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64 Sentences With "unpicking"

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

Unpicking decades of tangled legal agreements will be harder than it looks.
Critics devoted thousands of words to finding hidden clues and unpicking symbolism.
There are a number of assumptions underpinning these positions which need urgent unpicking.
In America, presidential candidates are talking about building walls and unpicking trade deals.
Articles unpicking which song is about which male celebrity abound, though they hardly seem necessary.
The reckless unpicking of military alliances and the betrayal of allies are already bad enough.
There's a puzzle-like quality to unpicking each level, and committing its demands to muscle memory.
As Mancunians took to the streets, counter-terrorism officers were unpicking the origins of the plot.
The trickiest question for contemporary capitalism is unpicking the distinction between what's fair and what's permitted.
But he leads a party tightly woven into the associational web that he wants to start unpicking.
Also at work is a less quantifiable unpicking of mutual supply dependency by Chinese sellers and U.S. buyers.
But financial engineers are unpicking their secret sauce and finding new ways to sell it by the bottle.
Where it can, the United States is already unpicking military dependence on what it perceives to be hostile suppliers.
"We are sensitive to talk of unpicking financial legislation, which applies carefully negotiated international standards and rules," Dombrovskis said.
"We are sensitive to talk of unpicking financial legislation which applies carefully negotiated international standards and rules," Dombrovskis said.
Those moves by Trump can be added to a lengthy list of actions aimed at unpicking the Obama legacy.
It's a record to spend many hours with, unpicking its seams and delving deep below the obvious for the route to oblivion.
Earlier, he was on stage, in conversation with Edge editor Nathan Brown, unpicking his career and where he wants to take it next.
But we are not cherries and it is perfectly possible to implement the citizens' rights part while saying "no" to any other unpicking.
Unpicking the truth from the hype and working out how to deal with the new challenges we find ourselves facing is a herculean task.
Full marks from Adorno et al so far, for unpicking an element of what can make pop formulaic, in order to create something different.
"The Church of England is more than a statistic, and unpicking its role could be trickier than it looks," she says—"a bit like Brexit."
The moment you start unpicking why people use the term as an insult, you realize that it says more about the accuser than the accused.
Unpicking years of sanctions is a complex task, complicated further in Washington by the fact that U.S. primary sanctions remain in effect, French Ambassador Francois Senemaud said.
Several of Lopez Obrador's economic advisers have said they expect the process to continue after the revisions, though he has floated the idea of unpicking the reform.
And now it's having to retrofit a more inclusive approach at the same time as unpicking an 'environmentally insensitive' legacy that original playbook really doesn't look so smart.
But analysts at banks and investment houses have over the years examined the returns of money managers, crunching them with computers and unpicking various "factors" that drive returns.
Unpicking the mechanism isn't straightforward: we still don't fully understand the nature of depression or the function of sleep, both of which involve multiple areas of the brain.
And depending on how key decisions on a number of strategic GDPR complaints go, 2020 could see an unpicking — great or otherwise — of components of adtech's dysfunctional 'norm'.
He said other items on the agenda for the talks included environmental protections, alignment with the EU single market and preventing a future Conservative prime minister unpicking any deal.
A less demanding smart home To return to the smart home, another barrier to adoption that the CMU researchers are interested in unpicking is the too-many-sensors problem — i.e.
A majority of people say they want a Christian coronation for the next monarch, and no government would tie up parliamentary time unpicking the links between canon and civil law.
Unpicking EU trade deals and replacing them with British deals could usher in a decade of complicated negotiations that would end in a less favorable deal for Britain, he said.
Analysts and investors said the complexity of Tesco and Booker's businesses meant unpicking the competition implications was a huge challenge to the CMA's processes and the outcome difficult to predict.
Rather than unpicking the figure of the psychopath or exploring the flaws of the American criminal justice system, "The Witness" is fuelled by one man's personal and obsessive need to comprehend.
Which means fact checkers, and indeed journalists, are faced with the Sisyphean task of unpicking all the BS that Internet platforms are liberally fencing and accelerating (and monetizing as they do so).
Ridicule, the more buffoonish the better, is a well-used tool in the unpicking of Fascist ideology, and Waititi cleaves to the Brooksian principle: that which does not kill me makes me ruder.
His decision will leave an uncomfortable feeling in many European capitals that the transatlantic relationship that Trump has been slowly unpicking for the past few years is about to unravel at an even faster rate.
