing out.
The common pasture will inevitably end up overgrazed to the point of ruin.
He made it look routine, to the point that fans began undervaluing it.
"And we're back to the point where it seems like we're fighting again."
The whole thing is both abstracted and economical, indefinable and to-the-point.
And, more to the point, Democrats' obsession with defeating him in the fall.
His Bobby is not merely passive but disaffected to the point of depression.
More to the point, none of these protections are legally or constitutionally required.
"It never got to the point where it worked well," Ms. Malashenko said.
But they also weakened existing parties and institutions to the point of collapse.
We've now got to the point where we want a little style, though.
You just have to try to get to the point where you agree.
For many years, Mr. Campanella appeared to work to the point of ubiquity.
"It gets to the point where you say enough is enough," Marks said.
I'm to the point where I can't go nowhere without someone knowing me.
The pace was frenetic almost to the point of being out of control.
If you do run a meeting, keep it short and to the point.
She asked Kavanaugh whether he ever drank to the point of blacking out.
"I'm to the point where I need to write my senator," Brons said.
The situation in Afghanistan has deteriorated to the point where retired US Gen.
If you do run a meeting, keep it short and to the point.
Where is our government, and — more to the point — where is American counterintelligence?
But her 2016 performance and, more to the point, Trump's, went without mention.
More to the point, it suggested a good way of approaching the stars.
"Bolton gets to the point very fast," a senior Administration official told me.
Now's he's getting close to the point of no return with his replacement.
This one reads like a little poem: affectionate, sincere and to the point.
In fact, it's best for you to be sincere and to the point.
It was all going great, up to the point some woman got handsy.
More to the point, the harm the game does is a serious concern.
The numbers are getting to the point where going all-digital is plausible.
But only one managed to get straight to the point: Ms. Hilary Duff.
After his burying-the-news preamble, Mr. Trump finally got to the point.
It got to the point where I just learned to live without it.
I was going at it to the point where I was injuring myself.
And then it got to the point where X was living with us.
It gets you to the point of realizing how unhappy you are faster.
It's dramatic to the point of satire, and, yet, it's oh so FIFA.
But while an agreement is important, keep it short and to the point.
I think back to the point that journalists get to shape the conversation.
She's also interested in her own beauty to the point of being vain.
We-- it forced us to really invest in Mason -- and frankly all seven investment partners-- to the point where-- and they're all with us today-- to the point where all eight of these people are on board-- their own boards.
That does go to the point, by the way, the Marissa Mayer point goes to the point of, first of all, female CEOs are much more likely to get the job when the company is imploding in the first place.
Maybe so, but Ms Coppola herself is unfazed to the point of being offhand.
Olszewski acknowledges that the wine world can be intimidating to the point of cheesiness.
And maybe the inflammation gets to the point where it becomes a bigger problem.
We always ended up getting to the point of: how can we mix differently?
So how do you get to the point of mastering the art of photography?
Bob ties me up to the point where I can only move my head.
Their relationship has even evolved to the point that they Skype all the time.
It's been going good, just keeping the lyrics short and very to the point.
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In another account, a player was forced to overeat to the point of vomiting.
Could tensions even escalate to the point of conflict, whether by accident or design?
They are slowing, but not to the point where I am worried about defaults.
Since then, negotiations stalled, to the point that the agreement nearly fell through entirely.
To the point where Raeph would just start laughing and put his headphones on.
No, it was tight and to the point and unquestionably powerful in its delivery.
To the point that I would get requests daily…of course, they weren't available.
To the point of talking down the latter in order to hype the former.
They can also, however, become observant to the point of feeling isolated or disconnected.
Few relationships this season have developed to the point of we-have-cute-patterns.
I was moved to the point I was having a physical reaction to it.
"Now it's gotten to the point where we can't not do it," Glaub says.
We sat on the sofa and had a short meeting, right to the point.
You have humbled me to the point where I can barely compose my words.
Almost to the point of it being slightly obnoxious — but in an adorable way.
Though a pragmatist to the point of cynicism, his career was rooted in zealotry.
More to the point, Apple still publishes very infrequently compared to other tech giants.
It's gotten to the point that some of Pompeo's own employees are fed up.
They fell short, which frustrated Kucherov to the point of voicing his dismay publicly.
He simply made himself undeniable, to the point where even WWE couldn't deny him.
You become a Cassandra, and almost get to the point of losing your mind.
It's gotten to the point where the audience cheers when anyone appears on stage.
He had gotten to the point where phony platitudes didn't mean a thing anymore.
It got to the point where his name was trending on Twitter on Friday.