We didn't intend for this to be a story, to have to deal with unpicking all the reasons why August died, but once that became the story it was critically important to tell it ethically, but also rigorously.
"Unpicking the regulation of a 10 billion pounds ($13.6 billion) a year fares system that underpins such a vital public service means there are no quick-and-easy solutions," RDG Chief Executive Paul Plummer said in a statement.
Tens of thousands of EU-related laws have made their way onto the British statute book during more than 40 years of membership of the bloc and unpicking that complex legislative web is likely to take many years.
"It's like unpicking the city and putting it back together in a different way," Helen Marriage, the director of Artichoke, the events company that started the Durham festival, said in an interview at the company's headquarters in East London.
The president is meanwhile unpicking the multinational deal to roll back Iran's nuclear-arms programme, which raises the chances of the Iranians resuming the programme and reduces, perhaps to zero, any prospect of the resulting crisis being handled diplomatically.
LONDON (Reuters) - Scientists unpicking the gene faults behind an aggressive blood cancer called acute myeloid leukemia (AML) have found it is not a single disease, but at least 11 different ones with important differences for patients' likely survival chances.
Unpicking the pitfalls of fame and the fundamentally fucked notion of punishing a woman for having sex, the band say "Miss GB" is about "sexism, regret, the death of dreams and, ultimately, doing what you want in the face of all of that".
"The point of this project was very much to build a game that was evocative of how you remember the old adventure titles," Gilbert tells me, moments after I've seen a decent slice of Thimbleweed Park in meticulous, mystery-unpicking action, all "Pick up" this and "Look at" that.
And, well, if Trump is seeing lots of bad news about himself (when he searches for news about himself) let's just say we're sure that Freud would have had a field day unpicking the knotted implications of Trump having such navel-gazing obsession with news sources he continually professes to hate and claims are "fake".
The enormity of the task – of unpicking hundreds of regulations, laws and agreements while forging new trading links, staunching a retreat of the finance sector from the City of London, attracting new and keeping established investment and combating the Scots nationalists who continue to threaten another referendum on independence – calls for strength and confidence.
Adeyoola held out the forlorn hope of a second referendum being called in the fall, should the immediate economic shock to the pound evolve into a national recession and that in turn beget a grim realization of what's coming down the pipe, even before the government has embarked on the vast task of unpicking treaties and renegotiating trade agreements and reconfiguring migration flows.
It's not the first time the Investigatory Powers Tribunal (IPT) has ruled against the agencies it oversees — that was back in February 153, pertaining to retrospective NSA-GCHQ data-sharing — but it's handed down just a handful of counter-agency judgements over its fifteen+ years, all of them since the 215 Snowden revelations, so this is another landmark moment in the unpicking of secret government mass surveillance programs.
"I've always believed in coming out and being independent from the EU." It has been almost half a century since the United Kingdom signed up to join other major European nations in a precursor to the EU, and the decision to begin unpicking the political, legal and constitutional threads that have bound this island nation to the European continent for so many years has proved painful for many on both sides of the English Channel.
Davis, who was beaten by Cameron in a 2005 party leadership contest, will take on the crucial role of defending Britain's economy from investment-withering uncertainty and covetous neighbours whilst unpicking over four decades of trade, legal and diplomatic ties to the EU. At the heart of the job will be finding an answer to the key negotiating riddle: how can Britain keep access to the EU's single market whilst winning the right to restrict free movement of workers from within the EU?
Davis, who was beaten by Cameron in a 2005 party leadership contest, will take on the crucial role of defending Britain's economy from investment-withering uncertainty and covetous neighbors whilst unpicking over four decades of trade, legal and diplomatic ties to the EU. At the heart of the job will be finding an answer to the key negotiating riddle: how can Britain keep access to the EU's single market whilst winning the right to restrict free movement of workers from within the EU?
Before you start, read through the instructions on your pattern well so that you don't pre-empt steps and have to waste time unpicking later.
Panic Nation: Unpicking the Myths We're Told About Food and Health, also published as Panic Nation: Exposing the Myths We're Told About Food and Health, is a nonfiction book by Stanley Feldman and Vincent Marks. It was published by John Blake in 2005.
The wheel remained in use until 1890. Other prisoners were engaged in breaking stones which were used for roadbuilding, oakum picking (unpicking old ropes) and other tasks. Further building work to designs by Richard Carver, the county surveyor, was undertaken in the 1830s and 1840s. This included the rebuilding of the front range and the addition of the gatehouse.