There's no nuance to their long-awaited reunion; it's short and to the point.
As the survey shows, women can be overconfident to the point of absurdity too.
That he screamed and threatened and demeaned his staff to the point of terror.
He's very straightforward and to the point, and I thought that would play well.
I have smelly, sweaty feet — to the point that they induce serious social anxiety.
In December, Kramer's apartment flooded to the point where it was no longer habitable.
He admits, though, that getting to the point of treatment is not always easy.
"It infuriates me to the point that I can't even think straight," says Zeinner.
Each day becomes rushed to the point where you're not giving yourself an hour.
For people in 22016, these rules sound antiquated to the point of being absurd.
Kalb was in the media spotlight on Thursday for her to-the-point tweets.
However, it's much more at home in the accessible, to-the-point Amazon marketplace.
Weisz got straight to the point; "I don't think you ever ask men that."
"Broad City" often stretches ordinary female and urban experiences to the point of absurdity.
"I haven't gotten to the point yet where I've been overly sentimental," he said.
It would be ridiculous to the point of laughter, if it wasn't so gross.
It's getting to the point where there's nothing Alexa and Echo devices can't do.
He's shared spoilers to the point that his fans have threatened to unfollow him.
"It's to the point where feel horrible about being depressed and stuff," she continued.
Despite its obvious perversity, the play has been ritualized to the point of normalcy.
I've done an autobiography and in many ways this gets to the point quicker.
But a witch hunt on this scale this broadens to the point of absurdity.
More to the point, restrictions like this appear to offer no safety benefits anyway.
Because it had gotten to the point where being in hospital wasn't good enough.
To the point that the View doesn't just feel well designed, it feels considerate.
She's preternaturally humble, to the point where it begins to border on self-deprecation.
It got to the point where I'd have my period for full two months.
More to the point, however, security issues with IoT devices are already demonstrably harmful.
That meant bringing the platform to the point where it could scale, for example.
The implied follow-up to the point is that down is the new flat.
It was enough to get to the point where we had a functioning prototype.
He began mutilating his body to the point where he was teetering on death.
She dulls them quickly to the point where steeling them is no longer effective.
But the most controversial art is simple, to the point, and evokes strong feelings.
" The new iteration's title gets to the point quicker: "Pharma Bro: An American Douchical!
"It got to the point where I didn't feel safe online," Gandy tells Broadly.
More to the point, it won't get you anywhere in this Republican-run Washington.
That decision riled up progressives to the point that one of its leaders, Rep.
Science is getting to the point where it can mimic nature to a degree.
It's incredibly boring to the point where it almost resembles an experimental writing project.
The essentials should be there, with specific, to the point statements about your responsibilities.
I take full responsibility for amplifying these claims to the point of national concern.
More to the point, he was the clear choice of Iowa's progressives, with Sen.
"It's so amazing that we've gotten to the point we are today," says Ross.
Is there this urge to use it to the point where you cannot function?
"It got inundated to the point where it was useless for everyone," he said.
Larson was, per usual, direct and to the point: Cruz doesn't have any trouble.
He's almost to the point where he's not even part of this family anymore.
But it gets to the point where you can be overwhelming to other people.
Through inattention and underfunding, many state parties have shriveled to the point of ineffectiveness.
She says she was injured and humiliated to the point she suffers anxiety attacks.
But more to the point, putting these laws to the test often is important.
When I was a teenager, I was bullied to the point of becoming suicidal.
As a result, they micromanage to the point of madness and fall off schedule.
My negative thoughts have controlled me to the point where I'm legit going insane.
At times blunt to the point of rudeness, Philip is Elizabeth's most important support.
"Geminis overextend themselves and work too hard to the point of exhaustion," she adds.
But it's come to the point where I hear it from them so often.
This is what Jeff Sessions did, to the point he almost lost his job.
Perhaps even more to the point, defunding Planned Parenthood could backfire on Republicans politically.
It got to the point where I just sucked it up and ordered one.
And, more to the point, how much more can the Grey's Anatomy audience take?
Like to the point that it made me resent my own children a little.
More to the point, only 1 percent was actually rejected and 9 percent suspended.
" He added that their talk was "brief but it was straight to the point.
He could be direct and to the point, knowing he already had my trust.
The term "cinematic" is overused in video game criticism to the point of cliche.
And that's why it's all one word, very blunt, heavy-handed, to the point.
I have it to the point where I can control everything in the house.
But our sense of kind discourse has been abused to the point of breakage.
"They were being overmedicated to the point where they weren't really there," she said.
Not too much to the point where he's boring, because he'll never be boring.
You get to the point where you can capitalize on your run-scoring ability.
We had to cut everything out to the point where it became a science.
Minati Das, the mother of a 19-year-old, got to the point quicker.
Both reservations are refundable up to the point that customers sign a purchase agreement.
Tragically, this rail network has been allowed to deteriorate to the point of disrepair.
Yes, it's totally transparent -- to the point of ickyness -- what Grimm is doing here.
More to the point, the government admitted that Trump himself had blocked the plaintiffs.
But developing new technology to the point where it can be commercialised takes time.
"It's gotten to the point that we do active shooter drills," Ms. Shelton said.
Nate Well, I'm sympathetic to the point, but I prefer a standard map. Why?
" Her tag line on her profile is also simple and to the point -- "human.
It got to the point where everything had to be so exact and perfect.
At this point, the macro data has not deteriorated to the point people feared.
If we get to the point where we need to strike, we should strike.
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To the point that the new movie doesn't even have Rocky's name in it?
Will you get to the point where you can no longer not say something?
But we also don't want to be overly cautious to the point of wastefulness.
We're getting to the point where these things are basically tablets with calling capabilities.
The cost of clean energy will fall to the point that it seems free.
I was partying and running amok to the point of almost hitting rock bottom.
Maybe we just never got to the point where he thought it was ridiculous.
Tess: Maybe we can get to the point where there's nothing left to protest!
The word is at once suggestively specific and vague to the point of meaninglessness.
There was a lot of crying to the point where I was weirded out.
They also read the Bible selectively, as Zeigler demonstrated to the point of parody.
It's gotten to the point that the mayor has decided to reclaim the label.
When I finally answered, he apologized for interrupting me, then came to the point.
Coaches often have a reputation for being strict, sometimes to the point of bullying.
The fact that John has said that wasn't intentional is really to the point.
It was surprisingly satisfying, to the point that I even made a second cup.
Western society especially obsesses over hygiene and cleanliness, arguably to the point of mania.
With respect to Putin, he is compromised, or enamored, to the point of incapacity.
The series will follow the books — but not to the point of utter faithfulness.
It also backfired, to the point that this anxious young artist stopped making art.
I have a sweet tooth to the point of it being a personal failing.
They have gotten to the point where it's madness to walk away from that.
Dr. Barbara Sturm, an aesthetic medical doctor in Germany, is more to the point.
We get to the point when our bodies won't let us hide inside them.
We get to the point when our bodies won't let us hide inside them.
That's not surprising, because the account is partial to the point of being misleading.
Military experience can be valuable, but not to the point of overwhelming the civilians.
"It's to the point where people don't even record me no more," he said.
Ms. Stuart said she came to the point reluctantly, out of disappointment with Mrs.
It took a long time to get myself to the point of accepting that.
It just got to the point where, this isn't fun, different chicks every night.
More to the point, he effectively controls the state budget that funds the authority.
These are typical second-drawer Disney numbers: momentarily catchy, neat and to the point.
The film is relentlessly eye- and ear-filling, sometimes to the point of irritation.
But second, and perhaps more to the point, Salatin is also a natural iconoclast.
"We've gotten to the point where the funeral home is the client," he said.
Hoffa, for all his windy belligerence, is also petty to the point of neurosis.
My eldest child often pushed through her pain to the point of overdoing it.
More to the point, we could have skipped the foofaraw with the ER doctors.
It leans in on gimmicky mechanics, but not to the point of over-indulgence.
I thought he slowed his tempo down to the point where it was controllable.
And more to the point, what does the wider world even look like now?
The press ran with his mistake, excoriating him to the point of mocking ridicule.
I hope to get to the point where I can enthusiastically support Donald Trump.
A decades-old Bordeaux is complex to the point of being confusing to neophytes.
"Does it come to the point of removing a president from office?" she said.
As a result, his story has been embellished to the point of becoming legend.
It isn't so bad to the point that it's unusable, but it's definitely noticeable.
Will it get to the point then more Republicans question sticking with the president?
More often, the satire is subdued to the point that it's hard to perceive.
Has trust eroded to the point we're caught in a feud we cannot defuse?
To the point where I was hesitant to bring any of my stuff in.
That brings us to the point where you cannot expect it to happen organically.
But developing new technology to the point where it can be commercialized takes time.
"It got to the point where everybody was just done," the person told KGO.
It has gotten to the point where the council has its tentacles into everything.
They eventually controlled it to the point where it looked like a gentle waterfall.
" He also said, "I did not drink beer to the point of blacking out.