Purple was derived from the colour associated with joint operations in the UK MOD at the time.Trevor Taylor, Jointery and the Emerging Defence Review , Nov 2009 Penelope was the name of the wife of Odysseus who tricked her suitors by weaving a burial shroud during the day and unpicking it at night. This slow progress was thought to reflect the state of secure system development at the time.
The United Kingdom's Advertising Standards Authority, the self-regulatory agency for the UK ad industry, uses nutrient profiling to define junk food. Foods are scored for "A" nutrients (energy, saturated fat, total sugar and sodium) and "C" nutrients (fruit, vegetables and nut content, fiber and protein). The difference between A and C scores determines whether a food or beverage is categorized as HFSS (high in fat, salt and sugar; a term synonymous with junk food). In Panic Nation: Unpicking the Myths We're Told About Food and Health, the junk food label is described as nutritionally meaningless: food is food, and if there is zero nutritional value, then it isn't a food.
Having digested the book, Matejka became committed to unpicking the destructive political polarisation which the fascists were bringing to Austria. Along with Ernst Karl Winter he joined up with the circle of intellectual pacifists around Franz Kobler. Others group members included Oskar Kokoschka, Stefan Pollatschek, Rudolf Rapaport and the artist Georg Merkel. There is nothing to indicate that the men's intense discussions together did much to roll back the tide of fascism in the immediate term, but the written works and, in some cases, paintings produced by group members provided markers that pointed the way towards a saner political framework at some yet to be determined point in the future.
Bevir and Rhodes thus provide an elaborate philosophical foundation for a decentred theory of governance woven together by the notions of beliefs, traditions and dilemmas. 'It follows that the role of political scientists is to use (1) ethnography to uncover people's beliefs and preferences, and (2) history to uncover traditions as they develop in response to dilemmas. The product is a story of other people's constructions of what they are doing, which provides actors’ views on changes in government, the economy, and society. So, for example, a political scientist may select a part of the governance process, and then explain it by unpicking various political traditions and how actors within these traditions encounter and act to resolve dilemmas.
This might be described as a "traditionalist" view. There is a conflicting philosophical view that deadlines should be avoided and that each class should progress at its own pace: such that no student is "left behind". Whilst the remaining students "catch up", those students who understand quickly should be placed in a "holding pattern" full of puzzles and questions that challenge them to connect recent learning with longer- established learning (they may also be encouraged to spend a small amount of time enhancing their understanding by supporting teaching staff in unpicking underlying errors/questions of fellow students who have not grasped recent ideas as quickly). This view might be described as a "Mastery" approach.
Make Do and Mend pamphlet cover designed by Jill Greenwood Jill attended art school in Chelsea and then joined the fashion brand Jaeger in 1931, where she known as "Crawshay". Initially employed in retail at their flagship Regent Street store, Jill's artistic flair was recognised and she was put in charge of display. During WWII, Jill wrote and illustrated Make Do and Mend pamphlets for the Ministry of Information. These iconic publications provided tips to housewives on harsh rationing, giving advice on how to stay frugal yet chic by reusing old clothing, creating ‘decorative patches’ to cover holes in worn garments; unpicking and re-knitting old jumpers, and protecting one's garments against the ‘moth menace’.
As a fitness instructor, Smith found a lack of appealing clothes in which to work and started to sew her own. She had no formal training in garment production, but had been interested in fashion since a teenager, crocheting bikinis from age 16, customising her clothes from age 18, and from age 21 starting to design and make her own clothes. She began by unpicking a favourite swimsuit and used it to make a pattern out of newspaper, providing the basis for her first leotard design. Her students liked her outfits, and started requesting that Smith make clothes for them too. At the age of 24, she returned to Brisbane and continued teaching aerobics, now to classes of hundreds of students.
In 1916, Bertrand was awarded the Prix Goncourt for his novel L'Appel du sol about a group of soldiers thrust into the war Bertrand himself had fought, during which they experience horrors none ever expected to just a few weeks before. These soldiers study the motives behind their march to war, representing all France in their make-up and ideals, but also unpicking the reasons behind the French will to fight and the destructive nature of blind patriotism. His second work was named L'Orage sur le jardin de Candide, and was a collection of four short stories, collected and finished in the weeks before his death, and reflecting that ominous state of affairs very strongly. They are frequently surreal and often heavily introspective, perhaps reflecting the world that Bertrand found himself in.

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