He shrank his social world ever smaller, to the point of skipping family gatherings.
It's something he enjoys doing, to the point of, 'I don't want to leave.
And, more to the point, where does "the copy" end and "the fake" begin?
We had just a few moments to return to the point of our talk.
Cardi B's recent live performances have been short, to the point and very fun.
It took a lot of time to get to the point I'm at now.
"To the point where all my interviews were getting totally off-track," Giller says.
Draymond's shit talk backfired to the point that it blew his tailpipe inside out.
Many women never get to the point where becoming a CEO as a possibility.
Yeah, it got to the point where I was visualizing that all the time.
His production is menacing and to-the-point, deploying distorted drums with military precision.
It will fuel the global Salafi jihadi movement, funnel resources to Iran that undermine efforts to pressure Tehran, threaten Israel possibly to the point of triggering a major conflict with Iran, and fuel Arab Iranian tensions possibly to the point of open war.
When connected to the Point, speeds were cut in half, likely due to the Point's less capable antennas and the lack of a dedicated backhaul channel for the router to communicate to the Point, like the Eero Pro and Orbi systems have.
"I saw myself getting to the point where I could propose to Rachel," he said.
It was supposed to be a business drink — short and sweet and to the point.
Getting to the point: Bonnie Tyler is gonna sing "Total Eclipse" during this literal eclipse.
Most of this decor is, of course, patriotic, often to the point of self-parody.
Some of these event modifications for gender are minuscule to the point of being symbolic.
Most areas have been decontaminated to the point where full bodysuits are no longer required.
" Or more to the point: "He's way too comfortable with his messages to our team.
Syria US and Russian goals in Syria have been different to the point of opposite.
What possible stooges has Trump not humiliated publicly to the point where they've pulled support?
Thank God my heart never palpitate to the point I was dead in my apartment.
They played telephone with it to the point where the revelation came from Abrams himself.
"I loved Gypsy to the point where I would ... do anything for her," he continued.
They've allowed it to escalate it to the point where women's lives are getting affected.
The Ultimen are unbelievably sappy heroes — to the point where they even piss off Superman.
She feuds with her terrible boss Gabe (John Cameron Mitchell) to the point of quitting.
He finally got to the point where, yes, perhaps Facebook has a role in it.
Klingon has evolved to the point where some people use it in their everyday lives.
So, they need us, to the point of the president, more than we need them.
Even light video editing in iMovie won't choke the laptop to the point it's unusable.
"It got to the point," she says, "where you are begging people to buy them."
These infections can escalate to the point of causing severe pain, bleeding, shock and death.
There's just something unsettling about being so dehydrated to the point of cracking and flaking.
"ClassPass is squeezing studios to the point of death," said one New York studio owner.
Many of us went along with the yearbooks at times to the point of absurdity.
Her readings were brief and to the point, and none of her clients came back.
"I tuned the game to the point where it felt interesting to me," he says.
When it used to almost, it was getting to the point of almost being routine.
That's right: CrossFitters embrace the "no pain, no gain" mentality to the point of vomiting.
On "Body Horror," Rapp and Yemi's vocals decay to the point that they become indistinguishable.
To reproduce, the spider wasp first injures a huntsman spider to the point of paralysis.
I was becoming frustrated to the point of tears, but I ultimately let it go.
And they've gotten to the point where he struck me in my face three times.
Hopelessness is relentlessly dreary to the point that it somehow flips over and becomes inspirational.
Literally I just got to the point where I was like, 'F—k off Gage.
They're short, to the point, and incrementally build up a longer, serialized story and world.
But now it feels like those options are overwhelming me to the point of drowning.
"There are days I'm debilitated to the point where I can barely move," she said.
More to the point, he has offered rhetoric stating his support for what they accomplish.
It got to the point where a stranger asked if she was pregnant with twins.
More to the point, she takes the formal innovations of Ohr to a fresh place.
But so far Mr McDonnell's ideas are badly worked out to the point of irresponsibility.
"Getting to the point where I'm actually playing with these guys is unbelievable," he said.
Does the movie lean on humor to the point of detracting from important character arcs?
It's gotten to the point where we're designing space harpoons to spear and collect it.
Burnham explained that the movie doesn't "elevate" the plot to the point that it's unbelievable.
The products look how the whole line feels: clean, understated, and to-the-point transparent.
Thurman says that she felt dehumanized "to the point of death" by the car crash.
Will Mary finally do right by her sister — even to the point of sharing Henry?
And that gets us to the point of the special brew: it's all about sustainability.
The end of emulating others completely, to the point where you're trying to mimic somebody.
The RPM "decayed" to the point where the pilot could see the individual rotor blades.
More to the point, Marzipan apps could probably offer a better experience than Electron apps.
Getting to the point where she could re-embrace her life was a long journey.
It was to the point where I'd have at least two [emotional breakdowns] a week.
Her panic disorder causes to her hyperventilate sometimes to the point of her passing out.
But not to the point that would cause him to want to commit this crime.
" Eventually, the singer said her depression became overwhelming "to the point where I was suicidal.
BM: Honestly, some of us have gotten to the point where any job will do.
The videos are circulated, becoming viral to the point where news outlets cannot ignore them.
"We got to the point we had to actually turn off the numbers," Cox said.
It had gotten to the point where I had obvious bald areas on both eyes.
I remember thinking you were cool and mysterious to the point where you seemed otherworldly.
He was allegedly served alcohol to the point of "severe intoxication," according to the suit.
My addiction got bad enough to the point where it left me homeless several times.
She was brave, energetic and nonjudgmental to the point of having no taste at all.
"We're getting to the point now where ... we can say we're getting close," Krafcik said.
Primitive achondrites come from asteroids that were heated to the point where they were melted.
Traffic poured in, to the point where Goldberg began buying domains of the popular misspellings.
Context: The video in question slowed Pelosi's speech to the point of sounding questionably slurred.
But it's making Shannon a little crazy, to the point where she cries to Omarosa.
In fact, it's gotten to the point where he has a #DougHive of his own.
But more to the point, why don't we lead by example in a positive fashion?
Meanwhile, Crabs often internalize their feelings and frustrations to the point that they shut down.
She and Trick are genuinely adorable, to the point that I miss being a teenager.
Your usual mental spin-cycle may be on turbo, to the point of total confusion.
Eight years later, he became sick again to the point where he couldn't live alone.
In Lesley's case, the condition worsened to the point where she was put on dialysis.
"Security has gotten to the point where there's too much information out there," he says.
It got to the point that he was having trouble going to school each morning.
I never got to the point where I thought, What if this doesn't work out?
It was like psychological torture to the point where I almost (agreed to be deported).
They have all worked with repetition, even to the point where it becomes very monotonous.
They have swelled up, but never to the point that I couldn't even touch them.
"We got only to the point of thinking it wasn't a preferred tool," she said.
Chyna claims the Kardashians interfered with the shooting of "Rob & Chyna" to the point E!
How did you get to the point that you knew you were ready for it?
As a mom, you just don't have time, so you get straight to the point.
Lucas was conscious of what inspired him, but never to the point of overt acknowledgment.
During the course of the fair, Bayonne overflows with ham to the point of overdose.
It's gotten to the point that Ms. Olympios is referring to herself as a brand.
Beyond Hammer, the entire cast is just absurdly good looking to the point of distraction.
It's look like we've come to the point when only new generation will do something.
"For me, it's been extremely unsettling to the point of emotionally paralyzing," her mom said.
The entertainment industry has spent decades demonizing piracy, often to the point of near-parody.
It's never easy, but it's gotten to the point where we don't doubt ourselves anymore.
But also keep it relatively short and to the point to minimize pain for everybody.
How did you get to the point where you wanted to launch a business site?
And more to the point, musicians don't make much money these days selling their recordings.
Don't get me wrong, I felt fully medicated, but not to the point of debilitation.
I've gotten to the point where I'm pretty old for a musician at this point.
Then, craft a concise email that is well written and gets to the point quickly.
This solipsism perhaps explains Alig's tendency to exaggerate the truth to the point of lies.
Jurors have rejected death sentences to the point that many prosecutors have stopped seeking them.
It's just that now we've become sophisticated to the point where we've tamed our environment.
Sex workers are cast aside to the point of being the butt of a joke.
"Now it's gotten to the point where we can't not do it," Glaub told PEOPLE.
But Equals is abstract about these issues, to the point where they don't particularly connect.
We are to the point where chefs are now as famous as some movie stars.
It kills me to the point that I feel like I can't make it up.
No one else has carried it through to the point where I'm at right now.
Students often bear the weight of a religious university's restrictions, to the point of expulsion.
I think we've gotten to the point where we need to get into more detail.
Hidden behind a concrete-and-stucco fence, the house recedes to the point of disappearing.
Our public lands are being overgrazed to the point that horses and burros are starving.
It was to the point where they were doing product testing and things like that.
He can be mistrustful to the point of paranoia, but he can be recklessly frank.
And, more to the point, why they're on solid ground in distrusting major political institutions.
He is clinically depressed, to the point of not being able to leave the house.
Delivery has grown to the point that its as much as 75% of his business.
Hot to the point of discomfort, maybe sharp, and you'd be exposed to a vacuum.
I was swinging pretty good up to the point I went on the disabled list.
But Trump's tax tweet was as smart as it was very much to the point.
Toxicology would later show Hill was intoxicated, to the point he could not legally drive.
Jim Jordan is absolutely shredding the Democrats' arguments, to the point that they look silly.
The borders of "lasagna," as a category, would weaken to the point of utter collapse.
"It really got to the point where I didn't take it very seriously," he said.
And I think he's almost to the point of being delusional about his own power.
They've even escalated to the point that they paralyzed the city's airport for several days.
Starting out can also make you really excited to the point where you overdo it.
"He's boring, but he's to the point," said Ward McCarthy, chief financial economist at Jefferies.
But a change in this dynamic could unnerve Beijing to the point of prompting action.
"We've gotten to the point that half of our families are being undermined," Towns said.
I want you to push yourself but not to the point where you hurt yourself.
And even getting to the point of implementing successful regulatory repeals will likely take years.
"I never got to the point that I thought, 'OK, I'm feeling good,' " he said.
We should be celebrating a woman's right to introversion — even to the point of rudeness.
The debate today over fairness in college admissions is oversimplified to the point of absurdity.
Schiff threatened to gavel Jordan down unless he got to the point of his question.
But more to the point I don't think anyone else should be scared of anybody.
Tim has gotten to the point where he manages his monthly expenditures with surgical precision.
Other updates include greater racial diversity, to the point of anachronism, and significantly less racism.
I think we getting closer to the point where the two will finally meet, though.
"He comes across as dynamic and straight-to-the-point which Americans like," he added.
More to the point, Obama's rebuke was directed at the Clinton supporters, not the protester.
Like seriously, crazily neurotic, almost to the point where I can't do it, I swear.
"You don't want to joke to the point where you're being ineffective," World Peace said.
To the point where people would come to RVIVR shows just to mess with us.
Abstraction prevails, to the point where Hatanaka's stylized faces lack features like eyes and noses.
It's to the point that Moesha is not sure she can return to Ghana safely.
"I'm to the point where I no longer am calling this an accident," Allman said.
At the same time, some parrot species are proving flexible to the point of invasiveness.
In what ways have they demonstrated flexibility to the point of invasiveness in new habitats?
I don't see myself ever getting to the point of drinking to block my feelings.
You cannot say, as Mike Trout is bland to the point of being completely unreadable.
But they did not get along, to the point of "collaborative failure," according to Excelsior.
She's all about that sensory experience to the point where she'll overlook major red flags.
"Backpage was straight to the point no strings attached," he told Motherboard by text message.
It's inflated to the point that I've actually created my very own GIF from scratch.
Boylen is a retrograde disciplinarian who's extremely stubborn and passionate to the point of exhaustion.
"Ain't Gonna Sleep" has the most straight to the point watch lyric of all time.
Maybe its population has dwindled down to the point we don't ever see these things.
Clarification, 1/18/18: I simplified this, perhaps to the point where it is misleading.
The city's roads and pipes had been allowed to deteriorate to the point of disfunction.
The majority of these instances of misogyny are casual to the point of feeling unavoidable.
He was belittling almost everyone at the table to the point that I had enough.
The action scenes, when they aren't CGI'd to the point of being laughable, are forgettable.
It got to the point where my wife didn't want me going out by myself.
" Tomic's confidence as a burglar grew to the point that he felt "indestructible and invulnerable.
Her body tightened in painful contractions, to the point that she doubled over in pain.
"Andrew got to the point where he could out-Jesuit a Jesuit," Martin told me.
Once you get to the point where you think you're ready, go over it again.
More to the point, it increases when women marry and when they begin bearing children.
It's out of the ground and to the point of sale as quickly as possible.
"He just made eye contact and came to the point of tears," Mr. Buttigieg recalled.
When did you get to the point where you knew you had a finished product?
Insecurity has worsened to the point of lawlessness in much of its huge northern desert.
It's gotten to the point where they know where each other are gonna be at.
It has gotten to the point that I cannot even look at him in meetings.
The conversation got larger, and then it got to the point of, why don't we?
You don't want to get to the point where you're just like, 'Ugh, this game.
It's a modest, halfhearted add-on and, more to the point, the tour skips it.
We kept listening and engaging people to the point where now they know we're coming.
The power brands wield over their suppliers can be oppressive to the point of tyrannical.
More to the point, there was nothing at all about agriculture in the official agreement.
To the point where by 22018, they're raising tens of millions of dollars a round.
I didn't believe I could get Ambrose to the point where he'd make that choice.
More to the point, it will go to the team that does not blink first.
When speaking to groups, Pastor Danny had a roundabout way of getting to the point.
In the last three months, though, they have become notably shorter, straight to the point.
The economy is slowing down but not to the point of recessionary levels, Patel said.
But again, we're not locked down to the point where we can't leave the house.
"She's very assertive, to the point where I can't get a word in," he said.
Whoever thought we'd get to the point of urging everybody to just agree with Mitt?
I often work myself too hard to the point where I have a mental breakdown.
But good teaching and hard work by the students are far more to the point.
I got to the point where I didn't even talk about it with other people.
"It shouldn't have to get to the point of a neglect charge to get help."
Hyperviolent nearly to the point of photorealism, the Assyrian reliefs were also triumphalist in tone.
Holzman's most essential tenet was not to program his players to the point of paralysis.
"I've gotten to the point where I just worry about what's happening today," Headley said.
Politically-motivated to the point of parody, Democrats know that facts are not their friends.
It is getting to the point where a lot of people are getting fed up.
He is small to the point of fragility, and his frame swam in the jumpsuit.
The resulting environment is one that is highly competitive — to the point of being overcrowded.
Or suppose Trump fawned over Vladimir Putin to the point of returning Alaska to Russia?
They show up prepared and get to the point, instead of trying to impress you.
More to the point, I never saw Brett act in the manner Dr. Ford describes.
They're really connected to nature, but almost to the point of not having apparent agency.
"We're getting to the point where if you use plastic, you get shamed," she said.
Don't push through an activity to the point of injury just because you're having fun.
How did Mitt Romney get to the point where he was ready to act alone?
Intros have become truncated, says Mr Kalifowitz, "to get to the point a bit faster".
Get to the point in the first few lines of the body of your email.
The report demonstrates Beijing's reach into US society, to the point of alarming federal officials.
His "acting is noncommittal to the point of being minus," wrote The New York Post.
A walrus, Kulu, has been lent to the Point Defiance Zoo & Aquarium in Tacoma, Wash.
More to the point, he could do the job, and that might be good enough.
Bringing more of these capabilities to the point of care can improve surveillance and diagnosis.
"It was awkward to the point that I couldn't wait to get out," he said.
And for the record I am including the anti-Trump to the point of derangement.
For David, offers from men and women were abundant to the point of being overwhelming.
Some of the people on the Vatican side were emotional to the point of tears.
Their reunion is very sweet and EXTREMELY GAY to the point of being censored overseas.
The phrase has caught on to the point that it's the name of a PAC.
The meetings are to-the-point affairs that are over in 20 minutes, officials say.
He got straight to the point: he was looking for someone to help him out.
I just had to get to the point where I could write it really quickly.
More to the point, it doesn't want its own politics upended by any more Brexits.
Few words are needed on the sensual track, with Skye getting straight to the point.
"We are to the point where we have no other option," one teacher told KTUL.
Indeed, many of the people he encounters find him direct to the point of rudeness.
That's probably because he's busy working 16-hour workdays, sometimes to the point of exhaustion.
Or more to the point, the model cannot be used to provide those services fairly.
He got straight to the point -- The 32-year-old was tired of the violence.
"He was very fascinated with my attire, to the point of being inappropriate," she added.
It will sometimes get to the point where we're yelling at each other or swearing.
Do you have to be that aggressive to the point of dementia to do that?
More to the point, click farms are really terrible at worst and unethical at best.
And more to the point, investors would wonder about that, pushing r-g even higher.
"It's blown up completely out of proportion to the point where it's embarrassing," he said.
She kept fantasizing about marrying him, to the point where she thought she was Mrs.
When such relevant points are considered, the wage gap narrows to the point of vanishing.
It got infected, and it hurt to the point that he could barely touch it.
So what if you get to the point where it's not fact-checking they want?
To the point that he even went on with a Sam Cassell big balls dance.
More to the point, Democrats had bigger congressional majorities, so they could get more done.
We're crippled with student debt to the point where home ownership is a pipe dream.
We had not yet quite got to the point where everybody was watching everything on DVD and binge-watching things was a thing, and we had not quite got then to the point where the Netflix-y idea of download-and-watch was happening.
Why is our society defensive to the point of denying that racism is still a problem?
BioShock did both, to the point where I still, occasionally, have BioShock or Rapture-themed dreams.
"We're never going to get to the point where there are no errors," he told reporters.
He's intense, almost to the point of being annoying, but in our conversations, he's been lucid.
HANNITY: Let&aposs talk -- let&aposs go to the point, Gregg, that Sara is making here.
I got to the point where I didn't feel like I had to guard anything anymore.
And that gets to the point of why dress codes are so pointless to begin with.
Traditional motifs like gingham fabric and bustles are mutated just to the point of the uncanny.
From fashion to beauty, the gender lines are blurring to the point of, well, no lines.
"It got to the point where we wondered why we were paying two rents," says Jessica.
Competing for females, the males fight very violently, even to the point of killing one another.
But I think going back to the point when we were saying before about Peter Fonda.
Then it got to the point that I did things just for a piece of crack.
"It's not to the point where you want to commit suicide," Paul Redd, one inmate, said.
A: The robocall is like the mosquito of telecommunications, bugging us to the point of madness.
I've built it up to the point now where I've got a good, loyal fan base.
"It got to the point that I would drive just to meet my payment," he said.
More to the point, I never saw Brett act in the manner that Dr. Ford describes.
They said the markets have not quite gotten to the point where they will melt up.
Also, it's gotten to the point where I can't ignore the pains in my chest anymore.
Third, Trump's response to Mims's comment wasn't actually a response to the point she was making.
Similarly, Villanelle's sexuality isn't a show to the point it's unclear if she actually did finish.
"It got to the point where people thought I was digging my grave," he told PEOPLE.
To the point it makes me feel bad when I'm doing it because I'm so miserable.
Life is much easier in Europe, where the regulations are pliable to the point of meaninglessness.
She told the New Yorker he overpowered her to the point that she just gave up.
More to the point, what does it mean to be a hero in an unwinnable war?
It got to the point where my girlfriend was annoyed, and my data charges were insane.
More to the point, gambling executives may not have the stamina to see the projects through.
Over the years, Young's lefting and righting has become legendary to the point of legal action.
Such is the method of the movie: patient, composed, and cool to the point of froideur.
He enjoyed the mild high to the point that he found himself ordering bottle after bottle.
Both the text and the argumentation are dense (to the point of obscurity, in some instances).
This update certainly makes a lot of sense, to the point that it almost seems dated.
I don't remember exactly how we got to the point that we were fighting each other.
I like to think its little virtual brain was overwhelmed to the point of total paralysis.
Notice how she never promotes herself, gets right to the point and always provides valuable content.
The new pen speeds up the inking experience to the point that there's no perceptible lag.
And they're super-light, too — to the point where it almost feels like there's nothing inside.
But O'Connor held on to the point where President Trump himself went and rallied for Balderson.
It came to the point where it was so easy to smoke, I just couldn't stop.
Biden's attack — though it didn't help him much — was much more brutal and to the point.
In standard economic models, it's simply assumed: Wages fall to the point where supply meets demand.
They're ... It's just ... HR: So go back to the point Kara raised, so you didn't personalize.
Where's the "car crash" that repulsed Karr to the point of having to shield her eyes?
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Unfortunately, some active strains of influenza mutate to the point that the vaccine's potency is diminished.
Our style has matured to the point where we can transfer pure emotion onto the canvas.
He tells the world his model is the best, to the point of being pleasantly annoying.
Some analysts were more bearish than their peers, to the point of tilting toward the apocalyptic.
The second problem is that Mr Johnson is naive to the point of irresponsibility about economics.
Throughout Chinese history, opposition has seemed muted right up to the point when it has exploded.
Best known for his work as The Range, Hinton appears curious to the point of distraction.
"They got to the point where they could have thrown switches," said a DHS official.  Fantastic.
More to the point: Can't we find someone who's never locked a girl in a room?
If something is retouched to the point where it's no longer attainable, you've gone too far.
I've gotten to the point where I know I'm just beating my head against the wall.
"Why not," she tweeted, including a sea of laughing emojis… I get straight to the point.
Rob gets in too deep with an office flirtation, to the point where he gets fired.
She began going into work even when she felt ill to the point of throwing up.
To the point where, when I was a really young kid, it would stop me sleeping.
"We believe our business has grown to the point of being self-funding," the company wrote.
Of course, I got to the point that I knew in my heart it was Adrian.
We're not to the point where all of the physical goods in our lives are rented.
It got to the point where I was like, 'This is just not going to happen.
His challenge is to advance the process to the point that no successor could unravel it.
We'll keep this short and to the point: There's a new Twitter account of unknown origin.

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